Tu pete lecticas———

[6055]Uxor si cessas amare te cogitat

Aut tote amari, aut potare, aut animo obsequi,

Ex tibi bene esse soli, quum sibi sit male.

If thou be absent long, thy wife then thinks,

Th' art drunk, at ease, or with some pretty minx,

'Tis well with thee, or else beloved of some,

Whilst she poor soul doth fare full ill at home.

A fourth eminent cause of jealousy may be this, when he that is deformed, and as Pindarus of Vulcan, sine gratiis natus, hirsute, ragged, yet virtuously given, will marry some fair nice piece, or light housewife, begins to misdoubt (as well he may) she doth not affect him. [6066]Lis est cum forma magna pudicitiae, beauty and honesty have ever been at odds. Abraham was jealous of his wife because she was fair: so was Vulcan of his Venus, when he made her creaking shoes, saith [6067]Philostratus, ne maecharetur, sandalio scilicet deferente, that he might hear by them when she stirred, which Mars indigne ferre, [6068]was not well pleased with. Good cause had Vulcan to do as he did, for she was no honester than she should be. Your fine faces have commonly this fault; and it is hard to find, saith Francis Philelphus in an epistle to Saxola his friend, a rich man honest, a proper woman not proud or unchaste. “Can she be fair and honest too?”

[6069]Saepe etenim oculuit picta sese hydra sub herba,