Last Updated:2026/01/01
Sentence
But
if
ye
would
know,
what
grace
they
meene,
go,
and
looke,
and
learne
emonges
them,
and
ye
ſhall
ſee
that
it
is:
First,
to
bluſh
at
nothing,
And
bluſhing
in
youth,
ſayth
Ariſtotle
is
nothyng
els,
but
feare
to
do
ill:
which
feare
beyng
once
luſtely
fraid
away
from
youth,
thẽ
foloweth,
to
dare
do
any
miſchief,
to
cõtemne
ſtoutly
any
goodneſſe,
to
be
buſie
in
euery
matter,
to
be
ſkilfull
in
euery
thyng,
to
acknowledge
no
ignorance
at
all.
Quizzes for review
But if ye would know, what grace they meene, go, and looke, and learne emonges them, and ye ſhall ſee that it is: First, to bluſh at nothing, And bluſhing in youth, ſayth Ariſtotle is nothyng els, but feare to do ill: which feare beyng once luſtely fraid away from youth, thẽ foloweth, to dare do any miſchief, to cõtemne ſtoutly any goodneſſe, to be buſie in euery matter, to be ſkilfull in euery thyng, to acknowledge no ignorance at all.
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