Satyrae seriae: OR, The Secrets of things; written in Morall and Politick Discourses.
1 Of Ceremonies and civill Complements.
ONE saith wisely, that Ceremonies are but the translation of Vertue into the [Page 2] knowne Tongue, the distinctions and ful poynts, without which they could not be understood: If we be so carefull in the set formes of Speech and Language, why not in Action & Gesture? the one speakes to the eye, the other to the eare: They are but Transitory Hyeroglyphicks; and not to use them, bespeakes neglect to others, when themselves are best exprest by a seeming neglect. It is the minde that is capable of a decent carriage, which if you first make expert, they will be better exprest to the life, [Page 3] than onely by an apish imitation of corporall action. To use them too much towards inferiours, is popularity: to use them towards equalls, is civility and love: towards superiours, they become reverence and companions of their honour; for bowed heads, bare caps, ceremonies and respects doe make honor so desireable; and the weakest look no farther than to these outward accidents; never thinking that true bravery and honour conststs in Honerante, non honorato, not onely in formality of [Page 4] worship, but a mentall reverence to their vertue, which is the most worthy part of dignity. Though of themselves they be light and vaine, yet they have that command in the respects of men, by reason of that which they use to signifie; that some whose minds are below the performance of nobler vertues, doe seeke reputation by comlinesse of going: it is good to have a commanded carriage, and not to let the errours of the mind bee discovered by the negligence of looks: it appeares by the [Page 5] truth of the old Adage, that they are significative, and not onely Mutes: Nil interest habere ostium apertum, vultum clausum.
2 Of the Multiplicity of Bookes.
THe most Books adde rather bulke to the body of Learning, than spirit and quicknesse of inventions, as a soule answerable, which by diffusion weakens and makes slow the course of knowledge.
In Bookes, the relations of affaires are framed in the mold of the understanding, by way of expression, which makes those things that are writ have a shape and appearance of a more perfection than those things which are done. They endeavour to bee either Delian divers of Questions, or to have the ilumination of an Interpreter or the name of an exact Methodist: and for the variety of them and their adulatory Dedications, I may say of them as of our Farthings, the impression [Page 7] makes them goe the curranter, though the matter debaseth them: books are only freed from the power of Oblivion, which is the occasion the Poets did promise to themselves an immortality of name; esteeming all other things as subject to the inconstancy of affaire and period of time.
Which is the meaning of that Fable of theirs, how that in the end of the threed of every mans life [Page 8] there is a certaine coyne affixt, upon which is writ the name of the dead party; which as soone as the Sister hath cut, shee throwes them into the River Lethe; but about the River there flyes a great company of Birds, which do carry the coyne a little way in their beaks, and afterward carelessely let them fall againe: but amongst those Birds there are found some Swans, which if they light with a Coyne upon ones name on it, they presently carry it to the Temple, devoting it to perpetuity: [Page 9] Bookes are the Coynes on which mens names are writ; those of an ordinary flight, they endure for a time, but presently are forgot; but if there bee one who can sing well, they are carryed on the wings of true Fame, and as Swans leave the sweetest notes to posterity. Bookes are the best Councellors, the best Companions, and the best heires of a mans knowledge; they be the Monuments wherein lye hid the sacred reliques of Knowledge & Wisedome; and the reason, why the multiplicity [Page 10] of Bookes yeelds not advancement to learning is, because they are but as rivolets, drawne as it were from the Fountaine of some Author, and conveied by the secret passages of mens understandings and fancies, returne to it againe; keeping still the same levell with the Well-spring, which denies a further rise. It is a good rule in Naturall Philosophy, Interitus rei arcetur per reductionem ejus ad principia, which is a good rule also in the course of Learning; for commonly for prevention [Page 11] of corruption in Letters, there needs the reducing of the understanding to the first Originall: and sometimes if they beginne not againe the sent will grow cold: To write in that in which there is no beaten path, is most honourable; for hee that leads hath this advantage above others, (saith learned Hooker) if others follow him, he hath the glory of it: if not, hee hath the excuse of prejudice.
3. Of Fortune.
I Will not speake of the actions of men, as they are the children of Divine providence: Nor will I ascribe an Apotheosis to Fortune; but will onely view the power and activity of mans reason, in the nimble apprehension and taking hold of occasions, to see how farre outward Circumstances doe conduce to the making of a mans owne Fortune. It was the saying of a [Page 13] great one, that however he knew that rule, that quisque fortunae suae faber, yet the most in number were those, who spoyled their owne fortunes. It is an Art which most mens invention have flowed into; & yet is still capable of renovation, as it were, by the incertainty of affairs so curiously involved by mutuall relation, which is Tacitus his observation of a too superstious Constancy in that Emperour to his old way, in which once hee proved fortunate, idem manebat, & idem dicebat: So that [Page 14] some through an imbecillity of mind, not knowing to make a departure from the gravity of their usuall pace, doe oftentime, with that Spaniard in the story, undergoe the lash of Fortune: Qui respicit adventos non seminat, saith Solomon; so that there is required a judicious observancy of time, as well as a prudent making of occasions. He that would be a Master in the Art, must discerne his Elogium, who was said to be adeo versatilis ingenij, ut quocunque loco viveret; fortunam sibi fabricare visus est. There [Page 15] are some of that temper; the pulse of whose affection still beats after the motion of honour, who had rather be not good than not great; & therfore will cast about the mist of deceite, to blind the eye of your apprehension, and by corrupt counsailes endeavour to rise from the clouds of disgrace, to see the sunne of honour; but apparent rari. Others will bring all their Elogies of their worth upon the stage of honour, where they would gladly display themselves; they will cry after Fortune, and court [Page 16] her, like a peevish Mistris, into disdaine of them, till at last they prove but swolne bubles, which the least winde of adversity makes them evapourate into their owne element. Honor is vertues reward, and is no more than the reflexive beames of the sun of vertue, and gives only to good wils in a larger extent to exercise themselves in, as an open field; & therfore it must be used as in the open region of the Common-wealth, not in the inclosures of ones own particular ends and respects: Hee must [Page 17] study well the nature of the present times, who would bee an instrument of state; for otherwise his understanding may prove an unfit match for service of Majesty; impar congressus Vlysi. Hee must know himselfe as well as the times, and others as well as himselfe: Qui sapit innumeris moribus aptus orit; and as Tully saith proprium hoc esse prudentiae statuit, conciliare sibi animos hominum, & ad usus suos adjungere. To prostitute a mans time too much to the fleshy thoughts of Fortune, tasts [Page 18] of the stomacke of the Israelite: and surely those thoughts spent on riches, will devoure those which should bee for the Temple: whence comes those corrupt axioms, Prosperū & felix scelus virtus vocatur. Aesope saith wittily, multa novit vulpes, sed nuum magnum felis; which is no more than the certainty of a friend for ones fortune, and honesty for ones selfe: its like the Sun which gives a great light; whereas the Starres, though more in number, doe not all shine so bright, sapiens dominabitur [Page 19] astris. It is no small part of policy to distinguish of fortune and occasion, its easier to see the one than retain the other: faciliùs for tunam reperias, quam retineas: Riches are sometimes vertues ornament, sometimes vices punishment; and surely it hath a diverse operation, according to the difference of the materialls it meets withall; The prosperity of fooles shall slay them; Limus nt hic durescit, &c. Some in the making of their owne fortunes, are well studied in men, but know not the nature of [Page 20] businesses, nor worth of favours: others onely wise by rule; and maxims of particular government looke not into the nature and quality of their competitors, and those whom they have to deale with: so that betwixt these two observations of extreams, one might extract an exact patterne: take some of both, and it will prove a good composition; as well some of the knowledge of persons, as excellency of art of policy.
4 Of Wisedome of Speech.
SPeech (saith Scaliger) being but a Sarment of Nature, covereth either the souldier as with Arms for necessity; or as a Gowne the Senator for profit; or as a more dainty garment the curious Citizen for pleasure: it consociateth the remotest regions of mens hearts, by the participation of one anothers thoughts: and [Page 22] therefore I can call Discourse by no apter title, than to be the vehicula cogitationum, and therefore they should still runne even with the wheeles of their thoughts. These were the ancient decrees of truth, they counted it an happinesse of the understanding to be inlightned with it, a weight of labour to search it, but the glory of humane nature to speake it. Ante omnia mi fili custodi cor tuum, thoughts are but the children of the heart, as speech is of the thoughts; the prudency of whose [Page 23] direction is of excellent use, view it either in the glasse of Divinity or Policy: and even in the building up of the fabricke of a mans own fortune, there is no small wisedome in polishing and framing the materialls of ordinary talke: Every speech acquaints us either with the matter which we aske, or the minde of the speaker which hee delivers: the perfection of the art of speech to others, consists in a volubility of application, and as one saith, if a man would come to an excellency of it, if he were [Page 24] to speake with a hundred persons, he should vary his stile to each: which Art Alexander seemes well to have knowne: whilst hee animates his Souldiers, some with the hope of Wealth, incenst the ambitious with the heat of Honour, provoked the malicious, with the remembrance of the former grudges betwixt the two Nations: Thus speeches which have an edge, enter sooner the affections; than dull and slow expression. It would not be unusefull to have the knowledge of the severall formes of [Page 25] speech; of suddaine questions, of suspended answers, and a great variety of others, in which they thinke▪ no small policy consists: together with the apprehension of the colours of praise and dispraise of vice and vertue: but in the use of these a man should have rather a largenesse of understanding, to turne themselves in with dexterity, than to be tied to the straightnesse of a few rules of remembrance. To have wisedome grounded in the heart, and no too much in the tongue, becomes [Page 26] policy: Loquendum ut vulgus, sentiendum ut sapientes. Words ought to become the person who useth them: which Tacitus intimates, speaking of Augustus: Augusto profluens & quae principē deceret, fuit oratio. Seneca notes also a danger, when words are not quickned with the life of reasons; but are onely uttered with a kind of plausibility of the speaker. Nocet illis eloquentia quibus amorem facit sui, non orationis: imitatiō of others, however usefull, yet is servile; because it should [Page 27] come from the fluency of a happy imitation: but this is rather to be referred to the characters of stile and oratory, than to a serious observation: Eloquence makes for the credit of the matter; but to speak agreeably to whom you direct your speech, shews more of the wisdom of the person: Those who have the stile of eloquēce, do rather use the applause of it for pardon of faults, than for suffrage to vertues merits. Thus to know the parts of speech, is not onely the part of a good Grammarian, but a Polique.
5 Of Trust and Distrust.
IT cannot be denyed but that the safest rule to trust to, not to bee deceived, is to to distrust. A Religious suspition is a good antidote against the poyson of Vice, which still the divell instills into us with a deceitfull pleasure, putting an imposture upon their understanding. Our Saviours prophecy of the latter times enjoyns this Caution: Cum venerit [Page 29] filius hominis, non inveniet fidem super terram. There is a distrust commanded to Doctrines, to Men, to Times: and however we bee all from one common lumpe of the earth, that we might seem to keep a greater distance from men, than the common Relation of Nature doth require, hee who said love one another, which is Charities Rule, the same bids us joyne the innocency of the Dove with the wisedome of the Serpent; which is Prudence Rule. It is a digressiō from the ordinary [Page 30] Law of Charity, to entertertaine suspitions, which onely flye in the night of a mans ignorance. It's the stile of Policy to distrust, where by probability of appearance it may give security. To let every thing receive a mans owne additions; which are formed in the weake modell of a doubtfull fancy, distracts judgement; and though men that are most sensible of their own imperfections, wil soonest expect deficiencies from others: yet it is safe to thinke there is somewhat lyes hid, which he doth [Page 31] not apprehend; for it collects the understanding, admits not of any thing without due examination; for many through want of venting the extasies of their breasts, have turned, dyed with the palenesse of envy, which have put the whole frame of their composition out of joynt▪ and we may wel decline from the trust to others, when it is not alwayes safe to trust: our selves. The heart of man is deceitfull, which like a Magicke glasse, represents the forms of things which are not: Therefore first [Page 32] proceede from a knowledge and caution to your selfe, to that of others; so it may prove a wholsome exorcisme, lest you might swell too great in selfe esteeme: the flatterer composeth the modell of your owne desires, your selfe being the Archetype: therefore first let them be viewed in reasons light, & the others as things imperfectly mixed, are obscured: Palle scunt phoebo radios jaculante cometae. Machiavell doth well to acquaint the world with the common practice of men: for it induceth vigilancy [Page 33] to faire seeming actions and gestures pretending to amity, which are nothing but the alimenta socordiae: For you shall have a man give you the smoothnesse of his countenance to bee taken hold of; whilst he studies evasion by the sliperinesse of his fancy. A fairer looke than ordinary towards the Spaniard, puts him into a present suspition of his owne safety. In friendship it is a good rule odi tanquam amaturus, & ama tanquam oditurus. Insinuations of amity are dangerous symptomes of [Page 34] a perfidious disposition. It is an ordinary custome for one man to build his fortunes out of the ruines of another: wee see the manner of Natures production of things, how commonly the corruption of one thing, is the generation of another: and how many have generated their owne fortunes, for taxing the corruptions of other men: And ever note, that where there is too great a facility of beleeving, there is also a willingnesse of deceiving: and although beliefe carries with it a [Page 35] colour of innocency, yet distrust still carries strēgth off safety. Tutius peccat qui diffidit, innocentius qui credit.
6 Iests.
IT is the best composition of speech to use gravity of matter, and reserve a liberty of stile: which is no more than to turne aside from the ordinary wayes of expressions to certaine pleasant walkes made for the recreation [Page 36] of the mind. Jests in the wiser sort of men, serves as ornament; in the weaker they be but levity; if you use them concerning persons, the truest nature of a Iest, is to want truth, for they should have somwhat of the invention: but if they taste of malignity, and beginne to flye on the wings of insolency, they draw too nigh the nature of Libells. Therefore the State, and those heavenly bodyes of Majesty, admits not the presence of humane audacity: Nemo ad Deorum conviviū admittitur, nisi [Page 37] ad ludibrium: too much use of them in serious affaires, relishes of the spirit of vanity: for Jests never penetrate farther than the superficies of the matter; which as one notes is the properplace of a Jest. They may come to the esteeme of light bodies, w ch ever swim on the top, but never with solidity goes to the depth of knowledge. They should never looke towards the Temple, for then the Jesuite meetes with him in his Epigram, Tu cave sed fiat ni io [...]s iste focus: they ought not to passe over greatnes [Page 38] of businesse with a slight of the minde; but they enjoy their use, when they mollifie sharpnesse of words, with sweetnesse of conceite: they are good companions in discourse, & are most facetious, whē attended with a happy concurrance of circumstances. It is a Poeticall vertue, and where this kinde of ingenuity lights in men of more solid professions, it is a happy conjunction; for the one makes him usefull, the other delightfull: they must be used like Physicke; you must not accustom others [Page 39] eares with them too much: for they lose their operation, by reason of the too much familiarity they have with the hearers.
But touching these kind of elegancies, I shal use the words of the learned Verulam, who saith, That of all the excellencies of the gifts of the Minde, as to repeate after another a great number of names at once reciting: to write many Verses ex tempore of a Theame: to be quick in Satyricall similitudes: or ready to turne Iest into Earnest, or Earnest [Page 40] into Iest: these and the like I esteeme no more than the agility of a Dancer of the Ropes, or a Pantomime: for they are the like things: the one abuses the strength of the body, the other of the minde.
7 Of Love.
THere is no precept commands that application over a man, as the power of Love; It drawes the affections by a [Page 41] kind of sweetnesse; wheras rules doe it by distortion. Sometimes its like Circes wand, sometimes like Mercuries Caduceus: sometimes it corrupts, sometimes it makes chast: beauty commonly as it is either found or apprehended, is the object of that fancy, which still proves like a Gorgon, which while men admire, it makes them blind in the eyes of the understanding; which causes one to extoll the vertues of the party loved so farre above truth. Vertue it selfe is faire, (which made [Page 42] him say) that if it could be seene, it would stirre up a great many lovers of it: Virtus nil aliud nisi internaforma, forma externa virtus. It is the strongest of the passions, and often found in the weakest mindes; whose breasts not fortified by the strength of Councells; such amorous conceites have the easier accesse to. Every soule is imprinted with the character of this desire, which being turned from the love of the Creatures to piety, it becomes divinity: it makes all things seeme pleasant: [Page 43] and therefore it is the advice of a great one, not to bee without some strong affection: for sine proposito vita languida est: Glances and gestures doe often procure affection, whether it be by strengthning the imagination or not I know not: it is most fervent when most opposed: nor is it without a Mystery in Nature the secret attracting of affections betwixt particulars, without any knowledge or apprehension of their conditions; for there are certaine vertues which want a name, which is [Page 44] the cause some hardly can give a reason of their love.
It is prevalent, sometimes in the wisest men, which shewes it hath a proximity with good.
Youth is most subject to those inclinations, which shewes that it is for the most part the Child of Vanity; whilst he is steeped in his affections, it becomes like a Dew which falls in the morning of his Youth, [Page 45] scarce got out of the night of his ignorance; and is expelled by the rising of the Sunne of his Knowledge.
Young men are amoumorous, middle-age affectionate, old men doting.
8 Of Action, Meditation, and Contemplation.
THere is as much difference betwixt meditation, and Action in civill [Page 46] knowledge, as is betwixt Dreames and things really performed: the one hath the apprehension of a thing by the view of the understanding, the other the knowledge of the particulars by the guide of experience. And although God and Angels must be onely spectactors, yet a nigh conjunction of Action and Meditation hath ever beene esteemed as a thing full fraught with vertues: for as Action would cease if it received not nourishment by Meditation; so Meditation, if not put in [Page 47] practice, would lose its vertue towards man. The publicke commands the best of every mans thoughts: even as in nature, Quod est conservativum formae majoris, id activitate potentius. Yet certainly they have all felt the influence of heavenly joy in the quiet repose of their owne thoughts. Observation is the companion of meditation, as experience is of action: in the framing of a mans owne fortune, actions doe most conduce: the worth of which is exprest by our Saviour: [Page 48] opera sequuntur eos. Those who wholly dedicate themselves to bee their owne readers, must know they are not at all times politicke: and those who meddle in multiplicity of action, will finde they are sometimes not wise: but the prayse of Contemplation, I leave as a subject to some Fryer, and will view the vertues of both: Publicke actions are commonly uncertain, which doe put on severall countenances, according to the variety of occasions: the Notions which wee may get of mens [Page 49] thoughts are most credible: for commonly we are most prone to thinke of that which wee are naturally inclined to. Naturall Pallats doe disgust the meditation of the Scriptures, till they be fed at Christs Table, they be sharpned for these heavenly joyes: the corrupt opinion of Politicks have cast no little darknesse on the glory of letters, esteeming them but as the Patrons of idlenesse, and that they doe reduce a mans minde from greatnesse of workes, to smalnesse of speculation: when [Page 50] as every thought is an internall act of reason, and first settles the mind with the knowledge of its duty, before it put it forward to execute; for otherwise they may exercise their errous as well as vertues. In civill conversation it is commonly said, that actionem esse cum stultis; lectionem cum sapientibus: Meditations in civill matters doe too much abstract the minde, when it is a good Rule; Minus pecuniae, minus fidei, minus prudentiae in mundo, quam homines cogitent: The best rules [Page 51] in Prudence: consists in the apprehension of the smallest affaires; and yet makes up the body of one of the greatest knowledges. The best instances give the securest information, as Aristotle affirmes, Optima cujus que rei natura in portionibus ejus minimis observatur. Meditations in envious men are to be feared: Pallidos timeo, rubicundos amo: in religious men it is capable of divinity; in politicke men, it is generative of Counsells. Actions are like precedency of place, most honourable when [Page 52] they lead: Things that have beene once done, though they have more difficulty, yet they have lesse praise: in the one you must not bee too stupid, in the other not too pragmaticall. Meditations are like parents, which doe generate: Post varios usus meditando extunderet artes. Actions are like children which doe perpetuate; ut non solum fuisse videantur, sed vixisse.
9 Of Errours and Deceits.
ERrors be the cunning Artists of Vice, as Deceit is of Errors. Cunning men are most dangerous; whē they seem most wise, Serpens putredo magis contagiosa, quam matura: they take no more of vertue than serves for their turne; and desires onely an opinion of honesty, to procure him other mens faith, a chiefe instrument [Page 54] for him to worke by: those whose mindes are not capable of vertuous intentions, they divert to sinister & by wayes, to cozen the simplicity of other mens beliefe: thus true & solid wisedome often degenerates into poore slights of the mind, while they wrap all their actions in deceite, the better to carry them invisible: so that they are growne to that subtilty of the Art, that as one wittily saith, Qui indissimulantèr omnia agit, ae (que) decepit; nam plurimi aut non capiunt, aut non credunt: so that it is [Page 55] become a hard matter not to deceive: the greatest advantage of deceite is other mens imperfections: they practise them in words, in gestures; in the composing of which, they are so curious, that if you should looke into the realty of their actions, they would prove but a poore labyrinth of vanity: which having found out by the even thread of truth, and having unfolded them, you will finde them to bee but a poor rable of deceit: Qui fraudum minutijs negotiorum frangunt soliditatem. You never heard [Page 56] of any man of more than ordinary worth, but whose wisedomes were made of the same stuffe as the Souldiers credit was: è telâ crassiore, and not admirable for its fine thinnesse: To use them to others, is the way to make them take the like liberty in the use of them to you againe: so that you will hinder your selfe so much of the knowledge of the certainty of their intentions.
There are three Characters noted of deceite in the Scriptures: Devita prophanas vocum novitates, [Page 57] & oppositiones falsi nominis scientiae; ineptas & aniles fabulas devita. Nemo vos decipiat in sublimitate sermonū. Cunning men soonest deceive, when not knowne; therefore I may well change the Poets Verse.
10 Of Content.
OVr endeavours in the pursuit of this, resembles the Sunne, which gives us light into the knowledge of these terrestriall bodyes; but againe obscures those Starres and the heavenly globe: so wee still dive into the practises and workes of men on earth, while we never thinke of the glorified bodies of the Saints in heaven: it is a mystery [Page 59] in nature, that all men doe desire some stay or pole upon which the rest of their thoughts may bee turned: and how happily a man may make this Religion, I appeale to the joy it affords: a generall view of the understanding of the whole world, and all that dwell upon it, makes much for the nature of Content. This was Solomons prospect, when hee looked upon all the workes of his hands, hee pronounced them to bee vanity and vexation of spirit: Men (according to the divine Aphorisme) [Page 60] are borne to trouble, as sparkes flye upwards: and thus we may best obscure the false light of worldly delights with the sunne of true wisedome and knowledge. The place of content, is the content of the place you are in: the highest feete of honour, may bee below the true sence of it: for ambition is like a Fever, which ever seekes to heale and perfect it selfe by changing of place, when it is not the local person, but the mind that is capable of serenity. It is an axiome in the Physicks: Quod corpus non [Page 61] ponderare nisi extra locum suum: The stone weighs not till it it bee lifted off from the body to which it tends: no more doth the soule feele the weight of labour and care, while it hath its conversation in heaven (its proper place) from whence originally it came.
Folly is joy to him who is destitute of understanding; but a man of understanding walketh uprightly. There is nothing so much breeds greatnesse of Spirit, as to know the smalnesse of the worth of things: for those men [Page 62] who are onely intent upon the petty things of the world, doe sacrifice themselves to the inconstancy of Fortune, by reason the object of their desires is so capable of vicissitudes; and doe for feit their content: but remove a little these Elysiums, the joyes of Humane fancy, and those severall motions of desires which may seeme to arise even from the variety of our composure: and bee ravished a little with a delectare ô anima mea in Deo: The sweetnesse of which musicke drownes all the [Page 63] lesser sounds of worldly delights: it settles all the distempers of the soule, and makes it smooth with a constant equality towards humane dangers. Thus, you may invert the order of humane delights, while the Worldling is taken with the riches of Gods mercies; while we here build up the admirable Fabricke of our salvation, wherein Christ is the chiefe corner stone. Here you may have your Gardens for meditation, and hence translate to your owne breasts the flowers of Vertue, which [Page 64] may make it flourish as a paradise to it selfe: Here you may enjoy the prospect of the Worlds Vanities, beneath the high pitch of thy sublimer soule: where to bee conscious of well-doing, is the perfection of Humane felicity.
11 Of Friendships.
FRiendships are entertained for credit, for affection, for necessity: the chiefe use of them for credit is with great men: for affection with persons of moderate estate: for necessity with poore men. However men put on faire forms of friendship, yet parity was a thing much celebrated by the Ancients: rich men will be more cautious, because [Page 66] they have somewhat to lose; men of like fortunes will commonly sticke closer to you: poore men will bee ever suspitious of your love towards them. They are a remedy against solitude: if they be entered with good men, they restore the perfection of man; if with bad they corrupt it: crafty men abuse them, simple men know them not, wise men use them. One alone makes not a parradise; so let them bee few but vertuous. For it is a thing wherin a man doth interpret himselfe, [Page 67] Nam qui amicitias arct as copulat novas necessitudines sibi imponit: In the making of a mans owne fortune he is fittest; Qui sapit innumeris moribus. All the caution touching bad men, shall bee like the learning of Sophismes, the better to avoid them: keeping of company hath still a kinde of assimilation, as the Physiciās speak, though it happēs through divers distempers of the minde: some desires you through malice to defame you; others through corruption of manners to make you bad, some [Page 68] through cunning to have you feede their sinnes, which themselves are not able to maintaine. In dealing with these men you must imitate that musicall troope of deceiving the sence: ut cum jam adesse videatur, placide elabetur, because friends love not to have contempt cast upon their wayes: good men enjoy, cunning men interpret, malitious avoyde, scoffers neglect: these offer themselves to my penne, as they are commonly used in civill conversation. The knowledge of all [Page 69] persons reacheth but to this, to teach men to play their cards the better, and to performe businesse with more dexterity and readinesse.
6 Of Silence.
A Man had neede to be very well verst in the parts of speech, that needs not the help of this Mute. To forbeare to speake truth or piety, through too superstitious reverence to the goddesse of [Page 70] Silence, were to make a man liable to his Paradox who told one who was silent, Si prudens sis, stultus es, si stultus prudens. Liberty of speech shewes freedome of minde, and yeelds a man information by others answers. Silence is the vertue of a friend, for men love commonly to lay the things of most value in the surest place; which is the reason the secret mans bosome doth participate of so many Councells: He who offends through Speech, offēds rashly, who throgh silence safely. Wisedome resteth [Page 71] in the heart of him that hath understanding: but that which is amongst fools shall be made knowne. It hath a strange kinde of vertue in it: and in the Pythagorean Schoole was thought to breed knowledge, like those who in dreames receive influences: In matters of consequence qui silet est firmus; For Fame is like a river which gather strēgth by going. In some cases a thing not spoke doth expresse more, than if it had beene spoke, saith Sophocles. Silence often shewes a depth, though [Page 72] they say the Currant stream is most cleare. Men very politicke are noted by Tacitus to use a kinde of freenesse in opening of themselves. Caesar publickly profest that he had rather bee first in a poore Cottage than second at Rome; but he knew them to be his friends to direct them, not his competitors to awake them. It is a kinde of darknesse, for it makes you walke in obscurity, and rather to bee guest at then knowne. In discourse it is good to heare men first; for silence hath the same effect with [Page 73] authority, it procures a kinde of respect to your words: Meritis si forte virum quem conspexere silent. Commonly they are well tuned, but gives the pleasantnesse of the musick inwardly to themselves: and are as a shut booke, which if you open and reade, you may find much good discourse therin. It nourisheth Meditation, & is no more than that which Seneca expresses, Sapiens semper in se reconditur, but in case of devotion you must still use it, ut eo sis melior, non occultior.
13 Of Questions.
SOme men doe rather employ their inventions in raising of questions; then their judgments in determining them: the one makes learning fruitfull of disputes, the other of workes. Asking of questions proceeds commonly from some prenotion of that which hee doth aske, which occasioned that opinion in Plato, to thinke that all knowledge [Page 75] was but onely remembrance: Qui aliquid quaerit, generali quâdam notione comprehendit, aliter qui fieri potest, ut illud quod fuerat inventum agnoscas. It is a great part of learning not to teach onely what to assert, or affirme, but prudently to aske. Men that are very froward in asking, doe often use the same liberty in telling: Like Vessells which want a bottome, they receive most, because they vent most: in cunning men they are dangerous, for Questions in them are like Beggers [Page 76] gifts, sua munera mittit in hamo, which are onely to draw somewhat backe againe by way of answer, to betray you. Suddaine Questions doe often procure the truest relation of matters, which on considiration they doe begin to colour: they must bee warily raised in religion, for in it we have still more respect to the author of divinity, than the matter: and as delight in humane Learning is inferiour to that which is divine, so faults committed in divine knowledge are more dangerous than those in [Page 77] humane. The ancients did raise them with a jealousie, which is Gods attribute; not with the spirit of contention, which is the Divells: In the life of Christ it is observed that his humility did conquer all the vaine practises of men; so in religion, which is the Christians life, humblenesse of spirit doth often goe beyond the subtilety of humane understanding: for a man may let his soule slip away, and yet dispute of the highest points of divinity: and therefore it is safer with some of the [Page 78] Saints to sit at Christs feet with humility in meditation of his passion, than in the Chaire of subtile controversie.
14 Of Life.
MEn desire Life, as Children doe the light: and as the love in the one is encreased by the sight of glorious trifles, so is that in the other. The desire of humane honours, the glory of splendid miseries, the [Page 79] comforts of friends, and all the passions which we attract in the course of our life, by too much familiarity with them, doe make it so desireable. The consideration of life as it is a passage and journey is good and wholesome; but the feare of the brevity of it, tastes of a weake and vaine spirit: there is some mixture of vanity in the contemplatiōs of them, who would make the space of a whole life but a preparation for the pains of death; when wee know it should bee spent after the comforts [Page 80] of a better life; in hoc quod mortem prospicimus, fallimur; quicquid enim retr [...] est, mors est. And we follow a better Oracle, who hath told us that Death hath lost his sting, which might sharpen our feares. The Satyrist speakes not onely like a good Poet, but a good Morallist: Quid Turpiùs esset, quam propter vitam, vivendi perdere causam: while wee desire to advance our lives, we neglect the performance of those duties for which it was given us. The Ethnicks did terminate the desires of [Page 81] life in the happinesse of it: great men oft slight it in others, abuse it in themselves. Nero preferred Seneca's livings before his life, though he had formerly beene his schoolemaster. Vertues perfect life, innocency restores it, vices debase it: the passions contemne it: prosperity shewes the riches of life, adversity the wealth of the minde: hunc volo, laudari qui sine morte potest. The true esteem of the worth of life, raises a man to the highest pitch of Heroicall valour. This made Iohn the Duke of [Page 82] Saxony, being condemned to dye, esteeme no more of his life than a game at Chesse came to. This made Sir Thomas Moore (while hee jested with the Barber about the Controversie between his head and the King) esteem so little of his life; I mean not the bare dissolution of his frame into their severall elements; but in a true consideration of life, and her severall stages, we may safely repose our thoughts in Solomons Parable: una generatio migrat, & altera venit, sed terra manet in aeternum [Page 83] veluti the atrum in quo haec fabula pregitur: it is the best conjunction to be an old man in wisedome, and a child in innocency. Life commonly gives not that fame to men of excellency of parts, as Death which is the life of Fame, which rises out of her ashes; except some turne a lover of men, and devote themselves to the Commonwealth: then laudem mors alijs quam tibi vita dedit.
15 Of Sciences.
SInce Learning is the perfecter of Humane reason; its happy when it selfe is perfected by reason of experience: Theology is the safest starre to direct our course in the wayes of the intellectuall world, in which, as in other parts of the greater world, you shall meet with some places barren, some for use, others for delight: some Sciences are fruitlesse of [Page 85] workes, others usefull in direction, others pleasant in speculatiō. They should not be altogether Virgins, but should sometime bring forth and bee generative; and as they be the improvement of humane reason, so its reason men should endeavour to improve them; multi pertransibunt, & augebitur scientia, was the prophecy of the last and worst times. To have Sciences still runne after the stile of Master & Scholler, is Pedanticall, to have them labour for production of workes, is Philosophicall. [Page 86] Disputes rise from the search into the understanding, workes from the scrutiny into nature; wherefore saith Heraclitus, Let men seeke the truth of things in the greater World, not in their owne little Worlds. Elenches (the idols of mens brains) are come to that sinnesse of slight, as Seneca seemes well to expresse them, whiles he compares them to the tricks of Juglers; which we know not after what manner they bee done; but we know sure enough that it is not so, as it seemes to us [Page 87] to be. Rationall studies doe still sharpen the understanding for the orderly capacity and methodicall apprehension of any matter. Morall Philosophy guides the affections, Logicke the understanding, Policy the Common-wealth; Astrology is conjecturall; Mathematicks certaine, Metaphysicks sublime: Poetry rises from the strength of a Naturall wit, Rhetorick from a dainty minde; Natural Philosophy from deepe Caves and Mineralls, saith a learned one: History springs from [Page 88] times, matters, persons. Knowledge and learning without experience, is like the statue of Polyphemus, which wants an eye: And therefore men who are wholly immersed in their own thoughts are lesse nimble for taking hold of occasions. To go alwaies by the straightnes of rule, doth not so wel agree with the crosse lines of fortune, which requires a fashioning head: so that little learning falling into men of strength of capacity, nimblenesse of apprehension, ability of judgement, will produce [Page 89] greater effects than a continued study in an unexperienc'd man. Knowledge of Sciences, brings forth such workes, which according to the parts of the receiver prove the Nobler. Cunning men, it makes them able to deceive: the judicious it makes them apply thēselves to nobler ends and intentions: in Stoical natures they breed a neglect of things. Grave studies make a man learned, ingenious studies praised, religious happy; and sometimes the foolish studies most fortunate.
16 Of Dangers.
ELegant was his observation of the gazing Philosopher, how that if hee had looked downe, he might have seen the stars in the water; but looking up hee could not see the water in the starres: and commonly inspection into low matters, discover the knowledge of those things, which by the contemplation of themselves might expose us to danger; [Page 91] melior est oculi visio, quam animi progressio. Dangers have somewhat of the nature of the Cocatrice; and as the one is begot of prodigious mixture, so is the other of disparity of circumstances; whom if you chance to observe first the feare of danger is past; but if hee penetrate you first, he endangers your safety. Some are more quick on the present to avoyd the blow, than of fore-sight to prevent it; security is the Mother of them, so that they have the quality of an enemy, Dolus an virtus quis [Page 92] in hoste, they often deceive as well as overcome: to whom they seeme light, they soonest light into them: Changes and periods of Cōmon-wealths, in some sort exceede the reach of humane Prudence: which as the Kingdome of heaven comes not by observation, but reaches to an high act of Providence. The avoyding of danger, altogether wants not danger; for sometimes Physick, which is given against the violency of one diseasese, enclines the body to a worse, and are so much the more [Page 93] hurtfull, by how much the more secret. Dangers doe shew prudence, safety temperance. Some doe vainly affect a kinde of glory in running into them: but hee that loves danger shal perish therein. They are well cōsidered in private, but are ill feared in action; for then nil terribile nisi ipse timor. Its wisdom to oversee them, valour to overcome them, desperatenesse to run into them.
17 Of Precepts of Policy.
THe extent of this discourse, is as large as the actions of men themselves: and Speeches in this kinde being but the children of observation, have the liveliest representation of action, when experienced men write them. Therefore I will borrow some from that King, whose heart was said to be like the sands of [Page 95] the Sea; and will set them without order, to shew that they are still capable of additions.
The turning away of the simple shall slay them, and the prosperity of fooles shall destroy them.
THis Parable describes the greatnesse of the misery of the weaker sort, and the weaknesse of the greater sort: the one whose mind being not truely setled in the apprehension of themselves and others; [Page 96] nor his thoughts poyzed with the weight of judgement, turnes from the performance of his duty to crooked intentions, and slights of the minde, and cunning, which sacrifices him to the tiranny of misfortune, and not seasoned with divine Precepts, loseth his rest and content, and in the end proves miserable, when Solomon saith, Prudens advertit ad gressus suos, stultus divertit ad dolos. The other who consider not any thing after the rules of wisedome; but whose thoughts being below the [Page 97] ordinary things of fortune: a more prosperous aspect of good fortune puffes him up, and breeds an inequality in his mind, not knowing that every thing hath its worth from its use, but thinking them to have their glory from others esteeme. Goe into their order, Qui magnam felicitatem concoquere non possunt: and through a weaknes of understanding sinkes under the burthen of his felicity.
Let thine eyes looke right on, & let thine eye-lids looke straight before thee.
THis Parable taxes a vain curiosity in men, who not caring to goe on with a caution to their owne wayes, but turnes to observation of others speeches, rather caring what men might say, then what they ought to doe; according to that of Solomon, cunctis sermonibus [Page 99] ne accommodes aurē tuam, &c. Hee who applies himselfe to the inspection of others manners and customes, rather than the government of his owne, hath not well studyed this precept. And againe, he who lookes not straight before him, with an insight into the present state of things, but doth by a wandring of the mind anticipate the joyes of future comfort. It doth obscure and dul the true apprehension of the present, and makes mens minds uncertaine, rather led by the hope of that which shall [Page 100] be, than content with the fruition of that which is. In another place he saith, Wisedome is before him that hath understanding: but the eyes of the foole are in the ends of the earth. And againe, Better is the sight of the eye than the wandring of the minde: the one shewes setlednes in judgement, the other diversions of a weake minde. Thus doe all those who flye on the Wings of Humane desires, who doe interprete the meaning of that Fable; while they either come too nigh the [Page 101] Sunne of Honour, are melted with the heate of ambition; or else flying over the Ocean of humane affaires, doe meete with Clouds and Mists of disgrace, which doe make slow their motion towards their intended desires.
Reprove not the scorner, least he hate thee: rebuke a wise man, and he will love thee.
VVE are taught, not to throw the precious [Page 102] Pearle of Wisdome before men of Swinish Condition.
Give Councell to a Scoffer, and hee will corrupt thy wholesome advice by the infection of his poysonous breath; and what is spoke against their wayes, they onely thinke them to proceede out of an honest simplicicity, and an ignorance of their course. Therefore saith Solomon, Stultus non accipit verba prudentiae nisi ea dixeris quae sunt in corde ejus. A man of understanding shall attain unto wise Councells, for [Page 103] he knowes that they doe but use the priviledge of friendship, who doe but rebuke them; and besides he is conscious that Mortall condition, how vertuous soever, is capable of error; according to that of the Comaedian Homo sum a me nil alienum expecta.
Wise men lay up knowledge, but the mouth of fooles is meere destruction.
IN this is reprehended the Futile Loquacity of of those who have not so much knowledge as to conceale their ignorance; but by untimely discourse doe forfeit the opinion of their wisedome, who lets the stocke of their knowledge runne into the Channell of watery [Page 105] discourse, before their breasts, the fountaine, be full. The other husbands well his talke, and to that end layes up the fruit of knowledge, and ut sapiens semper in se reconditur: Wisedome resteth in the heart of him that hath understanding, but that which is amongst fooles shall bee made known.
The wayes of a foole are right in his owne eyes: but hee that harkeneth unto Councell is wise.
HE that doth not acknowledge that he is weake, is but weake in knowledge. A man had need view himselfe oft in the glasse of Divinity, to see what Habits & formes his soule weares; not in the flattering glasse of his owne thoughts: neither must hee too much [Page 107] trust to his owne heart; for he is wise that knoweth the deceitfulnes therof. The opinion of being vertuous, is reckoned amongst the causes of vice: its a safer rule for one to say, Ile avoyd this, because judgement tells me it is nought, than to say, I love and follow this, because I affect and thinke it good: for the receite of wisedome and instruction will give subtilty to the simple, to the wise man knowledge & discretion.
A fooles wrath is presently knowne: but a prudent man covereth shame.
THere is no passion so soone betrayeth the secrets of the heart as anger, and none discovers this passion so much as the heart of a foole. The Poet calls it a torture, to tyrannize a man to confession: ubi vino tortus & irâ: By these two wee come to see a mans nakednesse; they betray the [Page 109] tower of reason to the fury of the assaulting passions. Here is the difference betwixt patience, which is the covering of a mans shame; and anger which is the discovering of his folly: the one upon every occasion growes loud with insolency, the other upon every occasion drawes the curtaine of Prudence before him, which is Silence, to make him walke unseene.
There is that maketh himselfe rich, yet hath nothing: there is that maketh himselfe poore, yet hath great riches.
THere are some, who are not of an ordinary composition of understanding, can enjoy the riches of Content in the midst of an honest poverty. It is the faculty of the imagination that can turne it selfe, and make every thing appeare [Page 111] to it selfe, as it will it selfe, saith Antoninus. It is not the outward things, but the minde which is capable of Content: non est beatus nisi qui beatum se esse putat. The other, whose riches are larger than the extent of their knowledge, loses the use of them, by an unruly desire of having more, when as David saith, Man walketh in a vaine shadow, he heapeth up riches and knowes not who shall gather them: a desire of Wealth still shewes the poorenesse of [Page 112] a mans minde: (or thus) there are some who vainly glories in the opinion of being held rich, advancing in Fame that, which he really findes the want of; others who through a narrownesse of understanding, would be thought to have nothing, because they will reserve a power of having more.
The back-slider in heart shall be filled with their owne wayes, and a good man shall bee satisfied from himselfe.
THere can arise no greater griefe, or anxiety of Spirit, then from the following the desires of the heart. This Salomon pronounceth as a curse against those that hating knowledge, did not chuse the feare of the Lord, therefore shal they [Page 114] eate of the fruite of their owne wayes, and be filled with their owne devices. There is difference betwixt the prospect, which was Solomons, who pronounced all the workes of his hands to be vanity and vexation of spirit: And when God beheld all that was done; Loe it was very good. Wise men, whose breasts are sacred Treasuries of good counsaile, though they meete with obliquity and crossenesse in businesse, yet they can presently descend into themselves, and there finde speciall preservatives [Page 115] and good precepts against the distasters of outward losse.
The simple beleeve every word; but the prudent doth looke well to his going.
THere is still a privation of Judgement, where there is a too great facility of believing. Our Saviour warneth us of the deficiency of Faith: Cum venerit filius hominis [Page 116] non inveniet sidem super terram: Distrust is the chiefe Antidote against the poyson of deceite. It is a Character of Wisedome: The prudent man is ever suspitious to his owne credulity, caring rather that hee should doe what hee ought, than to heare others talk of what he ought not to doe.
The heart of him that hath Vnderstanding seeketh knowledge, but the mouth of fooles feeds on foolishnesse.
ALL mens mindes either feede on their owne vertues, or the detraction of anothers vice; for in al knowledge which is but the food of the minde: there is a kind of assimilation: they who have drunke a more full draught of wisedome, [Page 118] doe still desire to preserve it by the same nourishment, by which it first tooke Life: the other like a prodigall childe feeds not cleane, but amongst his base lusts, and pleasures which prove but Huskes, which may provoke the appetite, but cannot fill it.
Excellent speech becommeth not a foole; much lesse doe lying lips a Prince.
IN the wisedome of Speech, there is to be observed a decorum, what words should fit the Speaker. Great words become not a servant, nor wise the foole. A Prince should use Majesty of Speech, befitting the state of his person; and truth of speech befitting [Page 120] the divinity of his Commission: the one in way of his person, as Tacitus notes: Augusto profluens & que principem decerit fuit oratio: For the variety of his words, the Scripture teacheth him an heavenly attribute, Dij sicut eritis.
It is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer, but when he is gone, then hee boasteth.
THis shewes the ordinary deceite, and the formulaies of buying; when many times that which men praise is not good, nor that ill which men disprayse: therefore it will be useful to observe in common Language, to see how many colours you can reprehend in them.
An inheritance may bee gotten hastily at the beginning, but the end thereof shall not be blessed.
THis reprehends the immature accesse to abundancy of wealth: qui festinat ad divitias non erit insons; its true many have made a shorter cut to riches, having some knowledge, and not too much honesty: [Page 123] who though they may keepe a great noyse in mens mouths, yet a prosperous successe scarce favours them: illis vix gaudet tertius haeres: and besides Solomon tells us, that they take Wings like the Eagle and flye away: quae ad breve durant, brevi parantur.
A goodname is to be chosen rather than great riches.
A Good name is the best heire of a mans vertues: No men bonum est instar unguenti fragrantis: praise in life time is vertues spurre; in death it is his ornament; nemo laudes contemnit, nisi qui prius laudanda facere desuevit.
Repaire thy work without, and make it sit for thy selfe in the field, and afterward build thine house.
IN the framing of a mans owne fortune, he must have a speciall care to fashion the materialls of his speech, and intentions in private and solitary meditations, before he come to the actiō of performance, or the building of the Fabricke. If you doe not first cast your purpose in [Page 126] the mold of prudence and wisdome; your actions wil be cast on the unconstancy of Fortune, if you conceive not honest intentions, and noble ends, you are but Theomachi, you do build a Babel or things of confusion, quae tolluntur in altum ut lapsu graviore ruant: If the Archetype be not good which is in the understanding, the imitation of it will hardly prove capable of perpetuity. Action without forecast; speech without consideration, controversies in the Pulpit, are like stones hewn in the Temple, [Page 127] which are there only made fit, whereas they should build up.
For men to search their owne glory, is not glory.
LEt another praise thee, and not thy owne mouth; a stranger and not thy owne lips. Poore men often digge in the richest Mines, and search the precious veine of that glorious mettle, when it belongs to the owners. Men who are poor in worth & vertue may talke of the [Page 128] honoured waies of Fame and Credit, which they doe not owe: for they belong to vertue and godlinesse. It was said to bee the cause of Iugurths glory, plurimum faciendo & nihil de seipso loquendo; by which meanes he grew greater than envy, and fruitfull in acts of worth.
Da'mihi ne (que) paupertatem, nec divitias.
THis determines a grave question in Morall Philosophy, whether [Page 129] it were a great happinesse to enjoy wealth, or to cō temne it: this cuts out a faire course betwixt the deformity of foule extreams; and yeilds a good cooling-card for the hot game of ambitiō: to desire that state onely wherein we might best serve God: There ought to be a limitation of the care of getting wealth: our Saviour teacheth it, Primum quaerite regnum Dei, &c. The Ethnicks tells us, Primo quaere animi bona, & caetera vel aderunt, vel non oberunt. The kingdome of Christ was not of this [Page 130] world; (therefore saith one) if this were his Kingdome, he would not let the evill be amongst the good; nor the lascivious with the chast: surely he had no such thing in this world which we cal greatnesse. They say nullū magnum ingenium sine mixturâ dementiae; but it may be very well verified of great fortunes, and with the Satyrist, Raro fortuna sensus communis in illa; & the same gave occasion to Solomon, after he had repeated a catalogue of his pleasures, and works of magnanimity, to note that [Page 131] in the midst of all these, that still his wisedome remained with him, to shew the difficulty of the conjunction of wealth and wisedome.
Of making many books there is no end.
THis is caution, which extends it selfe as well to the reading, as writing of Books: a multiplicity in either, is both distraction & trouble; for as in reading it is a great part of a scholler, to know what [Page 132] he ought to read, sitting & suiting with the knowledge of that which hee desires: so in writing its a great care to bee had in the choyse of the subject, that it bee fited to the strength of his owne ability: Quid valeant humeri quid non, saith the Poet: Most books that are writ, doe rather increase learning in the bulk and bignes, than in vertue & spirit. It is no smal distemper in the labours of the learned, when they turne the ends of their labours for estimation, which destroieth the estimation of their [Page 133] labours, when they rather taste of the spirit of vanity, then are undertaken, through a desire of the information of others. They chuse a subject rather to vant their owne wit, then those whereby they may advance piety: which is that which Solomon addes as a corolary to his discourse, and a perfection to all humane actions: for if they looke not towards the Temple or some profit of man, me thinkes Sir Walter Raleigh hath well pronounced them fooles in print.