[5202]Si fleatam aspicias, ne mox fallare, caveto;

Sin arridebit, magis effuge; et oscula si fors

Ferre volet, fugito; sunt oscula noxia, in ipsis

Suntque venena labris &c.

Take heed of Cupid's tears, if cautious.

And of his smiles and kisses I thee tell,

If that he offer't, for they be noxious,

And very poison in his lips doth dwell.

SUBSECT. V.—Bawds, Philters, Causes.

When all other engines fail, that they can proceed no farther of themselves, their last refuge is to fly to bawds, panders, magical philters, and receipts; rather than fail, to the devil himself. Flectere si nequeunt superos, Acheronta movebunt. And by those indirect means many a man is overcome, and precipitated into this malady, if he take not good heed. For these bawds, first, they are everywhere so common, and so many, that, as he said of old [5204]Croton, omnes hic aut captantur, aut captant, either inveigle or be inveigled, we may say of most of our cities, there be so many professed, cunning bawds in them. Besides, bawdry is become an art, or a liberal science, as Lucian calls it; and there be such tricks and subtleties, so many nurses, old women, panders, letter carriers, beggars, physicians, friars, confessors, employed about it, that nullus tradere stilus sufficiat, one saith,