THE ANTIPATHY betweene the French and Spaniard Englished By Robert Gentilys
Sold by R Martine at the Venice in old Baly 1641
THE [...] AND THE Spaniard. OR, of the world, displayed in lively [...] representing the Antipathy of their Humours and different Dispositions. [...] of the Customes of both those Nations.
By R. G. Gent.
LONDON, Printed for [...] at the Princes Armes in Pauls Churchyard.
TO THE RIGHT Worshipfull SIR PAUL PINDAR Knight.
YOur well known goodnesse which makes you admired & praised by every one, excited long since a desire in me to testifie unto [Page] the world, and your self, that though a stranger unto you, yet I was not such a stranger in the city, but that I had heard and taken notice of your daily pious and charitable workes. So that this my translation being to goe forth into the view of the world, I have made bold to dedicate it unto you for two causes. The first, [Page] my desire to make knowne unto you that you had an unknowne servant, who had long wished for some opportunity whereby he might manifest the desire he had to tender his service unto you. The second, to make this poore worke more acceptable to the world, by prefixing your beloved name in the front [Page] of it, which is greater in the worlds esteeme, Quam cui possit invidia nocere. Your curteous and noble mind will (I hope) not disdaine the gift, though so smal that it meriteth not so great a Patron: I promising ere long to present you with something which shall bee mine owne invention. So wishing you many happy daies, [Page] fore-runners of eternal happinesse, I rest,
To the Reader.
TO obviate an Objection I thought good to write these few lines unto thee. For it may bee said that the extolling of one is in some sort the vilifying of another: and the glorious praises given in this book to the French and Spaniards may seeme a disparagement to our Nation. But when I think [Page] upon that Prince, who desirous to have a valiant man brought before him, and one being presented unto him, who had many scarres about him, (which were questionlesse tokens of his bold adventerousnesse) said he had rather have had the man who gave those wounds. I resolve my selfe that our Nation is rather commended and [Page] magnified by their praises then otherwise. For if their conquests be so glorious, what must the English renowne be, who never could bee said to have had but the upper hand of either of them, in all attempts or enterprises, witnesse Histories & Chronicles of all ages? If the Authour have beene any thing hyperbolicall in their praises, [Page] impute it to the Spanish phrase & humour which cannot speake in a low stile or strain, & in your owne discretion accept of his meaning, & circumscribe his generalities. As for example, when he saith that these two great Monarchs protect & defend others, taxe him not with so much indiscretion as to imagine he meant all, but onely such [Page] petty Princes & Dukes as have their adherencies and dependancies upon them. And not those who equall in power need not crave ayde of any but God, either to defend, or vindicate them. So submitting my authour and my selfe to thy curteous censure, I rest
The opposition, and conjunction of the two great lights of the EARTH.
CHAP. I.
That Peace and Vnion, are Gods Attributes, and the perfection of nature.
THAT supreame God who made the Heavens, chroniclers of his glory, and greatnesse; to give us by his visible effects some knowledge, and notice of [Page] the invisible treasure, deposited in the deepe treasures of his owne omnipotency. In all his operations, as well internall, or (as the Divines doe terme them,) ad intra, which are the generation of the word, and production of the holy Ghost; as also in the externall, as the creation, the providence, the preservation, and the like, sheweth us, that his most essentiall and proper attribute is Union. Since the reall distinction, admitted by sacred Divinity, betweene the Divine persons is not sufficient to make the Son not to be the same with the Father, and both one with the holy Ghost. Nor doth that infinite variety of divers natures, whereof this artificial frame of the world is composed besides the universall dependency, [Page] which they have from one beginning, refuse the bond of peace, wherewith they are straightly joined together. For proof of the first, the efficacy wherewith the same God, did so much give in charge and urge unto his chosen people the unity of his divine nature, shall serve me for a concluding reason, he saying unto them a thousand times; Hearken O Israel! thy God is one, and one is his name. Which wordes as they are most true, and unreproovable witnesses of this truth, shall save me a labour of proving it by naturall, and theologicall reasons.
The second, which is the dependency which all creatures have, from one onely beginning, may be plainly demonstrated by that which historicall Moses writ [Page] the beginning of his sacred history, attributing the creation of the world to one sole cause. Which truth that great Mercurius Trismegistus did also leave engraven in pure Emerald, beeing there in followed by the whole troop of Philosophers, who unanimously confessed one first cause, eternall, independent, and immortall; needing therein no other Tutor, but onely the light of naturall reason. And if any curious man should aske me the proof of the third point, he may yeeld himselfe satisfaction, by considering the streight bonds, and intrinsecall union, wherewith all natures doe linke themselves one with another▪ untill they come unto the first linke from whence they were taken. Nor let any one thinke this union, and [Page] naturall concord of the creatures to be a borrowed perfection; or accidentally belonging unto them: seeing that the supreame architect, who made all thinges deliberately, and with wisdome, and measure; having set every one of them in their owne poste, and place convenient for their natures, gave unto them all joined together union, for the center of their preservation. And that so properly, and intrinsecally, that if the said union could be broken, the whole frame of the world whose harmony consisteth in the reciprocall consonancy of all its parts, would be brought to nothing.
He that shall with particular attention consider the seven rings, or linkes, whereof the chaine of this world is composed, [Page] shall easily finde out this marvailous bond of union. Beginning from the first and last, which is God; who though he be generally united to all creatures, which live in him, subsist by him, and move through him; yet by a more particular assistance, he is united unto the Angelicall nature, as the perfectest of all creatures. This joyneth it selfe with the nature of the heavens, which by reason of its incorruptibility, is the most perfect next unto the Angelicall. To the celestiall enterlaceth it selfe the elementall, in whose linke consisteth the diameter of the chain; as that, which according to the order and perfection of nature, is farthest from the first. The fifth is composed of the last element, which is the earth: and this is [Page] the first linke, which begins to turne towards it beginning, and it is the vegetative nature which intresseth it selfe with the sensitive, and that with the rationall, which uniting it selfe immediately with God, shuts up the chaine and circle of this succession. And because the last knot or linke of this chaine was to unite it selfe with God, and betwixt God and the creature there could be no proportion of equality: therefore the eternall wisdome created the soule, which being immortall and incorporeall, should have some resemblance of God, and so uniting it selfe perfectly with him, the chaine of the fabricke of this world should so close up and shut. And in case, that some curious body, not content with [Page] the generall union, of the seven rings or linkes, which have bin set downe, should desire more particularly to finde out the point of this trueth, he may satisfie himselfe, with the internall searching out of each nature and linke of the said chaine. And beginning from the first, he shall finde in it an infinite abysse of perfections and attributes, which are Wisedome, Omnipotency, Justice, Goodnesse, Glory, Mercy, and innumerable more, which are all with an unspeakeable incomprehensibility gathered in, and united unto the indivisible latchet of the most simple divine nature.
Concerning the second linke, which is the Angelicall nature, he may very well apprehend, not onely by the light of faith, but [Page] also by the strength of his owne understanding: the marveilous order, & perfect concord, wherewith those Angelicall spirits are united together; the Cherubins joyning themselves to the Seraphins, the Seraphins to th' Archangels, they to the Angels, Thrones, Powers, Dominions, & the other kinds of the twelve quires of Angels, with such great uniformity and concord, as may be presumed in that heavenly commonwealth. Then if we shall cast our eyes, on the contemplation of the third linke, which is the nature of the heavens, we shall plainly see (if Ptolomie deceive us not) that the primum mobile, is united to the Christalline heaven, this to the eight spheare, the eighth spheare to Saturne, who joyneth himselfe to Jove, [Page] Jove to Mars, Mars uniteth himselfe to Sol, Sol adheres to Venus, Venus to Mercury, Mercury to Luna, from whose hollow superficies takes it beginning: the fourth linke of th' Elementall nature, joyning it selfe unto the annexed fire, it unto the ayre, whom the element of water followeth, untill it comes to unite it selfe unto the earth, which is the universall center of al heavie and ponderous things.
From the earth beginnes the fifth linke, to goe upwards againe, and this is the Vegetative Nature; which, like unto the rest, keepes it dependance and succession united unto all her species and kindes, beginning from the biggest trees and of greatest fruit, even to the lowest, humblest, and poorest grasse of the [Page] field. In this vegetative nature consists the basis and foundation of the sensitive, which is utterly unable to put in practice th' operations of moving, and feeling without it. This likewise is not different from the first, and hath it kindes and degrees of succession and dependency, the noblest, and perfectest of them, which is the Lyon, uniting himselfe to the poorest worme of the earth. This sensitive nature, linkes it selfe at last with the rationall, which being (by meanes of the soule) spirituall, exceeds in perfection; the corporeall, vegetative, and nutritive, remaining at last united with God. So that the aforesaid union is not onely to be found in this whole universall frame, but also in every one of its parts. It being impossible [Page] that there should be any one not linked and united to the rest, by the analogie of some attribute, which is indifferently proper to them all.
The little microcosmos of man may be an example of this, her being an epitome and cipher of the whole fabricke of the world, in whom all natures are united, he being participant of each vertue and perfection; for he hath his body of the heavens, elements and stones; his vegetating or growing, from the plants; his feeling from beasts, his discourse from Angels, and the image and likenesse of God. And passing to that which is proper unto this nature, we shall finde that all his actions have a dependency one from the other; the understanding being not able to [Page] understand any thing, unlesse it unite it selfe to the sences; nor these produce any sensations or feelings, unlesse they joyn themselves, by meanes of the species and image, which presents it selfe unto them, with the object. And according to the Philosophers doctrines, the object unites it selfe to the externall sence, the externall transmits it to the common, the common represents it to the phantasie, from whence comes the names of phantasmaes: With these imaginations doth the active intellect joyne it selfe, illustrating them, and with taking away all their materialities, makes them of sensible, intelligible. The active intellect unites it selfe with possibility, which cannot operate, unlesse the active disposeth it to it, by [Page] [...] [Page] [...] [Page] representing the species unto it, disrobed of all matter and singularity. From thence the intellect or understanding being disposed produceth its first operation, which is the simple apprehension; and this coupleth it selfe with the second; which is affirmation or negation; from whence groweth the third, which is discourse. The discourse goeth united with the will, which could not produce any act of love, or hatred, or election; if discourse had not gone before, it being impossible to will or refuse that which hath not before bin knowne. So that all things which are inclosed within this frame of the world, are nothing but union, accord, and amity; not onely through the dependency which every thing hath from one sole beginning; [Page] but also through the loving correspondency, which they hold amongst themselves.
And if any one shall aske me the reason of this marvailous linke, and intrinsecall love wherwith so many, and so different natures are linked together, I will not answer them with that which is ordinarily said, that God had so ordained. But I wil say, that the supreame artificer, having determined in the creation of the world, to make a perfect and durable compound; variety and union were very requisite therein: it being impossible to make any thing beautifull, which was not composed of varieties, or durable, if it were in and against it selfe divided. To this end he appointed all creatures (at the least the corporeall ones) a naturall, [Page] and proper meane, which hindereth all that which is contrary to the union, and preservation of this world. And this is that prima materia, argued upon by all, but (as I beleeve) knowne by none. This materia (which some say, is pura potentia; others an entitative act; others, that it is neither quid nor quantum, nor quale) is a beginning, in the which stand united all corporeall or bodily natures. It is not ingendred, nor it doth not corrupt; for so the union and pacificall harmony of the world might come to be lost, whose preservation is grounded upon the incorruptible unity of this matter. It hath bin created, but not from everlasting, as Plato, and others have affirmed; it being impious to give or attribute [Page] the glory of eternity, and of being, without a beginning, unto a creature, which is due onely to God. Finally, it is sufficient for us to know, without engulfing our selves into any other metaphysick, that the matter whereof all corporall things are framed, is of one and the same kinde; and by that reason, all your materiall species or kindes, are united and coupled together.
And because that the formes of the compounds, which must necessarily be sundry and diverse to make a perfect and faire compound, should not deviate from that unity, which God ordaines, and nature pretends: The supreame Artificer determined that they should all come forth of the entrailes of the materia▪ or (as the Divines call it) de potentia [Page] materie, that so in all their alterations and changes, they might be tributary unto that beginning, out of whose bowels and entrailes they came: the power of corrupting, engendring, and altering, resting onely in it, as not being subject to goe out of the bounds of union and peace.
By this doctrin, is confuted the opinion of many moderne Phylosophers; who judging by the sence, that which is contrary to reason; beleeve that the formes of the Elements, have no other end, then to destroy and corrupt. As for example, the fire, which we see consumes, and devoures all as it findes, living in perpetuall warre with the water; as also the earth with the ayre: For if we leave that seemingnes, which sence sheweth us, and examine [Page] the trueth with reason, we shall finde, that the elements being constitutive parts, whereof all your mixtes are compounded, it is repugnant, and contrary to them, to have destruction be their end, their nature being essentially ordained to compound. Whence is concluded, that the naturall end of the Elements, is nothing but union. And although there ordinarily seemes to be a continuall enmity betweene them, destroying one another, yet we must hold for a certaine, that this warre is onely made for the preservation of peace and union; since the fire in seeking to persecute its contrary, doth nothing but seeke a temperament, to the rigor of his proper strength; and any thing else which might hinder the union [Page] and conjunction, whereby the compound is preserved.
So that we will conclude this Chapter, saying, that Union is an attribute of God, the treasure of nature, the naturall center of creatures, and chain of the whole world This unites the mortall with the divine; as the eternall Word with humane nature. The mortall with incorruptible, as the body with the soule. The materiall with the spirituall, as the understanding with the sences. The living with the insensible, as beasts with the earth. The heaven with their elements, the elements with man, & man with God. And finally, from God, to God, there is nothing but peace, concord, union, agreement and love.
CHAP. II.
That enmitie and discord are monsters of nature, and the divels owne children.
FRom the precedent Chapter, we may by very good consequence inferre, that, which we seeke to prove in this: For if union and peace (as we have proved) be Gods attributes, and the perfection of nature, it is plaine, that enmity and discord (capitall enemies of union) must of necessity be contraries to God and nature, being altogether averse to the noblest perfection that our understanding can conceive in God, which is unity and simplicity; wherewith his divine attributes and perfections, are so [Page] indivisibly united together, that no manner of distinction can be admitted betweene them, either reall, formall, or fundamentall, as Divines doe terme them; unlesse we should allow of the distinction of reason, which our understanding licenciously frameth conceiving that to be distinct, which in it selfe is indivisibly one. Daily experience sheweth us, the great repugnancy, and contrariety that is betweene discord and nature, either of them shewing it by their effects: seeing the proper and principall end of the one, is to corrupt, diminish, ruine, and undoe. Of the other, to generate, to joyne, to multiply, and unite all wordly things, with the most firme bond of peace. Because that knowing by evident induction, that discord [Page] and enmity, are enemies unto God; and the very plagues of nature, we may, with good reason, conclude them to be, the workes of the divell, wrought by his owne hands: so pestilent a fruite doubtlesse proceeding from such an accursed tree.
The Apostle did in three wordes admirably set downe the genealogie, and discent of this fierce monster, saying, that through the divells envy, death was come into the world. Wherein we must note, (according to the exposition of some Doctors) that the Apostle in this place, calleth dissention, and discord, by the name of death: And that very properly, seeing that the Doctors meaning by death, as well the soules, as the bodies death, we shall [Page] finde death to be nothing else, but a wretched separation, and unfortunate divorce tending to ruine, and perdition. And as for the death of the body, none can be so ignorant, as to deny this truth, beholding with his owne eies, the dissolution of the streightest, and internallest friendship, as humane understanding can conceive; and after that, the miserable accidents which ordinarily accompany a dead carcasse. And if this passage bee taken for spirituall death; it being an enmity, and divorce, between God, and the soule, and not an ordinary divorce, but an infinite one by reason of the infinite distance, that is between God and a sinner: we still conclude that death, and discord, are one, and the selfe [Page] same thing; and both daughters to the divell, and envy, as the Apostle saith, the motive which moved the divell, to bring this accursed dissention into the world, was a cruell, & impatient rage against man: being not able to endure, that God should grow enamored, of so ugly, base, and wretched a nature, as humane nature is; and that he should enrich it, with so many extraordinary favours & priviledges, as unite himselfe hypostatically to it, and make it the instrument of redemption; denying that favour, to the Angelicall nature which is more noble and perfect, then the humane: and so being desperately enraged, he contracted matrimony with envy, in which wedlocke, death was borne: so [Page] that death, or discord, hath the divell for her father, and envy for her mother: her grandfathers were pride, and contempt, and her first root was ambition.
This cursed plant was the first Angels plague, and that which made him to exceed the bounds of his owne nature: rashly opening the way unto an unbridled appetite, and ambitious desire, to climbe up unto the heaven of divine perfection, to place his throne above the starres, and to be like unto the most high. Making the consideration of himselfe, and the beauty, and perfections, wherewith he was enriched, the instruments of so blinde a pretence, and proud absurdity. Judging himselfe thereby, to be worthy of so great an honour: out of which consideration [Page] grew pride, which augmenting the raging fire of her mother ambition, caused the Angell to forget the respect and honour due unto his creator, and to become the heire of contempt. These two fierce monsters of nature, Pride and contempt, made such a slaughter of that faire creature, that they left not in him the least signe of perfection and goodnesse▪ yea, they did so deprave and pervert his will, that seeing himselfe banished out of heaven, and condemned to a perpetuall priva [...]ion of God, and [...]o the terrible habitation of those darkesome prisons of hell▪ hee enragedly protested to be revenged. And being unable to execute his vengeance against God▪ his infinite perfection and greatnesse, being not to be reached [Page] unto; he purposed to wreake his vengeance upon man, as the creature in most favour, not being able to endure those particular favours and prerogatives wherewith he perceived God did intend to honour him. Out of which consideration sprung envie▪ the Divels spouse, and mother of death.
With such weapons doth this fierce Leviathan persecute mankinde, and with them he brings to an end all his pretences: subjecting unto his empire and command, all the Provinces of the earth. It being most certaine, that cities subject to discord and dissension, cannot be free from the divels bondage, and consequently subject to ruine. The epithets which the Prophet Nahum gives unto the citie of Niniveh, shall [Page] be sufficient, and faithfull witnesses for me herein; when he cals it the citie of blood, the citie of misery, the city of death and perdition; attributing the cause of these wretched effects, to nothing but to the discord and division of her inhabitants. And he doth with so much efficacy, insist upon this point, that he pronounces an infallible curse upon that citie, which shall stand divided and in discord. The same doth the Prophet Hosea, concluding by an enthymeme the ruine which comes through dissension, saying, Their heart is divided, and therefore they shall perish. And if this be not sufficient, let us consider that wretched tricke he served our first fathers, in the beginning of the world; where it being a hard taske to [Page] beat downe such knowledge and wisedome, so perfectly infused, as Adam & his wives was, he used no other weapons then these, perswading them, that God had enjoyned, upon paine of death, not to taste of the tree of life; onely through an artificiall malice, because that none should be so wise as himselfe: which he could so well, and with such lively reasons perswade them, that (being already moved with an ambition and desire of knowledge) they conceived such enmity and hatred against God, that casting away the respect and obedience which they knew was due unto him, they did contrary to that which was commanded them; remaining thereby subject unto death, and their posterity to an abysse of miseries.
[Page] Let him that is curious, observe for the confirmation of this truth, the sentence which God pronounced against the Serpent; when as being willing to punish him by way of retaliation, or as they say in Latine poena talionis. He tooke for a meanes of the punishment, the same way as the Serpent had taken, to make man fall from his originall justice and state of innocency; saying unto the Serpent, I will set enmity betweene thee and the woman; as if he should more plainly say, thou hast procured through thine accursed perswasions and lyes, to set hatred and enmity betweene the woman and I, to make her a slave, and all her posterity subject to thy will and tyranny. And I say unto thee, that thou shalt be chastized with the same punishment, [Page] for I will sowe such terrible hatred and deadly antipathy betwixt you, that you shall alwayes live in continuall warre and enmity, she endeavouring with all her might to breake thine head, and thou to set snares for her heele.
Finally, by meanes of enmity and hatred, the divell did catch Cain, never letting him rest untill he tooke away his brother Abels life. By meanes of these two, he stirred up Esau his anger against Iacob, Saul his revenge against guiltlesse Duvid. Pharaohs hardnesse against the children of Israel. And with dissention, discord and ambition, the divell hath brought under his dominion and obedience, the most noble and fruitfull Provinces of the earth; burning up the fruits [Page] of peace, respect, feare, reverence and zeale of the publike welfare towards them, to whom they were subject, by divine and humane lawes.
Many times have I considered that excellent and admirable invention which Samson used to revenge himselfe upon the Philistines; and I truely finde, that it is the same as the divell useth to be revenged upon man; since, if that I well remember the story, Samson having sought all the surest wayes, to be revenged of the wrongs he had received, could finde none more effectuall then division, verily beleeving, that thereby he should ruine all his enemies goods and wealth; and to that end he tooke a number of Foxes, and binding firebrands to [Page] their tailes, he let them run into the Philistines corne fields: The beasts feeling themselves loose, began to sever and divide themselves in the fields, with such disorder, that there were not two left together, all taking severall wayes, fixing their eyes towards their owne homes and terriers. Which division was the cause that all the corne was burnt up, leaving the land spoyled, and Samson revenged. With such like industry doth the Divell subject unto his Empire, all the countries of the world; overthrowing the best things he can finde in them, and leaving them utterly unable to helpe themselves. Seeing that to turne a quiet and peaceable citie into a citie of bloud and wretchednesse, [Page] the first thing he doth is to stirre up ambition in them whom he findes most disposed thereunto, and alluring them with their owne proper interests, he kindles the fire of discord and dissention in such sort, that it being impossible to pacifie and unite it: the feare of God, the zeale of publicke welfare, the respect and obedience due to the Prince, and the charity towards ones neighbour, are all beaten down: whence immediatly followeth, the totall perdition and ruine of the common-wealth.
By all this which we have said, we may surely inferre, that since discord and division produce no other fruit but bloud, ruine, perdition and death, they cannot be positive effects of God, to whom [Page] is repugnant to be the authour of evill: Nor yet of nature, whose treasure consists in unitie; but meerly the Divels, who seekes nothing but to oppose himselfe to all goodnesse and perfection, which God or nature brings forth in this world. The contrary effects also, which are found in both, may beare sufficient witnesse to this truth, since that all which God and Nature pretend, is nothing but peace and union: that which the Divel professeth, is nothing but warres, and dissention. Nature loves preservation; the Divell ruine; that to generate, this to destroy. Nature finally desires to make every thing like unto it selfe, by means of peace, love and union: the Divell strives to subject every [Page] thing under his dominion, by meanes of division, hatred and discord. Therefore such effects being directed unto such a detestable and perverse end as destruction, wee cannot attribute them to God; to whom, by reason of his infinite goodnesse and perfection, is not onely repugnant to be authour of evill, as the Apostle saith, but also to will it or desire it.
And if any selfe-weening, or peevish man should contrary this, alledging the words of the Prophet, who said, There is no evill done in the Citie but God doth it: and likewise the words of the Apostle in the ninth chapter to the Romans, where he seemes to prove, that God is cause of the evill which is done in the world: [Page] he may satisfie himselfe with the Fathers of the Churches ordinary exposition of those places; considering that in evill, or sin, there are two things, whereof the one is the materiall of it, which is the physicall action, or reall execution, to which God doth positively concurre, it being impossible for the creature to doe any reall act without the ordinary concurrencie of the Creator: Since that all that is in the world, lives and is preserved through him: and in this sense are to be understood those texts which prove God to be the cause of evill.
But the formall, and malicious part of sinne, as the deformity of it, and privation of righteousnes, depends onely from our free and [Page] absolute will, and not positively from God. Because if that were so, God should not onely goe against his supreame perfection of being God, but should also bee unjust in punishing man; he not being the true and immediate cause of sinne. And so we must freely confesse, that the proper and essentiall cause of sinne, is the maliciousnesse of our will, depraved both by it selfe, and by the Divels temptations.
And though we finde in holy Scripture, that many times God punisheth one sinne with another, as Pharaohs insolencie with the hardnesse of his heart; the Pharisees incredulity with blindnesse, we cannot for all that say, that God is the authour of evill; because that although those [Page] which God punisheth with, considered in themselves, are sinnes; yet if they bee considered as effects of the divine justice, to which belongeth to reward and punish every one according to their desert, they ought not, nor cannot be so called. And so our conclusion alwayes remains true, that enmities, warres, discords, divisions, and other such like accidents, are workes of the Divell.
CHAP. III.
That it is monstrous in Nature for one to persecute another that is of his owne likenesse.
ANY speculative understanding, will bee quite astonished, and full of wonder, if hee [Page] consider the abysse of chimeraes, falshoods, deceits, persecutions, and garboiles, which pride and ambition doe breed in the heart of man, to so detestable and perverse an end, as the destruction of the particular creatures of the same kinde: A thing so horrible, monstrous and terrible, that it goeth beyond the nature of the fiercest beasts of the earth; amongst which you shall hardly finde any that will abuse and persecute another of the same species or kinde. And therefore he said very well, who left it to us for a Proverbe, that man with man is like unto a Wolfe; since that this beasts cruelty in tearing in peeces a poore Kid, is not greater then the rigor and tyranny of a bruitish [Page] and soule-lesse man against another man. Another said, that one man against another, is a Lion: and a third, who would expresse the venome of his heart, said, that one man towards another, is a man declaring unto us that his fiercenesse surpasseth the fiercenesse not onely of these, but also of all other beasts, whereof there is not any that abhorreth from the preservation of its owne species and nature.
And if we doe, in truth consider this point, we shall finde, that among creatures there is not any; which hath more ground, or reason to humble it selfe, and to love the particulers of its kinde; nor lesse reason to grow proud, and persecute them, then man. Since [Page] that pride hath alwaies for her seale some noblenesse, prerogative, or excellency, whereupon she builds her close pretences, and presumptions. And man is farre from all these: his composition, and first frame being of the lowest, basest, grossest, and vilest drosse of the world, which is the earth; out of the slime, and ordure of which man was framed. And therefore the monstrousnesse, and violence of pride, is no lesser in man, then if one would exalt the element of the earth, above the heavens.
And if we will shew his begining, state, and end, we shall plainly see this truth, reduced into a short and compendious definition, which most patient Iob [Page] made of him, saying, that the nobility of man consistes in being borne of woman; to whom the expositers upon this text doe attribute variablenesse, fragility, imprudency, and all manner of imperfections. In having a short life, and full of miseries, calamities, and afflictions; there being none of Adams children, that can glory, of having had the least shadow of pleasure, and content, which he hath not paid for, with a thousand griefes, and bitternesses; in a most incredible inconstancy, and variability, because he never continueth in the same state, and purpose, but is wholly a disordered, and confused chaos, which hath no determined nor sure end. And finally, it is a brickle, [Page] and unsafe vessell, into which, as the Prophet David saith, the treasure of life is deposited, and which one, and that a very small stone, is able to breake, and reduce to nothing. Because that though his phantasticall prides be all of gold, and silver, and doe reach up to the heavens; yet the foot, and basis thereof being of clay, like Nebuchadnezars statue, some smal stone of weaknesse, or disaster, hitting against it, they straightwaies come downe with their whole frame, and all their chimeraes; and fall into a poore, and stinking grave: so that if we consider him from the top, to the toe, we shall finde nothing, in him, but is contrary, and repugnant to pride. Whence followeth [Page] that man, having no ground whereupon hee may grow proud, he cannot have any, for the persecuting of others, persecution being the daughter of ambition, and arrogancy; but that the basenesse of his composition, should rather invite him to peace, amity, and love.
And though these forealledged reasons, should not move man, to withdraw himself from such an execrable, and cruell montrousnesse, as to be the butcherer of his owne kinde: yet his equality, and similitude, with all the rest, might move him to procure peace and amity; the holy Ghost in S [...]lomons bookes, and nature it selfe, teaching us, that all thinges doe [Page] love their like; which being most true, it shall also bee more reprehēsible in man, to persecute one another, then in any other creature: seeing that amongst all the created species, there is not any that hath its particulars more like, equall and proportionable then man, reserving its similitude and quality so wel, both in the beginning, middle and end; that there is not the least tittle of difference: For as for the beginning, it is well knowne, that they all came out of the dust, or slime of the earth, and that they were all borne naked, and came into the world weeping. The equality of the end may bee known by the universall attribute which all Adams posterity doe owe unto their birth. Since that [Page] neitehr Scepter, nor Miter could ever finde any Antidote, or spell against death. And as for the middle, which is from the time of their birth, untill death, wee have already said with Iob, that mans life is a continuall warfare, full of all manner of afflictions, and calamities, as may bee devised or imagined. And this is universall and common to all, there being none exempt from crosses.
So that there being in man a perfect, and totall similitude with all his particulars, and all agreeing in one, and the same degree of misery, basenesse, and calamity, there being none in this more noble, or priviledged then others; we conclude that pride, and persecuting of his like [Page] in man, is a monster, and prodigy of nature and a frenzy of the understanding. Hee being by his basenesse bound to humble himselfe; and by his equality tyed to love those of his owne species. Whence I doe inferre, that your naturallists doe with very good reason, call the Lyon King of the Beasts; and preferre him before other Beasts for generosity and strength; because God made him advantaged, and shewing oddes of the rest, but by what reason can one man esteeme himselfe to bee more then another? What prerogative or excellency did nature grant unto him, which she denied to other men? which being most certaine, wee may securely say, that a man which is proud, [Page] and at enmity with another; is worser then the Divell, or to say better, pride, and ambition, is not so unproper for the Divell as for man. Because if Lucifer did pretend to set his throne above the starres, to be like unto the most high, and had other foolish fancies, and rash propositions; though hee had no true nor reall ground for it, the creature being incapable of the creators perfection and noblenesse: yet he saw, and knew in himselfe some likelihood, and colour for his unbridled appetite; knowing himselfe immortall, incorporeall, and the most beautifull of all creatures; being as Isaiah saith, not onely a bright shining starre, but Lucifer unto the morne, and the most perfect of [Page] all other angelicall spirits. Moreover the whole army of Divells is united, and concordant in the persecution of the soule, one not entermedling in the others office, nor endeavouring to disturbe or crosse the temptation, that another shall intend.
Whereby it is proved, that man being the most abject, and wretched creature, and having nothing but what other men are also partakers of; growing proud, and persecuting another man, hee goeth beyond the nature of a brute beast, and is worser then the Divell himselfe.
CHAP. IV.
Of the noblenesse of man.
THE conclusion of the precedent Chapter, gives us great occasion to treate in this Chapter of the noblenesse of man, and of his excellencies, by reason of a motive any one may have to wonder at our last proposition, wherein we concluded, that man is the most abject, imperfect, and wretched creature of the world: Which being considered at the first sight, seemeth quite contrary to that which both Scripture and common Philosophy teacheth us, Canonizing man for the noblest and perfectest creature. And truely if we doe with particular [Page] attention consider, that high sublime and lofty degree of noblenesse and perfection which man attained unto by that Hypostaticall union, which the divine word made in the incarnation, wee shall freely confesse that it is the noblest and perfectest of all creatures; since the angelicall nature did not onely remaine inferior to it, but also subject to adore it in Christs humanity. Whence (as some Doctors testifie) the first Angell tooke occasion to rebell against his Creator, not being able to brooke the exaltation of humane nature, and the extraordinary and exquisite favors, which by revelation hee knew God would communicate unto it.
Neither is that proofe which [Page] is ordinarily brought by them who thinke man inferiour to the Angell, of any great force or power; for whereas the vulgar translation saith: Thou hast made him little lesse then the Angels, the Hebrew hath it, Thou hast made him little lesse then Eloim; which according to some Rabbins interpretation, signifies, that man is little lesse then God: because that the word Eloim signifies many times God, and many times Angell. And that exposition is not much out of purpose, but grounded upon very good reason: for if we attentively consider that marvellous union which God made with our nature, we shall finde that Gods Epithetes were thereby so appropriated unto man, that it may [Page] truly be said, that man is little lesser then God; which thing the Angell cannot glory in, hee being deprived of so notable a favour.
And although in all creatures there bee in some fashion a certaine resemblance of God, yet it is more perfect in man then in any of the rest, since that in none but man is to be found the Word incarnate. His composition consisting of Soule, whose three powers are correspondent to the three divine persons; and of body, which united to the soule, is correspondent to the divine Word, in which are divinely united Body, and Divinity. And of all this the Angell is incapable, because he is incorporeall.
[Page] The Divines call these perfections, perfections of meere grace, because that God would out of his will and mercie so favour this nature, though shee could no way deserve it by any vertue or excellencie. And in this all cōfesse, that human nature is more noble then the Angelicall, since God did not bestow so many favours upon the Angell, as hee did upon man. But if wee consider both these natures of themselves, without any respect to grace, many, or almost all will say, that the Angell is more perfect then man. In the deciding of which question, I cannot resolve my selfe, but with a distinction: Noting first, that in man there are two things to be considered, the Soule and [Page] the body. Of the soule some say, that it is of the same substance & nature as the Angels are, incorporeall and rationall as they; but that is not a compleat substance (as Logicians call it) wherein it only differs from Angels.
Others ingulfing themselves into an abysse of Metaphysickes, say, that the Angell is more perfect then the soule, since he is not subject to the imperfections and miseries of the soule, and hath his will, not indifferent to good or evill as the soule hath, but onely frame himselfe to doe that which is good and just. Which reason I cannot allow of: For considering the Angell according to his owne nature, or in puris naturalibus, as Divines tearme [Page] it, he is as indifferent to good or evill, as the rationall soule; which is evidently proved by holy Scripture, which saith, that Lucifer and all his followers did sinke themselves into hell, and Michael and other good Angels remained in Paradise. For if the Angell by nature had been impeccable, and could not have sinned, hee could not have damned himself, nor much lesse save himselfe, if his will even from the instance of his creation had beene precisely determined to evill. Besides the Scripture telleth us that there be good and bad Angels, and that the last fell from Heaven for the sinne of pride: whereby is concluded, that the nature of Angels precisely considered, is peccable, and may [Page] sinne, being indifferent to good or evill, as well as the soule. Yet the Angel being now confirmed in grace, loses the indifferency which he had, and his will remaines now governed and subject onely to good. And all this may the Divine finde to bee likewise in the soule punctually: there being none so foolish as to imagine that in the blessed there is any indifferency or possibility of sinning. So that by the foresaid reason it is not concluded that the Angell is more perfect than the soule.
And if the curious person will give me leave to speake my opinion freely, in this case I will say (alwayes subjecting my selfe to the doctrine of the Fathers, and correction of the Church) that [Page] the soule in this world, even with its indifferency of sinning or not sinning, is more perfect then the Angell, though he neither doth nor can sin. The reason is, because the soule having the power to sin and not sinning, gaines a greater excellency and perfection then shee should otherwise have, if she were good because she could not be bad, as the Angell is: So that the indifferency which is in the soule, and her being subject to so many temptations which daily fight against it, argues an excellency of perfection; whereby making her victory more glorious over her enemies, her reward shal be so much the greater. For I would faine know what great commendations is it for a man to be quiet and [Page] peaceable, when there is no boby strives against him? Or what is it for one to be good, when there is no body to provoke or entice him to bee evill? And what perfection shall it be not to sin, when the will is so tyed and subjected as that it cannot sinne? None verily: Whereby I conclude, that the soule even in her owne nature is more noble than the Angels. True it is, that if we will consider in Angels that which is accessory, and concomitates this their unaptnesse to sin, which is glory, and the beatificall vision, in this he shall bee more perfect than the soule, and there shall be as much difference betweene them, as there is betweene him that is blessed, and him that is not: whereof I intend [Page] not now to discourse. But if we will consider the counterprises and inconveniences whereunto the soule is subject whilst it lives within this mortal body, (I mean the dependency it hath upon the senses in all her operations) then questionlesse the Angel being incorporeall, and without any dependency, is more perfect then it. Yet otherwise the soule exceeds all other creatures in noblenesse, amongst which shee onely participates somewhat of God.
Of this noblenesse of man in respect of other creatures, I doe not purpose to discourse, but only by the way; it being a thing which requires much metaphysick, and speculation; wherefore laying it aside, we wil treate [Page] of that, which it hath in respect of its owne individui, that is one man, in respect of another: seeking wherein consists the noblenesse of man: that is to say, who amongst men may justly call himselfe noble, and what requisites he ought to have, that deserves such a title, and name. I am moved to speake of this by reason of the conceit every one hath of himselfe, of what quality soever he be, esteeming himselfe noble, and well borne. And this evill is growne so common, that if you aske a Cobler an accoumpt of his genealogie, and discent, he shall puffe up like a Peacock, answer you, that he is descended by a direct line, from the Emperour Sigismond, or Alexander the great: [Page] and he will speake it with such confidence, and ostentation, that even he shall bee bound to beleeve him, that knows it to be false. I will not say, that Noblenesse is repugnant to a mechanicall artificer, nor to him that lives by his hand labour; Yea I hold them to be in a great error who ordinarily stile country men and those people who live by their labours, to be peasants, and base people, banishing them out of the number, and company of the noble, by reason of their vocation. Since it is certaine that the noblest of all men that ever were, was Adam, and he had no other quality, nor trade but a labourer: being forced to eate his bread with the sweat of his brow. The sonnes [Page] of Adam were noble, and they exercised themselves onely in mechanick and base trades: as as to bee Smiths, and the like. Noah was by all men held to be noble, yet his recreations were nothing, but planting of vineyards, and sowing of fields. Abraham and his children were noble, seeing that from them came the Jewish nobility, yet had they no other meanes to live, but what they got by labouring: Saul, and David, were noble, and Kings, yet were nothing but sheapeards. Finally, all the ancient nobility was occupied in bare and mechanicall exercises: wherby I conclude, that they are deceived who judge of nobility by their exercises and trades. Neither doth true nobility [Page] consist, in being private, or in favour with Kings: since there are many who not onely are out of favour with Kings, but also are persecuted by them; yet their nobility, stands still firme, alive, and secure. Neither doth it consist in learning; since that ordinarily the most learned, and wise, if they have nothing else but learning, are the most vile, and contemned of a common wealth. Whence I draw this conclusion, that true nobility consists in every ones generous actions, be he rich, or poore, Cittizen, ignorant, or learned. So that he may lawfully be called noble; who shall be most noted for some heroicall enterprise, either of fidelity, or valour, or any other rare vertue. [Page] And it is reasonable and just that such a ones memory should bee preserved in his posterity, all of his linage holding the name of Noble.
This is the true nobility which is called discreet and wise mens nobility; because those that are so, ought to hold or esteem none but such to bee noble: But the vulgars nobility, which this day is practised in the world, is not this, but wealth; so that in this our wretched age, hee is onely esteemed noble, that is rich. And if the discreet and wise reader will give mee leave to prove the noblenesse of wealth by the basenesse of the contrary, which is poverty, hee shall clearly see, that the vulgar sort are not much deceived therein, since there is no [Page] mis-hap nor misery can be equalled to a poore mans. Poverty is the quintessence of contempt, the root of all worldly miseries, and the grave of vertue. Give mee the valiantest and couragiousest man in the world, if he be poore, a Hare shall not bee more timorous or cowardly then hee. If hee bee honest and mannerly, there is none, but seeing him poore, will esteeme him an hypocrite. And finally, povertie comming to any mans doore, the world knowes him not: his kindred denies him, his friends retire from him, his servants forsake him, and hee seemes a stranger to all, the world flying from him, as if hee had the plague about him. Poverty is the mother of Infamy: for finding a man [Page] poore, hee will bee apt to worke any deceit or roguery, and attempt any treachery: his ordinary companions being dishonour, cruelty, ignorance, contempt, falshood, infidelity, treacherie; which, and the like, a poore man shall bee apt to commit. What difference is there betweene a poore man and a withered tree, a bow without a string, a ship without tackling, a cart without wheeles, a bird without wings, or a body without a soule? Surely not any: Since hee remaines as unable to doe any good thing, as the abovenamed things. Since therefore these are the effects which poverty produces in man, with very good reason the vulgar sort affirme, that nobility consists in [Page] the want of nothing. And what doth man desire more, then with nobility to enjoy those priviledges which wealth bringeth with it: For let a man be the most infamous fellow under the Sunne; yea, let him be a hangman, if hee be a rich man, and in prosperity, he shall straightwayes be a Cavalier, Noble, and well descended from the line of Alexander the Great, and the first of the Baldwins: Let him never have taken sword in hand, nor seene battle, unlesse it were drawne in some picture; and they shall presently say, that hee is a valiant Captaine, and that in the Gulfe of Lepanto hee overcame the Turkish Armie, and tooke the King of Miramamolin prisoner. Let him not know the first letter [Page] of the A. B. C. and they shall suddenly canonize him for a Mercurius Trismegistus. Finally, being rich, he shall in the vulgars eye, have all the vertues, eminences, and noblenesse in the world: for all will respect and reverence him, pulling off their hats to him a mile off. If hee comes into the Church, they will all make way for him, and give him their places. At banquets they place him at the upper end of the table; when he speaks, they all stand attentive, and hearken to him, as if a Cicero were speaking.
The rich mans house is frequented by all men, his children are made much of, his servants are respected, and stiled gentlemen; if he be sicke, the City is [Page] turned upside downe to find out presents to bring him; his gate stands full of foot-clothes, his hall full of visiters, his tables attended on with musicke; and in conclusion, as all manner of miseries accompany the poore man, so all contents, favours, and priviledges belong to the rich, since in this wretched age money is the absolute Lord over all our actions. This commands, governes, and keepes in subjection all the world, and all things, as Salomon saith, obey it. It attaines to all things, makes all things easie. Money is the object, motive, and end of all mans cares and desires; towards it are bent all his endeavours and employments, and every thing is governed by it. This makes the bitter [Page] sweet, the impossible easie, the little great, the false true, and finally of nothing it makes all things; and by reason of its great power and worth, all the world loves it, seekes it, and adores it, tormenting and even martyrizing themselves for to obtaine it. What moves the Souldier to march up to the knees in water in the winter time, loaden with iron, nigh dead with hunger and thirst, broken and bruised all in peeces, with death daily before his eyes, but only money? what makes the Labourer to break his armes, yea his whole body, tearing up the earth with his labors, but onely money? What makes the mechanicall artificer passe continually the winter nights in working, but onely money? [Page] Who makes the Merchant venture his life upon two inches of planck, and suffer so many storms and tempests, but onely money? Who makes the Lawyer lose his sight in studying Bartolus and Baldus, the Physician Hippocrates and Galen, but onely money? Who makes the Councellour confound his braines to defend his causes per fas & nefas, but onely money? In conclusion, money is the end towards which man directs all his actions and endeavours. The Physicians Recipe, the Apothecaries misce, the Lawyers Bartolus, the Scriveners Pen, the Notaries &c. the Logicians Ergo, the Grammarians Nominatives, the Astrologians Heaven, the Philosophers infinitum, the Metaphyficians [Page] unum verum & bonum, the Shoomakers Nawle, the Taylors Needle, the Plowmans Plough, the Noblemans Gentility; and finally, life and death it selfe lies in the hands of money: since reward is able to condemne a just man to death, and to give life to one that is condemned to dye. Whence finally I conclude, that the vulgar sort speakes not much out of purpose, when it attributes all the noblenesse of the world unto money, since in the world infinite wonders are wrought by it.
CHAP. V.
Of the Noblenesse and Worth of the French and Spanish Nations.
IT were fitting and reasonable to leave this chapter unto fame, as a lawfull Chronicler of this heroicall enterprise, it being onely reserved for her to end that which my pen could not in an age beginne. For if true noblenesse consists in the generosity of actions, as wee have said in the precedent Chapter, the actions of these two Nations are so many, so excellent, and so heroicall, that it would bee impossible almost in an age to rehearse the least part of them. I will not [Page] now stand to set downe the beginning and descent of these two most noble Nations, it being notorious unto all, and ordinary for them who have written of this matter. I will only insist a little upon the contemplation of the rare and perfect vertues which God infused into them: of which he may come to have knowledge and notice, who will attentively consider the marvellous order which God held in the six daies of his Creation, in which time he had beautified the large field of this world with so many varieties of nature; and that they might make shew of the perfection which hee had granted them, hee made the fourth day two faire and bright lights, to which hee gave certaine vicars [Page] and substitutes, giving them full licence to assist the day and night, dividing, ordering, and appointing times and seasons, and producing those marvellous effects which daily experience presents unto us in the theatre of this visible world. The greatnesse and perfection of these two Lights might sufficiently be proved by the onely knowledge of the senses: since he must be altogether blinde, that opening his sight towards heaven, doth not know, that the Sunne and Moone are authors of all the rejoycings and gladnesses of this world▪ and of all the varieties, changes, and alterations that are seene in the foure elements: and that their absence causeth many troubles and sorrowes amongst men, [Page] which the horror of the night, and nightly impressions may testifie by the sunnes absence, together with an infinite company of other effects, which for brevity sake, I do omit. Notwithstanding the strongest meanes I have to prove the excellent perfection of these two lights, is to see that the Prophets, and the whole Scripture, when they would make us conceive the greatnesse of the Creator, they know not to whom better to compare him, then to these, calling him Sunne, and Moone, and Astrologie teacheth us, that all the starres, and luminous bodies receive their light, and splendor from them, and that from them proceed all the alterations, and motions, of all [Page] that hath, or hath not life.
These and infinite other greatnesses, shall the contemplative man find in these two great lights which God placed in the celestiall globe, so noble, faire, and bright, that an acute understanding can not sufficiently praise them, but onely by admiring them. For if those doe enlighten all visible and materiall thinges; these doe enrich, and governe the reason, and the actions of the will, which are so much above the sensitive, as the being free, and voluntary exceeds the naturall, and depending. These have for their ends generation, corruption, variation, and change; these to eternize, to conserve, and also to attaine to the infinite, since they [Page] doe produce marveilous effects, as vertue, counsell, understanding, learning, and doctrine, which eternize the soule with God. Those have their seat and place, in an incorruptible, yet materiall substance; and these hold dominion over humane nature, for whose service the first were created; and because that the middle, or meanes, cannot be more perfect then the end for which they are ordained, the heavenly lights with all their influences, and vertues, being onely created for man, it is certaine they must bee lesse perfect then man.
Yet we will compare the noblenesse of these two earthly lights, which are the Spanish, and French nations, with the [Page] two heavenly ones, there being more amongst creatures which may better represent their rare perfection, seeing that the one hath such proportion, and correspondency with the other, that it seemed the divine architect tooke from these the originall▪ which had ab aeterno bin framed in his divine minde, to produce in time their pourtracture, and place it in the first, and fourth spheare. These are they which in rigor of justice deserve the name of two great lights; that which now vertue, learning, and advice, doe publish the truth: so that the Evangelick faith holding her seate betweene these two most firme, and inexpugnable columnes, that is between [Page] a Catholick, and a most Christian, she stands firme, and secure, out of danger of being stained by any cloud of infidelity, or persecution. They doe command the day, and the night, since there is no nation from one pole to the other, which doth not obey them, spreading their names into all, both barbarous, and catholicke provinces, as the feare of the Lions voice amongst the other beasts of the wood.
CHAP. VI.
Of the noblenesse, and valour of the French.
LET Christendome publish the strength of the valiant French arme, and let faithfull [Page] Europe exalt her famous acts, let not England altogether contemne her valour, and let Germany celebrate her fearlesse assaults, let Italy solemnize her valiant endevours, and let perfidious Turkie divulge without passion, her heroikall enterprizes and actions, wherewith she doth daily eternize her immortall valour: let the same fame also speak (if it doth not through passion grow dumb) and tell that which my tongue and rough pen cannot: let the powerfull Ottoman aright confesse this truth, which holds it selfe unconquerable by having one company of French Souldiers. And let not great Persia dissemble the qualities and valour of this great Nation, since it studies nor labours for [Page] thing more then to imitate their manners and warlicke hardinesse.
The memorie of Roman antiquity is now forgotten, her proud command, her so renowned acts, through the singular prowesses and rare generosity of the unconquerable French nation. Fame which was once so appassionate of the excellent enterprises of Alexander, and Caesar, remaines now tributario unto the heroicall and immortall actions of great Henry the fourth, father of his countrey, pillar of Christendome, scourge of the Infidels, and shade of the whole world. And from such a foundation and premisses, let them begin and continue unto this houre, to sing and praise the rare [Page] prudence and extream wisedome of great Lewis, worthy sonne of such a father. Let the seaven Planets, and all other starres of biggest greatnesse, which in this French firmament receive their brightnesse, and light from this Sunne, speake, and communicate unto the world his peregrine valour, that every one may admire it. Let that almost infinite number of Princes, which like bright starres adorne this sky, discover the magnanimity of his bright influences, that the wise may conjecture the beauty of the whole, by the beauty of the parts. Let the Earth eternize thy renown, since the Heavens, as an elect vessell of perfection, do bestow singular favours upon thee, beautifying thee with all those [Page] conditions and requisites which belong to a just and lawful King. And if one (as the Scripture saith) would have excused himself from being King, saying that he was no Physitian, neither was there bread in his house: that cannot bee spoken of thee, who art abundance it selfe, and furnishest other nations with bread, wealth, nobility, infinite valour, vertue, knowledge, mercy and piety. And to this plenty is added thy being a Physitian, wherby thou doest arrive to the non plus ultra of thy greatnesse; remaining upon earth the mirrour of Christians, the scourge of Infidels, the fire of thine enemies, the death of the envious, the haven of the passionate, the comfort of thy subjects, the protector [Page] of thy orphans, the justice of thy wronged.
None can tax thee, unlesse it be some one, who bursts with envy, or rages with passion. When did ever the poore, wretched, or needy come to thy doore, to aske for succour; but that thou diddest with a free and liberall hand, remedie their necessities? when did the afflicted, ever lay open his griefes, and sorrowes, unto thee; but that he found thee alwaies disposed like a pitifull mother to yeeld her a remedy? when ever did oppression, wrong, or subordination dwell within thy breast? was there ever any affect found in thee, towards thy children other then clemency, liberality, generosity, and vertue? can there be ought [Page] found in thee to obscure the least atome of the perfect splendors? No surely, thou art the quintessence of greatnesse, and valour, thou art the Infinitum in actu of worth. Finally, thou art the content and harmony of this our hemisphere.
The last attribute belonging to these lamps of heaven, which is to cause changes, alter the times, and produce divers effects, belongs also to this nation, may easily be proved, without spending many wordes, by the quotidian experiences, and marveilous effects, which her glorious enterprises doe worke amongst all nations; since that every time as France takes arms in hand, other nations presently, confused, and changed, and [Page] with a deadly heart beating double their garrisons, fortifie their wals, renew their munitions, give orders, and prepare themselves with such care for defence, as if they looked for a new deluge in the world. The fierce roaring of the Lion in the night, doth not more affright the other beasts of the wood, then the sound of the French trumpet, or drumme, affrighteth other kingdomes: what lightning broke out of a cloud, comes downe whirling more furiously through the aire, then the fearlesse, and warlike French doth in setting upon an enemies campe? what Kingdome, Nation, or Province, is upon the earth, that having France on his part, hath not Mars in his armes, [Page] a Lion in his breast, an Eagle in his handes, a crowne on his head, and an assured victory on his side? are the treaties, complots, expeditions, and undertakings of other nations, powerfull and strong enough, if French valour doth not aide, and confirme them? No surely, since we see that as the sunne beames doe dissolve the Chaos, and obscurity of the clouds; even so the French strength, and industry, once beginning to shew it selfe, breakes, splittes, and annihilates, the plots, and stratagems of all other nations: so that they doe if this will, they have if this gives, they get if this suffer, they conquer if this helpes, they lose if this go from them and finally, if this persecutes, they are destroied.
[Page] I could say much more, though it would all be too little, if feare of being tedious, did not stay my tongue, and the discretion which a writer ought to suppose in the reader did not secure me, as also the infinite disproportion, which is betwixt the grosse energie of my tongue, and the supreame valor of this nation. So all that which I have said, and all that which Rethoricke could set downe, if she did undertake the taske, would be but a beginning of an infinite, an atome of an immensity, a point of a line, an instant of eternity, a shadow which passeth, and like a nothing in respect of the whole. And since the subject of my Booke will not suffer me to conceale any thing of this noble nation, [Page] I shall be forced to imitate the industry of that famous painter, who being commanded to draw out a Giant in a little space, finding that it was impossible to draw him out whole, he resolved to draw onely one of his little nayles, so as by that proportionably might be knowne the deformity and greatnesse of the Giant. Let those therfore which reade this Chapter know, that if I have said any thing that seemeth too much to any one, that all this is but the least part of the whole, which might be spoken in praise of this Nation.
CHAP. VII.
Of the noblenesse and valour of the Spanish Nation.
THe complaints of my mother Spaine begin now to buzze in mine eares, as offended by my having bent all my forces in praysing of France; imagining that being drawne by some private interest, passion, or subornation, I have with silence passed over all her greatnesses. I already see the Lords of Spaine angry with me, canonizing mee in their assemblies and congregations, for the most ungratefull, faithlesse, and forgetfull man of the world, perswading themselves that against the naturall law of my Countrey I have taken [Page] Cesar his due from him. On the other side, me thinks I meet the French quite puffed up, imagining that which I have spoken to bee proprium quarto modo (as your Logicians terme it) belonging onely to them and not to others. I also know that some malicious Sophister, enflamed with passion, stands waiting with great impatience to see whether I will expresse my selfe, and tell which of the two Nations is the Sunne, and which is the Moone, which shall have the title of the greater, and which of the lesser Light.
But my intention being not to kindle the fire of enmity betweene these two Nations, but rather to quench that which is, and onely to treat of the excellency [Page] and noblenesse of each of them, without offending either of them: I say (shunning comparisons, which are odious) that betweene these two most noble Nations there is neither greater nor lesser, great nor little, since they are both great Lights, faire, and resplendant. And that therefore all that I have spoken of the French Nation, must also be understood of the Spanish, without diminishing any the least perfection as may be thought of.
And to shew the great proportion which these two nations have with the two Lights of heaven, upon which I have grounded my discourse, it shall suffice that the holy Scripture saith, that God created two great Lights, without seeking out any other [Page] particulars, or Metaphysicall distinctions. Yet to satisfie the malcontent, and those which are too curious, who will not be content till they know which of these two Nations is the Sunne, and which the Moone; which governes by day, and which by night, I shall be forced to shew a point of Philosophy, by which your delicate and appassionate understanding shall be satisfied, and shall confesse that there is neither greater nor lesser between these two noble Nations, being both great, and of exceeding worth and dignity.
Your Schollers know that the whole Homogeneon, or alike, is of such nature and property, that the integrant parts of it have the same faculty, name, and being [Page] which the whole hath. As for example, water which stands in many vessels, bee they great or small, still all or each of the parts retaines the same name and vertue of water, there being no attribute that can bee imagined which doth not equally befit all the parts. In the same manner we shall see that the light being a homogeneall and like quality, all the parts of it, though placed in several subjects, have the same nature, name, and vertue. And therefore it would be a great absurdity to imagine the light of the Sunne to be different, or of any other quality then the light of the Moone, since God made them both the fourth day, shining with the same light which hee had created the first day. Which [Page] may admirably bee proved by those words of the Psalm, which say, Per diem Sol non uret te, neque Luna per noctem, giving us to understand, that the vertue of heating is in the same manner common to both, as well as the shining, the having its influences, and the lighting. And in that sense must those words of Moses be understood, Fecit Deus duo luminaria magna. There are notwithstanding three things to bee considered in each one of these lights, the influence, the manner, and the light. The two first are different enough, the Moone ending her course in eight and twenty dayes and odde houres, and the Sunne in a yeare, and therefore there must needs bee some difference in them, and [Page] [...] [Page] [...] [Page] therefore holy Scripture calleth the one the greater light, and the other the lesser; but as concerning the light, they are both great, and shining. The same Philosophy may be found in our two earthly lights, I meane in the French and Spanish Nations, to whom God did impart worth, perfection, and noblenesse, with such liberality, that he left them great, and wholly perfect, noblenesse and vertue being as proper to either of them, as the light is to the Sunne and the Moone. The truth is, that in some particulars there may be some difference, and may likewise by turns bee called one greater then the other, no otherwise then the Philosophers affirm the heavens to be more perfect then man, by [Page] reason of his incorruptibility, but as being a living creature, not onely man, but even the least worme of the earth is more perfect. In the same manner some things may bee found in the French Nation which may cause it to be called the greater, and so likewise the Spanish may have others which may give it the same name and title. Yet these differences being accidentall, doe not undo the greatnesse of the other, agreeing both in the essentiall perfection, of being both most noble and advantaged. And therfore all that which hath beene spoken of France, & much more which might have beene spoken, may without diminishing of the least tittle bee also spoken of Spaine.
[Page] And if that the enmity and naturall antipathy, rooted in the hearts of these two Nations, for so many ages, shall dazle the eies of some passionate, and will not suffer him to know the reason, I wil satisfie him with experience, the true mother to give satisfaction and faithful witnesse of truth, by setting downe some little parcell of that most pure & unspeakable brightnesse which this great light communicates to all the world, to bring forth in it those vertues and marvellous effects which are in it. Of whose unlimited strength, the Eagles and the Lion, which great Philip carieth in all his devices, shall bee witnesses, giving us thereby to understand, that his command, worth and strength, flies through [Page] all parts of the world, there being no part within its spacious map, wherein his light, feare, signiorie and noblenesse is not knowne.
A thousand times have I had in remembrance those words of David, who saith: In omnem terram exivit sonus corum, & in fines orbis terrae verba corum, which though they bee construed by the Doctors, for the Apostles, and preaching of the Gospell, yet I may bee suffered to apply them to the singular vertue of this noble Nation, they seeming to bee spoken onely to this purpose; for if we attentively hearken to the cries which are heard in all the parts of the world, there is nothing heard but Viva Spain and Viva Philip. If you ask Europe [Page] who is her father, shepheard, refuge, tower & strength, and who keepes in awe a many of young Lions, Wolves, Tigers, and Foxes that would bite him, it will surely bee answered, that it is none but this couragious Lion. If wee come into Affricke, wee shall heare nothing but a terrible and timorous rumour of warre, accompanied with a squadron of confused and untuned voyces, which in despight of them, call for mercy, and cry, Viva Spaine. If we turn our hearing towards fruitfull Asia, we shall heare it doe nothing but lament the continuall slaughter which the Spanish policie and valour makes there. And if we aske newes of this great nation in America, it will answer [Page] with lowd voyces, that she is indebted unto it for the light of the Gospell, and Christian religion, and for taking of it out of the Divels hands: and finally, for making of it a new world. And if curiosity do draw us to inform our selves of what is spoken upon the brinish and wide seas, questionlesse we shall heare, that Spaine enriches her Islands, defends her gulfes, and makes the passage easie to all nations. Finally, the claws, strength and valour of this great Lion, reach to the ends of the world, since that America obeyes is, Affrick feares it, Asia desires it, and Europe honours it.
And as wee have said above, that it is proper to the heavenly lights, to order times, divide seasons, [Page] and enrich the world with divers effects, to whom can this better be attributed, then to this valiant Nation, whose noblenesse, wisedome and quicknesse of wit is such, that it specifies each speculative understanding? Since that all nations, even her greatest enemies, confesse, that Spaine is a harbour of vertue, a treasure of understanding, a sea of discretion, a garden of noblenesse, an abysse of sciences, and a wonder of the world. And fear of not ending my discourse, I should once engulfe my selfe into the heroicall attempts, and noted actions by the Spaniards, did not hinder me, it would appeare that those of Mars would be abased by theirs; and all those which have been written of [Page] from the creation of the world to this day, compared with theirs, would be but as a shadow of the body, and a draught of the originall, there being no fidelity, obedience, respect, generosity, wisedome and prudence in the world, which compared with the brightnesse and splendor of this light, bee not darkened, ecclipsed, and do not vanish away.
And if any one judging mee to be suspect through being passionate and partiall, shall disallow of these my reasons, let him take the depositions of her very enemies, as eye-witnesses, and hee shall see, that there never lodged feare or pusillanimity in the heart of a Spaniard; nor was there ever any Spaniard, that did [Page] [...] [Page] [...] [Page] not valiantly spend his life in service of his king, and defence of his countrey, which the continuall heart-beatings, and mortall slaughters wherewith they affright the Moores, can well witnesse, whose frontiers doe water their fields with the bloud of their inhabitants, in stead of water, spilt by the unconquered army of Spaine. Who tames the unlimited desires, and unsatiable thirst of the Ottoman Wolfe, but the strength of this majesticke Lion? Who humbleth and abateth his proud ambition, beating downe his designes, discomfiting his armies, casting his thoughts to the earth, and causing him, like a frighted Wolfe pursued by Dogges, to beat a retreat, but the supreame valour of [Page] this Spanish Monarch?
I finally conclude the praises of this great Light, with that Maxime of Aristotle, as true as proper to this Nation, which saith, that in every kinde, there is a thing which is the rule and direction of all the rest, and which containes in it selfe all the perfection which severally the rest have in themselves. As for example, amongst the Beings of God, amōgst substances the Angels; amongst soules, the rationall; amongst the heavens, the Emperiall; amongst the Planets, the Sunne; amongst the Elements the fire; amongst living creatures, Man; amongst men, Christ: Amongst bruit beasts, the Lion; amongst fishes, the Sturgeon; amongst birds, the [Page] Eagle; amongst metalls, Gold; amongst pretious stones, the Carbuncle; amongst colours, Azure; and amongst Nations, the Spanish, which is the modell and major of all the rest, and that which hath in it selfe all the prerogatives and eminences, and is the noblenesse of all the nations of the world.
CHAP. VIII.
That the French, and Spanish Nation, being the beginning of the other Nations, naturally ought to be opposite.
IT beeing concluded in the precedent Chapter, that the French, and Spanish nations, are the beginning, and spring of all the other; It must through [Page] necessary consequence follow, that they ought to bee opposite, and contrary; as likewise the two great lights of heaven are, upon which the discourse of this my booke is grounded: The end of the contrariety which is in the heavenly ones being none other, then the variety, whereby the spacious garden of the world shewes faire, and enamelled with divers colours, with infinite variety of natures, and kindes, yet with such order, and art, that all united together seem nothing but individuum of one onely thing. And so it was requisite that their influence, and motion should be various, and divers; it being certaine that there can be no difference in the effects, if the causes be not different; [Page] which punctually belongs to these two nations, which as the beginning, and modell of the rest, must have some contrariety, in their ceremonies, humours, fashions, of cloathing, conversations and the like, that other nations which looke on these in a glasse, might be various, and so humane nature, by reason of the said variety, should be beautified, and delightfull.
And though this truth be cleare to any one that shall looke on it; yet I will confirme it by Aristotles authority, who saith, that beginnings ought to be different, saying when he defineth them, that contraries or beginnings, are they, which are not made by any, neither any of [Page] them is composed of the other, but of them all things are made; which definition squares excellent well with these two nations: since we cannot say, that they are composed of any other; that is that they have taken any perfection, vertue or noblenesse, from them which were before them; seeing it is plaine that since the creation of the world, there never was any nation florishing in learning, wit, subtilty, policie, or other laudable exercises, more then these two. And so it seemes that God did with particuler providence make them in this world, bestowing on them immediately with his owne hand, those perfections which they have. Neither can it be said, that the one is composed [Page] of the other, since that neither France takes anything from Spaine, nor any way seeks to imitate it, nor Spaine likewise from France: yet other nations are composed of them, receiving all the good they have, from these two beginnings, and fruitfull springs, so that it agreeing so well, with these two nations to be beginnings, they ought also to be of their nature, that is to be contrary.
I hold it certaine, that this variety and opposition of nature, which is in these two nations, was by divine providence. For if all were of one minde, and one humour, either all would stay at home, and would have no desire to see the world, or all would be wandring, and forget [Page] their homes, and families, against the law of nature, & preservation of humane kinde: and the effects of the world not have that beauty which is in them, if they were all alike. And therefore this being the pretended, and in the creation of the universe, God made these two beginnings, and nations so contrary, and shared all favours, and graces, amongst them so equally, that the one cannot prevaile against the other, like two contraries of equall vertue; that cannot overcome one the other.
Neither let any one deceive himselfe so farre as to thinke that the contrariety which is in these two nations as originalls, be any imperfection, but that it is in them the greatest excellenlency [Page] that may be, seeing that if we consider it well, they have no other end, then peace, and preservation, it being a thing infallible that since they cannot overcome, nor conquer one another, by reason of the equality, strength, and valour, they will preserve not onely themselves, but these nations also which depend on them. It being most certaine that a Province favoured, and protected, by Spaine, shall not be destroied by France: nor likewise by Spaine, any nation favoured by the French. And therefore wee shall finde that this contrariety is ordained for the peace, and preservation of the world: and if God had not made these two originall, these two nations contrary, [Page] and communicated unto them their valour, with full equality, I verily beleeve that a great part of the world would be left: for if God had not tempred the fury, and violence of the French, with farre degrees lesse of Spanish patience, and solidity, they would questionlesse be soveraigns of the world. And contrariewise if Spanish patience were not mixed, with a slow, and flegmatick deliberation, there is no doubt but they would bring all the kingdomes of the earth in subjection. And that therefore God, who with an equall ballance, measure and wisedome made all thinges, sweetly disposing of them, ordained that the world should be preserved in peace by [Page] meanes of this contrariety, dividing the goods so equally betweene these two Nations, that that which the one wanted, the other abounded in, that so like two perfect originals they might give peace and preservation unto other Nations.
This Philosophy wil not seem harsh to them who shall consider in the foure Elements the contrariety and order wherewith they mix themselves, to produce and preserve those things which are composed of them; for hee shall in them finde their qualities tempered and divided with such art, that the one hath that which the other wants. God gave the Element of fire heat (as the Philosophers call it) in summo, and drinesse inremisso. For if it were [Page] extreame, as the heat, it would with its power and activity destroy all the other. And therefore to withstand that disorder, he left the fire with a remisnesse. If the earth had coldnesse in extreame, as it hath drynesse, it would by reason of its clamminesse & hardnesse be intractable, and altogether incapable of compounding any mixt. He left the water with a remisse humidity, giving the same to the ayre in summo. So that with this distribution of qualities, God made them originals of peace and preservation. The same art did hee use in these two Nations: for he gave the French the extreame of valour, force, and gentilenesse, yet accompanyed with the remisse of variability and inconstancy.
[Page] He placed in the Spaniard courage, stability, and constancy in a supreame degree, but tempered with a remisse deliberation. I would lay open the point more diffusedly, if I did not feare thereby to animate, by telling of the truth, the two nations one against the other, who will not confesse that they have any thing in a remisse degree, but all perfection in summo. And so we are to beleeve that it was by heaven ordained that gifts should be so entermingled betweene these two Nations, that neither France nor Spaine should have all the power in either of themselves, but equally divided betweene them, that knowing themselves to be no stronger one then the other, they should alwayes live in [Page] peace, and should not attempt any thing whereby they might get broken heads. The truth of this admirable peece of worke was rarely set downe unto us in two words by the wise man, who considering the fabrick and ordering of the world, and the wonderfull meanes which God ordained to preserve it, said that hee had set one against one. Which was questionlesse done, because no one should overtop the other, going beyond his bounds and confines. And so considering well the whole frame of the world, we shall finde that there is no one kinde or nature in it, but hath its contrary. God having set against a hell, heaven; against a Lucifer, Michael; against vice, vertue; against an Adam, Christ; against [Page] an Eve, a Mary; against the fire, water; and finally, against the Spanish the French nation, from which two, as from beginnings, yet contraries, should issue such plentifull streames of valour, generosity, & noblenesse, as should beautifie and make fruitfull all mankinde; since that if any light of faith hath spread it selfe amongst infidels, it hath beene through the diligence and labour of these two most noble Lights.
CHAP. IX.
How the Devill envying the noblenesse and perfection of these two Nations, turned the naturall contrariety into a mortall antipathy.
OUr Lord God created these two noble Nations in the aforesaid degree of perfection, that they might communicate and distribute that light and beauty which he had granted to them. But the old Serpent, mortall enemy unto peace, knowing the marvellous good and notable profit which these two Nations might have broght to the world, [...]f they had agreed and lived together in peace, fearing lest they [...]hould with their great learning [Page] and holinesse, cause the true faith and Christian religion to spring up in all Heathen countreyes, and by that meanes get them from under his subjection, whom by meanes of idolatry and bestiality wherewith he deceived them, he yet kept: hee gathered strength out of their weaknes, and sought to hinder this fruit, making use of the powerfullest arms he had, which were enmity and hatred: which hee rooted so deeply in these two Nations, that he converted his art into a nature, leaving them enmity and persecuting of one another as hereditarie, there being no signe or token left of amitie, peace and union betwixt them; so that the smoke and dust, as Saint Iohn saith in the Revelation, that cursed [Page] starre fell from heaven, hath raised, is gotten up to the fourth spheare, and darkened the Sun. This is the cloud of enmity and mortall hatred, which the Divell sowed between the Spanish and the French, which obscured the Sunne and light of these two nations. Since, if had not been this cursed seed of enmity, whence groweth the distrust of one another? They had, being both united together, conquered most Kingdomes and Monarchies of the world, dissipating the darknesse of infidelity in many provinces and kingdomes which want the light of the Gospell, and had offered an acceptable sacrifice to God, of an infinite number of soules, which they would have drawne out of the [Page] way of perdition, and brought them into the way of salvation and eternall life.
It is therefore lamentable to see, that this accursed Leviathan should finde so much aptnesse in such wise nations, to swallow his mortall poyson, and bring them from their first perfection, that hee could bee contented to set them at variance, and in hatred; but hee hath also with his powerfull diligence converted them (at least in outward shew) into himselfe: seeing that although a Frenchman be the same with the Spaniard, in that which is of the essence, that is rationalitie; yet hath the Divell so disguised this nature in such sort, and hath so maliciously defiled, and changed her accidents, humours and conditions, [Page] that now a Frenchman in a Spaniards eye seemes to bee no man; and a Spaniard a Divell in the Frenchmans eye.
And if the Divell would have been contented with setting enmity and discord onely in the humour, cloathing, commerce, and other particular ceremonies of these two nations, it were no great matter, for it might easily have been remedied; but he was so cunning in sowing this mortall dissention, that with his deadly punctures and poyson, he converted that into nature, which before were but accidents, making it passe by succession, from the fathers to the sonnes, & from these to the grand-children, like originall sinne. So that as the Chicken flieth from, and is afraid [Page] of the Kite, although hee doth not know him: or as the gentle Lamb scarcely come out of the mothers belly, seeing the Wolfe a great way off, retires fearfull and timerous, flying him as a mortall enemy, having never seen him before, nor received any hurt by him, nor any having shewed him any enmity and antipathy. In like manner the hatred of the French to the Spaniards, and the Spaniards to the French, is growne so naturall, that even in children hanging on their mothers breasts, there seemes to grow a naturall instinct to know a Spaniard a mile off, crying out as lowd at the sight of him, as if hee did see some strange vision or apparition.
[Page] From this naturall antipathy commeth that to either nation, the customes, cloathing, & manner of living of the one, seemes evill-favoured, improper, and altogether abominable to the other, though the things of themselves bee good, joyning them with the three ordinary fruits of hatred, which are, unbeliefe, detraction and contempt. For if one tell a Frenchman of any victory, any strong hold, or citie which the Spaniard hath taken, or any other famous & heroicall enterprizes, which this nation ordinarily performe, none shall make him beleeve it, no not if an Angell should come down from heaven to verifie it. And if he be either by common report, or other credible relations forced to [Page] beleeve that the thing is true, hee will say, they yeelded without resistance, or that all in the hold were asleep, that the watches and centries betrayed it, or that there were but thirty of the enemies souldiers, and the Spaniards were three thousand: or finally, that there were many Frenchmen in the Spanish army, by whose advice and industry the battell was given, and the victory obtained. Howsoever, hee will never confesse, that the victory was truly gotten, but by some accident, or mischance.
So againe, if the Spaniard heare any such like newes of the French, he will say that some river broke her bankes, and drowned the enemies campe, or that thirty peeces of ordnance brake [Page] and killed halfe their army, or that the plague, or some other contagious disease, was amongst them: so that he will not confesse that the victory was obtained by any strength, valour, or industry, but by meere misfortune.
All the world knowes that Spaine is more barren then France, by reason of the great droughts, and small store of raine, that falls there: wherefore some yeares there comes corne, and other victualls out of Languedock, and Provence into Catalonia, and France, come your hollands, cloth, linnen, cambrick, and a thousand other commodities which Spaine hath not: yet you shall not finde a Spainard who will confesse, that [Page] France is a better land, or more abundant, and rich. The same weaknesse we also finde in the French, seeing that the greatest Prince of that nation, that day as he will make shew of his greatnesse, he adornes and beautifies himselfe with things which come out of Spaine: if he have any brave horse, it is Spanish, if he have perfumes about him they are Spanish, if he be cloathed in fine cloth it is Spanish, if he drinke good wine it is Spanish, and will scorne at play to carry any money about him but Spanish pistolets; and yet though all this be true, they will not beleeve, but that Spaine is a wretched country, and Spaniards a cunning, malicious, and no way curious nation. And when they [Page] are convinced by experience, they will say, that all is good in Spaine which cannot speake.
All Spaniards hold the French liberty, mirth, and affability, to be base, contemptible, dishonorable, and of small esteeme, and almost madnesse, and yet is a wonderfull perfection, wherein they excell all other nations; for by that meanes any one bee hee never so poore, may come to speake to the King, and relate his grievances to him when hee will, without any let. The French gives like judgement of the Spaniard, calling his gravity, and continency, pride, and madnesse; yet it standeth with reason, that every one should know what he is, and not give occasion to suffer too much liberty, [Page] to breed [...] and disrespect.
The Spaniards accompt your French liberality in great feasts, and banquets, to be an unreasonable gluttony; it being very true as I my selfe have seene, that they are very abundant, and delicate in their foode, especially your Nobility; their ends in these excesses beeing no other then to keepe their houses, servants, and families, satisfied, content, and merry; which are things properly belonging to generosity. The French beleeve that to abstaine from these excesses, and the rule and order which the Spaniards keepe, proceeds from basenesse, and avarice, onely to avoid expence: and yet it is manifest that this is no vertue, like [Page] unto sobriety, and parsimony, as well for the commendation it particularly hath in holy Scripture, as also for the spirituall and bodily benefits, which proceed from it.
If you aske a Spaniard what he thinkes of the French habit, and fancy, he will not onely hold them to be ill favoured, but will be scandalized at a thing which causeth mirth, and attracts the mindes. For to see a troope of French upon a festivall day cloathed in such variety of colours with a thousand kinds of feathers, jewells, embroderies, fringes, ornaments, and gold laces with so many hundred of jewels, diamonds, pearles, rubies, emeralds, and topaces, that one would thinke the Indies were [Page] landed in France; is even as one should see a garden enamelled, and enterlaced most artificially with divers flowers, or a faire field full of dazies, lillies, and violets, whose faire shew, wakens the sences, keepes the mind in suspence, and enamoures the very soule: Yet the Spaniard will say, that it is the greatest folly in the world. I doe not wonder at it, because that in Spaine your civill habit is so much used, and wearing of colors so abhorred, that they force the hangman to weare colours, for a marke of his shame, and infamy. And if we have a French mans judgement concerning your Spanish habit, and manner of clothing, he will say that to goe alwaies in black is a signe of despaire, [Page] the marke of a widdow, or a decayed person, yet blacke is one of the most honourable colours, and argues modesty, reputation, authority, and understanding.
Let a French man truly consider the effect of the looke, modesty and curtesie of a Spaniard, his deliberatenesse in his speech, his reservednesse, his affectuous conceipts in his discourses, his gravity in his gate, his patience in his businesse, his measuring of his words, his attentive hearkning to his reasons who speakes to him, and he shall truly finde that all is but civility and curtesie; yet he will say that Spaniards would seeme to be wise but are not. And if a Spaniard looks upon the actions of a Frenchman, [Page] his never standing still, his unquietnesse and impatience, his flinging away, though he knows that under such actions there is a great deale of wit, capacity, subtilty, and wisedome, yet he will say, that Frenchmen neither seeme nor are wise.
If a Gentleman go to a friends house to visit him, he will scarce be in, but with a great deale of mirth he asketh for breakfast, if it bee in the morning, or according to the time of the day, wherein hee shewes his liberty and friendship, seeing that to eate in one dish, and drinke in one cup is a signe of fidelity and friendship. Now this would be abominable and disgracefull to the Spaniard, who would rather starve for hunger and thirst, then [Page] aske for it in a friends house. Yea there are some so shame-faced, that will sit a whole meale without drinke, onely because they will not aske for it: as it happened to certaine countrey people, who being invited to a Bishops house, after they had eaten went to drinke at a river, because they were not so bold as to aske for drinke at the table. If we aske a Spaniard what he thinkes of the manner and fashion which the French use in saluting of Ladies, kissing their facess, comming neare them and touching them with that freenesse as is used in France, he will lose his patience, and he will by no meanes be perswaded that such ceremonies can have any civility or curtesie in them: it being a maxime among [Page] [...] [Page] [...] [Page] them, that who parleyes will yeeld the hand, who yeelds the hand will yeeld the face, and who yeelds the face will yeeld the rest. And yet it is most certaine true, that such actions are void of malice, and ancient customes, practised even in the Apostles times. As also when they salute them afar off, going backwards, raking their feet upon the ground, with such like honest, wise, and just ceremonies, wherein there cannot be the least occasion of any rash judgement: yet I doe not wonder at this ordinary contrariety, seeing the Devill hath so taken away all manner of liking betweene the two Nations, with envie and hatred, that he makes that seem evill and detestable unto them, which indeed [Page] is commendable and honest.
CHAP. X.
Of some things which befell the Author in France, touching the enmity of the two Nations.
I Know that every one will beleeve the antipathy which I am describing, without urging mee to prove it by any of those many particulars which happened unto me. Yet I will a little digresse from the theory, and (as by the way) delight the Reader with some passages, which when I remember I cannot forbear laughing, and afterwards to fall into a strange admiration, in seeing how much the name and sight of a Spaniard hath beene, and is abhorred in France.
[Page] I went out of Spaine, drawne by that curiosity to which the desire and appetite of knowing inclines unquiet mindes. And being told that in France I might satisfie my desires, I was not slow in taking my journey that waies, it being neare unto Spaine, and there being also ordinary commerce betweene them. I undertooke my journey with as much ease as my poverty could afford me, which was not so great, but that I did ride on horseback, and had some money, though not much, which I also was forced to lay out to make me a suit of cloths. I beleeved that as soon as I should come into France, without any other art or ostentation, that onely seeing of me in Spanish habit, would make all the [Page] world affect me, and strive who should first have me home to his house. I thought that a spanne of ruffing which I wore stiffe starched, would serve me for bill of Exchange; beleeving that having them on, none durst deny to lend me money, if I desired to borrow of him.
Then I assured my selfe that I should be esteemed of, respected and in a manner feared, by reason of six palms of rapier which hanged by my side, raking with the chape upon the ground. At last I arrived into France, cloathed in Spanish habit, as may be presumed of one that went into France with a pretence of finding favour, onely because hee was a Spaniard. I travelled all the way from Burdeaux to Paris, [Page] without any accident worth the writing, unlesse it were some base words they gave mee when I paid my reckonings at Innes; which because they were of no great importance, and spoken by people which could not offend me, I bore with patience. I came into Paris with that desire which the citie deserves all men should have, which come to see it. I began to walke the streets with a Spanish gravity, state and garbe: yet I was faine to leave it, and hasten my pace, forsaking my wonted gravity: for I had not scarce gone twenty paces, when I heard a noyse behinde me of children that called to me, Senor Senor de la Burrica pany Ravanicos: Sir, Sir, out of your budget bread and radishes, with a thousand other [Page] injurious words, and such untuned voices, that I was by necessity forced to goe into the first house that I found open, leaving the doore and court as full of little children and men, as if it had been the Councell chamber gate. By misfortune there were three little boyes playing in the entry, who seeing mee in a habit which they were not accustomed to, did entertaine mee with such out-cries, fears and shreekes, that with their noise many began to look out at the windows: then came a groome, who thinking▪ I had done those children▪ some injury, strook me such a blow on the head with a Curry-comb he had in his hand, that he had almost astonied me. I thought to excuse my self in those troubles, [Page] with some humble reasons; but it was a kinde of preaching to a desart. And so after I had made my complaint to 30. or 40. that were come into the entry, they resolved to put me into the street, and turn me over to my first tormentors, who waited at the doore for me, whose number being by the one halfe increased, they began to follow mee up another street, with such a noise and tumult, that from all sides came an infinite of people to see the cause of this extraordinary tumult, thinking I was some fellow that was whipped up and down the streets. I was so troubled, and besides my selfe, that I had not the wit to aske where I was; and though I could have done it, yet that accursed company [Page] of Humble-bees did not give me time to doe it: so that all as I could doe, was to hasten my pace, endevouring to finde some gate of the Citie, taking it for my last remedy, to goe out of it. But my evill fortune not yet satisfied, (to my greater confusion) caused me to see a Church which stood open, and a Priest saying Masse in it, and many hearing of him; I went in, thanking God a thousand times for the favour he had done me, in delivering mee out of the hands of so many Caldeans. I was scarce gone up the second step, but there began such a laughter amongst the poore lame people that stood begging at the Church doore, that they which were within the Church very attentive at masse, turning [Page] their backes to the Altar, began to gaze upon me, and second the others laughter, whereat I remained so astonished and confused, that I stood a great while still in the midst of the Church, turning my selfe no way; and I had stood so a great while longer, if one of them as stood next to me had not come to mee and bid me make cleane my cloke.
So I went into a corner of the Church, where looking upon my selfe from head to foot, I found a hares scut and a peece of a sheepes gut pinned upon my cloake, and the rest of it embroidered with spittles and other filth, which together with my habit, had beene the cause of the tumult in the street, and laughter in the Church; the sudden murmure [Page] of them which heard masse was so loud, that the Priest looked about three or foure times, to see the motive of this newes, and because I perceived he knew that I was the cause of that whispering and noise, every time he turned himselfe about to the people and cast his eyes upon me, mee thought he reproved me as a disquieter and disturber of that spirituall rest. Which did so trouble me and make me so ashamed, that I repented a thousand times that I was come into the Church. Once amongst the rest, when the Priest turned towards the people, he looked upon me, and whether it was true, or but onely my imagination, I thought that in stead of saying Dominus vobiscum, hee had said to mee, [Page] Why doest not thou get thee hence? with which impression I suddenly went out of the Church so enraged, astonished, and troubled, that not looking what was before me, nor regarding where I set my feet, as I came out of the doore I hitting my head against a Friers nose, who stood in the middle of it, begging with a box in his hand, and gave him such a knocke, that he fell on his hands and head to the ground, and the box tumbled downe the steps, at the bottome whereof stood ten or twelve foot-boies holding their masters horses, who enraged against me for the knocke I hit the Frier, began to make a tumult, and hold up their rough cudgels against me: and surely they would have evill entreated [Page] me, if my laying hands on my patient sword, and the sacrednes of the place where they stood had not stayed them. Yet using their tongues for instruments of revenge, they followed me down the street with such injurious words and speeches, as were able to have scandalized the desperatest fellow in the world: And they did not leave me, till crossing of a street, I shut my selfe up in a Cookes house, where I staid all night, yeelding infinite thanks to God for being gotten out of so great a feare and confusion.
The day following I resolved to take another way, thinking that of the last day to have been unlucky. And so with hope of better fortune I tooke heart, and came out of the house with the [Page] same gravity and statelinesse as I used before: yet still looking every way, to see if I met with any of mine enemies. Truly that day was lucky, for none followed me in the streets, onely the Shoomakers, Coblers, and Taylors in every street as I went by, would leave their worke, and standing upon their doore sills, would hisse, scoffe, and laugh at me till I was gotten out of their sight. Whereof I made small account, it seeming but a pastime to that was past.
This manner of contempt and scorne lasted all the while I went in Spanish habit, which was almost two months, during which time my very soule was tormented with divers affronts, fictions, and jests, whereto I could by no [Page] meanes finde any remedy: so that the remainder of that time, I was forced to goe in the evenings after Sunne setting, like a night-Bat, or a man that hid himselfe for debt, it being impossible by day to goe in the street an hundred paces, without having twice as many boyes about me. Once that I presumed to goe over a market place, the sight of mee was such a novelty, and seemed so strange to certaine women which sold radishes, salads, and egges, that comming neare one who was weighing of a Cheese of ten pounds, she so wondred, and was so affrighted at the sight of me, that the scales fell out of her hands, and both scales and cheese fell upon a basket of eggs which stood under them, out of [Page] which immediately began to runne a streame of whites, and from her mouth issued more excommunicate curses then doth come from an Exorcist to one possessed of the divell: the egs were another womans who stood by her, and perceiving her ware upon the ground, without scolding with the other, tooke hold of three or foure of her cheeses, which stood there upon a little table, so that the one striving to take them away from her, and the other to keepe them, they strugled so long that both they, the table, cheeses, and basket, and all came to the ground, and falling with their heeles upwards, discovered &c.
I stood by looking on, and [Page] laughing with the rest, who stood by looking upon the skirmish, which lasted above a quarter of an houre, struggling, and scratching upon the ground, with the skirts of their coates over their heads, so that those that came at last could not perceive what it was, seeing nothing but their buttocks and their feet. The battaile ended with some little bloud, bruises and losse of much haire on both sides; and having wiped their faces which were all bedawbed, with butter, egs, durt, and bloud: seeing me there, and remembring that I was the first cause of the skirmish, they both with one accord tooke up the broken egs which lay on the ground, and ranne towards me [Page] with their haire about their ears▪ and barefoote throughing them at me: after them arose all the rest, and beleeving I had beene the cause of all that mischiefe, they began to showre upon me so many stones, onions, peares, whole cabidges, and peeces of poore John, that they made me looke blacker, and more disfigured then they; and I remember I could make no more use of the cloake nor the hat, seeing a whole army of women upon me, so enraged as they were, I sought to escape from them running as nimble as a Deere, forgetting that gravity, and statelinesse which I professed.
By good fortune in this my trouble I met with a gentleman, who questionlesse had beene in [Page] Spaine, and moved with compassion, tooke me into a friends house, which by chance was at the end of that street, for me unfortunate, and commanded certaine groomes to make cleane my cloake, and clothes. I came out againe, timorous, and angry; fearing to commit some infamous action, as really I had done if I had drawne my sword against ten or fifteene women, who warred against me with nothing but onions and cabidges; and I had scarce gone a hundred paces, but a farre off I espied a troope of people who very silently stood hearkning to a long and set discourse which a blinde man had with a dogge tied to his girdle in a chaine. The dogge hearkened to him [Page] attentively, that he truely seemed to have judgement and capacity to apprehend all that was said unto him. So having made him dance to the sound of a cymball which he carried at his backe, he began to aske him certaine questions, and amongst the rest, he said unto him what wilt thou doe for the King of France? Then the dogge began to dance and skip, and make such shew of rejoicing, that if it had beene a man as indeed it was a beast, he that had seene him would have judged him to be mad or frantick, seeing how he danced and stirred about. This question being past, the blinde man asked him againe, what he would doe for the King of Spaine? Lord! who could [Page] relate the foolish noise which that beast made with barking? truly the haire upon the ridge of his backe began to bristle, hee grinned with his teeth, turned his eies awrie, pricked up his eares, and began to gape so wide that he seemed to have a legion of divells within him. I could look on no longer, I was so enraged & even smothered with anger, to see that the hatred & disdain against the Spanish nation, should be a means for blind men to get their livings in France. Whereupon I resolved to cloath my self after the French fashion, and conforme my self to the use of the country, perswading my selfe that I might thereby prevent a thousand inconveniences.
I went away from that company, [Page] thinking that my habit gathered more people together then the blinde man and his dogge: and so taking my way homewards, I found at the end of a narrow and unfrequented street, a woman sitting upon her doore sille, and giving her child pappe, who being froward, and untoward, would by no perswasions eate his pappe. The poore mother vexed with the childes obstinacy, seeing all the faire means she could use, could not make it take that which she would give it, made use of the present occasion, and when I was neare her she said to it, see the Spaniard that comes to carry away little boyes that will not eate the pap: in truth that little creature [Page] was so affrited when it saw me, that full of feare with a panting heart hee held up his little hands, as a signe to his mother to give him all the pap at once: This thing made mee laugh so heartily that for two houres after, I did nothing but laugh and wonder at it.
But if I should particularize unto you, the broiles, the decepts, and cousenings, which the inkeepers used towards mee, I should never have done. I never came into an Inne but I came out of it, with a quarrell, was cousoned, and yet forced to aske all those that were present forgivenesse: The quart descu in my hands, or rather in their handes was worth ten sols: a relon of ten sols was converted into a [Page] halfe quart d'escu, and this into a royall, and that of five royalls into five sols: and if I chanced to reply any thing, they would turn towards me like Lions, chiding me, and saying, that if I did not know what value coynes were of, I should learne, and not contest with honest people that feared God, and caried a good conscience: and they would tell me I had no skill in Arithmeticke, and especially in subtraction. Many times I should buy some wares which I knew would not waste at the ayre nor the fire, yet within a quarter of an houre in a pound I should finde foure ounces wanting. With these and the like deceipts I passed my first dayes, till knowledge and practice of the countrey shewed me [Page] what meanes I should use to free me from these evils.
CHAP. XI.
The contrariety and antipathy of the soule and body of the Spaniards and the French.
I Have thought a thousand times to aske the midwife in what manner the French came out of their mothers bellies, for seeing the contrariety that is betweene them and the Spaniards, mee thinkes it is impossible for them [...]o be borne in the same manner, seeing one can hardly presume, [...]hat having the middle and the end, the body and the soule, yea [...]nd their very death contrary, they should have their naturall [Page] beginning, which is their birth, alike. This contrariety is so great and so remarkable, that to define a Frenchman, one cannot doe it more properly, then to say he is a Spaniard the contrary way. For there the Spaniard makes an end where the Frenchman begins, as I shall shew in the following chapters. As for the soule I must confesse that they are all created in tempore, and that they are all of the same species, and that God doth with one action create and infuse them into the organicall body. And if faith did not teach me, I should never beleeve, that French and Spanish soules were of the same nature. Yet I finde, that if we consider the soule of it selfe, and without any reference to the body of either Nation, the [Page] soule it selfe is neither French nor Spanish: And this specificall unitie which Divinity admits between them, is not against that which I say; for considering the soule within the body, it is no more indifferent, but determined to bee either Spanish or French.
Wherefore I say, that the soule determined into a French body, hath her powers quite contrary to a Spanish one. First the French understanding hath its apprehension very quicke, and with a great deale of ease will goe through any difficulty that can be proposed unto it: yet it goeth no further, nor entreth into deeper discourses, which depend upon the same difficulty: But with the same speedinesse as hee [Page] [...] [Page] [...] [Page] did apprehend it, with the same it goeth away and is forgotten. Contrariwise, the Spaniards understanding is slow in apprehending the difficulty, but having once understood it, he will hold it fast, drawing a thousand consequences out of it, and sifting every point of it.
The Spaniard his understanding is altogether speculative, since that in all his actions, his end is no other but the contemplation of things, without afterwards directing or settling of it upon any servile or mechanicall worke. Wherefore you shall finde few naturall Spaniards of any mechanick trade, as Shoomaker, Taylor, Cobler, Joyner, Inne-keeper, or the like. For which I call the French to witnesse, [Page] who goe into Spaine, and come backe againe offended, because they finde no Alehouses nor Innes as they have in France, so that sometimes they may travell three dayes and not come at an Inne, whereby they are constrained to carry meat with them in their bags, and wine in their bottles. The French understanding is altogether practicall, being it is not content with the only knowledge of things, but learnes them for to make use of them therein, where he may reap some profit by it, and so is not idle, but to avoid idlenesse employes it selfe in any manner of exercise; and thence growes the variety of trades in that Nation. The greatest part of your French wits addict themselves to the studie [Page] of the Law and Canons, and very few study Positive or Schoole Divinitie. Amongst the Spaniards few study the Law, and almost all Divinitie.
The French understanding, though it receive and hold things concerning Faith and Religion for infallible, yet it cannot stay and fixe it selfe on them, but will see, consider, and also judge whether that which faith sayes is as he meanes, and finding some difficulty, he runs his boat a ground, beleeving himselfe onely, and denying that which others hold. The Spaniard his understanding is fearfull, and humble in that which concernes faith, and determination of the Church. So that as soone as any Article of faith is propounded unto him, he [Page] presently sets bounds to all his knowledge, wisedome, and discourse, and not onely strives not to know whether that bee so or no, which the faith sets downe, but useth all the meanes hee can to avoid speculation thereon, fearing to fall into some errour through the frailty of his understanding. Whence groweth the punctuall obedience which the Spaniards yeeld to the Church of Rome, and the difference and dissention that is thereupon amongst the French.
The French man will resolve upon businesses of greatest importance, when he is in most company, being not disturbed by any tumult, noise, or outcrie: so that I have noted in this nation, that your Princes, [Page] Lords, and other persons of quality, will dispatch their commissions, and other weighty businesses sitting at table, the eating being no disturbance to the audience which they give to a thousand people: and sometimes they will sit at meales and have one of each side of them, who at the same time will talke to them, and they will answer them all as punctually, as if they were shut up privately in a chamber, without any disturbance and had nothing to doe, but to hearken to them, which speake to them. All this is contrary to the Spanish understanding, who if hee have any businesse of consequence, retires himself into some solitary place, and is such an enemy of company [Page] and tumult, that if a fly comes buzzing by his eare, when he is in the depth of his businesse it is enough to hinder his resolution.
In the second power of the soul which is the memory, there is contradiction, & antipathy, since the French mans is altogether concerning the present: I mean, that all his actions have none other end, but that which they then have and possesse, remembring neither that which is past, nor that which may happen: and so for a content and pleasure in hand, they forget all past adversities, and make no count of any thing which may come, though they know assuredly, that that very occasion once past, it shall surely happen to them. The Spaniards are quite contrary, [Page] who weigh all their actions with the scale of what is past, and what is to come; not plunging themselves, in the content, and enjoyment of the present, without thinking, weighing, or esteeming all inconveniences which may ensue: and therefore reducing this point to two words, I say: that the French mans memory is about the present, if one may beare present things in memory: and the Spaniards is of that which is past, and is to come: the French will easily remember, or forget a thing, being quickly angry for any present wrong done to them, and easily forget and pardon it: Your Spaniards must be much urged before they will remember an offence, but once [Page] had in minde, they will hardly forget it. I could make a whole book and a large volume, of the contrarieties, and antipathies which are in their wills, if I might speak all that which truly I might, without distasting of neither nation: I will therefore be content, without touching the vertues or vices, which might bee found in either, God onely being perfect, and without fault, to say that there is no nation in the world so patient, and suffering, as the Spanish nation is; so that it will never quarrell nor contend, unlesse it be upon a more then urgent occasion, which must prick him on to it. The French contrariwise, if you doe them but a haires breadth of offence or injury, he [Page] presently makes a breach, and will never rest till they be revenged by fighting.
The Spaniards are true, firme, and constant in their loves; so that many times they goe beyond the bounds of affection, adoring that which they love, and with so much fidelity, that they would bee afraid to annoy it so much as with a thought, and they inviolably preserve this faith; no chance whatsoever, being able to remove them from what they professe, yea they are so affected to their will, that many times they lose their judgement, which never happens to the French who are so mutable in their wills, and purposes, and so voluble that having set their affection upon one, they will [Page] settle it upon a hundred more, if so many should come to them. And if any there be, as there are many, that have not this defect: yet their affections are to changeable, that the least anger in the world, will change their fire of love into a colder snow, then that which is in winter upon the Pyrenean mountaines.
A French man that is in his Mistrisses favour, will doe what he can to let his friendes and all the world know his being in favour, and his being acceptable unto her: a thing much abhorred by the Spaniard, who if he be in any such predicament, with all care and diligence, will seeke to hide his content from his friends, and all the world, and even from himselfe, if it were possible. [Page] Finally, in this particuler they have two contrary motions; The French man seekes to have that seene, which lies hidden. The Spaniard seekes nothing more, then to hide that which is outward and in light.
The Spaniards delight extreamly, in outward apparance, and honour, caring more to satisfie the world, then for their owne interests; so that they care not for suffering want or misery, so that it be not known: and there are some who being in places that they must goe abroad, handsome in cloathes, want will bring them to that extremity, that they will fast two daies to have a handsome cloak, and a starched ruffe, to goe abroad in, and they will carry themselves [Page] so lustily, well disposed, and haughty, that you would thinke they had kept a very good house. Contrariewise the French have no other end in their actions, but their proper interest, and pleasure, so that if he may but fare well in his diet, he cares not what the world can say: and if necessity sorce him to it, he will sell his cloake, his sword, yea his very shirt, and drawers; and after he hath consumed them, hee will goe forth naked if need be into the street, to give his friends satisfaction; holding it no disgrace to say that he hath sold them to buy food. If a Spaniard be so neere driven that hee must sell his cloathes, to buy food; hee will first sell his shirt▪ seeing that with his doublet, and [Page] ruffe, he covers the want of it; and if his need increases he will sell his doublet, covering his body with his cloake, after his doublet goes his sword, after that his ruffe; and the last thing of all is his cloake. But the French man when he is in want, doth quite contrary, beginning where the Spaniard ends, and the first thing hee sells is his cloake, next his doublet, then his britches, and last of all his shirt: in want there is none more valiant and fearlesse then the Spaniard; nor is there any are more timorous then the French, if he want victualls. A Spaniard will live three daies upon a peece of bread, and will not bee dismaid, or shew losse of courage, but if the French man [Page] wants his pottage but one day he thinkes himselfe lost and undone.
A Spaniards generositie is notable when he begs an almes; seeing hee will never confesse hee doth it for necessity, but by some accident or disaster; that he was forced to save his life and his honour, to cloath himselfe in a poore habit, & beg in the streets; and the words he useth when he begs shall bee these or the like: Please you, Sir, to doe some curtesie for a poore cavallier, who is come out of his Countrey for such a mischance; that hee hath beene forced to cloath himselfe in this habit as you see: And when you know who it is that begs (as long it shall not bee before you doe know) you will [Page] thinke your selfe happy that you pleasured a man of my condition and qualitie; and if by chance he that hears him, and hearkens to his complete speeches, aske him who hee is, and what mischance he hath had; having first made him sweare that he wil not discover him, he will answer that he is nephew to an Earle or Duke, or brother to the Admirall of Castile, and that a great Princesse falling in love with him, he conveyed her out of her fathers house in mans apparell, which being discovered by her parents, he was forced to absent himselfe and live in that fashion unknown, till his friends had made peace; and hee will say that he hath fifteene or twenty thousand crowns a year, and eight or ten Baronies: [Page] Finally, the Spaniard then shews his generosity most, when hee sees himselfe most crossed. But if a Frenchman comes to that passe, that he hath not a peny, nor any thing to sell for food, good Lord who can rehearse his inventions! his stratagems, his wry mouths, and shruggings, to make his misery knowne, and to draw men to bestow an almes upon him? Hee will shrinke up his shoulders, crosse his hands, fall on his knees, beat his breast, weepe, and with a dolefull humble voice full of anguish, will desire you to give him a farthing, to buy him bread, seeing he hath eaten nothing in three dayes; he will say he hath nothing in this world that he can depend upon, nor any that can afford him any [Page] [...] [Page] [...] [Page] comfort, that hee is altogether wretched, forsaken of his kindred, parents and friends: finally, he shewes so much lowlinesse, and faints so, that hee should bee harder then any stone, that hearing a relation so full of compassion and misery, should not bestow something upon him.
The contrariety of body which is betweene the French and the Spaniards is so manifest, that it would bee time lost that were spent in discoursing long upon it; it being manifestly seene, that the most part of Spaniards are little, and your French tall. Your Spaniards are brown, your French faire: your Spaniards brave blacke haire, your French red or flaxen: your French weare long haire, your Spaniards [Page] short: your French have spare legs, your Spaniards fleshy, seeing a Spaniards calfe of his legge will bee as big as a Frenchmans thigh: your French let their beard grow, your Spaniards cut it, leaving nothing but the mustachoes and a little tuffe in the middle: your French are cholericke, your Spaniards flegmaticke: your Spaniards are slow, your French quick: your French are light, your Spaniards solid: your French are merry, your Spaniards melancholy: your French are bold, your Spaniards shamefaced: your French are precipitious, your Spaniards warie: your French liberall, your Spaniards sparing. From these may bee considered infinite thinges which shall alwayes [Page] be found wholly contrary.
CHAP. XII.
Of the contrariety that is betweene the French and the Spaniards in their clothing.
IF one consider a Spaniards habit, you shall finde it quite contrary to the French; the Spaniard from the waste upward being broad and thicke, and the French man contrariwise, from the middle upwards is slender, his doublet being very close and strait. Amongst a thousand Spaniards you shall finde none but weares a cassack, and amongst a thousand French, you shall not finde one that will weare it: there is not a French man but will in [Page] summer weare his doublet open before and behind, holding it a stately thing to shew their shirt: The Spaniard although there should fall lances of fire, will never unbutton himselfe, holding it disgracefull to shew ones shirt: A Spainards hat is high in the crowne, and narrow in the brimmes; the French quite contrary: The neck and collar of a Spaniard is close before; the French mans open: That which the Spaniard weares upon his armes, the French man weares it upon his thighes, wearing long sleeves, and short breeches▪ and the French man wears very long breeches, and his doublet sleeves very close: The Spaniard wears garters, and the French man weares none at all: The French [Page] fancy weares two great roses which cover almost all his shoo: The Spanish pompe is to weare such a small latchet that you can scarce perceive it: your French weare high hollowed and pointed heeles, your Spaniard weares them low, broad, and flat: The Spaniard weares his stockings drawne up smooth, that you can scarce take hold of them with a paire of pincers, the French man lets them fall loose, desiring to have foure plaites just above his heele: The Spaniards weare a long cloake and let it hang downe; the French weare it short, and so tuckt up, that you can scarce see any thing of it but the cape: A French man cannot hold his armes under his cloake as he walkes the streets, the Spaniards [Page] never hold them out: your French weare a little sword and with small hilts, and hanging before them: your Spaniards weare their rapiers with large hilts, and weare it upon their side: your French man weares his dagger on the middle of his girdle: your Spaniard hangs it on the one side: your French man when hee goeth to fight in duell, will put of his doublet, and his shirt too: the Spaniard wears his shirt, his doublet, his coate, and his jacke of maile: the French man begins to button his doublet from the necke downe towards the waste: the Spaniard begins at the waste and ends at the necke: the Spaniard when hee makes himselfe ready puts on his doublet first; [Page] the French man last: the French man in cold weather puts on a wastecoate in the night, and puts it off in the day, because he will not seem thicke wasted: The Spaniard weares it the day, and pull it off at night.
CHAP. XIII.
The contrarieties in eating and drinking.
THE Spaniards ordinary rule is to eate twice a day, a [...] at dinner and at supper: The French man foure times eating besides those two meales a [...] breakefast, and afternoones nunching: The Spaniard brings in fruit at the beginning of meales, your French at the latter end: [Page] your Spaniards have every one their severall dishes to eate pottage in: your French eate all in one platter: The meate which is set on a Spaniards table is cut in small peeces: The French mans is whole: your French will put all their fingers in the dish to take out a sop, your Spaniard will very carefully take it up with two fingers, if he have no forke: the Spaniard reserves what good meate remaines at dinner, for supper: the French man never brings meate to the table againe: the French man eates his boiled meate first; the Spaniard his [...]ost meate: the Spaniard eates [...]allads onely at the supper, and at the beginning of it: your French man at every meale, and at the [...]atter end: the French man after [Page] meals walks and goes: the Spaniard rests and sleeps: when the Spaniard drinks he fils water out first, and then wine; the French the wine first, and then the water: the French man alwaies talkes while hee is eating; if the Spaniard speakes a word it is a wonder: the French man cals aloud for his drinke, the Spaniard beckens, and saies nothing: the Spaniard eates much bread, and little meate, the French much meate and little bread: the Spaniard eates very leasurely; the French man very fast.
CHAP. XIIII.
Of their Antipathy in going.
IT is a strange thing to see a company of French men walking in the street; for they will all, if there were a hundred, walke side by side, taking up the whole bredth of the street, and they goe as close as grapes in a cluster, stumbling, falling, and rising, yet never forsaking their ranke; neither advancing forwards, nor tarrying behinde, though they meet with other company, and bee justled by them; or though they justle, and be ready to overthrow one another: The Spaniards doe quite contrary; for if they be above [Page] three in company, they will goe together but onely two and two, so that when they are many, they make as it were a procession: when the French walke alwaies in their turnings they keepe their places: the Spaniards change at every turne, those going into the middle which were on the sides: the French ordinarily walke as fast, as if they had Sergeants at their heeles: the Spaniards walke with such leasure and gravity, that they that see them, thinke they have lately beene sicke, or have yet some quartane ague: your French use to walke about the city booted and spurd, the Spaniards cannot indure it; and if they doe chance to walke in bootes, they will not weare spurs: your French when they [Page] are a horseback, ride alwaies a full trot: the Spaniards ride leasurely: The French mens footboyes runne after their Masters when they ride: the Spaniards go before: your Spaniards on horsebacke weare their cloakes and swords, and their mans sword too: amongst the French, the Page carries his Masters sword and cloake: if a French man walkes pensive, he lets his cloak hang upon one shoulder, and holds his hand upon the pommell of his sword, the Spaniard casts out his legs, and turnes up his mustachioes: when your French goe together in the street they leape, laugh, and make a noise, that you may heare them a mile off: the Spaniards walke upright, stiffe, and grave, say nothing, [Page] nor make any uncivill or unmodest action: the French man when he meets a friend, salutes him with his whole body, bending downe his head, kissing his hands, and making legs, and stand halfe an houre in such action: the Spaniard holds his body and his head, as stiffe as a stake, & only with the pulling off his hat, requites the prolixe curtesies, and reiterated ceremonies of the French: a French man though noble will make no difficulty, to pull an apple out of his pocket, or buy it in the street, and eate it before all the world: a thing so abhorred by the Spaniard that hee would not doe it for the world, fearing to offend them that look upon him: when the French man seeth some body [Page] a farre off and would becken to him, he lifts up his hand towards his shoulders: the Spaniard casts his hand downe, holding it towards his feet.
CHAP. XV.
Of the contrariety in speaking.
HE that would discourle of all the particulers, which might be spoken of in this point, must of necessity make a great volume of it, wherefore to shun prolixity to which I am an enemy, I will only touch the property of these two languages, & also of the third which is the Italian: Some curious wits faine that these three languages had their originall with the beginning of [Page] [...] [Page] [...] [Page] the world, and that they were all three used between God, the serpent, and man: They say that when God commanded Adam he should not eat of the tree of knowledge, he spake to him in Spanish, shewing thereby that the property of that language was gravity, imperiousnes, command, and noblenesse: after God had given him this command they say the serpent, the better to induce him to sin, and to disobey Gods command, spake to him in Italian, to shew us that amongst all languages there is none so perswasive, sweet, and affected, as the Italian: after our first parents had sinned God called them, and asking them the cause of their disobedience, they answered him in French, [Page] there being no language to free and excuse themselves like unto it.
As for the rest it is seene by experience that the French ordinarily do speak much, and aloud, the Spaniards a little, and softly. If one aske a Spaniard why hee came out of Spaine, hee will answer that the King sent for him, because he should go treat about some businesse of great importance. And if you aske a Frenchman the same question, hee will say he went a pilgrimage to St. Iaques in Galicia, or to visit the holy Crucifixe of Burges, and that his fellow dying in an Hospitall, he staid behinde looking for some company to goe home into his Countrey with him. Finally, you shall get nothing out [Page] of a Spaniard that is out of Spain, but greatnesse, nobility, and authority; and from a Frenchman when he is in Spaine, you shall heare nothing but abasing of himselfe.
Your Spaniards have a noted property, different from all other Nations, which is, that being out of their Countrey, they love one another, honour, and respect one another extreamly, though at home they have beene mortall enemies. And if any one questions him cōcerning his fellow, asking him who, and what he is, though you question him about the poorest fellow in the world, and the sonne of a cobler, he will answer with great admiration, and say, Is it possible Sir that you doe not know that cavallier, [Page] and that you have not heard of him (though perhaps he hath never a shooe on his feet) I dare lay a wager, that there is scarce in the City or Kingdome a childe of five yeares old but doth know him, at least if he bee of any fashion. You shall understand Sir, that he is sonne to the Maggiorasco of Castile, and of the greatest families of Spaine; and there are many that say, hee is second cousin to King Don Sebastian: yet hee goes disguised, and in the habit you see, by reason of some mischance; and I beseech you, Sir, not to discover him: for if the King should know of it, hee would take it very ill, that he did not goe directly to alight at Court: and hee would not for all the world be known. [Page] If a Frenchman, or any of another Nation, meets with another Countrey-man out of France, presently they become mortall enemies, speaking the worst they can one of another; and if any one desires to know, and be informed what his companion is, he will with all manner of contempt, say: Sir, that is a Frenchman, a poore Carpenters sonne, whose fathers goods were all taken away for debt, and had not above eight or ten crowns left, with which hee bought that suit at the Brokers, which makes him seeme to bee some fine fellow; but before foure dayes comes to an end, hee will sell it, and then you shall see him goe a begging: and so will speake the worst hee can of him.
[Page] All the industry in the world cannot make a Frenchman keep a secret, but that hee must needs reveale it: And all the drugges in the Indies shall not get a secret from a Spaniard. Finally, all the Spaniards actions are contrary to the French, and there is no concordancie nor resemblance in any of them.
CHAP. XVI.
Of the fruits of the said Antipathy.
THe aforenamed, and many other contrarieties, which manifest the hatred and mortall enmity between these two Nations, were sowen by that accursed Satan, the enemy of mankind, [Page] planting this accursed root between them, that so the head being infected, all the members might also bee out of order, and overthrowne, with such extravagancie of Religions, Customes, and Lawes, as wee now see over all the world: since that we may freely say, that the liberty which barbarous nations have to multiply their beastly Customes, Statutes and Edicts, proceeds from nothing else, but from the enmity and disagreement of these two: and that the greatnesse of many Princes, who at this time have great dominion and command in divers parts of the world, groweth from the small confidence these have in one another, each doubting to lose their owne, whilest they engage [Page] themselves in the conquest of others.
Who makes any question but if they would with one accord have communicated that wonderfull talent, of knowledge, vertue, and learning which God hath bestowed upon them, but that they might have gotten out of the divells hands an infinite number of soules, which for want of teaching, lie now buried, in the darknesse and chaos of ignorance and error? And wee see that by reason of our sinnes, and to the great affronting of the valour and greatnesse of these two nations, a barbarous and tirant King governes all the East: Christendome also in part yeelding him obedience, hommage, and tribute, and all the world [Page] honours, and holds him for a great Lord, to the great disparagement of the honour due to the Catholick faith, her chiefe, and defenders: yet it hath no other ground nor cause, but this accursed hatred, and pernicious enmity: For the strength and valour of these two nations lying buried in themselves, necessarily their enemies must increase, and so innumerable heresies, errors, sects, and unbeleefes spread themselves abroad in the world, by which the body of the Church is daily persecuted and evill intreated: wherefore the divell being cunning and well experienced, made use of the invention and strategeme of the good shepeard, when a troope of wolves fall upon his sheepe, [Page] which is to set his dogs, and mastifs upon them, that whilest they two fight, his flocke may passe securely and untouched: A cunning and marveilous invention of the divell to come to his accursed ends: He saw plainly, that if he left the strength and mouthes of these two valiant Lions unmuzelled, they would have swallowed up all infidelity and barbarisme, filling it with all manner of holinesse and vertue, so that there would have nothing redounded unto him but shame and confusion: wherefore fearing to lose the command he had over the infidels, he caused hatred and discord to come between these two nations, and so diverted them, that they might not disturbe the increase and [Page] prosperity of his vassals, and truely when I consider this point, I am astonished with wonder, being not able to imagine or think, what vaile or cataract, so blinds these Nations, as that they cannot see these evills; and that they will suffer their enemies to grow great, and exalt themselves before their faces; to the blemish of that reputation they hold in the world; it being thought that they are the two greatest Monarchies of it.
And if the zeale of their own honour did not move them to open their eies, and to take it ill, that they being stiled the one most Christian, and the other most Catholick; a barbarous infidell and tirant, should usurpe and command the holy Sepulchre, [Page] and that he should entitle himselfe grand Signior: and the continuall cries of poore Grecia, Bulgarie, Sclavonia, and Armenia, and many other poore Christian Provinces, which onely implore the favour, and protection of those two Nations or either of them, for to bring them out of the wretched slavery and servitude wherein they live: yet might they be moved to compassion; by reason that it is one of the easiest & securest enterprises that is in the world; as it is well knowne to them who have been in those parts.
This is the snare wherewith the divell keeps tied the strength of these two Nations, and the vaile which hee hangs before their eies: there being at this [Page] time an infinite number of valiant souldiers buried in sloth, who study nothing, but how to undo and breake the Spanish power, and policy: who if they were imploied against the infidells would performe more heroicall exploits then Homer writes of Hector and Vlysses. With such perswasions and deceits doth this cursed enemy bewitch a great number of Cavalliers & Gentlemen that live contented with their meane fortunes, who if they would employ their valours and warlike courages in Turky, would not make plaine Cavalliers, but mighty Monarchs. In the same manner are in France many Illustrious Princes, and magnanimous Lords, which following the ordinary course of the Court, [Page] and service of their King, live at home, who if they did put to execution the inclination of their noble mindes in Africke or in Asia, would conquer more Provinces then Ferdinand Cortese did in America. Wherefore I know not by what diabolicall witchcraft such noble understandings are blinded, that they doe not perceive that by this hatred and enmity, both Nations lose many Crownes and Kingdomes which they might have subject to their dominions. And that their union should not onely not suffer themselves to hurt one another, but neither of them to bee hurt by other Nations, but be assured also, that such a concord and amity could have no other end nor issue, but the service of [Page] God, the exaltation of his Church, the peace of the world, the banishing of infidelity, and the increase of the common good. Things which this pestiferous venome of enmity, troubles, and hinders, there redounding from it nothing but multiplicity of heresies in Europe, institution of sects and religions in the East, the observance of beastly and salvage customes and statutes in those parts of Libia and Ethiopia, the exaltation of Mahomets law in Africke and Asia, the Turks swelling pride in Constantinople, the little respect and discourtesie of the King of Fesse and Marocco, the poore Christians miseries which live among the infidels, the captivity of the holy Sepulchre, the martyrdoms [Page] and torments of an infinite number of slaves in heathen lands, the multitude of Lordships and States, which know no Kings nor Lords, the persecution of the Catholicke Church, the perturbations and commotions of common-wealths, the small security of neighbours, the contempt of those who are farre off, and the boldnesse of vassalls. All these things happen by reason of the hatred and enmity of these two nations, which certainly if they were as well united in conformity of wills, as they are in confederation by way of marriage, scarce the world were able to resist the force of such an union. In witnesse whereof I will alledge a reason which an old and wise Moore told me upon a Friday in [Page] Constantinople, who after hee had long questioned with mee concerning the manner of living of the Kings of Europe, and particularly of these two kingdoms, which they confesse to bee the chiefe and the most powerfull of Christendome, he told me that every time they came into their Moscheas to say their prayers, they prayed to God that the hatred of these two Nations might last for ever, that the one being continually suspicious and mistrustfull of the other, they might not remember them, nor thinke upon taking armes against them.
CHAP. XVII.
Of the cause of the enmity and antipathy of the Spaniards and the French.
I Have endeavoured divers times to finde out by speulation the fundamentall cause of the disdaine and hatred betweene these two Nations: Because that though it is true, that the Divell hath been the principall authour of this antipathy and discord, to hinder the fruit which might grow through their union, yet we must presume, that hee found in them some ground and root to increase such a cursed dissention, and pernitious poyson.
Some doe attribute this contrariety to the difference of the [Page] starres, and their influences, as their universall cause, and say, that the situation of the heavens, and constellation of Spaine, being farre different from that which the French have, consequently the temperament and humours of both must bee very different. They confirme this with Hippocrates doctrine in his booke de Aere, Aquis & Locis, which saith, that the divers constitutions of the starres, is cause of the variety of temperaments, complexions and humours of man. And verily hee that considers the humours of these two Nations in order with the constellation and change of time, shall find some likelihood in this reason; seeing that in Spaine, if hot weather once begins, it continueth [Page] in the same vigour three or foure months, there being in all that time no notable change; and of the same compasse is the Spanish humour: seeing that setting upon a purpose, hee keeps himselfe firme in it, without any change or alteration at all. It is otherwise in France: for there, bee it Winter or Summer, the cold nor the heat, nor the faire weather, never lasts three dayes together; but the variablenesse of this constellation is such, that a man can never perceive what time of the yeare it is. The inhabitants of Paris know this to bee true, because that in one day there you shall have the weather change eight or ten times, the morning or day breake being very faire, and two hours after there [Page] falling a deluge of rain: after the which, the Sunne will appeare more bright and resplendent then in the month of June: and hee shall scarce have spread his beams, but you shall heare a noise of thunder, lightning and winde, as though the world were sinking: and therefore there being a dependencie from the influence and constellation, the French, as subjected to an inconstant clymate, must needs be voluble and inconstant in their determinations. And therfore hee that will assigne for the reason of this Antipathy and hatred, the diversity of climates, will say, that the Divell grounded his malice upon nature, making use of the differences of the starres.
This reason, though in appearance [Page] it bears some shew of truth, yet it doth not resolve our question: seeing that though the starres have dominion over naturall things, yet they do not extend their force to acts of absolute command of the will, which are hatred and love, and therfore we must confesse, that those who bring this reason, that the starres encline things subject unto them, (yet naturall ones) and by reason of the league, which it hath with their wills, this influence may somewhat touch them, moving them in some manner, but yet it cannot force them.
And since this matter gives me occasion of speaking of a difficulty, which is commonly handled by curious and learned men, I will not passe it over with [Page] silence, without speaking that which my small talent will affoord me. All the world almost marvailes at some things which the Astrologers fore-tell, which depend on mans wil, over which no constellation, influence, or celestiall vertue, hath power to move it or force it; but contrariwise the will and discourse command and governe the starres with their influences. Whence came that common Proverb, Sapiens dominabitur astris: and yet wee see that many times they prognosticate the truth, and so punctually, as if the starres did directly enforce mans will [...] whence holding such predictions to bee miraculous, they call the Astrologians Magicians, no [...] beleeving that such things may [Page] be known by naturall reasons, thinking it impossible, that the command of the starres should go beyond materiall things, under the which are not comprehended the powers and actions of our soule.
Surely they which finde great difficulty in this, doe it not without great ground: but if they [...]hall consider the order which our understanding and the will [...]old in producing of their acti [...]ns, they shall finde, that it may [...]e done only by the perfect spe [...]ulation of the starres; without [...]oing beyond the bounds of na [...]re. Since all will yeeld to me, [...]at the starres have their influ [...]nces in sublunary things; and [...]at they have great power over [...]aturall things, they being governed [Page] by them: and that being true, the consequence followes, that the celestiall vertue and influence, shall have command over that which is natural in man, as might bee the body with the senses, to which our soule is so linked, and so depends upon them, that it can produce no act without them, representing unto them the matter, which is the intelligible species; it necessarily followes, that by reason of this union and streight bond of amity which they reciprocally hold, the soule must somewhat participate of the dominion which directly falls upon the senses. And although by this meanes they do not force, but onely incline, ye [...] our will, after sinne, remained so contrary to the law of Reason [Page] and so annexed to the sensitive appetite, that it seldome withstands or contradicts it, reproving those things which it propounds unto it; which senses being governed by the influence and power of the starres, as subject and depending on them, the will must needs follow that which the appetite propounds unto it. And therefore the Astrologers judging the actions of the will by the influence which governes the sensitive appetite, many times prognosticate the truth, though absolutely it depend on the will of man.
From this doctrine, though true, it followeth not, that the influence of the starres onely, and the diversity of the clymates are the fundamentall causes of the [Page] hatred & antipathy of these two nations: being there are many other nations in the world, farre more different in climates, and constellations, which have not so much hatred and contrariety amongst themselves, as these two: we must therefore find out some other reason, more powerfull, then this of the starres.
I remember I have read in the histories of France, that King Lewis the eleventh, came to meet the King of Castile upon the confines of France, to confer with him about some businesse of importance. This King though magnanimous and generous, had notwithstanding his particuler humour, as other men have, and so he ordinarily wore a leaden medall in his hat, his [Page] cloathes, and other French mens who were his followers were ordinary, and of meane stuffe; so that he was but meanly cloathed without any statelinesse or pompe: the Spaniards did cloath themselves the best they could, using all the pompe they could, beleeving that the King of France would have come withall the greatnesse and variety as they expected from so great a King: and seeing him otherwise, they began to despise him, and strangely to scoffe the French men; where they conceived such hatred against the Spaniards, that they could never since forget this disgrace and affront: and if we will say that the devill at this meeting grounded the enmity, and antipathy which [Page] now a daies raignes, we shall not say amisse, seeing a farre lesser ground then this will serve his turne.
To all that is said before may be added a great motive which these two Nations have had to contemne and abhorre one another; which is that in times past, there came not out of France into Spaine any people of sort and note, but onely poore beggerly and needy people of the frontiers, as Guascons, Biernois, and others, who went as they do to this day in white round caps like a trencher upon their heads, bare legged, with wooden shoos which they call esclops upon their feet; these with a base kind of avarice will put themselves to any base office, as keeping of [Page] cowes, and hogs, to sweepe chimneies or the like, and though in their eating they bee sober enough, for with an onion, or a head of garlicke, and a peece of bread they will passe the whole day, yet in their drinking they are unreasonable, and all their gaines goeth in wine, which being strong and heady, presen [...]ly makes them drunke, so that for the most part of the day they go reeling and falling about the streets, to the great scandall of the Spaniards, amongst whom there is no greater infamy or dishonour then to bee drunke: wherefore the Spaniards who saw no other French men but these, & thought that all the rest had been like them, did abhor them, and conceive much enmity [Page] against them, and contempt of them; the same occasion had the French, for very few or no Spaniards of fashion going into France, and they seeing none but poore and wretched people who went to bee touched for the Kings evill, verily beleeved that all other Spaniards had been of the same kinde; and so from that basenesse they tooke occasion to hold the Spaniards in little esteeme; and besides this contempt to encrease this mortall enmity; each of these foresaid reasons in my minde, are sufficient occasions and motives of the hatred and disdaine we finde between these two Nations, especially the divell mixing his care and industry with it: But if I should speake mine opinion, I [Page] think there cannot be a more powerfull reason given for this antipathy, then the naturall contrariety of these two Nations humors: and so it being so hard a thing to force nature with reason, I doe not wonder, if the will in which consists hatred or love, keeps company with nature, and followes her steps, obeying her contrarieties and repugnances; and we must imagine, that to move the will so much the more to the contrariety of humors, the divell did helpe forward all the forenamed accidents; so that the constellation, the diversity of humours, the contempt of both nations, and the divell joining together, there could nothing be hoped for, but a mortall hatred, and the antipathy [Page] which now we see; the remedy of which lieth in God only; seeing I doe not beleeve that on earth there is any antidote for such a pestilent poison.
CHAP. XVIII.
That the conjunction, and confederacy of these two crownes, is a thing which proceeds from heaven.
AMongst the great and infallable truths which the Apostle St. Paul writ, to lift us up towards the knowledge of God, me thinkes that is a marveilous one when he saith, Invisibilia Dei per ea quae facta sunt intellectu conspiciuntur, which is as much to say, that in all and every [Page] creature; shines the infinite power of the divine wisdome; and that they are all like so many tongues, to declare unto us, what the almighty power of their author is; wherefore that must be a grosse and materiall understanding, which by the contemplation of things created, could not reach to the knowledge of the perfection and noblenesse of of him that made them.
The same was the royall Prophet his intent when he said, Coeli enarrant gloriam Dei & opera manuum eju [...] annuntiat firmamentum: whereby is knowne the imperfection and misery of our understanding, subject only to the knowledge of the materialities of this world, and unable to reach at the knowledge of [Page] things which are beyond natures bounds; since that in these (as Aristotle saith) he is as the owle or the night-bat is with the sunne beames, when it shines most cleare and bright: and the same Psalmist knew this truth, when he with such great fervency craved of God; Revela oculos meos & considerabo mirabilia de lege tua: holding it for a certain, that it was impossible to arrive to the knowledge of such high mysteries, with the imperfection of nature onely; wherefore the supreame architect finding that there could bee no equality nor proportion found between his greatnesses, and our humane understanding, they being infinite, and this materiall & limited: he ordained that man should come [Page] to the knowledge of his infinite power, by meanes of the visible effects of this world.
Whence we shall see by this reason that God at all times did communicate himself to men by materiall, and visible means, as in the guiding of the people of Israel, by day with a pillar of cloud, & by night with a pillar of fire, making mount Sinai to shake whē he gave the Law, affrighting them with thunder & lightning, sending fire from heaven, the deluge and the like, by which he did accommodate himselfe to the imperfection of our understanding. For if God should not use materiall things, and easie to bee understood, perhaps the understanding of man, would either attribute such effects [Page] to some other cause, or would not know from whence they proceeded. For it is certaine, that when God decreed to destroy the world with the floud, hee could as well have annihilated and destroyed it without filling of it full of water, or doing any other manifest and visible action; but it would not have seemed so great a wonder to men, if they were all fallen dead without any manifest cause, as the rivers over-flowing of their bankes, and the opening of the cataracts and windows of heaven was.
And though God could have destroyed those accursed cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, without any apparent signe, with making them fall simply, without [Page] any other visible effect; yet he would have their ruine be by meanes of a materiall cause, which should manifest the great power of him who sent to doe such an execution, as that was, to make fire (as the sacred text speaketh) and brimstome to come downe from heaven, a signe that hee could make even the grossest understanding know what the power of divine justice was: for if God had used some insensible meanes, the cause would not have been knowne, nor his great might and power. So also when hee gave the Israelites their freedome, taking them out of Egypt, hee could in the night have opened the gates of the citie, and made them come out, or by day have blinded all [Page] the people of Egypt, that they might not have seene them, or finde some other meanes to free them out of bondage; but if he had done so, hee had not caused that feare which materiall means did, and the visible tokens which he shewed, in turning the waters into bloud, filling the land with Locusts and Frogges, and Flies, with other marvailous wonders & effects; by means of which, all that barbarous people, and even Pharaoh himselfe confessed the omnipotencie of the God of the Hebrewes, and besought Moses, and his brother Aaron to pray for them, that those plagues might be taken away from them, and that they would obey him. And if God had used some other signe as had not been so plaine [Page] and manifest as this, and that which hee used at the red Sea, peradventure the Egyptians would not have attributed the deliverance of their slaves to the power of God: nor the people of Israel, who was rough and of a hard beliefe, would have believed that he by his omnipotence onely could have wrought any such effect.
In the law of Grace God used the same meanes to make himselfe knowne, seeing that all the miracles which hee wrought (as the Evangelists set them downe) were done by sensible and materiall signes; from which every grosse and rough understanding might gather the greatnesse and the supreme power of the Creator. For who could be so grosse, [Page] but seeing sight restored to a blinde man with onely laying a little dirt upon his eyes, might not know that the dirt of it selfe had no such vertue; and that therefore hee who applied that medicine, had a command above nature? And who will but say, seeing a Lazarus, who had lyen in the grave foure dayes, raysed onely by saying, Lazarus come forth, that hee had power over death? And that the satisfying five thousand people with five loaves and two fishes, onely by blessing of them, doth not infer supreme worth and power? And that seeing the healing of one, the restoring of sight to another, turning water into wine, banishing death by naturall means, doe not presuppose that this is a supernaturall [Page] power and vertue? And if that Christ had done these wonders without visible and materiall meanes, onely by his absolute power, peradventure his infinite power had not beene knowne: and therefore let us conclude with Saint Paul, that by meanes of visible and materiall things, wee come to the knowledge of the invisible things of God, as his Infinitenesse, his Immensity, his Goodnesse and Omnipotencie. And if in all nature there be any visible thing which sheweth us this divine power, it is the miraculous conjunction of these two Nations, so prodigious a one, that any grosse understanding may plainly perceive, that it is an immediate worke of Gods omnipotencie, which only could [Page] undoe that which the Divell with so much diligence and art had done: since we cannot imagine that any secondary causes could have so much worth, industry and power, as in an instant to unite two natures so infinitely distant one from the other, and make them come frō an extream hatred and enmity, to the other extreame of union. And seeing that if the discord and contrariety of these two Nations, had been a new or superficiall accident, the onely consideration of good understandings, and the perspicuity of wise and prudent persons, might have been sufficient to remedy it, but being nature and antipathy, which like originall sin goes by succession from the Fathers to the children, and [Page] so to the grand-children; and especially being fostered and maintained by the Divels malice, we must infallibly beleeve, that it is the worke of heaven, and that this union was onely reserved to God, for to prevent an abysse of evils and miseries, which by the said enmity were threatned. And so God, to whose goodnesse it belongeth to dispose sweetly of things, having created and preserved the world by means of the union and peace of his creatures, seeing that the discord of these two Nations was sufficient almost to ruine it, stayed through his omnipotencie, the fury of this raging evill, and through his goodnesse and mercie, provided such a perfect and salutiferous remedy as this [Page] divine union is, that so the world might not only be freed from its imminent ruine, & the calamities which threatned it by reason of this enmity, but might also bee enriched with those pretious fruits which from this union may be expected.
And as the end which God pretended in this confederacie, is no other but this: so it is plainly knowne that the Divell with all his followers, hath not had power to hinder the execution of it, though hee raised a thousand inventions, pretences, and feares, both amongst the common people, and also the most Noble, egging them on with the fire of enmity and hatred, to oppose themselves with all the power as might bee, against [Page] Gods decree, the Common-wealths repose, and the good of the whole world: and though the Divell went loose, and puffed up, holding the victory certaine with his forces, against that small aid which was promised; yet his care and labour being against the will of God, and the universall peace, I wonder not that God did send a woman to breake his head, through the wisdom of so good a physitian, whilest hee laid wait and snares for her heele.
And though there were no other reason to prove that this confederacie came from heaven, this would of it selfe be a sufficient proofe, that wee see it was gloriously effected, against all humane endevours, and propounded [Page] difficulties, and against such great oppositions, as I will now leave to the wise mans contemplation, and the pennes of others, who peradventure will write of this matter. Wherefore I conclude, saying, that this conjunction being made at that time, when this antipathy was most rooted between these two Nations, wee must needs confesse, that it was done by divine power, since neither hatred, nor disdaine, nor the diversity of climates and humours, nor the variety of customes, nor mistrust, nor the Divels endevours were able to hinder it.
CHAP. XIX.
Of Gods marvailous invention to unite these two Nations.
IT will not be hard to perswade an understanding man, that this so important & so glorious confederacie comes from heaven, & was ordained for the generall good of mankinde; the effects, circumstances & means of effecting it, having been such, and so mysterious, that they prove it to be true: and that which now stupifies mans understanding, is the marvailous and divine invention which God used in uniting those two Nations, so different amongst themselves, a meanes so [...]ngenious and soveraigne, that it [Page] [...] [Page] [...] [Page] not bee hoped nor looked for from any other place th [...]n from that inaccessible and majesticall Consistorie of the holy Trinity: seeing that in it God hath shewed three effects of his immense God-head, which are, Omnipotencie in uniting from an infinite distance. Mercie in preventing an abysse of mischiefes, which threatned the world: and Wisedome in establishing an union & indissoluble marriage. Whereupon wee are to consider, that God was not contented (by finding out of such a way & means) to remedy the present evill, but like a good Physitian hee left an antidote and medicine to preserve these two Nations from any infirmity or danger as might ensue.
[Page] This healthfull medicine which God sent into the world is matrimony the most effectuall and strong meanes that could be found in nature, the wills being thereby so straightly knit together, that they being two that are united, come to be one flesh, and so conformable and united, that it causeth one to forget father and mother and brethren, to forsake his country, his own interest, and even himselfe; for married folkes many times deprive themselves of their owne liberties, to subject themselves to the content and desire of one another; wherefore marriage bringing forth such effects, wee may say that God by meanes of it uniting these two actions, found an extreame and exquisite [Page] [...] [Page] [...] [Page] remedy, for an extreame and exquisite disease, there being joyned to it by succession an eternall and perfect union, out of danger of ever being lost, by reason of the stability promised in those thinges which come from heaven; where I dare say there could not have been found an inventiō more to the purpose, or more secure then this was; seeing there is nothing in the world that can mortifie the fire of enmity and discord more then the matrimoniall knot, which once contracted between two enemies, when they thinke the grievances and distastes which are past, they quite forget them againe, having not the heart or minde to persecute or offend so much as in thoght, those that are [Page] of their owne blood, or have any dependency of it.
The Romans (as histories report) made use of such remedies, when they saw themselves most persecuted by the Sabines, amongst whom there was so much enmity, hatred, and persecution, that they did destroy and ruine one another, burning their corne, spoiling their vines, and killing one another wheresoever they met; whereby other nations which were not subject to them grew the stronger, and encreased through their two enmities, and discords: so that at the last they perceiving the dammages and wrongs they did themselves by persecuting one another, and the triumphs and glory which other nations got, [Page] grounding their happinesse and greatnesse upon their discord, they agreed to use for a remedy the same meanes which God had used with these two nations; which was, that the Romans determined to give their daughters in marriage to the Sabines sonnes, and the Sabines held it for an excellent good remedy to give their daughters unto the Romans sons, that so by this mixture the evill might bee remedied, & the nations remain in peace and concord: and it is certain that though the Romans remembred the wrongs, & injuries, they had received at the Sabines hands, & that through this remembrance there might some appetite and desire of revenge be stirred up: yet when they saw [Page] that if they executed their rage and fury, they must doe it upon their owne blouds, having their daughters amongst the Sabines, they staied themselves from doing them any hurt: which consideration served also for a bridle to the Sabines, knowing that they could not use their swords against the Romans without spilling of their owne bloud; and so by meanes of marriage and confederacy they forgot all passed enmity, and remained intimate and hearty friends: such and many other good things ought wee assuredly to hope for; through the meanes and confederacy which God hath ordained between these two nations; for they being linked together with so firme and effectuall a knot, as [Page] matrimony, we may be sure that Spaine having matched her daughter with the sonne of France they will quite forget all enmities, rancors, & hatreds, as hitherto have troubled their peace and quiet, to their great wrong, and dimunition of the renowne which they might have gotten if they had agreed; and will unite themselves, with such indissoluble and firme amity, that there shall not be seen any signe or shadow of what is past; and their wils will be so well ordered and disposed, that neither of them will have any more intent to attempt warre, persecution, breach of faith, or any other manner of deceit against the other, each of them binding their hands to their girdles for feare [Page] of doing hurt, and harming their owne bloud: moreover none can imagine but that by this confederacy the antipathy and enmity which was, will be quite extinguished, and ended; seeing that marriage in all respects both of law and reason, ought to bee more powerfull and effectuall in subjects that are so noble, generous, prudent, Christian, and fearing God, as these two nations are, then amongst barbarous, heathen, and idolatrous people, as the Sabines and the Romans were; whereby all those who are well affected to these two nations, may assuredly promise themselves and hope for so perfect and compleat a peace, and agreement, as the like hath not been seen in the world, with all [Page] the fruits and properties that from it (as proceeding from heaven) may or ought lawfully to be hoped for. In so happy a confederacy I contemplate the supreame and extraordinary love that God hath shewed to these two nations, giving unto them the same meanes & manner for peace and union, as hee himselfe tooke, when he was most at enmity with the world: not onely Divines but others also know the continuall warre and enmity which was between God and man before the incarnation of the word; they employing themselves in nothing else but in offending him, with all the sinnes and wickednesse as they could, neither feare, nor shame, nor any thing else being able to refraine [Page] their disordered appetites; and these sins were so great, that there could not be five righteous men found in Sodom, no nor one to stay the vengeance of heaven; but mans nature was so corrupted and depraved, that God seeing their wickednesses and sins, said in Genesis, poenitet me fecisse hominem: not that he repented, for he being exceeding perfect, was uncapable of griefe, repenting, change, or imperfection, but it was as if he had said: I see humane nature so disobedient, ungratefull, and bent to evill, that were I capable of repenting I should repent that I had created it: so that at that time men did so obstinately contemne Gods commandements, that they offended him without any [Page] care, and on the other side God was extreame severe and rigorous in punishing of faults; which the names that were then given him in holy Scripture may witnesse, calling him the God of armies, the God of vengeance, the strong, rigorous and severe God: which titles were accompanied with the fury of his power, as it was seen in the generall Deluge of the world, in the fire which descended from heaven to punish Sodome, in the number of the Jewes which hee caused Moses to kill when they worshipped the Calfe, in the four hundred yeares that he kept his people in slavery in Egypt, in the number of the Egyptians which he drowned in the red Sea: and infinite other examples which [Page] the Scriptures teach us; so that God doth nothing but punish, and men nothing but offend. So that seeing hee had created mankinde to save it, and his divine goodnesse being more inclined to mercie, and love, then to justice and crueltie, hee tooke pitty and compassion upon humane nature, and determined to make a peace, by meanes of the most glorious and admirable marriage as could be conceived; which was to marry his Sonne, the Divine Word, unto our Daughter, humane Nature, and to unite himselfe with it so intrinsecally and perfectly, that hee never left it, nor will ever leave it (as great Anselmus saith) by which consederacie and hypostaticall union our nature was [Page] so extolled and favoured, that it surpassed the spirituall degree of Angels, from whose greatnesse, (as wee have said) the first Angell tooke an occasion to rebell against his Creator. By meanes of this divine & supream league, Gods justice and divine wrath was converted into mercie and compassion: Mercie and Truth (as David saith) meeting, and Peace and Justice giving each other sweet kisses: Yet there remained in man an Obligation of never offending God, but alwayes to serve him; taking as a motive thereunto, Gods extraordinary mercie and clemencie shewed to Man, in espousing himselfe to humane nature our daughter: so that in offending him, besides the disloyalty and [Page] ungratefulnesse wee shew, wee doe also offend our owne bloud and nature; And by this selfesame union was God moved to use sinners mercifully, staying the rigour and punishment, by reason of the matrimony which his Sonne contracted with our Nature, holding it for a certaine, that this great Advocate which we have in heaven with the Father, which is Christ, doth obtaine forgivenesse for our sinnes: and in consideration of his merits, the everlasting Father bestowes those favours and mercies upon us which we feel every day.
Hence it is, that holy King▪ David, when hee implored the Divine favour, was alwayes wont to say, Protector noster, aspice [Page] Deus, respice in faciem Christi tui. As if hee had plainly said, God of my soule! my stay, my protector, and only refuge, look on me with the eyes of thy divine mercie; but doe not looke immediately upon me: for thou shalt see nothing but sinnes, iniquities, disobediences, and wickednesses, which will provoke thee to wrath and anger; but cast thine eyes upon thy Sonne: for seeing him wedded to my nature, questionlesse thou wilt bee moved to mercie and compassion. Finally, with this miraculous league, God remedied the enmity which was betweene man and him, and left man fortified with eternall peace and amity. All this may in some sort bee seene by the heavenly conjunction [Page] which God hath made betweene these two Nations, which hee hath of his infinite mercie protected; it being certaine and sure, that they being united by divine meanes and invention, they shall live in perpetuall peace, and continuall concord, triumphing over their enemies, and leaving unto posterity memorable enterprizes, and actions of Noblenesse and Generositie.