of the Dog too take his avauntage, and the fors 

 and experiens of the Bear agayn to avoyd the 

 assauts : If he wear bitten in one place, hoow he 

 woold pynch in an oother too get free : that if he 

 wear taken onez, then what shyft with byting with 

 clawying, with roring tossing and tumbling he 

 woold woork too wynde hym self from them : And 

 when he was lose, to shake hiz earz tvvyse or 

 thryse with the blud and the slaver aboout his 

 fiznamy, waz a matter of a goodly releef. 



Of the Industrie and Fidelitie of Dogs. Their 

 Elogie or Memorable Praise *o -^ 



(From the '■'■Living Libraries Written in Latin by 

 P. Camerarius, and done into English by John Molle, 

 Esqtri>-e, in 162 1 ) 



' I ^HERE he found many discourses almost in- 

 -*- credible in histories, concerning the industrie 

 and fidelitie of dogs. Dio reporteth notable 

 things of the fidelity of Sabinus his dog. Pierins 

 recounteth out of ancient Authours, that Minerva 

 Iliada had a temple in Daulis, wherein certaine 

 dogs were kept, which never shewed themselves 

 gentle to any, and to be plaied withall, but to the 

 Greekes ; for against the Barbarians, they would 

 ever be barking and still troubling and biting them. 



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