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Show S dtnnccrnmg tbc Stane ¢a Mafter (f{ays he) that none but him "felf was worthy to Tread the Srage. An <on the other hand, fo good a man, tha ‘he was the moft unfit Perfon of the Gan ¢to come There. And 1s notthisa plai (h (0 '"]" S ey 0l (4 m&fi&% 165 He fmers nresforb Lw i loghesTT Hings e unea{o?m ‘ u H m ofthe Excel r pmy hat / e Lo o e Diho fe eth Thewr : 1 of D@ba --1--- o stheRw {h o, "" v fi Counurmce.l o i, A 1' ¢ Confeffion of the Lewdnefs of the Play¢ Houfe; And that the better a Man was ¢ the more he was obliged to forbear it I could go on, muc farther with $t Auguftine, but T love to be as brief as ma be. T could likewife run through th fucceeding Centuries,and collect Evidenc all alonc But I conceive the beft Ages and the blfiocfi Authorities, may be {ufficient: And thefe the Reader has had alread yHowever, one Inftance more from th Moderns may not be amifs. Didacus d Tapia an eminent Spaniard, fhall clofe th Ewidence Thi Author in debating th Queftion whether Players might be admitted to the Sacrament, amonnfi: othe things encounters an Ob;e&xo Some Peo ple itt feems pretended there was fome goo to be learn'd at the Play-Hozfe. To thef he makes this reply ‘Granting your Suppofition, ( fays He ‘ your Inference is naught Do People uf ‘to fend their Daughters to the Stews fo ‘ Difcipline? And yet it may be, the mxoht meet fome there lamentmg thei ‘own Debauchery. No Man will bree ‘his Son upon the High-way, to harden hi ¢ Courag T |