

Mathematician, eurious calculator of nativities, a general read scholar, "Wood's character of him is, that "he was an exact At his viearage he is remarked to have always given Valsby, in Lincolnshire, through the munificence of his noble patroness,įrances, Countess Dowager of Exeter, but resigned the saine, as he relis us, for tIe seems to have been first beneficed ai L,y George, Lord ]erkeley, he kept, fo use the words of the Oxford antiquary, ,vith the rectory of 8egrave, in Leicestershire, given to him in the year 1636, Of Oxford, conferred on him by the dean and canons of Christ Church, which, gth of :November, 1616, had the vicarage of St. In 1614 he was admitted to the reading of the entences, and on the In 1599 he was elected student of Christ Church, and, for form Seventeen, in the long vacation, 1593, sent to ]razen :Nose College, in theĬondition of a commoner, where he ruade a considerable progress in logic and Sutton Coldfield, in "Warwickshire,+ ri'oto whence he was, at the age of
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ROBERT "DuIITOX WaS the son of Rlph Iurton, of an ancient and genteelįamily at Lindley, in Leicestêrshire, and was born there on the 8th of February,ġ576.* He received the first rudiments of learning at the free school of V thogral,hy iz in instaacc-q moernied. V, hich occur in the work, are nowf« the first thne glvon and obsolete Tducation, translations of the conntless quotations from ancient writers :ysterles to those who bave hOt had the advantage of a classical L,light of" any future caprices of fashion. With confidence» that so valuable a repository of` amusement an'3 in-į,»rmation, will continue to hold the rank to which it has been restorcd,įlrmly supported by its own merit, and sale from the influence and Graeeful to the memory ol the author and the publisher relies This is now prescnted to the public in a manner hot dis. In the increased prlce which every copy offered for sale produeed Īnd the inereased demand pointed out the neeessity of" a newĬditlon. Its exeelleneies once more stood eonfessed, Look ,vas again sought for and rend, and agaln it beeame an The Aatomy ofg'l[elancholy were to reeeive thelr due praise. The tlme, however, at length arrlved, when the merits of

Raercif"ully stolen marrer from ]3tJrtTO ,4thout any acknowledg. Vbserved, more than a eentury ago, that several authors had un. Proved, beyond a doubt» that the ealls of" justice had been littleĪttended to by others, as well as the faeetious YOI.[CK. nent ol modesty» lay elaim to every mark ol respect and inqulry :FEraa» af lenh drew the attention of the public towar,]sĪ wrlter» who though then littl¢ _know_n might without impeach. Plaarîsms of Tristram ,Shandy» so suecessfully brought to light byĭa. The plunderers of literature» the poachers in obscure volumes. enee towards an author, who af lenh was only looked into by

Mear a eentury and the succeeding generatlon affected indiffer. Tashlon» suspended» in ome degree» that faine wlfich had lasted Their om» eulled from a performance whlch they had not tho Inferlor wrlters bave embellished their works wlth beauties hot Hot disdaln to build two of his finest poems on if and a host of Many parts o£ it into hls own popular performance. If in the warmest terres» and the ludierous STEar. Least elght edltlons» by wlfich the bookseller, as WOOD records, gotĪn estate and» notwlthstanding the objectîon sometlmes opposedĪgalnst it, of a quaint style and too greatan accumulationĪuthorltles, the fascination of its vit» faney» and sterllng sens%īave borne down all censures» and extorted pralse from the firs

Indolent» and the refuge of the unlnformed. If was the delight of the learned» the solaee of the That perlod few books were more read or more deservedly Great celebrity, which continued more than hall a century. At the time of its original publication it obtained a Trie work now restorcd to public notice bas had an extraor-ĭinary rate. ECTIONS, IEMBEllS, AND SUBSECTIONS, PH[LOSOPHICALLY, MEDICALL,Ī SATI17JCAL PREFACE, C01DUCING TO THE FOLLOWING DISCOUI1SE.Ġ0RRECTED, AND ENRICHED BY TRAN8LATIONS OF THE NUMEROU8 CLASSICAL ErI'RACTS ITS KDS, CAUSES, SYMPTOMS, PR06NOSTICS, A,ND
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Full text of " The anatomy of melancholy : what it is, its kinds, causes, symptoms, prognostics, and several cures of it : in three partitions : with their several sections, members, and subsections, philosophically, medically, and historically opened and cut up"
