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... you might as wel say, several texts. Al is in the choise & handling. Yea mary; but Montaigne, had he wit, it was but a French wit ferdillant, legier... ...s Essays PREFACE To the Right Ho- norable and all praise-worthie Ladies, Elizabeth Countesse of Rutland, and Ladie Penelope Rich Give me leave ... ...s windes in emptie ayre diffus'd, strength lose, Unlesse thick-old-growne woods their strength oppose. So seemes it that the soule moved and tossed, ... ...hey at last discovered a great fertill Iland, all replenished with goodly woods, and watred with great and deepe rivers, farre distant from al land,... ...downe to the ground, and steadeth them as a flancke. They have a kinde of wood so hard, that ryving and cleaving the same, they make blades, swords,... ...ntaigne's Essays To the Right Ho- norable and all-praise-worthie Ladies, Elizabeth Countesse of Rutland, And Ladie Penelope Riche. Give me leave (p... ...f 7)4/10/2005 4:03:43 AM Montaigne's Essays To The Right Ho- norable, Elizabeth Countesse of Rutland. Thrise-happy Countesse, your thrise-honor'd... ...eddle with these sedicious and quarrellous divisions? What shall I chuse? Mary, what you list, so you chuse. A very foolish answer: to which it seem... ...Diogenes, who was come to visite him, foorthwith presenting him a knife: 'Mary, this,' said he, 'and that very speedily, if thou please': 'I mean no...