Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n action_n good_a sin_n 1,408 5 4.8951 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64668 VVits fancies, or, Choice observations and essayes collected out of divine, political, philosophical, military and historical authors / by John Ufflet ... Ufflet, John, b. 1603. 1659 (1659) Wing U20; ESTC R8998 43,009 138

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

but one wrench higher and they cannot be silent the just avenger of sin will not loose the glory of his executions but will have men know from whom they smart Men had rather die then endure torture therefore extorted confession cannot be good It is both lawfull and fit in things not prohibited to conform our selves to the manners and rights of those with whom we live The same day fotty years after England was conquered by William the father was Normandi conquered by William Rufus the Son it being the 27th of September 1106. A Conquest draweth to it the alteration of these three things viz. Apparell Law and Language Conquest is confirmed by continuing possession The price and honour of a Conquest is rated by the difficulty A Prince that hath conquered and joyned a strange Country to his domions ought to be circumspect what Governors he placeth there Conduction is that which is sooner overcome and altered by that which it nourisheth and Crudity is that which is strong and hard and will not suffer it self to be altered A short conclusion of long premisses best befits the memory Henry the eight in the 38th year of his Raign by his Letter commanded the Lord Gray not to demolish Cattillions Fort but in secret gives him a special command to ruine it Contraries are known by one method and the privative is known only by seperation of the knowledge of the positive Contraries are two opposites of one kind as black and white both colours moist and dry both qualities but substances have no contraries in themselves There be two enemies of peace first conscience of evil done secondly sence of fear of evil suffered the first we call sin the latter crosses A wide conscience will swallow any sin those that have once thralled themselves to a known evil will make no difference of sins but by their own loss or advantage wickedness once entertained can put on any shape trust him in nothing that makes no conscience of every thing Many times the conscience runs a way smoothlywith an unwarrantable action rests it self upon those grounds which afterward it sees cause to condemn it is a sure way therefore to inform our selves throughly ere we settle our choice that we be not driven to reverse our acts with late shame and unprofitable repentance Such as make conscience of sinning are carefull not to be thought to sin A good conscience is no less afraid of a scandall then of a sin whereas those that are resolved not to make any scruple of sin despise others constructions not caring whom they offend so they may please themselves Those which have a cleer conscience from any sin prosecute it with rigour whereas the guilty are ever partiall their conscience holds their hands and tells them that they be at themselves while they punish others The conscience may well rest when it tells us we have neglected no means for redressing our afflictions for then it may resolve to look either for amendment or patience A good conscience will make a man undauntedly confident and dare put him upon any tryall when his own heart strikes him not it bids him challenge all the world and take up all comers Contrarily he that hath a false and soul conscience lyes at every mans mercy lives slavishly and is fain to daub up a rotten peice with the basest conditions Conscience is the conserver of religion it is the light of knowledge that God hath planted in man which is ever watching over all his actions as it beareth him a joyfull testimony when he doth right so it curbeth him with a feeling that he hath done wrong when ever he commiteth any sin Conscience not grounded upon any sure knowledge is either an ignorant fantasie or an arrogant vanity The conscience is a conservation of the knowledg of the Law of God and Nature to know good and evil The conscience is that which approves good or evil justifying or condemning our actions The greatest bliss on earth is a pure conscience Nil conscire sibi nulla palescere culpa There is no sin but vexeth him in whom it is the first revenge is that no man is quit from his own guilty conscience There is least danger and most safety when mens consciences do make conclusions for and against themselves No man can wash his hands of that sin to which his will hath consented bodily violence may be in-offensive in the patient voluntary inclination through fear to evil can never be excusable Sin is the off-spring of the will not of the body where consent is not there is no sin A constitution is a gathering and uniting of the people together both in one Common-Weale and Church into a civill or divine Politie the forme of which politie is Order In Anno 682 Agathus commanded that the constitutions of the chief Bishop should be holden for Apostollicall The church of St. Saviour in the raigne of Crathlint founded in the Isle of Man was the first Bishops-See that was erected in Scotland three-upon is esteemed the mother-church churces are not now constituted but repaired If the church cast not out the knownunworthy the sin is hirs but if a man will come unworthily the sin is his No Element but through its mixture hath departed from its first simplicity so there is no church but hath some error or sin in it The naturall sicknesses that have ever troubled and been the decay of all churches since the beginning of the World changing the Candlestick from one to another have been pride ambition and avarice We must be directed by the Church but then the Church must be directed by the right rule the Scripture But if any Church as Rome shall tell the rest any thing that will notly even to that rule we may lawfully dissent The fittest place for prayer is the church and among the congregation especially if the petition be for publike graces and benefits and not in places of seperation or faction in private conventicles The church keeps a feast on no Saints birth day except the birth day of Saint John the Baptist The church is but one body yet the several members of it rest in divers places and are dispersed into several congregations which of themselves are called churches though they be altogether indeed but one church as Saint John in the Revelation writes to the seaen churches yet they were all but one church in seven parts Lingering is a kind of constancy suddenness argues fear Consultation is concerning things that vary and alter and medleth not with those things that be firm and stable The Bread and Wine by consecration cease to be common Bread and Wine being dedicated to a sacred use and so the Bread and Wine are made holy ceasing to be common such a change as this understood the fathers to be made in the Bread and Wine but not as touching the substance and being but as touching the qualities this change the reformed allow and by such a
should have crooked lines Oft-times the circumstance of an action marrs the substance in divine matters we must not onely look that the body of our service be sound but that cloathes be fit nothing hinders but that good advice sometime may fall from the mouth of wicked men A mans heart can best judge of it self others can best judge of his actions happy is that man that can be acquitted by himself in private in publique by others in both by God It is very safe for a man to look into himself by others eyes in vain shall a mans heart absolve him that is condemned by his actions It is certain that all indifferent actions and behaviour of a man have an extream holding and dependence either upon virtue or vice according as they are used or ruled for there is no middle betwixt them no more then betwixt their rewards heaven and hell It is not sufficient for a man to have refrain within himself never so many vertues and good qualities except he imploy them and set them on work for the benefit of others Virus enim latus omnis consistit in actione The actions and writings of every man take not-except in the matter subject and occasion some commending favoritie to happen to it All our actions upbraid us of folly our whole course of life is but matter of laughter we are not soberly wise We commonly measure and censure all actions and the doers of them by the event one is crowned for that which another is tormented as Caesar and Erachus Grievous Enormities and bitter Calumnies commonly follow renowned actions Present actions are not with safety related nor are they listned unto without danger The actions of our ancestors use to be examined not to be malignate for we not emulate but imitate them We willingly listen to the praise of such who gotten long since out of the reach of envy seem by their deeds of fame to raise the weakness of mortality and faults which are found in past actions displease not whilest they take from us the evil opinion of the present times The action is easie to be effected which hath nothing of fear in it but the act it self Great actions have need of help else they will be suffocated by simplicity It is easie to add to the greatness of actions by words to truth by appearances it is not amiss The government of a State is but a slippery path one only bad action is sufficient to ruinate a Prince who hath been raised up by a thousand good ones A present good action is able to make a past bad one to be forgotten when it is thought that the like will not again be done Actions are not alwayes done by their agents in an instant dispositions proceed them the truth of whose effects we do not know because the vertue of causes is unknown to us The sequell of every action dependeth for the most part upon the beginning Dimidium facti qui bene caepit habet So forceable continually is the beginning and so connexed to the sequell by the nature of a precedent cause that the end must needs erre from the common course when it doth not participate of that quality which was in the beginning In nature all violent actions are of short continuance and the durability and lasting quality of all actions proceedeth from a slow and temperate progression so that the resolutions of the mind that are carried with an untemperate violence and favour much heat and passion do vanish away even with the smoake thereof and brings forth nothing but leasurable repentance therefore it is best for men of such natures to qualifie their hasty resolutions with a mistrustful lingering that when their judgement is well informed of the cause they may proceed to speedy execution Fame is the spirit of a great action maketh them memorable or unworthy by report The actions of men would be none at all if they were not at first received in the mind Experience teacheth that no action is wisely undertaken whereof the end is not wisely forecast in the first place however it is the last in execution It is great justice that our actions should be measured by opinion not by reason The nature of man is forward to accept but negligent to sue for they can spend secret wishes upon that which shall cost them no endeavors Naturall Men. It is the fashion of naturall men to justifie themselves in their own courses if they cannot charge any earthly thing with the blame of their own sufferings they wil cast it upon heaven that a man pleads himself guilty of his own wrong is no common work of Gods Spirit Griefe Griefes increase exceedingly when they grow upon occasion which hapneth besides all reason Like as any accident which falleth beyond our expectation is more greievous then that whereof a reason may be rendred and which a man might suspect to follow Service Service which is received from an inferior argues weakness and challengeth great recompence to equalize the recompence to the benefit received is to equalize the receiver to the benefactor those benefits which are received from a superior are willingly acknowledged for acknowledgement is all he expects which witnessing the receivall of them obliges to an addition of more Compellation Sweetness of compellation is a great help toward good entertainment of admonition roughness and rigour many times hardens those hearts which meekness would have melted into repentance whether we sue or convince or reprove little good is gotten by bitterness Not onely the vocall admonitions but also the reall judgements of God are his errands to the world Adversaries Violent adversaries to uphold a side wil maintain that which they do not believe God provides on purpose for his Church mighty adversaries that their humiliation may be the greater in sustaining and his glory may be the greater in their deliverance Love It is no love that cannot make us willing to be miserable with those we affect the hollowest heart can be content to follow one that prospereth adversitie is the only furnace of friendship if love will not abide both fire and envie it is but counterfeit All adversity finds ease in complaining and t is a comfort to relate it Prosperity and adversity have ever tied and untied the affections of the Vulgar He that is fallen into adversity hath not only enemies to pursue him but his friends forsake him and become his foes Advancement Advancement is not alwayes a sign of love either to the man or to the place some men are raised up that their fall may be the greater there are no men so miserable as those that are great and wicked Behaviour Winning Behaviour advisedness and fierceness mingled together season any affair excellently wel when the winning behaviour appears sufficiently the advisedness not at al and the fierceness but a little Affections The affections of the body may be inculpable but not the mind 's There is no disposition so
neer bordered upon vice and leaning to it but by the reins of prudence may be restrained and kept in the right way so there is no nature so neer a-kin to vertue but may be corrupted by ill usage Therefore it is good to contemplate the affections of men as they are attended with good or ill and search how far they may be hurtful or valuable least we immoderately praise some and do unjustly undervalue others All living creatures by a secret instigation affect to be most doing of that thing in which they are best able Angels Angels when they appear are conceived to cloath themselves with the Elements Of all Creations that are so near us as Angels be God hath shut up the knowledge of them most from us in Scripture and no man yet hath given a satisfying reason for it Some hold that they be one of the three Invisibles to wit God Angels and the Soul of man all which the eye hath never seen their simple existence Angels are simple and abstract Intelligences and Substances altogether without bodies Antiquity Any man whatsoever may erre in matters of Antiquity The study of Antiquity is a fair knowledge which is most precious for the adoring of humane life and strong at least in pleading for humane oftentation The Order of Dignity is to be respected before the Order of Antiquity Apparel Apparel was first instituted by God for three causes first to hide our nakedness and shameful parts Next to make us more comely And lastly to preserve us from the injuries of heat and cold Apprehension Apprehension gives life to crosses The efficacy of Gods marvellous works is not in the acts themselves but in our apprehension Some are overcome with those motives which others have contemned for weak Appetite Our Appetite must be curbed our passions moderated and so estranged from the World that in the loss of Parents or Children Nature may not forget Grace Whosoever slackens the reins of his sensual appetite will soon grow unfit for the calling of God The concubisciple and irascible appetite are as the two twists of a Rope mutually mixt one with another both twining about the heart both good if they be moderate both pernicious if they be exorbitant If the Appetite will not obey let the moving faculty over-rule her and let her resist and compel her to do otherwise Forms God hath not appointed to every time and place those Forms which are simply best in themselves but those that are best to them to whom they are appointed which we may neither alter till he begin nor recal when he hath altered Apostacy An Apostate is an opposer of the Faith he once professed and is worse then he that opposeth that which he never profest Arts. The Fame of all eminent Arts is stained by the multitude of Artificers and the unskilfulness of them most of them being unable to do what they promise and seeking their commendation onely in the vain name of such an Art Art Military is despised in time of rest and quiet and Peace esteemeth alike of the Coward and the Couragious Practise brings or breeds Art and Art obtaineth Grace Beauty is more beholding to Art then Nature and stronger provocations proceed from outward Ornaments then such as Nature hath provided Art can never attain to Natures perfection imitate it never so near though our esteem prefers it and seeing it gets a little by emulation attribute much more unto it The practise of every Art is referred to the use or profit and thereby judged Art will be discovered if it be often used when that would be made seen which is not it must be curiously done if any good be expected Three things are sought in every Artist that is to say Nature Skill and Practise his Nature to be judged of by his Wits his Skill by his Knowledge and his practise by Use Edward the third brought Artisicers for mahing Cloth from Gaunt The strength of a battel consisteth in the Artillery and Shot Aristoeracy Aristocracy is a form of a Common-Weal wherein the less part of the Citizens with Soveraign Power command over all the rest Unthankful attempts are alwayes rewarded with grief and disgrace Harmless counsels are good for the innocent but in open and manifest villanies there is no hopes of safety but in audacious attempts Foul attempts are begun with danger and sometimes accomplished with reward Changes are the aptest times for greatest attempts delayes then are dangerous and soft quiet dealing draweth more evil then rashly hazarding All but Athiests however they let themselves loose yet in some things find themselves restrained and shew to others that they have a conscience Every thing hath a quantity that it cannot exceed and hath a power to attain to it from the generative causes whereof the thing it self is produced by which power if it be not hindered it dilateth it self gradually in time till it come to the fulness where it either resteth or declineth again as it grew up the manner of Augmentation proceedeth from the qualities that Nature hath infused into every thing and neither from matter or form Evil were as good not seen as not avoided To fore-know and not to avoid evil is but an aggravation of judgement Equal Authority where there is the self same power is commonly pernicious to all actions it being impossible to chuse two minds of so equal a temper that they shall not have some motions of dissenting It is the hard condition of Authority that when the multitude fare will they plaud themselves when ill they repine against their Governors Authority cannot fail of opposition though it be never so mildly swayed Soveraignty abused is a great spur to outrage The conceit of Authority in great Persons many times lies in the way of their own safety whiles it will not let them stoope to the ordinary course of nature There is no passion that doth eclipse the light of reason or sooner corrupt the sincerity of a good judgement then that of anger neither is there any motion that pleaseth it self in its own actions or followeth them with greater heat in the execution and if the truth chance to shew it self and convince a false pretended cause as the author of that passion it often times redoubleth the rage even against truth and innocencie The punishment of banishing offenders was first broght into this Island by Edward the Confessor Liberal modesty is decent but clounish bashfulness is disgraceful That no man should be too much discouraged for the baseness of his propagation even the base son of man may be lawfully begotten of God King Hnery the second was supposed to be begotten of Maud the Em●irsse some time before by ●tephen of Bloys before shee was married to Geffery Plantagenek Duke of Anjoy In the fifth year of Henry the eight was a battel fought neer Floddon-Feild between James the fifth King of Sco●s and the Kings Leivtenant of the North the Earle of Surrey in which the King
who with the beginning of the Popes of Rome was Primate of all Scotland and all the Isles of the same The 10. th year of William Rufus the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury being Primate of Ireland consecrated Malchus Bishop of Waterford which place was mada a Bishops-See at the same time In the 6. year of William the Conquerour it was decreed at a Synod holden at Windsor that the Arch-Bishop of York should be subject to the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and that the Arch-Bishop of York with all the Bishops of his Province should come to such a place as the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury should appoint to hold a Counsell at It is no true Bishop that desireth rather to be Lordly himself then profitable to others Leo the fourth Pope of Rome made a decree that a Bishop should not be condemned but by 72. witnesses The good Bishops of Rome continued almost 300. years the first of them was named Limus Blood is hot sweet temperate a red humor prepared in the meseraick veins and made of the most temperate parts of the Chilus in the Liver whose office is to nourish the whole body to give it strength and colour being dispersed by the veins through every part of it and from it spirits are first begotten in the heart which afterwards by the Arteries are communicated to all the other parts The force and power which lyeth in the blood the spirits and in the whole body is that which causeth the diversity of passions by reason that the passible part growing out of the flesh as from a root doth bud and bring forth with it a quality proves semblable The bodies misgriefes proceed from the soul and if the mind be not first satisfied the body can never be cured The corruptable body suppresseth the soul and the earthly mansion keeps down the mind that is much occupied Mans soul though it be immortal dyeth a kind of death it is called immortall because it can never leave to be living and sensitive and the body is mortall because it may be destitute of life and left quite dead in in self but the death of the soul is when God leaveth it and the death of the body is when the soul leaveth it so that the death of both is when the soul being left of God leaveth the body Labienus of Rome was the first on whom the punishment of burning bookes or writings was excluded upon Bookes are living Ideas of the Authors mind Something it is to have a fame go of a man yet words are as fame soon blown over when Libera scripta manet Books out live men Boldness or Valour is not terrified with a mans own danger but to fear in the behalf of others is humanity Boldness and fear are commonly misplaced in the best hearts when we should tremble we are confident and when we shoud be assured we tremble A cold and moist brain is an insepetable companion of folly Brevity although it breed difficulty yet it carrieth great gravity Brevity when it is neither obscure nor defective is very pleasing even to the choycest judgements Brevity makes counsell more portable for memory and easier for use The Brownists say they did not make a new Church but mended an old The Brownists seperate for these four causes or points A hateful Prelacie a devised ministery a confused communion and an intermixture of errors The Brownists charge Episcopacie with four heresies first their Canons secondly sin uncensured thirdly their Hyrarchy fourthly their Service book The agreement of brothers is rare by how much nature hath more endeared them by so much are their quarrells more frequent and dangerous Butidius a man well qualified and if he had taken a right course a man likely to have come to honourable preferment over much haste pricked forwards and at the first went about to out-go his equalls then his Superiors and at last of all to fly above his own hopes which hath been the overthrow of good men who contemning that which by a little patience is had with security hasten to that which gotten before his time breedeth their ruine and destruction Buying and selling of men and women which was used in England untill the third year of Henry the first was then prohibited In the third year of Henry the first by a Synod holden at London it was decreed that all burialls should be in their own Parish because the Priest should lose his ●ees The care of burialls the pomp of funeralls and magnificent Tombs are rather solaces to the living then furtherances to the dead A Canon is that which in a universal counsell is established Innocent the fourth was the first Pope that caused Cardinalls to wear red hats and to ride with trappings A Canteed containeth a hundred Townships Nothing cometh to pass without an efficient cause There be three sorts of causes naturall voluntary and casual Nothing is ended or begun without a Precedent cause that cause can hardly rise again and recover grace which hath been once foyled It is a sign of a desperate cause to make Satan our Counsellor or our refuge Although a man have a good cause he may fail in obtaining his right by Law unless he follow it earnestly defend it stoutly and spend freely Those things are casual whose act is not premeditated by any Agent It is the weakness of good natures to give so much advantage to an enemy Wha● would malice rather have then the vexation of them whom it persecuets We cannot better please an adversary then by hurting our selves this is no other then to humor envies to serve the turn of those that maligne us and to draw on that malice whereof we are weary whereas carelessness puts ill will out of countenance and makes it withdraw it self in a rage as that which doth but shame the Author without the hurt of the patient in causless wrong the best remedy is contempt In the first year of Richard the first the City of London received their Charter of freedom and to chuse twenty six Aldermen and out of that numto chuse a Major to rule the rest also two Bayliffs or Sheriffs whereas from the Conquest they were governed by Port-greeves In the 21. year of Henry the third the King at a Parliament at Westminster comfirmed the great Charter The 26. of Edward the first the great Charter was confirmed and at the same time it was enacted that the King should not charge the Subjects with any taxes or tullages but by Parliament It was also confirmed again in the 27. year of his raigne with these words added Salvo jure Coronae nostrae Edward the third confirmed the great Charter in the 15. year of his raigne The Duke of Orleans the French Kings brother challenged King Henry the fourth to meet him with 100. Knights compleatly armed against the like number and the vanquished to be ransomed at the victors pleasure A substantiall change is above the reach of all infernall powers and is proper to the
second Dunkirk was taken and spoyled by the English Hugh Spencer Bishop of Norwich being General All Duels are unlawful in that they as it were commit the quarrel to the ●ot for the use of which there is no warrant since the abrogating of the old Law but it is most especially unlawful in the person of a King who being a publike person hath no power therefore to dispose of himself in respect that his preservation or fall the safety or wrack of the whole Common-wealth is necessarily coupled as the body to the head He that enters a Duel loses as much the opinion of Wisdom as he gains the opinion of Daring Great is the force of Duty once conceived even to the most unworthy The Eye and the Ear are the minds Receivers and the Tongue and the Hand the Minds Expenditors Earthly things proffer themselves with importunity Heavenly things must with importunity be sued for The Earth is our Mother that brought us forth our Stage that bears us and our Grave wherein we are intomb'd So she gives us our Original our Harbour and our Sepulchre Gods Elect have three Sutes of Appares viz. Black Mourning Red Persecution White Glorious Natural respects are the most dangerous corrupters of all Elections What hope can there be of worthy Superiors in any free people where nearness of blood carries it from fitness of Disposition In the year 885. Adrian the third being Pope the Emperors of Germany who formerly elected to the Popedom lost their Prerogative In the year 998. in Pope Gregory the fifth's time it was agreed that the Emperors of Germany should be elected by three Bishops viz. Mentz Tryers and Cullein and by three Princes viz. The County Palatine of the Rhine the Duke of Saxony and the Marquess of Brandenburgh and in case the said six cannot agree then the King of Bohemia to have an umpiering Voice The reason why we pray Eastward is because Paradise was there planted from whence we were cast out which is the reason also that we build our Churches East and West yet the Jews had their Priests that in their Sacrifices alwayes turned their faces towards the West Education is another Nature altering the Mind and Wit The beginning midst and end of man's life lyeth onely in vertuous and honest Education which is the very means that is opperative and powerful for the attaining of Vertue and true Happiness There is none in the World so wickedly inclined but a religious Instruction and Education may fashion a-new and reform them nor any so well disposed the Reins being let loose whom the continual fellowship and familiarity and the examples of dissolute men may not corrupt and deform No Element but through mixture hath seperated from its first simplicity When the Ancients contended against each other to perswade people to this or that action Eloquence had then her original Fame with Posterity is the fairest reward of Eloquence Commonly the enmities of nearest Kinsfolks if once they fall out are most despiteful and deadly The difference between Enmity and Emulation is thus Enmity hunteth after destruction and onely rejoiceth in that which bringeth our Adversary to ●uine and utter destruction but Emulation which is a spur to Vertue contendeth only by well-deserving to gain the advantage of another mans Fame that useth the same means to attain the like ends and is alwayes mixed with love in regard of the affinity of their affections and the sympathy of their desires not suffering the overthrow of their Competitor but succouring him in time of danger and calamity that he may still continue to shew the greatness of his worth by the opposition of inferior actions which are as a lesser scantling of desert to measure the estimation of the other humor The causes of the Roman Empire were the Domestick Wars the immoderate greatness of the Princes of the Empire and the Dignity of the Emperor being Elective and not Hereditary It is the dissolution of an Empire if the Revenues be diminished by which it is maintained and if Customs be taken away the abolishing of Tribute wil be demanded In the second year of Henry the 4th the Emperor of Constantinople came into England to request aid against the Turk In the fifth year of Henry the eighth the Emperor of Germany Maximilian served under the Kings Banner and did take pay Boniface the third was the first that was called Pope and he obtained of Phocas the Emperor That the Roman Seat should be called the Head of all Churches At that time three remarkable things happened The decay of the Roman Empire The rising of the Popedom and The springing up of Mahometism Of the ruine of the Empire these two Beasts arose which have much harmed the Church and as the Empire hath decreased these have encreased All Philosophy teacheth us That man desires an end and that there is some end which every man tends to beyond which he cannot think or hope In the 7th year of Henry the fifth by a General Councel holden at Constance it was decreed That England should have the Title of the English Nation and to be taken and reputed one of the five Nations that obeyed the Roman See Common Enemies must first be opposed Domestick more at leisure That which open Enemies dare not attempt they work by false Brethren and are so much the more dangerous as they are more intire A man ought to be jealous of whatsoever an Enemy either by speech or action shall cast upon him however colourable the reasons may be which are alledged to induce him thereunto for it is improbable that an Enemy whose chiefest care is to weaken the Adversary and to bring him to ruine should advise him to any thing that should concern his good unless the profit which he himself shall thereby gather do far exceed that which the contrary part may expect When a man's enemy offereth him that which hath appearance of good let him refuse it God hath created nothing in this World either man or Beast without an Enemy to hold it in fear and humility He that would undertake great Enterprises had of Wisdom and Courage Wisdom to contrive and Courage to execute Wisdom to guide his Courage and Courage to second his Wisdom both which if they meet with a good cause it cannot but succeed Princes that desire to continue friendship ought not to meet and have interviews to avoid suspition but to hold correspondency by wise Councellors Envy hath this good in it that it afflicteth those extreamly that use it Envy proceeds from a base mind Glory follows good deserts Envy follows Glory The envious man feeds upon others evils and hath no other Disease but his Neighbours welfare It is the nature of man and a deeply rooted quality in us streightly to look into the prosperity of others with an envious eye and to require a moderation of Fortune no where so much as in those we have seen in equal degree with our selves It is a thing