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Show A Difoourfe, to Sir Henry Savill, Arts, Logicft, R.hetoriclz: The Ancients, Ariflotle} Plato, '1 IJ~t tetus Gorgi<ls, Litigiojiu, vel Sopbifta, Protagoras, Ariflotle, schola jlu.TopickJ, Elenchs, B.heterick.!) Organon, Cicero, Hermogenes. The Ncoterick!, RantJtJ, Agricoltt. Nil Jacri Lullius ~his Typocofmia, fiudying 1 Coopers I>iOionary; J'vlattheus qolle&ion, of proper words for Jl.-le-taphor s; .Agrippa, de vanitat. &c. . !f2!!e. if not here~ of lmitation. . Collefiions preparative. Ariflotles Similtude of a Shoomakers · shop, full of shoes , of all Sorts : Demojihenes Exordi4l Concionum. Tulli9i precept, of 'I hefes of al~ for~s,preparative. . The R.elying upun Exercije, with the Difference, ofVjing, and tempering~ the Inflrument; And the Similitude, of prefcribing> ag~ inft the Lawes, of Nature and of Fftate. 5· Points. That Exerc1e:r, aret?be framed, t_o the Life~· That is to ( ty, to work Ability, In th~tk1nd, whereof a Man, 1n the Co~trfe of ACJw n, {hall have mofi Vfe. The indirelJ, and· Oblique Exereifes, which do 3 per partes, and per ctmfequentiam, inable thefe Faculties; which perhaps, di.re[/ Exercife, at firfr, would but difrort. And thefe, have chiefly place, where the F•aculty is weak, not_ per fe, but per_ Accidens. As \ 1f f!Vant of Memory, grow through Ltgbtnej{e of Wzt; and want of flayed Attention; ' Th~n the Mat?e~atiques, .or the Law, he~peth :·1 Becaufe, they are Th1ng~=--wherein 1f the Mmd' once roam, 1t can-not recover. Of the Advantages of Exereife; As to dance with heavy Shoes ; To march with heavy Armour, and Carriage; And the contrary Advantage, (in Natures, very dull, and unapt,) of working Alacrity, by framing an Exercife, with fome Delight, or Ajfeelion;. -Veluti pueris dant Crujiula blandi DolJorer, Elementa velint ut difcere prima. Of the C at~tions of Exercife ; As to beware, left by evitl doing, (as all Beginners do weakly,) a Man grow not, and be invete. rate, in an ill Habit; And fo take,. not the Advantage of Cujlome in perfection, but in confirming ill. slubbering on the Lute. The MarjJaUing, and Sequele of Sciences, and prafJi[es: Logie/z, and Rheteric/z. lhould be ufed, to be read, after Poefj, Hiftory, and rhilofophy. F irft, Exercife, tod~ things well, and clean; after,. promptly,and readily. The Exercifes, in the 'lJniverfitier, and Schoole.r, are of Jt1emory, and Invention; Either to (peak by Heart, that which is fet down verba,tim; Or'to fpeak Extempore. Whereas, th~re is little ufe,. in AfJ~on:~ of either of both: But mofi: things, w hicb we utter, are netther verb~tlly premeditate, nor meerly Exttmporall. Therefore Exercija, . touching Helps, for the ln·t ellecrual'l p owcrs. Fxercije, would be framed to tak r 1 . fider of Heads; And then to fit a e d ~tt e Breathwg, anq to ton- This would be done, in two ~a:ner~~~ t~e SJ:eech, ~.X: tempore. Tables; And without F - fl. ' . ot wnh wntm!! and a b • or, tn moLL Alllons · t · · . N . pau~ Ie:, to ufe the Note; Whereunto . f. ' I ls pernlltted , and ed, It will put him out ' l .a Man be not accuftom- . There is no ufe, of a· Narrative Me • . . Ctrc'!-~fiances ofTimes, Perfons a:;plln Academii!, viz, with And It ts one Art to difccou fce '.1 haces~ and wah Names. 'rc rt" b e: A nd here'i n Vfe andr A l'l "a nu· anot· er t R 1 . ' 0 e ate, and De- ' _IOn, tsmofr converfant. Alfo, toSummeup and C a . ry genera~} Vfe. ' ontra ) Is a Thing, in'A&ion~ of vc .. CERTAIN |