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Show g fo lofgoght?fsytfi p Pnflofopher efl ----- aooncerning the Stane. ¢ aRefemblance of the Matter before them So that where the Reprefentation is foul 13 the Thoughts of the Company muft fuffer Tally crys out upon ¢ Licentious Plays T4e2e g, gy "and Poems;as'the bane of Sobriety, and pe B¢k Dive ‘on Lewdnefs, and that Pleafure is th ‘Root of all Evil loaly i both Ma 4l e D ofthei 't s be) th 0 e an clean.sh data import.tsv out README Tady. Belaft mght m at s danget It Dypls ywn for a ' orid Young g S Aoe and D f o fho e i Debautefs | ookitl Ob'(fl2v? ¢ wife Thinkin :"That Comedy{ubfifts up- L. 1 Livy, reports the Original of Plays among the Romans. ‘He tells us the ¢ were brought in'upon the fcore of Re¢ ligion, to pacifiethe Gods, and remove ¢ Mortality. But then He adds that th ¢ Motives are fometimes good, when th ¢ Means are ftark naught: That the Re-De. 1 ¢medy in this cafe was worfe than the L#-7¢ Difeafe, and the Atonement more Infec¢tious then the Plague Valerius Maximus, Contemporary wit Livy, gives much the fame Account o the rife of Theatres at Rome 'Twa De ¢yotion which built them. And as fo ¢the Performances of thofe Places, whic ¢ Mr. Dryden calls the Ornaments, this Au¢ thor cenfures as the Blemifhes of Peace And which is more, He affirms ¢ The ¢ were the Occafions of Civil Diftrattions ¢and that the Srater firft Blufh'd an ¢ then Bled, for the Entertainment. He,; ¢ concludes the confequences of Plays in-csp. 4 "tolerable |