« fcyi'ptuitt of jfti'itff ' 4 % 
E !»dreii4s ; alfo their Keeper may lead , nay , 
rike them, and they will do them no harm. 
5. If any one lyeth flat on his face, and doth 
:ign as if he were dead. 
6. If their mouths are miraculoufly ihut, as in 
jthe cafe of Chap. 9. 
1 1. They win never injure a Camels if they can 
have any other prey ; hence Utreiotus recites that 
Xerxts did look on it as a prodigy, and as a token 
uf bad fuccefs in his war, when a Ljon in hit Army 
^ore a in pieces. 
12. They alwayes hide thcmfelves in feme 
Cave, or high Mountain, in which they moft de-* 
light to be, and there they will fit in fuch a poffure 
as may the better fit them with greater violence to. 
fet on the next prey. Hence Dw/d, Pfal, lo. v. 
8, 9. doth recite aU the feveral pofturcs x>f 
mSy and doth apply them to his Enemies. But 
if the prey be fo far from him, that he thinks he 
will eietpe, he will roar and make fuch a noife, 
that he will even amaze the wild beafts, fo that 
they are not able to flir any further, and fo be- 
come a prey j hence it is that the Scripture, when 
at any time itfpeaketh of an Enemy, to Ihew the 
terriblenefs of him, fetteth it out by the roaring of 
a L^on. 14. When he cometh to a wild beaft , 
he encompafleth him with his tayl, fo that he can- 
not get out : after once he hath taken his prey , 
Jbe teareth it to pieces with his teeth and claws; 
I and after that he hath broken all the bones , and 
torn the flclh in pieces, he then firft licketh up the 
i^lQod, before he eateth any of the fle£h. 16, If 
. he 
