Is mild and manageable; but if loosed

From moderation, then is fierce and troublesome.

On which account the same poet afterwards, distinguishing his powers with some felicity, says—

For he doth bend a double bow of beauty,

And sometimes men to fortune leads,

But sometimes overwhelms their lives

With trouble and confusion.[18]

But the same poet also, in his play entitled The Wounded Man, speaks of people in love in this manner:—

Who would not say that those who love alone

Deserve to be consider'd living men?