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A03207 The hierarchie of the blessed angells Their names, orders and offices the fall of Lucifer with his angells written by Tho: Heywood Heywood, Thomas, d. 1641.; Cecil, Thomas, fl. 1630, engraver. 1635 (1635) STC 13327; ESTC S122314 484,225 642

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prodigalitie was such His exhibition he exceeded much And when his money was exhausted cleane His credit flaw'd and there remain'd no meane Either to score or pawne he walks alone And fetching many a deepe suspire and grone His melanch'ly grew almost to despaire Now as we finde the Diuels ready are And prest at such occasions ev'n so than One of these Sp'rits in semblance of a man Appeares and of his sadnesse doth demand The cause Which when he seem'd to vnderstand He makes free protestation That with ease He can supply him with what Coine he please Then from his bosome drawes a Booke and it Presents the Youth and saith If all that 's writ Within these leaues thou giv'st beleefe to I Will furnish all thy wants and instantly Vpon condition thou shalt neuer looke On any page or once vnclaspe the booke The yong man 's pleas'd the contract he allowes And punctually to keepe it sweates and vowes Now saith the Spectar note and vnderstand What thou seest done Then holds in his left hand The fast-shut booke his right he casts about Then with his thumbe and finger stretched out Meaning the middle of that hand holds fast The charmed Volume speaking thus at last Natat as saliat Aurum and instantly Six hundred Crownes into his pocket fly This shew'd and done he stands himselfe aloofe Giues him the Booke and bids the Youth make proofe As he before did The same order kept The selfe same summe into his bosome leapt They part the youthfull Schollar is surpris'd With ioyes incredible and well advis'd Within himselfe thinks he How should I curse To lose this more than Fortunatus Purse Which to preuent the surest way I 'le chuse Transcribiug it lest I perchance might loose Th'originalll copy Then downe close he sits Shuts fast his dore and summons all his wits From hand to hand the Booke he moues and heaues Weighing and poising the inchanted leaues Then layes it ope But in the stead of Histories Or Poëms he spies nought saue Magicke mysteries First page by page he turnes it ouer all Saue Characters most diabolicall He nothing sees then pausing a good space His eye by chance insists vpon a place At which he wonders namely'a circle that Is fill'd with confus'd lines he knowes not what Their meaning is and from the Center riseth A Crucifix which the Crosse much disguiseth Clov'n through th' midst and quite throughout dissect Aboue an head of horrible aspect Resembling the great Diuels ougly foule Which seemes on his rash enterprise to scoule On the right side two Crosses more appeare That after a strange guise conioyned were And these are interchangeably commixt And vpon each a Caca-Damon fixt Vpon the left that part exposed wide Which modest women most desire to hide Oppos'd as ev'n as iust proportion can Was plac'd th' erected virile part of man At these much wondring and asham'd withall He feeles a sudden feare vpon him fall Which Feuer shakes him his eye 's dull and dead And a strange megrim toxicates his head Imagining behinde him one to reach Ready t' arrest him for his promise-breach He calls aloud his Tutor is by chance At hand beats ope the dore and halfe in ●●ance He findes his Pupill and before him spies This booke of most abhorrid blasphemies And questions how it came there He tells truth Then he in stead of chiding cheares the Youth And hauing caus'd a great fire to be made Now sacrifice this cursed Booke he said The Pupill yeelds the flame about it flashes Yet scarce in a full houre 't is burnt to ashes Though it were writ in paper Thus we see Though these Familiar Spirits seeming bee Mans profest friends their loue 's but an induction Both to the Bodies and the Soules destruction Explicit Metrum Tractatus octavi Theologicall Philosphicall Poeticall Historicall Apothegmaticall Hierogliphicall and Emblematicall Obseruations touching the further illustration of the former Tractat. PRide was the first sinne and therefore the greatest It was the Fall of Angels and is that folly in Man to bring him to perdition It striueth to haue a hand in euery noble Vertue as it hath an interest in euerie detestable Vice The Valiant it swells with vain-glory the Learned with selfe-conceit Nay further it hath beene knowne That men of most submissiue spirits haue gloried That they could so far humble themselues as being proud that they haue not been more proud It hath made zealous men presume of their merit wretched men to boast of their misery Come to the Deadly sins It is Pride in the Enuious man to maligne the prosperitie of his neighbor in the Wrathfull man to triumph in the slaughter of his enemy in the Luxurious man to trick himselfe vp and glory in the spoile of his Mistresse in the Sloathfull to scorne labour and delight in his ease in the Auaritious to despise the Poore and trust in his aboundance According to that of Ovid in the fift booke of his Metamorph. Sum foelix quis enim neg at hoc foelixque manebo Hoc quoque quis dubitat tutum me copia fecit Happy I am for who can that deny And happy will remaine perpetually For who shall doubt it Plenty makes me such Bee'ng made so great that Fortune dares not touch Pride saith Isiodor est amor propriae excellentiae It is a loue of our proper excellencie Saint Augustine telleth vs That all other vices are to be feared in euill deeds but Pride is not to be trusted euen in good actions lest those things which be laudibly done and praise-worthy bee smothered and lost in too much desire of Praise Humilitie maketh men like Angels but Pride hath made Angels Diuels It is the beginning the end and cause of all other euills for it is not onely a sinne in it selfe but so great an one that no other sinne can subsist without it All other iniquities are exercised in bad deeds that they may be done but Pride in good deeds that they may be left vndone Pride saith Hieron was borne in heauen still striuing to possesse and infect the sublimest mindes and as if it coueted still to soare vp to the place from whence it fell it striues to make irruption and breake into the glory and power of men which first broke out from the glory and power of Angels that whom it found Copartners in nature it might leaue Companions in ruin From heauen it fell saith Hugo but by the suddennesse of the fall hauing forgot the way by which it fell though thither it aime it can neuer attaine All other Vices seek only to hinder those Vertues by which they are restrained and brideled as Wantonnesse Chastitie Wrath Patience and Avarice Bounty c. Pride onely aduanceth it selfe against all the Vertues of the minde and as a generall and pestiferous disease laboureth vniuersally to corrupt them Now the signes by which Pride is discouered and knowne are Loquac●ty and clamor in speech bitternes in silence
Novemb. 7. 1634. PErlegi hunc Librum cui titulus A Diuine Poëm intituled The Hierarchie of Angels Qui quidem Liber continet folia 287 aut circitèr In quibus nihil reperio quò minus cum publica utilitate imprimi possit ita tamen vt si non intra annum proximè sequentem typis mandetur haec Licentia sit omninò irrita GVILIELMVS HAYWOOD Capell domest Archiep. Cantuar. THE HIERARCHIE of the blessed ANGELLS Their Names orders and Offices The fall of Lucifer with his Angells Written by Tho Heywood Vita scelesta vale coelica vita vent LONDON Printed by Adam Islip 1635 TO THE MOST EXCELLENT AND INCOMPARABLE LADY AS FAMOVS FOR HER ILLVSTRIOVS VERTVES AS FORTVNAT IN HER REGALL ISSVE HENRETTA MARIA Queene THE ROYALL CONSORT AND SPOVSE OF THE PVISSANT AND INVINCIBLE MONARCH OVR DREAD SOVERAIGNE King CHARLES Her Highnesse most lowly and loyall Subiect THOMAS HEYWOOD In all humilitie consecrateth these his well-wishing though vnworthy Labours To the Reader Generous Reader I Shall not need to apollogise before-hand either for the height of the subiect or the manner of handling this Worke when the Argument of euery Tractat can speake for the one and a direct proceeding in the course proposed for the other Remembring the French Prouerbe Qui edefie en publick place Faict maison trop haut on trop basse Who builds i th' way where all passe by Shall make his house too low or hye I haue exposed my selfe a subiect to all censures and entreat the Reader not to vndertake me with any sinister prejudice For my hope is if he shall fairely trace me in that modest and carefull course which I haue trauelled he may say in the conclusion Facilius currentibus quam repentibus lapsus For I professe my selfe to be so free from all arrogance and ostent that Vt caveam timenda tuta pertimesco My Iuvenilia I must confesse were sutable to my age then for being a childe I spake as a childe but Maruritie hath since better instructed me remembring that excellent Sentence of Sophocles Si Iuvenis luxuriat peccat si senex insanit Nor forgetting that of Seneca the Philosopher Ante senectutem curandum benè vivere in senectute benè mori I haue proposed vnto you Good Angels and Bad the excellencie of the one still continuing in their created Puritie the refractorie rebellion of the other damning themselues to all eternity In the reading of which I entreat you to take into your consideration that wholesome obseruation of Saint Chrisostome Natura rerum sic est vt quoties bonus malo conjungitur non ex bono malus melioretur sed ex malo bonus contaminetur sic vnum pomum malum facilè centum bonos corrumpti at centum mala nunquam vnum corruptum efficiunt bonum Further to expect any new conceits from old heads is as if a man should looke for greene fruit from withered branches But as Time the producter of all things though he be aged himselfe is euery houre begetting somthing new sowe on whose heads he hath cast such a snow as no radicall or naturall heate can melt in imitation of him who as sure as he knowes vs borne will as certainly prouide vs buriall will neuer suffer our braines to leaue working till our pulses cease beating But howsoeuer the manner of our working be so the matter which is wrought vpon be worthy the value of the subiect dignifieth the invaliditie of the Vndertaker And thus I take my leaue of thee with this gentle admonition Heu heu dij mortalibus nectunt malum Quando bonum videt quispiam non vtitur Thin● THO. HEYWOOD The Argument of the first Booke VRIEL A Iove Principium the Creator Of all that liue sole Animator Atheisme and Saducisme disputed Their Tenents argued and refuted A Deitie approv'd by all Gods Creatures in generall Into the world how false gods came And first begun t' vsurpe that name A Quaere made the world throughout To finde this GOD of whom some doubt The Argument of the second Booke IOPHIEL A GOD bee'ng found deny'd by none It followes there can be but One By the Philosophers confest And such as were of Poets best Him not the Oracle denies Nor those the antient World held wise Sage Sybill Mage Gymnosophist All in this Vnitie persist Next That this Pow'r so far extended Can by no Sence be comprehended Neither his Essence most Diuine Be sounded by weake Reasons line And last what names most properly Belong to this great Deity The Argument of the third Booke ZAPHKIEL OF th' Vniuerse the Regions three And how their parts disposed bee How gouerned and in what order In which no one exceeds it's border That Moses Arke in all respects Vpon this worlds rare Frame reflects Both how and when by Pow'r Diuine The Sun and Moone began to shine The day of our blest Sauiors Passion Compar'd with that of the Creation How ev'ry Star shines in it's Spheare What place they in the Zodiacke beare And of the twelue Signes a narration Their influence aspect and station To proue no former worlds haue bin And this must perish we liue in The vainnesse lastly doth appeare Of Plato's Great and Vertent Yeare The Argument of the fourth Booke ZADCHIEL WHat Ternions and Classes bee In the Coelestiall Hierarchee In what degrees they are instated How 'mongst themselues concatinated Angels and Doemons made apparant By Ethnicks and the Scriptures warrant Of Visions and strange Dreames that proue Spirits each where at all times moue Against their infidelitie That will allow none such to bee Discourse of Fauor Loue and Hate Of Poetry of Deaths estate Th' Essence of Spirits how far they know Their pow'r in heav'n and earth below The Argument of the fifth Booke HANIEL THe consonance and simpathie Betwixt the Angels Hierarchie The Planets and Coelestiall Spheares And what similitude appeares 'Twixt one and other Of the three Religions that most frequent bee Iew Christian and Mahumetist Vpon what grounds they most insist Ridiculous Tenents stood vpon In Mahomets blinde Alcaron Where he discourseth the creation Of Heav'n and Angels A relation What strange notorius Heresies By th' Priscillians and Manichees Were held The truth made most apparant By Text and holy Scriptures warrant The Argument of the sixt Booke RAPHAEL THe Heart of Man bee'ng so adverse To Goodnesse and so apt to pierce Things most retruse a course exprest On what it chiefely ought to rest A scrutinie made where and when The Spirits were created Then Of Lucifer the chiefe and prime Of Angels in the first of time His Splendor Pride and how he fell In battell by Prince Michael Their Fight their Armes the triumph great Made in the heav'ns for his defeat The number that reuolted and How long they in their grace did stand Some other doubts may plaine appeare Which to this Argument cohere The Argument of the seuenth Booke CAMAEL OF Gods great Works a serious view For which
they Should so agree being 'mongst themselues at strife To giue to others what they haue not Life Haue they then from the Sun their generation Resolue me then what Countrey or what Nation Can shew his issue Haue they power innate As in themselues themselues to procreate If any of them tell me mongst them all Of what extension are they great or small In new discov'ries if after somewhile We touch vpon an vnfrequented Isle If there we sheds or cottages espy Though thatcht with Reed or Straw we by and by Say Sure men here inhabit 't doth appeare The props and rafters plac'd not themselues there Nor of their owne accord the reed or straw Themselues into that close integument draw Nor could the sauage beasts themselues inure Vnto a worke so formal and secure And you ô Fooles or rather Mad-men when You view these glorious Works which Beasts and Men So far from framing are that their dull sence Can neuer apprehend their eminence And do not with bent knees hearts strook with terror And eyes bedew'd with teares lament their error Submissiuely acknowledge their impiety And blasphemies 'gainst that inuisible Diety If but to what you see you would be loth To giue faith to In Plants a daily growth You all confesse but of you I would know When any of your eyes perceiv'd them grow In Animals we may obserue increase And euery member waxing without cease But when did euer your acutest eye Distinguish this augmenting qualitie Force vegetiue and sensatiue in Man There is with Intellect by which he can Discerne himselfe and others to this houre Tell me Who euer hath beheld that Power We with our outward sences cannot measure The depth of Truth nor rifle her rich treasure Let that Truths spirit then be our Director To bow vnto the worlds great Architector Or will you better with your selues aduise And beleeue those the antient Times held wise And not the least 'mongst these Th' AEgyptian Mages The Indian Brachmans and the Grecian Sages Ev'n these approv'd a God before Time liuing Maker Preseruer and all good things giuing The Poets and Philosophers no lesse In all their works ingeniously professe Theoginis Homer Hesiod Orpheus All Vpon this great Power inuocate and call To their Assistants In the selfe same line Rank't Plato and Pythagoras both Diuine Held for their reuerence done it Let these passe To speake of your great man Diagoras The Prince of Fooles of Atheisme the chiefe Master As was of Magicke the learn'd Zoroaster Peruse his Booke you in the Front shall reade These very words From a sole soueraigne Head All things receiue their Being and Dispose What more could he confesse Which the most knowes He on whose shrinking columes you erect The whole frame of your irreligious sect Holding the statue of Alcides then Numb'red amongst the deified men It being of wood To take away the glory From Idols in a frequent auditorie Of his owne Scholers cast it in the fire Thus speaking Now god Hercules expire In this thy thirteenth Labour 't is one more Than by thy stepdame was enioyn'd before To her being man thou all thy seruice gaue Thou now being god I make thee thus my slaue The Atheist Lucian held Gods Sonne in scorne And walking late by dogs was piece-meale torne Yet for the loue I to his learning owe This funerall Farewell I on him bestow Vnhappy Lucian what sad passionate Verse Shall I bestow vpon the marble stone That couers thee How shall I deck thy Herse With Bayes or Cypresse I do not bemone Thy death but that thou dy'dst thus Had thy Creed As firme been as thy wit fluent and high All that haue read thy Works would haue agreed To haue transfer'd thy Soule aboue the sky And Sainted thee But ô 't is to be doubted The God thou didst despise will thee expell From his blest place since thou Heav'n hast flouted Confine thy Soule into thine owne made Hell But if thou euer knew'st so great a Dietie A Sauiour who created Heauen and thee And against him durst barke thy rude impietie He iudge thy cause for it concernes not me But for thy Body 't is most iust say I If all that so dare barke by Dogs should dy Thus saith the Atheist Lo our time is short Therefore our few dayes let vs spend in sport From Death which threatneth vs no Power can saue And there is no returning from the graue Borne are we by meere chance a small time seen And we shall be as we had neuer been Our breath is short our words a sparke of fire Rais'd from the heart which quickly doth expire And then our bodies must to dust repaire Whilest life and spirit vanish into aire We shall be like the moving Cloud that 's past And we must come to nothing at the last Like Dew exhal'd our names to ruine runne And none shall call to mind what we haue done Our Time is as a shadow which doth fade And after death which no man can euade The graue is seal'd so fast that we in vaine Shall hope thence euer to returne againe Come then the present pleasures let vs tast And vse the Creatures as in time forepast Now let vs glut our selues with costly wine And let sweet ointments in our faces shine Let not the floure of life passe stealing by But crowne our selues with Roses e're they dy Our wantonnesse be counted as a treasure And in each place leaue tokens of our pleasure For that 's our portion we desire no more Let vs next study to oppresse the Poore If they be righteous nor the Widow spare Deride the Ag'd and mocke his reuerend haire Our strength make Law to do what is iniust For in things feeble't is in vaine to trust Therefore the good man let 's defraud for he We know can neuer for our profit be Our actions in his eies gets no applause He checks vs for offending 'gainst the Lawes Blames vs and saith We Discipline oppose Further he makes his boasts That God he knowes And calls himselfe his Sonne Hee 's one that 's made To contradict our thoughts quite retrograde From all our courses and withall so crosse We cannot looke vpon him without losse He reckons vs as Bastards and withdrawes Himselfe from vs nor will he like our Lawes But counts of them as filthinesse The ends Of the iust men he mightily commends And boasts God is his father Let 's then see If any truth in these his words can be And what end he shall haue For if th' Vpright Be Sonnes of God hee 'l aid them by his might With harsh rebukes and torments let vs then Sift and examine this strange kinde of Men To know what meeknesse we in them can spy And by this means their vtmost patience try Put them to shamefull death bee 't any way For they shall be preserv'd as themselues say Thus do they go
that man in It might see The former glorious Structure fram'd by Thee The Sunne the Moone the Stars the Planets seauen Pleiades Arcturus all the Host of Heauen Thy mighty hand created Times and Seasons Thou hast for vs appointed of which Reasons Cannot by man be giuen who hath presum'd Of Worlds before and after this consum'd More to succeed Thy Wisdome all things knowing Finds these to be but fancies meerely growing From Curiositie and can affourd No shape of truth from thy most sacred Word From which let no vaine boaster be so madde As the least jot to take or ought to adde Make it to vs the onely Rule and Square By which to guide our actions and prepare Our meditations solely to incline But from that Centre to deriue no Line So shall those Soules thou hast so dearely bought Be perfect and we praise thee as we ought As far as th' East is distant from the West Remoue our sinnes from vs In euery brest Plant in their stead all Goodnesse God Immense Whose smallest Attr'ibute passeth humane sence From whom In whom By whom All things subsist Visible and vnseene who as thou list Thy Worke About dost compasse Within fill Couer Aboue Below supportest still Keepe vs the worke of Thine owne hands and free Whil'st wee put Hope and Confidence in Thee Vs from all euill guard vs we Thee pray Here Euery where at this Time and for Aye Behind Before Within dores and Without Aboue Below and guirt vs Round about So wee with lips and hearts vnfeign'd ô King To Thee for all thy benefits will sing This Hymne O Holy Holy Holy Thee Wee do Inuoke ô Bessed Trinitie To enter Vs thy Temple mak 't a Place Worthy thy Iuning there by Diuine Grace This By the Father Of the Sonne we craue This By the Sonne good Father let vs haue O Holy Spirit that this may be done Wee Intreat Thee By the Father and the Sonne Quid noscis si teipsum nescis Bucer in Psalm The Dominations E●● 〈◊〉 Ioannis 〈◊〉 Gener THE ARGVMENT of the fourth Tractate WHat Ternions and Classes be In the Coelestiall Hierarchee In what degrees they are instated How 'mongst themselues concatinated Angels and Daemons made apparant By Ethnicks and the Scriptures warrant Of Visions and strange Dreames that proue Spirits each where at all times mo●e Against their infidelitie That will allow none such to be Discourse of Fauour Loue and Hate Of Poetry of Deaths estate Th' Essence of Spirits how far they know Their power in Heauen and Earth below The second Argument THere is no Power 〈◊〉 Domination But from the Lord of our Saluation The Dominations A Little further let my Muse aspire To take myne eyes from Earth to looke vp higher Vnto the glorious Hierarchy aboue The blest degrees in which the Angels moue In this the best Theologists assent That they are Substances Intelligent Immortall Incorporeall Mouing still Assisting Man obseruant to Gods will In three most blessed Hierarchies th' are guided And each into three Companies diuided The first is that in which the Seraphims bee Cherubims Thrones distinct in their degree The Seraphim doth in the word imply A Feruent Loue and Zeale to the Most-High And these are they incessantly each houre In contemplation are of Gods great Power The Cherubim denotes to vs the Fulnesse Of absolute Knowledge free from Humane dulnesse Or else Wisedomes infusion These desire Nothing but Gods great Goodnesse to admire The name of Thrones his glorious Seat displaies His Equitie and Iustice these still praise The second Ternion as the Schoole relates Are Dominations Vertues Potestates Dominions th' Angels Offices dispose The Vertues in the second place are those That execute his high and holy Will The Potestates they are assistant still The malice of the Diuell to withstand For God hath giuen it to their powerfull hand In the third order Principates are plac't Next them Arch-Angels Angels are the last The Principates of Princes take the charge Their power on earth to curbe or to enlarge And these worke Miracles Th' Arch-Angels are Embassadors great matters to declare Th' Angels Commission hath not that extent They only haue vs Men in gouernment God 's in the first of these a Prince of Might He in the second doth reueale as Light Is in the last his Graces still inspiring To know what 's to their Offices requiring The formost Ternion hath a reference To contemplate Gods Diuine Prouidence Prescribing what by others should be don The office of the second Ternion Doth his concurring Influence disperse Vnto the guidance of the Vniuerse And sometimes hath a working Now we know The third descends to'haue care of things below Assisting good men and withstanding those That shall the rules of Diuine Lawes oppose These seuerall Companies before related May with good sence be thus concatinated First because Loue of all things that haue being With Diuine Nature is the best agreeing As hauing influence and birth from Him Therefore the first place hath the Seraphim Because from Loue all Knowledge doth arise For who that loues not God can be held wise And therefore in it's proper Mansion sits The second place the Cherubim best sits Because from Loue and Wisedome nothing must Or can proceed but what is Good and Iust. Therefore the Thrones haue the third place assign'd So that to Loue the Seraphim's inclin'd Euen loue vnto the Great and Holy-One Cherubim to Wisedome Iudgement to the Throne Now because Empire for so oft it falls Must needs submit to Iudgement when it calls And that to Empire there of force must be A Vertue to maintaine that Empiree And that this vertue cannot exsist long Without a Power that is sufficient strong Able their molestation to redouble That shall this Empire or this Vertue trouble The second Ternion in these heauenly Bowers Are the Dominions Vertues and the Powers Further since Power or Might nothing preuailes Whereas a Light illuminating failes And this Instruction but two wayes can grow By Word or Action therefore they bestow The next place on the Principates as those Who the most eminent actions still dispose Then to th' Arch-Angels who from the blest Trinity The chiefest Principles of our Diuinity Vnto our deare saluation necessary 'Twixt heauen and earth immediatly carry To th' Angels last whose industry extends To Creatures Men and so their Power ends In things inferior this is the Oeconomy Of the most blest and sacred Hierarchy Yet notwithstanding some there are and those Pretending no small iudgement that oppose Not onely this faire Order and Degree But hold No Spirits at all or Angels be The Sadduces thus argue If such were We doubtlesse should of their Creation heare From Moses who his first Booke doth begin Both with the World and all things made therein But makes of them no mention And againe If they be nam'd in Text 't is to restraine
of issue the Saturnine to dissuade from all things that be euill Such was that Socraticum Daemonium or Genius of Socrates which still continued and encouraged him in the studie an practise of Vertue whose condition was to dissuade him from many things but to persuade him to nothing Of this Daemonium strange things are reported in Historie as that it was euer at his elbow to diuert him from doing euill and to aduise him to shun and auoid danger to remember him of things past to explaine vnto him things present and reueale vnto him things future Socrates himselfe confessed that hee saw it sometimes but seldome yet heard it often He dissuaded Charmiades the sonne of Glaucus from going to the Groues of Nemaea and to excuse himselfe from that journey who despising his counsell perished in the aduenture Vpon a time sitting at the table of Timarchus where a great banquet was serued in Timarchus offered twice to rise from the boord but was held by Socrates Yet watching his opportunitie while the other was in serious discourse hee stole away priuately and met with Nyceus whom he slew For which fact being condemned and led to death he confessed vnto his brother Clitimachus That if he had been swayed by the double aduertisement of Socrates hee had not vndergone so sad a disaster The same Socrates in a great defeate which the Athenians had flying from the victorious Enemie with Lachetes the Praetor and comming to a place where three wayes met he chose one path to himselfe contrarie to the aduice and counsell of all the rest And being demanded the reason wherefore he did so he made answer That his Genius so persuaded him Which they deriding tooke a contrarie course and left him abandoned to himselfe Now when the Horsemen of the Enemie made hot pursuit after them they tooke that path which Lachetes and all his people had taken who were all put to the sword and onely those few which followed Socrates escaped He presaged the great strage and messacre which after hapned in Sicilia As also of the deaths of Neon and Thrasillus in their Expedition against those of Ionia and Ephesus Saint Augustine in his booke De Cognitione verae vitae is persuaded That Spirits by Gods permission can raise stormes and tempests and command raine haile snow thunder and lightning at their pleasures As also That by the instigation of Spirits wild Beasts become either rebellious or seruiceable to mans vse In another place hee ascribeth the operation of all things seasonable or vnseasonable vnto them but not as Authors and Makers but Ministers and Seruants to the Diuine Will and command According with that in Ecclesiasticus Cap. 39. vers 28. There be Spirits that are created for vengeance which in their rigour lay on sure strokes in the time of destruction they shew forth their power and accomplish the wrath of him that made them Fire Haile Famine and Death all these are created for vengeance the teeth of the wilde Beasts and the Scorpions and the Serpents and the Sword execute vengeance for the destruction of the Wicked They shall be glad to do his commandements and when need is they shall be ready vpon earth and when their houre is come they shall not ouerpasse the commandements c. To this strict rule of Gods commandement both the good and bad Spirits are limited and beyond that they haue power or abilitie to do nothing Otherwise those that are malignant euill would in their rabies and fury destroy all Gods creatures in a moment Moreouer as the same Author affirmeth the Diuell hath power to tempt and entice man to sinne and wickednesse but he cannot compell him These be his words Serm. de Temp. Potest Diabolus ad malum invitare non potest trahere Delectationem infert non potestatem c. Rabbi Avot Nathan a learned Iew affirmeth That Spirits haue three things common with men namely Procreation Food and Death Porphirius as Proclus witnesseth of him held all Spirits to be mortall and that he amongst them who was the longest liued did not exceed the number of a thousand yeares Plutarch in his booke De Oraculorum defectu reciteth a story That about the Islands called Echinades newes was brought to one Thamus being then a ship boord that god Pan was dead and this happened iust at the birth of our Sauiour Christ. But because I haue made vse of this Historie heretofore in a booke commonly entituled The History of Women to insert the same here likewise might be tasted as Cibus bis coctus But to answer that learned Rabbi and Porphyrius like him opinionated Not possible it is That Spirits created by God immortall and incorporeall should be any way obnoxious to extinction or death More credible it is that these were meere phantasies and illusions of the Diuell by such prestigious sorceries persuading vs that Spirits are mortall to make man distrust the immorralitie of the Soule and so possesse him with an heresie grosse impious and damnable Here likewise a most necessarie consideration may be inserted to giue answer to the Sadduces and others who obstinately affirme That Moses in his Booke of the Creation made no mention at all of Spirits or Angels When as Saint Augustine contrarie to them in beleefe saith That vnder the words of Heauen aud Light though not by their proper and peculiar names they were specified and intended And that Moses writing to a People whose obstinacie and stupidity was such that they were not capable of their incorporeall Essence he was the more chary to giue them plaine and manifest expression Moreouer it may be supposed That if the discreet Law-giuer had told them of their Diuine nature it might haue opened a wide gap to their idolatry to which he knew they were too prone of themselues For if they were so easily induced to worship a golden Calfe and a brasen Serpent both of them molten and made with hands how could so excellent and diuine a Nature haue escaped their adoration Yet doe the words of Moses allow of Spirits though couertly where it is said Genes 3.1 Now the Serpent was more subtill than any Beast of the field which the Lord God had made c. By whom was meant the Diuell as appears Wisd. 2.24 As Satan can change himselfe into an Angell of light so did he vse the wisedome of the Serpent to abuse Man c. I had occasion to speake in my discourse of Dreames of the one brother Sleepe something shall not be amisse to be discoursed of the other Death and to amplifie that in the Prose which in the Verse was onely mentioned Cicero calleth Death the yonger brother of Sleepe which being a thing that cannot be auoided it ought therefore the lesse to be feated One demanding of a noble Sea Captaine Why hauing meanes sufficient to liue on land hee would endanger his person to the perills and frequent casualties of the Ocean
confidently beleeued his wife soon after died leauing him her vniuersall heire of great possessions and mighty summes of money which both emboldened and strengthened him in his diabolicall proceedings so that by the assistance of Sergius the Monke hee now openly proclaimed himselfe a Prophet and sent of God to prescribe new lawes vnto the Nations And hauing before made himselfe skilfull in all their Lawes the better to countenance and corroborate this his Innouation he thought to accord with the Iewes in some points to continue them his friends and in some things with the Christians lest he should make them his enemies He likewise complied with diuers Heretiques with the Macedonians he denied the Holy-Ghost to be God with the Nicolaitans he approued the multiplicitie of Wiues c. On the other side he confessed our Sauiour Christ to be an holy man and a Prophet and that the Virgin Mary was an holy and blessed woman whom in his Alcaron he much extolled With the Iews he held circumcision with many other of their ceremonies Besides his Religion gaue all the abhominable vices of the flesh free scope and libertie which drew vnto his new Sect much confluence of people from many Nations and Languages to be his abettors and followers His booke he called the Alchoran and lest his diuellish impieties and absurd impostures should be examined and by that meanes discouered hee made it a penaltie of death for any man To argue or make difficultie of any Tenent contained therein making protestation That they ought to be supported maintained by Armes and not by Arguments His first attempt was To set vpon the confines of Arabia Heraclius being then Emperor who held his seat at Constantinople at the same time Boniface the first was Pope and Honorius his successor The newes of this great insurrection comming to the Emperors eare he prepared to suppresse it with all speed possible and to that end he entertained into his Pay the Scenites a warre-like people of Arabia who before had in their hearts much fauoured Mahomet by whose aid in the first bloudy Conflict he was victorious and dispersed this new Sect and had hee followed his present fortune he had quite abandoned it from the face of the earth But supposing them by this first defeat sufficiently disabled and himselfe secured hee failed to keepe promise with the Scenites and detained their pay who in meere despight that they had bin deluded and so injuriously dealt with ioyned themselues with Mahomets dis-banded Forces and by reason of his former r●putation elected him their Captaine and Generall growing in time to that strength and boldnesse that they attempted diuers places in the Roman Empire entring Syria and surprising the great city Damas inuading Egypt Iudaea with the bordering prouinces persuading the Saracins and people of Arabia That the Land of Promise solely appertained vnto them as the legitimate successors vnto their father Abraham and Sarah from whom they deriued their Name Thus animated by the successe in these wars he was suddenly puft vp with a vain glorious ambition to conquer and subdue the whole world His next expedition therefore he aimed against the Persians a Nation at that time very potent and held to be inuincible His first aduenture succeeded ill for his army was defeated but after hauing re-allyed his forces in his second attempt fortune so fauoured him that hee compelled them to embrace his Religion Briefly and to auoid circumstance after he had run through many hazards and prosperously ouercome them he was poysoned and dyed according to Sabellicus in the fourtieth yere of his age And because he had told his complices and adherents That his body after his death should ascend into heauen they kept it for some dayes vnburied expecting the wonderment so long till by reason of the infectious stench thereof none was able to come neere it At length they put it into a chest of iron and carried it to Mecha a City of Persia where it is stil adored not onely of the people of the East but the greatest part of the world euen to this day And so much concerning the Impostor Mahomet With which relation the most approued Authors agree as Platina in the liues of the Popes Blond●● in his booke of the declining of the Roman Empire Baptista Ignatius in the Abridgement of the Emperours the Annals of Constantinople Nauclerus Antoninus and others And now when I truly consider the stubborne Atheist the misbeleeuing Mahumetan and stiffe-necked Iew it putteth mee in minde of that of the Psalmist Is it true ô Congregation Speake ye iustly ô sonnes of men iudge ye vprightly yea rather ye imagin mischiefe in your hearts your hands execute crueltie vpon the earth The Wicked are strangers from the wombe euen from the belly haue they erred and speak lies Their poyson is euen like the poyson of a Serpent like the deafe Adder that stoppeth his eares which heareth not the voice of the Inchanter though he be most expert in charming Breake their teeth ô God in their mouthes breake the jawes of the yong Lions ô Lord let them melt like the waters let them passe away when he shooteth his arrows let them be broken let them consume like a Snaile that melteth and like the vntimel● fruit of a woman that hath not seene the Sunne c. Amongst Theodore Beza's Epigrams those which by a more peculiar name he inscribeth Icona's I reade one of Religion in the manner of a Dialogue Quae nam age tam lacero vestita incedis amictu Religio summiver a patris sorholes c. What art thou in that poore and base attyre Religion The chiefe Father is my Sire Why in a robe so thread-bare course and thin Fraile Riches I despise which tempt to sin Vpon what Booke do'st thou so fix thine eyes My Fathers reue'rend Law which I much prise Why do'st thou go thus with thy breasts all bare It fits those best that Truths professors are Why leaning on a Crosse Because indeed It is my welcome rest none else I need But wherefore wing'd Because I looke on high And would teach men aboue the starres to fly And wherefore shining It becomes me well Who all grosse darknesse from the minde expell What doth that Bridle teach vs To restraine All the wilde fancies of the brest and braine But wherefore Death do'st thou beneath thee tread Because by me ev'n Death it selfe lies dead This shewes the qualitie and estate of true Religion and the Professors thereof which is builded on the Messi●● whom the peruerse and obstinate Iewes will not euen to this day acknowledge Concerning which I obserue an excellent saying from Gregorie Pap. The Iewes saith hee would neither acknowledge Iesus Christ to be the Sonne of God by the words and testimonie of his Heralds and fore-runners the Prophets not by his infinite Miracles and yet the Heauens knew him who leant him a bright star to light him into the world The Sea knew him who against
acquire And therefore we must in this sincere Truth Our selues examine How we spend our Youth Manhood and Age and then by searching finde How fraile weare how'vnstedfast and how blinde And next when we our miseries haue skan'd Sifting all actions that we take in hand How vaine they are Necessitie will leaue That Consequent behinde That we must cleaue Onely to that great Pow'r nor from it shrinke Without which we nor moue nor speake nor thinke And because we haue falne from Him by Sin To intimate There is no way to win Our peace and reconcilement or dispence With our transgression but true Penitence I thus proceed Great hath the Decertation Bin 'mongst the Learned men 'bout the Creation Of blessed Angels Some of them haue said They many Worlds before this World were made To'attend th' Almighty Others haue againe So curious a scrutinie held vaine And almost irreligious aiming still To penetrate into his secret Will Without his Warrant and conclude That they Had with the Light subsistence the first day Were with it made of Nothing had no Being At all till then The Fathers disagreeing About this point some haue opinion held But by the later Writers since refel'd As Hierome Ambrose Gregory Nazianzen Cassianus Damascenus Origen Hilary Basil These with others were Resolv'd That because nothing doth appeare From Moses in his Booke of things created Concerning them That they were fabricated Long time before Againe Because Saint Paul Writing to Titus saith God first of all Before the World th' Hope of Eternall life Promis'd to vs c. Hence they maintaine this strife Interpreting the Text Er'e the Creation Which words include If Before God did fashion All things that Being haue in earth or heauen There must be some to whom this power is giuen And those the Angels But on this Assertion Learned Saint Austin layes a great aspersion Affirming them with th' Heav'ns Emperiall made And that before they no existence had Saint Paul interpreting Th' Almighty gaue This Promise and blest Hope Mankinde to saue From all Eternitie to elevate Mans Fall in that pure Lambe Immaculate His Sonne and our deare Sauiour And thus Opinion'd were graue Athanasius Gregory Theodoret Epiphanius With diuers others Which no sooner mov'd Was in the Lateran Councell but approv'd Of all the Bishops as of both the best Which in the sacred Scripture is exprest For thus 't is writ God ended the seventh day The Worke He made for so doth Moses say And in the day whch He his Sabbath nam'd Rested from All the Worke which he had fram'd Which vniuersall word perforce doth carry Spirituall things as well as Elementary Such as before the World thinke them created In many doubts themselues haue intricated I would besides haue them resolue me How Vnlesse his Worke imperfect they allow It can with reason stand that if they were In Time before Time was and with sincere Faith and Obedience had so long aboad They onely then revolted from their God Should this be granted it must needs inferre Strong argument a second way to erre Namely That no Coelestiall Hierarchy Subiects of that eternall Monarchy Who haue remain'd as by the World appeares In blest estate so many thousand yeares But notwithstanding the great grace th' are in May slide like Lucifer and fall by Sin Which the Church holds erronious Be it then Granted That God did make the Angels when Th' Imperiall Heav'ns were fashion'd at first pure And without sin for euer to endure Had they not falne through Proud Imagination By which they then incur'd his Indignation For nothing Euill can from Him proceed So much the Text implyes where we may reade God said when he his rare Worke vnderstood All things that I haue made be greatly good And lest the Church might that way be deluded 'T is in the Lateran Councell thus concluded All Spirits were created pure at first But by their selfe-will after made accurst To make things cleare Although we must confesse That Moses doth not in plaine termes expresse When how and in what order Angels were At first created yet it will appeare How that their Essences and Natures bright Were signified by names of Heav'n and Light And though they seeme forgotten in that Text Obserue how other Scriptures are connext To giue them Name and Being In that Oad In which the three blest Children prais'd their God In the hot flames to giue to vnderstand That Angels were the Worke of his great Hand O all ye Workes of God the Lord say they Blesse praise and magnifie his Name for aye Praise him ye Heav'ns ye Angels praise the Lord. Let vs to Daniels adde the Psalmists word Praise Him all ye his Angels Some haue said That Angels were the last worke that God made But most absurdly He in Iob thus sayes When the Stars of the Morning gaue me praise Then all the Angels of my Sonnes the choice Extold my Name with an exalted voice Now when the Great and most Diuinely Wise Did the rare Fabricke of the World deuise And by the vertue of his Word create The Heav'n and Earth in their so goodly state He made the Angels in the first of Time Of Substances most noble and sublime Amongst which Lucifer was chiefe and hee As he might challenge a prioritie In his Creation so aboue the rest A supereminence as first and best For he was chiefe of all the Principalities And had in him the three stupendious qualities Of the most holy Trinitie which include First Greatnesse Wisedome next then Pulchritude The Greatnesse of the Sonne and holy Spirit The Father is which they from him inherit Now of the Father and the Holy-Ghost The Wisedome is the Sonne so stiled most The Father and Sonnes Pulchritude is he That 's the third Person in the Trinitie And though of Angels the great pow'r be such As hath in Scripture been extolled much For their nobilitie and excellence As first of Michael whose pre-eminence Daniel relates as naming him for one Of the prime Angels that attend the Throne As Raphael who told Tobit Of the seuen That still before th' Almighty stand in Heav'n Himselfe was one Or as the Seraphim Who as the holy Prophet speakes of him With a cole toucht his lips from th' Altar tooke Or as of Gabriel whom the holy Booke Mentions who to the earth made proclamation Of our most blessed-Sauiors Incarnation Yet aboue these was Lucifer instated Honor'd exalted and much celebrated And therefore many of the Learned striue His greatnesse from Ezechiel to deriue For thus he saith and what he doth infer 'Gainst Tyrus they conuert to Lucifer Thou sealst the Sum vp art in Wisedome cleare Thy beauty perfect doth to all appeare Thou hast in Eden Gods faire Garden been Each pretious stone about thy garment's seene The Ruby Topaz and the Diamond The Chrysolite and Onyx there were found The Iasper and the Saphyr dearely sold The
Of Thunder Tempest Meteors Lightning Snow Chasemates Trajections of Haile Raine And so With piercing eyes he hath a deepe inspection Into the Sunne Moone Stars the true direction Of all Stars fixt or wandring Zodiacke Lines Articke and the Antarticke Poles and Signes The courses of the Heav'ns the qualities Their influence their effects and properties And as they haue a vertuall pow'r to know All our inferior bodies here below So of the Sp'rits of Glory or Perdition The Orders Offices and the Condition Briefely There is no Creature God hath made From the first Chaos but it may be said Whether it be abortiue or full growne That to the Angels nature it is knowne Since then so great and so profound 's their skill Infus'd into them by the Makers Will No wonder 't is that they such strange things can Beyond the weake capacitie of Man We onely by things sensible attaine To a small knowledge and with mighty paine And into error we may quickly fall For in it is no certaintie at all Sp'rits cannot erre and be deceiv'd as we Seeing and knowing all things perfectly In their true reall Essence which is meant Onely of Naturall things and hath extent No further For as Angels Creatures bee Th' are limited in their capacitie In all such things as on Gods Pow'r depend Or Mans Free-will their skill is at an end And vnderstand no further than reueal'd By the Creator else 't is shut and seal'd Hence comes it that the euill Angels are So oft deceiv'd when as they proudly dare To pry into Gods Counsels and make show By strange predictions future things to know This makes their words so full of craft and guile Either in doubts they cannot reconcile Or else for cettainties false things obtruding So in their Oracles the World deluding Whose answers either were so doubtfull and So intricate that none could vnderstand Or meerely toyes and lies for their words were By interpointing so dispos'd to beare A double sence and seeming truth to tell Whether or this or that way the chance fell But the good Angels they can no way erre The reason is That they themselues referre Wholly to Gods good pleasure from which Square And perfect Rule they neuer wandring are They iudge not rashly hid things they desire not And after future chances they enquire not Nor further of ought else to vnderstand Than they are limited by his command How many thousand traines hath Sathan layd By which he dayly doth fraile man inuade By entring Contract as a seeming friend Thereby to draw him to more fearefull end Of which the Fathers witnesse for one saith The Diuell with Magitions compact hath Another That all Magicke cov'nants bee Meere superstition and Idolatrie Which growes from a societie combin'd Betwixt the euill Daemons and Mankind If these were not Why should the Ciuill Law Firm'd by th' Imperiall sanction keepe in awe Such damn'd Impostors For the words thus run Many we know abstruse Arts haue begun To put in practise to disturbe the Aire Vpon the innocent Soules these likewise dare Vomit their malice and from the graues call Spirits from rest by Diabolicall And cursed Spells All such as shall rely On things preposterous and contrary To Natures course Gods people to annoy The Churches Curse them and their Arts destroy The like against these selfe-opinion'd fooles Is Articled in the Parisian Schooles Of such like Miscreants 't is in Esay said We haue strooke hands to league with Death and made Cov'nant with Hell How can Man be exempt From this Seducer he that dar'd to tempt The Sonne of God All these will I giue thee If thou wilt prostrat fall and worship mee Of these Compacts and Couenants we finde Two sorts and both blasphemous in their kinde The first When willingly we seeke inspection Into that Art and labour our direction From Magicke bookes or vse their Circles Lines Their superstitious Characters and Signes The second when without maleuolence We search into that art with no pretence Of Curiositie onely we vse it Knowledge to gaine and got not to abuse it And that is dangerous too all Such compact League with the Diuell as in word or act Breathe words vnknowne obscure inserted vainly Or such things as are holy vse prophanely As by obseruing certaine Characters Signes Figures Angles Squares Diameters c. Certaine Dayes Houres Stars Planets Constellations Graines Numbers Instruments of antique fashions And these beyond their naturall operations When Sacraments or any thing that 's holy Shall be abus'd by their ridiculous folly When Images of Wax or such like matter Are cast into a pot and boyl'd in water When certaine Numbers vnknowne Markes or Notes Writ in strange coloured paper he deuotes To superstitious vse When as to Coine Of gold or siluer or of brasse they ioyne Stamps of new Characters and this to bee When such a Planet is in such degree Such Pieces did Pasetis vse to weare What e're he bought he neuer payd too deare Who parting from the Merchant did but name The sum he payd and backe to him it came When holy Ceremonies through the Malicious Are made idolatrous and superstitious When Linnen neuer washt is vs'd and hee Must hold a Wand that 's cut from such a Tree With which he strikes the East and then the West The North or South as to his purpose best That all his Haire shaues off by night or day Thinking thereby to driue the Div'll away That takes dust from a Sepulchre to vse Or from the Graue the Deads bones to abuse Or ought besides that shall seeme retrograde To Reasons course or what 's by Nature made Further Vnto this Cov'nant doth belong● All such as stand in their opinions strong To meditate those fond Bookes bearing name From Ada Abelus Enoch Abraham Cyprian Albertus Magnus or Honorius Paulus with those in Magicke still held glorious Who boast ambitiously with great ostent This Art had both it's birth and ornament Either from Adams Custos Razael Or else from Tobits Keeper Raphael Another strange Booke they produce and say 'T was Salomons call'd his Clavicula These Magi by old Sathan thus misguided Another Volume in sev'n parts diuided Stuft with Spels Charmes Oblations all Confusions Of Non-sence and the Diuels meere obtrusions As a Worke learn'd and sacred still prefer To ev'ry curious yong Practitioner All these are but his subtill traines to draw Men from Gods Feare and honour of his Law For in this Art whoeuer striues t' excell He strikes a lasting Couenant with Hell And as in these so likewise in past Ages He wanted not his Astrologomages For most of this prognosticating Tribe Mettals vnto each Planet can ascribe Siluer vnto the Moone to the Sunne was Gold sacred vnto Iove Copper and Brasse To Venus white Lead vnto Saturne Blacke Iron and Steele to Mars nor doth there lacke Amber to Mercury To each of them They
trans-shape himself into the likenesse of a Mouse But when the Diuine Iustice thought fit to giue a period to his insolencies being watched by some of his enemies they espied him in the Sunne sitting in a window that belonged to a stoue or hot house sporting himselfe in that shape when comming behind him when he least suspected they thrust their swords through the window and so slew him In like manner that great Magition of Newburg who sould a bottle of hay in stead of an horse being twice apprehended and hauing twice by the Diuels help escaped out of prison the third time hee was forsaken of his great Patron and deliuered vp vnto death I will conclude with the great Archi-Mage of these our later times Cornelius Agrippa who when he had spent the greatest part of his houres and age in the search and acquisition of this blacke and mystical Science yet doubted not to write after this maner The Magitions by the instigation of the Diuell onely in hope of gaine and a little vain-glory haue set their mindes against God not performing any thing that is either good or profitable vnto men but leading them to destruction and errour In whom whosoeuer shall place any confidence they plucke Gods heauy judgments vpon themselues True it is that I being a yong man writ of the Magical Art three bookes in one volume sufficiently large which I entituled Of Hidden Philosophie in which wheresoeuer I haue erred through the vaine curiositie of youth now in my better and more ripe vnderstanding I recant in this Palinode I confesse I haue spent much time in these vanities in which I haue onely profited thus much that I am able to dehort other men from entring into the like danger For whosoeuer by the illusion of the Diuell or by the operation of euill Spirits shall presume to diuine or prophesie by Magicke vanities Exorcismes Incantations Amatories inchanted Ditches and other demoniacall actions exercising blasphemous charmes spels witchcrafts and sorceries or any thing belonging to superstition and Idolatrie all these are fore-doomed to be tormented in eternall fire with Iamnes Mambre and Simon Magus These things this wretched man writ who saw the best and followed the worst For he continued in that execrable studie to his end and hauing receiued a promise from the Diuell that so oft as age came vpon him so oft his youth should be renewed and so liue euer he commanded his owne head to be cut off in hope instantly to reuiue againe But miserable that he was he was cheated in his confidence by that great Deceiuer in whom hee most trusted by which he made both soule and body a sudden though long expected prey to the Diuell There can scarce a sin be imagined more hatefull to God than Magicke by which the Couenant made with him being violated the Sorcerer entreth a new with the Diuell in which open war is proclaimed against God and a treaty of Peace first debated and after concluded with Sathan God himselfe saith by the mouth of his seruant Moses If any turne after such as worke with euill Spirits and after Soothsayers to go a whoring after them I will set my face against that person and will cut him off from amongst his people And againe If a man or woman haue a Spirit of Diuination or Soothsaying in them they shall die the death they shall stone them to death their bloud shall be vpon them Reade Deutronomie cap. 18. vers 10. Let none be found amongst you that maketh his sonne or his daughter to goe through the fire or that vseth witchcraft or a regarder of times or a marker of the flying of Fowles or a Sorcerer or a Charmer or that counselleth with Spirits or a Sooth-sayer or that asketh counsell of the Dead for all that do such things are abhomination vnto the Lord and because of these abhominations the Lord thy God doth cast them out before thee Thus we see as well by the Scriptures themselues as by the Ciuill Lawes of Kingdomes all such as shall separate themselues from God and enter into conuerse and fellowship with Sathan are cursed in the act and ought to be extermined from all Christian Churches and Commonweales The Emblem A Moth or Silk-worme creeping from an old stocke or trunke of a tree and turned vnto a Butter-fly The Motto Ecce nova omnia Behold all things are made new Complying with that which wee reade in Saint Pauls second Epistle to the Corinthians cap. 5. vers 17. Therefore if any man be in Christ let him be a new Creature old things are passed away behold all things become new And Ephes. 4.22 That you cast off concerning the conuersation in times past that Old Man which is corrupt through the deceiuable lusts and be renewed in the spirit of your minde and put on the New Man which after God is created vnto righteousnesse and true holinesse The Emblem is thus exprest Truncus iners eruca fuit nunc alba voluctis Ambrosium Coeli corpore gaudet iter Antea vermis erat mutatio quanta videtis Corporis antiqui portio nulla manet Vestis opes habitus convivia foedera mores Lingua sodalitium gaudia luctus amor Omnia sunt mutanda viris quibus entheus ardor Terrhenae decet hos faecis habere nihil ¶ Thus Paraphrased A meere trunke was the Silke-worme now it flies A white Bird sporting in th' Ambrosiall Skies Before a Worme What a great change is here Of the first shape no semblance doth appeare Garments Wealth Banquets Contracts Mannors Ioy Loue Language Fellowship Change must destroy Such men whom Diuine ardor doth inspire Must of this terrhene drosse quench all desire After which change followeth eternity And of the Saints and Elect it may be said Parva patiuntur vt magna potiantur Smal are the things they suffer in this world compared with the great things they shall receiue in the world to come We reade Dan. cap. 12. vers 2. thus And many of them that sleepe in the dust of the earth shall awake to euerlasting life and some to shame and perpetual contempt and they that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the Firmament and they that turne many vnto righteousnesse shall shine as the Starres for euer and euer Moreouer Iob 19. For I am sure that my Redeemer liueth and he shall stand the last on the earth And though after my skinne wormes shall destroy this body yet shall I see God in my flesh whom I my selfe shall see with mine eyes and none other for mee c. AEternus non erit sopor Death shall be no euerlasting sleep Iohn 5.28 Maruell not at this for the houre shall come in which all that are in the graues shall heare his voice and they shall come forth that haue done good vnto the resurrection of life but they that haue done euill vnto the resurrection of condemnation Saint Augustine in one of his books saith Resurgent Sanctorum