Unparalleld varieties: or, The matchless actions and passions of mankind.: Displayed in near four hundred notable instances and examples. Discovering the transcendent effects; I. Of love, friendship, and gratitude. II. Of magnanimity, courage, and fidelity. III. Of chastity, temperance, and humility. And on the contrary the tremendous consequences, IV. Of hatred, revenge, and ingratitude. V. Of cowardice, barbarity, treachery. VI. Of unchastity, intemperance, and ambition. : Imbellished with proper figures. / By R.B. ...

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Title
Unparalleld varieties: or, The matchless actions and passions of mankind.: Displayed in near four hundred notable instances and examples. Discovering the transcendent effects; I. Of love, friendship, and gratitude. II. Of magnanimity, courage, and fidelity. III. Of chastity, temperance, and humility. And on the contrary the tremendous consequences, IV. Of hatred, revenge, and ingratitude. V. Of cowardice, barbarity, treachery. VI. Of unchastity, intemperance, and ambition. : Imbellished with proper figures. / By R.B. ...
Author
R. B., 1632?-1725?
Publication
London :: Printed for Nath. Crouch, at his shop at the sign of the Bell in the Poultry,
1683.
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Subject terms
Curiosities and wonders.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A81080.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Unparalleld varieties: or, The matchless actions and passions of mankind.: Displayed in near four hundred notable instances and examples. Discovering the transcendent effects; I. Of love, friendship, and gratitude. II. Of magnanimity, courage, and fidelity. III. Of chastity, temperance, and humility. And on the contrary the tremendous consequences, IV. Of hatred, revenge, and ingratitude. V. Of cowardice, barbarity, treachery. VI. Of unchastity, intemperance, and ambition. : Imbellished with proper figures. / By R.B. ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A81080.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 2, 2024.

Pages

XXXV. When the City of Troy was taken, the Greeks did, as became gallant men; for, pitying the mis∣fortune of their Captives, they caused it to be proclai∣med, that every free Citizen had liberty to take a∣long with him any one thing that he desired; Aeneas therefore neglecting all other things, carried out with him his Houshold Gods; the Greeks delighted with the Piety of the man, gave him a further permission to car∣ry out with him any other thing from his House, where∣upon he took upon his shoulders his Father, who was grown old and decrepit, and carried him forth; the Grecians were extreamly affected with this fight, and deed of his, and thereupon gave him all that was his own, confessing, that nature itself would not suffer them to be enemies, but Friends to such as preserved so great Piety toward Heaven, and so great a Reverence to their Parents. Aelian Var. Hist.

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