Page:LuciansTrueHistory (Hickes).djvu/41

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TRUE HISTORY.
5
And this kind of repose will be the more conformable, and fit their purpose better, if it be employed in the reading of such works as His purpose in writing this history.shall not only yield a bare content by the pleasing and comely composure of them, but shall also give occasion of some learned speculation to the mind, which I suppose I have effected in these books of mine: wherein not only the novelty of the subject, nor the pleasingness of the project, may tickle the reader with delight, nor to hear so many notorious lies delivered persuasively and in the way of truth, but because everything here by me set down doth in a comical fashion glance at some or other of the old poets, historiographers, and philosophers, which in their writings have recorded many monstrous and intolerable untruths, whose names I would have quoted