MICROCOSMOS. THE DISCOVERY OF THE LITTLE VVORLD, VVITH the government thereof.
SIth that thou hast so soundly slept my
Muse,
Dreaming on that which thou before had'st dōe
Being awake againe, thy
Spirits rowze,
To make an end of what thou hast begun:
Be'ng
rest-refresht therefore, now forwards run
With bright
Christ the true God of Wisedome, & the onelie Sunne in
[...]lightning our Intelligence.
Apollo; (pray him be thy guide)
Vntill thou touch the Tropicke of
Reason
Where
VVisdome puts
Plus vltra, there abide,
For past that
point to passe, is passing pride.
For our
VVill's Baiard blind, yet bold, and free,
And, had she
way made in hir maine
Carreere,
sh'would runne into that
Light that none can see
Saue light of
Lights, to feele the
secrets there,
Which
Angells wonder at, yet not come neere:
But
Reas'ns conduct is nothing safe
The secrets of the highest Heaven are farre aboue the reach of humane Reason
[...]
herein,
Therefore the
VVill hath too iust cause of
feare
Lest shee should runne into presumptuous
sinne,
For which divinest
Angells damn'd haue bin.
For since our
Proto-parents lowest fall,
Our wisdoms highest pitch (God wot) is low:
But had
they stood
Hee had infus'd in all
His
VVord, (selfe-
VVisdome) which alone to know
Is to know all that
VVisdomes selfe can showe:
But since, the state of things is so vnstay'd
That
humane vvisedome stands it wotts not howe;
Vnsure in all; for,
Iudgment's oft betrai'd
In that which
proofe before had well
Every knowledge hath its beginning of the senses, which are often deceiu'd. Therefore all sciēces which are deriu'd & fast rooted in the senses are vncertaine, & deceiptfull.
assai'd.
But having toucht the
Braine, the
Soule, the
VVill,
(All which (saue of the
soule) can brooke no touch)
It rests that
Reasons heasts wee doe fulfil,
To prosecute much more, or more then much,
That
VVitt for
VVill wil willingly avouch:
Th'al-giving
Giver giveth al that liue
(His
Creatures) such
desires, and
Natures such;
As for their
good with good wil stil should striue,
And shun what ere should them of it depriue.
Beasts more thē
Men (the more
Beasts mē the while)
Pursue that
good that doth their natures fitt.
To them for that (though they be nere so vile)
Is highest
knowledge giv'n, and they vse it,
Thereby condemning both mans
VVill, and
VVitt:
And yet hath
Man a (synn-peruerted)
will
To seeke that
good he knowes most
[...]requizit,
Who knowes & loues the
good, yet takes the ill
Oft for the good, but for the
evill stil.
Yet as he was ordain'd to greater
good,
So greater
knowledge was in him infus'd;
With no lesse
will, (were it not
sinn withstood)
To seeke that
Good; yet the
will witt-abus'd
When it hath found it, is oft
witt
The vnderstanding abused by the misreport of the inferior senses diverts the will from embracing good obiected to hir.
refus'd:
Vnhallowed
sense, drown'd in that damned
iuyce,
(
Synnes Syder) from
Eaues fatall
Apple bruiz'd,
(Be'ing deadly drunck) makes stil the worser choise,
Wherein (like
Sow in mire) it doth reioyce
[...]
Among the hoast of
Natures creatures, bee
Three kindes of
Appetites, (there ay consorts)
3. Kinds of Appetites in all creatures.
Naturall, sensitive, and
Voluntarie.
The first divided is into two sortes;
[Page 41]
One found in all that to the
VVorld resortes:
That's
inclination voide of
Sense or
Soule,
To doe what the owne nature most importes:
The naturall apetite two-folde.
As
light things mount, and
heavy downwards roule,
Which nature,
Natures selfe cannot controule.
The other with this vertue
action haue,
Which nerthelesse proceedeth not from
sense;
To
Vegetatiue Soules this,
Nature gaue,
Soules Vegetatiue.
Which in
Trees, Plants, and
Grasse hath residence;
Who doe desire to sucke that
influence
That feedes them, and avoides the contrary;
A
plant will thirst for
moistures confluence;
And draw to it all kinde humidity,
Retayning
that it liues and pro
[...]pers by.
The like in our owne
members we obserue,
Who wanting
nutriment doe sucke the
vaines;
The
vaines doe sucke the
bloud themselues to serue;
Thus
each attracteth
foode when
neede constraines,
And all
things living seeke the same with paines:
Hence we devide this
naturall desire
The natural desire how devided.
Into two
kindes, the one, each
plant retaines,
The other,
things which
life doth
sense-inspire;
As
Man, and
Beast, and what doth els respire.
The
Seate of this
desire stands on two
feete,
Which fixt are in
two places; That's to say
The
liver, and the
Stomacke; there doe meete
The
forces of this
Appetite to slay
With
famine, or with
foode fraile
life to stay:
The
sensitiue desire is two-fold too,
The sensitiue apetite two-fold.
From
sense the
first, the
last comes not that way,
The first, to
ioy and
griefe is fixed so,
That no
force can it from the
same vndoe.
For in the
sinewes (
Feelings instruments)
This
pow'r is plac'd, or in the
Synewy skin;
And that the
Synewes ioyes, or discontents,
That wel, or ill, affecteth them within:
By
heate, or
cold, they
paine, or
pleasure wyn,
As they to them are wel, or ill applied.
For
sense and
motion synewes made haue bin
That by them
paine or
pleasure, should be tride,
And make our
Bodies moue on ev'ry side.
Nor doe these
Appetites wait on the
will,
Ne from the
Phantazie doe they proceede,
For wil we, nil we, we shal hunger stil,
Whē
food's with-drawn, that should our
Bodies feed;
And we shal feele what
sense affects with speede,
How ere the
will or
Phantazy impung;
We may abstaine from
nurrishment in deede,
But then thereby much more for it we long,
And
Flesh wil pine with
paine, if hunger-stung.
But th'other
Appetites bredd without
touch,
Are forged by the
thoughts or
Phantazie;
These, discreete
Nature in the
hart doth couch,
Which be
Affectes that lurke in secresie,
Be'ng
motions of the
hartes Hart properlie:
These wait on
witt, and choose or else reiect
What it holds deerest, or doth most defie;
So
VVitt's the
cause, and they are the
effect,
That loue, or loath, as
witt doth them direct.
This
vvitt, and
vvill, the
Beasts doe not possesse,
For their most knowledge is most
sensuall;
Guided by
Nature in their
Brutishnesse,
Onely by
inclination naturall,
[Page 43]Which moues their
sense vn-intellectual,
Or this, or that way, without
Reasons
Though Beast
[...] haue much more perfect outwa
[...]d senses then Men, yet can th
[...]y not imploy them reasonably as Men doo.
sway;
Then
vvitt and
vvill their sense wee cannot cal,
Though
sensuall will and
witt we cal it may:
For
man alone hath
both to guide his
way.
The
Voluntary Appetite we finde
Is gott by
Reason, and produc'd by
vvill,
By it we are to
good or
ill inclin'd,
As
Reason doomes of them by
Iudgments skill:
Two actions hath the
vvill in reason still,
By which we
good embrace, and
ill refuse,
Reason revealing what is
good or
ill,
Who rules hir not as though
will could not choose,
But as one teaching Hir
[...] hir
pow'r to vse.
As in the
Vnderstanding and the
Minde
Of
Men, and
Angells, God hath fixt his
forme,
So to
Mannes will
Free-will is not avoided by grace but established: because grace healeth the Will, that is, giveth vs a will to righteousnes. Aug. de spiritu & littera. Cap. 30.
his loue was no lesse kinde,
That to
Gods wil he might his
vvill conforme:
Ah woe! that
sinne should since the same deforme
VVithout constraint! for
Hee Her
freedome gaue,
And did with
vnderstanding her informe,
That
voluntarie
That we do
[...] will well
[...] God worketh of himself without vs, and when we will so well that we doe accordingly, God worketh togither with vs. August. De gratia & libero arbitrio. Cap. 17
service hee might haue;
As that, his nature most doth loue and crave.
For, as himselfe doth nothing by
constraint,
So he constraines
God draweth vnto him, but he draweth none but the willing.
not those that him obay;
Lest that their
vvil might haue cause of complaint,
For want of
libertie it selfe to sway:
Those
praiers please him not,
Constraint doth say,
But true
obedience flowing from the
God giues regenerate Men free-will to do well but the reprobate haue free-will onely to doe evill. Musculus cōmō places.
vvill;
Then
vvill should force her selfe (for so shee may)
His gratious good will freely to fulfiil,
Sith
good he made hir loue, and loath the
Ill.
Then
Iustice would that
God mans
will should doe
When
Man doth Gods
vvill,
Godlinesse hath the promises of this life and that to come. When Man pleaseth God God wil please Man. All is to be given to God who prepareth the good-will of Man to bee holpen, and helpeth i being p
[...]epared. Aug Enchir. ad Laurent. Cap. 22.
this exchang is iust;
And
Gods free-wil must needes subscribe thereto,
Sith it is free to doe that needes itmust,
VVhich cannot doe the thing that is vniust;
For that were
bondage free, or
freedome bound;
Sith ro doe
evill but to haue a lust
VVere Vassallage to
Sathan that Hel-hound,
VVhich fredome to doe
good would quite confound.
But yet the
vvill hath many motions else,
Diverse
degrees therein doe plaine appeare;
Some haue such open
harts and wilful
vvills
As that they
loue and
hate through
passion meere:
So,
Reason their
Mindes Sterne in vaine doth steere,
For
sense they serve, and have no patience
The seemeing neerest
pleasure to
These are Beasts in humane shape, whereof the World's too full.
forbeare
For further
good; but forth-with please their
sense,
As
sensuall appetite doth them incense.
But
vvill in others, so hir selfe commaunds,
And those
Pow'rs to her
pow'r subordinate,
That (being free) shee bindeth
both in bands
And vnto
Reason all doth captivate:
As, many
Dropsy-drie forbeare to drincke,
Because they know their
ill t'would aggravate;
So,
vvill herein from her owne selfe doth shrinke,
And cleaves to that, that
Reason best doth thinke.
The
Heau'ns, and
Earth, and all the
Elements,
(And what besides
Man, is of them compos'd)
Doo GOD obay in his
commaundements,
For, as
Hee wils, so are they al dispos'd;
[Page 45]Yet never he himselfe to them disclos'd:
Then not from
knowledge their obedience springes,
But from the
nature in their
kinds inclos'd;
Yet
Men he made to know and doe the things
That be of
him, which
grace and
Knowledge bringes.
And that he should with more heede doe the same,
A
VVill he giues him ioyn'd wirh
griefe and
Griefe & Ioy are alwaies Consociates of our will
Ioy;
Which
vvill might ioy when she doth
passion tame,
And in the contrary might feele annoy,
All as shee doth her natiue powres imploy.
Here hence we know the odds twixt
Ioy and
Griefe,
For in
extreames they
comfort or
destroy
Such as leade here a good, or evil life,
Both flowing from the
vvill, their fountaine chiefe.
This
pow'r hath highest vertue of
Desire,
And
Caesarizeth ore each
Appetite;
Shee rules (being taught) with libertie intire,
VVhose actions are to
vvill and
nill aright;
VVhose
Obiect's real
good or so in sight:
In nature shee hates
ill in
deede, or show,
And in the true, or false
good, doth delight;
If
ill for
good shee choose, hence it doth gro
Because
ill seeming
good, shee takes it so.
Shee nought can loue but hath some show of
good;
Nor ought can
The will naturally cannot desite that which in nature is evill.
loath but hath like show of
ill;
Desire of
good by her may be with-stoode,
But
it shee cannot loath, or leave it still:
So may shee choose to execute her will,
VVhen
ill is tendred her
indeede, or
sho,
Bnt cannot l
[...]aue it, or her wil fulfill,
Because to
ill shee is a mortall foe,
And lothes it as sole worker of her woe.
Then must shee needs be ever vnconstrain'd,
Sith her
Creators Wil would haue it so;
Shee could not be her selfe, were shee restrain'd,
And though shee waites on
Reason to, and fro,
Will makes Reason to attend her.
Yet shee makes
Reason waite her will to kno:
For, touching her, her
Lord confines his powre,
Which cannot take that he did once besto,
Namely,
arbiterment, (her richest dowre)
Except
Not-beeing, should her quite devoure.
The Wil may obiect, or not obiect what shee will to the Minde.
For shee hath powre, to obiect to the
Minde
What pleaseth her, or not the same obiect;
And while the
Thoughts the same do turne & winde,
Shee may oreturne those
Thoughts or them neglect,
And turne the
Minde to what shee shal direct:
Yea when as
Iudgments final doome is giv'n,
Shee may, or may refuse the same t'effect;
For
Men are not as
Beasts by
Nature driv'n,
Vnlesse of
Reason they are quite bereav'n.
The vnderstā ding straineth out of the secret & hid
[...] causes of thinges that which to wisdōe is incident. Wil exacting the sāe.
About shee goes when
Iudgements doome is past,
And re-examines what it hath decreed;
Which done, perhaps the same shee will distast,
(Although the sentence be direct indeede)
And runnes another course, lesse right, with speed:
Which second
The Wil refuseth Good being found, not for being good, but not being so good as it willingly would hau
[...]. I
[...]l spirits may provoke our fātasies & wil
[...]
search yet aimes at greater right,
Though shee mistakes the same for want of heede,
Which
want proceeds frō
Sins extreame dispight,
That blindes our
Mindes eies in extreamest light.
Wherefore it vs behoues
Grace to invoke,
Whereby
wit vprightly may weld the
will;
For as ill
Sprites our
fantazies provoke,
So on our
wils they may the like fulfill,
[Page 47]And make her scorne to rule by
Reasons skill:
For, shee's ambitious and delights to raigne
Without controle, how euer
well, or
ill;
And beeing free shee runneth on amaine,
To
ioy if wel, if otherwise, to
paine.
This liberty of
Monarchizing thus
Shee deemeth good, what ill so ere ensues;
It is a kind of bondage to haue powre, wil, and liberty to doe ill.
Which
libertie, is
bondage base to vs,
And
free we were, if our
will could not chuse
But vse His
will, that gaue vs
wils to vse:
Whose only
service, only
freedome is,
And only they are
Slaues that it refuse;
Sith they are
Sathans servants (if not his)
Which please him most, when they do most amisse.
For in this great
commerce of terrene things,
The
bad whereof exceeding so the
good,
And that so fast the one to other clings
That twixt them both there is great likelyhood,
Hardly by
will can they be vnderstood:
And sith
Men Bodies haue aswel as
Soules,
Things bodily best like the bodies moode,
Which often so the
Minde and
VVill controules,
That as it lusts it rules and over-rules.
Herehence it is, some
mortall life doe prize
Whosoever seekes felicity where it is not shall finde infelicity where it is.
Aboue eternal, and their
guts aboue
The highest
God, that doth their
guts suffize;
And though the
will herein may rigor proue,
Yea, may be forc'd to leaue what it doth loue,
Yet nought can her resistlesse powre constraine,
For nothing can
desire from her remoue,
Although shee cannot doe what she would faine:
So maugre
force, shee
freedome doth retaine.
Reason and mans desires shoulde be in continuall league.
Sith
Reason then the
VVils desires should sway,
And bring th'
Affections to obedience,
Its requisite they should accorde alway
To mainetaine warres against rebelling
Sense;
Which is the rule of
Reasons consequence:
Wherefore we may wel iudge of
Reasons rule,
By the
Affections and
VVils continence;
As a good
Prince or
Master of a Schoole,
Make them they governe, hate, and shun misrule.
The Hart and Minde beeing at Vnity procure the tranquility of the Affections.
And, for th'
Affections from the
hart proceede
(Which is the
Seate of loue to
God and
Men)
If then the
hart and
Minde be wel agreed,
The
hart with flames of lasting
loue will bren,
And fire out froward
Passions from their den:
Then wil the
Tongue from
harts aboundance speake
Gods highest
laudes till they report agen;
Then
loue twixt
Tongue &
Hart shal marriage make,
To bring forth naked
Truth, which
loue doth seeke.
Wherefore the
Providence divine did place
The
lunges (the voices
Organs) next the
Hart;
(As the
Mindes instruments the
Braines embrace)
That they may neere at hand, soone vse their
Art;
As
Orators of
Princes play their part
Neere to their
Sov'raignes; And wert not for
sinne,
The Braines and Hart are the Seates of Reason and the Affectiōs. Sin is nothing because it was made without him, without whō nothing was made that was made.
The
VVill, from
Reasons rule should never start,
And twixt the
Hart, &
Braine there should haue bin
A lasting
league, as beeing neere of kin.
Sin, noughty
Nothing that mak'st all things nought,
(Except the
Thing of
Things that made thē good)
Thou wast vnmade thy selfe, yet
ill haste wrought;
Whereby thou haste so perverst
Flesh, and
Bloud,
[Page 49]That now by it all
goodnesse is with-stood:
Damn'd
Nothing that hast such a
some-thing stride,
How wast begot? by whom? and in what moode?
Through lust; By Eaue and Adam; In their pride:
Now
Sinne.
Error speakes what
The scriptur
Truth hath iustifide.
For
wit, will, Anger, and
Concupiscence,
Are fowre powres of the
soule, wherein should lie
Fowre
vertues, taking thus their residence:
VVisedome in
wit, in
will Integritie:
Valor in
Ire, and in
lust Temprancie:
But
wit with
ignorance, and
will, with
wronge,
Anger with
Feare, and
lust, with
libertie
Are so pervers'd, that they themselues impunge,
Except preventing
grace be mixt amonge.
The totall
frame of
mans divinest
part,
By
light divine we see is out of frame;
Th'antipathie betwixt the
That is, betweene Reason and the Affections.
Minde and
Hart,
Giues but too good assurance of the same:
And though the
minde in all her
limbes be lame,
Yet in our little
world shee raignes as
Queene,
And seekes wilde
passions of the
Hart to tame,
That in her selfe there might bee ever seene,
Soule-pleasing
ioy and
peace to flourish greene.
For shee's the
mancion of
Felicitie,
Contrived so, that there its safe confin'd;
To which there is no way nor entery,
But through th'
Affections, servants of the
Minde:
Yet they too oft disloial prooue by kinde,
Who liers, and
sinne-soothing
claw-backes are,
Whereby our
iudgments eies they
(Traitors) blinde,
That
it erres mortallie ere it beware,
If
reason of their
treason haue not care.
Reason, Concupiscence, & Ire, 3. speciall powres of the Soule.
For three
Powres speciall in the
Soule reside,
Reason, Concupiscence, and ardent
Ire,
The first, to
Truthes obscure abiding guides;
The second,
good-things gladly doth desire;
The third, doth from the contrarie retire:
In bowels of the first the
VVits are bred;
Th'
Affectes are forg'd in both the others fire;
In nomber fowre,
Ioy, Hope, Sorow, and
Dread,
Which from the last
powres spring, as frō their head.
First, from the first
Powre, Ioy and
Hope proceedes,
(For what we covet, wee ioy in with hope)
And
Ire, the last
powre, Dread and
sorow breedes;
For,
hate to
dreade and
sorow lies wide ope;
Griefe in
hates hell the way to
dreade doth grope.
From these
Affects (as from their
fountaine) floes
All
vice and
vertue which in
Man doth cope,
For
vice and
vertue ay are mortall foes,
And as
Reas'n rules, so either overthroes.
Anima.
The
soul's call'd
Anima our
flesh containes,
While shee the same with
vitall fire filleth;
Mens.
Mens, while shee
mindeth, or shee
Minde retaines,
Animus.
And
Animus, while shee hath
VVill or willeth;
Ratio.
Shees
Ratio, whilst shee
iudgement iust fulfilleth:
Spiritus.
Then,
spiritus shee hight, when shee
respires.
From all which,
science to the
soule distilleth,
Scientia.
So, call'd
scientia; thus her names doe change,
As shee her qualities doth interchange.
The outward
senses outward
parts possesse,
As
th'inward to the
soule are knit by
kinde:
And, for the
soule her powre doth most expresse
In that whereto her
soule is most inclinde,
[Page 51]Here-hence it is, men mortified in
minde
Whose
spirits powres on things divine are bent
The soule vseth not the ministry of the outward senses when shee is swallowed vp with divine meditations.
Fare, as they were sometimes,
deafe, dombe, &
blind,
Their contemplations are so violent:
But,
Vulgars outwarde
sense is excellent.
But while the
soule can take a strict survay
Of all the
instruments which shee doth vse,
So long the
owner of that
soule may say
He hath a
iudgement sound, and perfect
Muse:
But if those
instruments that
Man misvse,
Or ruine them, the
soule straight seeing it,
Her ruin'd
Iaile shee striues then to refuse:
Which
strife the
senses frame doth so vnknit
That it confounds it, or distracts the
VVit.
And in this
moode (though we esteeme it madd)
Men prophesie, and truely things foretell,
The soule being divine works divinely, if shee bee not hindred by her Clog, the body.
Speake diuerse
Tongues, which erst they never had,
And in
Artes which they knew not, they excell.
Thus whilst the
soule doth hold her
house an Hell,
Striving to be enlarg'd, becomes more free,
Then workes shee like her selfe (exceeding well)
That wonder tis, the same to heare and see:
O sacred
soule (but
God) who's like to thee!
NOw, for the
Hart fraile
life first intertaines,
And is the last
part that from it departes,
(Without which, dull were
reason, dead the
braines)
It's taken for the
part which powre impartes
To
VVit and
VVill, whereby they play their partes;
So as it's held the
Mirrour of the
minde:
The Hart the Mirror of the Minde.
For, when the
Minde vnto herselfe converts,
The
Hart is interposd, where shee doth finde
Her feature fowle, or faire, cleere-eied, or blinde.
Then, for the
Hart is such a powreful
thing,
My
hart desires to touch it feelingly:
And, for the
Hart doth
paine or
pleasure bring,
A cleane Hart and a cleane soule are convertible.
The
paine is
pleasure, when
Head properlie
Makes hand discribe the
Hartes hart handsomly.
Earst
Mans internal
partes we did devide
Into three
VVombes, the
Braines, the
Brest, &
Belly:
About the
Braines (before) our
skill we tride,
And now by
it, the
Brest must be discride.
Which is the
Shoppe of al the
Instruments
Wherewith the
vitall Vertue operates;
The
Hart, the
Lunges, with al
Lifes incidents
In region of the
Brest, doe hold their States,
Whose
Bulke them Bulwarkes frō what ruynates:
The
Midriff parteth them from
partes that feede
(Which the third
VVombe, (the
Belly) circulates)
It being a
Muscle made for
Natures neede,
Assisting in the Breathing Acte and Deede.
And next, there is a
Tunicle, or
Skin,
That over-spreads the
Concaue of the
Brest,
Much like a
Spiders webbe, subtile, and thin;
Wherout two others grow to part the rest,
Because two places should be breath-possest:
So that, if one (being hurt) could not respire
The other might one halfe retaine (at least)
To keepe
Natures providence for Manns good, should lift vp his minde to the consideration of the loue of a greater Good.
Lifes breath (at point to part) intire,
And blowe the
sparkes that kindle
vitall fire.
These
Felmes (like to a
Nett with
fruite repleat)
Together hold what ere the
Brest doth bound,
They line the
Ribbes, that whē the
Lunges doe beate
They might performe their office whole and sound,
[Page 53]Without being
bone-bruiz'd, which might thē confound;
So likewise in a
Caule the
Hart's inclos'd,
Call'd
Pericardion, being
Ovall round,
Or like a
Flame for forme, and so dispos'd;
To shew that
vitall fire is there
repos'd.
There, in the
Hart's the fountaine whence doth flow
The Hart is the fountaine of naturall heate.
Naturall heate, and by the
Artires sends
It al abroade to make the
Members grow,
And keepe them growne, in plight to doe their
ends.
And though each
Instrument of
breath attends
And serves the
Voice, yet were they chiefely made
For the
Hartes vse, (that
Lifes-fire comprehends)
That by their service that
fire might not vade,
VVhich vnkinde coldnesse else might overlade.
Wherfore the
Lunges (
breaths-forge) is preordain'd
First to receaue the
Aire that cooles the
Hart,
VVho doe prepare it (being intertain'd)
And so prepared, doe the same impart
(
As Nature wills) to that
Life-giving
part
[...]
The
Lunges therfore, are Spūgy, soft, & light,
That
Aire might enter, and from thē depart,
VVhich guard the
Hart (on left side and the right)
From bordring
Bones, that else annoy it might.
VVhich hath a double motion; One, when it
It selfe dilates, the other, it restraines.
The Hartes motion is double.
VVhen it goes
out, in goes
Aire requisit:
And when it shrinketh
in, then out it straines
All smoky
Excrements procuring
paines.
This
motion's kinde, proceeding frō its kinde
(Not as the
Muscles moved by the
Braines)
For which it hath fixt
filaments assign'd,
VVherby it selfe, it selfe may turne & wynd.
This double motion hath two double vses,
(A two fold vse whereof we mention'd haue)
The next to draw in
bloud; and then, by
Sluces
To send it to the
Lunges, for
foode they craue
At the
Harts hands, sith they the
Hart doe saue.
Thus gratefully they
kindnesse interchange,
To teach vs how we should our selves
A motiue to brotherly loue taken from the disposition of the Members.
behaue;
For when we disagree, it is as
strange
As
Hart and
Lūges should cease to make this chāge.
Thus, this subordinate
Lord of
Mannes life
(The
Hart) resides in his wel-fenced
fort;
And, though with it al
vitall force be rife,
And
members keepes from being al-amort,
Yet should it die, if their helps were cut short.
Hence
Kings may learne, that though they Monarchize
Yet doe they, whom they rule, maintaine their port,
Which should induce them, not to tyranize,
But, like good
Hartes, lifes-pow'r to exercize.
The flesh of the Hart is the firmest flesh of any part of the Body.
The flesh whereof is firmer, then the flesh
Of all the
parts the
Body hath besides:
So,
Kinges should be most firme, for, being nesh,
Their
Subiects might be woūded through their sids.
Such be the
People stil as be their
Guides.
The
Hart with
Passion, passion may each
part,
VVhich
Ioy or
Sorrowe with the
Hart abides:
So,
Kinges their praise and
People may subvert,
If
Passion over-rule their ruling Art.
And in the
Bulke it is so situate
As that its
Base is
Center of the
Brest;
The end whereof (where
greatnesse doth abate)
Leanes to the
left-side more then al the rest;
[Page 55](So
Kings, where they frō
Iniust
[...]ce makes great Kinges lesse, then Fame can take notice of.
Right decline, are least.)
Yet leanes the
Hart so, for two causes great;
One, that the
Brest-bone should it not infest,
The other, that it should the left-side heate,
Sith on the right, the
Liver doth that feate.
And though the
Hartes left part more heavy bee,
Because its hard and greater then the right,
Yet
Nature hath so ballanc'd it, that shee
Makes it to hange (by admirable sleight)
As if the both sides were of equal weight:
For in the left part (heaviest) shee putts
The
vitall spirit, of its nature light;
And in the right part (lightest) loe, shee shutts
The waightie
Bloud, wherwith that part shee glutts.
Lo, thus the
Highest holy vpright hand
By even counterpoise hath hang'd the
Heart
In the
Brests Center, (like as th'
Earth doth stand
The Hart is hang'd in the Brest by even counterpoise.
In Center of the
Heau'ns) by matchlesse Art:
Hence we may learne the duty of this
part,
Which should be vpright in
Affects, and
vvill,
And never from the rules of
Vertue start
To right hand, or to left, for
good or
Ill,
But come
life or come
death, be vpright stil:
This
part likewise hath two
Concavities,
On left side one, the other on the right:
And for this vse, are these
capacities;
The right receaves the
bloud (be'ng boild aright)
That from the
Liver runnes, to give it might
To feede the
Lunges, and
vitall spirits breede,
Bred of pur'st
bloud in the left
Concaue dight,
Like
sweate that frō the right
one doth proceede,
Which sweate with
vitall Spirits it doth feede.
That is the
furnace, wherein still doth flame
The
vitall Sp'rit, resplendent, quicke, and cleere,
Like the
celestiall Nature, for the same
Both
heate, and
life to all the
whole doth beare;
This
Primum mobile that
All doth steere:
These
concaues thus are made commodiously;
Many good com
[...]lexions are ill in conditions.
But now (alas) most harts all hollow are,
That
Bloud and
Spirits therein confused lie,
So as no
Art can one from other spie.
In this left
concaue where the
Hart doth trie
His chiefest skill, the
vitall sp'rits to make,
There is the
roote of that great
Artery
From whom the
Artires their beginning take:
Which neere the
Hart doth so it selfe forsake,
That part ascends, and part thereof descends
To carrie
vitall fire to parts that lacke;
These are the
pipes whereby the kinde
Hart sends
His
cordiall comfortes to th'extreamest
ends.
And, for the
Veines and
Artires neede each other,
And that their
succors should be neere at hand,
They meete, and (for the most part) goe togither,
Thereby to vigorize the
vitall Band
Which the
Harts vertue wholy doth command:
For, th'
Artires being lincked with the
Vaines,
Lend
Aire and
Spirit, least their bloud should stand;
And frō the
Veines some bloud each
artire draines,
Which to disperse, the
vitall spirit constraines.
Mutual loue is to be learned from the mutuall assistāce of the partes of the body.
Betweene the
Hart and
Lunges the like is seene
(As erst was said) to learne vs
mutuall loue;
For, certaine
Pipes doe passe these
parts betweene,
By which, each others kindnesse they doe proue:
[Page 57]The
hart from his right side doth bloud remoue
Vnto the
Lunges by the
Arteriall Veine,
The
Lunges through veyny-
artire, aire doth shoue
Vnto the
hart, it to refresh againe,
Whose side sinister doth it entertaine.
The
hart (besides) hath many
members more,
Which are distinguisht by
Anatomists:
The
right, and
left side hath a little
dore,
And many a
pipe so small therein subsists,
That scarse
mans eie can see how
each exists;
Yet all haue vse; for, when the
hart doth seeke
Such
bloud as without which no
hart consists,
The
meanes wherewith it draws it, should not break,
But that the
strong therein might
helpe the
weake.
And, that the
Aire might enter in thereby
More mildly, and for
Nature, more concinne,
Therefore, the
hart doth not immediately
Draw from the
Mouth the
aire it draweth in,
But through those
passages it first doth rin,
Lest be'ng too cold t'would coole the
hart too much;
For all
extreames, saue extreame
good, are sinne,
And
Nature Vertue in the
Meane doth couch,
Vertues Throne is erected iust betweene extreames.
Shewing, that our
desires should still be such.
That
God, whose powre no
power can resist,
Resists all
powers that are too violent,
And ever doth the
moderate assist;
From whose hand (only) comes the Thunder-dent,
To plague the
prowde, and wound th'
incontinent:
For, should his
Creatures powre b'immoderate,
Then should not his owne bee so eminent:
So, if they
it affect, he
them doth
hate,
And with a thundring vengeance ends their date.
Thus having sleightly toucht this tender
part,
(Touching his substance, proper place, and frame)
It now remaines that we doe proue our
Arte
Touching another
motion of the same,
Belonging to our
soules affections lame,
Lam'd by our
Flesh too
lustie, yet too
fraile,
Too
lu
[...]tie in desire of its owne shame,
But
fraile in that wherein it should prevaile,
Yet when its weak'st, the
Soule doth most assaile.
It not suffiz'd that nere-suffized
Loue
That al
things made, to make
Man only
Bee,
But to
Be vvell, as wel some men doe proue,
VVho though of
Beeing, they desirous be,
Yet not being
wel, they
Murder themselu
[...]s.
end
ill, sith they see
Their being
VVell, and
Being disagree:
Then
The Soule Vege
[...]atiu
[...] d
[...]si
[...]es to Be, The Sensitiue to be well, The reasonable to be best, and therfore it never rests till it be ioyned to the best.
Being, was not
Manns creations end,
But to be happy in a high degree:
And therfore al
men al their
forces bend,
T'inioy that
Good, that
Beeing doth cōmend.
Which good desire of
Good, in
Man is knitt
To a detesting of the contrary;
But, for that
sinne hood-wincks
Mans Eie of
VVitt
He gropes for
Good, but feeles the
Evi
[...]l cleaves to each worldly Good, as Canker doth to Silver.
Evill by:
From this desire of
Good, th'
affections flie;
Which with their motion swift
[...] draw that
desire
Heere, there, and where soere they please to hy,
In pursu
[...]e of that
Good which they require,
To which (though base they bee) they would aspire.
Yet they
were good, & kindly lov'd their like;
But they
are ill, and loue
Ill seeming good;
Yet they by
Natures instinct
Ill dislike;
And yet by nature evil is their
moode,
[Page 59]Basely obaying the
sinne-soiled
Blood:
At first they were
Truthes other selfe, for friends;
Yet now by them shee's too too much with-stoode,
Adhering to her
foe, while
shee pretends
To blesse the
Sense, though to accursed
endes.
The motiues of the
Soule these
motions are,
Whose other names are called the
Affects
[...]
By foll'wing
good, and flying
ill, they
ARE;
Consisting so of these two good
Effects;
Though
Syn their
sense with
error oft infects:
Some vsher
Iudgment, some on her attend,
The
later, take or leaue as shee directs;
The
Former, naturally cannot offend,
For they desire but
Nature to defend.
As when the
Body (
Nature to suffize)
Desires to eate, or drinke, (as
neede requires)
Or when good
happe or ill doth it surprize,
Then
Ioy and sorrow (as Plato affirmes) are the Ropes wherewith we are drawne to the embracing or avoiding of euery action.
Ioy or
sorrow moueth our
desire:
These stil fore-run our
Iudgment, & conspire
With
Nature, to vsurpe her highest
Throne;
For nature runneth on, or doth retire,
As shee is mov'd by iudgment of her owne,
And so doe these that
Nature wait vpon.
But those
Affects that follow
Iudgmēts Traine
Wait hard, as long as
Hart is wel dispos'd;
Then lasts the
League betweene the
Hart &
Braine,
For, al their
iarres by
Reason are compos'd:
But when the
Hart against the
Brain's oppos'd,
(Which oft proceeds of too much pampering)
Out flie th'
Affections that were erst repos'd,
And from their neckes the Raines of
Reason
[...]ling,
Impatient of slow
Iudgments tarrying.
Yet true it is that
Hart cannot be mov'd,
Ere
Iudgment doomes what's good or badd for it;
Then
Hartes desires by her must be approv'd,
Or els the
Hart cannot desire a whit:
For what
Iudgement foregoes the Affections.
she holds vnmeet,
it thinks vnfitt.
But for the
motions of the
Minde are free,
And neede not stay, as it is requisit,
So before
Iudgment doe they seeme to
Bee,
Although they follow her as
bond, and
free.
But though th'
Affections cannot moue at all
If
Iudgment wing them not and make them flee,
Yet
sound advice (which heere we
Iudgment call)
The Affections may work without soūd advisement.
May be at rest when they too busy bee,
Mov'd by the iudgment of the
Fantazee:
This
Iudgment's blinde, yet is it most mens
Guide,
And no lesse rash, yet ruleth each degree;
This makes th'
Affects from
Rights straight
Pathes to slide,
For
Fantazy doth fancie
waies too wide.
This skipp-braine
Fancy, moves these easie
Movers
To loue what ere hath but a glimpse of
good;
Then straight she makes thē (like vnconstant
lovers)
To chāge their
Loues, as she doth change her
moode,
VVhich swimmeth with the current of the
Bloud:
For as the
body's well or ill compos'd,
(VVhich followes oft the nature of
its foode)
So
Fancy and these
Fondlings are dispos'd,
Though in the
Soule, and
Minde they be inclos'd.
And yet the
body's but the
Instrument
VVheron the
The Soule worketh by motion, and the Body by Action.
soule doth play what she doth please;
But if the
stringes thereof doe not concent,
The
harmony doth but the
soule displease;
[Page 61]Then tune the
body Soule, or playing cease:
And when a
String is out, straight put it in
With
Phisickes
Phisicke can extenuate the Humors that make the Body vnapt to execute the workes of Vertue.
helpe, which
Passion may appease,
By humbling
that which hath too lowd a dyn,
And put the
Parts on a
Soule-pleasing
Pyn.
These
Partes though many, yet of
three consist,
That's,
Humors, Elements, and
Qualities;
Which
three, doe of fow'r
partes, a part subsist,
For from
Earth, VVater, Aire, and Fire doth rise
All that the Heav'nly
Cope doth circulize:
These are the
Elements from whom proceede
The
Humors be the children of the Elements.
Humors with their foresaid qualities;
For,
Bloud, Flegme, Choller, Melancholy breede
Hott, Cold, Moist, Dry, a fowr-fold vital Seede.
An
Element is the most simple part
An Element, what.
VVhereof a
thing is made, and in its wracke
Is last resolved; And in
Phisicks Art
There are but
tvvo, which two of
those doe lack
That al the Elemental
bodies make:
These
two, are tearmed
Simples, &
Cōpounds,
2. Elements in Phisick-Arte.
The
first, is borne on
Speculations back;
The
last, is bredd by
Practize, which cōfoūds
Two or moe
Simples in each others bounds.
The Elements of
Natures famelies
Produce the
Elementals temprament,
VVhich is a mixture of the
Qualities
Or composition of each
Element:
(As
these doe bend, so are their
bodies bent)
VVhich we
Complexion cal; wherof are two,
Complexion what.
VVell, and ill tempred; And the
Aliment
That feeds the
Body, herein much can doe,
For that can make & marre
Complexion too.
Wel tempred Complexion, what.
VVell-tempred, is an equal counterpoise
Of th'
Elements fore-mention'd
qualities;
Whereof ther's but one
thing of
Natures choise
VVherein shee made the
mixture thus precise:
(As
Galens tract of
Tempers testifies:)
VVhich, of each
hand, is the
interior skin:
And hence we may thus fitly moralize;
That
Nature to the
Hand so good hath bin,
That it might temper what the
Mouth takes in.
Il Cōplexion, what.
Ill tempred's that where some one
Element
Hath more dominion then it ought to haue;
For they rule ill that haue more regiment
Then
nature, wisdome, right, or
reason gaue:
So doth this
Element it selfe behaue:
Yet each
ill temper doth not so exceede,
As that it spils what
better tempers saue;
For some surpasse the
temperate in deede,
In some small ods, whereof no
harmes succeede.
The Bodies temper is fiue waies discerned.
Fiue waies the
Bodies temperature is knowne,
By
Constitution, Operation, Clime,
Coulor, and
Age, by these the same is showne,
As
Dials by an
Index shew the time.
The
Body fat is
cold, for
fat doth clime
By cold degrees; and that, full-flesht is hot,
For
heate proceedes from
bloud, as doth my
rime
From
braines; where no
heate were, if
bloud were not,
And bee'ing too cold they would my
sense besot.
By
Operation too, the
temper's found,
For when a
creature, (
Man, Beast, Hearbe, or
Plant)
Doth that which they by right of
kinde are bound,
Then no good temprature those
bodies want:
[Page 63]The
Clyme in shewing this is nothing skant;
For South-ward, Men are cruell, moody, madd,
Hot, blacke, leane, leapers, lustfull, vsd to vant,
Yet wise in action, sober, fearefull, sad,
If good, most good, if bad exceeding bad.
The Northen
Nations are more moist, and cold,
Lesse wicked and deceiptfull, faithfull, iust,
More ample, strong, couragious, martiall, bold,
And, for their bloud is colder, lesse they lust:
Then cold
bloud being thicke, it follow must
They are lesse witty, and more barberous;
And for they inwardly are more adust,
A natural reason for the gurmādizing, and qua
[...]fing of the Flemmings.
They
meate and
drinke devoure as ravenous,
The
panch and
pot esteeming precious.
Yet are they most laborious, loving
Artes;
Whose
soules are in their
fingers (as its sed;)
For, all our best
hand-workes come from those
parts,
As from the hotter
Climes, workes of the
hed:
And those that twixt the
South, and
North are bred
(As
France and
Italy, Spaine, and the like)
Of
hot and
cold, are ev'nly tempered;
Therefore they are not made so apt to strike;
But warre with
VVisdome, rather then the
Pike.
The
coulor likewise shewes the
temprament;
The Coulor shews the bodies temper.
For
Sanguin's red: and
yellow's Cholericke:
The
M
[...]lancholy is to
blacknesse bent:
The
white or whitish, is the
Phlegmaticke:
The
white, and
blacke, are cold and rhewmaticke:
The
Red, and
yellow, hot by course of
kinde:
To this consents each skilfull
Empericke,
Who by experience of their practise finde
That
coulor shewes the
temper, notes the
minde.
The
Sanguin's frolicke, free, ingenious,
Couragious, kinde, to
women over-kinde;
True
Iovialists, by nature generous;
And hot and humid they are by their kinde:
The
Chollericke is hasty, and inclinde
To
Envie, pride, and
prodigalitie;
The reason why men cholericke of cō plexion are
[...]oone angry.
As
Herc'les-hardy, though with anger blinde;
And in its temper it is hot and drie,
Which is the cause it is so angery.
The
Phlegmaticke are idle, sleepie, dull,
Whose temper's
cold and
moist, which drownes the
wit:
The
Melancholy's mestiue; and too full
Of fearefull thoughts, and cares vnrequisit;
Who loue (as loathing
men) alone to sit:
In temper
cold and
drie too like the
dust,
(Dust of the
earth, ere
God life-breathed it,
Where hence we came, and wherevnto we must)
Which flies (as fearefull) from a little
Gust.
These are the
humors, whereof
Man consists,
A humor, what.
Which is a
substaunce thin, to which our
foode
The
Stomackes heate by
nature first disgests,
And hath dominion chiefly in our
bloode:
These like the
Elements moue in their moode:
For
bloud is hot, and humid, like the
aire:
Flegm's cold, and moist, in
VVaters likelyhood:
Then
Melancholy's like
Earth, cold and dry'r:
And hot, and drie is
Choler, like the
Fire.
Howe the meates are changed to Humors.
And, that the meates to
humors should be chang'd
They must be thrice concocted thorowly:
First, in the
Stomacke they are interchang'd
And made that
Chyle wherein potentially
[Page 65]The
Humors (
Chaos-like) at first doe lie:
Next, in the
Liver the
Masse Sanguiner
Of
Chyle composed is, successiuely:
The third, and last's through al the
bodie, where
Humors are made, that
Meate and
Chyle first were.
These raigne by turnes, vntill their tearmes be done:
Bloud, in the
spring, from
three till
nine each
Morne:
How the Humors raigne in mans body
Choler, from thence, till
three in th'after
noone
In
sommer-season: Then
Flegme in his turne
From thence till
nine at night doth rule the
sterne
In
Autumne: then sad
Melancholy thence
Till
three next
Morne, when
VVinter doth returne:
Thus in their
turnes they haue preheminence,
Till
Time turne vs, and them with vs from hence.
And as these
humors haue their turnes in time,
How, & when the Planets rule in mans body.
So rule the
Planets in like consequence:
For, by the
Moone is governed our
Prime
That's
hot and
moist, but the preheminence
The
moisture hath; So our
Adolescence
Is swaid by
VVit-infusing
Mercury
Being
hot and
moist, yet doth more
heate dispense,
Which tunes the
voices Organes erst too hy,
Making them speake with more profundity.
Thē,
youth (our third age)
Loues Queene, Venus swaies
Bee'ng
hot and
dry, but yet more hot, then drie;
In this we
VVantons play, in
Venus plaies
And offer
Incense to a rowling
eie:
Bright
Sol (the gloriou'st
Planet in the
sky)
Doth rule our
Manhoode which is temperate:
Hee
Author is of
race and
gravity;
Of haplesse life this is the happi'st state,
Which they hold long'st that are most moderate.
And lastly
old age being
cold, and
dry,
By al-wise
Iupiter is governed,
Author of
Councell, Craft, and
Policy:
VVhich
Age againe in two's distinguished,
The first
yonge old age may be Christened:
The last
Decrepit is, and so is call'd;
Which
Saturn rules with
Scepter of dul
lead:
This
Age to
Life like
Death, is stil enthrall'd,
Thus in our life the
Planetts are enstall'd.
Precise dates assigned to severall changes of mans age in his life.
And to these
Ages, dates precize we giue;
As
Child-hood from our Birth till
thirteene yeares:
Adolescēce, frō thēce to twēty fiue:
And
youth frō thēce til
fiue, & thirty weares;
Frō whēce, til
fiftie Mannes-estate apperes:
And to the rest
old-age we doe assigne;
But
one his yeares thē other better beares,
As
time their temprature doth enterteigne,
Therfore the
temprature should
age designe.
For al men
cold &
dry are old, though yonge,
Psal. 31.11.
Some yong at
sixtie, some at
forty old;
In growing old the youthful
Sanguin's lōge,
For it doth store of
heate, and
moisture hold:
The
Melancholy, being
dry and
cold,
Is aged soone: So
women more then
men
Soone meete with
age, which makes some be so bold
(As vnder
Paint the face.
Coulor that they are
wo-men)
To keepe off Age till they be
Bis puer.
yong agen.
The Aire wee breath may hastē our age.
The
Aire we breath doth beare an Ore herein,
And being subtil moves the simple
Minde;
For, never yet was
foole a
Florentine,
(As by the wise hath well observed byn)
[Page 67]So subtill is the
Aire hee draweth in:
The
influences of malignant
Starres,
Causes of the Aiers putrification & consequently of grosse witte.
Vales, Caves, Stanckes, Moores, and
Lakes that never ryn
Carion, and
filth, all such the
Aier marres,
Which killes the
Corpes, and
vvitts Carreër barres.
From
Regions, VVinds, &
stāding of the
place
Where we abide, come the
Aires qualities;
Vnder the
Poles (the
Sun nere showing
face
But as a
stranger) the
Aire so doth freeze
That whosoever breathes it, starving dies:
And in the Torrid
Zone it is so hott
That
flesh and
Bloud (like flaming
fire) it fries,
And with a
Cole-blacke beautie it doth blott,
Curling the
Haires vpon a
vvyry knott.
The
winds, though
Aire, yet
Aire do turne & wind;
The passions of the Aier do affect our Minds.
VVhich Passions of the
Aire, our
sp'rits affect;
These by the
Nose and
Mouth a waie doe finde
To
Braines, and
Hart, and there their
kindes effect,
And as they are, make them, in some respect:
For, where the
VVindes be cold and violent,
(As where rough
Boreas doth his
Throne erect)
There are the
People stronge, and turbulent,
Rending the
Sterne of
civill government.
The situation of the
place likewise
The situation of the Place makes the Aier good or badde.
The
Aire therein doth wel or ill dispose;
If to the
Sea, or Southerne winde it lies,
It's humid, putrifactiue, & too close:
So fares it in
fatt grounds (
Slouthes chiefe repose)
The
Sandy grounds doe make it
hott and
dry;
As
cold, and
moist it is, that
Fennes inclose,
But
cleere &
piercing on the
Mountaines hy;
Thus
Place with
Aire doth chāg our quality.
Foode good or badd, helpes or hinders Witte.
Of no lesse vertue are our
Alements,
Which
VVinde, &
Aire, vnto our
sp'rits prepare,
VVho are conformed to those
Condimentes;
Then
fine they be, if most
fine be our
fare:
The
Goodnesse, Quality, and
Time of yeare,
Vse, Order, Appetite, and
Quantity,
The
Howre and
Age, these
nyne require our care
If we desire to liue heere healthfully,
And make the
Soule aboue her soule to fly.
The soone-concocted
Cates good
iuyce affoording
And but few
excrements, are those alone
That make the
mind to boord, when
Bodi's boording,
If temp'ratly the
stomacke take each one:
These in the
Braines base
witts doe oft enthrone:
For, these the
Mouth prepareth for the
Maw,
VVhere be'ng concocted, to the
Liver runne;
From whence, a sanguine tincture they doe draw,
Then to the
Soules Courts hie by
Natures lawe.
The
Hart's the lower house, the
The Hart & Brayne.
head the hie;
(The
Roomes whereof we did discribe whil-ere)
Where once appearing they are
wing'd to fly,
And in their flight the
Soule and
Body steere
With motion such as both
Coelestiall were:
What mervell is it then, though
Geese some be
For want of
Capons, that would
Cocks appeare
(
Cocks of the
Game) and chaunt melodiouslee,
If with their kinde, their
Commons did agree.
How subtill doth a simple cupp of
VVine
Make the
Soules faculties, and their
effects?
It makes their divine natures more divine,
And with a world of
Ioy the
Hart affects
[Page 69]Which,
Sorrow though in panges of
Death reiects:
Hence comes it that some
Captaines doe ca
[...]rowse
When they must
Wine moderatly taken chee
[...]es
[...]he Ha
[...]t & spi
[...]it
[...].
Combate with contrary
Sects,
To heate the cold
bloud and the
spirits rowse,
And so make
Courage, most couragious.
But here (as erst was saide) some over drinke,
While they desire in fight to over-doe;
On nought but
woūds, &
bloud, they speake, & think,
While
Healthes goe roūd, &
braines goe roūder too;
VVyne-making
Bloud to
VVine &
Bloud them wooe.
But
Nequid nimis, is the
List wherein
Courage should combate, and the
Barre whereto
Valor should venter, what is more is
sinne,
Which by the
wise and
Valiant damn'd hath bin.
Drincke hath
three; offices, The
first assists
3. Offices of Drinke.
Concoction, for in it is boil'd the
meate:
The
next, to mixe the
foode the
first disgests:
The
Last, to bring it to the
Livers heate,
There to be made redd-hott, & apt to
[...]leete:
Now when the
Current is too violent,
It beares awaie (vntimely)
small, and
greate,
So crossing
Nature in her kinde intent,
She back
Vomitt
[...].
retires not knowing what she mēt.
Then
meate must soak, not in the
Stomacke swimme,
If
Nature duely we desire to please;
For, when the
Stomack's
Gluttony & Drunken
[...]s
[...]e are he horrible sepulture
[...] of mans reason & iudgment.
full aboue the brimme,
Tyde tarries none, how ere it may disease
And
Nature drowne in those vnruly
Seas:
Breath most corrupt,
behaviour more then most,
And
Mind much more then most, is made by these;
Then how corrupt are
they that of it boast?
So much corrupt, they may infect an
Hoast.
Its said of one,, that did help to behead
The mounting
Monastries that deckt this
land,
That he (at last) lost his all-wittie
Head
For
words he spake, to which he could not stand,
Nor stand to speake,
VVine having vpperhand:
Who vsd (as
Fame reports) his
wits t'refine,
To let them often rest at
VVines commande;
But
wit abused, by abuse of
VVine
Abusd One that forc'd
Law to force his fine.
Now as a moderation in these things
With
Iudgements choise in their varieties,
To
Soule, and
Body, health, and
glorie brings;
Temperate exercise available to minde and bodie.
So both are bound to temp'rate
exercise
For helping them to vse their faculties:
For without
health the same were hindered,
And
health from hence as from an
helpe doth rise;
For holesome
labour breakes those
humors head
By which the
enemies of
health are led.
Natural heate
It helpes the
heate that helpeth all the
parts;
The
Spirits it quickens, and puts ope the
pores;
Whereby each loathsome
excrement departs
As at so many straight wide-open
dores:
Our
limbes it strengthens and our
breath restores:
The
morning walkes to the
intestines send
The
first digestions filth (which
kinde abhorres)
And make the
seconds to the
bladder wend,
So
labour lets our
sicknesse, so, our
end.
All
travell tendes to
rest, and
rest to
ease;
Then must the
bodie travell to this
end:
The Sons of Adam, borne to labour.
The
Spirits travell hath respect to these;
For
idle Spirits that
actiue Sp'rit offend
[Page 71]That for such
ease a world of
woe doth send:
Yet naught was made that was not made to rest;
But nought was made to rest vntill the
end:
For
Heau'n, Faith, Man, Beast, Fish, Fowle, & the rest
Doe travell,
in fine to be rest-possest.
Yet
Nature hath ordained a
repose
Which we call
rest for
Man, which
rest is
sleepe;
The
cause whereof from the
Braines cheefly floes,
When mounting
vapors in their moisture steepe
Doe
humors wax, and in the
Nerves doe creepe;
And so their
conducts close, which shuts the
eies;
Then rests the
corpes in death-like
darknesse deepe,
And Spirits
animal Rest doth surprise:
So, are they said to rest vntill they rise.
This makes the
head so heavy after meate,
The fumes ascending make the
head descend;
For they like
hammers on the
braines doe beate,
Til they haue hammerd
humors in the end,
The weight whereof doth cause the
head to bend:
Yet sober sleepes, in
place, and
season fit
Doe comfort
Nature, and her
hurts amend;
The
Spirits it quickens, and awakes the
wit,
For
hart must sleepe, when the
head wanteth it.
Dead
sleepe, Deathes other name and Image true,
Doth quiet
Passion, calme
Griefe, Time deceiue;
Who pay'ng the debt that is to
Nature due
(Like
death) in quittance thereof doth receiue
Supply of
powres, that her of powre bereaue:
So
sleepe her
foes wants friendly doth supply,
And in her
wombe doth wakefull
thoughts conceiue,
Making the
Minde beyond it selfe to spie,
For, doubtlesse
Dreames haue some divinitie.
Divinity oft in dreames
For, as the
influence of
Heavens leames
Frames diverse
formes in matter corporall:
A natural reason, for the divinity of Dreames.
So of like
influence visions and
Dreames
Are printed in the
powre fantasticall;
The which
power being instrumental,
By
Heav'n disposd to bring forth some effect,
Hath greatest vigor in our
sleepes extreames;
For when our
mindes doe corporall cares neglect
That influence doth freely them affect,
And so our
Dreames oft future haps proiect.
VVatching oremuch, oremuch doth
Nature wrong,
It blunts the
braines, and
sense debilitates;
Dulleth the
Spirits, breedes
crudities among;
Makes the
head heavie,
Body it abates,
And
kindely heate it cooles, or dissipates:
Over much watching debilitates our wittes.
Yet thorny
cares, or stings of ceaslesse
Smart,
May keepe out
sleepe without the
senses Gates,
(By pricking them as it were, to the
hart)
Till
vitall Sp'rits from
senses quite depart.
Those
Chieftaines, on whose
cares depend the
crowns
(The waighty
crownes, on their as waighty
cares)
Of mighty
Monarches, and
their owne renownes,
Two
burdens which in one who ever beares,
This waking care breaketh the sleepe, as a great sickenesse breakes the sleepe. Eccle 31 2.
Must night, and day, vse
hands, legs, eies, and
eares:
These watch, yea sleeping wake for in their sleepes
The
point on which their
harts are fixt, appeares,
And through their closed
eies their
minds eie peeps,
To looke to
that which them from
slumber keepes.
Their
sleepes are short, but were they short, & sweet,
[...]re enemy
[...]o sle
[...]pe and
[...]epe cō
[...]or
[...] of Care.
Nature would longer sweetly
life support:
[...]ut in their
sleepes with
wakfull thoughts they meete;
That make their
sleepes vnsweet, and yet as short;
[Page 73]Which must perforce make
Nature all amort:
Care a Cāker to Min
[...]e and Body.
Yet as they were all
Minde, and
Body none,
That had noe feeling of the
Bodies hurt,
That
Minde (all mind) though
Corpes the while doth grone,
Makes
flesh all hardnesse brooke, as it were
Stone.
Such force hath
worldly glory (though but vaine)
To make men, for her love, themselue
[...] to hate,
Who for desire of her, their strength doe straine
Farre, farre aboue the pitch of mortall state,
And paine in sense, to
sense doe captivate:
Though
pains wake sēse, yet sense doth waking sleep,
Dreaming on
Glory in the lapp of
Fate;
So
paine frō
sense, doth paine with pleasure keepe,
While
sense is moūting
Honors Mountaine steepe.
VVhere
Glory sitts enthron'd (Coelestial
Dame)
Surrounded with a Ring of
Diadems,
VVith face (whose beaming-beautie seemes to flāe)
Darting in simling wise those blissefull
beames
On
those that for her
The laboure of like Bodies be not a like painfull. For glory in a Prince makes the laboure lighter then that of a Pesant, because he wot
[...]s it wil be notable.
loue brooke all
extreames:
VVhat
Sense hath sense being so beheavened,
And carried from it selfe on
pleasures Streames?
But as entranc'd with ioy, it must seeme deade,
And feele no paine in
Minde or
Body bredd.
If then
Vaine-glories loue shall so subdue
The
sense to
sense that feeling all annoy,
Its arm'd to brooke the same by
glories view,
And the more
griefe is felt, the greater
ioy;
(Yea though the
grife the
sēse doth quight destroy)
VVhat shall the loue of
Glory infinite
Make
sense endure, if
sense her powers imploie
To apprehend it, as its requisite?
Such love should hold the paines of
Hell too light.
When vnconceaved
Ioy dilates the
Hart
To th'vtmost reach of his capacitie,
When
sense no leasure hath to thinke on
smart,
Being so busied with
felicity
That
soule, and
sense are ravished thereby;
What marvell then though
fire doth comfort such,
(Although with quēchlesse flames their flesh it fry)
Sith that much
Inward ioy annihilates outward paine.
pain their
ioy makes more thē much
And
paine, that
sense can feele, no
sense can touch.
This made a woodden
Esay the Prophet so marti
[...]ed.
Sawe sweete to the
flesh
wherewith it sundred was in savage wise:
This makes the burning
S. Lawrence.
Grediorne flesh refresh
That on the same in hellish manner fries,
This makes
paine pleasure, and
Hell Paradise.
Then give me, ô good
giver of all
good,
An
Hart that may ore
paine thus signiorize,
For thy deere
love; then with my deerest blood
Ile wash the
Earth, and make more
Saints to budd.
When
Stones (as thicke as
haile) from hellish
hands
Battr'd that blessed
S. Stephen. Act 7.56,58.
Proto-Martyres braine,
The
sight he saw his
senses so commands,
That, as the
Stones did fal the
sense to paine,
It deem'd that
Grace on it did
pleasure raine:
And that deere
blood, like-worthlesse
water shedd,
Did make the springing
Church to sprout amaine;
One Martyr begets many.
For that no sooner was this
Martyr dead
But many (as from him) came in his steede.
And that the
Elements doe loose their force
(
[...]hat by such
losse their
Lord might
lovers win)
It wel appeares; for, did he not divorce
The heate from
fire, which his deere
Saints were in?
[Page 75]Some too wel knew that this perform'd hath bin:
For out it flew and brent their
enemies,
And where it first began, it did begin
The powre thereof with powre to exercise,
Dan. 3.22,23.
To shew
his powre, that loth'd their sacrifice.
NOw, to retire from whence our
Rimes doe range,
And touch the
soule, &
minds mind at the
soule;
We see the
bodies state the
minde may change;
So may the
minde the
bodies state controule;
Thus they the state of one another rule:
The
soules soule is the
minde, and the
mindes minde
Is that, where
Reason doth her
lawes enrowle:
Yet fuming
Passions both of them may blinde,
When
body, with them both are ill inclin'd.
Phillipides, that
comedies compil'd
Orecoming one that with him did contend
In that light
Art, (when hope was quite exil'd)
Sorrow doth occu
[...]ie the the place of extreame ioy. Petrarch.
A suddaine ioy wrought his as suddaine end.
Like
fate did one
Diagoras attend,
Who, see'ng his three
sonnes at
Olimpus crown'd
For
deedes there done (which
All did much cōmend)
Extreme ioy (being suddaine) is enemy to nature.
He them embracing, straite fell dead to ground,
Because his
ioy was more then
hart could bound.
As extreame suddaine
ioy doth kill the
hart,
Leaving it bloudlesse which is
ioies effect
Simil.
(For ioy sends bloud amaine to ev'ry part)
So, extreame
griefe the
hart may so affect
(Or suddaine feare) that
life may it reiect;
For both revoke the
sp'rites, bloud, and
kind heate,
And to
hartes Center doe the same direct,
Which place bee'ng little, and their throng so great,
Expels the
Vitall spirits from their
seate.
Marc Lepidus, divorced from his
wife
Whom he intirely lou'd, with extreame griefe
(For it conceav'd) he quickly lost his life;
So
loue reft
life, that erst was
lifes reliefe,
For
loue of that his
woe was fountaine chiefe.
So, with a
suddaine feare haue many died
Which name I neede not, sith I would be briefe:
By it the
haires haue suddainely bin died,
As by graue
writers is exemplifide.
Of no lesse force (though lesse the reason be)
Is
shamefastnesse, in some of mighty
minde:
Shame may bring life to confusion in generous spirits.
One
Diodorus died because that hee
Could not assoile a
Question him assign'd:
The like of
Homer we recorded finde;
Who died with shame for being so vnsound
Not to be able (like one double blinde)
Quod capio perdo, quod non capio mihi seruo.
To answere that, base
Fishers did propound;
So sense of
shame did
sense and life confound.
These
Passions are the
suffrings of the
soule,
Body & Soule
That make the
Inne to suffer with the
Ghest:
For,
Perturbations both togither rowle
Here, there, and ev'ry where, as they thinke best;
Heate naturall
Kinde-heate they fire, or quench with their vnrest:
For, some (as all obserue) haue died with
ioy;
And some with
griese, haue bin
life-dispossest:
For in extreames, they
Nature so annoy,
As (being suddaine) her they quite destroy.
Yet
Mirth in measure, kindly warmes the
bloud,
And spreads the
Sp'rits, b'inlarging of the
hart:
This
mirth in measure is the only
moode
That cuts the throat of
Physicke, and her
Art,
[Page 77]And makes her
Captaines from her
coulors start;
Phisition
[...].
It makes our
yeares as many as our
haires:
Mirth makes mans yeare
[...] as many as hi
[...] haires.
Then, on
earths stage who play a meery
part,
Shall much more more thē much offend their
heires
By overlong p
[...]olonging their desires.
Then, should I liue by
Nature overlong,
For I to
mirth by
nature am too prone;
But
Accident in me doth
nature wrong,
By whom vntimely shee'l be overthrone:
For
Melancholy in my
Soule inthrones
Herselfe gainst
Nature, through crosse
Accident,
Where shee vsurpeth, that is not her owne;
And
Nature makes to pine with discontent
That shee should so be reft her regiment.
Thus as the
Corpes the
qualities compound,
So are th'
Affections moist, dry, hot, and
cold,
The Affectiōs follow the qualities of the Humors.
The
last are humor'd as the
first abound:
Ioy (hot and moist) the
Sanguine most doth hold,
As
sorrow (cold and dry) possesse the
Olde.
Meane
ioie's a meane to make
men moist, and hot,
In which two
qualities Health hath her
Hold:
But
griefe the heat consumes, and
bloud doth rot,
Which
health impaires, and cuts
lifes Gordian knot.
And as meane
mirth mans age maks most extreame;
So doth it cloth the
bones with frolicke
flesh:
For, to the
partes it makes the
bloud to streame,
Which makes them grow, & doth thē ioy-refresh;
This
mirth the
hart must haue when
head is fresh,
For wyny
mirth proceedeth from
excesse;
Sicknesse i
[...] (as Seneca saith) the chastisement of intemperāce.
And all
excesse doth but make
nature nesh,
Vnable to endure
times long processe,
How ere it may spend
time in
drunkennesse.
This correspondence then twixt
flesh, and
sp'rite,
Should make our
Mouth the House of
Temperance;
For the
Corpes qualities will answere right
Her rule of Diet; Then
intemperance,
The
Head and
Hart doth odiously entrance:
The Har
[...]s affects begett the Mindes
The
Hartes affects, produce the
Heades effects,
Which make the
Soule and
Bodies concordance:
Then sith the
Bodie breeds the
Soules affects,
The
Soule should feede the same with right
respects.
Respect of
Health, respect of
name, and
fame,
Depending on our moderation,
Should be of force to make vs vse the same;
But, when the
Bodies depravation
Toucheth the
soule, and bothes damnation,
All these
respectes should (being things so deere)
Inflame
Desires immoderation
Coldly to vse
hott wines &
belly cheere,
For belly-
gods are but the
Divells
Deere are fatted but to be killed; So Epicures &c.
Deere.
Sith
sicknesse then in
bodie, and in
soule,
From
tempers ill, and
ill affections flo,
VVitt ought
VVills appetites to over-rule
VVhen they (to follow
sense) frō
Reason go;
And bring them to the bent of
wisdoms Bo:
For, sith our
soules by
Knowledge things discerne,
From whence the
will hath pow'r of
willing too,
The power of The will is derived from Knowledge.
If
Knowledge then be to them both a
Sterne,
They should do nought but what of her they learne.
And so they doe, but their
Guide being blinde
Of the right Eie, no mervel though they runne
Too much on the left hand from place assign'd,
Directed by
Delight, the
senses sunne:
[Page 79]But
Cloudes of
sinne our
Knowledge over-runne,
Which make her run awrie in rightest
vvaies,
Whereby our silly
soules are oft vndunne,
VVhen as shee weenes to winne immortall praise,
And crowne her
Craft with everlasting
Baies.
Who learnes a
trade, must haue a time to learne;
For without
time an
Habit is not gain'd:
So diverse
skills the
soule cannot discerne,
Vntill they be by
exercize obtain'd,
Pr
[...]ctise the Moth
[...]r of Habit.
For by it onely
Habittes are attain'd:
VVhich
Habitts stretch not onely to our
Deedes,
But to our
suffrings, beeing wrong'd, or pain'd,
For
Customes force another
Nature breedes,
And pyning
soule with
patience it feedes.
Vnto a
soule impatient (seldome crost)
Each
Daie a
yeare, each
yeare an
Age doth seeme;
The Soule is possest in patience, if shee possesse patience.
But a meeke
soule with
troubles often tost,
The
time, though long, doth ordinarie deeme;
For
Time and
Troubles she doth light esteeme:
This well appeares in
sicknesse, (though most ill)
At first we still doe worst of it misdeeme,
But staying long with vs, we make our
vvill
Familiar with it, so endure it still.
Afflictions water cooles the heate of
sinne,
And brings soule-health; But at the first like
frost
It
soule benummes, as it were starv'd therein,
And
sense, and
Life and
sp'rit thereby were lost:
The
Crosse doth quell to
Hell the seldome crost:
Hence is it,
Christ doth with his
Crosse acquaint
Those that be his, whereof they glory'ng boast,
For that the
Crosse wel borne creates the
Saint,
Frst the crosse and then the Crowne.
As it to
Fiendes transformeth them that faint.
Affliction, Ladie of the happy life,
(And Queene of mine, though my life happlesse be)
Give my
Soule endlesse
peace, in endlesse
strife,
For thou hast powre to giue them both to me,
Because they both haue residence in thee:
Let me behold my best
part in thine
Eies,
That so I may mine
imperfections see;
And seeing them I may my selfe despise,
For that
selfe-love, doth from
selfe-liking rise.
Enfold me in thine
Armes, and with a kisse
Of coldest comfort, comfort thou my
hart;
Breath to my
Soule, that mortified is,
Immortall
pleasure in most mortall
Smart:
Be ieloues of me, play a
Louers part:
Keepe
Pleasure from my
sense, with sense of
paine,
And mixe the same with pleasure by thine
Arte;
That so I may with
ioy the
griefe sustaine,
Which
ioye in
griefe by thy deere loue I gaine.
When from our
selves we are estranged quite,
(Though it be strange, we so estrang'd should be)
Thou mak'st vs
Affliction being familier with vs, doth make vs most familier with our selues.
know our
selves at the first sight
And bring'st vs to our
selves, our selues to see;
So that we throughly know our
selues by
As a man cā not know him selfe, if hee know not God so he cannot know God well if hee know not him selfe. So inseperable are these knowledges
thee:
But bright
Voluptu'snesse doth blinde our
Eyes
That we can nothing see, (and lesse foresee)
But what within her gaudy
Bozome lies,
Being a
Mappe of glorious
miseries.
Pleasure, thou
VVitch to this bewitching
VVorld,
Eare-charming
Siren, sold to sweetest
Synne,
Wherwith our
Hartes (as with Cords) is ensnarl'd,
That breake the
Cords we cannot being in,
[Page 81]How blest had we bin, had'st thou never
bin?
For hadst not thou bin,
Griefe had nere had
beeing,
Sith at thine end, all
sorrow doth
The end of worldly pleasure is the beginning of Payne.
begin,
And it with thee hath too good-ill agreeing:
That's leagu'd in
ill, and in
good disagreeing.
Observaunce, looke about with thy right
Eye,
View this
VVorlds Stage, and they that play thereon,
And see if thou canst any
one espie,
That plaies the
wanton being wo-begon;
Or in
VVealth wall'wing, plaies not the
VVanton:
Wealth makes men wanton.
See how deepe
sighes pull in each panting
syde
Of the first sort, in all their Action,
And how the second sort no where abide,
As standing on no ground through wanton pride.
The
first, with downe-cast lookes stil eie the
Mould,
As waying whence they came, & where they must:
The
second, with high lookes the
Cloudes behold,
To see how they for
place and
grace doe thrust,
Like these vngratious proude
Oppressors iust:
Quiett and
sadd the
first doe still appeare,
The otherm
Ample fortunes, haue as ample passiōs.
madde with
mirth, for
Prov. 13.10.
quarells lust;
Affliction thus to
God doth
Soules indeere,
When
welfare makes them to the
Devill deere.
Revile mee
vvorld, say I am
Sincke of
shame,
Nay worse then
Ill it selfe, (if worse might be)
Thou dost not wrong me
VVorld, for so I am,
Although I am the worse (dam'd
VVorld) for thee:
Spitt out thy
fame-confounding spight at me,
Make me so vile that I my selfe may
Our
[...]nemies will tell vs wherein wee are faulty which friends will forbeare
[...] so may we profit by our foes
[...]
hate,
That so I may to my
Reformer flee;
And be'ng reform'd, I may still meditate
On that pure
Minde, that mended my
Minds state.
Then though
Affliction be no welcome
Ghest
Vnto the
world (that loues nought but her
weale)
Of me, therefore shee shalbe loved best,
Because to me shee doth the
VVorld reveale,
Which
worldly welfare would from me conceale:
Affliction is the best Tutres
[...] to make vs know the World.
It is a gaineful
skill the
VVorld to know,
As they can tel that with the
VVorld doe deale,
It cost them
much ere
proofe the same doth show,
Which knowledge frō
Afflictiō streight doth flow.
And though the entrance into
Vertues way
Be straite, so strait that
few doe enter in,
Yet being entred, walke with ease we may,
For labour endes when vve doe but begin:
,,
Sweat before
Vertue lacky-like doth rin
To ope the gate of
Glory sempiterne,
That her triumphant
coach might enter in;
So outward temp'ral toile 'gets
blisse eterne
Vpon the corpes of
Vertue most interne.
Custom is another nature. Custom is overcome by
[...]ustome.
Sith
Custome then is of such liuely force
As it hath powre it
selfe to overcome,
How blest are they that doe themselues divorce
From
Custome ill, by force of good
custome:
And ten times blessed they that from the
VVombe
Accustom'd are to
Vertues straightest
VVay,
For, such by
Custome vertuous become,
Though powreful
Nature doe her selfe say nay;
For
Nature, Customes powre is forc'd t'obay.
When, the affections are called vertues or Vices.
When the
Affections Acts are
habits growne,
Then
Vertues or els
Vices are they nam'd;
A vicious
Habit's hardly overthrowne,
For our
Affection is therewith enflam'd,
[Page 83]As with the fire infernall are the
damn'd:
Who though they would, and though they anguish haue,
Yet cannot that outragious mood be ram'd,
But still they raging sin, and cannot saue
Themselues from that, that makes their griefe their graue.
A vicious
Habit is
Hels surest
Gin,
Wherewith a
Man is sold to
sinne, and
shame,
Running from
sinne to
sinne, and nought but sinne,
As
Rivers runne the same, and not the same.
Til the
mindes Iointes,
sinnes force doth so vnframe
That it becomes most loose and dissolute;
Neither regarding
heav'n, hell, shame, nor
fame,
But to liue loathsomly its resolute;
Thus
Habits ill, make
evill absolute.
But
few there are in whom all
vice concurres;
And fewer are they, that all
faults doe want;
Vnto the
worst, offences cling like
Burres;
And to the
best as to the
Adamant
The
Iron cleaues; for the
Church militant
By
nature is accompanied with
sinne;
Yet the least force of
faith partes them (I grant)
Sin inhabites, but is not habituall in the godly.
Because it cleaues but sleightly to the
skinne,
But to the
wickeds flesh its fastned in.
For as a
burre the longer it abides
Simil.
Vpon a
garment being cott'nd hy,
The more the
VVooll windes in his hooked sides:
So
sinne the longer it in
Flesh doth ly,
The faster to the same its fixt thereby.
If
Nature then
sinne soone doth entertaine,
Vse violence to
Nature by and by,
That it perforce may from the same refraine;
For what
skill cannot,
force may yet constraine.
Simil.
And as the
Burre to
VVooll so being fixt,
With
skill, or
force cannot be parted thence,
But that some part will with the
VVooll be mixt:
So,
sinne where it hath had long residence,
Will leaue
remaines there, maugre
violence:
Simil.
But
Iron from the
loadstone cleane will fall
With but a touch: and so wil
sinnes offence
From those in whom its not habitual
With but a touch of
Faith, though nere so small.
That I may touch the
Subiect of my
Rimes
More home, (though homely I the same doe touch)
And for, my travell'd
Muse might breath somtimes,
And, that the
Reader too might doe as much,
(Lest that prolixitie might make him grutch)
Here shall shee make a
stande, and looke a-backe,
Simil.
As
Riders rancke on
Steepes haue customes such
To breath their bony-
Nags, when winde they lacke,
And courage them againe like toile to take.
In knowing our soules, we know
[...]he wel-head of al our Actions.
THe knowledge of the
Soule, and of her
Powres,
Is the
well-head of
morrall-VVisedomes flood:
Hence know we al (worth knowing) that is ours,
In
body, or in
Soule, that's ill or good:
And if these
Powres be rightly vnderstoode,
We know the
founts from whēce our
Actions slow,
And from what
cause proceedeth ev'ry
moode,
Or good, or ill, and where that
cause doth grow;
Al this and more, this
knowledge makes vs know.
For in the
Soule doth shine (though
sinne-obscur'd)
By
Natures light, great light of such
science;
Whereby the
Soule is made the more assur'd
In all her
Actions, and
Intelligence;
[Page 85]Though oft deceav'd by
seeming goods pretence:
And for the
Soule is to the
body bound,
Affections therein haue their residence,
That, as with
wings, the
soule with thē might boūd,
Aboue her selfe from being
bloud y drown'd.
Wherefore shee hath
Affections of two kinds,
The Minde turns & winds the body by the Affections of the Hart.
The one eggs on, the other doe restraine,
By which the
Minde the
body turnes and windes,
As they the
mind, and
minde the
Corpes constraine:
Yet whē these
Curbs our head-strong nature paine,
It winceth with the Heele of
willfull-will;
Orethrowing those
Affects that doe it reigne,
And in
extremities it runneth still,
Which is the
Race of
Ruine, Rest of
Ill.
This comes to passe when as we overpasse
The
bounds of
Nature, by our Natures vice;
And in some one
excesse we do surpasse,
Desiring more then
Nature may suffice,
To which our corrupt natures vs intice:
For let the least
Necessity appeere
A ken from vs, (though neere so smal of price)
Little suffiseth Na
[...]ure, but nothing Opinion.
As a little Colloquintida d
[...]th marre a whole pot of pottage: so covetousnesse doth make all other vertues abhominable. The best vse of worldly things is
[...] to contemne worldly
[...] It things
[...] Plato.
We hold what els we hold, (though nere so deere)
VVorthlesse, and for that
want with woe we steere.
Hence is it that with never-ceasing toile,
And no lesse care, we traverse all this
All;
Nay, all that
All we restleslie turmoile,
And bandy (as it were) this Earthie
Ball
Past
reasons reach, to win
worlds wealth withal:
Desire of having thus still moiles the
minde,
Though
Nature be suffis'd with
pittance small;
VVhich makes vs loose our selues when wee it finde,
Sith see our selues we cannot, being blinde.
It blinds our
Eyes that seldom'st are deceav'd,
Eyes of our
Soule, that make our
Bodies see;
Then
Soule and
Bodie cannot be perceav'd,
By their owne vertue when they blinded be;
And
mine and
thine, doth sever
mee, and
thee:
Nought can content vs. Therefore the
Affects
Are in the
soule like
windes (that nere agree)
Vpon the
Sea, and worke the like effects,
Some great, some smal, yet like in most respects.
Beside the chiefe
windes and
Collaterall,
(Which are the
VVindes indeede of chiefe regard)
Sea-men observe more,
thirtie two in all,
Al which are pointed out vpon their
Carde:
But our
Minds Mapp, (though many may be spar'd)
Containeth many more
Affects then these,
All which though sett our
Minds Content to guard,
Yet sturr they vp (as
VVindes doe on the
Seas)
Vnquiet
Passions which the
Minde disease.
A simil.
When
Zephire breathes on
Thetis, she doth smile,
Shee entertaines that
gale with such content;
But, if proude
Boreas doe puffe the while,
Shee's madd with rage, and threates the
Continent;
For those proud puffes her
soule doe discontent:
So, some
Affections our
soules browes vnbend,
And other some doe sextiply each dent;
Some meanely please, some meanely doe offend,
And some doe make the
Soule her
Soule to rend.
Those that doe meanely moue,
Affections hight;
The other
Huff-snuffes
Affections move the Soule moderately, but Perturbations move her most violently.
Perturbations be;
These later rudely gainst their
Guides doe fight,
And so enfume them that they cannot see,
[Page 87]Or make them from their
Charge away to flee:
So that the soule being left without a
Guide,
And tost with
Passions that still disagree,
Doth like a Sternelesse
Shippe at randon ride
A Simil.
On mightiest
Seas, wrack-threatn'd on each syde.
For, if our
Reasons iudgment blinded be,
Th'
Affections needes must ever run
When Iudgmēt is betraid, the Affections are misguided.
awrie,
And draw with thē each
sense tumultuoslee
To offer violence to
lowe and
hye;
That
God, and
Nature, tast their tyranny:
Let but the
Hart bee
loue-sicke, and the same
Will carry
Iudgment where his
Loue doth ly;
And there confine it, setting all on flame
That offers but resistance once to name.
The lower
Iudgment in our
blood is sunck
The lower is her reach in
Reas'ns discourse;
For
Iudgmēt with our
blood may be so drūck,
That doome she cannot
better frō the
worse,
But (reeling too and fro) is reft of force.
The higher therfore, she her selfe doth reare
Therfore moderate fasting feedes the Soule.
Aboue base
Flesh &
Blood's declining course,
The more
Affections basenesse wil forbeare,
And neerer draw to that that first they were.
For,
Passions passing ore that break-neck Hill
Of
Rashnesse, ledd by
Ignorance their
guide,
By
false-Opinions Hold of
Good and
Ill
Taking their course, at last with vs abide,
While frō our selves they make our selues to slide,
So that we seeke not that sole sov'raigne
Good,
But many
Goods we seeke; which being tride
Doe but torment the
Minde with irefull
Ills takē for good, grieue the mind vpō triall.
moode,
Because they were by her mis-vnderstoode.
Had we the prudence of the
brutish kinde,
We would prevēt these
Passions Stormes with ease;
For, ere a
Storme appeares they shelter finde;
Like providence haue Sea-men on the
Seas,
VVho see them farre off, and provide for these:
So ought we, when we see a
Passion
Passion is easiest extinguished when it begins to kindle.
rise
That may the
Soule, and
Body much disease,
VVith
Moderations pow'r the same surprize,
Before it gather
head to tyrannize.
But, so farre off are we from curbing
Passion,
That wilfully we mount it, and so ride
On it a gallopp (spurr'd with
Indignation)
To all
Extreames, where
Vices all abide;
The
Divell being extreame
Passions guide:
For once whē
Reason
[...]s driven frō the
Helme,
And we twixt
Scylla and
Charibdis glide,
Ther is no hope but one should overwhelme,
And send vs straight to the infernal
Realme.
But with a prudent
Man it fares not so,
He keeps himself without th'
Affectiōs
A wise man rules, and is not ruled by his Affections.
sway;
He seekes no
good, but he it wel doth kno,
And knowing it, seekes it the rightest way:
VVe say, and misse, because we mis-asay:
VVisdom chalks out the way her selfe to find,
So that
Men cannot erre if it they waie,
Except they be (as many) wilfull blinde,
For it is straight, though strict in easie kinde.
VVisedome (the
VVell of ev'ry perfect
good)
Is that, which
wise men onely (seeking) finde;
VVhich
Constancie holdes the Hart that holds wisdōe.
constant
good they seeke in constāt moode,
And being found, most constant makes the
Minde:
[Page 89]For to the same, it selfe, it selfe doth binde:
Heerehence it is, the clowds of
Ignorance
That erst the same did naturally blinde
Away are chased, without tarriance;
For
VVisedomes Sonne, himselfe doth there advance.
Thus
good, and
ill (as erst we said) procure
The
Mindes Affects, or
Moodes, (so cald by some)
Which
good, or
evill, pure, or most impure,
Is either
past, or
present, or to
come,
To be attain'd, or not be overcome:
And, as we deeme the absence of
good, ill:
So, absent
Ill,
Ill is the privation of good.
wee deeme doth good become;
Either of which affecteth so our
VVill,
That by their meanes it is in motion still.
When any
good's propounded to the
soule,
Shee notes, shee likes, and lastly it doth loue
[...]
But in her
Mouth shee often it doth rowle,
That so her
Pallate may thereof approue,
Before it can her
Soules affection moue:
This motion of possessed
good is
Ioy;
But
good to come (which we doe long to proue)
Is call'd
Desire,
Good is the obiect of loue and Desire.
which loue doth still imploy
To seeke that
good which it would faine enioie.
If
Ill proposed be, its call'd
Offence,
Because the
soule offended is thereby;
If it abides,
Hate doth her
soule incense;
For shee a lasting
ill hates mortally,
As that which most her
soule doth damnifie:
And, as from present
Ill, Griefe doth aspire:
So,
Feare proceedes from
Ill farre off or ny:
The
moode gainst present
Ill is sinnelesse
Ire,
To bee angry with evill, is good.
And
Fa
[...]th, and
Hope, gainst future
Ill conspire.
All which
Affects haue others vnder them;
For
Rev'rence, Pitty, and
Benevolence,
Spring out of
Loue, (as
Braunches from the
Stemme)
From
Ioy, Delight; Dislike, from
sorrowes sense;
And in
Desire, Hope hath her residence:
Pride is a mō ster compounded of many Affections.
But
Prid's a
Monster, for shee is compos'd
Of
Self-conceit, Desire, Ioy, Impudence;
These, and such like in
Pride are oft disclos'd,
For in her
wombe they restlesse are repos'd.
And, as
Affections one another breede,
By one another so are they restrain'd:
Ioy woundeth
Griefe, &
Griefe makes
Ioy to bleede;
And so the rest are by the rest refrain'd,
As by the
Stronge the
vveaker are constrain'd:
A Simil.
As when curst
Thetis chiding knitts the Brow,
Her
Billowes proud, that eithers pride disdaine,
Thrusts out each other: So, when
Passions flow,
The
greater doe the
lesser overthrow.
A Simil.
And oft it fares in our
Mindes Common-weale,
As in a
Civill-warre the case doth stande;
Where no
mann's careful of his
Countries heale,
Or who of right should al the rest commaund,
But follow him that hath the strongest hand:
So, in
Affections fight ther's no respect
To the
Mindes good, or how it should be scand,
But (inconsiderate) they both reiect,
And doe as strongest
Passion doth
Where Passion raignes Reason obayeth.
direct.
The
Hart, the Hold where these
Pow'res are inclos'd,
Heereby is vext; for, if it doe incline
To those
Affections that are worst dispos'd,
Its inly griv'd, els
Ioy the same doth line,
[Page 91]And with the same doth face the
Face in fine;
But, if sadd
sorrow doe the
Hart surprise,
It doth deface the face and make it pyne;
Looking like
Languishment through both the
Eyes,
For through the
The Eie is the Index of the Minde.
Eyes, our Eye the
Hart espies.
This direct
Index of the
Minde, the
Eyes
Doth oft bewraie what
Reason doth conceale;
For wil yee, nil yee, we shal see thereby
What's well, or ill, in the
Mindes common-weale:
Eccl. 13.26.
Our
Lookes, our
Falshoode truely doe reveale,
Whereby oft
lives and
liberties are lost;
Examin'd
Theeves
Confounded looks bewray mēs lewdnes.
confesse that they did steale
By their confused
lookes, with horror tost:
Thus
Count'naunce oft putts vs to double cost,
It
Lyvings costs, to hold it beeing hy,
It costs our
lives, when we it cannot hold;
We cannot hold it when through it we dye;
And two
Proppes hold it high,
Silver and
Gold,
For which oure lives, and livinges oft are sold:
For too lowe State too false doth make the hands,
Which in the
Countenance wee oft behold,
Through which we die; and State that highly stands
Lands must vphold; So, it costs
life and
lands.
Thus
Ioy and
Sorrowe send with equal pace
True
tokens of their presence in the
Hart,
(By
Natures force conducted) to the
Face;
Where they the powr's convince of
Reasons Arte,
And in the
The countenāce showes how the Hart is aff
[...]cted
[...]
Front with force they play their part:
If in the
Hart, Griefe be predominant,
The browes wil bend as if they felt the smart;
If
Ioy, the face wil seeme therefore to vant,
Then how
Hart fares,
Fooles are not ignorant.
That
Man is truely wise as
Man may bee,
That can beare
weale, &
woe, with like aspect;
There may be such, but, such I nere could see;
Yet good
mens countenance I much respect,
But of their goodnes nere saw that
effect:
Let
Stoicks giue for praecepts what they list,
This vertue may (perhapps) be their
defect;
For though
Affections force they can resist,
Yet they'l prevaile whē
Natures powres assist.
And
weakling that I am, how apt am I
To martial al my
Passions in my face;
Not to dissemble, is not to lyue.
I oft haue tride, and yet I doe but trie,
To keepe them in, in their conceaving
place,
Dissembling so
Discretions fowle disgrace:
But as I cannot colour my
defects,
So, can I wel dissemble in no case;
Which is the
cause of many badd
effects,
For none (though nere so vaine) this
vaine affects.
Teares are the
Tokens of a Passion'd
Soule,
That
Hart for
Loue somtimes sends to the Eies,
And oft they witnes there
Ioy, Paine, or
Dole,
But how so ere, from
Passion strong they rise;
Which
Passion in
Compassion often lies:
Mine
Eies are kyn (too neere of kyn) to these,
Which, though my
Spirit doth it much despise,
Yet doe they turne mine
Eyes too oft to
Teares quench the
[...]e of immod
[...]ate Passiō.
Seas,
To drowne
Harts Passion and to give it ease.
But blessed were I if mine
Eyes could flowe
With
Teares of
Pittie seeing the distrest;
But much more blest, had I then to bestow
And franckly giue, then were I treble blest;
[Page 93]In
Teares, in
wealth, and in
both so addrest:
My
Secret to my selfe, I blesse
Him ay
For being no worse, though badd I be at best;
The lesse I speake of what I feele that way,
The more I feele his
grace my
thoughts to sway.
He, Fount of goodnesse (holie be his name)
Was often seene (when he as man was seene)
To weepe, and seem'd delighted with the same,
Seeing the
VVorld (through his
Teares) stil oreseene,
That might by his
example blest haue beene:
Who never was observ'd to laugh, or iest,
Either in
Manhood, or when
yeares were greene,
At
merry-meetings, or at
vveddings feast;
Showing thereby what
moode fitts
Vertue best.
If
Ioy at any time had toucht his
Soule,
(As when his words had made a
Proselite)
He (only wise) would wisely it controule,
For that this
moode with
Mirth is too light for the gravity of Maiestie.
Maiesty do
[...]h fight,
Which in his
Person was enthron'd by right:
This we admire as that we cannot doe,
For, we in pleasures vaine so much delight,
That
Ioy may make vs
madd, and
kill vs too:
For
Ioy, or
Griefe can our
hart-stringes vndoe.
Thus when our
Teares doe testifie our ruth,
We neede not rue, or of them be asham'd;
For,
Vertue therein her owne selfe ensuth,
When with
selfe-love her
Soule is most inflam'd,
Which selfe-loue burns the
Soul yet nere is
Vertues self-loue alone is Vertuous.
blam'd:
Wherefore such
Teares, and
Teares effus'd for
sinne,
Is wyne of
Angels, so by
Angells nam'd;
Then blessed are those
Founts that never lyn
To send forth
streames, that
Angells glory in.
VVhen
sighes for
sinne ascend
[...]
Mercy descends,
And in the
rise, their flight anticipates;
Grace centreth
sighes that
Mercy comprehends,
But
sighes from
sinne ascending
Mercie hates;
Sighes for, and from
sinne, are vnequall
mates:
From sinne, none but sighes sinneful can arise;
But
sighes for
sinne high
grace consociates,
The kingdom of heaven suffers violence; and th
[...] violent take it by force Mat. 11. 12.
And did not
Mercie stay them in the
rise,
They would with violence the
Heav'ns surprise.
The Hart cō ceaues two kindes of Ioy or Griefe.
Two kindes of
Ioy or
Griefe the
Hart conceaues,
For
Good, or
Ill, possessed, or future;
The name of
Hope, the later
Ioy receaues,
Which of some
good to come doth vs assure;
The latter
Griefe doth
Feare in vs procure
Of
Ill to come, which we with
Griefe expect:
So,
Ioy, and
Hope, or
Griefe, and
Feare in powre
Are much alike, their
ods Time doth effect,
And take their
names as they doe
Time respect.
Hope time to come respects, bred by
Desire,
Desire of
good, wherein we
Ioie by
Hope;
Likelyhood is the life of hope touching mundane matters.
Hope hath no helpe of science but intire
Rests on
coniecture, which to
doubt lies ope,
And
likelyhood giues her her vtmost scope:
Yet
Hope that's fixt on that all-working
VVord
That gaue
Earth being, and the
Heav'nly Cope,
Excludes
Coniecture, and is so assur'd,
As if that hopt for,
Time did straite afford.
Then no true
Ioy can
hope accompany,
That hath but
likelyhood for her best stay;
For such
hope, Posse evermore doth eie,
Which ere it comes to
Esse, slides away:
Behold a possibilitie of faile;
Which must of force our
hope sometimes dismay;
Then
Feare a shaking
hope must needes assaile,
And
hope must shake, that
crosse events may quaile.
Such is the
VVickeds most assured hope,
The hope of the impious is full of feare.
Who
Ancor it on transitorie
Toyes;
They feare the cracking of that
cable Rope
That holds them to their
hopes expected ioies;
Contingencie their constan'st hope annoies;
Which ay is constant in vnconstancie:
And oft them with their groundlesse hope destroies;
Which fils their hopes with dire perplexity,
And lines their
ioies with lasting
miserie.
But
hope that hath for
obiect certaine things
(As those which
Truthes nere-failing
word assures)
In great'st
distresse great consolation brings,
And like good
sauce an appetite procures,
Griefe to disgest, as long as life endures:
This
hope makes
harts to hold that els would breake;
And harts almost quite broken shee recures,
And when our
foes by force our ruine seeke,
Innocencie dreades no danger.
She giues vs strēgth to weene their force too weake.
Shee holds the
powres of
hell in high contempt,
And makes a iest of temp'ral powre or paine;
From all
annoy of both shee is exempt,
For in
Griefes bowels shee doth
ioie retaine;
As Ionas did in the VVhales intertaine:
The
aire shee striketh with so strong a
winge
Hopes winges are pennipotent.
That
aire, or
fire, the force cannot restraine,
But vp shee will through both, and ev'ry thing
That lets her from the
place of her biding.
Nay, she with such resistlesse
wings doth flie,
That shee her selfe her selfe doth oft surmount;
The Patriarck Abraham.
The
Faithfuls Father made her so to stie,
And diverse other
Saintes of lesse account;
Being on her
VVings she, maugre
force, wil mount,
Who, through the ten-fold
heav'ns (though thick & hard)
Cā glide with ease, as
Fish do through a
foūt,
Nor by the
high'st himselfe can shee be bard,
Gen. 32.26.28
But will prevaile, as it with
Iacob far'd.
Thus
Ioy, and
Hope goe iointly hand in hand,
Like
Twins got by
Desire, by
Fancie borne;
And as
Hopes ioie, on future
Good doth stand,
So,
Fear's a griefe conceav'd for
Ill vnborne
(Which we expect) wherewith the
Soule is torne:
Then looke what ods there is twixt
Hope and
Ioy,
The like's twixt
Feare, and
griefe (in minds forlone)
A like they comfort, or the
Minde annoy,
As they best know, that
best or
worst enioy.
Feare doth the
Hart contract, (that
Hope dilates)
And shut so close that
vitall Sp'rits it pines;
Then
Nature to prevent
death (which shee hates)
Drawes
bloud and
Sp'rits from al the parts confines,
And to the
Hart in haste the same assignes:
Then are the outward
partes, as pale, as cold,
And quake as fearing their approaching
fines;
Then pants the
heart that labours
life to hold,
Which ties the
Tongue, womb loosing ere it should.
And as this
sense-confounding
Passion, Feare,
The
hart with
horror thus excruciates;
So, in the
soule it such a swaie doth beare,
That it the
Powres thereof quite dissipates;
[Page 97]And makes most
abiects, of most mightie
States:
How like an
Idoll stands
Feares servile
Slaue?
Whose total
senses Feare so captivates,
The Senses would dy, that fea
[...]e might
[...]ot
[...]iue
That no one
sense hath force it selfe to saue,
But
Death desires to kill the
feare they haue.
If this base
Feare (harts hatefull hel) possesse
The
hart, the
hart doth then possesse the
heele;
But most of all, when
hart doth most transgresse,
And divine vengeance it (with feare) doth feele;
Then
Strength may seeke to stay it, but, t'wil reele
In spight of
morrall strength, that it should sway;
And, as starke drunke with
fear, turne like the
wheele
That wheeles the nether
heauens without stay,
Let
courage say the while, what courage may.
No
harnesse (though by
Vulcan forg'd) can make
Feare is vtterly ha
[...]tl
[...]sse.
Feare to be hardy, or not hartlesse quite;
If
Armors could from
Art such tempers take,
The
Artist should be
king'd in
Fortunes spight;
For many
kings would crowne him for this sleight:
But
he it is, whom
heav'n, and
hell doth feare,
Can take
feare from, and arme vs with his
might;
For he alone the faint-
hart vp doth reare,
Or make the stowtest
hart most faint appeare.
Wee must then armed be from
Feare, by feare;
Gods feare expels feare.
Gods feare, that strong
Vulcanian Armor, must
Guard such good
Soules as doe regard it heere;
Because such
feare is euer full of
trust,
Eccle. 1.12.
That feares no threate of any mortal
thrust;
For, Hope in him, doth make the dareing
hart,
Which
hope no
hart can haue that is vniust;
For
Conscience prickes will make the same to start
When the least
Leafe doth wagge, by
winde, or
Art:
The Belly becomes loose though force of Feare
When therfore divine
Iustice sinne wil scurge,
He doth dishart their
harts, in whom it raignes,
In sort, that they themselves with horror
Iob. 41.16.
purge,
When he on them his heavy vengeance raynes;
So that their
feare exaggerates their
paines:
The haughti'st
Hart (erst swolne with
Valours pride)
Feare striks stone-dead, whē he but vēgeance faines;
And greatest
strength by
vveakenesse is defide,
When as his
pow'r in
vveakenesse doth abide.
Courage comes from Hope.
Then,
Courage comes from
Hope, &
Hope frō
Heau'n,
The
Donor is the highest
Diety;
The
praise is His, that is to
prowesse giv'n,
For he alone the
Minde doth magnifie:
Then praise him
Lowe, if courage make you
Hie;
And laude him
High, if feare make yee not
lowe;
Yea
high and
lowe praise Him alone, whereby
You gaine the
praise that
men on you bestowe,
From Whom (as frō the
Fount) al
praise doth flowe.
How is it then, that
Divills in
Mennes forme
swaggring
Six-penny Champions.
Man-quellers are so desperate?
Who with strong hand
Gods Images deforme
Fearing no
man, but give the
checke or
mate
To
good and
badd of what soever state
[...]
This is not
courage, but an hellish fire
That boiles their
bloud, cal'd
Ire, inflam'd by
Hate,
And oft of
Saints they (
Fiendes) haue their desire;
Iob. 2.7.
No otherwise then
Iob felt
Sathans ire.
Gen. 4.8.
So, cursed
Caine slue
Abell in that moode,
Abell, that
Innocent the
Highests belov'd;
Yet
Caine had
hart and
hand to broach his blood:
The like,
Men Angell-like haue oft approv'd
[Page 99]By those whome
God in this life nere reprov'd.
This
secret is
obscure, but light to those
That take it light, and it abide vnmov'd;
Them
Faith assures, He doth of all dispose;
In whome, come
life or
death, they hope repose.
If divine
God.
LOVE desires my
Bodies death,
By soddaine death my
Soule so straight to haue,
VVhat matters it, though he bereave my breath
By
Div'll, or
Angell, so my
Soule he saue;
The
God is the Fountaine of all Power.
pow'r they both possesse, to them he gave,
Both are his
Ministers to doe his will;
If
Sathan then, my
Corpes bring to the
Grave,
To me it is so farre from being ill,
That
Sathan doth me good, against his wil.
Me good said I? well may I call it good,
Sith it is
good of
goods, good all in all;
The
fount, whereof all
goodnesse is the
floud,
That never yet was gag'd nor never shall
By
Men, most wise, or
spirits Angelicall:
It is th'
Abysse of true
Felicity,
VVhich some
men, more then most fantastical,
Suppose they have, had they high
dignity;
VVith
pleasure fac'd, and lyn'd with
Misery.
Thus
Ioy, and
Hope, were by th'
all Giver giv'n
As sweete
Conductors to his sweetest
Sweete;
And
Feare, and
Griefe, from his
wrath are deryv'n
To awe the
Mind, (which first therwith doth meete)
And that which that
Mind hath fore-done vnmeete,
should be thereto as
Sorrow remaines after sinne for sin, to make the Soule detest sinne
[...]
Scourge and Scouger iust,
VVhich doe remaine, when
sinnes sowre-
Sweetes do fleete
To make the
Mind abhorre her former lust;
For
Griefe, and
Feare, are iust to
Mindes vniust.
Now the true
pleasure which our
Nature craues
The whiles the
Soule remaines the
Bodies Ghest,
Is the true
rest some
Good the
Soule vouchsaves,
Which the
Hart holdeth, and esteemeth best;
As
Contemplation is
Reasons rest:
Yet can there be no pleasure in that
good
If it be greater then
Hart can disgest;
For, if the
Continent bound not the floud,
Confusion must ensue in likely-hood.
If
Light (ioy of the Eye) be, as the
Sunne,
Too great for the
Eyes small capacity,
They may be dymmed so, if not vndunne:
Or if it be too small, they cannot see;
As they are strong or weake, so
Too great Light is as offensive to the Eye, as too little.
Light must bee:
The like of other
senses may be sedd
Outward or
inward, bound to
forme, or free,
Who must with
moderation still be fedd,
For
excesse thē annoies, nay strikes thē dead.
As therfore
God is most most infinite,
So hee's with ioy receaved of that
part
That's likst himself, which is the
Soul or
sp'rit;
But for that he cannot himselfe impart
(being
Immense) to them by
pow'r or
arte,
(they being not so) he is to them applied
By
God is by Intelligence apprehended of vs.
Vnderstanding, yet but so in part;
If otherwise he should with them abide,
They would through
glory be quite nullified.
Now, as a man takes pleasure by these
partes,
So in that
part he takes the most delight
That to his
Flesh, or
sp'rite, most ioy imparts;
And with those pleasures is he swallowed quight,
[Page 101]That doe affect that
part with maine and might:
Therefore the brutish
Vulgar, most are pleas'd
In things substantial which appeare to sight,
And things divine, which cannot so be seas'd,
They hold as vaine, and are therewith displeas'd.
Amonge the
pleasures which are sensuall,
The vilst is that we
feele, by that we
touch;
Because it is the Earthli'st
sense of all:
The
Tast's of better temper, though not much:
Note which of the outward senses is the most supreme.
Smelling is light, and lightly more will grutch
At vnsweete Savors, then in sweete will ioye;
The
Hearing is more worthie farre then such,
Sith its more
Air
[...]y and doth lesse annoy,
Whereby we gaine the
Faith which we enioy.
But
Seeing, (
Sov'raigne of each outward
sense)
Holds most of
Fire, which is in nature neere
To the
Seeing is the Soveraigne of the outward Sēses & why.
Celestiall Natures radience;
Therefore this
sense to
Nature is most deere,
As that which hath (by
Natures right) no
Peere.
Thus much for
pleasures which these
senses giue,
VVhereof the
best must needs most
base appeare
Compared to the
worst our
Soules receave,
Whose
powres haue much more pow'r to take and give.
These are the
Lures of
lust, that never lyn
To draw the
vvorld to be a pray to
vvoe;
These make fraile
flesh &
Blood the
founts of
The outward senses are the Dores wh
[...]re thr
[...]ugh Sin enters into our Soules.
sinne,
From whence all mortall
miseries doe sloe,
Which
flesh and
blood doe groning vndergoe;
In these are
Baites for
Beggars, as for
Kinges:
VVhich pleasures streames doe (swelling) overfloe,
That they are caught vnwares; so that these thinges
The
VVorld to
Hell, and
Hell to
horror b
[...]inges.
These are the
windowes through which
Sathan spies
The disposition of our better
part:
Through these he hath a glimps of all that lies
Within the secret'st corners of our
Hart,
The Divell knowes not the thoughts of Man.
Which wel to know belongs to
heav'nly Art:
For loue of
these, the
Flesh the
Sprite doth loth,
Who for
their pleasure makes the same to smart,
And for their comfort
soule and
bodie both
With
Care confusedly themselues doe cloth.
A Simil.
As when grim
Night puts on a
Sable weede,
Fac'd with infernal
Apparitions,
That so the next
daies comfort might exceede:
So, are the
Minde and
Bodies motions
Care-cloth'd for
senses consolations.
Fraile
senses (Seede-plots of
impietie
Made for our
Reasons recreations)
Die and bee damn'd, or liue to magnifie
Your
makers Mercie, Might, and
Maiestie.
And as in
Pleasures false are true degrees,
Agreeing with these
Organs of the
sense,
Some
base, some
meane, some
high, (for so are these)
The inferiorst interior sense cōceiues more pleasure then all the outward senses can.
(Yet all but base to pleasures excellence,
Whereof the
soules low'st
powre hath highest sense)
So are there like gradations in the ioies
Those
Powres conceaue, as is their pre'minence;
The feeding
Powre, in feeding powre imploies,
Which pleaseth
Nature, but the
soule annoies.
The pleasures of the minde doe far excell those of the body.
Those
Ioies conceaved by th'
Intelligence
As most supreame, doe most reioice the
sp'rite;
For they belong to the supreamest
sense,
VVherein the
Minde conceaveth most delight
[Page 103](Though
Nature pine the while) by
Natures right.
Thus then, if
iudgement these
degrees would way,
Shee would reiect
ioie s
[...]nsuall, as too light,
And not permit the same her to betray,
Which makes fraile
sense the strongest
Reason sway.
The
Gluttons Gorge (
Charibdis of
Excesse)
Should (being disgorg'd) from surfetting forbeare:
Th'insatiate
Leacher would that
fire suppresse,
That
Conscience and his
secrets oft doth seare:
None would be
Beasts that
humane creatures were.
Then,
sense of
Touch or
Tast, as vil'st they bee,
So doe they bring the
ioies that soonest weare;
For those that come by that wee heare or see,
Doe longer last, and with vs more agree.
And the more base and brutish
pleasures bee,
The more brutish the pleasures bee, the more paine is taken in their execution.
The more's the paine in their accomplishment;
And the more vs'd they are excessiuely,
The more's the
soule and
bodies dammagement;
VVitnesse the
Leachers lothsome languishment,
The
Drunkards dropsie, and the
Gluttons Grease,
Each clogg'd with either, or worse punishment,
That
health decreaseth with their
corps increase,
And
shame increaseth with their
fames decrease.
Aske sensual-
pleasure, in her greatest ru
[...]fe,
How little griefe will overthrow her quite
And giue her
soule a deadly counter-buffe,
Shee wil (as forc'd) confesse, shee hath no might
VVhen
Griefe, scarse sensible, but comes in sight.
VVe can brooke
pleasures want with greater ease,
Griefes doe more annoy vs then Pleasures delight vs.
Then not feele
griefes though they in
pleasure bite;
For, absent
good doth not so much displease,
As present
ill our
Soules soule doth disease.
For
corporall pleasure being sensuall
Consists in some
excesse, which stil doth tende
To the extreame subversion of our
All;
The feare whereof must
pleasure needs suspend,
And make her suffer
pennance to the ende.
No
Cōsciēce
Gods cōmā dements mē tioned in the Decalogue.
sear'd with
Lusts Soul-scortching fire,
But seeles the
Lawes sharpe-burning
Iron to send
An hell of
paine, where she is most intire;
For it doth
death it selfe with
life inspire.
Now as the
pleasures of the
eie surpasse
The
rest that on the outward
senses rest:
So
Fancies pleasures all those
pleasures passe,
Because
Opinion esteemes them best;
Hence is it,
wealth with
pleasure is possest
For no inherent vertue, but because
Opinion holdeth the possessor blest;
This makes men (maugre
God and
Natures lawes)
To bite, and scrat for
wealth, with
Teeth and
Pawse.
VVealth, state, and
glorie, if they worldly be,
False
wealth, fraile
state, vaine-
glory then they are;
Only held good by doting
Fantasie,
Which wil no part thereof to
Reason share,
Least shee should finde them false, and bid beware:
But
Reasons pleasures are perpetuall,
They are all
comforte, quitted from all
Care,
They thrall the
Minde to freedome spiritual,
That makes selfe
Bondage, sweet selfe
Freedoms thral.
Bodily pleasures are but paines cōpared to those of the minde.
No marvell then, though
Men possessing these
Doe hold al other pleasures
hels of
paine;
That
some their
wealth haue throwne into the
Seas,
That so they might this
weale with ease retaine;
[Page 105]These made that
Eccles. 2.
King to hold all pleasures vaine
(Save these alone) that prov'd all vnder
Sunne,
These haue made
Princes quitt their princely
Traine,
Train'd by these
pleasures (which are never dunne)
Quite from their
Scepters and themselues to runne.
These make the
Mind and
Sp'rite so
Nectar-drūck
That they sleepe soundly in
divine delight:
These make the
Soule forsake the
Bodies Trunck,
Leaving it
Ioy-tranc'd whilst shee takes her flight
Through
Natures workes to have her
Makers sight:
These, these, & none but these are
Heau'ns on
Earth,
Because on
Earth they see by
Natures light
The highest
Heavens Maiestie and
Mirth,
And by his
Sonnes light
God the Father, father
[...]le
[...].
without
Sire, their birth.
Among which
pleasures, those which doe consist
In
Contemplation, are the most
divine;
By which this life and
that to come are blist,
VVhich made
Philosophers to it assigne
The
Chiefe Beatitude, the
Spirittes vvine.
If
Mindes that never knew the Sov'raigne
Good
Mount vp so high to make this
Good their
fine,
VVhat shame for those baptiz'd in
Christ his blood,
If they (like
Swine) doe place the same in
mudd?
And as the
Soule retaineth more or lesse
Of
pristine purity, so will the same
In all hir
Actions, lesse or more transgresse,
And to the
best, or
worst, her
motions frame:
Therfore some place their
pleasure in their
fame
For
knowledge, and seeke
knowledge to be knowne;
Some in rare
handy-works, and some in
Game,
Some how a
State may stand, or be orethrowne
VVhen it is little, or else overgrowne.
And of al
skils that meerely are humane,
Civill Policie.
This
skill is it that most commends the
soule:
This can instruct the
sword to make a
lane
To
Crownes, & teach the same
Crownes to cōtroule,
And
slaues in
Catalogue of
kings enroule.
For
Policies long
Arme can compasse
pow'r,
Which ioin'd, at wil, the
Earths huge
Bowle cāroule
In
Natures spight, if from
th'aetheriall Towre,
A suddaine vengeance stay not humane powre.
If the
swordes edge be set on
Policie,
It wil slip through the Ioints of
Monarchies;
And shaue the
Crowne of
Roiall Maiestie,
So be it stand in way of
Tyranies,
That clime to
Crownes by
bloud and
villanies.
The hand of
Policie welding the
sword,
Directs each Blow that
wounds stil multiplies,
Crownes are purchased often vniustly by bloudy cō quests.
That
slaues to
Crownes through
streams of
bloud may ford;
For
Crownes de Or, those
sanguine streames afford.
HEre
Muse craue licence for a maine
digresse,
Of those that shal thine
Ambages survay;
Sith
Policie compels thee to transgresse
The
Rules of
Order, her
pow'r to display;
She (most importunate) wil haue no nay,
But thou must from thy
proiect long desist
To blazon her high vertue by the way,
That
sense may see wherein
shee doth consist,
Wherein (being
much) thou must the
more insist.
But what I shall in this behalfe insert
Through my no
skill and lesse
experiment,
Comes from a
Muse that can but
speake of
part,
Much lesse hath skill to
teach al
government;
So to presume; sith
Reason hath bin strain'd
To highest reach for
Rules of
Regiment;
Sufficeth me to touch it as constrain'd
[...]
By that I handle; els, would haue refrain'd.
Nor wil I iustifie all
rules for right,
That
Policie approveth for direct;
God, and
Mans wisedome are repugnant quite;
Mans wisedome holdes for
good a good
effect
Caused by
ill, which
Gods doth stil reiect:
And to doe all that
Policie doth will
Must needes the
soule with mortal
Sores infect;
Heare, what
shee wils, then iudge, if
well or
ill;
And
vse or els
refuse it, as yee will.
Whose powre if it with
puissance be conioin'd
Policy (vnder God) is the overruler of all vnder heavē.
Controules al
powres, saue
hellish or
divine;
It glues together
states, that
VVarres vnioin'd,
And severs those that
Concord did combine:
It
makes or
marres disposing
Mine and
Thine:
On
Sov'raignes heads it makes
Crownes close to sit,
That sooner shal their
heads then
Crownes decline;
It makes
VVill law, when
VVit thinkes
Law vnfit,
Yet wils that
Law should lincke with
VVill and
wit.
It tels the
Statesman sitting at the
Sterne,
To Princes, wee must giue our reasons by waight, & our wo
[...]ds by measure.
(Embozom'd by his
sov'raigne) he must be
Carefull the humor of his
Lige to learne,
And so apply himselfe thereto, that hee
May neither crosse nor with it stil agree:
Like
Sol that with nor gainst the
Heaven goes,
Similie.
But runnes ascue, by whose
obliquitie,
All Policie ought
[...]o tend to publicke profite
[...]
Each thing on
Earth's conserv'd, and gayly groes;
So
Councellors their
councels shoulde dispose.
Simil.
And as the
Moone reflects her borrowed light
Vnto the
Sunne, that but lent her the same:
So
statesmen should reflect (how ere vnright)
Their wel-deservings, and their brightest fame
Where the worde of the king is, there is powe
[...], and who shall say to him, what dost thou?
Eccles 8 4.
Vnto their
Liege, as though from him it came.
For Princes may put shame of their
oresights
Vpon their
servants, who must beare the blame,
Applying praises of those mens
foresights
Vnto themselues, as if they were their rights.
A Caveat for great subiects.
Great
Subiects must beware of
subiects loue,
And
Sov'raignes hate the
first oft breeds the
last;
Kings wil their
Brethren hate, if not reproue
For being too wel belov'd, who often tast
The evil speede that growes from that loues hast;
Men shoulde not bee divels to shun tēporall death, or to be Gods on earth.
That which in privat persons is called Choler, in publike is called Fury & cruelly. Sal.
Rigor often buyeth her pleasure with perill of life.
Mercy & truth preserue the King: for his throne sha
[...]be established with Mercie.
Which makes great
subiects (in great policie)
That would of
King and
subiect be embrac'd)
To mix their vertues
deeds with
villany,
T'avoide the plague of
Popularitie.
With submisse voice it tels the
Soveraigne,
Severity makes weake
Authoritie,
If that too oft the
Subiects it sustaine;
And smal faults punisht with great cruelty
Makes
Feare and
Hate desp'rate rebell'ouslie.
For, death of
Patients Emprickes lesse defame,
Then
Executions oft doe
Sov'raignty,
And all that haue delighted in the same
Haue
hate incurr'd, and often
death with
shame.
For
Policie can hardly wel prevent
Prover. 20.28 He that is careles of his own li
[...]e, is Lord of anothers. Sen
[...]
The purpose of true
Hate made obstinate
With ceaslesse
plagues, and extreame
punishment:
For, when the weakest
hand is desperate
[Page 109]It may confound a
Which mischief (though with extream difficulty prevented if at al avoided yet al the means to escape it are these, 4. Enquiry, Punishment, Innocē cie, Destenie.
Caesar, so a
state.
Who death desires, is
Lord of others life:
He feares not
hell that would be reprobate:
A calme
Authoritie represseth
strife,
When much
severitie makes
Rebels rife
[...]
It's better
By reprehē sion which S. Basil cals the healing of the soule: Salomō an ornamēt of fine gold Pro. 25. and David a precious Balme, Psa. 41. Tacitus saith, every notorious execution of iustice hath some taste of iniustice therin, yet sith it wrings but some in particular it is amply recompē ced in the cō mon good.
cure, then cut of
members ill,
If it may be; and, if that wil not serue,
Yet cut them off as t'were against thy will:
For,
Men hate not their
members which they kerue
Or cleane cut off, the rest so to preserue:
For
Cruelty sometimes is
Clemencie;
Its
mercy in the
Prince (peace to conserue)
To cut off
Rebels with severity,
Lest they prevailing make an
Anarchie.
And, if in case a mighty Multitude
Of mighty
Men for
Treason were to dy,
Policie would not haue the
sword imbrude
In bloud of them as t'were successiuely;
But all at once, let them al
headlesse ly:
For oft
Iteration of revēg for one fault, is faulty. Punishmente is the companion of iniustice. Plato.
revenge with
bloud to iterate,
The malice may suppresse of
few too hy;
But stirres the harts of
all to mortall hate,
Which may impeach the most secured
state.
And therefore that which must be cut away
Away with it at once, quoth
Policie:
And to the
sores these
Salus f
[...]r the so
[...]es growing from overmuch severity
plaisters ply straight way,
Doe some great good that argues Charity,
And pardon some to shew thy Clemencie:
To shedde the bloud of corrupt Maiestrates,
Doth not a little the paine qualifie:
The sacrifice of such
hate expiates;
Thus bloud must heale what bloud exulcerates.
Intemp'rate
Patients make
Phisitions cruell,
And wayward
Subiects make the
Prince
Austere and iust Maiestrats are like the Ligatures of Chirurgions, which hurt them that bee wounded; for though those Bands be imployd to cure loose mēbers, yet they putt the Patient to much paine.
seveare:
Ceaselesse
abuses of
Ire is the
fuell:
Can
Sov'raignes beare, when
Subiects nought
By the resistance of those that should obey, the lenitie of those that cō mand is diminished. Tacitus.
forbeare?
Such must be taught to
loue through cause of
feare:
For, oft a ijrke from a kinde
Masters hand
Amōg much cockring, makes our loue more deere,
When as we know, it with our
weale doth stand:
So short correction tends to long command.
Iudges corrupt and all
Extortioners
Like
Spunges must be vs
[...]d, squiz'd being full,
And so must
Iustice handle
Vsurers;
They pull from
Vsurie is a sweete poison compounded vpon the ruines of good men.
Subiects, Kings from thē must pull,
And whē their fleece is grown, sheare off the wooll.
These are the
Canker-wormes of Common weales,
They mortifie and make the
Members dull,
Then when the
Head thereof these
Cankers feeles,
He needes must clense them, ere the
Body heales.
For whosoever feares
hate over much,
Knowes not as yet what Rules to
Rule belong;
Let
Subiects grutch without iust
A temperate dread suppresseth high and stout stomakes, feare in extremitie stirres men to presumption or desperate resolution, & provoks them to try conclusiōs dāgerous.
cause of grutch,
They will, whē they perceave the
Prince they wrōg,
To right the same, continue
Subiects long:
By
Punishment, and by
Reward a
State
May be ore-aged beeing over yong;
In
Mould of
Love to melt the
Commons hate,
Is to correct without respect of state.
From
Piety and cleere-Eyde
Providence
Authoritie derives resistlesse force;
Piety makes Authority most potent.
For
Piety constraines
Obedience,
Sith all beleeves the
Heau'ns doe blesse her coorse:
[Page 111]And
The mother of a wary person knows not what belongs to Teares.
Paul. Emil.
Providence subiection doth enforce,
For, it foresees where
Riott may runne out,
And with strong
Barres (which
Barristers r'enforce)
Makes fast the
Parke-pale there and round about,
That to goe through, no one wil goe about.
It teacheth
Princes wisely to beware
How they exhaust their
store for
warre in
peace
To maintaine
Superfluity in Bāquets & Aparrell are tokens of a diseased Cō mon-weale, or which is rather in dāger of death.
Seneca.
Reuellings, and nothing spare
That tends to
Sensualities increase,
Although therfore their
Flocks they often fleece:
It ill beseemes (quoth
Providence) the
Prince,
His
owne and
publike
A kingdoms superabūdāce if it be managed by a lascivious & voluptuous Prince, is the cause of the subversiō thereof.
Treasures to decrease
For private satisfaction of the
sense,
Which sincks the
State with waight of vain expēce.
If there be
factions for
Sions cause,
So bee't they breake not bounds of
Charitie,
Instruction sooner then
F
[...]are & terror are slender bonds to bind loue.
Tacitus.
Simil.
Correction drawes
Such
Discords to a perfect
Vnity,
That yeelds a sweete
Soule-pleasing harmony:
For, when a
Violls strings doe not concent,
We doe not rend them straight, but leisurely
VVith
A gentle intreaty is of more force then an imperious cōmād.
Claudian.
patience put in tune the
Instrument;
So must it be in case of
Government.
Its the least freedome
Subiects can demaund
To haue but liberty to hold their peace;
Who keepe their
errors close from being scand
Doe hurt none but themselves, in
warre or
peace:
If
Freedome true
Obedience release
It will
It is an easie matter to governe good men. Salust.
containe it selfe in
liberty;
And
Lenity Subiection doth encrease
Where
strife desires publike tranquillity,
And still agrees t'obey
Auctoritie.
Policy prompts the
Prince, with voice scarse heard,
If any
Subiects be growne over great,
By
O impious people, & accursed times, that doe constrain Princes to doe this for the safety of th
[...]ir States, & bodies, that is so perrillous touching the State of their Soule
[...].
death their
grandure must of force be barr'd;
But if by
Lawe they cannot doe that feate,
Without the shaking of their
State and
Seate,
It must be done without
Law by some
Chance
That
Ere the Subiect be in Armes. A Subiect placed in high dignitie hath more adoo to hold it, then others to gett it. Brutus.
soddainly must fall (ere blood doe heate)
So shall their
Throne be stablisht, (witnesse
France)
And subiect onely to
divine vengeance.
For it is sel'd, or rather never seene
That
peace and
powrfull men doe dwell
Tacit Hist
[...] Abraham and Lott must part when their wealth is over growne.
togeather;
And ten times blessed is that
King or
Queene
Who make their
Nobles live and loue each other;
Lyve like themselves, & like themselves love either:
This were the
Quintenssens of
Policie,
And
All Wisdome assisted both by nature and Arte, is little ynough to effect so great an Act by reasō of the perversnes of mās nature.
witte, that's seld derive from the
Mother,
VVhich rather can be wisht then taught, for whie?
No
pow'r from
vvill can take
vvills liberti
[...].
A King may from his high erected
Throne
VVith
Eagles Eyes (for
Kings such Eies should have)
Behold the
Members of the
State alone,
And what the
humors are which them deprave;
So may he purge the
partes the
VVhole to saue:
But to attone the
vvills perverst by
pow'r,
As easie wer't the
Ocian drie to lave;
Pow'r may cōstraine, but
VVill may choose t'endure,
And they that wil be sicke, no
skill can cure.
Great
Minds like
Horses that wil easly reare,
Are easli'st ruled with a gentle
Bitt;
And rev'rence
Princes should not gaine with
They ought to feare many whom many feare.
feare,
Nor
Love with
Familia
[...]itïe in Princes breedes contempt in Subiectes.
Lowlinesse, for
State vnfitt,
This
skill is very difficult, because
Vertues of diff'rent kindes must kindly knitt
Their
powres in one, which
VVitt togeather drawes,
And guards the
Prince, no lesse thē
Guards or
Laws.
The
Empires
Maiestie in a Prince is no lesse commendable then behooful.
Maiestie her
state sustaines;
The
Prince thereby security enioyes,
Free from
Rebellions reach (that
State disdaines)
And from contempt of
Rule, that
State annoies
Ingendring all misrule that state destroies:
The
Scepter and the nuptial
Bedd detests
To be
A Crowne devided vvill serue no kings head.
devided, or to share their ioyes;
Yet
Sou'rainty in extreame perill rests
Of
partnershippe, when it
Contempt disgests
[...]
Empires are
Fortunes Obiects and
Tymes Subiects,
Envy and
The Creator of all coupled Envy & a Kingdome together. Seneca.
Empire be inseparate,
Fortune doth often
Monarches make of
Abiects
And
Envy Monarchy doth quite abate,
If it assisted be with
vulgar
The Multitudes love is light & their hatred heavy.
hate:
For
Monarches finde no
meane betwixt the
Ground
And the extreamest topp of their
To attain to Empire ïs a work humane but to retaine it being attayned is a grace divine.
estate;
But if they fal, the fall doth them confound:
Therefore let them be sure of footing sound.
Three things (saith
Policy) doe stablish
Rule,
That it be
Constant, Severe, and
Restraind;
Constant: for
innovation breeds
misrule;
Innovation most dangerous to a state.
Severe: for oft by
Lenity vnfain'd
Nought but
Contempt (orethrow of
Rule) is gain'd:
Impunity breeds lawlesse
Over much pittie bringes ove
[...]much perill to Soveraignes.
Libertie;
For hope of scape (when
Iustice is but fain'd)
Drawes on bold
Vice to doe al villany
Vnder the
Nose of mild
Auctority.
For who is aw'd by him, whose
Sword doth lie
Fast
sheath'd with rust, that it wil not come out?
Who by
remisnesse, not by
clemencie
Makes th'edge of his pow'r (dull'd) to turne about:
An ynch of liberty more then ought, maks the Cō mons much more loose then they should.
This
King the
Commons wil command and flout,
Who are contain'd with
feare and not with
shame,
And nere abstaine from
Riot or from
Rout
For badnesse of them, but for feare of
blame,
And
punishment inflicted for the same.
Thirdly,
Authoritie should be
restrain'd,
(As erst was said) and is as much to saie,
Whē the Rod is in the magistrats hand, he may correct, but if it be out hee may bee corrected.
That the chiefe
strength from
Kings shoulde stil bee drain'd,
And stay with them, to be to them a
stay;
Lest
Treason should their
trust and
them betray:
They may dissolue the force of
Emperie,
When they make
Kings of those that should obay;
For
Slaues endu'd with
Kings authoritie
Make
Kings but
slaues, through
Kings infirmity.
Yet
Policie doth not forbid the
Prince
To honor
Subiects high, of high desert
With highest honor of
Obedience,
And though obeying, rule an ample part:
It is a sure guarde of thy principality, if thou doe not suffer great commaundemēt to indure long. Livie. 4.
So be't the
honor which they thus imparte
Bee
short and
sweete, chiefly
Lieuetenancie;
For it, if long, with
pride affectes the
Hart,
Which makes the same affect sole
Monarchie;
So put the
King and
state in ieobardie.
Hardly cā mē keepe a mean in dignities surmounttng mediocritye.
For
Men are
Men how ever
Angell-like;
The highest
Angels were ambitious:
Its death to
ample fortunes, Saile to strike;
Nay
Death to them is farre lesse dolorous:
[Page 115]"For vse of Rule makes mindes imperious.
Wee read but of one Scilla that having g
[...]t
[...]ē absolute empiry, gaue it over voluntarily.
Great
Persons haue great
Passions; state is stiffe,
Vnapt to bow, how ever curtuous:
And when great
Sp'rits haue tasted but a
whiffe
Of praise for rule, they (drunke) would rule in chiefe.
For as the
Man orecome with powrefull
wine
(Although a
Beggar cloathed like a
king)
Simil.
When some in mock'ry made him halfe
divine
With
Lauds, and
Legs, stil rising and bowing,
Perswaded was, he was no other thing:
So
Sp'rites that are made druncke with
vulgar praise
Not to bee overcome with praises & acclamations of people is incident to God only.
For their dexteritie in governing,
Doe weene all true that
vulgar vapor saies,
And thinke themselues alone the rest should raise.
When too great
subiectes doe too well agree,
Suspitious
Policie them out doth set:
For like as
stones, which in firme
Arches bee
Simil.
Would fall, but that they one another let,
By meanes wherof the
Arch more strength doth get:
We ought to endevor even by laws to hinder strife and partakings among nobles. Ari. 5. Pol. c. 8.
So fares it with a
state or
Monarchie,
Whose perill might (perhaps) be over-great
By ore-much
concorde of the over-hie;
Then
ods twixt them still mainetaines
vnity.
But among other rules of
policie
That are vnruly (if by that
Scripture.
rule squar'd
That al should rule)
[...]t
sov'raignes learnes to ly,
Dissemble, and deceaue; if it regard
The
common good of thē they ought to guard:
But to doe
ill, that
good thereof may come,
By better
Divinity.
Rules and more assur'd, is bard;
Then how it should a
sou'raigns state become
To ly at all, to this I answere
mum.
Kings shoulde bee so framed as they may be altogither good or halfe good, and not altogither wicked, but halfe wicked.
Ari.
[...]. Pol c II
But this I say from those that wel did trie
What tis to
rule, and ruling long to
raigne:
If
Kings make conscience of a little lie,
When it may good the
state and
Soveraigne,
Ill may ensue, that
good so to refraine:
Yet when wee knowe all
harts are in his hands,
That
harts and
all doth rule and sole sustaine,
We muse at
Policies so crosse
commaunds
When as we know, all by the
The divine Precepts.
other stands.
We haue two
eies, two
eares, and but one
Tongue
Which with the
teeth and
lippes is eake inclos'd,
And is the
senses Organs plac'd among
Eies, Eares, and
Nose, by
Nature so dispos'd
That nothing by the
Tongue should be disclos'd,
Before it hath tane councell of each
sense,
That are to
falshoode evermore oppos'd,
The Soule is the true lover of Truth.
Lest they should misinforme th'
Intelligence,
Which haynously procures the
Soules offence.
Proverb. 17.
Excellent talke becommeth not a
foole,
Nor
lying lips the
King; so saith that
Prince
That rul'd in
peace, and did his
enemies coole
With
truth and
equity; but that's long since,
These are the last, and therfore the worst daies.
And twixt the
times there may be difference:
Yet if we may not for
Gods gloryly,
Much lesse for matters
of lesse consequence:
Kings should be
Patterns of all
pietie,
VVhich doth consist in
truth and
equitie.
But pious
Augustine (canonized
For piety) saith there are certaine
lies
VVhereof no great offence is
borne or
bred,
Aug. in Psal. 5.
Yet are not faultlesse; in which
leasings lies
[Page 117]That
lie, which
Kings for
common good devise:
Hence may we see, how much deprav'd we are,
VVhen
Kings sometimes must
faine and
temporise
A Kingdome is a schoole of deceipt. Sen. Thyest.
For their
estate and
common-wealthes welfare,
VVhich would fare ill, if they should it forbeare.
VVho note withall, It breedeth small regard
To bee too lavish of their
presence, when
Among the
commons it might well be spar'd;
For
Maiestis like
Deity in
Men,
VVhen wee it see, as farre as wee can ken:
We bear m
[...]st reverence to Maiesty a far off.
Yet
policie (the
proppe of waightie
States)
VVould haue them present with all now and then,
As well to comforte, as to cease debates,
Both which their
harts to true loue captivates.
It tels them other
Documents among,
That who so bridles their felicitie
It is a great felicity not to be overcome of great felicity.
Shall better governe it, and hold it long;
For
Temp'raunce ioined with
Authoritie,
Makes it resemble sacred
Deitie:
It bids them loue the
learned with
effect,
VVho can with
lines their liues
historifie
That ay shall last, and their
renownes erect
Poets & Historiographers haue powre to giue immortality.
The Golden Worlds returned frō exi
[...]e.
As high as
Heav'n, maugre
humane defect.
And here I cannot wonder (though I would)
Sufficiently at these
guilt times of ours,
VVherein great
Men are so to
money sold,
That
Iupiter himselfe in
golden Showres
Wil basely stand, to gather while it powres.
Mars scornes
Minerva, gibes at
Mercur
[...],
He better likes
Venerian Paramoures:
Yet learning and Armes should bee in league by the law of nature.
Greatn
[...]sse regards not
Prose, or
Poesie,
But weenes an
Angell hath more Maiesty.
Artes perish wanting
praise and due
support;
And when
want swaies the
Senses Common-weale,
VVitts vitall
faculties wax al
Yet if some mens wittes were measured by their wealth, they would be accounted Salomons that are nothing else but money-baggs, ïn whō there is nothing but money.
amort:
The
Minde, constrain'd the
Bodies want to feele,
Makes
Salves of
Earth the
Bodies hurt to heale,
Which doe the
Mind bemire with
thoughts vnfitt;
Hēce come those dull
Conceipts sharp
witts reveale,
Which nice
Eares deeme to come frō want of
witt,
When want of
w
[...]alth (indeede) is cause of it.
As poore as a Poet.
How many
Poets, like
Anatomies,
(As leane as
Death for lacke of
sustenance)
Complaine (poore
Staruelings) in sadd
Elegies
Of those whom
Learning onely did advaunce,
That of their
wants haue no considerance.
What
Guift to
Greatnesse can lesse welcome be
Then
Poems, though by
Homer pend perchaunce?
It
lookes on them as if it could not see,
Or from them, as from
Snakes, away wil flee.
What's this to me (thinkes he) I did not this?
How then to me should praise thereof pertaine?
Thou hitt'st the
Marke (deere Sir) & yet dost misse;
For, though no
praise for
penning it thou gaine,
Yet
praise thou gett'st, if thou that
Pen
It is good to doe well, so it is also to support well doing.
sustaine,
That can
But Poets lie open to a mischiefe; for
[...]as Alchimists are suspected for coyning: so are Poets for libelling.
eternize thee in
Deathes despight,
And through it
selfe thy grossest
humors straine,
So make them pure (at least most pure in sight)
Which to
Posterity may be a
light.
In common policy, great
Lords should give,
That so, they may (though great) much more receaue:
The more like
God, the more they doe relive;
And, the more
VVriters they aloft doe heave,
[Page 119]The more
renowne they to their
Race doe leaue:
For, with a
droppe of
ynke their
Penns haue pow'r
Good and ill renowme are immortal and prevaile even over the remembrance of Tyme, which Poets have powre to give.
When Poets cōmend mens names to monument they neede no Tombes.
Life to restore (being lost) or
life bereave,
Who can devour
Time that doth
all devoure,
And goe beyonde
Tyme, in lesse then an
how'r.
Where had
Achilles fame bin longe ere this,
Had not blind
Homer made it see the
vvay
(In
Parchas)
[...]pight) to all
eternities?
It had with him (long since) bin clos'd in
Clay.
Where had
AEneas name found place of stay,
Had
Virgills verse of it no mention made?
It had ere this bin drown'd in deepe decay:
For, without
memory, Names needes must vade;
And
memory is ay the
Muses Trade.
But how can these
Daughters of
Memory
Remember
those of whom they are dispis'd?
They are not
Stocks that feele no
iniurie,
But sprightly, quicke, and wondrous wel adviz'd;
Who, though with
Lascivious, obscene, &c.
loose
Lines they are oft disguis'd
Yet when they list, they make immortal
lynes,
And, who soere by those
lines are surpriz'd,
Are made eternal,
they, and their
Assignes,
Or wel, or ill, as
Poesy defines.
Leaue we to vrge poore
Poets iust
As good no compleyning as complayning for no good.
complaint
(Sith they are deafe that should redresse the same)
That
Policy we may yet better paint,
And consecrate more
lines vnto her
name,
That learnes our
Pen her
laudes by
lines to frame.
Shee would that
Government should never dy,
Which is the
Rodd of
Circes, which doth tame
Both
Man, and
Beast, (if ledd by
Policy)
And tends to perfect
Mans Societie.
The put
[...]ing vp of one iniurie be, ettes another.
Shee teacheth
Kinges to giue and take no
vvrong,
One gettes Revenge, Contempt the other gaines:
All gainfull
Leagues she would haue lengthn'd long,
And not to warre vntill iust cause constraines;
For,
Iustice prospers
VVarres and
Thrones sustaines:
No
Secrets, nor no
publike governments
To
They that possesse all thinges want nothing but a man that will speake the truth. Seneca.
Clawbacks, or to those that scrach for
gaines,
Shee would have shar'd; for badd are all their bents,
And evermore doe ruyne
governments.
In such is neither truth to
God, or
King:
Therefore shee would have such aloofe to stand,
As farre (at least) as a
Prov. 25.23. The further Flatterers and Avaritious persons stand frō the Soveraign the surer hee stands.
Take away the wicked frō the King and his Throne shalbe established in righteousnes.
Prov. 25.5.
bent
brow can fling
Them from the
Sov'raigne, or a straight command:
These bitter baneful
weeds doe spil the
Land.
But to the
tried trusty, she would haue
The
Sov'raignes favoure constantlie to stand;
For, with their losse they seeke the
whole to saue,
To
whome, like
Fathers, they themselues behaue.
Shee tells the
Kinge that
Treason gathers strength
Extreamly in his
The Frogs (in AEsop) insulted vpon the Logg and held it in scorne.
weakenesse; and requires
That
it be cut short ere it gathers length,
And level
that, that out of course aspires:
Shee chargeth
Kinges to quench their vaine desires
Of
vaine expence, without the
Commons charge,
Lest it enflame
Rebellions quenchlesse fires,
Which oft, such large expence doth
much inlarge;
Who, oft the same vpon the
King discharge.
Shee wils that holsome
Lawes should be ordain'd,
Bereaving
Kings of
Not to be able to do evill is great power. It is an excellent necessity not to bee suffered to do evill.
pow'r t'infringe the same:
For, if their
Crownes are by the
Lavves sustain'd,
They should not breake the
God governs that common weale that is governed by a written law. Aristot.
Props, lest al the
Frame
[Page 111]Should fal, to their confusion and shame:
Statute of Reteyners.
It is an Aphorisme amonge the Lawes of the 12. Tables Let the protection of the People be the chiefest Law.
That, of
Reteyners shee would have obseru'd,
Else most
Ignobles, in a
Nobles name,
Wil let
Lawes course, which should be safe reseru'd,
And wrack the
Poore which
law would haue cōserv'd.
And as the
Law should governe
Maiestrates;
So should the
Maiestrates the
People sway.
The
Governours are living
Lavves in
States:
And a dumbe
Maiestrate the
Lavve is ay.
As
Bodies, Reason and the
Soule obay;
So
States should
Law and
Maiestrates by right;
For,
Law is
Reason, keeping
all in Ray,
By which the
wise themselues doe guide aright;
And
Vulgares have it from
Law-givers light.
She
Civill Policy
bidds the
Sou'raigne take heede how he heares,
Much lesse embrace th'advice of
selfe
Ouer-weening a pestilēt disease of the Mind, most familiar with Fooles.
Conceipt:
For, such
Conceipt hath neither
Eyes, nor
Eares,
To heare, or see
another, but doth waite
Vpon her selfe, admiring her owne height.
In
cases doubtfull it is dangerous
T'admitte
light
Take coūcell of thine owne hart for there is no mā more faithfull to thee then it Eccles. 37. 13.
Councells; for, for want of weight
T'wil make the case to be more ponderous,
The whilst such
He is more discreete with whom provident councels (that carry reason with them) do prevaile, thē prosperous deliberations which happen by chaunce.
Tacit 2. An.
Treasons prevaile on the sodaine, good Councells gather sorce by leisure.
Tacitus Hist.
Councells prove
Aereous.
For its oft seene that
Publike Policie
Occurrs with matters of such consequence,
Wherein there is such depth of
Misterie
That it wil blunt the sharpest
Senses sence
Of the acut'st, and swift'st
Intelligence;
Ne shall
Deliberation be assur'd
Of their
effect, vntill their
evidence
Tyme doth produce, or
triall hath procur'd,
Wherein
rash Iudgment must not be endur'd.
The heav'nlyest
Hav'ns, m'haue
Hellish entries:
Therefore, wise
Pilots keepe them in the
Maine,
And rather brooke rough
Tempests miseries,
Then by vnknowen perrils rest to gaine:
They shunne the
flats by their experience plaine;
For, in all perils such experience
Must guide the
course, els perillous is
paine;
Nay, death may follow
double
The faster mē run being out of the way the further they are out of the way.
diligence
Not set on worke by
single Sapience.
Experience is the eie of humane wisdom.
Experience is the
guide of
Policie,
Whose nere-deceaved
eie sees all in all;
Shee can make light the darkest
mistery,
Then, her at all
assaies to councell call,
Especially in
matters mysticall:
Realmes haue a
world of
crannies, where doe lurke
Ten thousand
mysteries from view of
eie,
VVhich nerethelesse vncessantly doe worke,
And often giue the
state a deadly
Iurke
Shee would haue
Kings to haue such
Councellors
A Prince ought to bestowe more in getting a wise coūceller, thē in achiueing a cōquest Quintus Curtius.
Wher no coū cel is the people fall: but where manie coūcellors are ther is heal
[...]h. Prove
[...]. 11.14 Simil.
That might be learn'd in
state-Philosophies;
For
Kingdomes govern'd by
Philosophers
No
Constellations feare, nor
Destinies:
They know what should the
Soveraigne suffice
And what the
Subiect; bending al their might
T'accomplish both their long felicities
By seeing that each
one may haue his right,
Preventing
forraine, and
domesticke spight.
As when a
Shippe, that liues vpon the
Downes
Of
Neptune (
[...]ightie
Monarch of those
Plaines)
Is neere at point to perish (if hee frownes,)
Without a
sterne and one that
it sustaines:
[Page 123](For maine is
perill els vpon those
Maines:)
So fares that
state that hath nor
Lordes nor
Lawes,
Wherewith the
Liege the
State from
ruine raines
In
stormes of
troubles, and
Contentions flawes,
VVherein wise
Councels calme
effectes doe
cause.
They are the
VVatch-men that stand
Sentinell
A good councellor is an Argust o the Cōmō-weale.
T'examine
all that may impeach the
state;
They make the
Common-wealth a
Paralell
To that of
Rome when shee was fortunate,
And
Caesar make of a meane
Magistrate:
VVho
Baracado vp with
Lawes strong
Barres
All that lies ope for
Vice to ruinate,
And stoppe the Passages of
Civill VVarres
VVith
martiall law, which
Male-contents deterres.
Nor neede the
Statesman gage
Philosophie
Deeper, then well to know how well to liue
In
Peace, and
VVealth, (this
worldes felicitie)
And
Rules of
Life, to that effect to giue;
They diue too deepe, if they doe deeper diue:
VVhat is the knowledge of the
Transcendents
To him that learnes men onlie how to thriue?
Though he nere red such wilde
They will distracte his thoughts, and government requires the whole man.
Artes Rudiments,
Hee's fitter farre for
civill governments.
The
Mathematickes, and the
Metaphysickes,
Haue no necessitie in
government;
But
Ethickes, Politickes, and
Oeconomicks,
These to good
Governours are incident,
VVhere
morrall vertue sitteth
President:
To bee well red in all good
Historie
To bee well seene in history necessar
[...]e in a Magistrat.
(VVhich makes the
sp'rite much more intelligent)
Doth stand with
state and perfit policie,
And maketh dexterous
Authoritie.
Salomō knew all in all. 1 King. 3.12.
The boundes of
knowledge are the highest
spheares,
For, all is knowne in their circumference;
And what soere this
Nurse of
Earthlings beares?
Eccles. 1.16.
Is subiect to
humane intelligence:
Then
knowledge is vnknowne by consequence:
In which respect
Men doe their wits apply
To this or that
Arte with all diligence,
Vnable to know al
Philosophie,
Because it stands not with
mortality.
In all things (as its sedd) are
three degrees,
To weet,
Greate, Small, and the
Indifferent;
And that which doth participate of
these
Is in perfection held most excellent,
The Councellor should bee vertuous, for hee supplieth vertues place, which is in the middest.
Which is the
Councellor in
government:
For, hee twixt
Prince and
People beeing plac'd,
Best sees what is for
both convenient;
And for his
vertue, is of
both embrac'd;
For
vertue from the midst is nere displac'd.
If any one supply that vertuous place
And is not vertuous, he a
Monster is;
For, in the
midst can nothing sit that's base,
Sith
Vertue there (as in her
Heav'n of blisse)
Her selfe enthrones to all
eternities.
Physitions labour, aimes at nought but
health;
Sailors, good passage; Captaines, victories;
So
Councellors should for the
Common-wealth,
Which iustly to her
limbes her
dowry dealth.
Those whom the king will know shalbee to wel known, but those hee looks strange vpon, no man wil know thē.
He had neede be more then
honest, yea much more
Then
vertuous (that is, vertuous past compare)
Who whē his King's with-drawn, may ope the dore
And in a
Closet diue into his
eare,
To put into his
Head how all
things are:
[Page 125]This if ill
Sp'rits perceiue, and hee will bee
Corrupted with pure gold, or what soere,
Some
Fiend will say, all
this wil I giue thee
(Shewing him
VVorldes) if thou wilt honor mee.
Then how behouefull tis for
Kinge and
state,
To make such
Minnions (if he must haue
such)
That in their
Soules corruption deadly hate,
And having
much, desire not overmuch;
But to finde such an
one, were more then
much:
A man maye light a candle at noone and seek amōgst a multitude, yet misse to sinde, such an one.
For to be
neere, and
deere vnto a
Kinge,
Fils
hart with
pride, and
pride doth empt the
pouch;
Thē for supply (sowre
Minions are for the most part so.
sweete) a sweete-sowre
thing
(Which may the
Sov'raign wrest, the
subiect wring)
Call'd
Lieges-loue abus'd, the same must bring.
But where shall
Princes then, bestow their
loue
(Sith loue they must, and ought, where it is due?)
On any
one that still his
grace wil moue
For
Common-good, and
private doth ensue
But for that
good; This
Minion in a
Mew
It is dāgerous ventering abroade the Aire is so infectious.
Had neede be kept; for, if he flie abrode
Divels-incarnate will him still pursue
Till they haue made a
Divell of a
God,
Or if hee scape, tis with
temptations lode.
An
Hart that's truely humbled and is dead
(For loue of
Heav'n) to all the
earth holds deere,
Yet
serpents wisedome hath, in his
doues head,
And from all spots of
pride is purged cleere,
And stil would fast to make the
rest good-cheere:
This were a
Minion for a
God, or
King,
Worthy to weld the
VVorld; and who drawes neere
In nature to this
Man, or divine
Thing,
A
Prince should vse, with all deere cherishing.
For,
Maximilian the Emperour answered one that desired hi
[...] letters pattents to ennoble him, I am able (quoth he) to make thee rich, but Vertue onelie m
[...]st make thee noble.
Vertue onely makes good
Councellors,
Who in great wisedome hold the
State vpright;
No
Halles orehang'd with
Armes of
Ancestors
Haue in their right creation any might;
But if they haue them too, they are most right:
Yet
Vertue found not
Tully
It is better to bring honour to a mans house then to diffame it being there already.
nobly borne,
But made him
Noble by his wisedomes weight;
"
Vertue respects not fortune, nor doth scorne
"
To dwell with those whose fortunes are forlorne.
Kinges come from
slaues, and
slaues frō
Kings descēd:
Bloud's but the
water wat'ring
Fleshes dust;
Which by its nature ever doth descend,
And makes fraile
Flesh to fall to
things vniust:
For, tis but
Act. 17.26. The higher the Sunne is, the lesse shaddow he maks, & the greater a mans vertue is, the lesse glory he seekes.
Blood in the
vniust and
iust:
And al alike it is in
high and
lowe;
Not halfe so ful of
life, as ful of
lust,
Making vs rather
abiect, then to growe
To
high accoumpt, for
ought that from it flowes.
Yet some times evil men make
Rulers good,
As good
Musitions, oft in
life are badd;
These
last make
discords ioyne in pleasant
moode;
The
first the like in
Common-weales have made:
So either may be
vertuous in his
Trade,
How ever
vitious in their
lives they are:
But
Policy the
Prince doth still disswade
From making
such too great, for they wil pare
The
Prince, and polle the
Commons
They will make sale of the Princes favour to the preiudice of his people
without care.
For
Slaves (though
Kinges) in disposition
Are most vnmeete to manage
Kingdomes states;
And so are
Men of base condition
Vnfitt to make inferior
Eccl. 38.33.
Maiestrates:
[Page 127]The Floures of Crownes fitt not Mechanick
They are, as the feete, n
[...] cessary members, nor could a common-wealth stand without them, howbeit they are as the feete furthest remoued from the head being Reasōs Seate.
Pates,
No more then costly plumes doe
Asses heads;
They are call'd
Crafts-men, quasi craftie
mates,
Let these rule
Crafts-men.
such (if they must governe needes)
For they at best are nought but holsome
vveedes.
But some as voide of
honestie as
Arte,
Advance themselues by
Had men no other fault yet are they therfore vnfit for government, because so desirous to governe. Authority should be denied to such as seeke it, & given to those that (like wise mē) refuse it.
wealth (the
Nurse of
Vice)
And with
good gifts supply want of
desert;
Good-giftes, that
Givers of
Commands entice
To part with
them though they be nere so nice:
These (seing
wealth hath giv'n them
Vertues meede)
Doe make
port-sale of
Vertue, and
Iustice
T'enrich themselues to clymbe thereby with speed;
From whence the wracks of
Cōmon-weales proceed.
Did they but good themselues by some
mens harme,
It might be borne, although it
heavy were:
But
Example of rich men doth much good or hurt in the cō mon-weale.
they hereby make
all themselues to
arme
With
gold, that seeke
authoritie to beare,
Because they see its gotten by such
geare:
When
Vertue's thus neglected and dispis'd,
Then
Vice perforce doth in her
place appeare;
And where dam'd
Vice hath
Vertues place surpris'd,
A
Common-woe, with
Common-wealth's disguis'd.
That must be deerely sold that's deerely
Alexander Severus caus
[...]d such to be deposed, and severely pun
[...]shed, that b
[...]ught their Offices, saying they sold deerer in retaile then they bought in the grosse
[...]
bought;
And whereas
Iudgments thus are bought and sold,
There, by
iust Iudgment al goes stil to nought:
Yet
[...]ustice and iust
Iudgments States vphold,
Whose want wrappes them in
mis'ries manifold.
The
Iudgments of that
Iust orewhelme that
Land
That armes
Oppression (gainst the
Lawes) with
Gold;
For where its so, there
VVill for
Law must stand,
And
Law goes with
Confusion hand in ha
[...]d.
Intelligence (supreme
pow'r of the
Soule)
Wherein alone w'are like the
The Philosopher saith, God is an infinite actuall Vnderstāding
Deity,
Is that alone which makes vs meete to rule;
For
Natures lawes, and
Reas'ns authority
Requires that such should haue high'st dignity,
That by their
vertue, and their
high estate,
They might conserve men in prosperity:
For right it is they should be rais'd to
State,
That make the state of all most fortunate.
For
Honor is high
Vertues sole
Honor is the Prize for which Vertue endureth what not?
Reward,
For which all vertuous
Men all
paine endure:
If then such men from
Honor should be barr'd,
All to be vicious it would soone procure;
For
Vice doth raigne where
Vertue hath no pow'r:
Where
Honors are bestow'd without respect
On good and badd, as cloudes bestowe their
shower,
There must of force ensue but badd effect
For who'l be good, if
Grace the
good neglect.
Honors given to vertue in former times.
In ancient
Common-weales they wonted were
Statues of
mettall, Arches triumphal,
With
Publike Sepulture, and
praises cleere,
These, and such like, they did bestow on all
That to their
Common-weales were as a
VVall:
For they that watch whilst others sound doe sleepe
To stay the
State, that else perhapps might fall,
And laboure stil the
Lambes from
VVolves to keepe;
Such
Shepherds should be honor'd of the
Sheepe.
Simïl.
For to give
Rule to none but
Midasses,
Is ev'n as if a
Shippe were rendered
In greatest
Tempests and
VVindes outrages,
To richest
Marchants to be governed,
Whereof ensues the wracke of
shippe and
freigh
[...],
From which in
Stormes it is delivered
By skilful Pilotts which haue gott the
sleight
by their experience to direct her right.
Themistocles is iustly famoused,
For that by
Valor and great
Policie
He did reduce th'
Athenians beastly bredd
To live by
Lawes in great
From wh
[...]m the lib
[...]rty of disorder is taken awa
[...] he i
[...] over-ruled for his owne benefit.
civility;
But
Solon's prais'd more meritoriously,
Who finding
Athens at the point to fall
With shocke of
Civill warre, he readily
Did staie the same, and reestablish't all
The
Lawes &
Maiestrats, driv'n to the
wall.
Nor did
Camillus that repulst the
Galls
And
Rome preserved from their furies flame
Deserve lesse, (if not more)
memorialls,
Thē the two
Romulus & Remus.
Brethrē that first built the same:
Nor yet can
Caesars or great
Pompeies fame
(Though they
Romes Empire stretcht from
East to VVest)
Be so renowmed, as his glorious name
That found it neere by
Haniball
Scipio Affricanus.
possest,
Yet rescu'd it, and gaue it
roome and
rest.
Then
Rule should not be given to the
rich,
If with their
wealth they were but
fooles vniust:
The
Common-wealth would
The oath of xpiān Kinges is. I will minister Lawe, iustice and protection a
[...]ight to every one. It beh
[...]ues thē thē to see that their vnder-Mai
[...]strates make a cōscience of th
[...]er owne oathes & the Kinges
[...]
private be to such,
For they would
rule by
Lawes squar'd by their
lust;
And for their
gaine stil buy and sell the
Iust:
VVisedome and
Iustice, with
wealth competent
Should be in
Rulers: such
[...]he
Prince might trust
With greatest
charge (next them) in
government;
For each will rule as
Vertues President.
For how ist possible
men should perswade
Others to
vertue and to keepe the
Lawes,
If they them-selues them-selues there frō
To mak laws for others & trāsgresse thē our selus, is to teach others
[...]o trāsgres thē
disswade,
And by their
lewdnesse, others
lewdnesse cause?
"A
Rulers Vice to vice the People drawes:
Sylla might wel be laught to scorne, when hee
Perswaded
Temperance to
all; because
He liv'd himselfe (none more) licenciouslee,
For none lesse loved
mediocritee.
Lisander was no lesse to blame, for hee
Allow'd those Vices in the
Multitude,
Frō which himselfe refrain'd
They that favor sin are a
[...] worthye of death as they that cōmit the sin Rom 1.31. The way by precepts is obscure & long, but by example
[...] sho
[...]te & plaine. Senec.
religiouslee:
For, if by
Princes, vices bee alowd,
It is al one, as if they
vice ensude.
But iust
Licurgus nere did
ought forbid,
But by himselfe the
same should be eschude
Whose
subiects did no more thē himself did,
Such
Legislators should bee
deifide.
Such
Prince or
Priest, such
people,
Princes and Priests ought to be the Exchequers of Gods inestimable Graces.
saith the
Saw;
Examples more then
Lawes make men liue wel:
Doe
Priests liue so? their liues like
Loadstones
Good works ar much more perswasiue to good life thē good wordes.
draw
The
people to the same: And doe compel
Sans-force t'
obedience such as would rebel:
Then weigh what
good or
ill your
Good life is the effect and glory of the church militāt & of the good Pastors thereof. Blessed is the Prince & Priest whose liues serue for vnwri
[...]en law.
liues doe cause
Ye
Prophets Sonnes, that should in
grace excel;
Is your
life il? its double ill, because
It hurts your
selues, and to
vice others drawes.
And where
Vice raignes,
Rebellion oft doth
rule
That diss-vnites the best vnited
state:
Which growes from
Governors vice or
M
[...]s-gove
[...]nment
[...]or the most parte i
[...] cau
[...]e of rebellion; an a
[...]gument of the goodnes of ours.
mis-rule
That makes the
Commons (with no common
hate)
[Page 131]Watch al
advantage, to abridge their
date.
The forraine
Foe, then findes domesticke
aide,
Aide that assists
all that wil
innovate;
So by their
Subiects Sov'raignes are betraide,
VVhen their
mis-rule makes them be disobaide.
ANd here my
Muse leads me as by the
hand
Out of the
way (as it were) by the
way,
To view the liues of
Princes of this
Land,
Since first the
Norman did the
Scepter sway
Williā Duke of Normandy.
And scanne their
vndertakings as I may:
For by th'event of
Actions past, wee shall
The
present, and
future, the better sway;
Others harme teach vs to shū what caused them.
Which is the vse of
storie, for they fal
Seldome or nere, that haue
light to see
All.
VVilliam the
Norman, surnam'd
Conquerer,
By his succesful
sworde having subdude
This compound
Nation (weake through
civil war)
Brittan
[...] Saxon, Dane.
The
Conquest hee so thorowly pursude
As that an admirable
peace ensude:
This fierce
Invader with resistlesse
force
It is a glorious matter to cō quer, but a much more glorious to vse the Conquest well.
Dissolu'd the
state and made the
Multitude
To liue by
Lawes, which
Lawyers yet enforce,
Which, of all former
lawes did crosse the course.
Hee pull'd vp
all that might pul downe his
state,
Supplanting, or
transplanting ev'rie
plant
The way to establish a state purchased with the sword
That might proue
poison to his frolicke
fate;
And
planting in their
place (ere
Plants did want)
Such as were
holsome, or lesse discrepant:
So that no
Brittaine, Saxon, Dane, or
all,
A consequent of removing great ones in a newe-conquered kingdome.
Could to this day his
Ofspring here supplant,
But
they haue, doe, and
still continue shall,
Vntill this
Kingdome from her
selfe doth fall.
It was no little
worke, nor
wisedome lesse,
From so smal
wealth, and
powre which he possest,
Not onely such a
people to suppresse,
But erst at
ods, to make them liue in
rest
20 And odde descentes of Kings and Queens since the conquest.
For ten
descents twice
tolde and more at least;
Not as a
Nation mixt, but most
intire,
And with new
Lordes, new
Lawes the
land invest,
Which straight extinguish might
seditions fire,
And keepe
Ambition downe that would aspire.
For vvho so reacheth vvith his
sworde a
Crowne,
If
head, and
hand, vse not
As this of this Conqueror.
like
government,
The reeling
Crowne may soone be overthrowne,
Though it (perhaps) be propt by
Parliment:
France.
VVitnesse our
Conquests in the
Continent:
That vvere more
glorious, then
commodious,
Because we made the
sword the
instrument
Onely to make our selues
victorious,
Our glory & shame.
But not to keepe vvhat made vs
glorious.
From
VVilliam, vnto
Edward, Longshancks nam'd,
Turmoiles, and
Brals, to that
state incident,
That is not throughly
staide, the
Land inflam'd;
For no
peace is so sure or permanent,
Ava
[...]ice and Pride the perverters of Peace.
But
Avarice or
Pride makes turbulent.
Richard the first, transported by desire
To helpe to conquere
Iurie, thether went;
It is meer madnes to trust the Crown in their handes that long to put it on their owne heads.
And made his brother
Iohn, Regent intire;
Who did
vsurpe the
Crowne ere his
retire.
In which
returne, hee vvas tane
Prisoner
In
Austria, from whence b'ing
ransomed,
Rich 1. taken prisoner in Austria.
Hee repossest his
Crowne; but in the
warre
He made (when he his
Crowne recovered)
[Page 133]Vpon his
foes, he
life surrendered.
The sincerest minds may be tēpted aboue their strength by the glitering glosse of a crown lying within reach.
The end of
Kings thus causing their owne
griefe
To leaue their
crownes so neere anothers
Head;
A pleasant
pray enticeth many a
Theefe,
And who'l bee
second, when he may be
chiefe.
Neither did
Iohn escape the heavie
hand
Of iust
Revenge, to all
Vsurpers due;
In whose dire
Raigne, two curses crost the
Land,
The Pope interdicted the land.
Gods, and the
churches, which made
all to rue,
For ceaslesse
Troubles did thereon ensue:
And in conclusion his
life hee lost;
By poison as some saie.
For
vengeance to the
ende did him pursue;
So, al his
life hee beeing
turn'd and
tost,
Before his
time gaue vp his tired
Ghost.
But to descend to
Longshanckes, in whose
time
Edward. 1.
The
common-wealth (fast rooted) gan to sprout,
And by this
Piller to high
state did clime,
For he was
prudent, painefull, valiant
[...] stout,
And dextrously his
bus'nesse brought about:
He wisely waide how incommodiously
All kings that thought so thriv
[...]d the better.
The
Conquests stoode atchiv'd the
Land without,
Therefore he bent his
powre, and
industry,
It to reduce into a
Wā Scotlād.
Monarchie.
On
VVales, and
Scotland he that
powre imploide,
That which is got
[...]ē with the Sword must so bee mainetained, which little instrument can remooue Obstac
[...]es bee they never so g
[...]eat, or keep them downe that wold rise without permission.
Reducing both to his obedience;
And long might one the other haue enioy'd
Without hart-burning inb
[...]ed
difference:
If hee had vs'd
King VVilliams dilligence:
Prosperous he was
abroade, and iust at
home,
A no lesse
vertuous, then a
valiant Prince,
Leaving his
Sonne (that next supplide his rome)
A demonstration what doth
kings become.
Edward his
Sonne, succeeded him in
Rule,
But not in
To rule is as much as to amend that which is amisse or awry.
Rules, by which he rul'd aright,
Who being seduc'd by
Masters of
Misrule,
Referr'd the
government to their
oresight,
Who,
all oresaw, but
what advance them might:
Vntill their
rapine, and
ambition,
The loue of
all from their
A Prince once in obloquie, doe hee wel, or ill, al is ill taken of his subiects
Liege parted quight;
So that the
Sire assail'd was by the
Sonne,
And being
subdu'd,
[...] in
Prison.
Tacitus Hist. Simil.
A direfull
end to
Kinges misguided, due;
Who like to
figg-Trees growing on the side
Of some
steepe Rocke, doe feede none but a crue
Of
Crowes and
Claw-backs, and Sinn-soothers.
Kites, which on their
Toppes do ride,
And plume on them (base
Birds) on ev'ry side:
A
States abundance, if it manag'd be
By a lascivious
King, which
Slaves misguide,
Subverts the
The more wealth, the more woo, if evil imployed.
State which
Kinges cannot foresee,
When they are compast with ill
Companee.
Edward. 3.
Edward the third, was most victorious,
In all
attempts and
Actions fortunate,
No lesse
iudicious then
valorous,
Yet were his
Conquests hurtfull to his
State,
For they the same did but debilitate:
So that when through his
ages feeble plight,
And this ore-racked
Realmes most poore estate,
The
Synnewes of the
warre were cracked quight,
His wonted
fortunes then plaide least in sight.
His
Fathers blood with never-ceasing
cries
Filling
Th'almighties iust al-hearing
Eares,
Importunes
Vengeance, which with
Argus Eyes
VVatcheth his shaking
house for many
The divine Vengeance sleepes not though it wincks.
yeares,
[Page 135]And to his
Sonnes Sonne fearefully appeares:
Disastrous
Richard of Burdeux.
Richard second of that name,
Pestred with
plagues, and ceaselesse cause of
feares,
(Through his
misrule) can well averre the same,
VVho did the
forme of this
State quite vnframe.
He, like his
Grandsire great, great
troubles rais'd
Through his more great
oppressions, and
excesse:
He lov'd and praised none that
vertue prais'd;
Liv'd like his
Grandsire great, with like
One evil corrupteth another and evill put to evill is cause of mutuall destructiō.
successe,
VVho, blest a
few, that
few or
none did blesse:
Edward, and
Richard, second of their
names,
(The
last, the
first did second in
distresse)
Both over-ruled were by base
past-shames,
So
Both alike, lost
Kingdome, Life, and
fames.
And if there be
wrench in this
Paralell,
It is in that one had a sory
Sonne,
The
other a like
Cousin to compell
Him yeeld his
Crowne, be
[...]ore his
Daies were done,
VVhich were abridg'd (as
Edwards) in
Prison:
But, if this
King had not so
childish bin
VVhen
Mowbray peacht th'
Vsurper of Treason,
He might haue bin secure from al his
Kin:
But blinded
Iudgment is the
hire of
Sinne.
Thus fa
[...]es it with weake
Kings, and
Cousins stronge;
Richard, lies
naked clothed with his
God executes his owne iustice by the iniustïce of others.
gore,
Exposed to the
view of
old and
yonge,
A woefull
Spectacle, if not much more
For
Kinges that live, as he had liv'd before:
But though
Exampl
[...]s (freshly bleeding yet)
Doe
Caue crie, (or rather lowde doe rore,)
Yet
Kings thus
clawde, where they doe
ytche, forgett
The future
paine
[...] on present
Present pleasures take away the thought of future paine.
pleasure sett.
Henry 4.
Henry the fourth, which thus vsurpt the
Crowne,
Of all
Vsurpers had the best successe.
For, he was provident to hold his owne,
And for the Common-wealth he was no lesse:
In
Field, and
Towne, he would direct the
Presse;
Chiefe
Captaine, and chiefe
Councellor was
A Kinge should be able to councell as chiefe councellor and direct as chiefe Captaine.
he
Who rul'd in height of
VVisedome, and
Prowesse;
Into obscurest
Treasons he could see,
And if they
VVere, soone cause them not to
Bee.
This held him
Kinge as long as
life he held,
Which was as longe as
Nature gaue him leave;
And courage gaue the
Scepter wel to weld
Vnto his
Sonne to whome he
both did leave,
Who, did accordingly the
same receave:
Henry 5.
He
rul'd as did his
Sire, in
VVisedomes strength,
And heigth of
Valor, which he eke did give;
Who caught fast hold on fleeting
France at length,
,,But weak Arms loose, what ere the strōg Arme geint'h.
And now as rowsed from a tedious
Sleepe,
(After this
Kinge with glorie was interr'd)
The
Divine Vengeance gan againe to
Vengeance attends the 3. and 4 generation of mercilesse māquellers.
peepe
Vpon his
Sonne, that longe had bin deferr'd;
The
Cries of
Richards blood now well are heard:
And silly
Henry (though a
Saint he bee)
Henry 6.
Must beare the
plagues his
Grandsires guilt incurr'd,
When he imbrude his
hands, or did agree
To have his
Sov'raignes bloud shedd savaglee.
His
Vncles (more like
Fathers) first he looseth,
Then by a
woman most improvident
He is ore ru
[...]'d, fo
[...]
shee of
all disposeth,
Till
Hate and
Factions ore-grew
government.
[Page 137]Then
Richard Duke of
Yorke in
Parliment
Rich. Duke of York claimed the crowne in Parliament.
Claimed the
Scepter, (being so ill swai'd)
Where was examin'd his
claime, and
descent,
And then gaue waie to
it, when
all was wai'd;
So, silly
Henry was by
law betrai'd.
The
title of Duke
Richard thus admitted,
But an
Vsurper needes must make the
King;
Yet t'was
decreed that he should bee permitted
For
life to hold the
Crowne which
death doth bring
When as the
Crowne is held as no such
No king, i
[...] but halfe on
[...]
thing:
Making the
Duke by
Act of
Parliament
His
Heire apparant, without altering,
Which for them both was most malevolent,
For hardly can one
Crowne, two
Kings content.
This was a fond conspiring
Parliment
The fruites springing frō the pow
[...]e of Parliamēts to make Kings in England.
Against their
Liege directlie, and the
Lawes;
No lesse
disloiall, then
improvident,
And of
effectes most bloudie was the
cause;
For, now the
King his
Friendes together drawes,
VVho, for his safetie straight began to lay,
VVhich could not be without the fearefull
Pawse
Of
Yorke (that
Lion) cleane were
Germanicus, because one or two in the Army had only a purpose to salute him by the name of Emperor, was never wel brooked til by his own death he had paide the price of other mēs rashnes. Tac Hist.
cut away,
Downe must his
Den, his
Howse must haue no
stay.
VVho like him
selfe (beeing truely
Leonine)
Stood on his
strength, so to defeate his
foes;
And having
wisedome truelie
serpentine
Still
compassing about the
crowne he goes,
Whom
Henry tripping in his
course
No wisdome prevailes against Gods decree.
orethroes:
But his
Sonne Edward kept the
claime a
foote
Vntill that
civill bloud the
Land oreflowes;
Who, in conclusion, pull'd vp by the roote
All
Lets, & got th'imbrued
crowne with
mickle boot.
Edward 4.
Whilst this was
doing, the
Realme was
vndunne,
The
Common-wealth, became a
Common-woe;
Iustice, and
government by
Rogues ore runne,
The
Ministers whereof tost too and fro
Like
foote-balls over which al men may
The effects of civil warre: for looke how much Peace is bet
[...]er then warr, so m
[...]ch is
[...]orraine invasion better then civill dissention.
goe:
All was quite out of
square, by
squaring thus;
The
Ground did grone enforc'd to vndergoe,
Continued
Armies (most contentious)
That made the
State poore, as prodigious.
This
Claime was wel
examin'd, and
admitted,
Here was
Succession wel
established,
What
villanie was not thereby committed?
What
vertue was not quite abolished?
And who so
high that were not drown'd in
dreade?
Yonge, olde, rich, poore, and
Babes vnborne,
Civill warre ten
[...]es to the preiudice of the yet vnborne.
or borne,
Beasts, & things senselesse had cause
Teares to shedd,
For
all hereby away perforce were worne,
And far'd at least, as
Creatures most forlorne.
Woe woorth such vip'rous
Kings houses yeeld many such Vermine.
Cousins that wil rend
Their
Mothers
[...]wombe (the
Cōmon-wealth) to raigne;
From such
apparant-Heires God vs defend,
That care not who doe
lose so they may
gaine:
And long may
Hee in
peace the
Crowne sustaine,
That for our
peace, &
his, such
Heires hath brought;
We all of late for
such did stil complaine;
Then now sith we haue such, and cost vs nought,
Lett's
thankfull be and
know them as we ought.
As
Pow'r doth want, so
Claimes, &
Factions
For a poore and hungry Army cannot observe military disciplin. Casiodorus.
cease;
Might Right orecomes, chiefly in
Kingdoms claimes;
Pow'r Titles stirrs, and
Conquest makes their peace:
The
Sword the
Law (how firme soever) maymes,
[Page 139]Which at a
Conquest (though vnlawful) aymes:
Though
Prince, and
Peeres, provide for future
rule,
Ambition hardly her estate disclaimes,
Though for a time the
Lawes her over-rule,
Yet when
time serues, the
Law shee wil
Ambition vpon the least opportunitie setts vpō what so ere hinders hir rising
misrule.
Our
State stands not on
Armes as
others doe;
Our
force lies most dispersed at the
Plow,
Vnready, rude, and oft rebellious
More cōmon weales are ruined for want of good obayers, thē good commanders.
too,
Whose
Sun-burnt
Necks oft rather breake thē bow,
Not caring
whom, ne
what they doe alow:
These and such like enduced our late
Prince
Such
motions vtterly to disalowe,
For this, and many an inconvenience,
Whereof all
Times affoord experience.
This made this careful
Queene as knowing well,
(By fortie fiue yeares
proofe, and her sharpe sight
Into
events, whereof al
Stories tell)
How safe to
rule, and keepe the
State vpright,
For her
rights sake, right close to keepe this
Iealousy is glued to loue and to a Crowne.
right:
Better (she thought) such
Hëires two
daies old
Then two
yeares, and as strong in
Law, and
Fight:
So, lou'd her
States life, and her
owne to hold,
And made her
Hart that
Heires securest
Hold.
But sith shee did conclude this great
affaire,
Both
Law, and
Conscience, doe conclude the
State;
And who resists (by birth) that lawful
Heire,
Resists the lawful
Sov'raigne Maiestrate,
Made both by birth and
Law from iust
estate:
Monarchicall-inheritance resides
In
him from
her,
Birth, Bequest, Laws of God, Nature, Nations, and Reasō, togeather with all kingly worthines makes good our now kings possession.
then, who doth violate
Obedience to him wounds the tender sides
Of
Law and
Conscience, and al
good besides.
Edward the fourth thus hauing caught the
Crown,
The weake
Lancastrians drave to the wall,
And spared
none, till
all were overthrowne
That might lie in his
waie to make him fall:
His
Neerenesse of blood doth oft put hartes furthest a sunder, in K
[...]ngdomes cases.
Brother Clarence (ô
Crime Capitall!)
He did
rebaptize in a
Butt of
VVine,
Being ielous of him (how soere
Loiall)
A
Turkish providence most
indivine;
Yet
Crownes wil rest on
such, ere thei'le decline.
Besides, a sliding and new-fangled
Nation
Ful of
Rebellion and
Disloyaltie,
May cause a
Prince for his securer
station
To stand vpon the like
extremitie
VVhere
Vertue hath no
place of certenty.
VVhat
Prince (if providēt) wil stick to straine
Both
Law and
Conscience in secresy
To cutt one
Mēber
The Lawe it selfe will rather admitt a mischiefe thē an inconvenience.
off, that letts his
raigne,
VVhich the
states Body doth in
health maintaine?
The more
perfection and Heroick
worth
Such
Heires, great
Cousines, or great
Subiects haue,
The more the
Multitude wil sett them
He alwaies shal be suspected & hated of the Prince in possession whō men doe account worthy or like to be Prince in succession. Tacitus Hist. The Valor & fierce courage of the great Cousin, displeaseth the iealous Soveraigne. Tacit.
foorth
And more and more their
rule they seeke and craue;
Then must we lose a
part the
vvhole to saue:
These haue
Achitophells to egge them on
And make them much more restlesse then a
wave,
Vntil their
Soveraignes they sett vpon
To make them yeeld vp their
Dominion.
Manie a busie-
Head by
VVords and
Deeds
Put in their
Heads how they may cōpasse
All crafty & Achitophell-like councels, are in showe pleasant, in execution hard, and in event deadly dangerous.
Crownes,
That
Crownes at last may compasse so their
Heads
And sitt victoriously on steedfast
Thrones:
[Page 141]All these like humming Bees ensue those Drones;
To gather
Hony if they chance to rest,
And store themselues with sweete
A Bākerours peace is in civill discord, & his discord is in peace.
provisions,
VVhilst the
Crown-greedy
Cousine in vnrest
Lives but for them with
feares and
cares opprest.
Now though
King Edward (like a wary
Prince)
To remoue
Obstacles bent all his
might;
Yet could no
skill or
humane providence
Protect his
Sonnes from their
Protectors spight:
VVho as he seru'd King Henry, seru'd them right.
The blood of
Innocents on
Innocents
VVith heavy
vengeance mixte, amaine doth light
[...]
Thus, Innocents are plagu'd for the Nocents
Such are the
High'sts inscrutable
Gods Iudgments are inscrutable but none vniust.
Iudgments.
And as He murdred
Henrie for his
Crowne;
So for their
Crowne were his
Sonnes
Iustice equal in quality, & quantity for Henry 6. and his Sonne were murdered. &c.
murdered,
By hardest
Harts in softest
Bedd of
Downe
They were (deere
Harts) at once quite smothered,
VVhich some ignoble
Nobles
Man ought not to vse mā prodigally. Seneca. Richard 3.
furthered:
And, rather then they should not die by force,
Or want a
VVant-grace to performe the
Deede,
Their
Vncle and
Protector must perforce
Their
Crowne from
Head, and
Head frō
Life divorce.
Now vp is
Richard, (
Monster, not a
Man)
Vpon the Royal
Throne that reeling stood;
Now
Rule doth
Vnder this King, to do ill was
[...] not alwaies safe
[...] & alwaies vnsafe to doe well, as Tacitus reports of Neros raigne, Princes that tyrannously governe their people haue greater cause to feare good men then thē that bee evill.
end, when he to
rule began,
VVho being perfect
ill, destroi'd the
Good,
And like an
Horseleech liv'd by sucking
blood.
Now as desire of
Rule more
bloody was
In
Yorke then
Lancaster, so did the flud
Of
Divine Vengeance more in
Yorke surpasse:
For to maine
Seas of
blood, Blood-Brookes repasse
[...]
They which cōtēn: peace and covet honour, doe lose both peace & honor.
Bloud-sucking
Richard (swol
[...]e with sucking
Bloud)
When
Horsleech-like he had his bloody
pray,
Away fals hee in
bloud bemir'd with
Mud,
Making his
Nephewes vsher him the way.
For from his
crowne the
crowne was cut away.
A good cause in publike war (like the Cape Bone spei) cō ducts to the lād of triumph
Henrie the sevenths keene-edg'd victorious
Sword
Slipt twixt both
Crownes vnto his
Crownes decay,
And got the
Crowne that was much more assur'd
VVhich hee to his, and his to theirs affoord.
God amongst
Men, no
King but demi-
God
Hen. 7.
Henrie the seventh the
Sc
[...]pter takes in
hand,
Who with it (as with
Moises powrefull
Rod)
Turn'd
streames of
civill bloud that soakt this
land
A good prince mak
[...] war that hee may haue peace, and endures labor in hope of rest. Salust.
To
silver streames, that ran on
Golden sand:
He turned
Swords to
Mattockes, Speares to
Spades,
And bound vp
all vnbound, in
peaces Band,
Who dra
[...]e the erst long
idle to their
Trades,
And chang'd iniurious
Swords, to
Iustice-Blades.
No more
Plantagenet, but
Thewdor now
Sits in the
Kingdomes late vnstable
Seate:
Eccles. 5 8
[...]
Plow-men praise
God, and
God doth
Where God is praised mēs endevors are blessed.
speed the
Plow,
For such a
King that makes their
Crops compleate,
And multiplies their
heardes of
sheepe and
Neate:
Vpon
Ambitions Necke hee sets his
foote
Keeping her vnder;
Two things doe establish the Throns of kings prudēce & pietie, the one a
[...]earing in their Actions, the other in their manners.
And amongst the
VVheate
He puls vp
Darnell dulie by the roote,
And nought neglects that may his
Kingdome boote.
This
Salomon lookt into
High and
Low,
And knew
all from the
Cedar to the
shrub;
He bare the
sworde that gaue a bitter blow
1. King. 3.12.
Aswell to
Cedars, as the lowest
stub
[Page 144]That in the
course of
Iustice prou'd a
Rub:
Homer faineth all the Gods to sleep except Iupiter implying ther by the care of a good King for his subiect
[...]
VVisedome and
Prowesse did exalt his
Throne,
Iustice and
Mercie propt it, which did curb
Those that would shake it, so that he alone
Did rule the
Roast that
all did liue vpon.
He, (vertuous
King) still fear'd the
King of
Kings
With louing
feare, that made him
Lion-bold.
He ordred
things as pleas'd the
Thing of
Things,
Princes ought to measure their Actions by the standerd of their Laws; as this did.
Like
David, that of
him his
Crowne did hold,
That on his
Throne his
Ofspring doth vphold:
Laden with
happinesse, and blessed
daies,
His
Realme repleat with
blessings manifold;
This prosp'rous
Prince (to his immortall
praise)
Left
Life, Realme, Children, all at happy
staies.
Then no lesse fear'd, then famous
Henry,
Hen. 8.
(That had a sacred
Caesar in his pay)
His sword was so successefull as made his neighbours glad of his friendship, & feareful of his indignation.
With some-what more then
mortall Maiestie,
Sits on the
Throne (that
hands divine did stay)
As
Heire apparant, and the
state doth sway:
He weilds the
sword with his victorious
hands
That the whole
Continent doth sore affray,
Wherewith he makes to crouch the
Neighbor lands
Which in a manner lie at his
commands.
Hee was as
circumspect, as
provident,
Mercie may haue her excesse in humā things.
And by his
Fathers observation
Did right well know, what kinde of
government
Was fitt'st for this vnkinde revolting
Nation:
Clemency is most daungerous where & whē soft quiet dealing draweth on more evil then severity
[...]
Well knew
hee how to part a
Combination
That stood not with the
state, or his
availe;
And if he were severe for
reformation,
T'was
Emperik-like, that knew what it did aile,
So, kill the
cause lest all the
VVhole should faile.
His for
[...]aine
VVarres, and famous
Victories
More
glorious were
[...] then for our
Contrie good:
For, such
VVars haue these
inconveniences,
They make vs spend our
Treasures with our
bloud,
Where both are cast
Forrain Cō questes were costly in achiving costly in holding, & oft no lesse costly then dishono
[...]rable in forgoing
away in likelyhood,
When
wars abroad drinke vp our
wealth at
home,
The
fire must out, when spent is all the
wood;
And if nought from without come in the wombe
The Body needes must die by Natures dombe.
The
wealth hee
prest from
Monastries supprest
VVith the
Revennues which to them pertain'd,
In liberal larges to his friends & servants.
The
Crowne possest, but hee it
dispossest
With
open Hand; which, had
they, still remain'd
T'had bin aloft; for lesse hath
Crownes sustain'd.
Lone, Reliefe, Subsedie, and such as these
Might (for the
subiects ease) haue bin refrain'd:
The
crownes Revennues
such might well release,
And haue maintain'd the
state in
warre and
peace.
If these had still bin
adiuncts of the
crowne,
And
all that hold them hold as of the
same;
Our Kinges might haue had a double intrest in their subiectes.
Our
Kings might warre with
Tenants of their
owne,
Who would
vnprest haue yet bin
prest for shame
To follow their
Liege-land-lords by that name.
The
Crowne then, like a
Condite neuer dry,
Stil might haue stream'd (to th'
owners endles fame)
Rivers of
Riches vnto
Low and
hy
That well deserv'd of
King or
Contery.
Those
harts, whose life their
Liege should thus maintain
(No lesse then
bodies to their
souls are bound)
Should haue bin
tied vnto their
Soveraigne
To goe with
him at ev'ry needfull
Sound,
[Page 145]And in their
service bin most faithful found.
But that, that shalbe, shalbe. That high
hand
That all disposeth, thus did it
The hearts of Kings are in his hands that disposeth all things to effect his inevitable decrees.
confound
For purposes which hardly can be scand,
But for the
Crowne ill, how ere for the
Land.
Hee,
Caesar-like in's
fortunes confident,
Ere first he crost the
Seas to warre with
France,
The
Marquesse of
Exceter made
Regent
And
Heire apparant; but no ill by chance
Ensu'd till he did him quite
Beheaded him
disadvance:
Hee had forgot the direfull
Tragedie
Of the sixth
Henry, and like
heires apparance:
But more advis'd, he held it
policie
He knew it was not the speach of a wise man to say, who woulde haue thought it?
To spare that
heire till more necessitie.
When he had
cleer'd the
coast, and
clensd the
waie,
Of all that lay in
either to molest,
And having put the
state in perfect
staie,
He with his
Fathers laid him downe to rest,
And left a
Sonne in whom the
Land was blest:
Edw. 6.
VVho being
yong, could not yet stirre the
sterne,
But
rul'd by those his
sire esteemed best;
And while the vertuous
King to
rule did learne,
His
Realme (misrul'd) in
vp-rore did discerne.
Heere raign'd
Ambition, like
Obedience clad,
There rul'd
Sedition, in
Concordes coate;
And
here and
there Rebellion rag'd as mad,
Simil.
And
ev'ry where the
Common-wealth did floate
Like to an halfe-suncke tempest-beaten
Boate:
Each for him
selfe, no one for
King or
Sate,
Vpon the
VVedge of
Gold the
best did doate,
All stood as falling still in each
estate,
Knights giving
Earles, Earles giving
Dukes the
Mate.
Many a
Demas then forsooke poore
Paule;
In Summe, the
Summe of all was out of
square,
And yet (strange
Paradox) at
square was
all,
None
Compasse kept, yet
For private good.
compassing they are,
And
Circumvention held
discretions care:
Thus whilst the
Sov'raign's in
minoritie,
Each would be
sov'raigne that about him were;
The smal in
grace strave for
maiority,
And
Youth with
Age for
Seniority.
Disorder thus dividing the whole
Disorder mother of Confusion.
State,
And subdividing those
divisions;
The
Lord of
Love, to show his vrged
Hate,
Tooke the wrong'd
Kinge from his
Dominions,
And left the
Land fir'd with
Sedition the plague of perver
[...]nesse.
seditions:
By
Angells hands this
Kinge Angelicall,
(A
[...] one of high
Iehovahs Minions)
Was borne from this
Nation vnnaturall,
That vengeance on it, so, might freely fall.
No sooner had the
Heavens seis'd his
Soule,
But a left
hand began to seize the
Crowne;
Which seisure a right
hand did soone controule,
And
VVrong that would aspire,
Right straight putts
Fortune oftē reserveth t
[...] the hardest chance
[...] them whō she advā ceth to the greatest dignity.
The fortunate cannot doe ill i
[...] they would.
downe;
Which fatally in fine was overthrone:
Yet was that
VVronge made
Right by their consents
That were to see that each one had his owne;
But
Heau'n disposeth
Earth and her intents,
And
Earth gainst
Heav'n oppos'd, too late
He is made wise too late that is made wis
[...] by his owne h
[...]rme and irrecov
[...] rable l
[...]s
[...]e.
repents.
Who trusts in
Men in whome was never
D
[...]p
[...]t from th
[...]e enemies and bew
[...]re of thy f
[...]iendes Eccle. 6.13.
trust
(Except they were at warre with
VVealth and
State)
Few
Statesmen such) shal see how much
distrust
Doth Men advantage, and prolongs their
date;
[Page 147]
Treason's in
Trust; Repentance comes to late:
When
Powr's deriv'd from
those that are but
weake
(
VVeake ev'ry way) it stands in desprate
state:
Frailty sticks not
fidelity to
Frailty is ful of falshood.
breake
VVhen it doth
favoure, and
advantage seeke.
In case of
Crownes (when it our
Crownes may cost,
If we misse holding when at them we catch)
It's deadly dangerous at al to trust,
Much more to trust
There is nothing more profitable to mortall men then distrust. Euripides.
all that advantage watch
By thy
losse, from
losse themselves to dispatch:
Religion cannot dwell in double
They that stand with all worldes will stand with no world if the world stand not with thē. Queen Mary.
harts;
Such
Harts haue
All that with al
states doe match:
Then where
Religion slideth,
promise starts,
And feare of
perill, worldly frendshippe parts.
Queene Mary (for, she
was that which shee
was,
Namely our
Queene, and neere to our late
Queene)
Her faults in silence we will
Love covers the multitude o
[...] sins in our neighboure what should it doe thē in our Soveraignes that haue more meanes & inducemēts to sin thē private pe
[...]sons.
overpasse;
Let them be buried with her, sith I weene
Sh'hath bin well
taxt whose memorie is greene:
Shee now is
Crown'd, and
Crown'd to others cost;
VVith
Spaine shee matches, being overseene,
Her
Kinge forsakes her,
Calis quite is lost,
All goes awry, which makes her yeeld the
Ghost.
Now sacred
Queene Elizabeth.
Cynthia girt with silver
Orbe
From out
Cimerian Clouds of
Prisonment,
(Faire Queene of
Chastity) appear'd to curbe
Contention, which oreranne this
Continent;
And ioyn'd the same with
peacefull government,
VVhich we doe yet
enioy, and long may wee
The
cause of
it
All that vnderstand the worth of blessed Peace will say Amen to a praier for Peace.
possesse in all
Content;
Amen say I, and all that peacefull bee
In him that saith
Amen when all agree.
God will rather heare the Orisons of thē that pray for Peace, thē the Trūpets that proclaime warres
Pray for thy King (ble'st Ile) lest that a
Change
A five-fold
change, to
Desolation tend;
Or thou made subiect to a Subiect strange,
Which may thy publike-weale in peeces rend,
And make it private onely to the
frend:
Gods Mill grindes slowly, but small meale it
So often wee play with Gods iudgmēts because we feele not the force ther
[...]of, that at length (like the Fly in the flame) we are consumed of them.
makes.
Then praise him for thy
peace and lesse
offend;
Be not as
one that stil occasion takes
To
sin the more, the more he
peace pertakes.
Farre be it from
Religion, to pretend
Obedience whil'st it
aymes at Princes spoile;
Its not
Religion Soveraignty to end,
That
Servitude thereby may keepe
Civill warre is fa
[...]re worse then Tyranny or vniust iudgmēt Plutarch. in Bruto.
a
coile,
And for her
freedome covett
Freedoms foile.
If
Kings Commands do
crosse the Divine
will,
In their discharge
Religion must recoile,
But not confound the
Charger, for its ill;
And ill can never good
Gods commandements. A Recapitulation of what hath bin discoursed touching the Kings of England & their governments.
Commands fulfill.
Now, brifly t'recollect what we haue sedd
Touching the
Actiōs of these
Potētates:
William Conqueror.
In
VVilliam Conquerer's considered
How soone are conquered devided
Stat
[...]s;
,,For force disioyned
[...] small force
Vis vnita fortior.
ruinates.
He, being desirous to reteyne the
Pray
His
Sword had purchas'd,
it quite dissipates;
And like a
Chaos at his
feete it lay,
To
forme it as he listed ev'ry way.
New Lords, new Lawes.
With the new
Kinge, he gaue new
Lords and
Laws,
Which curb'd the
Head-strōg, & did yoke the
VVild,
Till
Disobedience with
obedience drawes,
And
all as
one to
one and
all did yeeld,
[Page 149]That
with and
for that
One did winne the
field:
VVho, finding his
possession to bee sure
Did ease the
thralldome wherein they were held,
And that which erst he wounded, he did
To hurt and heale for more health is holsome.
cure;
And ev'ry waie their loves did then alure.
Now are the
Kinge and the
Nobility
True
freinds, and
fathers to the
Common-weale;
The
Commons now obay
Blessed is the affliction that procures greater perfection.
vnfeynedly:
The
Victors and the
Vanquished doe feele
How much these
Corsiues deadly hatred heale:
Now all, being
whole and
sound, are made
intire,
And all aboute, their
Liege doth
Larges deale,
By meanes whereof he hath his
harts desire,
Whilst with his
love, he thus setts
Harts on
[...]ire.
If he to
mercy had the
Peeres receav'd,
Or trusted to their
Oathes (true
Fallacies)
And so departed when
hee had perceav'd
The
State well
settled leaving
Deputies,
H'had lost the value of his
Soone ripe, soone rotten.
Victories:
Ne had the
Land bin free from
vvarrs and
woes,
That doe consort divided
Monarchies;
Ireland a woefull
wittnesse is of those,
That for a
Conquests want, wracks
Friends and Foes.
Omitting other
Princes, to descend
Edward 1. Longshancks.
To the first
Edward, that did first refine
This
Common-weale, and made the same ascend
VVhen through
mis-swaying it seem'd to decline:
In whom we see the
Providence divine
VVorke by his
VVisedome, Valor, Industrie,
Glorious
effects, which in the
State doe shine;
For
Hee it made an intire
Monarchie,
Which now remaines so to
Posteritie.
Edw. 2. Rich. 2 Hen. 6. Edw. 5.
Edward and
Richard, second of their
names,
VVith the sixth
Henry, and the Infant
King,
By these (bee't spoken not without their
blames)
Is seene the dire and diverse altering
Of kingly
state, through evill managing.
These beeing
childish, fraile, improvident,
Laie open to
Ambition gathers resistles strength in a Kings weakenes.
Ambitions canvasing;
VVho (sp
[...]ing
time) vsurpt their
government
Making them
Mirrors for
Kings negligent.
The faults fore-mention'd in these haplesse
Kings,
The vniust
rule of those that ruled
them,
Maiesty without magnanimity is vnassured. Livie. 2.
[...]
The
subiects strength which
Sov'raignes weaknesse brings,
A fatall
Potion made for
King and
Realme,
Whereof they dranke a deadly
draught extreme:
Kings must be
Kings indeede and not in
show,
Like as the
Sunne is Actiue with his
Beame;
For if they suffer
Subiects, Kings to grow,
Kings must bee
slaues, and to their
Subiects
I haue seene servāts on horses, & Princes walking like
[...] servāts on the ground. Eccl. 10.7.
bow.
Edw. 3 Hen 4.
Edward the third and
Henrie Bullenbrooke,
Hen. 5. Edw. 4.
Henry the fift, and the fourth
Edward,
These
Princes were of
Fortune nere forsooke,
Because they
governed with due regard;
And whilst
they watcht, they made the
rest to warde:
By others
errors they did
rule aright,
Loving feare a sure guarde to Soveraigns
Who made their
subiects loving feare their
guarde:
Ambition durst be dam'd ere come in
sight,
Or but once moue her
head to looke vpright.
No kingd
[...]me free frō Ambition.
Kingdoms the obiects of fortune & Envy.
Kings cannot safely raigne without
mistrust,
Because no
state without
Ambition is,
Which ever hath her
Train
[...] (for so shee must)
To helpe to
guide her, when shee
guids amisse;
[Page 151]For shee is
blind, and oft the
way doth misse,
Impatient of
delay in her
desire,
Now running
that waie and streight trying
this;
Like to a restlesse ventlesse
Flame of
fire,
Simil.
That faine would finde the
way streight to aspire.
Ther's
Perfectiō humane
no
perfection without some
defect,
Yet may't be cur'd, or tolerable made;
Onely
Ambition doth all
cure reiect,
VVealth doth augment it,
want makes it not fade;
Ambitiō a sore of the minde incurable.
And into
deepes vnknowne in
both t'will wade:
In
doing well it is most
insolent,
And no lesse
impudent in
doing bad,
Too wil'd to tame, and violently bent
With
Tooth and
Naile to catch at
government.
The
Conquests which these
Kings in
France obtain'd
(As
those in
Scotland) were by
others lost:
"(For Vice will lose what is by vertue gain'd.)
Their keeping put the
state to ceaslesse
An inevitable incōvenience
cost,
VVhich
[...]ost the
Commons (rag'd) being racked most;
And with
their losse, the
King lost many
frends,
VVhich were as
Fortes to guard his
Kingdoms coast;
"But ill
beginnings haue vnlucky
ends,
And worse
proceeding, worse in fine offends.
In the last
Richard may be liuely seene
Richard. 3.
Ambition really
annatomiz'd;
VVhich orelookes
all, and yet is overseene,
Advising
all, yet none more vnadvis'd,
Destroying
all till shee be sacrifiz'd:
Shee,
Ambition would destroy al to be aboue all.
Faith, Sex, Age, Bloud, State, and
Contery,
Divine and
humane lawes (immortaliz'd)
Respects not, in respect of
Empery,
All which appeer'd in this
King copiouslie.
Hen. .7
In his Successor
(Englands Salomon)
Are diverse things well worth the imitation
In our
states policie: for he alone
Bent all his powres to benefit this
Nation:
He saw our
forraine Conquests ill probation,
And that for
Islanders it was vnmeete
To spend their
wealth for
forraine domination,
Which was no sooner
fixed, but did
fleete,
And did this
state with ill
Salutes regreete.
He thought it
losse to purchase
Vniust peace is to be prefer red before iust warre Livie. Yet open war is more secure thē suspitious peace. Tac. 4. Hist.
warre and
hate,
Where
loue and
Traficke might be helde with
gaine;
He well remembred, how each Runnagate
And wandring
Nation, here ran in amaine,
Making their
profit of this
Nations paine:
He saw the
safetie, and
Great heapes are made of many litle thīgs in peace, & brought to nothinge in warre.
weale of this
state
Rested in
wealth and
peace, and
quiet raigne,
And not in
forraine Conquests, and
debate;
VVhich haue as
short, as most
vncertaine date.
Through
Peace and perfect
government this
Land
May in her rich
Peace & good government the Parents of Prosperity.
Commodities abound,
Which may cōfirme the
Neighbor-friendships band,
And intertrafficke with them,
tunne for
pound,
So make the
Landes adiacent, to her
bound:
Thus
God is pleasd, and
King and
Contrey eas'd,
The
Tradsmen
God selleth vs riches for the price of labor.
thriue, that
dearth &
wars cōfound,
The
People are (as with great profit) pleas'd,
And
none, but those that liue by
spoile, displeas'd.
This prudent
Prince perceav'd this
Common-weale
To be by
Trafficke strong made in the
We are said to be well backt when wee are no worse frended
backe;
So, as an
head that
Members wants doth feele,
He leagu'd him, where might be suppli'd their lacke,
[Page 153]Or
be as walls to keepe the
Realme from wrack:
He seeing that (which he did often trie)
The
Gold makes al thin
[...]s pregnable.
Money-Sacke, best kept the
Land from
Money is the very sin
[...]wes of a State. Mucian.
sack;
Therefore the
Angells which from him did fly
Had but short
wings, and lighted but hard by.
Among the things which he did least regard,
His
Belly and his
Backe were more then least;
He fared wel, when so his
The good of the Subiects is the obiect of the good
[...]rince.
Commons far'd,
(Although his
commons were not of the best)
Yet fared like a
Kinge without a
feast;
He rather chose to haue
Exchequers
Money (saith Thucidides) makes weapōs forcible and profitable.
rich
Then wealthy
VVardropps; yet would well be drest
When it his
Maiestie and
State did touch;
Yet held, save
Common-wealth, all wealth too
Cyrus
[...] was wont to say, he heaped great treasures whē he enriched his friends & Subiects.
much.
Where
Kings be not in ceasselesse
guard of
Armes
(Like these of
ours) the
State lying open so
T'
invasion and
Rebellions soddaine
harmes,
Let not the
Kinge looke
Friends should
[...]oile the
Foe
At their owne
charge, for feare of
overthro:
And in
tumultuous times to breake their
backs
Will make them from their
Necks the
yoke to thro,
And to be freed from such tormenting
Racks
Wil ruine all, though them with al, it wracks.
Such great
improvidence
Let Kinges that desire to live in peace, provide in time thinges necessary for warre.
and want of
heede
vnseasonable
Taxing (
Tempting rather)
Hath made the
Soveraigne with the
Subiect bleede;
Witnesse the two last
Richards among other,
That knew how greevous
then it was to gather.
Store is no
Sore (they say) except of
Tiberius of Constantinople accounted that for counterfet coyne, that was levied with Teares and cryings of the people.
Sores,
Yet tis sore
The bitings of enraged necessitie are most dangerous
[...] Portiu
[...] latro.
store with
hate to heape togither;
Hate havocks in each hole in al
vprores,
As
VVater havocks
life through all the
Pores.
This
spectacle of
Kingly providence
Nere cloi'd the
subiect with too great estate,
Nor would he of a
Pesaunt make a
Prince;
His best
belov'd he held in sober
state,
That he might liue with them without
debate.
Hen. 7. a true Pa
[...]terne of a wise and vertuous Prince.
Of all the
Kings that ere this
Land possest,
For
government discreete and temperate,
This
King deseruedly is deemed
best,
And to be imitated worthiest.
In his Triumphant most victorious
Son
Hen. 8.
Henry the last in
name, and first in
fame,
Is to be seene great wisedome, vsd to shun
Crosse Accidents and
courage in the same:
Yet some suppose, that he incurred
blame
For be'ng too open-handed in expence
Bounty doeth cover manie faults, & Avarice obscureth many vertues.
And
giftes excessiue; but it is a shame
For
Kings not roially to recompence
The rich desert of any
Excellence.
Ingratitude in all's most monsterous,
But most of all in
roiall Maiestie,
Wherein its more then most prodigious:
Munificence makes great,
Authoritie;
Guiftes doe superinduce the heart to loue.
And standes with
Greatnesse in great
policie:
The force of
Guifts doth offer violence
Even to savage
Inhumanity,
Forcing therefrom such loues obedience,
As
singlie workes with
double diligence.
He more respected honor then profit.
His forraine
Conquests much more
famous were
Then any way
commodious to this
state,
Yet
[...]hem his actiue
sp'rite could not forbeare;
For
Caesar-like he would predominate
[Page 155]VVhere he had least iust
coulor of estate:
In raising lowest
shrubs to
Cedars hie
He from his sage
Sire did degenerate;
Yet
vertue though it nere so low doth lie,
Is vvorthy of high
praise and
dignitie.
In the last
Edwards and
Queene Maries raigne
Edward 6. Q
[...] Marie.
Is seene, what to those
states is incident
VVhere
subiects doe not feare their
Soveraigne,
But striue to liue beside their
Regiment,
Contemning so their too-weake
government:
Contempt in subiects is the con
[...]usion of government.
This made the
Rebell rise in
strength and
pride,
From
Sov'raignes weaknesse taking couragement,
T'assault their
Gates, led by a feeble
Guide,
Shaking their
Thrones a while from side to side.
In our
Queenes no lesse
long then
peacefull reigne
Q
[...] Elizabeth.
Blest (as appeer'd) by that blest
Prince of Peace,
VVas seene much more then
wisedome feminine,
If wee respest how soone shee made to cease
The
olde Religion for the
oldes increase:
That suddaine
change that did the
soule acquite
Of
olde devotion (which
none will release
Vpon the suddaine) still to stand in might,
May make a
Newter deeme sh'was in the right.
Act. 5.35,36, 37,38,39.
And now descend yee
spirites Angelicall,
That, chargde, doe guard th'
Anointed of your
Lorde;
Crowne my
Liege Lord with crowne
imperiall,
And put into his
hand the awfull
Sword
Of
Iustice; so, the
good shall bee assur'd,
And so may
yee bee freed from your
charge,
VVhereby the
good are evermore secur'd;
For, hee that
office will for you discharge,
Sith
Iustice goodmens surance doth inlarge.
Blesse
him ô ever-blessed
Vnion,
Making a no lesse blessed
Trinitie;
Blesse
him as thou hast never blessed
one
That ever did possesse this
Monarchy:
Showre downe thy
blessings on his
family:
The
blessings of the
womb giue to his
Queene,
And let them as the
Sea-sand multiplie;
That frō their roiall loines may still be seene
Heires, as the starres of heau'n, for store, and sheene.
Thus haue I breath'd my
Muse in
Policie,
Or rather runne her out of breath therein;
That so shee may with more facility
Runne ore the
rest lesse difficult, vvherein
Shee hath much more then much delighted bin.
But
Policie is but abus'd by me,
I doe but mangle her, and make her
sinne:
But were shee whollie seene as shee should be,
Sh'would seeme no
daughter of
Mortalitee!
REturne my
Muse frō whence thou hast digrest,
(To toile thy selfe in
states deepe misteries)
And now directly prosecute the
rest
Touching the
soules yet vntoucht
faculties:
VVee varied, where we toucht varieties
Of
dispositions of the
soule and
sp'rite;
In touching which, vvee toucht these
Policies
Wherein the
worldlie wise so much delight,
Because
they tend to rule the
VVorld aright.
The Mindes pleasurs much more pleasant thē corporal delightes.
The
pleasures of the
Minde (as erst vvas said)
As farre surmount all
pleasures corporall,
As the
Minde doth the
Bodie, which is swai'd
But by the
Minde, with svvaie
Monarchicall;
[Page 157]Yet some base
bodies keepe the
Minde in thrall:
VVho doe s'extremely doate on
fleshly ioies,
That they doe wish they had no
minde at all,
That so they might not feele the
Mindes annoies,
For those
delights which
Flesh and
Sprite destroies.
These
Men-beastes are as if they never
were,
Sensuall persons are vselesse burdens to the earth.
They burden but the
Earth, yet are too light,
VVho liue to
lust, yet streight away they weare,
(Like
Dew against the
sunne in highest height)
With
flesh-consuming fleshly fraile delight.
These senslesse
spunges of
Improbity
Are full of
pleasure, but it is vnright;
For
Gods hand squizeth out their
iollitie,
And fil
[...] their
Mindes with reall
miserie.
The
Minde, her
pleasures needs not intermit
The senses soone weery of their pleasures.
And then retake them, as the
senses must:
But changeth them as shee thinkes requisit,
(Sometimes the
iust, for
pleasures most
vniust,
So changing
Loue too oft to lothsome
Lust)
Except the
powre, from whence the
motion springs
Be hindred by (and so betrai'd in trust)
Some let in th'
Organs, vsd in her
workings,
Wine & sicknes 2. Obstacles that lets the m
[...]ndes actions.
Which
VVines excesse, and
sicknesse often brings.
But those
impediments bee'ng tane away,
Shee, like a
River, keepes her wonted course
Simil.
In
motion still, ti
[...]l shee bee at a stay
By some strong
Damme; yet doth her selfe enforce
(Stil gath'ring
strength, &
courage from her
Sourse)
To breake away through all
Impediments,
Wee ought to propose nothing to the minde vnworthy of her.
That so shee may imploy her wonted force
Vpon the
pleasures, which her most contents,
Be they vaine
Ioies, or
divine ravishments.
It then behoves vs to be wel advis'd
What
matter we propose vnto our
minde;
Or
good, or
ill, or
ill with
good disguiz'd:
For if shee should therein a liking finde,
Shee will thereto be evermore inclin'de:
Simil.
Like some pure virgins, that nere knew the sport
That men doe yeeld them, in the
kindest kinde,
Having once tasted it, are all amort
But when (though damn'd) they a
[...]e at that disport.
If then we would cheere this ay-moving
mind,
We must haue care, that that be perfect good
Which shee doth
chew (how different e're in
kynd)
For, corrupt
Aliments breede corrupt
blood;
And
blood corrupted is
Confusions flood:
But
sensuall pleasures cannot please the
Sense
Without being cloied, though they change their
mood;
Sense must awhile forbear plea
[...]ures to make them more pleasāt.
For
Sēse sometimes must hold thē in suspēce,
To sett an edge the while on her dull'd sence.
Likewise, the
pleasures which we doe receave
From
The pleasurs which sense receiues from natural things are more pleasant thē those frō Artificiall.
Natures works haue much more force, then those
That we from
Artificiall things conceaue:
For lett all
Artes vnto our view expose
What
Arte it selfe in each kinde can disclose,
They bring
satiety soone with the sight;
But who is cloi'd to see a flowred
Close,
Hills, Dales, Brooks, Meads, VVoods, Groues, all daintie dight,
Sunne, Moone, and
Starrs, & al in perfect
plight?
For we, being
naturall, doe best agree
With things in nature no lesse naturall;
Yet, to confesse a wel-know'n veritee,
Our often seeing these faire
Creatures all
[Page 159]Doth make the pleasure much lesse
Nothing vnder the Sūne long cōtents: therefore wee should seeke contentment aboue the Sunne.
Cordial,
Herehence it is, that we doe lesse admire
The pow'r of that
Hand supernaturall,
Which did this
al with al these
Faires attire;
And so not praise him, as his
workes require.
Yet if a
Child, confin'de t'a
Dungeon deepe
Vntil he had attained
Manhoods yeares,
Should on a
Sōmers-day frō some high
steepe
Vpon a suddaine see these glorious
Fayres,
His
Eyes would ravisht be, how ere his
Eares;
For
Eares should solac'd be, aswell as
Eyes,
With the melodious
Birdes.
nimble-winged
Quiers;
Nay I suppose such
ioy would him surprise,
As he were plung'd in ioyes of
Paradize.
But while he's
Dungeon'd, let the expert'st
Tonge yonge,
(That able were to create
Living wordes)
Paint out the
Earth with quicke-
words, great with
And though that
Fry againe like
Spawne affords,
And ev'ry one had pow'r to pierce like
Swords
Into the nature of these
Rarities,
To make him comprehēd the highest
Lords
Inferior'st
workes, he could not well cōprize
The thousādth part of
grace which in thē lies.
As when a
Man (though with an
Angells tongue)
Simil.
Whilst we are
Dungeon'd in this
VVorld of
vvo,
Tels vs of
Heau'n, and all that doth belonge
Vnto the state of those that thither
[...] go,
With words that from a
well of
VVisdome flo,
Yet tells he not the hundred thousandth part
Of that rare
blisse which none on
Earth can kno;
As good
Soules wel perceave, whē hēce they
None know it but they that feele it.
part;
VVhich farr surmoūts the highest thoughts of Hart.
But herein's faulty this Comparison:
To
Mundane things is fixt
satiety,
But those blest
Things that are aboue the
Sun
Are priviledg'd from such deficiency;
For they are ful of all
The propertie of true felicity is alwaies to cōcent the desire and exclude feare.
felicity:
The more they are beheld the more they may,
For they content
Desires best-sighted
Eye,
And please the more, because that
still they stay;
"For true
ioyes are compleate by their delay.
Aske that same third-
Heau'n-rapt
St. Paule.
Saint, what hee
saw
Or what he
heard, when he was ravisht so;
Hee'l tell you (though most learn'd in sacred
Law
And no lesse learn'd each way) he doth not kno,
The
ioye thereof his
Sense did so oreflo.
If then so great a
Clark, so pure a
Saint,
Being but in the
Heau'n, two lofts belo,
Wants
words the ioye there of aright to paint,
Who can the highest
Heavens blisse depaint?
Thus the
Affects of
ioy and
Griefe, are giv'n
By him, that giues
all onely to one
end,
To weet,
his Glorie, and desire of Heau'n;
Ioye to alure, and
Griefe th'
Affects to bend
From that which doth to
Griefe and
Horror tend.
Now then, to runne through other strong
Affects,
And to descend to
Love, (that doth
Loue doth descend not ascend.
descend)
Which is a
Passion powrefull in
effects
And chiefely the chief
good by kinde respects.
When
Iudgment hath alow'd a thing for
good,
Shee foorth-with tenders it vnto the
VVill,
Which doth embrace the same in ioyful moode,
Because it doth hir
Soules desire fulfill:
[Page 161]And when that
ioy (conceav'd) doth tarry still
Its called
Loue,
How love is bredd.
which doth the wil incline
To
simple good, or
good scarce toucht with
ill:
Thus
Loue is bredd or
humane or
divine,
Which in the
soule like a faire
Flame doth shine.
But
Loue, that hath respect to any
thing
Besides the
goodnes of the
thing belov'd,
Is rather
doating, which doth
loathing bring
Doating b
[...]ings loathing.
Whē
things therby desir'd are wel approv'd:
If
God himselfe bee for his
bounty lov'd
And
onely therefore, who doth loue him so
Doth loue him for his
goodnes, by him prov'd,
Yea for that
goodnes which to him doth flo,
Not for that
good which he cannot forego.
Who loveth vs for his owne
goodnesse sake,
And for no
good in vs, (for we have none)
We should loue him, not for he did vs
God should simply be loved for his own goodnes.
make,
But for his
goodnesse onely and alone,
And loue al
goodnesse, for, and in that
One:
A
father loues his
sonne, not in regard
Of any
gaine, but for he is his
owne;
Nor should a
Sonne, his
Sire loue for
reward,
But for he is his
Sire in
Nature dear'd.
For, if we loue
ought for the
good we have
From it, we loue our
selves more then the
same,
Or loue
it for our
selves, our selues to save
From want of
that which from it to vs came:
So such loue is
selfe-loue, which
Love doth blame:
It is selfe-loue to love God for his bounty towards vs onely.
But we must loue the
Lord of Love for
love;
Nay, though he hate vs, we must love his
name,
Sith to make
man
Loue made vs to loue.
Loue onely did him move
But to loue him againe for
Mannes behove.
If then we weigh, by vvhat
degrees wee mount
To him from vvhom our
soules did first descend,
We finde that as through
loue (which doth surmoūt)
They came from him, so to him they ascende
God is mans beginning & his end.
The selfe-same
way, as to their proper
end.
For comming from
him, they must
know him needs;
Aud knowing
him, they needes must to him tend,
But so they cannot, but by
loues good-
deedes;
For what is not of
loue, from
sinne proceedes.
The order of loues progres
The order then, of the
degrees to
loue
Is, first vvee at
things corporall beginne;
For, our
birth to that
Steppe vs streight doth moue;
Vnto our
outward senses then wee rinne,
To
Fancie next, and so wee never linne
Till through
Reas'n, Iudgement, Contemplation,
VVe come to
loue, and so wee rest therein:
But to descend by the selfe same
gradation,
And there to rest, descendeth to
damnation.
For, to dismount from true
loues loftie
pitch
(Loue of the
High'st,) so lowe as to
selfe-loue,
Is,
Sow-like, to lie mired in the
ditch
Of lowest
Hell, where we all
Sorowes proue,
And cannot for our
soules from thence remoue
Without kinde heav'nly
loues all-helping
hand;
He workes in vs both the will and the deede.
Which onely and alone hath powre to moue
Our
Mindes from
Earth vnto the
Livings Land,
And breake the
linckes of
selfe-loues mortall Band.
Loue makes an
Vnion of
Diversitie;
If then wee loue
God, hee and
wee are
One,
One (although diverse) through true
amitie;
VVee loue
him and our selues for
him alone:
[Page 163]So may we loue our selues, as wee loue none.
Selfe-loue is iustifiable whē we loue our selues for god only.
Likenesse breedes loue, which makes him loue vs so
Who made vs to his
Image; and his
Sonne
Assum'd our
shape, which makes his loue the mo:
Then, by like reason, wee should loue him to.
The more his
Image is renew'd in vs,
The more he loues vs, and wee loue the more;
Then to deforme the same's most odious,
And he detesteth vs alone therefore,
VVhich makes vs likewise loath
him and his
lo
[...]e:
All which proceedes from
dissimilitude,
For,
God and
Beliall are
foes evermore;
Then sith wee are with his faire
Forme indu'd,
Let
it by vs bee euermore renew'd.
For,
Beauty is an vrgent cause of
Loue;
Beauty is a speciall cause of loue.
If so, wee should embrace the fairest
Faire
With loue that should be farre all
loue aboue,
Yea, die for loue, that
Loue might
life repaire,
And glorifie the same as
Beauties Heire:
See wee an hue that mortall
beauty staines
(As doth the
Sunne the
Moone by his repaire)
This sov'raigne
Beauty all the glorie gaines,
God the Foūt of all Beauty.
Sith but a sparke thereof the same sustaines.
Then
Beauty blush to glorie in thy
Blaze,
And much more blush to blaze thy
glorie vaine
With
coulors fresh, to make fraile
eies to gaze,
Painting the face.
And such as cannot iudge of
coulors, faine;
No
coulor hast thou so thy selfe to staine:
The
best is too too
bad, and bad's the
Best,
That without
Without coulor of Reason.
coulor doe their
face ingraine:
In earnest such (I thinke) doe loue to
Iest,
As Chaucer, but my,
Muse will owe the rest.
But
outward beauty loue procures, because
Outward argues inwarde beauty.
It argues th'inward beauty of the
Minde;
For
goodnes is th'
effect, Beauty the
Cause,
And both togither commonly we finde;
For
Nature both togither stil doth binde.
A good
Complexions disposition
Is, for the most part, vertuously inclinde;
But
VVeomens beauty by permission
Being often tempted breedes suspition.
Sinne is conceived in the womb of concupiscence.
For hardly is
that kept, that
many craues,
And
chastitie with
beautie's stil at strife;
For, much more beautiful are
Frailties slaues
Thē (for the most part) they of vertuous life:
And, aske a
man, that hath a beautious
wife,
How much he fears the fowle fal of his
faire,
Because that nothing in the
world's more rife
Then at faire
beauties byding
mens repaire;
And where they
haūt, they do not stil
They rather ruine then repaire the
[...]ender honors of women.
repaire.
But this by
accident is rather thus,
Then any waie to
beauty naturall;
For it, by
Nature, is most vertuous,
A well tēpred body makes a like tempered mind ordinarily.
Sith
Tempers good, to
Ill are seldome thrall:
For,
bodies meerely are
Organicall,
Wheron the
mind doth play al
parts in one,
If then they be in
tune, most cordiall
Their
motiōs must be needs, sith there is none
That moues thē but the
minde or
God alone.
But for that
beauty stil alures the
eie,
An vnchaste eie loues to looke vpon
[...] light eie.
The
[...]ie the
hart, the
hart the
soule &
Sp'rite
Of those, that on the same do chance to pry,
Because it doth beheau'n them with delight:
[Page 165]This makes them instantly the same incite
To yeeld to
loue, or
lust, and their
desire;
Then being subiect thus to restlesse fight.
It oft enflames, and is ens
[...]am'd with
fire,
That
Flesh and
Sprite makes but one
flame intire.
How many may wee see distracted quight,
Or pyning liue, or rather dy with
paine?
Yea some to spill themselues (with all despight)
For others
beautie which they cannot gaine?
If
beauty then so ore fraile
sense doth raigne,
Beauty
[...]igniorizeth the sense.
The beauty of a Womā cheereth the face, and a man loues nothing better. Eccl. 36.22.
Sense, being subiect to her
sov'raigntie
Doth sue and serue, her
favour to obtaine,
VVith most impetuous importunitie,
Till shee as subiect, to her
Subiect lie.
And never times (except the
times of old
For whose
corruption al the
world was drown'd)
But these curst
times of ours, durst be so bold,
To make it common with
estates renown'd
To cou
[...]t bright
beauty
Maried.
match'd, as t'were
vnbound:
Call yee it
Courtshippe? cal it what yee please
(Though it be in
request) it was not found
In chaster
times;
[...]or oft it doth disease
The
head with
swellings which nought can appease.
Mee thinkes I see, (as I haue often seene)
A well-made
Male, as male-content to stand
(In
silke or
silver clad right well-beseene)
VVringing a
match'd faire
Female by the hand,
Adultery Luxury, wantonnesse, slouth, Pride, &c. are sins in Specie, the Genus to all these is Caro.
VVhil'st, in her
eare, he lets her vnderstand
How much shee ought to loue him
[...]or his loue;
Meane while hard by stands
Patience the Husband,
And lets
Temptation his weake
vessell proue,
VVhich in his sight her vnseene
Spright doth moue.
Its prettie
pastime so to passe the time,
It savoures of good
breeding, and good
VVitt:
The
Howres are made more pleasant by this
Chime,
Who would not stil to here the same stil sitt,
Although a
man transformed were by it?
O tis a iolly matter to give eare,
Nay to give leaue to
Musicke in her fitt:
He is a
Beast that wil not then forbeare
Though he thereby be made a
Beast to beare.
4. Kindes of divine furie.
Foure kinds of
divine fury are obseru'd,
1 The
first (and first by right)
Propheticall,
Which by
Apollo is rul'd, and conserv'd;
2 The
next by
Bacchus, called
Misticall;
3 The
third by
Muses, hight
Poeticall;
4 The
fourth and last, by
Venus governed,
Is call'd the
Fury Amatoriall;
Which doe inferre, that
Love is borne and bredd
Without the breach of
Natures Maidenhedd.
What
force it hath, is better felt then showne,
Loues force is vnvt
[...]erable.
For
VVords cannot expresse the
force of
loue;
Call we it
Love or
Lust, it is well known
It hath the
force of both, the
Heart to move;
Which
these can testifie that it did prove:
Semiramis (whose
Vertue past compare)
This furious
Passion her did so remoue
From that shee was; that lusting to reshare
Hir
Sonne, her
Sonne her
Threed of
Life did share.
The
Macedonian Philipps peerelesse
Alexander Mag.
Sonne,
That over-ranne the
VVorld with
Sword and
Fire,
This flaming
fury yet did so ore runne,
That for his
Thais (that kindled his
desire)
[Page 167]He burnt
Plutar. in Alexand.
Persepolis, sans cause of
ire:
Yea, did not onely that fowle
fact command,
But with his
Hands he lab'red (as for
hire)
To burne the
buildings which as yet did stand,
Till he had laid al level with the
Land.
A
VVonder worthy of all wonderment,
That he that foil'd what ere his
force withstood,
Should bee thus
foil'd, and made a
President
Of
Lusts fell
force, which so enflam'd his
Blood
That made his
Flesh Wild-
Fire in likelyhood:
A
Man by
woman, a
King by a
Queane
To be so overcome through
Lustfull moode,
(Being so
effeminate and most
obscene)
Argues, in
Loue and
Lust there is no
meane.
Loue is lawl
[...]
Strange are th'effects of
Lust. For,
Men with
Men
Nay,
Man with
Beast: A Sinne not to be toucht
So much as with the
Tongue, much lesse with
Pen,
And least of all with
that too oft bewitcht,
With loue of
that which is by
Nature grutcht:
Lust is so blinde that it cannot discerne
A Man from
Beast, (how ever beastly coucht)
But doth a
Man-beast moue (though
Nature yerne)
The tricks of
Beasts, with lothsome
Beasts to learne.
Graue
Xenephon lov'd
Clinias in this kinde;
So as hee crav'd of
Ioue when
Clinias di'de,
That (if he might see
him, and still be blinde,
Or not see
him, and still be perfect
Eyde)
He rather mought the want of
sight abide
To see
him once, then still to haue his sight
And not see
him; See see how blinde a
Guide
Is lothsome
Lust, that leades
men so vnright,
Lust is blinde.
As for her pleasure so themselues to spight.
Semiramis an
Horse (ô brutish
Lust!)
Did lust to haue (ô mōstrous
Mare humane!)
Pasiphaë long'd for a
Bull to thrust
Her from a
woman to a
Cow vncleane:
And
Cyparissus made an
Hynde the
meane
To coole his
courage; Aristom
[...]chus
A silly
Bee would haue to be his
Queane.
Lust whither wilt? wilt be so monstrous
To long for
Bees that be but moates to vs?
Publius Pilatus fell in lusting loue
With
Hellens Image; and
Pigmalion
Such lovers are as sensles as the stones which they loue.
For his owne
Picture did like
passion prove.
Damn'd
Lust what pleasure provd'st thou in a
stone
That's cold by
kind, as
Snow on
Libanon?
To tell the
Mischiefes, Spoiles, &
Masacres,
By
hate effected, though through
loue begun,
Were but to tell the
number of the
Starrs;
For
Lust and
Mischeife are ioynt-
passengers.
Troy might (perhappes) haue stoode vnto this
Age,
Had
Lust not laid it levell with the
plaines;
And
seas of
Blood spent in that ten yeares
Siege
Might still haue kept the
Chanells of the
Vaynes:
Lust is most willfull.
But lewde
Lust is so loose that shee restraines
Her will in nought, though it bringes
all to nought:
Shee pleasure takes in
pleasure causing
paines;
For by her painfull pleasures such are wrought,
Yet on such
pleasures shee doth fixe her
thought.
Shee will not let the
Thoughts so much as prie
A
minutes space, on
ought, but what shee loues;
Shee
(Tirant) captivates the
Fantasy,
So that it cannot stirre till shee it moves:
[Page 169]Or if it doe shee forth-with it removes.
My
Fancies Mistris, saith some
slaue to
Lust,
Is my
Thoughts Heau'n: So swallowed with his
Loues
Are all his
Thoughts; and though as dry as
Dust
He lusts to please his
loue with loue vniust.
For this, al that pertaines, must be in
print,
VVeeds, VVords, Lookes, Loks, in
print, not one awry,
Whose
Motions must be currant for the
Mynt;
His
glances must keepe iust time with her
Eye,
O toile intollerable!
And seeme to die, se'ng her rich beauties
dye:
Yet with a
carefull carelessenesse, he must
Avoide the
hate which too much
loue doth buy,
And loue no more then may provoke to
lust;
These are their loue-
tricks, trickes of loue vniust.
One makes an
Idoll of his
Mistris Glove,
And offers (thrice a day at least) a
Kisse
Vnto each
finger, so to show his loue;
Another her
Haire-Bracelett makes his
blisse,
And
Night and
Day t'adore it wil not misse.
These
Fancies, fancie doe with
kindnes cloy,
VVitt nere, in
loue, taught
Pupill so of his,
(As saith the
Book) but doth his
powres imploy
With
kindnesse coy, to winne his witty
Toy.
Whist
Muse, be mute; wilt thou like
Naso proue,
Quoth Speculation.
And interlace thy
Lynes with
levity?
Wilt thou add
Precepts to the
Arte of
Loue,
And show thy
vertue in such
vanity?
So to polute thy purer
Poesy!
No more, no more, ynough, (if not too much)
Is sedd already of this
Mistery;
My
Conscience at the same doth (grieving) grutch,
But let it goe this once, with but this
Touch.
Be
[...]uty promis
[...]th more honesty then deformity.
And how-soere
Beauty may bee abus'd,
It promiseth more
good then
shapelesnesse:
If it proue otherwise, its thus excus'd;
The
High'st to shew that
good-guifts (more or lesse)
Proceede from him, and not from
Natures largesse,
Lets
beauty fal, and soile it selfe with sinne,
VVhich is more dam'd if
beauty it doth blesse,
As
Vertue is most
faire, that blest hath bin
VVith
beauty being resident therein.
But
loue, that
Beautie breedeth, is threefold,
According to three
obiects of that
loue,
All
faire, some
good, which thus we may vnfold;
3. Causes of loue viz Pleasant, p
[...]ofitable, & honest.
The
Pleasant, and the
Profitable mooue
As doth the
Honest, true
loue, which vve proue:
The
first concerneth things that please the
Sense,
1 As
beautie, and at what the
sense doth roue;
2 The
second hath to
welfare reference;
3 The
third and last to
Iustice and
Prudence.
The
first and
second kinds of
lust or
loue,
Among the
Perturbations may be put,
Sith they so many ill
affections moue
That make
mans life to be in
Sorrow shut,
VVhich like a
Razor off the same doth cut:
But loue of
honest things is vertuous,
And from
mans praises takes away the
But;
It shows the
Minde is right magnanimous;
'For that's most
great, that is most gracious.
Perfect loue.
This
loue is kindled by that heav'nly
Flame
That like fine
Gold, doth purifie the
Sp'rite;
And like it selfe (transmuted) maks the same
Good, gratious, holy, wise, iust, clear, &
bright,
[Page 171]Glory'ng in
him that makes her
glory right:
God, the Exchequer of Beauty.
This is the loue of
beauty most extreame
VVherein celestial
soules doe most delight;
Of
loue that feedes the
Sp'rite it is the
creame
Infus'd by
Iustice Sonnes inlightning
Beame.
This
loue resembles that of
Seraphins,
VVho burne in loue of the
extremest Good;
And makes
Men like the sacred
Cherubins
Still priviledg'd from
outward charge; whose
moode
Is stil t'attend on
LOVES Trin-vnion-hood.
This
loue, this
beauty, (Loue of vertuous
thi
[...]gs
Whose
beauty flowes from divine
beauties Flud)
Doth make
Men Gods among the mighti'st
Kings,
And
Kings with highest
God, in high'st
dwellings.
Goodnesse is
Beauties Mother, and true
Loues;
Goodnesse is mother to loue & beau
[...]y
Beauty and
loue are both bred in one
VVombe:
Then
loue and
beautie stil it much behoues
To tend to
Goodnesse, as vnto the
Tombe
That must at
last for ever them enwombe.
But there are diverse
loues, and
beauties mo,
According to the
creatures all or
some
Proceeding from that
LOVE and
BEAVTY, who
Sheds both on
things aboue, and
things belo.
Fowre special
beauties, Goodnesse hath created;
Goodnes hath made 4 especiall beautie
[...].
The
first is that, whereby the
Minde and
sp'rite
Hath
VVit and
Vnderstanding in them seated:
1
The
second, them adornes with
Knowledge bright
2
That mounts the
Minde to
Contemplations height;
The
third, in
seede preserving
mortall things;
3
The
last in
corp'rall things that
sense delight:
4
Science the
Soule to
Contemplation brings,
But her to
things materiall
Fancie flings.
Yet, did the
soule but weigh hovv shee is bound
To her
Creator, for his matchlesse loue;
Shee would from thence (by
Reason) soone rebound,
The little consideration we haue of Gods goodnesse towards vs, is the cause of our coldnesse in loue to him
And wholy stil contemplate
things aboue:
For this, his loue requitlesse doth approue;
He gaue her
beeing, meerely of free
grace
Before shee
VVas, or could his
mercie moue;
Then if
shee loue him, her loue is but base
Compar'd with
his that made her what shee
wa
[...].
VVho giues a
Guift much more affection shoes
Then the
Receaver for it can bewray;
The
giver giues, beeing free to giue or choose,
But the
Receaver's bound to loue alway:
Yet, if the
giver giues to th'end to
pray,
Its not of
Loue, but
Lucre, (loth'd of
Loue;)
GOD cannot giue so, in whom
all doth stay:
But
Men giue
thanks for
Blessings which they proue,
And
God thereby to giue them
more doe moue.
The loue that is bought is
[...]ark nought.
Such
loue in
giver and
receiver both
Is meerely merc'nary corrupt, and base,
VVhich hatefull
loue the Lord of
loue doth loth,
And from such
lovers turnes his loving
face,
As from false
Hypocrites, abusing
grace:
But true
loves scope, is (in a gracious
moode)
To loue all those that
Mercie shoulde embrace,
Respecting nought, but to streame foorth the
flud
Of
goodnesse, which it hath for others good.
For
loue is free, and freely would be lov'd;
Its actiue, like a
Flame in operation;
Saue that, like
fire it is not
vpwardes mou'd,
But doth
descende by
Reasons computation,
[Page 173]For such
descent on
Reason hath foundation
[...]
The
Sire doth loue the
Sonne, more then the
Sonne
Doth loue the
Sire, because by
generation
Part of the
Sire into the
Sonne doth runne,
A natural re
[...] son why loue descendeth.
But no part of the
Sonne in
Sire doth wonne.
Sith
loue in nature stil doth thus
descende,
God loues man more then
Man his
God can loue;
For
Man proceedes from
God who is his
ende;
But
God from
Man likewise cannot remoue,
In him we liue move, & haue our being.
For
Man is
finite, and in
God doth moue:
This made him loue
Men when they were his
foes,
And for their loues a
world of
woe did proue:
Therefore hee's
Fount of
Loue whence all
loue floes
Which
loues for
hate, and
hate doth
loue-dispose.
Now, how to loue this
VVell of
loue the more
Loue doth direct, by kindling the
Desire
Truely to
know and
minde it evermore;
To know god
[...] loue is the way to make Man loue.
Both which so sets the
soules frame all on fire,
That it is made one
flame of
loue intire:
The more wee
know it, it the more wee
minde;
The more wee
minde it, it wee more
require;
The more we
seeke, the more wee it doe
finde,
And being
found, it quite doth
lose the
Minde.
For then the
Mindes no more that which it
was,
For to this
loue it's transubstantiate,
To weete
[...] as neere as
loue can bring to passe
Its ev'n the selfe-same
thing immaculate,
And like this
LOVE, this
loue doth contemplate;
Reiecting
all that would inveagle it
To loue ought els, and stil doth meditate
To loue nought els, and bends all powres of
wit
To make it selfe for this
Loue onely fit.
Thus
Sinners may turne
Seraphins by
All true loue is either Amor Coe
[...]i or amor Secul
[...], this of our neighbou
[...]e, that, of God.
As
[...]here is no l
[...]ue without faith, so there is no faith without loue.
Loue,
wounding with
Loue-shafts Gods hart (pure alone;)
So, as the
ones hart so the
others moue
As twixt them a
[...] there were no
Hart but
one:
This is to lye next the chiefe
Corner-stone
In the
Church-militant, (
Triumphant rather,)
For
God and
man this
Loue doth
[...]o attone
As doth, nay more then
loue doth
Sonne and
Father;
For
loue makes both intire still altogether.
Loue, of all humane Affections is, the most pui
[...]ant & passionate.
For
Loue doth graue (though in an
Hart of
Brasse)
The
forme of the
Beloued in the
Hart,
So that a
Lovers Hart is like a
Glasse
Where the
Belou'd is seene in ev'r
[...]
part;
So, in
Gods Hart w'are graven by
Loves Arte,
And in our harts
Loue doth his
forme ingrave;
Thus interchang'd we eithers
forme impart
To others liking by the
Loue is the Bond that vnites God & man.
Loue we have,
And make the
Hart the
Lodge it to receave:
The
ende or scope of
loue is to
vnite;
The faster therefore it conglutinates
Two harts, or of them makes an
vnion right,
So much the more her
vertue shee elates,
And perfectly her
kinde effectuates:
Then,
Loue in
God (in whom
Love perfect is)
His vertue so to
man participates,
That they become
Brothers by redemption ought to be more neere & deere to each other, thē Brothers by creation.
one through that
loue of his;
For
Man partakes his
Image and his
Blisse.
But
man (meere
Chaos of extreame
Defect)
Doth loue, but loveth onely in
desire:
He longs (perhapps) to loue with al effect,
That
God and
he thereby might be
intire,
[Page 175]Whereto his leaden
loue would faine aspire;
From which
desire proceeds a pleasant
paine,
Pleasant, in that it setts the
soule on
fire
With
loue so good; And
paine it breeds again,
In good desires there is pleasure and paine.
For that it hath not, what it would haue fain.
But what is lacking in
Mans loue, the same
God doth supply out of his boundlesse
loue;
And makes
Mās loue therby a working
flame,
Which to presse through al
Pressures stil doth prove,
And towards
God (her
Spheare) doth ever move:
This
Flame doth melt the
marrow of the
Sp'rite
Making it
liquid sooner to remove
In't
Mercies Mould, where its reform'd aright,
And made
intire with
God.
LOVE, true
loues delight.
For when the
lover loues himselfe no more,
But the
Beloved in whom he abides,
Or, if he loue himselfe, it is
therefore
To weet, for that he in his
loue resides;
Then
Loue is pure, & at high'st
pitch besides.
When loue is in the height of perfection.
But such high
Raptures are too rarely found,
In fraile
humanity, that on
Earth bides;
Though
loue the
Soule therfore perhaps may wound
Yet stil t'wil be to the owne
Body bound.
How shal I
end with everlasting
Loue,
To ease my
Reader tir'd with heavy
lines?
Vnto this
Labarinth of
Loue (I prove)
The
Author (
LOVE) no
comming out assignes;
Yet rest I may, though it my
Muse confines:
As
Zeuxis drue a
vaile (with curious skill)
Ore that, hee wanted skill t'expresse by
Lines;
So I the like in
Loue must now fulfill,
And leave the
Reader to thinke what he will.
NOw may we
range next to the
Ranke of
loue
Other
Affections, and to doe it right
We must place
Favoure there, by which w'approve
Of some thing wherein we conceave delight,
For that it's
good in
deede or so in
sight:
Herein
Loues obligation doth commence;
Yet
favoure may haue
force where
loue lacks
might,
But without
Favoure, Loue is a
non ENS;
For,
Favoure waites vpon
Loves excellence.
[...]owe favoure i
[...] bredd.
Then
Reverence with
Favour we may
Ranke,
Bredd by comparing some high
Dignitie
With some inferior
State (that
Fortune sanck)
Which then is in it's
right especially,
When extreame
feare and
Hatred come not ny:
For though in
Rev'rence, Feare and
Shamefastnesse,
VVith
moderation doe obscurely lye;
Yet
Feare (by some
Ill caus'd)
Good doth suppresse,
Still seene in
that which breedes our
humblenesse.
True
rev'rence therefore beare we vnto
God
Who is
all
[...]good, as he
almightie is;
For, fear'd we nought but his revenging
Rodd,
Our
Rev'rence, would be turn'd to
hate by this:
Reverence springs from powre and goodnesse.
Then
Rev'rence growes from
pow'r and
grace of his;
And, whosoere with them he most endowes,
Of
Rev'rence from lesse Rev'rend cannot misse:
For
Rev'rence Pow'r and
Goodnesse still ensues,
And the
lesse worthie to the
better bowes.
For when we eie the vertue, pow'r, and grace,
Of the most
Noble, (truely called so)
And looke vpon our selves, and weigh how base
VVe are compar'd with them, then bend we lo
For, as
selfe-liking doth enlarge the
Hart,
Simil.
Or puffe it vp (like
Bladders which we blo)
So it contracts it selfe in ev'ry part,
When we see
others passe vs in desart.
Then as we rev'rence
God for
goodnesse more,
We reverence God more for his goodnesse then for his powre.
Then for his
might, and awfull
Maiesty;
So, if we would be rev'renc't of the
Low'r,
We must surmount them in that
ex'lency
That makes vs most resemble
Dëity:
For whereas
Goodnesse doth associate
Might,
There the most
Insolent, most rev'rently
(Though otherwise repleat with al
Dispight)
VVill doe their
Homage freely with delight.
For
homage, fealty, and
honor, are
To sacred
Vertue due by
Natures Law:
Honor we owe to
Vertue (though but bare)
And
Vertue matcht with
might doth
Rev'rence draw.
Then
Honor, Reverence, and loving
awe
To whom honor and reverence are due vpon Earth
Are due to
Maiestie; and
that is due
To
Magistrats that
Men frō
Vice with-draw,
And make them
Vertue eagerly ensue,
Themselues therin be'ng
Leaders of the
Crue.
The last
Affects to
Love subordinate
Are
Mercy and
Compassion;
Mercy and compassion, Affectes flowing from loue
These are they
VVhich make vs (like
God) to commiserate
The
miseries of those that still decay,
Or are at point to perish without stay.
These, these, bewraie that we are
Members quick
Of that same
Bodie, whose
Head doth bewray
That they are
Members mortifide, or sick
VVhich feele no
paines, that fellow-
members prick.
These make vs make the
hand of the
distrest
Our
Mucke and Earthly
Mammons continent,
Yea make vs make the
Orphanes home our
Brest,
And our right
Arme the
VVeedowes Sustinent;
Loue hath nothing in private.
And all that want, our
All them to content.
O that these
were more frequent then they
are
With those that doe our
Churches so frequent!
For damn'ds Devotion that will nothing spare,
But for selfe-comfort altogither care.
These,
Colledges and
Hospitals erect,
And both endow with copious
maintenance;
These are so prevalent in their effect,
That they vnto the
Heav'ns doe
Man made of earth.
Earth advance,
Wherein there is no
want or
sufferance:
These doe
forgiue, as gladly as they
giue,
Vnto their
foes miscarried by
Mischance;
These
good and
bad (like
God) in
lacke relieue,
"For
Mercies Bowels melt when
anie grieue.
These
Bridges builde ore
Rivers (semi-Seas)
And turne deepe
VVaies (though endlesse in extent)
To
Cawseis firme, for
Man and
Beasts more ease,
Compassiō extendeth her vertue to man and beast.
And ev'ry
waie provide for
bothes content,
Through fellow-feeling of their dryriment:
These make their
VVaredrops and the
Needies, one,
And their owne
Limbes, limbes of the
impotent;
Ioy with the ioiefull, mone with them that mone
And sigh in
soule, when they in
Bodie grone.
O that my
soule could (as it gladly would)
It selfe infuse into each
worde or
line
That tendes to
Mercies glorie, then it should
(So as it ought) at least like
Phoebus shine,
[Page 179]If not at most, bee more then most divine:
For,
Mercie and
Iustice are
Gods mightie
Armes,
Mercy & Iustice are god
[...] almightie Armes.
But he most
might to
Mercie doth assigne
As bee'ng the right
Arme, holding all from
harmes
Though
All do fall through
Frailties least Alarmes.
Mercie's the true
Idea of
Gods Soule,
Wherein his matchlesse
glorie glitters most;
Which is of force his
Iustice to controule:
For when in
Iustice all that
are, were lost,
Then
Mercie them redeem'd, to
Iustice cost;
The Lord of
Iustice was vniustly slaine,
That
Mercie might triumph, and iustly boast:
Gods Mercie triumpheth over his Iustice towards Man.
As
Loue first
made, so
Mercie made againe
Man-kind, that
sin had
marr'd with monstrous
stain.
Sith
Mercie then is of so high account,
Shee should bee most familier with the
Hy:
Pri
[...]ces and Maiestrates.
For,
God in mercy doth himselfe surmount,
That is, it doth himselfe most glorify:
So they that eie the
Poore with
Pitties eie,
And haue most
mercie seated in their
soule,
Draw neer'st the nature of his
Dëity;
Whose
names engrossed are in his
Check-role.
And next him ought the
VNIVERS to rule.
THus having toucht th'
Affections most humane
That
humane nature doe consociate;
Now follow those that are most inhumane,
Inhumane affections howe bred.
Bred by
Opinion of
Ill, which wee hate
Which make vs savage or in worse estate:
The vnrest of our
soules, the while they rest
Within our
Bodies, and predominate,
Proceedes from
fowre chiefe causes of vnrest,
Which thus by
Natures searchers are exprest.
4. Perturbations frō whō do flow al immoderate passions of the soule.
Desire, Feare, Griefe, Ioy, all immoderate
(Which
perturbations be) from these proceede
Al
Passions which the
soule excruciate,
Which the
Mindes ignorance doth (fatting) feede;
As knowing not what's
good or
Ill indeede.
Desire and
Ioie those
goods accompany
Which be not
good, further then
Natures neede,
And that a
little (God wot) doth supply
For,
overmuch doth her soone mortifie.
Aske
peace and
plenty what fell
fights they haue
With these three
Monsters, Pride, Strife, &
Excesse,
Hardly themselues, if they at all, doe saue,
From their fell
force, they eas'ly wil confesse.
Wherefore God doth blesse man with abundance.
Yet,
God with
Peace and
Plentie, Man doth blesse,
That
Man might blesse
God both in
word and
deede,
Not take occasion from thence to transgresse:
But from these
Fountaines pure doe oft proceede
(By their abuse)
Abuses which exceede.
There is no greater temptation thē never to be tēpted, & no sorer punishmēt then of God never to bee punished.
For,
sinne in
peace and
plentie, is so arm'd
VVith all that may allure the simple
sense,
That
sense by those allurements is so charm'd,
That soone it yeeldes to
sinne obedience,
As it were forc'd by some
Omnipotence:
When
sinne so sweetly doth
intreate and
pray,
And promise
Flesh, Heav'n in
Incontinence,
(To which
prosperity doth
Flesh betray)
How can fraile
Flesh and
Bloud say sweet
sinne nay?
If
Tast would tast, what might her
Pallate please,
Sinne offers the senses their severall satisfactions.
Sinne offers
Manna, Nectar, and what not?
VVould
touching feele?
sinne opens
pleasures Seas
To plunge the
sense therein, it to besot.
[Page 181]The
smell shee ioies with
sents as
sweete, as
hot.
The
eare shee tickles with such
wordes and
Notes,
That
Hearing (ravisht) hath her selfe forgot.
With
eie bewitching
Faires the
eie shee dotes:
And thus each
sense in
pleasures seas shee flotes.
These
senses thus bewitch'd,
Fancie allures
To share the
sweetnesse which they say they finde:
Fancie consents; and
Iudgement soone procures
T'approue their
pleasure, which betraies the
Minde,
(Betrai'd and quite misled by
Iudgement blind)
Thus in
prosperitie sinne domineers,
Vertue without adversitie withereth and loseth her force.
VVho vvith strong
cordes of
Vanity doth bi
[...]de
The
soule and
body, as it vvel appeeres
By those whom
welfare to the
world endeeres.
O
Flesh! didst thou but know how
suger-svveete
The
pleasures vvere proceeding from the
Crosse;
There is no other passage to heaven thē through the fire of Afflictions.
Th'wouldst runne amaine, the cōming
crosse to meet
And count al gaine, saue that alone, but losse:
All sensual
Ioies doe thee but turne and tosse
With restlesse proofes of
false felicitie,
Which
Ioies retaile, but vtter
griefes in grosse,
For,
corp'rall pleasure in extremitie
The
center is, of endlesse
miserie.
Now
Griefe and
Feare,
Griefe & fear accompanie transitory riches.
though they accompany
These evil
goods (
goods evil by abuse)
Yet they respect all kinde of misery
VVhich we conceiue, vvhen wee haue not
their vse:
Through vvant vvhereof, as through an open
sluce
Flow all
vexations, and
annoies of
minde,
Into the emptie
sou
[...]e, which they reduce
To their
obedience in rebellious kinde;
For
Reason they in
rage doe rudely binde.
The
Body hereby (puling) pines away
Simil.
(Like to a
Bladder whose winde is out strain'd)
By such degrees, as it doth by the way
A whyning make as if the same were pain'd:
So, fares the
Body, by the
Minde constrain'd,
Till she be breathles, she breathes out but
mone,
For want of
Goodes but fain'd, her griefes vnfain'd
Doe drie vp quite the
Marrow of the
Bone,
As if shee were in wretched plight alone.
Good Affects proceede frō the opinion of good, and evill, frō evill.
For as al good
Affections doe proceede
From the
opinion which we haue of
Good;
So doth th'
opinion of
evill breede
All ill
Affections and each evil
moode;
For ill Conceipt, conceaues this cursed Broode.
Offēce, what.
Now the first touch of
ill, is call'd
Offence,
Frō whence (if it contynewe) foorth do budd
Griefe, Envy, Hate, and fell
Impatience,
As
Loue proceeds from true
Goods residence.
And sith ther's nought that doth to
Earth belonge
In which both
Good and
Ill in deede, or
sho
Are not (like
Phisick-Potions) mixte amonge;
All mundane things are as they are takē.
Therfore frō thence may be drawne
VVeale or
VVoe
As they are tane, sith both from thence doe flo:
For
that which likes some, some doth most displease;
According to the
humors which they owe,
Some take repose, in that which most disease,
As some delight in
VVarre, but most in
Peace.
And the more inly that
offences touch,
So much the more they doe thereby offend:
The inward'st is the better part by much;
Then that which thereto doth annoyance send,
[Page 183]To the tormenting of the
VVhole doth tend:
Offenses against the outward Senses are much lesse os
[...]ensiue then those against the inward.
Offences done to the externall
Sense
Are not so grievous, as those which doe wend
To the internall; No
[...] is
VVitts offence
So sore, as that which doth the
VVill incense.
Nay, if our
VVill be not offended, we
Can suffer, what not? without al offence;
In which respect we willingly agree,
That
Friēds reproofs should proue our
patience,
When with our
Foes we would not so dispence:
Likewise o
[...]r
selues of our selves so may speake,
That
others speaking so would vs incense,
And make vs mortally
revenge to seek:
Thus
VVill bee'ng pleas'd, nought can our
Nothing moues our patience that moves not our will.
patience breake.
Then sith
Offence most grieves the tender'st
Sense,
Therefore are
they offended soon'st of all,
Whose
Mindes and
Bodies haue most
excellence,
And are most
delicate and
speciall,
Bee it by
accident, or
naturall:
And mong the
Hoast of
Natures Creatures,
Man
Is hard'st to please, and most to
Anger thrall;
Man of all creatures hardest to please.
For he with nought will beare, nor suffer can,
Yet al haue cause this wayward
VVaspe to ban.
If therefore
One it be so hard to please,
How much more hard to please an
Hoast of
Men?
What can be saide or done so wel, but these
Will
Who so pleaseth all doth more then he that made all.
all, or some of
all, speake there agen?
They care not against
whom, nor
where, nor
when.
Aske
Generalls if this be true or no,
Who though they make their
Purs-strings cracke agen
To please the
Presse, yet they shal not doe so,
But some will murmur, and speake broadly to.
Some, to bee thought more iudicious are most censorious.
For, some are so invred
fault to finde,
That they offended are without
offence,
Nothing they
heare or
see, but irkes their
minde,
So all offendes them without difference:
And, to be thought of tall intelligence
Their
Tongues dispraise, what their
Thoughts highly praise;
Because they weene great praise proceeds frō thēce:
For he (thinke they) that sees what to dispraise,
Sees and
knowes how t'amend it many
waies.
Criticks of these times.
How many may we
heare and
see of these,
Who with bent-
brow, scue-
looke, and
mouth awry
Sleightly survaie the
workes that wise-
men please
Protesting them to be but
poore; And whie?
Because they proue their
VVitts base povertie:
They faine would
faine to haue vnfained skill
In ev'ry thing wherein they
faults espie,
A Foole may make the wise ridiculous to Fooles.
And by depraving
VVitt t'haue witt at will,
When all's but
fain'd, and
strain'd and passing ill.
When Men adore their owne
sufficiencie,
And weene their
excellence doth check the
Skies,
What marvel ist, if al beneath the
Skie
They check; and through their
selfe-conceite dispise?
(Who, but to see their owne
woorth, haue no
Eyes)
These be men of partes that would have al whollie.
These
Men are inly mov'd with much offence,
When they another see by
Vertue rise,
Because high
State (they weene) should recōpence
No
others, but
their onely
excellence.
Bee they most
poore, yet be they much more
proude,
Exclaiming on the
tymes wherein they live:
The cōplaint of base malecontents.
For
Men of woorth (say they) with
parts indow'd
The
tymes doe not respect, nor wil relive,
[Page 185]But wholly
Without good partes.
vnto
partlesse Spirits giue:
Thus doe they melt awaie in
Envies fire;
And whilst
hart-burnings thē of
rest deprive,
They them bestirre to part that is
intire,
And
Commō-wealthes orethrow, so to aspire.
These vnwise wittie
Mal-contents are they
Divells incarnate tempt mē desperate.
That egge on
Men vnwise, and violent,
T'attempt the over-sway of
Princes Sway,
Or rather to confound their
government,
That so they might be made preheminent:
For, sly
Vlysses must point out the
place
Gainst which the force of
Aiax must be bent,
And
Men made
desp'rate hold it no disgrace
To be directed in a desp'rate
case.
These
waspish over-weening idle
Drones,
Are mortal
The Pestilēce which infects al that comes neere it.
plagues to ev'ry
Publike-weale:
Right
anti-Kesars vndermyning
Thrones;
Yet
Princes hardly shal their
motions feele
Vntil their
States and
Seates begin to reele:
And then too late (perhapps) seeke fast to sitt
VVhē they must rest vpō the pointed
Steele;
These are th'effects of mal-contented
VVitt,
Which not lookt to, wil haue a madding fitt.
All which proceedeth meerely of
Offence,
Cōceav'd by hateful natures hard to please;
VVhich,
mischiefe and great
inconvenience
Bring to a
State, and neither
Land nor
Seas
Can possibly be priviledg'd from
They walke like Devills invisible.
these.
VVho still doe feare, their mis-imploied time
VVill bring vpō thē
that which wil displease;
VVhich to prevent they seeke aloft to clime,
VVhich to effect, make cōsciēce of no
crime.
For, feare of
evill (though of
ill to come)
Doth grieue the
minde, as if it present vvere;
Cold
feare and
griefe then
Reason so benumme,
That it feeles nothing but cold
griefe and
feare.
A natural reason of rebels civill fury.
This
colde made
hot by
Ire, which it doth steere
Becomes
hell fire, which like a quenchlesse
flame
Consumeth all it toucheth or comes neere,
And leaues nought els behinde but lasting
blame,
So,
Feare turn'd
Fury, Man doth all vnframe.
Simil.
For, as in
nature, things that are most
cold
Made
hot, are most extreame
hot, like the
Fire:
So
Feare, most
cold by kind, yet if it should
Bee chaf'd vncessantly with
Hate and
Ire,
T'would be more
hot, then all
fires made intire.
For,
Man is more out-ragious, wilde, and wood
In
Passions heate, then
Passion can desire;
A man in fury more furious then a beast.
No
Beast is halfe so fell, in maddest moode,
As
Man, when
Furie sets on fire his
bloud.
A discription of an angry Man.
From which
fire flie out
Sparkles through his
eies,
VVho stare, as if they would their
holdes inlarge,
The
Cheekes vvith boiling
Choler burning rise,
The
mouth doth thundring (
Canon-like) discharge
The
fire which doth the
Stomacke overcharge:
The
teeth doe (grating) one another grind;
The
fists are fast, in motion to giue
charge,
The
Limbes doe tremble,
feete no footing find
But stampe, or stand vnconstant as the
VVinde.
All anger springs from offence but al offence grows not to Anger.
Which hellish
Passion from
Offence proceedes,
But all offence proceedes not to the same;
Offence the
Mother is that
Anger breedes,
But not it selfe in
nature nor in
name,
[Page 187]Ne can they bee confounded vvithout blame:
For
thinges offend vs oft which haue no
sense,
With vvhich vve cannot
angrie be for shame;
For, that must haue (like vs)
Intelligence
VVhich can to
Ire provoke our
patience.
For,
Ire's a vehment
motion of the
Hart,
What āger is
Stirr'd vp by
trespasse, scorne, or such like
ill
Offred vnto vs,
w
[...]olie or in
part,
Which in the high'st degree offends our
will,
For which, we would
revenge in hast fulfill:
For, each one rates himselfe by the
Assise
Of
selfe-conceipt, by him conceaved still,
From that great
good which, he weenes, in him lies
Which none (as he supposeth) should despise.
The more therefore a
Man himselfes esteemes,
The better a man thinkes of himself the sooner hee is moued to anger.
The more and sooner he to
Ire is mou'd;
Because that so great
worth's despis'd he deemes,
For which hee rageth, as from
wit remov'd;
Then,
Rage to
Rancor easily is shou'd;
VVhich is an
Anger most inveterate,
What Rancor is.
By
Charitie and
Reason most reprou'd,
And
God and
good-men mortallie doe hate;
Therefore to bee eschu'd as
reprobate.
For,
Rancor is so fell and violent,
That ioint by ioint, the
Soule it rudely rends,
Forgetting
Iustice, and the
Innocent
God, man, sex, age, good, bad, or
foes, or
friends,
Rancor is indifferent to good & bad.
For,
this all
these indiff'rently offends:
Then who consults with such a
Councellor,
That
Argumentes with
tooth and
naile defends,
Shall bee of all (but
Fiendes) an iniurer;
For sure the
Div'l's in such a
Coniurer.
Some call it honorable to revenge with the sworde all iniuries done against a mās honor. But how can that be honorable which God abhorreth & condemneth to eternall death.
VVhose furie is inflam'd so with desire
To wreake it selfe on that which it enflames,
That on it selfe it brings confusion dire,
And oft with suddaine death her
subiect shames;
Heav'n, Earth, and
Hell, and all therein shee blames,
Nay railes against, if they wreake not her
wronge,
And for her selfe an
Hell, on
Earth shee frames,
To wreake it on herselfe, if shee be long
Barr'd from
Revenge, for which her
Soule doth long.
The quality of Rancor.
VVhich is a motion of the
Hart, then vvhich
None can be more immane, or violent;
VVhich turnes frō
that which doth it roughly tuch
And seekes to quell the same incontinent;
Or on the
cause to inflict
punishment:
A reason why angry men for the most part are pale.
Here-hence it is some ire
[...]ull
men are pale,
Because the
bloud returnes from whence it went,
VVhose
harts haught-courage so doth ore exhale,
That they dare doe what not? come
Blisse or
Bale.
But commonly the
bloud doth not returne
As to the
Heart it doth in
Griefe and
Feare,
But in the
face in
furie it doth burne,
And all the
Spirits it enflameth there,
As if no more vvithin the
Body vvere:
The
bloud and
sp'rits inflam'd, the
braine ascend,
VVhich they (confusedly distracted) stere,
For how so ere
heate may the
Heart offend,
To the brains
The
Minde doth rest, if
heate it not transcend.
Simil.
No otherwise then as a
man that drincks
More then a
man, yet if it not ascendes
Vnto the
braine, no
man him
druncken thinkes,
Nor is he
drunke though
drinke his
belly rends:
[Page 189]So, though the
heart, an
hell of-
beate offendes,
Yet beeing still vvithin the
heart confin'd,
The
soule vvithin the
braine her
worke attendes
Without disturbing of the
VVit or
Minde,
Who wonted freedome in the
braine doe finde.
But giue
Men wit at vvill, nay
vvisedome too,
(If possibly
men furious
Salomon denies it. Eccl. Chap 7.11.
might be
vvise)
And put exceeding
Anger therevnto,
All's to no purpose, for all in it lies
As
fat in
fier, which to
nothing fries;
Moue but their
choller once, and all's on
[...]lame
That should them coldly any vvay aduise:
For, when the
soule by heate is out of frame,
Her
Iudgement must be blinde, and
Actions lame.
So that in true effect the furious
Man
Is good for nought, (for
nought is all as good)
But to blaspheme, and raue, and rayling ban,
And make
good men amazed at his
moode;
I know no mā worse thē my selfe, God helpe me the while.
God sheild I should be any of this
broode:
Yet must I (to my shame) for shame confesse,
Because its seene what
humor haunts my
bloud,
That
Anger to my
heart hath oft accesse
Against my
will, which faine would
it suppresse.
He is mine arch
foe gainst whom still I fight,
And though I bee to weake, and he to strong;
Yet fight I will, and aie in his dispight
I will refraine my
hands, much more my
Tonge,
Both vvhich in
wrath are apt to
Instruments of revenge. The heate of the hart mak
[...] the fingers nimble.
offer
wronge:
Heav'n helpe me to subdue this hellish
Ire,
And all that doth or shall to it belong,
So with the
drops of
grace quench out this
fire,
That to my
heart it neuer more aspire.
Yet let me coldly speake in praise of
Heate,
VVhich be'ng
temp'rate, yeeldes most sweete
effects;
The praise of Choler.
For,
Choler makes the
VVitt and
Courage great,
Yea, makes the
Hart abound with kinde
Affects,
And abiect
Anger is better thē laughter for by a sadd looke the hart is made better. Eccl. Cap. 7.5.
humors vtterly reiects:
In the best
Natures commonly its plac'd
By
Natures finger, for these kinde
respects,
And if with
fury it be not disgrac'd,
It should by al
meanes, by
all be embrac'd.
How like to liuelesse
Logges some
Dastards are,
Whose
witt &
Courage are quite drown'd in
Fleame;
VVho, though
wrongs prick their
Harts, yet stil they fare
As they vvere either
dead, or in a
dreame;
Nothing shal moue them, be it nere s'extreame:
A Coward cā not be truely honest.
Heare they their
frēds deprau'd (though nere so dear)
Nay heare they
Fiends the
Highests name blasphēe;
They dare not speake a vvord for them for feare;
VVhat vse of such that such
base-mindes doe beare?
Simil.
For as a little
fire vvhen we are cold
Doth vs but little good, and be'ng too great
Doth warme vs otherwise then
fier should;
But being
moderate, it so doth heat
As neither letts vs
coole, nor makes vs
sweat:
So,
Choler if too little, little steeds,
And if too much, too much doth make vs fret;
But being
meane, it many
Vertues breeds,
And with an
actiue warmth, the
blood it feeds.
For to be angery and not to sinne,
Is an obligatorie
Eph
[...]s. 4. 26.
Heast divine;
For whiles we are that holy
anger in
(Not wholly angery) it is a signe
[Page 191]We flame with that which doth our
soules refine:
For, in our
Soules the
iry-pow'r it is
Vertue cāno
[...] performe her functiōs without anger.
That makes vs at vnhallowed
thoughts repine,
And sober
soules are zealous made by this,
Then zealous
soules can hardly
Anger misse
[...]
Thus
Ire I pleade for thee, but thou hurt'st mee;
O be propitious therefore, hurt me not:
Then
Volumes large,
[...]le write concerning thee
Which without blott of blame, I al wil blott
VVith
blacke that shal thy
Glory laud.
bright, make bright as hott:
So, leaue I thee, and would thou me would'st leaue,
Yet leaue me not, as one thou hast forgott,
But mind me stil, when I should thee conceaue
Gainst
ill that would my
soule of
good bereaue.
For so thou didst possesse
Gods patient
Soule,
When he as
God and
Man the
Temple clear'd
(With
VVhipps) of
money-Changers, who did proule
Luke 19.25.
For filthie
Pelfe in
place to him endear'd,
Where most of al he should be
serv'd and
fear'd:
So, be with me, deere
Ire, till thou and I
Must part,, or
[...] by thee no further steer'd,
Then may agree with perfect
pietie
And well may stand with true
felicitie.
NOw from vnloving
Ire doth
Hatred spring,
Hatred is a child of Ire.
Which is more Hellish; for, its lasting
Ire
As some suppo
[...]e; which is a damned
thing,
Like to the
Devill her prodigious
Sire,
VVho Loues to hate, as Loue hates that desire:
Sith
God and
Nature hath made
Man in loue,
To loue
God and his like with loue intire,
VVhat
Vice can
Vertue in
man more reproue,
Then that which
Man to misse his
Ende doth move?
Yet
Ire from
Hatred must distinguisht be,
I
[...]e & hatred distinguished.
For
Ire proceeds frō some
wrong done to vs,
But
Hatred, is conceav'd as soone as we
Suppose a
Creature to be odious;
Though to vs it were nere iniurious:
And
Time can
Ire aswage, but hardly
Hate,
Ire would but vex, but
Hatred's murderous,
Revenge cooles
Ire, but cannot
Hate abate,
Ires hart can melte, but
Hates is obdurate.
Love linckes men togither, Hatred putts them a sunder
Loue is the
Linck that lincks
mā kind (by kind
Louing and
kinde) in perfect
Vnion;
This
Statute (sans defesance)
men doth bind
To succour one another woe-begon,
As if they were not diverse but al
one:
But
Hatred is the Hatchet, which doth cleeve
Mankinde to peeces in confusion;
Releefe refusing, and
[...]ake to releeve,
Yet giues more
dāmage thē it would receave.
None harbreth
Hatred, but
men like the
Devill,
The proude and envious are like the Devill.
(The
Proud, &
Envious, which are ful of
hate)
These hateful
Hell-hounds loue this lothsome
Evill,
Because it seekes
mankinde to ruinate:
VVhat can the
Devill worse excogitate?
It is the
Toade that swells with
Venome such
That no
force can resist, much lesse abate;
The
Moath of
Mā-kind, worse thē
nought by much,
Yet most indiff'rent to the
Poore and
Rich.
A good vse of Hate.
But
hate inhabits
Man to good effect,
VVhen he loues nought, that is not perfect good;
For he through
Hate doth
Evill still reiect,
VVhich would corrupt his
Nature, Mind, &
Moode,
[Page 193]And make it (like it selfe) a
Nihilhood:
Such
hate is happie, holy, and divine,
By which the force of
Ill is stil withstood;
This
Hate we ought to loue, which doth repine
Hate, worthy of Loue.
At al which doth not
Loue aright refine.
Then sacred
Hate let my
Loue thee embrace,
And, to an
Habit grow'n, inhabit mee,
Sith thou flow'st from the
Fountes of
Loue, &
Grace,
O let my love be ever
backt by thee;
Then
Ill from
Loue (so
backt) wil ever flee.
Sinfull Hate i
[...] hatefull
[...]ut gratious hate is behoo
[...]ull.
It is a
feaver of the
Minde to hate,
That's hate to
Loue, but whē they both agree
They doe preserve the
Soule in perfect state,
Whilst
Ill of
Ills they quite annihilate.
Thē hate (my
Soule) that thou maist ever love
That which this
Hate doth loue, with loue intire,
That is, al
good below, much more
aboue,
Wherto this
hate through
loue would faine aspire;
For perfect Love inflames iust Hates desire.
No otherwise then
VVater hott or cold,
Simil.
Though in some sorte it doth oppung the
fire,
Yet makes the
flames thereof more manifold,
VVhen it is cast thereon, so as it should.
Thus
Ire and
Hatred may be
good or
ill
Envy is a branch of iniustice.
According to their
obiects; And
Envy
(Their aie-
familier) doth follow still
Hatred and
Ire, to make a
Trinity;
Ire & Hatred the Parent
[...] of Envy.
Which may be vs'd
well, ill, or
neut'rally:
It is
well vs'd for
Gods foes good successe,
But
ill, when it anothers
good doth eye,
And
neut'rally when it doth not transgresse
The boundes of
Love, for loving more or lesse.
Envy is oppo
[...]t to Mercy.
Shee is to
Mercie alwaies opposit
In her true kinde; for
Mercy stil doth grieue
At others harmes; but
envi's glad of it,
And pines with paine, when others wel doe thriue
[...]
Yea liues in
death, when others liue to
liue.
1 Some envy others
gains, that hinder theirs;
2 Some, others
weale, whē they cannot arriue
3 Vnto the like: some, other that aspires
To
that they sought, but faild of their desires.
4 But some there are that envy others
good,
Without respect of their owne benefit,
Only because they think their
fate's withstoode
When
others on the least
good fortune hit,
Or doe the least
good, getting
praise for it:
The envy of the divel what
This is the
envie, than which none is worse,
Ev'n that of
Sathan, for
Men most vnfit,
This is the
envie that incurres his curse,
That from
Heav'n for the like did
Angels force.
It is safer to be conversant with a Tyrāt, then with the envious persō for the one takes away but life but the other honor and good name.
For
envies eies pry most of al on
praise,
The noblest
goods, goods of the noblest
Minde
They most envie; and stil themselues they raise
To highest
vertue, where they (fixt) it finde;
Heereat the teeth of
envie most doe grinde:
For looke how much the
Minde the
Corpes excels,
And the
Mindes riches are of rarer kinde;
So much the more the hart of
envie swels,
At those that haue these
goods, then any els.
Shee is
Prides second selfe, or other name,
Monsters distinct, yet vndiuiduall;
In
heav'n and
earth hath wel appeer'd the same,
For both made heau'nly
Lucifer to fall;
Pride's more apparāt, for it needs must swel;
Envy is more obscure, then Pride.
But
envy euer lines
Prides Pectorall:
Pride's as the high'st,
envie the lowest
hell;
Worse
Hags thē either, can in neither dwel.
Pride, before
all desires to be preferr'd;
If
anie therefore be preferr'd before,
Shee instantly is with fel
envie stirr'd;
And the more rise, her envie is the more.
Though
Meeknes mount,
prids hart doth ake therfore:
For shee thinkes, only
shee doth al excel,
Then others excellence her
heart must gore:
As others heav'n on earth, is Envies hell;
So others rising makes Pride still to swell.
For, where there is no
sunne, no
shadow is;
And, where's no
weale, or
glory, envi's not:
Envy is as the shaddow of vertue.
Shee feedes on her owne
hart, and others
blisse,
Shee skornes to looke so low as to their
lot
That are of
Fortune, or the
world forgot:
Therefore shee lurkes about the
Courtes of
Kings,
Envies natural home is in Kings Courts.
(Whose
Crownes are ever subiect to her
shot)
There like a
Snake, that hisses not, shee stings,
And oft ere shee is seene
Confusion bringes.
For, not without iust cause doe
Poets faine
That shee (as one of the infernall
broode)
Doth
poison sucke, to
vomit it againe,
And makes of
Snakes her flesh-consuming foode;
Ovid. Met. l. 2. Simul
[...]
Which makes her like a
blind-worme, without
bloud:
Who often creepeth like this abiect
VVorme,
Not wotting which
way, each
way but the
good:
And in
Preferments way shee doth enorme
All
feete shee meets with, which none can reforme.
Envie therefore the
hart doth macerate,
The envious are ashamed to bewray their envie.
Because the
Tongue dares not the
griefe disclose,
That makes that
griefe still on the
hart to grate,
Which the
leane looke alone in silence shoes;
Yet
eies shrinke in (as loth to tell the
woes)
Such lookes hath the envious.
And looke ascue, as if in looking straight
They might directly so discouer
those,
All which makes
woe to haue the greater waight
The
soule and
bodie so to over-fraight.
Bion.
One said, beholding one with
envie pin'd,
I know not by thy
lookes (which all doe loth)
If
they fare well or
thou ill; for thy
Minde
Is vext alike, alike thou look'st for both:
Which
subtill speech included
simple troth;
Envy is as much grieued for others good as her owne hurt.
For,
envi's griev'd no lesse for others
good
Then for her proper
ill; and is as wroth
For others
praise, as if hers were with-stood,
And for both, sucks alike her
Subiectes bloud.
Shee envies all to
all, except
envie,
And that shee envies to, if it exceede;
Like
Argus, shee nere sleepes but when her
eie
Is charm'd by
Mercuries sweete sounding
Reede;
Envy flattered sleepes for a while.
"For envie flattered is well agreed:
When all respect is had of
her and
hers,
And all neglected els, her
All to feede,
No more, till shee neglected be, shee stirres;
Then as before her selfe shee straight bestirres.
The
sunne at highest shee resembles right
(Though base shee be and darke as nether
Hell)
Simil.
For as the
sunne obscureth
things most bright,
And makes the light of
things obscure, excell:
[Page 197]So
envie seeks
men famous most to quell,
Before how many the more the envious person slandereth a man, the more high in glory hath he plac'd the crown of the slandered if he take it patiently.
And praiseth most,
men least deserving praise,
Such as their deerest
fame to
shame doe sell;
All such (if any at all) shee most doth raise,
And all
men els, doth most of all dispraise.
The more
Men want of what they faine would bee,
The more their
want with
envie is supplide,
The lesse, if
prowde, they are in their degree
The lesse they can their
betters farre, abide;
"And horse prowd Beggars, they like Kings will ride.
Each Vice caries with it its own torment.
Now as each
Vice doth in it beare about
An inbred
plague: so in this doth reside
The plague of
plagues; to weare it selfe quite out
With fretting gainst the rich or roiall
Rowt.
The
envious, privie to their owne
defects,
Doe witnesse to themselues their small esteeme,
For which the
VVorld, they see, them still reiects,
Through which they inly burst with griefe extreme,
The envious condemne themselues for most vnworthy men. No affection is lesse disclosed then envy
But dare not let the
world them envious deeme.
For, no
Affect is lesse disclos'd then this,
Because it makes men lesse then
worthlesse seeme,
Therefore the much more dolorous it is;
"For griefes doe breake the heart if vent they misse.
What
Common-weales, and mighty
Monarchies,
What glorious
Kings, and famous
Generals,
Yea (which is strange) what heau'nly
Hirarchies
Whose wretched state and miserable fals
(By
envie wrought) remaine in
Capitals!
Whence all may see, how actiue and how fell
This
Furie is, who rests in
Funerals:
Or when on
earth Men rest i
[...] such an
Hell,
Envies rest in funerals.
That to th'infernall may be
Paralell.
Envie is the parent of Iealousie.
FRom
Envy springs ay-watchful
Iealousie,
(Ore-plus of
Loue, as iealous
Lovers would)
Which (worse then
Hell) hates al
Rivalitie,
And cannot brooke that any other should
Possesse that
wee or
ours would, or doe hold:
Yet some restraine it onely vnto
Loue;
For being (as they say) more manifold,
It
Obtrectation is Iealousie in the largest Sense.
Obtrectation hight, which who doth prove
Shal finde the
Minde vnlike it selfe to moue.
For, she can thinke of nought but
that alone
That makes her iealous, and when shee's restrain'd
Of former freedome, shee is not her owne;
But like a
Body bound t'a
Racke, is pain'd,
And thinks of nought but
paine be'ng so constrain'd:
This is the
Linx in
Loue that never
sleepes,
Iealousie a Linx in loue.
And oft (too oft) by
Lust is entertain'd,
Who through nine
walles of
Mudd, or
Mettle peeps,
And so (like
Argus)
Loves beloved keepes.
Now; as the
thinges belov'd are good or badd,
Iealousy good or bad according to her obiect.
How Iealousie is good.
So iealousie is good or badd thereby.
If
Men be iealous of their
thoughts that gadd
From the chiefe-
Good, good is that iealousie;
And in a
Prince tis no
impiety,
When he suspects
Ambition in his
State;
Nor in the mari'd ist an Heresy,
If loving-
iealousie without debate
Doe keepe each others
Love from cause of
hate.
Like may bee sedd of
Parents, Kinne, and
Frendes,
So longe as it aymes but at like
respect,
An harmelesse iealousie, from
harme defends
Those whom they governe, and by kinde affect:
[Page 199]Such
ieal'usie doth in
God our
good effect;
Gods iealousy touching vs doth procure our good.
Which makes him watch vs, where wee wake or sleepe,
VVho in his loue thereby doth vs protect,
From al those vnseene
ills that on vs creepe,
And by the same his
honor safe doth keepe.
But
iealousie conceau'd through cause vniust,
Evil Iealou
[...]
Be it in
VVeddlocke, Freindshippe, or where not,
Makes
Loue a
Languishment; for
false mistrust
Is not by
God, but by his
Foe begott,
Which
Loue with
Lust doth evermore besott:
Hence come the
Quarrells twixt the mari'd
Paires,
When they through
iealousie are overshott,
This makes
Affraies too oft of great
Affaires,
Quarrells raised through Suspitiō causlesse.
Iealousy, what.
And ruynes that which loyal
Love repaires.
The fell disturber of
Loves sweete repose,
Copesmate of
Care, tormenter of the
Minde,
The
Canker of faire
Venus sweetest
Rose,
The
Racke that over-racks the over-kinde,
The over-watchful Eye of
Loue stil blinde:
The
Hart of
Caution wherein ay are bredd
The vital
Sp'rites of
Arte to
State assign'd;
Soule of
Regard, alive when it seemes deade,
All this is
Iealousie that holds the
Heade.
The
Caucasus whereto
Loues Hart is bound,
Prov. 6.34.
The
Vulture which the
thoughts thereof devoures,
The
Primum mobile which turneth round
The
Braine, which to the
rest vnrest procures,
A Sore which nought, that's good for
ought, recures,
That's
Mummy made of the meere Hart of
Love,
A temp'rall
Hell, whose
torment still eudures,
The Pennaunce of
Mistrust, which
Lovers proue,
All this is
Iealousie which I reprove.
And now to ende (where we should haue begunne
When we began to touch corrupt
Affects)
With
Pride, because from her al
Vice doth runne
Ecles. 10.14.19.
(As from the
Fountaine) which the
Soule infects;
Which may be thus describ'd by her
effects:
A swelling of the
Hart which doth proceede
Pride what.
From
Selfe-conceite, that gainst the
Soule reflects,
And showes more glorious then it is indeede,
Which makes vs thinke our
gifts al
mens exceede.
The proude person hates pride in all but in himself.
THis
Prodigie, this more then mounstrous
Pride,
This
Soules envenomn'd
Botch, This
Sourse of
Sinne,
Can nothing lesse thē hir owne selfe abide,
When shee doth see her selfe
another in:
If shee her selfe doth hate, what can shee wynne
But hate of
all, that see her as shee is?
Still loth'd may shee be, for had shee not byn,
We stil had liv'd in earthly
Heavens blisse,
And
Lucifer held heav'nly
Paradis.
Sith
Man was made a creature sociable,
And that his liues-ioy should therein consist,
What
vice in man is more detestable,
Then that which doth this ioy of life resist?
For
Pride, as if shee were with nature blist
Pride holdes all in scorne but her selfe.
That farre surmounted more then
half-divine,
Scornes al
Humanity; if so, what ist
On
Earth that shee thinks (be'ng so superfine)
Worthie to
suite her, but alone to reigne?
Shee (swelling
Toade) lookes with disdainful
Eyes
If Humility be the mother of true piety, what is Pride, her contrary?
On highest things that are
sublunarie,
And
(Lunatick) aboue the
Moone doth rise
In minde, though she mindes nought but
villany,
Therefore the most
prowde are most ignorant
Of
wisedomes hid in blest
Theologie,
Because they meerely minde
things miscreant,
As earthly
pompe, and
port extravagant.
If not impossible, yet hard it is,
For the most
learn'd and
lowly wel to know
Themselues in ev'ry
part, and not to misse;
Then sith the
Prowd doe never looke so
low,
That
skil nere comes but with their overthrow:
The proud are taught to know themselues by their proper overthrow.
For they by nature are most prone to
pride
That know all but themselues; and yet doe show
They know themselues too wel, for, nought beside
They loue; which loue, that knowledge doth misguid.
For who so lookes with vvell-descerning
eies
(If he be mortal, be he what he wil)
Into him
selfe, he wil him
selfe despise;
For in him
selfe he findeth nought but
ill,
He that know
[...] himselfe best esteemes himselfe least.
Corrupting
Soule and
Body, Minde, and
VVill:
The
best shall finde but matter too too
bad
To humble them, and so to keepe them still;
The
worst shal see ynough to make them mad,
Seeing themselues through
Ill, so ill-bestad.
Al vnder
Heav'n mans pride hath made so vile,
So fraile, so ful of
sorrow and
vexation,
All vnder the Sunne is vanity and vexation of Spirit. Eccles. 1.
That should a
Man possesse al, yet the while
He should possesse but temporall
damnation;
And with it likely
divine indignation.
Can
Men be prowde then, of an earthly
hell,
Affording nought but
griefe and
molestation?
Or can their
harts with
Pride and
Sorrow swell
When one puffes vp, the other downe doth quel?
Proude men are senselesse in the strictest sense.
If so they can, it is for want of
sense
To feele the
griefes that are most sensible;
And senselesse
Soules haue no preheminence
Of
humane Nature; nor extensible
To
brutish, which is not insensible:
Then what are proud
Soules by this iust
accounte
But either deade, or comprehensible
In that of
Plants; which from
Earth cannot mount,
But that a worthlesse
VVren may them surmount.
The
Eyes that
Sunne-bright
Robes, or smoke of
praise
Doe dimme, are feeble-sighted, and such
Eyes
Cannot themselues as high as
Heaven raise,
Nor pierce to
Hell which in their
Owner
The proude haue Hell with the Prince thereof abiding in their hartes.
lies:
For if they would or could in any wise,
Pride could not possibly surprise their
Hart,
For
Heav'n they would admire, and
Hell despise,
And from that
Hell they would their
Eyes convert
[...]
To highest
Heav'n, and from it nere divert.
Simil.
But as the
Toade to
venome turnes her
foode
(How
pure so ere it be) shee feedeth on:
So
Pride turnes
Vertue to her venom'd
moode,
Then which no
prid's more neere
Damnation;
Spirituall pride God doth most detest.
For sp'ritual pride
God hates as he doth none:
Which
pride is
Luciferian, and the fall
Of those, whose
Soules are with it over gon,
Shal be like
Lucifers, for no one shall
Over-weening, an odious Vice.
Be sav'd that weenes his
vertue passeth all.
Pride is a winde that makes the
Soule to swell,
And without Issue it the same wil rend:
Therefore the
proude their owne
perfections tell;
Yea, onely tell of what them most commend,
[Page 203]And with whom not, for
praise they stil contend;
Prov
[...] 13.10.
Which if they misse, or others praised more,
Out goth that
wind, (which they with thūdrings sēd)
Against al those that are preferr'd before,
And as distracted, raile, and rave, and rore.
Doth
Pride a
Tenent hold, it must be so,
Although it cutt the Throate of
Reason quite;
The proude obstinate in their opiniō.
All her
opinions can abide no
No:
And though them to defend shee hath no might,
Yet to defend them shee wil rage and fight:
No
time, no
truth, nor no
authoritie,
Shal putt
Pride, if shee wrong be, in the
right;
For shee desires to haue the masterie
In al, that al may give her
dignitie.
Nothing so much shee dreades, as to be deem'd
Any's
inferior in any
thing;
This makes her loth to
learne, sith shee hath seem'd
To
know much more then al, by her learning:
She
Reproofs do enrage the proud, though for their good bestowed.
scornes
reproofes that
information bring;
Her
Vices shee wil haue for
Vertues tane,
Or like a
Serpent shee wil
hisse and
sting,
Blaspheme and what not, for shee's most profane,
And if shee can, be her
impugners bane.
The
frendshippe is as
dang'rous as vnsure,
Where
The proude mā, the drūckard and the Coward are nought to make f
[...]ends of; the proud will scorne thee if he out start thee in fortunes, the drūkard wil in wine bewray thy secrts, for what is in the ha
[...]t of the sober, is in the tongue of a drunkard, & the Coward dares not speake one word in defence of thy reputation though hee heare it slanderously depraved.
Pride hath any place in any
frend,
Pride wil the downfall of a
friend procure
If by such
fall the
proude friende may ascend,
For al his frenshippe to himselfe doth tend;
Comes
good from him, to him must goe the
praise,
As if
good in him did
begin and
end;
So robbes
God of his
glorie many waies,
And faine aboue his
God himselfe would raise.
If he with fained modestie doth vaile
His height of
Pride, and doth himselfe dispraise,
Tis but the higher to advance the
Saile
Of swelling
Pride, which he to
Cloudes doth raise,
Nay thūder-cracks the
Clouds, that clouds his
praise:
The highest
Heau'ns (he weenes,) must giue it way
Vnto the
Throne where perfect
glorie staies,
Sith the Earth cannot hould her, Hell must and can.
And there sitt cheeke by Iowle with
Glorie ay;
This,
Pride desires, and those that her obay.
If shee associate
Learning, shee wil leade
That Heav'nly
Lady into Hellish
waies;
Then shee misledd, each
Soule must needes misleade
That on her seeming-wel-stai'd
Iudgment staies;
Pride the Fountaine of all Heresies.
Hence spring al
Heresies; which
Pride doth raise:
For lett a
Scholer famous for his
skill
Maintaine dam'd
Error, he for peevish
praise
Wil ransacke
Bookes and
Braines to do it still,
Though he thereby his
Soule with
Millions spill.
For should we harrow al the
Soules of those,
The
Soules of al the
Heades of
Heresies,
We shal finde
Pride did thereto them dispose,
That they might liue to al
If a man live Soule & Bodie in Hell to all eternities that his name may live in the mouthes of men to all posterities, he hath but an hellish purchase.
Posterities
In
Mouthes of
Men, though but for
Blasphemies:
Knowledge puffes vp, and if the dewes of
Grace
Swage not the swelling, it so high wil rise,
That
Earth nor
Heav'n shal hold it in that case,
Till
Hell doth take it downe and it embrace.
The knowledge of the
Best consists in
Each man seemes to know more then he doth.
show,
This
Man is wise compar'd with one more
fond;
Yet this great wise man nothing lesse doth know
Then he would
seeme to know, and vnderstand:
[Page 205]Suffizeth him he beares the
VVorld in hand
That he is
wise and
learned; Nothing lesse:
But wise in this, that can
Mens thoughts command
To thinke him wise, when should he
truth confesse,
His
wisedome were but wel-cloakt
foolishnesse.
Latine and
Greeke are but
Tongues naturall,
Which helpe, but not su
[...]fise to make men wise;
For the effect of
speech is al in all,
Eccl. 39.1.
[...].3
Sound Sentence, which from wise
Collections rise
Of diverse
Doctrines, which
VVitt wel applies:
Then he that hath but
Tongues (though
all that are)
Not the tongs but the matter contained in thē make men learned.
And not the
wisdomes which those
Tongues cōprise,
May amongst
fooles be held a
Doctor rare,
But with the wise al
Tongue, and nothing spare.
Giue me the
Man that knowes more then a
Man,
Yet thinkes he knoweth no more then a
Beast:
Giue me him (quoth I) where is
Wee may light a Torch at none day & seeke such a one among a multitude & yet misle to finde him.
he? and who can
Give me that
Gifte, sith such are al diceast,
Or if they
bee, not to be found at least?
Sage
Socrates is deade, and with him gon
His
Pupills that knew more then al the rest,
Yet thought they knew farre lesse then ev'ry
one,
But now al
seeme to know, yet know doth none.
O! had a
man al
learning in his
braine,
And were to
heare or
see the wondrous
VVritt
Of some deepe
Doctors, he should track them plaine
From place to place where they haue borrowed it,
And nought their owne (perhaps) but what's vnfitt:
Yet as if
all were
As if wisdome and learning were buried in them.
For they haue the name of wisedome, but there be but few that haue the knowledg of her Ec. 6.22.
theirs, they are admir'd,
As if their
Sculls ensconst al
skill and
VVitt,
Or with some sacred
furie were inspir'd,
When as (God wott) their
VVitt is al-bemir'd.
Wee shall bee modest if wee take not that vpon vs which we haue not, and brag not of that which we haue.
Yet
all take on, as if all were their owne,
So tis,
all thinke, or
few know otherwise,
Which
few perhaps as well as they haue stolne,
(Borrow'd I would say) but yet they are wise
Not to detect each others
pilferies:
The greatest
skill these present
times affoord
Is others
If any where I haue followed our newe learning and Time in their fashion, Time and Learning ought the more to favor me, cōsidering how little I am beholding to them both
sayings cleanely to comprise
In
ours: so that it be not word for word,
Which wit with
moderne wisedome doth accorde.
But say a
Man knew al, that
Man can know,
Yet doth the
The Divels knowledge far exceedes mans.
Divell know more then that
Man;
What cause of
pride then can it be to show
Lesse
knowledge and more
pride then dam'd
Sathan,
Who hath obseru'd
all since the
VVorld began;
Nor doe the
Elementes repugnance marre
His
wits; for he of
Aire consists, and can
Command the same: But in
The warr of the Elements in man mars his wit.
Man so they warre
That he is taken
Follies Prisoner.
Who knowes nought in the
Cause but in th'
effect;
The
Divels knowledge to the
cause extends,
Who enters
Natures Brest, and doth select
All
secrets of the same, to secret
endes:
For he th'
Abysse of
Causes darke descendes,
The Divel can looke into all the hiddē causes of nature.
And with his
Owles-eies (that see best in darke)
Those
Causes to the
Causer comprehendes,
And how they are togither linckt, doth marke;
Yet is lesse prowde of this, then some meane
Clarke.
Yet he can
wonders worke amusing all,
For having view'd the
forces of all
thinges,
How the Divell workes wonders.
VVhether
celestiall or
terrestriall,
And with most curious search their true
workings,
[Page 207]Their
forces he with sleight togither brings,
And
actiue to their
passiue powres doth binde,
Yea one another so togither minges,
That it brings foorth (by
sympathie of
kinde)
VVonders surmounting all conceite of
minde.
No
one excels him (but that
Three in One)
In
wondrous workes, which may amaze the
wise;
But that same onely-wise
Trin-vnion
Workes
Miracles, wherein all
wonder lies;
For
Miracles aboue all
VVonders rise,
The Divels wonders are Mira, non Miracula.
Sith they are truely supernaturall;
But
VVonders he to
Natures Secrets ties:
Then
wonders simplie are but naturall,
But
Miracles meere Metaphysicall.
But be it that some
Elixer-makers, a golden yet beggarly corporation
[...] for they are as poore as a Poet.
Begger can extract
By distillation or some other meane
The
Quintessence of any thing; That
Acte
Suffiseth him to be as
prowde as
meane:
And though the
starueling be as lewd as leane,
Yet thinkes he
Kings should feede and make him fat,
Nay, doe him homage: O base
Thing vncleane!
Canst thou for
this, thinke thou deservest
that?
Or can a
The skill i
[...] Earthly and earth is the basest of Elements.
skill so base, thee so inflate?
What
Brest coulde bound thy
Heart then, if thou couldst
Make the
Elixer, which so many
marre?
It's past most probable
[...], that then thou wouldst
Seeke to be
Deifide, or els turne
starre,
That
Dull-heades might adore thee from afarre:
It is a
Because it tēds to the attainment of riches, which in this worlde are of most estimation.
skill indeede of rich esteeme,
And worthy of the rar'st
Philosopher,
But could
one doe the same, as
many seeme,
Yet no great wise
one he himselfe should deeme.
For al his
wits to this should be restrain'd
(Sith to worke
wonders the whole-
man requires)
And though at length (perhaps) he it attain'd,
Yet should he bee to seeke that
VVit desires,
In other
matters, then these
feates by
fires.
Sage
Salomon, whose
wisedome wonder wan,
Knew al in
all, which
all in
one admires,
Eccles. 1.
Yet knew that
all was
vaine, and he a
man
Vainer then
Vanitie, that
nothing can.
Our
knowledge is so slender, and so fraile,
That the least
pride cannot depend thereon;
Pride breaks our
Cōnings necke, which oft doth faile
To hold aright the nature of one
Stone,
Much lesse to know the kindes of ev'ry
one.
Compare the
All we know, with the least part
Of that we know not, wee shall see, alone
God only and alone is wise.
That
God is wise: And
men are voide of
Art,
And blinde in
wit and
will, in
Minde, and
Hart.
Be he a
Pleader, and a
wordie Man
(Whose
VVinde the true
Elixer is; for it
The
Aire to
Sōe lawyers sell both their silence and speech.
Immoderate desire of having, & honor be enemies, & can hold no cōgruency in one man togither.
If it be an in
[...]allible token of health, whē the Physitions be poore, thē is it a true sign of contention (a states disease) when Lawyers bee rich.
Aurum transmute lightly can)
If once he gets a
name for law-ful
wit,
Hee thinkes high
pride for him alone is fit:
Convoies of
Angels, then must help the
most
Vnto his
speech; for he makes benefit
Of ev'ry
word; for not
one shal be lost,
Or if it be, the
next shall quit that cost.
Vp goe his
Babell-Towres of
Pompe and
Pride,
That to the
High'st he may next neighbour be;
No
neighbour neeres him, his
grounds are so wide,
Then not a
Nod without a treble
fee,
[Page 209]An
Angell (though most bright) he cannot see:
Verie manie laws are notes of a corrupte Cōmon weale Tacit.
And yet to know the
Law, is but to know
How
Men should liue, and without
Law agree:
Which,
Reason to the simplest
Soule doth show;
Then
pride is farre too high, for
skill so low.
But though the
Lawyer liues by others losse,
And hath no place in
Platoes Common-weale,
Yet if he will not
Cato in R
[...]me forbad al to be called to the Barre that were found eloquēt in a bad cause
crosse
Law, for the
crosse
That no
Man hates, but all doe loue to feele;
Hee's worthy of the
Money. The duty of Lawes and Lawyers.
Crosse sweete
Comforts Seale:
For
Lawyers ought (like
Lawes) to make
Men good,
And who are in the
wronge, or
Right, reveale:
Then are they worthy of al
liuelyhood,
That make men liue in perfect
Brotherhood.
But, that a Petti-fogging prating
patch,
That gropes the
Petty-foggers the grād disturbers of good mens quiet.
Law for nothing but for
Galles,
Should be so prowde as if he had no match,
For tossing
Lawes as they were Tennis-
Bals,
This vexeth
God and
Good-men at the
Galles:
Yet such there are, (too many such there are,)
Who are the
Seedes-men of Litigious
Bralls:
And are so prowde that by the
Lawes they dare
Contend with
Crassus, though they
nought cāspare.
I graunt the
Law to bee an holy
thing,
Worthy of
reverence and all
regard;
But the abuse of
If hee ought to be punished which offereth to corrupt a Iudge with guiftes, howe much more ought he which goeth about to blind his iudgmēt wi
[...]h lies, or eloquence: because a vertuous Iudge wil not be corrupted with the first, but he may be deceived by the last.
Law (and so of
King)
By such as will abuse both for
reward,
Is dam'd; hard tearme! yet that
course is more hard:
Can such finde
patrones, such
course to protect?
They can and doe, but would they might be barr'd
From
Barres, or that ore
Barres they might be peckt,
El
[...] at
Barres with as hard a
doome be checkt.
Hinc ille Lachrymae! ô griefe of griefes!
My
Muse be mute, defile not thine owne
Nest:
O let the longest
Largs be shortest
Briefes
In this discordant
Note, and turne the
VVrest;
So that this
Pride in whō so ere is notable. for she wil be seene, being still overseene.
Note by thee bee nere exprest:
Canst thou my
Muse? canst thou my cruel
Muse
Make
Men, the
Muses Minions detest?
Forbeare, forbeare thy
Soules loue to abuse,
Or touch
that tenderly which thou dost vse.
Ist possible a
Poet should bee proude,
That for the most part is past passing poore?
That can paint
Vice with & without a
Cloude,
And be'ng most vgly, make
her vgly more,
Can he be proude? & only
Proud of a conning invectiue against pride.
proude
therfore!
It cannot be in
sense, and
Poets are
Sense-masters subtilized by their
Lore;
Yet tis too true that scarse one
Poet rare
Is free frō
Pride, though
Back be
leane as
bare.
Poetry no skil humane.
I cannot but confesse the
Skill's divine;
For, holy
Raptures must the
Head entrance,
Before the
Hand can draw
one lasting
Line,
That can the glory of the
Muse advance;
And sacred
Furies with the
thoughts must dance,
To leade them
Measures of a stately kinde,
Or iocond
Gigges: Then, if
Pride with them prance
Shee wil be foremost, then
shame comes behinde,
Both which disgrace the
motions of the
minde.
Wilt thou be lofty
Muse? then scale the
Mount
Where
Ioues high-
Alter
On the topp of Olimpus at the foote whereof runs Helicon.
stands; and on the same
Offer thou lowly,
that which doth surmount
The reach of
Vulgars, in no vulgar
Flame:
[Page 211]There sacrifize to
Ioue thy fairest
fame
In lowest depth of high'st
humilitie;
Humility is the surest foundation for the highest glory.
Humility that can advance thy
name
To highest height of
immortalitie,
Embosom'd by diuinest
Dëitie.
Art great with
yonge with
numbers infinite
The least of which hath pow'r to peirce the
Skie?
Yet lowly be, that the
wombe of thy
VVitt
That rare
Conception may yeeld readilie,
Their
mother so to glad and glorifie;
Thou art from
Heav'n my
Muse, thē be thou such,
As Heau'nly be, ful of humilitie;
Is thy
skill much? be
Humility doth best become the highest knowledge.
Extreame precisenes or affectation in words & stile doth quench the heate of our invention and bridleth the freedome of our witts. Wee must vse words as wee vse Coyne, that is, those that be cōmon and currant; It is dāgerous to coine without priviledg.
meeke then more thē
much,
For
Pride's most dam'd, that heav'nly
thinges doth touch.
Plunge thee ore head and eares in
Helicon,
Dyue to the
Bottome of that famous
Fludd,
Although it were as deepe as
Acheron,
Thēce make thy
fame vp-dive although withstood
With weeds of
Ignorance, &
Envies Mudd:
But though thy
fame faire
Sol should equalize
For
height and
glorie, yet let al thy good
Consist in that, If thou woul'st thou could'st rise,
But lou'st bum-basted
mountings to dispise.
Yet let me giue this
Poesie is the Caesar of Speech.
Caesar but his due
(
Caesar of speech that monarchizeth
Eares)
Sweete
Poesie, that can al
Soules subdue,
To
Passions, causing ioy or forcing
Teares,
And to it selfe each glorious
sp'rite endeeres:
It is a
speech of most maiestike state,
As by a wel-pen'd
Poëm wel appeeres;
Poesie more perdurable then Pros
[...].
Thē
Prose, more cleanely coucht & dilicate,
And if wel done, shal liue a longer
Date.
For, it doth flow more fluent frō the
Tonge,
In which respect it wel may tearmed be,
(Having a
Cadence musicall among)
A
speech melodious ful of harmonee,
Or
Eare-enchanting matchlesse melodee:
Succinct it is, and easier to retaine
(Sith with our
Some Philosophers supposed our soules to be musicke, some others Number.
sp'rits it better doth agree)
Then, that which tedious
ambage doth containe,
Albe't the
VVitt therein did more then raigne.
Its deckt with
Coulors fresh, and
figures fine,
Which doth the
Iudgment ay inveagle so
(Making the
Eare to it of force incline)
That
Poesie inveagles
[...]he iudgment to assent to her assertion
[...].
Iudgment often doth her selfe forgoe,
And like
VVaxe, bends
Opinion to and fro;
In
Prose the speech is not so voluble,
Because the
Tongue in
numbers doth not flo,
Ne yet the
accent halfe so tunable,
Then, to our
spirites much lesse sutable.
And, for its ofter vs'd, it cloies the
Eare
Be'ng not contriv'd with
Measures musicall,
And not alow'd that
beauty Verse doth beare,
Nor yet the
Cadence so harmonicall,
Much lesse the
Relifh, and double-relish words of arte incident to the Soule-inchāting Arte of musicke.
relish so
Angelicall:
Its not adorn'd with choise of such sweete
VVordes
(
VVords that haue pow'r to sweeten bitter'st
Gall)
Nor licence't that fine
Phrase, Arte Verse affords,
Which makes huge
Depthes, oft times, of shallow
Foorde
[...]
[...]
Therfore the
Poets from the
VVorlds first
Age,
As best persuaders, whose sweete
Eloquence
(They playing best
partes on this Earthly
Stage)
Was the first
retorick borne of
Sapience,
[Page 213]That glorie giues to
VVisedomes influence:
Oracles delivered alwaies in Verse.
Herehence it came that divine
Oracles
(
Apollos speech of highest excellence)
Were stil exprest in measur'd
Syllables,
The voice of
VVisdomes truest
Vocables.
In which respect, t'was meet'st to make
Records
Of memorable
Accidents of
Time,
Of
Princes liues and
actions of great
Lordes,
Which
Poets first did
Chronicle in
Rime;
And farre aboue
Chronography did clyme:
For they were first of al that did observe
(Though
Poets now are neither
flush nor
Prime)
The workes of
Nature for
Mans vse to serve,
But now gainst
Nature their
works make thē
They give those mē fame that recompence them with famine.
sterve.
They searcht the
causes of
things generable,
VVith their
effects and distinct
properties;
And made them (by their
skill) demonstrable,
Mounting from thence vnto the loftie
skies,
To note their
motions and
what in them lies:
They first did finde the
Heav'ns plurality,
Poets
[...]irst found the distinctiō of the Spheares.
And how they did each other so comprise
That in their
motion they made melody,
Caus'd by their
closnesse and
obduracy.
Yea, sought to finde each
substance seperate,
And in their
search they were most curious
Of divine
Essenses to know the state,
VVhich having found
[...] were most laborious
Them to expresse in
Poems precious:
They were therefore the first
Astronomers
[...]
Poets were the first Astronomers Metaphisicks, and Philosophers.
(That travell'd through the
Heau'ns from house to house)
First
Metaphisicks and
Philosophers,
Vnfolding
Heav'n &
Earth, Sun, Moone, &
Starre
[...].
Thus much for
Poets, and sweete
Poesie,
In whose
praise never can be said too much:
Yet
Pride their praise may blemish vtterly,
For she defiles like
pitch what she doth tuch:
And maks both
heau'n &
earth at it to grutch:
For no
Perfection can be toucht with
pride
But it wil looke as if it vvere not such,
Deform'd in fauour, which none can abide;
For
Grace is base being thus double
dide.
But that which grates my
Galle, and mads my
Muse,
Is (ah that ever such iust cause should
Bee)
The stewe
[...] once stoode where now Play-houses stand.
To see a
Player at the put-downe
stewes
Put vp his
Peacockes Taile for al to see,
And for his hellish voice, as prowde as
hee;
The Peacock.
What
Peacocke art thou prowd? Wherfore? because
Thou
Parrat-like canst speake what is taught thee:
A
Poet must teach thee from clause to clause,
Or thou wilt breake
Pronunciations Lawes.
Lies al thy
vertue in thy
Tongue stil taught,
And yet art prowd? alas poore
skum of
pride!
Peacocke, looke to thy
legs and be not haught,
No
patience can least
pride in thee abide;
Neither delighteth he in any mās legs. Psal. 147.10.
Looke not vpon thy
Legs from side to side
To make thee prowder, though in
Buskine fine,
Or
silke in graine the same be beautifide;
For
Painters though they haue no skil divine,
Can make as faire a
legge, or
limbe as thine.
Good
God! that euer
pride should stoope so low,
That is by nature so exceeding hie:
Base
pride, didst thou thy selfe, or others know,
Wouldst thou in
harts of Apish
Actors lie,
[Page 215]That for a
Reproofes wher they are wel deserved, must bee well pa
[...]ed.
Cue wil sel their
Qualitie?
Yet they through thy perswasion (being strong)
Doe vveene they merit
immortality,
Onely because (forsooth) they vse their
Meant of those that haue nothing to commende them but affected acting, & offensiue mouthing.
Tongue,
To speake as they are taught, or right or
wronge.
If
pride ascende the
stage (ô base ascent)
Al men may see her, for nought comes thereon
But to be seene, and where
Vice should be shent,
Yea, made most odious to ev'ry one,
In blazing her by demonstration
Then
pride that is more then most vicious,
Should there endure open damnation,
And so shee doth, for shee's most odious
In
Men most base, that are ambitious.
Players, I loue yee, and your
Qualitie,
As ye are Men,
that pass time not abus'd:
And
W. S. R B.
some I loue for
Simonides saith, that painting is a dumb Poesy, & Poesy
[...] a speaking painting.
painting, poesie,
And say fell
Fortune cannot be excus'd,
That hath for better
vses you refus'd:
VVit, Courage, good-shape, good partes, and all
good,
As long as al these
goods are no
worse vs'd,
And though the
stage doth staine pure gent
[...]e
bloud,
Yet
Roscius wa
[...] said for his excellēcy in his quality, to be only worthie to come on the stage, and for his honesty to be more worthy thē to come theron.
generous yee are in
minde and
moode.
Your
Qualitie, as fa
[...]e as it reproues
The
VVorld of
Vice, and grosse
incongruence
Is good; and
good, the
good by nature loues,
As
[...]her is good vse of plaies & pastimes in a Cōmō-weale for thereby those that are most vncivill, p
[...]one to moue war and dissention, are by these recreations accustomed to loue peace & ease. Tac 14. An. Ca 6.
recreating in and outward
sense;
And so deserving
praise and
recompence:
But if
pride (otherwise then morally)
Be
acted by you, you doe
all incense
To morta
[...]l hate; if
all ha
[...]e mortally,
Princes, much more
Players they vilifie.
But
Pride hath skil to vvorke on baser
Skils,
For each
Bagg-piper, if expert he be,
Pride fils his
Soule, as he his
Bag-pipe fils,
For he supposeth
he and none but
hee
Should be advanc'd; For what? For
Rogueree.
Hee can repine, and say that
men of
Though these words be vnfit
[...]or his mouth yet he fits his mouth to these words
partes
Are not esteem'd; Goe base
Drone, durtie
Bee,
Rest thou in
dung, too good for thy
deserts;
For
durt to
durt should goe, and
praise to
Artes.
Though no
man can more willingly commende
The
Soule-reioycing sound of
Musickes voice,
Faire
figure of that
blisse that nere shall end,
Which makes our sorrowing
Soules (like it) reioice;
The ende of Artes giues thē their true valuation.
Yet at the best its but a
pleasure choise
To make vs
game, vvhen wee are vvoe-begon;
It is too light graue
Artes to counterpoise,
Then no cause is there to bee prowde thereon
Albe't thou wert as good as
Amphion.
Pride, vvilt thou still be subiect to my
Muse?
Be subiect to
her stil, and so to
me:
But now shee should (if shee did well) refuse
Longer to haue to doe vvith cursed
Thee;
For shee hath found thee in the low'st
degree,
The
Hangman sav'd, whose
ba
[...]esse doth surpasse:
Yet he of
London, that detested
He
Gentlemen should hate Pride
[...]owe, sith she is become the Hāgmās loue.
(Whose
hart is made of
Flint, and face of
Brasse)
Of
decollation brags, but let that passe.
Then
pride farewel, base beastly
pride farewel,
Or fa
[...]e farre worse, then ill in worst degree,
Sith thou scorn'st not in such an
hart to dwell,
That by the
fruit liues of the
Gallow tree:
[Page 217]Who wil not scorne now to be toucht by thee?
Sincke to
Earthes Bowels from her burd'ned
Brest,
(For on the
Earth thou canst no
lower bee)
Sith
Hell's thy
Spheare wher thou should'st ever rest,
Hell, the home of Pride.
For, on the
Earth thou mov'st but to
vnrest.
Thus having past these
Passions of the
Soule,
That are as
founts from whence the
lesser flow;
We are arrived (through faire waies and fowle)
Vnto the third
VVombe situate below
The third wombe.
The
Midrife; where the
growing pow'r doth grow:
But for it is so farre remov'd from thence
From whence the
Soule doth her
arch-wonders show,
(Namely the
Seate of the
Intelligence)
Wee'l balke the same for its
impertinence.
Referring it vnto
Anatomists,
Who marke each
Mortesse of the
Bodies frame,
The
Pynns, the
Tenons, Beams, Bolts, VVindings, Iists,
All which they
marke when they doe it vnframe:
To these
Crafts-masters, I referre the same;
Suffizeth me to looke with my right
Of mine vnderstanding.
Eye
(Though it dimme sighted be and so to blame)
Into the
Seate of each
soules facultie,
Fixt to
VVitts wonder-working
Ingeny.
Yet as I could I haue the
Soule exprest,
If not with proper
Coulors, yet with such
As doe distinguish her
kinde from the rest,
Which
Kind, by kind, in
Beasts &
Plants doth couch:
But to paint her in each least
part were much;
Philosophers haue beene to
All Philosophers have erred touching the Soule.
seeke heerein,
Although they sought but sleightly her to touch,
And haue through
Error much abused bin,
VVhen her faire
Picture they did but
begin.
Crates.
For
Crates said, there is no
Soule at all,
But that by
Nature, Bodies moued be:
Hippa
[...]ch
[...]s & Leucippus.
Hipparchus, and
Leucippus, Fire it call,
With whom (in sort) the
Stöickes doe agree:
A firie
Sp'rite betweene the
Atomee
Democritus.
Democritus wil haue it: and the
Aire
Diogenes.
Some say it is: the Barrell'd
Cynick, hee
And with him
others of another
haire,
Doe thus depaint the
soule, and file her
faire.
The
soule (say they) is
Aire, the Mouth takes in,
Boil'd in the
Lights, and temp'red in the
Hart,
And so the
body it throughout doth rin;
This is the
soule (forsooth) made by their
Art.
Hippias.
Hippias would haue it
water, all or part:
Heliodorus.
Heliodorus held it
earth confixt;
And
Epicurus said it was a ( )
Namely, a
Sp'rite of
Fire and
Aire commixt:
And
Zenophontes, earth and
water mixt.
A diametrical repugnancie of opinions, amōg the Philosophers touching the soul.
Thus (simple
Soules!) they make the simple
soule fowle,
Of simple
Elements, or els compound:
Meane-while they make her (most faire
creature)
And dimme her
glorie which is most renownd,
Through
mists of
Ignorance, which them surround.
Others, of other substaunce weene it is,
Critias.
For
Critias with
bloud doth it confound,
Hippocrates
Hippocrates (that went as wide as this)
Said twas a thin
sprite spred through our
Bodis.
Some,
Flesh would haue it with the
senses vse;
Some the complexion of the
Elements:
Galen.
And
Galen doth not much the same refuse,
For to an hot
Complexion he assents,
[Page 219]For so's the
soule (saith he) and not repents:
Not that
Complexion, (some say) but abides
In some
point of it; and those
Continents
They hold the
Hart, or
Braine, where it resides
As
Queene enthron'd, and all the
body guides.
Some
Light would haue it, as
Heraclitus;
Heraclitus.
Others, some thing tide to no certaine
place,
But wholy present in each
part of vs;
Which, whether sprong frō the
Complexions grace,
Or made by
God, yet they weene cleer's the case,
From
Natures lap the same of force must fall.
Some others said a
Quintessence it was:
Some,
an vnquiet Nature moving all:
A
number, some, that it selfe moues, it call.
The
Caldees say it is a
formelesse Force,
Which nerthelesse al
forms doth apprehēd;
And
Aristotle doth him selfe inforce
Aristotle.
To make the same vpon the
Corpes depend;
For these his
words do sort out to that end:
It is (saith he)
an high perfection
Of bodie, that lifes powre doth comprehende,
Which
vnderstanding giues it,
sense, & motion;
This in effect is his
description.
Plato (surnam'd divine) affirm'd, it is
Plato.
A divine substance which it selfe doth moue,
Indu'd with vnderstanding. He doth misse
Lesse then the rest, though
Truth doth all reproue:
And
Senec saith the
soule is farre aboue
Seneca
The knowledge of the most
intelligent;
Which speech of his
Lactantius doth approue,
Thus doe they all about the
soule dissent,
Aswell for
substance, as
where resident.
Hippocrates.
For in the
braines Hippocrates it puts,
Strato.
And
Strato, in the space betweene the
eies;
Diogenes.
In the
harts hollow
veine the
Dog it shuts,
That alwaies in a
Tub enkenell'd lies:
Stoickes.
The
Stoicks say, the
Hart doth it comprise:
Democritus.
In al the
body, saith
Democritus:
In al the
brest, say
others as vnwise:
Hierophilus.
In the
braines ventricles, saith
Hierophilus:
Thus al in al were most erronious.
Empedocles.
Empedocles in
bloud the
[...]ame doth bound:
Galen.
Galen would haue each
limb a
soule to haue:
Renowned
Galen, how wast thou renown'd,
That didst thy selfe so foolishly behaue!
Thus for the
place they with each other straue,
And for the
soules continuance no lesse.
Epicures.
The
Epicure the
bodie makes her
Graue,
And
dies and
lies with it. But
some confesse
Shee's capable of
everlastingnesse.
Pythagoras.
Pythagoras, by transmigration
Wil haue it everlasting, or at least
As long as
beasts shal haue creation;
Man is the Horizō between Angels and Beasts
[...] as far from Beasts as Angels.
For it doth passe (saith he) from
Mā to
beast:
What
Foole could more ridiculously iest?
Yet he disciples had, and not a few,
That this grosse
doctrine did with ease disgest;
Therefore no
Beasts, these more
beasts, euer slue
Sith they their
frēds souls held, for ought they knew.
The
Stoickes, held the meane tvvixt
Epicures
And
Pythagoreans: for that
soule (they say)
That's
vicious, vvhilst the
body it immures,
Doth die, and vvith the
bodie quite decaie:
Some
partes of it (as
Aristotle holdes)
Aristotle.
That haue
seates corp'ral, with them fal avvay:
But
vnderstanding vvhich no
Organ holdes,
(As free from
filth)
AEternitie infoldes.
Thus for their
ending or
continuance
Do they contend; & no lesse
Christiās striue
Christians differ touching the soules beginning.
For their
beginning: some, the same advance
To
heav'n, and say they there did ever liue
Since
Angels fel. And other some beleeue
That one
soule doth
another propagate:
Some
others, their
commencement do deriue
From time that first the
Angels were create,
Which sacred
Austine doth insinuate.
Others there be, who constantly affirme
That
soules created are from day to day,
Thomas Aquinas his opinion touching the soules beginning.
Which he of
Aquine boldly doth confirme:
For sith the
soule doth forme the
bodies clay,
It with the
bodie must be made, they say.
Whereto agrees each moderne
Schoole-divine:
So that these
Men doe from each other stray
Touching the
soules birth, which they mis-assigne,
"For they speake ill that cannot wel
define.
And
Epicures the same doe mortal make:
The
Pythagoreans it doe transmigrate;
Some say, the
heavens do the same retake:
Diverse opinions concerning the souls continuance.
Some put it into
hell, in endlesse date:
Others would haue it
earth perambulate.
Some say there's but one vniversal
soule,
Whereof
particulars participate;
Which saying
Plato doth not much cōtrole;
Plato.
But that he would haue
either to liue sole.
Some, make each
Man two distinct
soules to haue,
The
Intellective, and the
Sensitive,
And that the
Sensitiue the
parents gave,
But the
Creator the
Intellective:
Others, the
soule doe of the same deprive,
Some make two distinct things of the Soule and vnderstanding.
For they the
soule and
Vnderstanding part.
Some make no difference, but doe beleeue
The
Vnderstanding is the chiefest
part;
Thus in
Conceite they from each other start.
Some suppose that humane soules are portions of the divine nature.
Some, held opiniō
Soules are bred in
Heav'n,
And of the
divine Nature portions are,
Deckt with al
vertue, by that
Nature giv'n,
Togeather with al
skill &
knowledge cleare,
Which in that
nature ever doe appeare:
From whence they did descend to animate
Mens bodies, which by nature filthie were;
Which did those pure
Soules so cotaminate,
That they those
Skills &
vertues quite forgat.
So that they could not vse thē further foorth
Then they were taught, which made thē to suppose
That what
skill, vertue, or what other
woorth
Our minds do remember Sciences, not learne them. Plato.
The
Soule bewrai'd, was but a minding those
It had in
Heav'n, and so knowes al it knoes:
So that the
portions of the
divine fire
Be'ng wel neere quēcht by
Blood, which thē orefloes,
Must be rekindled and made to aspire
By
Doctrine, which the
spirit doth desire.
Wheron they do cōclude, that sith the
soule
By entring in the
Body most vncleane
Is made prodigious, and extreamely fowle,
To
Heav'n cānot
Truth it selfe faith, no vncleane thing can enter into the heavens. Galat. 5.21.
returne be'ng so obscene,
[Page 223]Till it by
Discipline, bee
purged cleane;
And decked with the
rights of her
Birth-right,
Which to regaine,
Instruction is the
meane:
Or from the
Body being parted quight,
They may be
purg'd, some saie, though most vnright.
Now, when we
ballance al these
Arguments
In the sincere
Scales of the
Sanctuary,
Wee finde them viler then
VVitts Excrements,
And lighter then the
Skumme of
Vanity:
For true it is
The Blinde eates many a Fly.
A Proverb.
But that
Man hath a
Soule, none is so blinde,
But sees her almost with
Eyes bodily:
And that shee's endlesse the dymst
Eyes of
Minde
By
Natures dymest
light, may lightly finde.
God is a
sp'rite, the
VVorld a
Body is,
God and the world are epitomiz'd in man.
Both which in
Man are plaine Epitomiz'd,
Of
God hee's
Abstract in that
soule of his;
And in his
Corps the
VVorld is close cōpriz'd:
As if the divine
VVisedome had devis'd
To bring into a
Centers Center all
His
greatnesse, that cannot be circuliz'd,
And the huge magnitude of the
Earthes Ball;
For
Microcosmos men
Man fitly call.
Microcosmos.
Who in a
Minute can the
Earth surround,
And sincke vnto her
Center, then ascend
The agilitie, subtilty, and capacity of the Soule.
And cōpasse, with a trice, the Heav'nly
Roūd
Yea
Heav'n &
Earth at
once doth cōprehend
Not touching either; But doth apprehend
A thousand
places, without shifting
place,
And in a
moment ascend, and descend
To
Heav'n &
Hell, & each of them embrace;
It
selfe being compast in a little
space.
This,
Man can doe without the
Bodies aide,
Man is said to be man in
[...]espect of his humane Soule.
Then must he doe it as a
Man he is;
And in respect of his
soule he is said
To be a
Man, for by that
Soule of his
And onely by that
Soule, he acteth
this:
When the Minde is busie the outward Senses be at rest.
Which seeth when the
Bodies eyes be clos'd,
And when those
Eyes bee ope, oft
sight doth misse:
It travels whē the
Body is repos'd,
And rests whē as the same by
Toile's dispos'd.
Th'external
senses may loose all their pow'r,
If but the
Instruments of them decay,
Yet
Life and
Reason may continue sure;
But
Senses stay not if
Life doe not stay,
Life & Sense depend vpon the Soule.
And
Life the
soule doth stay or beare away:
The more the
Corpes decaies, so much the more
The
soule is strengthned; which
sick-men bewray,
Who when their
Bodies are most
weake and
poore,
Their
Minds reveale most
strength, and
riches store.
The Soule is no Quality but a Substāce
Then its a
substance and no
Qualitee,
For
Qualities in
Substances subsist;
Thē that which makes another
thing to Bee,
No
Quality can be, but doth consist
In its owne substance, which doth sole exist:
Then sith a
man's a
man, that is to say
A lyving
Creature with right
Reason blist,
He hath a
soule that forms, & him doth sway,
Else were he but a livelesse
Lumpe of
Clay.
Which
soule is Bodilesse, else could it not
The Soule is of capacity to comprehend Heaven and Earth.
Containe so many
Bodies smal and great,
By some of which it would be over-shott;
For al this
All, were it much more cōpleate,
[Page 225]In it may sit, without place for a
Seate.
Yet doth our
bodie bound it, which is smal,
But wert a
Corps it could not doe that
feate;
For that which can containe
Heav'n, earth, and all
Which they containe, cannot be
corporall.
The more it
hath, the more it vvill receiue,
The more it
holdes, the more it doth desire,
The more the soule doth the more it may receiue.
The more
things bee, it best doth them conceaue,
VVhether they be
distinct or els
intire;
All which at once may in the
Soule retire
Without disturbing or annoying either:
All which t'effect doth such a
Soule require,
That
infinite had neede be altogither,
The soule is in a sorte infinite.
And in a sort the
soule can bee no other.
We may in
Minde conceaue anothers
Minde;
Then, that which can conceaue
things bodylesse
Can be no
body (though pure as the
winde)
But meerely
Sp'rituall, which may haue egresse
Into each
Sp'rite, and from thence make regresse,
Without those
Sp'rites perceaving of the same:
We may enter into anothers minde with our mind
Then must the
substance that makes such accesse
Bee
immateriall in
deede and
name;
The
soule therefore is of a
sp'rituall frame.
Two
formes at once of quite repugnant kinde
No
Matter can receaue: but the
soule can;
No matter cā hold 2. formes at one instant of contrary kindes.
Black, VVhite, Fire, Frost, Moist, Dry, these
place doe finde
Without resistance in the
soule of
man;
Then
soules wee see at
Matter nere began:
Nay, sith the lesse with
Matter we doe mell,
The lesse flesh the body hath the more wit the soule hath commonly.
The more we vnderstand: it followes than,
That nought can more against the
soule rebell
Then
matter, which the
soule doth hate as
Hell.
For, wer't
Materiall, whereof ist made?
If of the
Elements, how give they
sense
That never
Life since their creation had?
Much lesse then can they giue
Intelligence,
That cannot give Sense that is sēslesse, nor intel
[...]igence that is vnintellectual
In whom nor
Life nor
sense hath residence:
A Body's meerely
Passive; But the
Sp'rite
Is absolutely
Active: And from thence
The
Bodies Actions doe derive their might,
Or els no
Limbe could stirr or wrōg, or right.
And that the
soule is an immortall
Minde
(Not mortall, like the
Body) doth appeere,
That whereas
Time in his
turnes, vp doth winde
The
Bodies substāce, which those turnes doe weare;
The Soule not subiect to Time.
Yet can those
motions, the
soule nothing steere;
But to more
staidnesse, they the same doe turne,
And make her more immortall (as it were)
VVho (like the
Pow'r divine) can
Time adiorne,
Or make it stay, or it quite overturne.
The
Time past, present, or to
come, are all
(As to the
soules sire) present to the
soule,
VVhich makes her
matterlesse and
immortall;
For that which can stay
Time, when he doth rowle,
Must be
Divine, nought else can
Time controule:
Time is the Soules subiect
Then
Time is subiect to the
soule (wee see)
VVhich as his
Sov'raigne him doth over-rule,
And though in
Time the
soule was made to
Bee,
Yet shee makes
Times turnes to her tunes agree.
The Soules food (Truth) argues shee is immortall like her foode.
Beside, her
Food doth her immortall make,
For mortall
Creatures feede on mortall
things,
As
Beastes on
Grasse, and
Beasts mens hunger slake;
But shee doth feede on
Truth, which truely bringes
For
Truth's as free from al
corruption,
As from
Tymes Turnes & restlesse
alterings,
Thē sith the
Soule doth feede on
Truth alone,
It needs must be
immortall in
Reason.
What
soule can doubt her immortality,
The doubt of our Soules immortality, prooves their immortality.
But such as is immortal? for that
doubt
Doth rise frō
Reas'ns discourse ingeniously;
Then if by
Reason shee brought that about
That
souls are mortal: That
soul's not without
The pow'r of
Reason: & who hath that
pow'r,
Must needs be of that rare Coelestial
Route,
Which
Iron Teeth of
Time cannot devoure:
For
Reas'n made
Time, and past
Time doth endure.
God the Fountaine of Reason.
No
Soule humane but covetts stil to
Bee,
VVhich could not be if shee but mortal were:
The eternitie past, overwhelmes the Soule as being too great for her capacitie, but that which is to come she can and doth cō ceave.
VVhen shee lookes backe
AEternitie to see,
Shee sees she cannot
past beginnings beare;
But be'ng
begun would
faine past
Time appeere:
Then how is it that
Men are al so
faine
If
Nature therevnto
all doe not steere?
But how ist
naturall if it be
Nature made nothing in vaine.
vaine?
And vaine it is, if it doe nought obtaine.
If ever thou resolved wer't to dye,
Consider how thy
Soule discoursed then:
Coulde shee perswade her selfe that shee must fly
The Soule cā not p
[...]ssiblie perswade her selfe that shee is mortall.
(Sith shee was made of
nought) to
nought agen,
And as
Beastes died, so did mortal
Men?
Maugre thy
soule while shee doth thus
discourse,
Shee slipps from al
Conclusions, and doth ren
Quite from her
selfe by
Natures proper force,
To weigh which
way she wends, free'd frō her
Corse.
The damned
Epicurean-Libertine
At
Deathes approach, (stirr'd vp by
Natures might)
No Athist but would faine dye the death of the righteous.
To
Life immortall would his
Soule resigne;
And in his
soule resistlesse
reasons fight,
To proue the
soule immortal by
Birth-right:
Doe what he can his
Thoughts to pacifie
Whiles they immortal striue to make his
Spright,
He cannot for his
soule them satisfie,
But they wil stil beleeve
shee cannot die.
If one weake
thought say thy
soul's but a
Blast,
That with thy
Breath is vapored to nought;
A stronger
thought saith it doth ever last,
For nought can mortal be, that hath that
thought:
The Soule is taught by naturall reason, & by the light of nature that shee is immortall.
By
Reason thus the
soule is inly taught.
If wandring
thoughts perswade that
Soules depend
On
that which
Nature in the
Bodie wrought,
Domestick
thoughts against those
thoughts contend,
And say,
Soules Bodilesse can never end.
They came from
God, to him themselues they lift,
They mount as high as they dismounted bee;
Simil.
Ev'n as a
Fountaine doth her
Current shift
As high, as it
descended, naturallie:
So Soules doe mount to him of whome they Bee.
Beastes know no more but
natures partes externe,
But our
soules into
Natures secrets see;
Nay stay not there, but they thereby doe learne
VVho gaue them sight such
secrets
[...] to discerne.
Some say the
Soule and
Bodie are but one,
Because their outward
Sense perceaues no more:
They might denie
God too by like
reason
Because they see him not: yet evermore
[Page 229]They see his
deedes, for which we him adore.
Then let the
actions of thy
soule perswade
The actions of our Soules proue their immortalitie.
Thy
thoughts thou hast a
soule; & let the
lore
Which
God in her infus'd, whē he her made,
Teach thee to know that thy
soul cānot fade.
The
soule consists not by the outward
The Soule is not subiect to the impression of the Senses because she is of an incorporall nature.
sense,
But by the
soule the outward
sense consists:
The outward
sense hath no
Intelligence,
(VVhich
in and
by an
Instrument subsists)
But as an
Instrument sense her assists:
The
sense can see a
Fort, but if w'inferre,
Men made the
same, and it the
Foe resists,
This doth surmoūt the outward
senses farre,
The Soules discourse surmountes the reach of the outward sense
And doth conclude, our
soules aboue thē are.
Our
Reason often giues our
sense the
lye,
Whē
sense would misinforme th'
Intelligēce:
For
sense gaine-saies the
Heav'ns pluralitie,
But
Reason proues the same by consequence:
Our Reason doth oft correct our erring sense.
The
Moone at full hath greatest light saith
sense,
But
Reason by cleere
Demonstration
Doth proue her then to haue least
radience:
Then
Reason by this illustration
The
soule, not
sense, makes Her foundation.
The
Sunn's one
hundred sixtie six times more
The Sunnes magnitude.
Then the
Earthes Globe in compasse; but the
sense
VVith
Tooth and
Naile with-stands it evermore,
And saies, (nay sweares) ther's no lesse difference
Then twixt the
Center and
Circumference:
But
Reason by right
Rules them both doth meate,
VVhich shee hath made by her experience;
And findes the
Sunne (as erst we said) more great
By
Demonstration is the Piller wheron al sciēce depēds.
Demonstration more then most compleate.
We by our
soules conceaue (as erst was said)
VVisedome and
knowledge bee'ng incorporal:
But outvvard
sense is altogither stai'd,
On
qualities of
things meere
corporall:
The Soule makes generall rules of many particulers: but se
[...]se insists vpon particulers.
The
soule, by
reason, makes
rules general
Of
things particuler: but
sense doth goe
But to
particulers material;
The
soule by the
effect the
cause doth sho,
But
sense no more but ba
[...]e
effectes doth kno.
The true essēce of things is vnknowne; and to man knowne by their accidēts and actions.
The proper
essence of
things is obscur'd,
And by themselues of vs cannot be knowne:
Therefore the knowledge of them is procur'd
By
accidents and
actions of their owne,
Which to the
soule by
wits discourse is showne;
Who vnderstādeth his waies? and the storm that no man can see? for the most part of his works are hid Eccle. 16.21.
For, she concludes by
Reasons consequents
(Though of themselues they meerely are vnknown)
That thus they are; which high
experiments
Lie farre aboue the reach of
sense ascents.
In them which wil not vnderstand this
Truth,
In thē which wil not vnderstand true doctrine ignorance is sinne, and in them which cānot, it is the paine of sinne.
Their ignorance is
sinne most pestilent;
But they which cannot, (ah the more the ruth)
Their ignorance, of
sinne's the punishment:
And who denies a
Truth so evident,
Hath neither
grace, nor
sense; for all may see
The
soul's immortal, and divinely bent,
And hath most force when shee from
flesh is free,
Which proues her
powre and
immortalitee.
If
soules and
bodies then be so distinct,
The soule is free from sin as shee was made by God.
And that the
soule, as she of
God was made,
Is free from
sinne, and by her owne instinct
Shee hates that
sense that doth to
sinne perswade,
[Page 231]How is it then that shee should be so bad?
Sinne deriues her force frō the soule.
For from the
soule, sinne doth her
force deriue,
Which with her
waight the
body doth orelade;
To God all things are lawfull that like him, and nothing likes him that is vnlawfull.
Can shee both
cause, and yet against
sinne striue?
Shee may (quoth
All) but
few doe it beleeue.
This is a
Gulffe that swallowes vp the
soule,
And quite confounds her, if shee enters it:
This
secret deepe, deepe
wisedome did enroule,
In that still-closed
booke of
secrets, fit
For Her alone to know, not erring
wit
[...]
Therefore the more
presumption we show
In
search hereof, the more are we vnfit
A
secret so vnknowne as this, to know:
For they know most thereof whose
sp'rits are low.
The lesse sobrietie vve vse herein,
The more we
Some certaine things though true are not vttered of God without dāger whō we seem best to knowe when we confesse him and his councels to be incomprehensible.
erre in by-pathes of
Offence;
And (giddy headed) headlong fal to
sinne,
From which we hardly rise by
penitence;
For
sinnes presumptuous,
grace doe most incense.
Then let vs
In doub
[...]full matters wherin we may be ignorant without danger, it were better suspend out iudgements then offer occasi
[...]n of contention Calv.
curbe our head-strong
thoughts, when they
Would run beyond the reach of
sapience;
And make them stop, where
wisdome points a
stay,
That is, to go no further then they
Warrantably.
may.
Many a curious
Question hath bin mou'd
Touching this
Divine matters are ful of obscu
[...]ity. Cat.
secret, and no fewer
Iarres
Hath it procur'd; and all to be reprou'd;
Sith ev'ry one his owne
conceite preferres,
Th
[...]s secret must be lookt vnto not into.
Which to maintaine, stil maintaines wilful
warres.
Some so desire to
know, that faine they would
Breake through the
Faithf
[...]ll ignor
[...]unce is
[...]etter then rash knoweledge.
Bounde that
humane knowledge barres,
To pry into His
brest which doth infold
Secrets vnknowne: These, strange
opinions hold
But let it vs suffize thus much to know,
That though the
soule cannot be soild with
sinne
As
God created her; yet
sinne doth flow
From
Sinne flowes from Adam to the soule, and enters into her when she first giues motion to the body.
Adam to the
soule; and enters in
When shee the
bodie doth to moue begin:
Nor must we make her sinnefull in respect
Shee with the
Corpes is
Cas'd, as soild therein,
The fault of Adam only infects the soule
But make the
Fault of
Adam her infect,
VVhich is, indeede, sole
cause of that
effect.
At large to proue her
immortalitie,
I should (like her) well-neere be
It is farre off, what may it be? and it is a profoūd deepnesse, who cā finde it? Eccl. 7.26.
infinite;
For, if the
Image of the
Deity
Bee found in
Man, in his
soule it is right:
And though by
Adam shee bee made
vnright,
Yet by the second
Adam (full of
grace)
Shee is againe
Since the elementary & diuine partes of Mā are corrupted one by another and both from Adā, they must be borne againe, by elementary & divine meanes, by Water and the Spirit.
reform'd and made
vpright,
Which makes her striue when
sin would her deface,
To foile it, or at least not giue it place.
Inough my
Muse of that, vvhich nere ynough
Can well be said, and let me (restlesse) rest;
For, I must ply my Penne which is my Plough,
Eccl. 25.3.
Sith my lifes sunne is almost in the VVest,
And I provided yet but for vnrest:
Time flies avvay, these
Numbers number
time,
But
goodes they number not: for their int'rest
Is nought but
Aire, which though to
heau'n it clime,
Is but meere
Vapor rising but from
slime.
There is no end in making many
bookes, and much reading is a wearinesse of the
Flesh.
Eccles. 12.12.
Yet this we doe, and pleasure take in toile
Although we doe but plow the barraine Soile.
FINIS.
WEther,
entranc'd, or in a
dreame of dreames,
Procur'd by
Fancy in our
sleepes extreames,
Or vvhether by a strong
imagination,
Bred in the Bowels of deepe
Contemplation,
My
soule, vvhen as my
bodie vvaking was,
Did see,
what doth ensue, in
Fancies Glasse:
I know not vvell; but this ful wel I know,
If it no
substance were, it was a
show:
A
show whereat my
Muse admired much,
Which
she with her best
sense can scarslie touch;
It was so strange and full of
mistery,
Past apprehension of her
ingeny.
Me thought I saw, (at least I saw in
thought
As on a
Rivers side I lay long-straught
Eyeing the
VVaters eie-delighting
glide)
An heauenly
creature more then
glorifide
Vpon the
waues come tripping towards me,
Who, scarse the
water toucht, did seeme to flee:
Her
face was louely, yet mee thought
shee lookt
As one that had long
time and
travell brookt.
The
Robe she ware was
lawne (white as the
Swanne)
Which siluer
Oes, and
Spangles over-ran
That in her
motion such reflexion gaue,
As fil
[...]'d, with siluer
starres, the heav'nly
waue.
Her
Browes, two
hemi-circles did enclose
Of
Rubies rang'd in artificiall
Roes:
Whose precious
haire thereto vvas so confixt,
That
golde and
Rubie seemed intermixt.
Vpon her
head a siluer
crowne shee ware,
(Depressing so that rising golden
Haire)
In token that shee knew no
marriage Bed,
VVhich ne
[...]thelesse was richly garnished
With rarest
Pearle, that on the arched
bents
[Page 234]That rose from that rich
Crownes embattlements,
Did shine like that braue party-coulord
Bow,
That doth
Heav'ns glorie, and their
mercy show.
About her
Necke hung
Natures
Nature sittes in a precious Stone as in her Throne of Maiestie.
Miracle,
A
Carcanet of glorious
Carbuncle;
VVhich did the
Sunne ecclipse, and clos'd mine
Eyes,
That they could not behold her other
guise.
This
sight (though glorious) much amated me,
From which, rowzing my selfe, I sought to flee:
But with the
offer I fell downe againe,
As one whose
Legges could not his
Corpes sustaine,
Yet still I off'red (bootelesse) to be gon,
For,
Sights divine daunt the stout'st
Champion
At the first sight; for,
Nature doth not love
To see (fraile
Creature)
ought her selfe aboue.
VVhen lo, this heau'nly
Apparition,
Bad me not feare, with sweete perswasion!
For, I am
shee (quoth shee) that lately was
Thy
Sov'raigne; frëed from this
Earthy Masse:
I now can like an
Angell with a trice,
Shift
place to serue the
Prince of
Paradice.
And, I am come to thee by his permission,
That (notwithstanding thy obscure
condition)
Thou should'st by me haue
light, and cleerely see
(As in a
Glasse) what shal hereafter
bee
Touching this
Land, I did predominate:
Looke in these
VVaues (quoth shee) and see her
fate.
But I yet fearing lest by some
delusion,
I might be drawne to drowne me, in conclusion,
Did backward seeme to doe this later
heast,
Though in the
premisses I seemed blest.
Then shee (as seeing with immortall eyes
The mortall
feare that did my
Soule surprise)
[Page 235]Skipt from the
VVater to the verdant
Shore,
And tooke me by the
hand, and cheer'd me more.
Her
touch, mee thought, sent to my
soule such
ioy,
As quite expell'd,
wh
[...]t erst did it annoy.
That
hand, mee seem'd, I kist with reverence,
Which yeelded sense-reviving redolence:
I held
it fast, and swai'd
it as I would,
For shee encourag'd me, and made me bold.
VVhen to my selfe, I wisht I had had might,
T'haue swaid or staid
it when
it once did write,
VVhen
it did (shaking) write
Elizabeth,
Name giving
Life to be a
name of
Death.
I often haue held
hands, while I haue taught
Those
hands to write, as (handsomely) they ought;
But had I held her
hand then, when it was,
I would haue taught her
hand all
hands to passe
In love-procuring
skill; and when shee wrate
Elizabeth great
R. abridging date
Of
Life and
Name, shee should haue written thus,
Live live great
R: for
dying oft for
vs.
And though shee had in
Earth no interest
Now frëed from
it by eternall
rest,
Yet, was my
soule, mee thought, extreamely glad
So to converse with her immortall
Shade:
And to my selfe I said, with
submisse voice,
If
Princes Shades our
Spirits so reioyce;
What will their
Substāce where
they please to grace?
That, in the
Soule must needes haue greater
place.
Arise (quoth shee) because the
VVater's deepe,
And thou (perhapps) dost feare therein to peepe:
Come follow mee to yonder shadie
Grove,
VVhich
Zephirus doth gentlie breathing moue,
Vpon the further side of this greene
Meade,
[Page 236]There shalt thou see,
what shall thy
Fancy feede.
Then vp I sprange with rare
agilitie,
Which gaue me pow'r, me thought, with her to flie
As swift as
thought, to that designed
place;
And there she laid me downe, with sweete embrace:
VVhich so entranc'd me, as a while I laie
Engulf'd in
ioy, yet all the while did praie
That the
Catastrophe of this sweete
Scene,
Might answere the
beginning and the
meane.
Shee feeling with her
hand my
Pulse to beate
As one whose
Soule did seeke to shift her
Seate,
Shee chafte my
Temples which did showring raine
The liquid
Pearle which oft proceedes of
Paine:
And with a loving
checke shee did controule,
The
Passion of my over-passion'd
Soule.
I am (quoth shee) no
Soule-confounding
Fiend,
Assuming
Angells forme for wicked
end;
But come to grace thee gracelesse forlorne
Man
VVith divine
favours; why dost feare me than?
VVhereto with trembling
Tongue I made reply:
I feare thee not, sense-mazing
Maiestie;
But the delight my silly
Soule conceaues
For this high
grace, my
soule of
sense bereaves.
VVell then I coniure thee in
Loue (quoth shee)
That thou feare not, But marke what thou shalt see.
No sooner these sweete
words accented were,
But in our
pres
[...]nce livelie did appeare
A Ladie of a most maiesticke state,
Cladd like a
VVorld-commanding
Potentate;
VVith all that might obiect
prosperitie,
To
VV
[...]tt or
Observations Eagles
Eye:
On whom attended two still-striving
Dames,
In
manners diverse, diverse too in
frames:
[Page 237]The one still eyde the
Mould, with downe-cast
looke,
In
blacke invested, in her
hand a
Booke:
Her
Brest close-clasped vp vnto the
Chin,
That no lascivious
Eye might prie therein:
A
Cipers vaile ore-canapide her
face,
Where vnder shone a
VVorld of modest
grace.
Nothing about her was superfluous,
And nothing wanting, fitte for
Natures vse:
I tooke her for some
VVorld-despising Dame,
VVhose
conversation was not in the
same.
The other was the true
Arch-tipe of
that
Which
Men for
Levitie doe wonder at.
Neere to her
Body shee (fantasticke) ware
A thinne vaile of Carnation coulor'd
ware:
On which, with
Starrs of
gold embost, was drawne
As t'were an vpper
Smock of purest
Lawne;
Which seem'd as if a Silver
Cloude had spredd
Over the face of
Phoebus blushing redd:
Vpon all which shee ware a
Gabberdine,
For
forme as strange, as for
stuffe,
[...]ich and fine:
To which ther was a certaine kinde of
Traine,
Which (vselesse) was turn'd vp threefold againe:
The
VVings wherof, (where her
Armes out were let)
were of pure
gold with
Smarags thicke besett:
So were the
verges of it sett with
stone,
As costlie as the
VVhores of
B
[...]bilon.
On either side from her
Armes to her
VVast,
It was vnsow'd, and made with
Buttons fast
Of orient
Pearle, of admirable size,
Which loopes of Azur'd
silke did circulize:
So as yee might betweene the
Buttons see,
Her
smocke out-
[...]ft to show her levitee.
The
Sleeves whereof were meanely large, yet so
[Page 238]As to the
handes it lesse and lesse did gro:
About whose
wrists being gath'red in fine
pleates,
It was made fast vvith orient
Bracëlets
Of
Pearle as bigge as
Plumbes, and intermixt
VVith other
Iemmes, of diuers
hues tran
[...]fixt;
Which ore her
hands hunge as superfluously
As (like the rest shee ware) most combrously.
Morisco-wise her
Garment did orehang
Her
Girdle, set with
stone and many a
spang:
VVhich nerethelesse could not be seene at all,
By reason of that
Robes orefolding fal:
Saving that when the
VVinde blew vp the same
It might be seene like
lightnings sodaine flame.
This
Garment though it were but too too long,
Yet too too short, or short'st of all, it hunge.
Her nether
Vesture strecht but to her
calfe,
Yet lower rought then that aboue, by halfe:
For, shee the vpper tuckt and trebl'd so,
As like a
Vardingale the same did sho.
Vpon her legges shee ware a
Buskin fine,
Of
stuffe that did like cleerest
Amber shine,
Downe halfe vvay folded, vvith a
Brouch below,
Which on the
shinne shee rightly did bestovv.
Her nether
smockes or smock-like
Petticotes,
Each
gale of
winde a loft in
Aier flotes:
Which she assisted vvith prompt reddynesse,
Glad of so good a
coulor (as I guesse)
To show the
coulor of her
skinne below,
Which scarse the
Smocks of modest
Matrones know.
Her
Brest lay open almost to the
VVast,
That by the
eie, men might be drawne to taste
The bitter
sweetes, vvhich in her did abound;
"For,
beautie through the
eie the
heart doth wound.
[Page 239]Her
Pappes vvere varnisht ore with shining
stuffe,
To giue the
Sight a lustie
counterbuffe:
Twixt
whom there hung a
Iewell of rare
Iemmes,
That the
eie dazl'd with resplendant
beames.
About her
Necke a chaine of
Pearle shee ware,
That to her
Brest did couer all the bare;
Saving that
here and
there yee might espie
A
dy-like
Square of polisht
Ivorie.
Her
Ruffe (or
Rebata.
what you vvill) about her
Necke,
Was
cut and
keru'd the more the
same to decke:
And in the
cuts, betweene the
foldes, did lurke
Frogs, Flies, Snakes, Spiders, al of
Gold-smithes work;
So liuely made, as that the
sight wou
[...]d sweare
They were aliue, for
each did seeme to steere.
Vpon the
hemme vvhereof did looslie hange
Many a glitt'ring siluer-golden
spang:
Which, with the
motion of her
bodie light
Did (twinckling) seeme like
starres in
winters night.
Her
face, though faire, vvas painted
cunninglie,
VVhich trebl'd
beautie, to bewitch the
eie.
In
center of her
forehead (which did shine
As if the
same had beene all
christalline)
Betweene rare
Pearles, disposed all in
fret,
A rich coruscant
Rubie in was let.
Vpon the
verge of whose gold-stayning
haire,
Illustrious
Saphires ev'nly ranked vvere:
Saving that
here and
there
[...]owde
Pompe did place
Great pointed
Diamonds to giue them grace.
Her
haire, though faire, yet was
it made to line
A curled
Periwicke of
Haire more fine;
Not
haire, but
golden wire drawne like the
Twist
The
Spider spins with her vnfing'red
fist.
Behind, the
rest was so in
tramells folded
[Page 240](Which precious
Pearle and
Rubies rich infolded)
That
all, like speckl'd
Snakes, in
Knots was vvound,
And ev'ry one with diverse
flowres crownd.
Her
gate was painefull, tripping on the
Toes,
As if
Desire should say,
lo, there shee goes.
Shee stood, as if she stood vpon no
ground,
But on some
water-waue that made her
bound;
For, novv shee sinckes on
this legge, then aloft
Vpon
that other shee advanced oft.
And no lesse oft shee would cast dovvne her
eie
Vpon her Ivory
paps; and vvantonly
Shee seem'd to smile on
beauty without peere,
To dravv all vvanton
eies to note it
there.
In
summe shee vvas such as
Voluptusnesse
With all her coulors cannot well expresse.
These
damsels straue (as erst I said) to gaine
The loue of
her that vvas their
Soveraigne:
Who seem'd to
each indiff'rently dispos'd;
But after much a doe their
strife shee clos'd
With this
decree; that vvho her most could moue
By
Reasons force, should bee her leefest
Loue.
Vertue.
Then
Vertue lo, (for so it seem'd shee vvas)
With modest
looke, and
favour full of
grace,
Began to tune her
tongue vnto that
eare
VVhich shee desired to her to indeere.
Albion.
Quoth
shee, deere
Albion, (so I knew her
name
That first of all into our presence came)
If thou wilt me imbozome, I vvill make
Both
Heav'n and
Earth to loue thee for my sake.
Thy
conscience I wil calme, and in thy
brest
Thou shalt perceaue the
heav'n of
heav'ns to rest.
Thine
vnderstandings eie shalbee as bright
As that faire
eie that al the
VVorld doth light.
As vnto her that giues them
eies to see.
Thou shalt reduce to thine
obedience
Without the
Sword, the
Earthes circumference.
The
wisemen of the
East shal come from farre,
Drawne by thy
grace, led by thy
vertues sta
[...]re,
And offer thee
Gold, Mirrh, and
Frankensence,
And what els may delight thy
Soule or
sense.
Thou shalt haue
powre to crush the crownes of
kings
And with their neighbors
swords to clip their
wings;
If they shal rise against thee in their pride;
So keepe them downe, and yet thy
hands vndide.
God and the
VVorld (though it be nere so il)
Shal hold
those curst that doe resist thy
will.
For, thou shalt
nothing wil but what is
good,
As long as
thou and
I, be one in
moode.
I wil breake ope
Heav'ns gates with might & maine,
And on thy head shal
Blessings powre amaine.
Yea, to thy comfort it shal wel appeare
That al desir'd
increase shal crowne each
yeare.
The golden
daies of peaceful
Salomon,
Shal ever waite thy blessed
yeares vpon.
The
sea shal yeeld thee from her liquid
VVombe,
VVhat shal enrich thy poore and basest
Groome.
Thy
Mountaines shal with
cattell stil be
crown'd,
The whiles the
Vales with
corne shal
[...] ore-abound.
Thy
Sonns, &
Daughters, shal yeeld comfort to thee,
That whilome did indevour to vndoe thee.
Thy
young-men shal see
Visions, & thine
Old
Shal dreame
dreames, by which
things shalbe foretold
That shal concerne thy
good in
times future,
And
that prevent,
which may thine
Ill procure;
Angels shal guard thy
walles and on thy
strand
[Page 242]In
legions they shal lie as thicke as
Sand,
To keepe thy
Fo-men from assailing thee,
In
Battaile rang'd by Heav'ns
Divinitie.
Thy
Schools shal yeeld thee
Saints, which shal direct
In
Life, and
Doctrine, whatsoever
Sect.
Thy
Citties like
Bee-hives shal stil containe
Men as
Bees busie for the
Common gaine.
All idle
Drones that live by
others sweate
They shal cassiere, or not allow them
meate.
There shal no
Begger in thy
Streets be found,
Nor
cries of
wretches at thy
Gates shal sound;
But, with the foizone of
Heav'ns blessings all
(By means of me) their Baskets fill they shall.
Thy
Peeres shal striue for
peace, & who shalbe
In
Vertue (not in
State) in highst
degree.
There shal be no
Contention in thy
Body,
Which heretofore hath made thy
mēbers bloudy.
The
Poole of
Grace shal overflowe thy
Land,
Glyding in Christall
streames on Pearly
Sand.
The
Horrors that consort the hateful
Crue,
Shal never come so neere as in thy
view.
No
humane quarters shal oretopp thy
Gates,
For seeking to ore toppe thy
Maiestrates.
No
Heading, Hanging, Burning, or the like,
Shalt need to vse, ne with the
Sword to strike
Those that doe weare good
Swords but to badd
ends;
For
all shal liue in
peace like loving
friends.
The Worde
Oppression, much lesse shall the
deede
Be never heard, where
all are well agreede.
Each
one shal know his
place, and in the
same
Shal laboure to preserve an honest
name.
One
Hart, one
Hand, one
Faith, one
Soule, &
Mind,
Shal al thy
People in one
Body binde.
[Page 243]Thou shalt not neede to feare the
Chamber-scapes,
The
sinnes gainst
Nature, and the brutish
Rapes,
Which with the godlesse
Nations are too rife;
For ev'rie
Man shal have his lawful
VVife:
Which dulie in an vndefiled
Bedd,
Shal gett right
Members for their vpright
Head.
Thou shalt not neede to pinch thy
Peoples Purses,
And so incurre thereby thy
Commons curses:
Or money-
Bladders seeke, in
Seas of
Bloud
To beare thee vp, from sincking in that
Floud.
For, thou shalt haue
Exchequers richly stor'de,
That thou to
well deservers maist affoorde
Roiall
rewards, without the
Commons Cost;
For,
Crownes are richly blest, with
Peace y-crost.
Taxe-vndergrowne, (ô odious
Tyranny!
Bredd in the
VVombe of
Sensuality)
Shal nere so much as once be nam'd in thee,
But thou shalt punish
Kingdomes, where they bee.
The cloudie
Piller shall guide thee by
daie,
The firie
Flame by
night shal show thy
VVaie.
Beauies of
Quailes, and
Manna (
Angells foode)
Shal showre from
Heav'n to doe thy
Children good.
Who shal therefore, sing
Hymnes of praise divine,
And merry make each
one beneath his
Vine.
The
voice divine shal thunder from on hie,
And talke with thee (
belov'd) familierly.
Thou shalt with
Moises Rodd divide the
Deepes,
And make their raging
VVaues to stand on
Heapes,
That
Man, and
Horse which to thee doo belonge,
Shal passe, as on drie
Land, those
VVaues amonge.
For thine
Advantage thou shalt ope the
Earth,
And send repyning
Rebells quicke beneath,
If any should arise; but doubtlesse
Those
[Page 244]Can never
spring, where
Vertue stil
ore-flowes.
If thou wilt vse
me, thou wilt vse
me still,
For I will please thy
Soule, thy
VVitt, thy
VVill.
And though I seeme t'vncircumcized
Sense
But passing
plaine, and ful of
Indigence,
Yet in my
Brest true
Glorie is enthron'd,
And al my
Friends shalbe with
Glorie Crown'd.
On me doe waite the
Ministers of
Ioy,
To be dispos'd as I shal them imploy.
Death, and
Damnation I treade vnderfoote,
And over
Lethe lake with ease I flote.
I am the
Darling of the
TRINITIE,
That ore
Sinne, Death, and
Hell hath
Emperie.
When
Heav'n shall
melt, &
Earth shal
meare away,
I in his blessed
Bozome live for aie.
If thou through
humaine frailtie chance to
trippe,
Ile stay thy
foote, that downe thou shalt'uot
slippe:
Or if in
mire of
sinne downe flatt thou fall,
Ile wring
Teares frō thine
Eyes to wash off
all.
What shal I say? if thou wilt cherish me,
Ile stil make
peace betweene thy
God and
thee:
That neither
Sathan, Sinne, nor
ought beside,
Shall haue the pow'r your
Vnion to devide.
Thinke what a comfort it wilbe to
thee,
By
me t'enioy this
VVorlds felicitee,
And when
Confusion shal dissolve the same,
Thy
Soule to live with God, with
Saints thy
fame:
VVhich al
eternity shall comprehend,
In
ioy past
ioy; thus shee vvith
ioy did end.
VVhen lo, the other (painted
Butterfly
That lookt too like voluptuous
Vanity)
Seem'd greatly chafed with this lōg
discourse,
And often
mew'd and
mop
[...]; and which is vvorse
VVith
VVhat might make the same seeme al a
ly.
But now shee gan to
face her
Countenance,
VVith many a
smile and
Eye-delighting
glance.
And thus with
voice, that did her
speech become,
Shee brake into her
Tales Exordium.
Deere
Albïon, whom as my
Soule I prize,
In whom (as in my
Heav'n) my
glorie lies;
If ever thou, by following sound advice,
VVouldst tast the truest
ioyes of
Paradice,
Thē, listen to me, while I breath such breath,
As shal create a complete
Heav'n on
Earth.
If thou wilt me imbrace, as did that
Salomon.
Prince
That was the
Sourse of humane
sapience,
Who in his
wisedome knew wel what he did
(Sith he knew more then al the
world beside)
When monge a thouzād
Loues, his
wisdomes powre
Did choose me for his chiefest
Bellamoure:
If therfore
thou wilt
me indeere to
thee,
That but one
soule may be twixt
thee &
mee,
I knowing what such
wisdōe high did please,
Wil plunge thy
soule in depth of
pleasures Seas:
Where thou shalt meete with
Ioyes vnsoūded deepe,
To lullabie thy waking
Cares asleepe.
But to particulate what they shalbe,
Requires the Tongue of some
Divinitee.
Yet coldly, as I can, I wil expresse
This onely heav'n-surmounting
happinesse.
Deere
sweete, quoth she, (&
sweet she lisped foorth)
If thou wilt well conceave thine owne high
woorth,
Listen to mee, and I wil tell thee
vvhat
Vanity is instant to gett attention because sense is betraide therby.
Shal glad thy
Soule, and correspond with
that.
As stands thy
case, thou well maist prize thy
Head,
[Page 246]With the extreamest
rate of
Ioues God-hed:
And sith aboue
he raignes in boundles
blisse,
Thy blisful
raigne below should be like
his.
I therefore wil draw
VVit, and
Industry
(Al vvhose defects my
science shal supplie)
To straine their
powres to their extreame extent,
So to accomplish thy
soules ravishment.
Thou on Triumphant
Chariots (like the
Sunn's,
That on the cristal
Heav'ns in glorie runnes)
By
Horses shalt be drawne, as white as
milke,
And al thy
way shal cover'd bee with
silke
Of choisest
kinde, and of the
Tyrian die,
As wel to show thy
state, as please thine
eie.
Thy
Robes shalbe pure
gold ten-times refin'd,
That like the
Aire shal gently turne and winde:
Not fac'd with
Ermine, but with everie
thing
That to the heav'ns bright
eie may
wonder bring:
Which shal send backe, when that
eie on it stayes,
(In counter change) more glittering-glorious
Raies!
Thy
Horses heades, vvith
Phenix feathers deckt,
Shal vvorke on
Angels eies the like effect.
The
pillers of thy
Pallaceis shalbe
Hewne out of
rockes of purest
Porphyree,
Their
wals of
Iasper square, and eu'ry
Ioint
Dissolued
Amber, passing cleere, shal
point.
The
columnes of thy
windowes shalbe
Iet,
Inlaide with
Pearle, in many a curious
fret.
Their
Glasse of
christ all: in whose vpper
part
With
stone of price, past price, and matchlesse
Art
Shalbe inserted
stories of thy
deedes;
That both the
eie delights and
Spirite feedes.
Their
Heav'n-high
Roofes shalbe embattelled
With
Adamant in
gold enuelloped.
[Page 247]Their
Tile of
Currall, and in
Lozenge-wise,
Mother of
pearle their
sides shal circulize.
Vpon their
crest, as thicke as they may stād,
Saint
George on horse-backe with a
Lance in hand,
Charging a
Dragon, both of precious
stone,
To wit, the
Emeral'd, and
Calcedone.
The
roomes within, al rooft in arched wise,
(Like to the
Convexe of the vaulted
skies)
Shalbe with purest
Bice enammeld faire,
Enchas'd with
stars, like
Ioues etherial
chaire!
The
chimny-peeces reaching through the
sāe
Of glorious
Chrysolites, that seeme to flame:
On whose
fore-fronts below, cut out shalbe,
In
Indian Berill, curious
Imageree.
The
hangings of thy
wals, of that same
ware
That
Salomon in al his
glorie ware.
Thy
floores shalbe (most glorious to behold)
Couerd with cloth of
Bodkin, Tyssue, Gold.
Thy
chaire of
state (t'amuse the
gazers sight)
Cut out of one vnvalued
Margarite
Shal stand on top of
Twelue most faire
Ascents,
Like that wherein
Ioue sits in
Parliments.
Each
steppe of
stone, of richest
price, and
hue,
Deckt on each
ende with
beasts, of dreadful view,
(Huge
Lyons, Dragons, Panthers, and the like
That in th'aspectors
harts doe
terror strike)
Shal seeme like that more then celestial
Throne,
Which
Iupiter in
state doth sit vpon.
Thy
cloth of
state that it ore-canopies,
Shalbe
stuffe brought from
Earthly Paradise
By
sp'rits immortal, which shal waite on thee,
And doe thy
Heasts, if thou wilt
rule by me.
This precious
geare (no
name is good ynuffe
[Page 248]T'expresse the
glory of this precious
stuffe)
With
Sunne-like
Carbuncles in forme of
eies
Shalbe embossed, as if each were
spies,
Which vvith their
luster creepe in each darke
hole,
That thou thereby maist pul thence by the
Polle
Who shal vnseene envie thy glorious
state,
So, with thy Sword of
Iustice pole their
Pate:
And, when thou sitt'st vpon that royal
seate,
Thou shalt seeme
Iupiter, if not more great,
Sitting on his celestial
Throne of
Thrones
Compas'd about with many thousand
Sunnes!
Thy privie
chambers (where thou privilie
Shalt glut thy selfe, vvithout
satietie,
With
what shal tickle al thy
vaines with
pleasure
Measur'd by
loues sweete
motions without measure)
Shalbe like
Orchards fram'd so by mine
Art,
That thou shalt seeme in
Heav'n whē
there thou art;
There wil I haue an artificial
Sunne
In the like
Heav'n al
daie his
course to runne,
That though the
daie abroad doe lowre like
night,
Thy
Sunne within shal shine exceeding bright.
The
Moone and
stars (like to the
lampes of heau'n)
By
night shal light thee, set in order ev'n:
And by their
constellations and their
frames,
Th'astronomer shal cal them by their
names.
Al kinde of
Trees, of what soeuer
sute,
That either
Branches beare, or
Branch with
fruit,
There vvil I cause (or at least, seeme) to grow,
That
Nature from her
owne them shal not know.
Plūbs, Peares, Dats, Filbeards, Apples, glistering
Cherries,
Pomgranats, Peaches, Medlars, &
Mulberies,
Lymmons and
Orenges, some
ripe, some
greene,
What shal I say! al
fruit that ere were seene
Thine
eie with
pleasure stil to entertaine!
Hard by shal runne, from Artificial
Rockes.
Confected
waters sweete, vvhose
falling mockes
The voice of
birds; which made by
science shal
Tune their sweete
notes, to that swee
[...]e
waters fal.
Here shal arise an hand-erected
Mounte,
From whose greene
side shal glide a siluer
foun
[...]
Encreasing
breadth, as it runnes, by
degrees;
Hemd in with
Couslips, Daffadils and
Trees
That ore the same an
Arche of
Bowes shal make,
Through
which the
Sunne shal parcel-gild the
Lake!
Beneath which, in this little siluer
Sea
Shal
bathe the daughters of
Mnemosine:
Singing like
Syrens, playing
Lyres vpon
Beheav'ning so this hand-made
Helicon!
Behinde the
Trees coucht, drown'd in
Daffadillis
Oxslips, wilde
Cullambines, and water
Lillis,
Shal
Elu
[...]s and
Fairies their abiding make,
To listen to these
Ladies of the
Lake!
Actêon here shal metamorphiz'd bee,
Great
Obron there shal
ring his
companee:
And
here and
there shalbe varietie
Of what so ere may charme the
eare or
eie!
Vnder a gloomy
Bowre of stil-greene
Baies,
That stil
greene keepe their
mortall makers praise,
(Where
Eglantines with
flowres thrust in their
Noses,
Intangled with the
slips of damaske
Roses,
Stil
fresh and
flourishing, as month of
Maie)
There shalt thou heare of
loue the svvetest
lay:
Which shall thy greedy
sense so much inchaunt,
That
where thou art, thou shalt be ignoraunt;
And
what thou art thou shalt not much respect,
[Page 250]Sith
heav'n-rapt
souls that
VVhat, do quight neglect
There,
Angells notes shal so inchant thine
Eares,
That thou shalt
swim in ioy, though
sunck in
Cares.
Here
Lab'rinthes intricate of winding
vvalkes,
Of
Mirtles filld with
Maie-bowes in the
Balkes,
Where out shal breath
soule-ravishing
perfume
(VVhich
time wil rather
prosper then
consume)
Shal lull fraile
sense asleepe in
pleasures lapp,
From
melancholie free'd and al
mishapp.
Each
foote of grasse-made
ground, orelaid shalbe
VVith
Natures Daizie-decked
Draperee.
And therewith-al, to yeeld the more
delight,
Angell-fac'd
Fairies (clad in
vestures white)
Shal come in tripping blithsome
Madrigalls,
And foote fine
Horne-pippes, Iigges, and
Caterbralls.
That done, the
Driads and the
Silvane crue,
Successiuelie thy
solace to renewe,
In
Matecheines, Lavolts, and
Burgamasks
Shal hardlie plie these
time-beguiling
Tasks.
Each
Tree shal droppe downe sweete
Ambrosia,
Or cordial
Spices, Myrrh, and
Casia.
The
Baies shal sprinkle from their dewey
Bowes,
Rose-water cleere to cheere thy
handes and
Browes.
Nought shal bee wanting in this
Earthlie Heav'n,
That
Art and
Nature to
Delight have giv'n;
Or by the pow'r of
Spirites may bee fulfill'd,
To ravish
sense with al that
Heav'n may yeeld!
For I wil dive into th'infernal
deep
[...]s,
VVhere
Pluto Prince of
riches revell keepes,
And make
him dance attendance on my
Traine,
T'effect thy
pleasure, deere sweete
Soveraigne!
There shalt thou see (without al cause of
feare)
The glorious
worthies of the
world that
were:
And
Scipio when he
Africk had orecome!
There shal the stately Queene of
Amazons,
Penthesilea, with her
Minions,
Present thee with a
Maunde of
fruite divine,
Cull'd from the golden
Tree of
Proserpine!
Hector, Achilles, Priam, Hecuba,
Great
Agamemnon, Pyrrhus, Helena,
Or
whom soever thou desir'st to see
Shal at a
beck doe homage vnto thee!
Ile ripp the
Bowells of the subtile
Aire
And bring the
Sp'rits therin (in
fashion faire)
To counterfet the
Musick of the
Spheares,
And with
Heav'ns harmony to fil thine
Eares!
To fetch for thee, from the extreame extent
Of
Earthes huge
Globe, what ere may thee content!
To flie vpon thine
errand with a trice,
To fetch thee
fruite from
Earthly Paradice!
To entertaine thee, when alone thou art,
VVith al the
secrets of each hidden
Art:
And whatsoere the heav'nly
Cope doth cover,
To
thee (that thou maist know it) to discover!
The
Stone so sought of all
Philosophers,
The making of which
one, so
many marrs,
Thou shalt directly make
it at thy pleasure,
T'enrich thy
kingdome without
meane or
measure!
The great
Elixer (making
small ones great)
Like
dust thou shalt make common in the
Streete!
And if thou wilt,
high waies shal
paved bee
With burnisht
gold, made onely but by
thee!
If thou wouldst haue the
Aïer turn'd, and tost,
To strike a terrour in each
Clime, or
Coste,
These
Sp'rits that
Lord it ore that
Element,
And when thou wouldst
[...]pare their
societie,
They, with a
vengance, through the
Aire shal flie
VVithout the least
hurt done to
thee, or
thine,
Except it be in making
you divine!
There shal no kingdomes
Cares, that
life destroie,
And like
Hell-paines the
Hart and
Minde annoy,
Once dare to ceaze vpon thy blisseful
Hart;
For I wil charme them so, by Pleasures
Art,
That they shal seeme as
dead and never sterr,
Thy
solace to disturbe in
peace, or
vvarre.
Ile reave sweete voyced
Boies of what they may
Ill spare, (if spare) to sing thy
Cares awaie.
Ile make some others spend their total
time,
To make sweete
strings expresse the
twangs of
Rime;
VVhich tickle shal thy
hart-strings with such
mirth,
That thou shalt saie, ha, this is
Heav'n on
Earth!
Thy royal-
Table shalbe serv'd with
Cates
Surmounting farre Coelestial
Delicates:
Ambrosia, shalbe thy coursest
Cheate,
And
Manna (
Angells-foode) thy
Groomes shal eate!
Delicious
VVines, that make sweete
Nectar sowre,
Beauties divine in precious
Boles shal powre,
To comfort
Nature and to glad thy
Hart
VVith
comfort that surmounteth
Natures Art.
The
Samos Pecocke, and the
Malta Crane,
The dainty
Lamprey in
Tart
[...]sia tane,
The
Phrigian Woddcock, and th'
Ambracian Gote,
The fine fish
Asinellus, hardly gott,
The
Oisters of
Tarentum, fish of
Helops,
The
Goldny of
Cilicia, Chios Scalopps,
The Nutts of
Tasia, and th'
AEgyptian Dates,
In few, all
kingdomes choisest
Delicates
[Page 253]That to the
Pallate pleasure may affoord,
Shal ore abound vpon thy bounteous
Boord!
When, from a Silver'd
Tent, to please thine
Eare,
Cornett
[...], Recorders, Clarions thou shalt heare:
Whiles to delight thy
sight as wel as
hearing,
Stately
Dumb showes before
it shal be sterring:
Which wel tongu'd
Mercury shal faire relate
Stil pointing to thy
praise, and glorious
state.
VVhen, with these
Sweetes thou art wel satisfied,
Ile make thee
Beds of
flowres, divinly dide:
VVhere thou, & thy
Loues, (for your
Limbs reposes)
May drownd your selues among sweet damask
Roses.
And while your rest, the sacred
Muses nyne,
(Singing ful sweetely
Ditties most divine,
That for
Harts ioy wil cause the
Eyes to weepe)
Shal lullabie your blisful
Soules asleepe.
Continual
Iusts, and roial
Turnaments,
Furnisht with al
Eye-pleasing
ornaments:
Mummings, Masks, Plaies; Plaies that shal play with
Care
As
Catt with
Mouse, to kill
her comming
There.
VVhat booteth it to weare a golden
Crowne,
If thorny
Cares it
line, to make thee frowne:
Away with
Care therefore, awaie with
thought,
VVhat shouldst thou doe with
that, that's
good for
nought:
Let
thē go waite on
Byshops, to whose
See
They doe belong, but let the
Prince be free.
VVilt thou be
Servant to the common
Trash,
That often leaves their
Master in the lash?
Or spend thy
VVitte, and
Sp'rits for such
Riffraffe,
And so consume the
Corne to saue the
Chaffe?
VVilt thou
orewhelme thy selfe in all
anoy,
That they may
swime aloft in
Seas of
Ioy?
VVhat! wilt thou place thy
pleasure in thy
paine,
[Page 254]And make thy
Subiect, be thy
Soveraigne?
Wilt loose thy
roiall sole
prerogatiue,
To make vngrateful base
Bash rags to thriue?
O be indulgent to thine owne deere
Hart,
And of
Heav'ns blessings take a blisful
part.
Doe not depriue thy selfe of that rare
blisse,
That vnto
none but
thee peculier is.
And here vpon the sodaine (great
mishap)
I found my selfe in
Oxford my
loues lap.
Where thinking seriously vpon this
thing,
I heard
some say,
God saue king
Iames, our
King.
And therewithal I heard a
Trumpets clang,
That in an
vnison that
Dittie sang.
Then did I more admire what I had seene,
But griev'd I had so double lost the
Queene!
And grieu'd no lesse, sith I saw not the
rest
Of
that wherein I held me highlie blest!
Had I so blessed bin, t'haue seene
th'event,
I should haue thought my
time divinely spent.
But as I cannot now diuine vvhat shal
Vnto this Land (orewhelm'd in
blisse) befal;
So wil I not suspect the
worst; for why?
God, onely
good, keepes good
Kings company.
JOHN DAVIES.