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A16632 Almansor the learned and victorious king that conquered Spaine. His life and death published by Robert Ashley, out of the librarie of the Uniuersitie of Oxford.; Verdadera historia del rey Don Rodrigo. Part 2. English. Selections Luna, Miguel de, 16th/17th cent.; Ashley, Robert, 1565-1641. 1627 (1627) STC 354; ESTC S100094 34,400 96

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his weightiest affaires and matters of most importance as with a man of Learning and Wisdome who gaue him sound aduice and of whom he had learned much To that house therefore among those woodie Mountaines he withdrew himselfe there hence often repayring to that Mezquita and Monasterie to recreate himselfe in conference and couersation with Mahomet el Gazeli not permitting any to visit him but his Seruants and his ancient Alcaydes neither them for their pleasure or pastime for if they came not on some businesse of importance or earnest occasion he admitted them not to his presence neither suffered them to visit him In this manner hee passed his life with great quietnesse and freedome from cares Hee very cunningly and subtilly vsed to examine such of his ancient Seruants and Alcaydes as came vnto him euery of them apart by himselfe and that very particularly in what manner his Sonne Abilgualit Abninace gouerned his Kingdomes whether his Subiects spake well of him whether they complayned or misliked him on iust cause or otherwise with such diligence he learned out of all of them what faults they found and obserued in him And this King Almansor being zealous of the common good of his Kingdomes and desirous that his Sonne should rule well intending to reprehend him of some things and instruct him how hee should gouerne without reciting or mentioning any one particular case of any that had complayned to him wrote this Letter vnto him which for the good admonitions therein contayned I haue thought fit heere to set downe The Letter of King Almansor PRayse bee giuen to the Souereigne God to whom Sacrifice and Prayer belongeth Amen And his plenteous blessing and Grace come vpon you my Sonne for without it no creature of his can doe any good thing be it neuer so little seeing all that is good commeth of his hand This being thus premised I haue thought good by this Letter to aduertize you of some things which you are to obserue co●●erning the Gouernment of your Kingdoms that your Subiects may enioy much peace with safetie and tranquillitie and that also you may be duely reuerenced loued and feared of them as is conuenient The first that you are to take care of is that you be not proud high-minded nor presumptuous imagining diuers imaginatiōs because you see your selfe made Lord of so many and so great Kingdomes and Armies by Sea and by Land so many valorous Alcaydes and Captaines humbled in your Royall presence obedient to all your commands and readie to execute whatsoeuer you shall appoint To free your selfe from this great Temptation you are to consider the infinite power and euerlasting Kingdom of God hauing no beginning middle nor end being of incomprehensible power and wisdome And therewithall you are to consider that your Kingdome is not infinite but hath his limits and bounds and is to finish and to haue an end as also the very memory of it among men With this consideration you shall bee in such sort humbled as is requisite you should Secondly you ought to consider that the Souereigne God created you in this World and gaue you power as a second cause of his to fulfill his most holy will in the Gouernment of his creatures heere on earth by mayntayning Iustice and vsing Mercie and Clemencie imitating your Creatour and not to erre in the administration of this Office you ought to behold and contemplate the Booke of this faire Theatre called the World this subordination of naturall Causes this regular and continuall mouing of the Heauens Signes and Planets so many Generations and corruptions in reasonable men and in all other things created in the Earth in the Water and in the Aire the Night and the Day the Raine Haile and Wind the changes of Times Heate and Cold and other alterations innumerable being all created in such orderly disposition with such Wisdome perfection and Prouidence as the wisest and skilfullest could neuer attaine to know and how from the time in which hee created this goodly Frame to this present and to the last instant in which it shall please him that it cease and haue end it neither hath beene nor shal be needfull to adde or take any thing to it or from it for that were to suppose some imperfection in his Workes which cannot bee because he is the God of highest perfection Moreouer to consider how hee sustayneth it gouerning and maintayning all things with Iudgement and Mercy with great and wonderfull Prouiden●● such a one he is You ought therefore to perceiue that your Gouernment is Disorder your Iustice Jniustice your Mercie is want of Clemencie your Charitie Couetousnesse your carefull Diligence is Slothfulnesse and to conclude that all your Knowledge is but Ignorance And I can assure you that if you would be mercifull to his Creatures yet you cannot pardon their sinnes If you bee a good Iusticer you can onely chasten their bodies not their Soules If neuer so charitable you cannot giue a blessing to their goods If you bee large and louing yet you cannot make them liue foreuer If you incline to giue them case and rest yet you cannot giue them glorie If you desire to adde comfort to them yet you can giue them no true and perfect consolation of Spirit Behold therefore what I say vnto you that you may know how great is the miserie of man Seeing that with all your power and Kingdomes you cannot make one drop of water to fall out of the Region of the Cloudes nor make one lease of a Palmotree nor yet deliuer and free your selfe from the least tribulation of the World The third thing which you are to call to mind is that you must die and must be iudged by our Souereigne God with a strict account of the good and euill you haue done in this life like a sinfull miserable man and that ouer and aboue this account which is to bee giuen by all men in generall Kings are to yeeld another particular to the Almightie God which is whether they haue well administred and gouerned their Common-weales If only in regard of their Kingly power they haue dealt hardly with their Subiects without any iust cause or offence of theirs If they haue imposed great payments or exacted vnnecessarie Tributes If they haue done wrong or vniustly for their particular interest if they did not condole with the poore and relieue and ease the oppressed hauing power to remedie their distresse and to redresse their grieuances and to conclude if they haue beene carelesse of the good of their Common-weales Woe bee to the Soules of such for they shall be condemned to perpetuall torments By this you may cleerely see that you and your Kingdomes are nothing and haue no being whereof to make any reckoning I assure you therefore that if you had duely considered the charge and dutie whereunto you bound your selfe that day on which I resigned the Gouernment into your hands that you had more cause to mourne and to