But lies awake, and takes no rest:
And up she gets again, whilst care and grief,
And raging love torment her breast.
Accius Sanazarius Egloga 2. de Galatea, in the same manner feigns his Lychoris [5249]tormenting herself for want of sleep, sighing, sobbing, and lamenting; and Eustathius in his Ismenias much troubled, and [5250] “panting at heart, at the sight of his mistress,” he could not sleep, his bed was thorns. [5251]All make leanness, want of appetite, want of sleep ordinary symptoms, and by that means they are brought often so low, so much altered and changed, that as [5252]he jested in the comedy, “one scarce know them to be the same men.”
Attenuant juvenum vigilatae corpora noctes,
Curaque et immenso qui fit amore dolor.
[5263]———totus Parmeno
Tremo, horreoque postquam aspexi hanc,
Alterno facies sibi dat responsa rubore,
Et tener affectum prodit utrique pudor, &c.