[ XVIII. Make it not any longer a matter of dispute or discourse, what are ]
[ XIX. Ever to represent unto thyself; and to set before thee, both the ]
[ XX. Consider them through all actions and occupations, of their lives: ]
[ XXI. That is best for every one, that the common nature of all doth send ]
[ XXII. The earth, saith the poet, doth often long after the rain. So is ]
[ XXIII. Either thou dost Continue in this kind of life and that is it, ]
[ XXIV Let it always appear and be manifest unto thee that solitariness, ]
[ XXV. He that runs away from his master is a fugitive. But the law is ]
[ XXVI. From man is the seed, that once cast into the womb man hath no ]
[ XXVII. Ever to mind and consider with thyself; how all things that now ]