... exquisite dainties: and all this he has compassed by acting rationally, knowing, that bread is,above all things, man's proper food, when seasoned by a good appetite; and, whilst a man leads a sober ... that their stomach has lost its natural heat; and that they should, on thataccount, pay a greater regard to the quality of what they eat, and what wines they drink; and likewise to thequantity ... that what exceeds this, is disease and death, and merely gives the palate satisfaction, which, though but momentary, brings on the body a long and lasting trainof disagreeable sensations and...