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A00658 A forme of Christian pollicie drawne out of French by Geffray Fenton. A worke very necessary to al sorts of people generally, as wherein is contayned doctrine, both vniuersall, and special touching the institution of al Christian profession: and also conuenient perticularly for all magistrates and gouernours of common weales, for their more happy regiment according to God; Police chrestienne. English Talpin, Jean.; Fenton, Geoffrey, Sir, 1539?-1608. 1574 (1574) STC 10793A; ESTC S101953 277,133 426

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God who beareth no malice to any man he hath made as hauing declared therein his power his wisedome and his boūtie For which three things we must acknowledge his handy worke with thankes giuing Besides we know that God is not but charitie and loue and who is constant in charitie dwelleth in God and God is firme in him as of the contrary who hateth any man hath no perfect charitie and by conclusion cannot be of God So that as we are first bound to loue GOD with all our heartes so in the second place we ought for his sake to loue al men with a true perpetual loue as our selues But if we find them possessed with any vice or faulte louing still the creature we may hate that which we sée not to be of God and hated of men as knowing that in God there is nothing but integretie and what els is good and vertuous These be the causes why we ought to loue the soules and bodies of sinners as being the hādie workes of God but lawfully maye we hate their sinnes and wicked condicions as we ought not to loue any thing in the Deuill but his creation which is deuine since touching the rest he is nothing but peruersitie of his proper will for which cause he is called wicked as not taking pleasure no which is worse not hauing power to delite in any thing but to do euill the same being the reason why so often we are commaunded to shonne him and not to suffer him to enter into vs by any pleasant suggestion but to resist him estéeme him our onely enemie a serpent and venemous Dragon a rauining Wolfe a roaring Lion a théefe and murderer séeking after nothing but by suttletie force ambushes and treasons to betray our soules yea if it were not by his wicked and wretched temptations we should neuer haue enemies malice or miseries no not once haue the thought to do wrong one to another the same being the cause that our sauiour Christ calles him our enemie it is he only whom we ought to hate and all that is in him except the spirituall substance the first creature of God it is he onely whom we ought so much to detest as not once to hear him sée him or séeke to learne any thing of him in whom is nothing but deceite lying abuse and murder it is he of whom wée ought to take nothing that he offreth for he corrupteth all that he giueth And séeing he is a poysoner let vs alwayes take héede that he enuenime not our thoughts with vaine and wicked pleasure with infidelitie consent to euill and that he poyson not our wordes with vanitie iniuries detraction lies false othes and blasphemie nor infect our workes or actions with ipocrisie or dissembled intention nor by any other trangression of Gods commaundements This wicked spirite hath stretched out his snares in all places and dispersed his poyson throughout the worlde he entrapped Eue in the earthly paradise and poysoned hir with lust of glory which as an infection hee hath earst distilled into infinit nations and persons his ginnes are so suttlely wrought and layd that they are espied and auoyded of none but such as are humble and lowly such as liue in continuall contemplation of Gods wisedome and his holy feare such as resolued into spirite haue no conuersation with the flesh and the world such as are strōg in fayth and of that immouable loue to God that they take no other pleasure but to do his commaūdements Suche doeth the spirit and wisdome of God instruct to espie and breake his suttle snares and giue them remedies against the poyson of that venemous basiliske Touching amitie cyuill which we get by societie of studie by coniunction of life and similitude of estates and functions or in recompence of benefits we may conioyne it with the Christian amitie by the which it hath his confirmation and is made better and more agreable to God By this if I loue better him that is thus my frend then an other professed vnto me by cōmon Christian amitie I do no wronge to no Christian frēd for the I take nothing from him of the which is his I mean of the which I owe him in true spiritual loue in the same sort the loue natural is not deminished by the christiā amitie but is made more firme spiritual as the Christiā Father louing better his owne sonne then an other childe forgetts not for all that to expresse effectes of Christian amitie to the other So that by this loue parents kindred and Christian neighbours may loue one an other with greater loue and yet do no wronge to others touching the zeale which they ought to beare them as we sée by the comparison of the fier where in is resembled charitie and perfect Christian loue which béegins first to heat and burne those thinges that are presented nearest to it I will not hold for all this that in case of election of a magistrate friendship is to be expressed for that there perticuler amitie shoulde giue place to publike friendship as where is more neede of vertue veritie and iustice then of singuler loue onely for as vertue being deuine is and ought to to be preferred afore all humaine affections So he in whome is most reputation of wisdome learning ' integritie iustice although he stand to vs neyther in parentage nor kindred yet for the friendship we beare to the publike or common weale ought to haue our voyce to the state of magistrate And in case of iudgment the father being iudge ought not to be partiall to his childe his kinsman his frend nor dearest familiar For there perticuler friendship giuing place to publike regarde hath no respect to affectiō but to reason right and iustice And séeing as hath ben sayde that amitie aswell naturall as ciuill ought to be ruled by christian frendship and that directed according to the will and comaundement of God with whome sinne is condemned and detested we ought to beare to our frend no percialitie of fauor support nor councell to the hurt or dishonor of an other much lesse obey his fancie plesure or will so far furth as it may bring detriment to the estate of his soule we must not flatter him to the ende to please him in any thing dishonest or vniust much lese heare or incline to him in any thing against God or the puritie of our conscience which we are bound to kéepe altogether to God The gréeke prouerb is the we ought to loue one an other euen to the alter the is so far forth as God be not offended eyther by othe or other vice no who maketh a lie to further the benefit of his frend yea or to fauor his owne life offends God what interest soeuer it bear to father or mother magistrate Kinge or Emperour ¶ How a common weale is gouernened and wherein it erreth Chapter iiij IN al estates in their particular function discharge
all Create others Centeniers to rule ouer an hundred Cinquanteniers to beare aucthoritye ouer Fiftye and Disiniers to commaunde ouer ten Let these Iudge the people in all seasons according to their order and charge and bringing to thée the causes of greatest importance specially suche as concerne God let them iudge the rest So shalt thou bee discharged of that great burden of labour where in vaine thou dyddest consume thy selfe before In this aduise of God to Moyses we sée is expressed what ought to bée the office nature and state of suche as are chosen to leade and iudge others according to God and that not onely in highe and stately Courtes but in places of right meane sorte who notwithstanding as in degrées so also in knowledge and vertue ought to aspire to excellencie Suche then bée wise men who with the sence of deuine and humaine learning bée principally instructed in the knowledge of God and vnderstand his will and iudgement with contemplacion of the causes effectes and nature of all thinges And being wise in this sorte as theyr exact knowledge will leade them to geue a perfect iudgement of al thinges so being ignoraunt in the least much lesse that they can iudge in integretye séeing they can not merite the name of wyse men But because according to Sainct Paul men maye haue knowledge and yet in theyr doinges bée voyde of integritye Iethro addeth the feare of God that is that knowing God they doe also feare and serue him For suche men would not willingly feare God who knowe his iudgements to bée no lesse horrible to them that displease him then terrible to suche as execute false Iudgement whereby trueth is peruerted wrong pronounced to the multitude and their proper conscience defiled And therefore as hee woulde haue them to bée firme in simplicitye of worde Doctrine and iudgement without instabilytye in cases of trueth which by theyr wisedome they knowe to bée so agréeable to God as hée is called the selfe trueth so it is a breache of theyr duety if they bee subiect to the errour of mutacion They must also hate Couetousnes as in which is layde vp the roote of al euils A vyce of more damnable perril then all the rest and of a nature so wicked that it leades men to Idolatrye by preferring Golde and glorious drosse of the worlde afore the liuing God drawing from them in the ende all feare Religion Reuerence and knowledge of God translate their hearts to infidelitie both towards Heauen and earth Lyke as by lamentable experience wée sée that oftentimes the gréedines of a wretched present leades the couetous Iudge into such blinde and reprobate sence that to peruert Iustice hee stickes not to commit his soule to sale Louing rather the base Earth then the maiestie of heauen to handle Golde then behold the Sonne to bée ritche then honest and lastly seekes to laye vp his felicitie in his transitory presence of welth rather then to lift vp his minde to aspire to the life euerlasting So that in such as are chosen to the regiment of pollecie ought to bée no note of auarice and muche lesse any profe of corruption for doing any acte of iniustice seing that of all other there is this perill in that vice that being once made ritche by couetousnes there is no limit or measure of their extorcion euen as to a smal flame if you adde encrease of wod you rayse it easilie to a greater blase For by howe much more there is offer and meane of gaine euen by so much more doeth the raging zeale of aua●ice growe great yea euent●● i● bée vnquencheable in the Ritche couetous man it takes continual increase not onely with the poyson of ritches but also with the yeres of their age where other vices carye this common property to diminishe with time the same being the cause why the Scripture saieth There is nothing more wicked then a couetous man for hée is not onely wicked to others by bringing pouertie vpon them in rauishing their goodes but also hee is the confounder of him selfe as touching his soule which hée bequeathes to the Deuil for nothing and oftentimes selleth it for a bare hope of a base profite executing the like iniurye vpon his bodye from the which hee oftentimes restraines natural and necessary nourishment becomes a nigarde to his health by sparing his purse makes his mind and body subiect to passions and perpetual labors shorteneth his temporal life and which worse is loseth euerlasting felicitye So that as Iesus Christ and after him Saint Paul not without cause do exhort in great affectiō to flée couetousnes as the nurse of infidelity the mother of perdition and lastly the infectious roote of al euils to such as folow it so if this vyce bring such damnable miseries to all mankinde as in respect of his continual wretchednes it ought chiefly to bee auoyded of the Iudge in whome ought not to appeare so much as a suspicion of such euil insomuch that besides the extreme peril of his Soule infinite are the temporal iniquityes which flow from a couetous Iudge in whom for gaine-sake is seldome found any difficultie to offer to hassard the goodes honour and life of many persons the same being the cause why the Sonnes of Samuel were deposed from their iudgement seate and why Cambises caused one of his Iudges to be slaine quick and with his skin couered his chaire the better to aduertise the sonne and successors of the sayd Iudge that they were subiect to the same iustice if for gaine they pronounced corrupt iudgement ¶ What gouernors God hath chosen and howe he hath declared them by myracles they ought all to be instructed at the entree of the Tabernacle and why the great benefite which commeth of good Iudges and why God doth ordaine some wicked ❧ The .2 Chapter TO resort eftsones to the matter of election of gouernours to common weales who are Iudges by theyr institution with the counsell of Iethro wée will ioyne the example of God when hée elected rulers ouer his people as Moyses for the most perfect and Iosua and for his Tabernacle Aaron and Phineus and then examine what commaundemente God gaue to Moyses for the calling of seuenty Elders or Senators whome hée ordayned as soueraygne Iudges and gouernours ouer the Townes of Israel Moyses in his complaint to be insufficient to susteine so great a charge and burden of affaires was hearde of God by him cōmanded to assemble at the Gate of the Tabernacle Seuenty of the most Auncient of Israel suche as were most wise best experienced amongst the people causing them to assist and stay with him to impart with them graces requisit to the estate office of good gouernors which graces hée calleth part communion of the spirite of Moyses whose perfect knowledge of thinges exact iudgement Holye zeale and integritye of Fayth Doctrine and lyfe such as were in him so they are al
poyson being in temperatly dronke But if masters are reprehensible for the offence of this education no lesse reproch belongs to fathers and mothers who foreseing not by counsell to whome to commit the institution of the youth of their children haue oftentimes mor care to entertaine horsriders and falkners for the delight of their trifling fancy then to prouide good and lerned scholemasters to breath knowledg and manors into their precious children yea they had rather spare a fewe crownes to the hurt somtims and vtter destruction of their children in committing thē to sellie ignorant corrupte and couetous masters whō to fauour their purse they take by report with out other proof then depart with liberall alowance to worthy sufficient men for the good institution and bringing vp of their youth for the which they stand in hazard of the seuere iudgment of god as guilty to all the wickednes which their children shall do together with the miseries happening to them for not being instructed and their youth trayned by wise and worthy maisters But a little more to touche the fonde couetousnes and inconsiderat consideration of such Fathers is not that man too farre from his senses who careth for his shoe and not for the foote for the which he had caused the shoe to be made euen no lesse vndiscrete is hee who séekes to heape and get great store of goodes and is negligent to fourme and fashion such to whom hee muste leaue hys wealthe if that man be a naturall foole sayth Salomō who breakes his body and witte to gette goodes and knoweth not his heire or whether he be good or euill What more extréeme follie can be in a rich father who hauing children to succéede him prouides not to make them able to vse his goodes after him But leauing by necessitie his grosse wealth to a sort of foolish and corrupt children neyther worthy to possesse them nor sufficient to vse them is hee not more fonde then hée that Salomon speakes of who condemned not the ritch man but for his too much care to heape goods and had no suertie to leaue behind him good heires the same by experience happening to some fathers nowe a dayes who of their children will not make them worthie and able heyres to their wealth by good diligent institution such Fathers are euill aduised who in the framing of their frayle children beare most regarde care to their purses First in trayning their children by vnworthie maisters besides the losse of time they make them learne mani things which of necessitie thei must learne eftsoones to forget by which the Fathers vainely spende their money and to the hinderance of their children withal besides the inconueniences happening by wicked education and forming of children aswell to them selues as to others the miserable infantes rysing into age and iudgement are ashamed of their nakednes knowe not what estate to practise no they haue no honest meane to liue in honor nor trade to entertayne their necessarie lyfe where the learned if they be not lefte to amplitude of liuinge and goods their learninge and industrie are lynes to leade them easely to preferment And being left ritch by their parents they haue meanes at pleasure to kéepe and encrease their reuenue Learned men haue honor rents and reuenues where euer they goe they are welcome where they come and haue reuerence in all Countreis and companies doctrine is a nouriture to goe to the end of the world without suffering necessitie It is a riche treasure that can not fall into pouertie it is a guyde that will not let vs erre in the wayes of this lyfe it is an vnconsuming light to light vs in the way of vertue it is a perpetual pleasure without enuie the very honor ornament and glory of a man for it formeth in man swéete deliuerie of woordes orderly methode of reasoning and bringes him to perfecte iudgement so that science is to the mind the same that the soule is to the body For which cause Aristotle being asked howe much the ignorant man differed from him that had learninge euen no lesse sayeth hee then the brute beast from the naturall man And so with good authoritie we may conclude that a mā without science is as a body without a Soule or as a simple humaine beast when she doth no iniurie to any but beinge corrupt and cruell he may be resembled with the fierce sauage beastes if he be suttle hee degenerates into a Foxe into a Swyne when he is a glutton into a dogge when he is impudent and intemperate into a Wolfe when he spoiles poore people and into a Lion Tiger Libberd when he vseth slaughter and tyrannie yea Seneca called an ignorant man but an Image of a liuely man. ¶ A continuance of the praise of science exhortation too builde Colledges in Townes The 9. Chapter BVt now let vs returne to our Science which séeing it is as the soule or spirit of a man it makes him reasonable and if it bée diuine it makes him altogither celestiall if the man be corrupt it corrects him and purgeth all his wicked affections whereuppon in good reason it is named the medcine of the soule if the man be poore it enritcheth him if he be low borne it makes him noble if he be contemned it honoreth him if he be little it makes him great rayseth him into dignitie and of a mortall and miserable man it giueth him immortalitie and makes him happie Then if learning be one of the most excellent benefites yea a treasure aboue all ritches comprehending in it selfe all that man can wishe for the contentment of all his desires and perfection of all humane felicities and séeing it is gotten in a colledge the permanent mansion of science yea the pallace of the Muses and their Helicon how much ought we to be affected to erect stately Colledges in euery Cathedrall Town and indue them honorably whereunto the learned mē getting there the meane of their honour and dignitie ought to beare speciall fauour and the vertuouse sorte to contribute franckly séeing by them they haue receyued theyr vertues yea and all others haue interest therein for respect of common benefite as doctrine for their children and correction of manners and to them selues exampes of all vertues Parentes being Colledges in the towne where they dwell shall alwaies be assured of the certain discipline and institution of their children and vnderstanding from one time to another what aduauncement they haue in their Colledge they shall not loase their money vpon credit and much lesse put it to hazarde and fortune as they should if they sent them further where they are also vncertaine of their profit and successe in learning For being farre from them they heare but opinions vntrue prayses of the learning of their children who in the meane while run foorth their time in playe and pasing the streates looking as the prouerbe is who hath the longest nose and liue altogither as
well the care dutie of their office and that by the direction of the Gouernours to whom belonges the first example of behauior as a head and the principall member of a body naturall do first their proper and generall offices for the better regimēt of euery common and particular part of the said bodye A body pollitike vnder these obseruations can not erre nor much faile to liue togither in happie conuersation and consent to peace concord amitie and euery other good conuersation And as we see the naturall bodye of man compleate with his due organes and instruments disposed and sound to doe his perfect actions thoroughe all his partes not suffering any faulte or negligence in any one to whom belonges office or function So they doe all agrée and consent albeit by trauels and operations vnlike or differing as is difference amongest the members yet conspiring and tending all to vnitie vnder the will and iudgement of the head euery one employeth his force to doe that belonges to his natural facultie wherein if there be any that fayleth in his proper action his infirmitie is immediatly discerned eyther that he is sicke or other waies restrained by dolour and grief that he can not performe his office as when the eye refuseth to ayde the body and euery outwarde part with his visible facultie it is seene that he is troubled with some corrupt humor falling out of the braine or being vexed with some other accident he cānot serue his body for the which as he remaines in sorrowe and grief so euery member in particular and all togyther in common do ioyne to his succours Firste the braine beginnes to debate and iudge what the disease is and how to prouide the remedie commaundes the toung to declare the grief and demaund meanes to cure it the eare heareth the foote trauelleth the hand is diligent to applie the medcine wherein all the rest haue common interest and that with generall care compassion and busie trauell as if the passion were proper to euery of them euen so and by this resemblance we sée thys body pollitike to be then in his best estate when it suffereth none of any condicion or calling what soeuer to liue voyd of function and trauell according to his dutie where if there be any eyther by superfluitie of euill humor or by nature corrupt or of discipline peruersed which leaueth his function he is not onely vnprofitable to him selfe and others but also a trouble to the reste of the partes but specially to the moste neare and noble partes which are his neighbours parentes and néerest familiars euen so in a body pollitike the greatest in office or credit ought to aduertise the magistrate which is the head to the ende to consider howe the infirmitie may be holpen to whom all the reste of the partes are bound to be assistant for the cure of the parte infected which least it growe to encrease of euill they ought to purge by some sharp discipline And that dooing no good in his simple application they are bound to redouble it to the vttermost wherein if it proue incurable let thē applie the searing yron and as an extréeme remedie cut it of to kéepe the other partes from corruption and the whole body sound And this albeit can not be done without extréeme sorrow to our whole common weale but specially to the next parentes neighbours and familiars yet being driuen thereunto for the health and sauetie of the whole the necessitie makes the cōstraint neyther hatefull nor intollerable The magistrat only as being the head of this body hath the iudgement and execution of this busines as he onely hath the eye to sée the eare to heare and the imagination and iudgement to determine to the sauetie of him that fayleth in his dutie and to the benefit and profit of the whole body pollitike wherein is not to be forgottē that naturally the head of man findes out spéedely the griefe or disease of the member to giue succours to it the same being an aduertisement that the chief ruler or head of a common weale ought also to know the euill that is happened in any place of his gouernement whereunto he is bounde with his eyes his eares his vnderstanding and all his other sensible synowes I meane officers inferiour to whom belonges the information of euery thing to the end reasonable remedie may be applied But this were a great euill if the head should become diseased by vices and peruersed affections for being so he would make to languish all his poore body and leade the members into disorder yea worse would happen if any grosse or corrupt humour hindered or stopped the naturall conduites by the which the liuely spirites procéeding from the braine could not pearce and passe thorough all the partes of the body whereby it might fall by apoplexie as dead without spéeche without mouing of breath and séeme to haue no sence In this we signifie that if the law which is as the soule of the body ciuill be in the head of the magistrat restrayned or hindred by corruption or aboundance of humores infected as couetousenesse hate feare loue and false opinion touching religion to performe her frée functions through all the saied body pollitike in motions and senses which are gouernements by wyse prouidence equitie and iustice The poore common weale can not but fall quickly to the ground euen as a house hath no meane to stand when his proppes are taken from vnder him This we reade happened in the time of Sedechias king of Jsraell when the great Sacrificator Phassur and all his vnder sacrificators and Prophetes except Jeremie EZechiell Daniel and a few others togither with their king and his officers were occupied in actes of couetousnes rapines iniustice and pagan superstitions and forhearing the exercise of the law of God all those as they were the first that declined to sinne so they were the firste that were committed to spoile captiuitie and murther and afterwardes the rest of the whole body slaughtered with al that miserable common weale defaced whiche afore stood in florishing prosperitie so long as hir heades performed their office and iustly exercised the lawe And where the soule of the common weale which is the law were not but by certayne smal humors corrupte with certaine vices hindred to do hir action whereby one only member should be distressed all the body could not but be in payne and not able fréely to doo his general office So the default of execution of iustice in one particular man is the error of the magistrate and the cause by the which the whole cōmon weale is put to trouble Therefore O you Magistrates in whose handes standes the direction of the soule and body of this Christian common weale and also of whom depend the successe rest and happynes of the same by your graue gouernement as of the contrary if there bée default in you what wretchednes and miserie it suffereth is attributed to you
that happen in the world they are alreadie well proued to discend directly from God and not by any prouidence of fortune as the Epicuriens and Atheists of our time beleue nor fatally according to the opinion of the infidels togither with the Astrologians who attribute all to their aspects constellations oppositions and reuolutions of starres and much lesse according to the philosophicall perswasion of the Phisitions bringing in the alterations and corruption of Elements and naturall bodies not raising vp their spirites to the consideration of the deuine prouidence that the soule gouernes not better all the parts of our humane body then the great God rules measures this huge world not suffring the least herb or plant to moue or grow without feeling his vertue and power Nor little bird to fall vppon the branch of any trée without the prouidence and will of that omnipotent mouer of all things nor lastly the least haire of our head which is not kept in reckoning by him The Phisitions or later Philosophers do oftentimes beguile themselues by the second causes as making them the imediat or first causes of any euill that hapneth which is a kind of infidelitie not fixing their iudgmēts but on things which they see as when the South wind hot and moyst hath blowne much most commonly in a yere when ponds lakes and fennes are corrupted when in a dearth of vittailes people are constrayned to eate vnseasonable meates when the ayre is close and giues out an euill seat when the winter contrary to his nature is hot and sootie when many vile and vememous beastes engender vppon the earth and caterpillers frogges and other vermine fall out of the ayre when such signes appeare the Phisitions say they are the cause of plague sicknes not considering that GOD vseth these second causes ordeyned by his prouidence as instruments and manifest signes of the same prouidence that for this reason By those signes he giues warning to the world that he prepareth to execute his iustice vppon people nations and by these foretokens inuites and aduertiseth men to fall to submission and supplication for pardon to the end he thunder not suddenly his ful indignatiō rigor vppon sinnes A child séeing his father prepare rods and bindes them shake them in his hand hath to thinke that he hath offended the time of his scourging draweth neare and therfore in feare teares humilitie he ought to fall prostrate afore the knées of his father as we haue afore aduised By these meanes sayth Joel what know we if God of nature good and reconcileable to our vices wil be conuerted and aforde grace at the least he will not condemne our soules if with a changed harte we performe action of penance when the Prince by long counsell and aduise causeth to be erected in many publike places of his Realmes great scaffoldes gibbets and the instruments of torment such as haue offended the law haue no meane to flée what other thing can they thinke of this preparation then a resolute purpose of the Prince to execute smarting iustice vppon them great is their present feare but farre greater the griefe displeasure which they ought to haue of their offences ought they not to call into practise all meanes seruing for their deliuery yea if they tary till they be led to the scaffold their hāds and feete bound with other attires of high offenders being ready to be offred to the execution there is small hope or expectation of mercie let them go themselues with their halters about their neckes and taking their best friēds to solicit in their intercession to the Prince let them discouer true effects of contricion and imploring the frée mercy of the Prince let thē offer restitution to the parties offended and better obedience and behauior here after in them selues so shall they with Dauid not suffer the vtter most rigor of iustice or els auoid it altogither as the Jsraelites escaped it in the time of Jonathas the Niniuits also by their seuere wōderful penāce euē so al these second causes are but signes instruments of Gods iustice tokens preparations and fore shewes as according to the examples of the rodds skafoldes and gibbets by the which he declares his anger and disposicion to punish sin The semblance that is made the preparation and the rod as they are no causes of gods iustice but it is for the punishment of our sinnes that execution is so aparantly prepared So after such shewes and warnings doeth not the Father begin to scourge his sonne Doth he lay aside the rod afore he sée the amendment of his sonne or at least some hope that he will core●t him selfe and not returne eftsoones to his naughtines The childe can not accuse the rod as the cause of his scourging much lesse the trée where it was gotten and least of all his father that layd one the lashes But entring in to the vew and iudgment of his owne life let him accuse himselfe and saye that his sinne is the first cause of the euill that he suffereth For if he had done well because the lawe is not to punish the iuste he had not feared that rod as in déed to speak properly he feareth it not though he haue offended but feares his father which holdes it in his hand since the rod can do him no harme if he be reconsiled to his father ¶ To remedie all euils the causes must be taken away the discrtion and wisdome requisite there vnto Chapter viij I Would we were as good Philosophers touching our faith as Phisicions be in their medicines and phisick Then would we apply as good spiritual cures against sinne as by them are ministred temporall remedies to heale and preserue bodies from diseases They assone as they deserne the second causes of a sicknes apply present prouision to the place where they remaine they minister purgations to kepe bodies from corruption by euill humors they cause the stréets and straight corners of the towne to be clensed lest the ayer congeale infectiō they make fiers abroad to mortefie and purge euill smells and within howses disperse and strew perfumes They prescribe sobrietie and forbid excesse they banish all vnsauerie meates bringe in abstinence from cohabitacion they apoynt Methredat and other preseruatiues and giue order to weare Rue and other strong hearbs proper against the Plague In like sort if we vsed spirituall meanes to kéepe vs from euill doing we should with the fact of sinne auoid also the perills miseries that are brought with it yea if assone as we deserned the second causes threatning signes of the vengance of God we would purge our selues of all wicked affections and vices not suffer in our commō weale impunitie of sinne but performe one holy and generall conuertion and conuersation according to christianitie we should not only tourne away the hand of God from vs but eftsones restablish his gracious
none shoulde be receiued into the degrées of Doctours without proofe of so long time studie after he be admitted to the state of Maister of Arte wherein if they haue not studied seriuslye or haue aspired to the degrees by fraud and supposition of witnesses or if they haue conuerted to other exercise the time that shoulde haue béen reserued to searche out that knowledge they committed wrong chiefly to God with whom it is not lawfull for any to enter into degrée and aucthoritie to teache if hée be not expert in all his Lawe To this may be ioyned the prouidence of the elders by whom it was ordeyned that in this case none shoulde employ time in other studie then in the Scriptures to the ende that beyng resolute in that knowledge the worlde shoulde not bée led in errours and false doctrines It were therefore a good order to be obserued in Vniuersities and places of congregation not to sende any young Preachers or Nouises into the countrey before they haue expressed their doctrine afore the auncientes and multitude of the religion that in the same exposition wherin they must teache their congregation abroade neither adding nor diminishing when they shall preache to the multitude For other wayes there were daunger that without this long custome or diligent exercise of priuate preaching these young prentises woulde deliuer to their audience suttle and false propositions which we call either vaine doctrines or heretical although they helde them without any wicked or peruerse wyll Besides hauing once pronounced them they woulde be ashamed to renounce them and so the people in the meane while should stand seduced And if they do renownce them the multitude woulde not afterwarde beléeue them easily because in opinion they woulde holde that they were constrayned to denie them as we reade that Berengarius was not able to reduce those whom he had seduced by ignorance So that as there woulde be alwayes feare of some errour so it coulde not be without blasphemie to the trueth of the Scripture to suppose in place of the same a falsehood and that in the Pulpit which being the seate of trueth such as are appointed to pronounce it ought to haue knowledge of good iudgement great wisedome perfect vnderstanding and holy affection pretending no other ende or purpose but the honour of God and health of soules without aspiring to particuler glorie séeing all glorie is due to God Let them beare no affection to couetousnesse and much lesse to please men but studie and preach to edifie forbearing for malice to any singuler person to exhibite bityng inuectiues in generall speache and lesse against estates Here when we speake of Preachers who ought to be such in all perfection of excellencie we meane Curates and Pastours which by the charge and duetie of their Pastorall profession are actuallye bounde to discharge that estate For as all other Preachers are but their Vicars so if it belong to the Curate to be no lesse learned then his Vicar is it not then contrary to all order and reason that he shoulde be raised into estate and dignitie aboue others if he expresse not greater perfections as in wisedome doctrine experience and vertue Why is the head raysed aboue the other members of the body but because he is endued with more excellencies of nature I wishe that none shoulde make practise of this profession without knowledge of all the Scripture and absolute interpretation of the holy Doctours which if it had béen obserued in the first institution the Church had béen replenished with learned and feruent Pastours Neither had the worlde swarmed with these newe opinions if they had well studied and obserued the Doctours of the Church This reformation also belonges to such as enter into the exercise of the lawes and all others that aspire to offices for the function of which belonges singuler knowledge to vnderstande the lawe and mainteyne it in all Courtes and not to lose anye lawfull cause by ignoraunce or for not being resolute in the Lawe in which default or if by corruption the equitie of a good cause be confounded the Lawyer is bounde to iust restitution ❧ God hath erected Phisicke and vvilleth that the Phisition be honoured but that vve vnderstande that all sicknesse comes of him and therefore vvoulde haue vs to aske health of him and to pourge our consciences of sinne Abuse of Phisitions vvith counsell hovve to kepe vs from diseases ❧ The .10 Chapter LYke as the Almightie as the wise man saith hath created Phisicke for necessitie the same appearing in so manye sortes of Hearbes Plantes and medicional Droages together with manye other things profitable to preserue and restore health wherein there is a dignitie and honour to the Phisition as the Minister of the same highe God So wée are tyed also to this further consideration that séeing our diseases for the most part and most often deriue congruentlye of our sinnes it is requisite with the aduise of the Booke of Wisedome to offer our selues to God in prayer and penaunce for remission of our sinnes to the ende Phisicke maye succede to good profite in his vs For if the cause of our sicknesse remaine stil in state and nature the arte and indeuour of the Phisition bringes forth no other effect then an increase and innouation of infirmityes and doeth profite no more then the Surgeon who thinketh by Plasters to heale an Vlcer within the body which hath already corrupted and putrified the boanes The same being the cause why in olde time men called first vpon the spirituall Phisition in confessing and receyuing Iesus Christ Much more ought wée to repose in God then in the phisition with prayer that hee dispose vertue into the Medicine for the Cure of our diseases If wée pronounce blessing and Grace vppon the meate which wée eate euery day and sanctify it by the word of God why should wée not reserue the same deuoute reuerence speciallye where the matter is of more great and necessary importaunce Ochosias in his sicknes hauing recourse more to his phisitions and supposed Gods then to the God of almightye power was tolde by Helizeus that hée should dye Aza suffering paine in his feete whiche grewe to a goute put confidence in Phisitions and neuer demaunded Cure of God whereby hee coulde not bée healed And albeit the phisition hath power ouer such diseases as haue theyr naturall causes as such as come eyther by Surfet of meate and drinke or superfluety of distemper Yet if God bée offended let the patient offer reconcilement by repentaunce and demaunde cure of him But where immediatly God sendes the disease it is in vaine to apply Phisicke without there bée first a reconsilemēt as is expressed in the sicknes of Ezechias So that in al infirmities let vs first haue our recourse to God and then resort to the indeuour and art of the phisition Like as also in such as bée true Christian Phisitions and vnderstand the counsel of God it is
corporall death is decréed in the Lawe of nature and other seuere iudgement of God inferred to the wicked as to Cayn for kyllyng his brother by the tremblyng of his bodye to the murtherers by the sworde to the worlde for his delightes glorie and whordome by the flood to them of Sodome and Gomorrhe for sinnes against nature by the fire of heauen to the adulterers and rauishers of women by terrible vengeaunce and to the chidren of Iudas who had done abhominable actes by paynes of suddaine deathes which they sawe euen by a naturall iudgement pronounced or inflicted as to Thamar for committing whordome and to the Sichimites for the Rape of Dina the daughter of Iacob If gouernours punishe not suche faultes by like paynes at the least let them ordaine others either conformable or neare approching them alwayes considering that corporall paines in the lawe bée figures and foreshowes of the eternall death which sinne deserueth In like sort where they sée in the Lawe of Moises certaine sinnes to bée punished by the body let them iudge them right sore displeasing and hateful to God who loueth his creature so dearelye as hée hath geuen him his owne image and likenesse and for whome he hath made the inferiour heauens the earth and the Elements with all thinges conteyned in the same and for whose cause hée sent his proper sonne vpon the earth to suffer all miseries yea most cruel and sclaunderous death And therfore being thus instructed bothe by the lawe whiche punisheth certaine sinnes with death specially suche as bée against the ten cōmaundements of the Moral Lawe or directly against Gods honour our neighbour or a whol● common weale and also by the Gospell to whom certeine sinnes are so abhominable as it condemnes them to eternall death and perpetual tormentes where is gnashing of téeth and lamentable sighinges they maye conclude suche offences to bée worthy of death specially where a whole common weale is iniured or offended For touching secréete sinnes wherein is no meane of proofe let them refer them to the iudgement of God and to the repentaunt Men sayeth the Scripture haue no power nor facultie to iudge but in matters apparant to the eye God séeing into the heart discernes the secréet things wherof hée defendes the iudgement to al others But where God is offended the cōmon wea●e iniured there let thē follow the iudgement of god which we know to be thundred vpon sinners committing such faultes Therefore let Iudges bee well aduised and geue no libertye of life to suche whom God hath already condemned in heauen both to corporal and eternall death Let them acknowledge that they are here erected as imitatours executours of his iudgement Let them remember Saul who pardoned Agag whom God had condemned to death and Saul for his indulgencye was reproued depriued of his kingdom Let them not also forget the grace which Helias shewed to his dissolute children who for that they were abhorred of god were the cause of his death I meddle not with the reproches which God gaue to the gouernours of Israell because they suffered sinne with impunitye suffering suche to liue who had defiled the earth with theyr wickednes people abhominable to God and worthy so many deathes as they had committed horrible vices And therefore hee condemneth those Iudges euen so often to eternal death as they gaue sufferaunce to others to commit suche faultes without inflicting vpon them corporall death To this let them adioyne this aduertisement that as one member corruptes the rest so the rotten part disposing continuall infection into the rest of the body deserues to bée cut of euen as the good Surgeon not suffering a Canker to encrease cuttes it of so soone as it beginnes to appeare Let them not doubt but that according to the Gospel al euil wicked men which the Law of nature and Moises condemne yea the humane lawe also according to reason do adiudge to death ought to die For as the Gospel so aloweth al those lawes as is before prooued S. Paul aduiseth the Corinthians by them all others to take awaye the wicked man who being corrupt in maners corruptes others for which cause he compares them to the leuine aduising notwithstanding that the punishmēt come from the magistrate who hauing the sworde is a iust terror to the offēdor for that he carieth it not in vain being the minister of god executour of his law which euen in the gospel condemneth the man that hath done euil Wherefore al men disposed into the action of wickednes must be punished by the magistrate otherwaies he should bring abuse to his estate Is it not the magistrate by whom S. Paul willeth that all such in a cōmon weale should be cut of by death which vexe the church and are mutinus sedicious iniurious false prophetes wherin because it may be douted to what vices the scripture appointeth punishment specially by death I meane to declare by order the paines of such as the law cōdemneth to the ende the magistrate leaue thē not vnpunished in his cōmon weale nor iustifie such by which he should draw malediction as god hath already condemned by the scripture Heare we must not winke at an error of our time receiued almost thorow al christēdom which is that we obserue no better the imitacion so often recōmended to vs of the iudgements of God to leade vs being also commaunded in the scripture according to the same in the punishment of sinnes which is a kinde of infidelitye and ignorance of God or presumptuous boldnes or at least an insēsible dulnes This error deriueth partly from the humane lawes made by the Pagans whose gouernment being led for the most part by fleshly reason suffred impunity for many sinnes which God by his law condemneth to death as diuinations sorceries diuers sorts of magike with whoredomes sauing women whoremongers for men that made the lawes were exempted the virgins vestal or incestuous women with their adulterors condemning no more cōmon vseries excessiue interestes with like sinnes which God abhorreth Gouernors of common weales ought in no wise to hold conformety with these Pagan iudgemēts But reforme them making felt the grauitye of such sinnes by the rigour of worthy punishmēt Men were wont to haue regard only to punishe such sinnes as séemed to beare preiudice to a cōmon weale and therfore sinnes common against god or which of their owne nature be common or Publike wherin the world delights without contradiction are left vnpunished the same being an occasion to prouoke the wrath of God vpon a whole nation destroye whole kingdomes If the auncient canons of the Church bée wel searched it wil be found that al such offences are punished by long straite penance as are also al othes yea the most execrable that men tooke in vaine of god or of the gods diuers opinions of religion although they were absurde wicked and lastly inuocation to the
by so much are they slowe in pittie but as men resolued whollye in forgetfulnesse of GOD they reioyce they laugh they sing at their Tables and passe their time in enterchaunge of wanton companies If this abuse be reprooued vnto them they aunswere Malencollye is hurtfull to their health not remembring the warning of Iesus Christe against them O wretchednesse saith he vppon you that laugh for you shall wéepe and lamente And miserye also vpon you O ye riche men which take your pleasures here and haue your consolations And no lesse vnhappye are all your others which fyll your bellyes for you shall endure eternall hunger In this are most to be reprehended Magistrates and gouernours to whose prouidence are committed so many poore people in their common weale that haue so manye desolate soules to comfort kepe so many sorowfull persons in delay of iustice and yet wil geue them neither hope in their causes nor helpe in their necessities And as they stande guiltye in the same vice with those intemperate sort if they correct not their conuersation with fines paynes and punish their bodyes to whom the Scripture pronounceth malediction Euen so they stande subiect to fall with them but much more gréeuouslye if they vse not diligence to take away the cause of this wretchednesse At Rome in the time of the Pagans there was a Law coherciue against excessiue and extraordinary expenses Much more then in the common wealth of Christendome should there be Statutes and seuere cohercions against superfluities and damnable delytes Let those epicures and belly gods of this worlde looke vp to the warning of Iesus Christ and prediction of Iob. They leade saith he their liues in good cheare and pleasures and vpon the point of death they fall into hell The riche man in the Gospell is not punished but because he helde sumptuous feastes put on gorgeous attire and despised the poore And when in hell he cryeth to refresh his tongue with one drop of water Abraham aunswered him My sonne thou hast receiued in thy lyfe thy benefites meanyng thou hast had richesse thou hast taken thy pleasures and made great cheare and this Lazarus felt nothing but miseries therfore content thy selfe thou canst not haue thy felicities twise neither he his perplexities againe Who in life tastes of pleasure after death shall be recompensed with displeasure as of the contrarye for him that suffreth euil for the honor of God is laid vp in heauen euerlasting good Other gluttons dronkards in general haue their sentence to be shut out of the kingdome of God wherein to auoide tediousnes I will not nowe medle with the examples of miseries hapned to glottons as to the Sodomites Israelites Holofernes to al which the sinne of epicurity brought miserable death Heare may bée resolued the question of some whether it bée lawfull to make banquets and whether they may be made to Ritche men wheren is to be considered that if the ende bée good and grounded vppon some office of Ciuill honestye they are not reproued Abraham made a godly banquet the same day his sōne was wained or taken from the nourse but it was an invitement to thanke God with his houshold friends for geuing him a sonne in his olde age Lot banqueted Angels whome hée tooke to bée certaine poore passangers Isaac banqueted with Abimilech for confederation of amity Ioseph congratulated the cōming of his Brethren with a sumptuous feast expressing only his feruent and natural loue to them The scripture geues much mention of Banquets Mariages and feastes of Kings such as were made on the solempne daies of sacrifices to God into the which were receiued the poore Leuites or ministers of the Temple other needy people as also in the new Testament speciallye on those daies when the communion was ministred the poore with the rest for the societye of christian Loue being made partakers of the Banquet whereof it tooke the name Agape that is charitye Christ him selfe was often at Banquets Mariages But whosoeuer made banquets to maintaine gluttony for which S. Iames reproues the Ritchmen of his time or for vaine glorye they haue theyr share with the wicked Ritche man in the Gospell in the tormentes of hell Touching mockers and scoffers let them thinke they are in the warning of Salomon That as their sinne is gréeuous so the iudgementes of God are prepared for them For séeing they ought to loue theyr neighbour as them selues they ought not onelye to bée sorye for the faulte which they reprehend and scoffe at in another but to haue compassion of it to correct it and to pray to God for him that hath the errour Repulse them farre from you sayeth the wise man for in them is nourished the causes of many contencions and therfore besides their condemnacion they shal be sure to be scoffed of others for that Gods iustice keepes his course ❧ Scoffers and men of pleasaunt conceyte pretending none other ende but to encrease pleasure are rebukeable But more if their I esting turne to the reproche of any so do they offend God Hovve vvee are bounde to employe our time It is not forbidden for all that to recreate our selues for honest purposes nor to vse our pastime and pleasure ❧ The .4 Chapter LET Scoffers and the vaine conceyted sort commonlye called pleasaunt men practising to make others laugh liue in pleasure not thinke they are without rebuke In whom albeit séemes no purpose of hurt to any yet the ende tending to the scorne of another can not bée without sinne and therefore suche pastime cannot auoide the due blame of vice Saint Paul reproueth them when hée willeth that there bée no fornication nor vncleannes nor couetousnesse named amongst them as is conuenient beséeming to holines And much lesse that there bée villany cloaked with fond speache or slenting contrarye to ciuill modestye which ought to be farre remoued from christians whose exercise standes in geuing thankes to God praising him and speaking of him employing the time also in discourse of thinges profitable good honest and tending to edifye the company Iesus Christ calleth this scoffing meaning idle wordes whereof there is reckoning to bée geuen in the iudgement of God speache vnprofitable time lost And as by S. Paul wée are warned to vse no talke but suche as maye serue and apply to edifye our neighbour So our tongue was consecrated of god by baptisme not to be emploied to other vses then to forme deuout speaches the handes to minister holy workes all the other members to be disposed to actes of goodnes acccording to theyr office for being dedicated to God to prophane thē in thinges worldlye vile filthy and vicious were as a detestable sacrileage impiety farre more greater then the prophanation which Balthasar vsed of the vessels of the temple of Salomon wherwith he banqueted his Cōcubines féeling therfore a sodaine terrible iudgement of God the night folowing And
continually for after death thou shalt haue no more worke to dooe meaning whilest thou liuest doo as muche good as thou canst for after death thou hast no more time to trauaile Play is also occasion of theft companion to gluttony a baite to whoredom a mouer of quarels and murders It is written in the story of the Corinthians that plaies were causes of their ruine for this reason Chilon a philosopher being sent in embassage frō the Atheniens to Corinthe to treate of peace for there were warres betwéen those .ii. tounes finding the Corinthians vpon a Festiuall daye so generally set at playe that not one of them would vouchsafe to enquire what was the ambassador and much lesse the cause of his comming And when he sawe that aswell the counsellors and chiefest as the rest were so caryed awaye with the delites of theyr playes that hee could not haue worthy audience hée returned at the instant iudging it to great indignitie that the magistrates and Senate should ioyne them selues with the folly of the popular sort And iudging that the best meane to reduce such incenset people were to assaile them by Armes perswaded the Atheniens therunto who afterward would neuer graunt them peace Playing at tables such like sléeping games are called of Aristotle the sportes of women for that to men those sportes are proper wherin is exercise of the body Touching playes at hazard wée finde them vncomely for all men but specially indecent for the christian profession For as the plaiers are led more by fortune chaunse as they terme it thē by wisedom or ability of the mind which is contrary to the nature of sports wherin is sought recreatiō by some industry of labor or dexterity of the spirit in which the praise is alwayes geuen to the vanquisher So in that play is no glory at all and much lesse duty of praise to the player because he doth no acte to deserue it The minde loaseth his practise reason hath no place the iudgement is confounded and the body hath no exercise the same being the cause why by the iust iudgement of God that kinde of playe neuer contenteth the player for that the more hée playeth the more ryseth hée in desire being prickt foreward with hope of profit abandoned to couetousnes wherby it hapneth that the gaine rising by that playe turneth seldome to profit being rather of a nature so wicked that it drawes men into disorder makes thē poore euen to nakednes retaines them in that basenes of minde that euen in the hardest winter they sit suffer as slaues the rigour of many cold nights with their féete benōmed vnder a cold table wherof are bred gouts reumes litargies appoplexies and yet these miserable plaiers haue no féeling of their wretchednes so swéetly are they lulled in the delites of this playe by the wicked spirite the very author therof For these such like reasons there was neuer christian who estéemed not playe vnlawful wherof a womā pronounsing her selfe a prophetis for holding opinion of certaine heresies was cōuinced by an Auncient and learned Bishop who iudged her not to be such one as she made her selfe estéemed for many reasons wherof one was for that shée was séene to playe at cardes and Dice at hazarde A pastime which neuer any of our religion was séene to vse The Philosophers estéemed them vnlawfull for that they haue no similitude with vertue delude reason and delite not so much the mind as they trouble it For as to the noble spirite nothing is more pleasaunt then when he may winne glory by the show of some excellency so nothing can be more contrary to his nature then eyther by sleight or fortune to bée vanquished by his inferior ouer whom by dexterity of nature actes of vertue hée is superiour Plato likewise would not geue sufferance to those plaies amongst his Disciples to whome when they excused them selues that they did no great faulte hée said this litle vice draweth to a greater offence meaning that from litle faults not thinking theron we slide into higher abuses if the humor of the first vice bee not restrained What then shal our christian gouernors say to our ordinary gamesters but euen séeing they abuse so many sportes and practise the plaies of Infidels contrarye to christian profession to forbid some moderate others aswel by measure and limitacion of time as by rate of money to loase at play the same being a necessary bridle to the affection of plaiers who séeme not to bée maisters of them selues the winners so gréedy of gaine and the losers of perplexed hope and desire to recouer theyr losses for which cause if they seldom geue ouer when al is lost at least recouering a new supply they ronne to a new reuenge so finde no ende in their playes turning theyr time into vnlawful acts and so from quarrels iniuries othes renounsing of God yong men fal into inuentions of theft and robberye with other practises of more wickednes Some haue placed Hunting amongst the sportes and pastimes of noble wittes wherunto Zenophon séemes to allure Princes great estates as to an exercise worthy of them hée sayth there is nothing aspireth so nearelye to the fierce fight with the enemye as to pursue the wilde Beast against whom must bée vsed art industrie labor and watching and sometimes suttletie and force to withstande daunger onely it behooueth the noble man so to choose his time for this exercise that he bring no incommodity to the countrey by reason of their corne Grasse Much lesse ought he to preferre his delyte to any pastime when his office is to consult in necessary matters abstayning from all vpon the Sabboth day And as hunting to the ecclesiasticall sort is an exercise most indecent so there is no lesse cause of restraint to meane people who haue to follow any faculty or arte profitable to the common wealth and necessary to the releefe of their priuate life Daunces with their wanton songes at this day are vaine and vnchaste Musicke of an Arte liberall is conuerted to an vnvvorthy vanity vvhat Daunces shoulde be lavvfull vvhat Daunces Musicke and Songes vve ought to vse a examples of holy men vvho neuer vvould be seene in Daunces ❧ The .6 Chapter DAunces and Roundes no lesse then wanton Musicke nowe a dayes are more dissolute then in times past yea resembling the vnchaste customes of the Pagans without faith and ignoraunt of God the same béeing a manifest token of the general corruption vanity of the present age And Musicke which according to the auncients was an Arte liberall in the which men praysed God song exaltacions to the noble actes of the elders recreated mindes heauyly loden with passions and reléeued bodies wéeryed with actions of trauayle is now become an arte of al vanity and filthynesse helping to the seruice of Sathan the delite of the worlde and pleasures of the fleshe I deny not but Daunces were in vse
starres in the night leade vs by infallible Lightes Thus there is no creature which God hath made séene idle but man who of a corrupt nature paruerteth his order where he is bound by most iust reasons both for the mind body to trauaile seeing that as labour is healthful and necessary to him so hée onely aboue al other creatures of God receiueth the profite of the earth and hath of God in the ende eternal recompense which proueth that trauaile whether it bée to gaine and preserue goodes or that it reléeue the necessitye of the bodye or tende to the health of the soule is most behoueful and necessarye to man. It is great hurt to a common weale to nourish mouthes that eate and labour not Who besides theyr owne idlenes are hurtful examples of disorder to others For such people are not satisfied with the losse of theyr owne time but sinisterlye seduce others to theyr faction and ten of those are inough to corrupt fiftye yea a whole Towne Therfore let the Magistrate purge his city of such dranes table Iestours Parasites forgers of Newes builders of scoffes to goo scotfrée them selues very natural pyllors of Tauerns And with the same seuere diligence let him cleanse his cōmon weale of al filthy quagmiers of ruffenrie scurility seruice of bawdes and bawdry for if one out-corner of his Toune bée infected with that pestilence it is inough to impoison the whole yea euen as there is precise order to clense the stréetes chanels of al filth vncleanes to kéepe the toune from corruption of aire and as the head of mans body foreséeth that there remaine no impedimēt to any member but the eye lokes about the body that it be kept cleane if there bée any offence there is a plaister applied to cure cleanse it euen so al such as the magistrate shal see through idlenes or vaine or vnlawful arte to prepare to corrupt them selues infect others Let him either by iustice or discipline reforme them or by good pollecye auoide them from the society of others If there be any fathers through whose negligence or other default theyr children of good houses become customarye to idlenesse sinne and other vices Let the Magistrate punish by heauy fines such fathers for bringing into theyr common weale such pernicious education and for example sake compell their children to ciuilitye by publike discipline It belongeth no lesse to the office of the gouernor to correct the prodigalities of such whose parentes diceassed and they left to theyr owne election of libertye and life with full Coffers waste their wealth in plaies glottonies pompes taking vpon them the title of Gentlemen attyre of yong Princes make loue to Ladies they which are the Sonnes of Marchantes who to get the name of nobilitye sell theyr shoppes holding it a staine to theyr reputacion to continue the trade of theyr fathers And so in continuaunce by much spending and neuer winning theyr prodigalitye leades them at last to sel euen theyr houses and implements litle knowing theyr value at the first and lesse considering to what vses God had ordained them Sure such ought to bée bridled by Publike aucthorytye and restrayned to rule and measure liuing according to the rate of other wise Burgesses And if they are vnapt to continue theyr Shops there may bée constraint to frame them to other trade bothe to theyr proper commoditye example of the Citye and to kéepe them from extreame pouertye whereunto there Idlenesse will bring them Heare let no man say haue not I onely propertye in mine owne may not I doo with my goodes what I list yea who can let me to sell it sith euery man is maister of his owne suche speaches please well the humour of the speaker but agree not with the statutes of a common weale wel directed and much lesse haue conformetye with cōmon reason because a perticular is but a member of the bodye polletike who ought to bee gouerned by his head and geue all the ayde hee can to his body Horace sayeth wée owe our selues and al that wee haue to our common weale as who saye wée are not for our selues neyther is our goodes our owne but all ought to bee employed to Publike behoofe but more to God of whome wee haue al so that if our countrey haue neede of our goodes or our life we ought to refuse nothing ought not the Arme to suffer to lose his sleeue yea and the ioynt to keepe his bodye were it not better the hand were cut of then to loase both the leggs or the whole bodye But a man to hurt him selfe is another matter for he should not onely do iniurye to him selfe but wrong to others For that cause wée say that if a man set fire in his owne house he ought to bée hanged for the act bearing common interest to the citye makes the man reputed as a publike iniuror of the state bée it that the house was his and builded by him yet to propertyes is anexed this condicion to vse them well to the behofe of al and not abuse them to the offence of any So goodes are a mans owne for his necessarye vse but if he abuse them they are none of his but the common weale ought to resume thē as a good mother and kéepe them for the after necessity of her child If hée that cuttes his Arme for the nonse deserue the punishmēt of a murderer no lesse merite of paine belongs to him who doeth wrong to his common weale to whome hée oweth that arme for the seruice of the rest For that cause euen amongst the Pagans hée which killed him selfe was led to the scaffolde and hanged as an offendour because hée had in that sort cutte him selfe of from his bodye polletike to whose seruice hée ought him selfe and al that was his The prodigal and vnthrifty man hauing turned his great wealth into a mountaine of smoke by his disorder leaues this charge to the Citye to kéepe his wife and to prouide for the sustenaunce and education of his children who being accustomed with theyr Father to epicuritie and deliteful pleasures can not but smel of their first corruption and be hardly kept from intemperance without a harde hand wil not bée restrayned from the life of theyr dissolute Father And therefore as wel to preuent this publike charge to the Citye as to reduce to modestye Impes of suche disordered stockes it is good to shake the rodde of discipline to kéepe such Youth from corruption not suffering any to liue in Idlenes least their example infect others ❧ There bee diuerse sortes of Idle pople some worcke certaine howres onelye and they bee certaine Artificers Some as vacabondes vvill neuer doo any thing vvho bringing vp theyr children in the same trade traine them to the vvallet betime Discourse of poore Beggers vvandring in Countreyes and of the euill that they doo ❧ The .12 Chapter BVT because this Idlenes hath so large a sircuite
immortall purtraits of the diuinitie of God and in hospitalles only the corruptible and mortal bodies of decayed men are fed and cherished In Colleges also poore children may bee susteined if the houses haue liberal dowries the same ministring great cause to the gouernours to prouide Colledges séeing also it is a common interest to all men to sée to the good instruction and education of youth what course of science so euer they take as hauing no abilitie of them selues to know what is good honest profitable nor what is conducible to the safetie of their soules and much lesse to discerne God and searche out his wil yea they shal be ignorant in their rule and gouernment of humaine reason so wicked and obscure a nature carrie they by sinnes so ignorant is their spirit so peruersed their will and affections whereby those children folowing time without discipline and institution should fall into infinit errours and dissolute manners and as vice encreaseth as the wicked wéede groweth without culture or labor and euery minde by his proper nature caried to doe euill where vertues can not bee attained without discipline and instruction so these young forward plantes if thei should not be licorred with wholesome moysture and moderated by the industrie of skilfull workmen they would bring forth fruites of corruption and troubles to their common weales and in the end ouergrow them to their generall destruction Let it be therefore a principall care in chief Rulers to erect Colledges building them in places ayrie cleane and faire obseruing the commoditie of the Sunne and wind reflecting temperatly a thing very delightful to the wit and profitable to the health of the body foreséeing that they carrie such state in showe and buildinge that aswell the beauty of the workmanship as the serenitie of the place may draw children of noble houses to passe their youth there and inuite other good wittes to establishe and follow the studie of learning The romthes standing in such amplitude and the chambers so many that they may conueniently conteyne the nūbers of schollers within the house being very hurtfull by many reasons to make separation of studentes one from another and vnder the chambers to bee made formes to the ende the Regentes and maisters remaining in the said chambers and hauing vnder them the said fourmes may better kéepe their schollers in dutie then if their fourmes were elswhere bestowed if the place be commodious it is necessary to make libraries in the sayde chambers which would bée very requisite for good Studentes for to yonge children and such as beare no vehement will to studie they would be but occasion to hinder or disorder their exercise it were good they were bestowed in a mild swéete and softe aier if the place beare commodity for the recreation and pleasure of wittes the windowes of these ought to haue aspect towardes the East and West for the South resolueth the wit and dulleth it and filles the braine with hurtfull vapour and the wind of the North as in winter when it is cold hindreth the memory and is hurtfull to the lyuer and lightes because it stirres vppe defluxion Secondly a Colledge or schole ought to bee indued with reuenue sufficient to entertaine a principall and Regentes of singular vertue and knoweledge with wages accordinge to their order and qualitie and that with such iust payment that they haue no occasion to complaine of their common weale nor of such by whō they are called to the exercise of that profession Touching the reuenues of Colledges without the which the stately buildings should séeme as cages wherin the birdes died of hunger for want of prouision goodly to beholde but not to dwell there the Church in other tymes hath prouided for her part a principall Regent for which purpose shée leauied foure or fiue hundreth Frankes of estate in the Cathedrall Churches for the finding of a man of excellent learning and vertuous life who at this day retaynes the name called Scholemaister and the Bishops and common weales supplied the reste as thei saw necessitie require wherein for the default of some of our predecessours discontinuinge this good and holy institution I wish our Ecclesiastical prelates of this time to restore and recontinue so auncient and necessarie constitution would where neede is either erect newe Colledges and encrease their reuenew or at least repaire such as are towardes ruine and of their grosse reuenues superfluous for the countenance of a churchman compart some porcion to the fauour of learning honour of God seruice of their countrey and their owne perpetuall memorie and as those holy and graue prelates of the former tymes saw there were no better meanes to preuent heresies and correct vices then by laying a ground of good instruction in the first yeares of youth so if their successours had succéeded them aswel in example and imitation as in their huge and wealthie liuinges they had stopped the course to many sectes and opinions which only are the cause at this day that Christendome standeth deuided in religion and the kinges thereof drawen into actes of mutuall conspiracie In some places common weales and cities onely haue had the honor to builde endue Colleges with a reuenue of a thousand or xii C. Frankes at the least for the which they haue bene and are amongest all other cities most celebrated Others not hauing like abilitie in wealth but no lesse forward in affection to learning séeking not to be slow or negligent in that which they sawe raysed their common weale to benefite and them selues into immortall honor procured brotherheads to be annexed leuied generall and particular gatheringes to erecte and endue their Colledges and solicited Bishops to transferre the ayde of certaine benefices makinge by that industrie their colledges both faire and riche wherein in some places as the prince to helpe the want of some townes vnable but well disposed to plant such foundacion of a common weale hath wisely appointed the Cathedrall and Collegiall churches to bestow Cannon prebendes to the reliefe of Colledges specially in their capitall Townes where ought to bee the residence of learned men to teach the whole Diocesse So in many townes specially in Fraunce where they haue so ready meane and either will not or dare not applie it to vse what great offence doe they to their Countrey and pitiefull wrong to their vniuersall youth for where their cities are poore and haue chapters and riche churches to supplie their prouision with the reuenue of prebendes whilest they are voyde yet they leaue the care and prouidence of their prince without execution and are negligent in the instruction of their poore frayle youth for the which they stande not onely condemned afore God but also subiecte to reproche in all posteritie yea euen of the youth them selues to their perpetual dishonor young wittes being by their negligence abandoned to vices ignorance and all sortes of dissolution where if they had ben trained in a colledge they
séemes very requisite that they be al lodged in a coledge or schole for these thrée reasons The first belōgeth to discipline the second to doctrine and the third is ciui● Pithagoricall or rather christian as shal be sayd All t●●ée containing one profite necessitie for a true and perfect institution of youth Touching discipline which is indiferently an instruction of manors and correction of vices it is most certain in common experience that with out all comparyson it is best obserued and entertained in a coledg for ther are geuen orders statutes instructions and precepts to them of the howse wher the foriners suche as be with out the coledg ar not nor conueniently cannot be constrained to be but specially they can not assist such orders as are priuatly distributed to the pensioners and chamber fellowes of the colleadg And for correction of faults ther is no meane to exersice it vppon suche as lodg with out both for the all beit they are not knowen yet if complaint come the offender findes helpe in his absence where by it happeneth that for want of discipline that sort of youth is norished in their vices being farre better that suche children had folowed some seruice vnder the correction of their parents or masters then with the studie at their booke to learn to do euill whereby the profession of the schole and scholers suffereth slaunder Thus vices rise to encrease in suche disordered youth for want of that good instruction in the knowledg feare of God which duely is administred to the howshold scholers and for lacke of rebuke and correction when they were taken euen in the action of their faultes And by experience this may be aduowched for trueth that familier doctrin of the feare and loue of God continued euery day in the schole which drawes so well young children from doing euill that it doeth much to take away the necessity vse of the rodd But for the children of the towne seing they haue not the commodities of this discipline it belonges to their parents to kepe them in exersise and not suffer their frayle children to fall in to corruption by their ease howshold examples Touching doctrine it is not possible to work such ripe effect in scholers out of the howse as in them that remaine ordinarily with in the coledg I mean not at the times of readings and lectures which is frée to all to assist and to profit all in comen The houshold scholers haue in their chambers or formes repeticion of their lectures euen by the regents who haue well studied vnderstood them which tutors if they haue not exelent knowledg are not able to repeat to their pupills because they vnderstand thē not throwly for as the regent notwithstanding this great lerning giues him selfe to studie the lecture two or thrée howres before he deliuer it to the scholers So if the tutor haue not abilitie of lerning how can he record with his pupills the substance and meaning of the lecture wherevnto albeit his learning enhable him yet hauing thorow all the formes some scholers what leasure can he haue to studye the lectures then what abilitie to make it familiare with the vnderstanding of his scholers To repeat the lecture it is necessary he studie it one houre at the least and if he haue for euery fourme two there are thrée howers appointed to the repetition to his pupilles of one fourme and if he haue of thrée fourmes onely he must spende at the least in the studie and repetition of lectures to interpret them as he ought xviii houres the day Let parentes therefore for the better instruction of their children chuse no tutor but such as is learned and not encombred with many pupilles in seuerall fourmes which is a meare abuse to the father and a spoyle to the tyme of the scholler In a Colledge they are tyed to a continuall diligēce in studie where the forreynors take their vaine exercise in the streates and fieldes measuring their plaie at their owne pleasure and oftentymes runne into libertie of will if they haue not good maisters Besides they in the Colledge haue particular disputes speake Latin continually and haue Theames at tymes and houres when the studentes in the towne can not assiste they haue exercise of declamations and playes of Comedies sometimes in which excellent and necessary cōtencion of learning the towne schollers haue no oportunitie of instruction yea they are in continuall exercise warre of learning by which profitable emulacion Salomon sayeth that as yron is made sharp by yron so wittes by mutuall controuersie are best prouoked to studie The third reason prouing it necessarie to be instructed in a Colledge is the loue wherein they are nourished confirmed by a cōmon habitation altogither for which reason Pithagoras made a colledge calling it Caenobium as a Couent liuing togither as brothers of one house and as Monkes doe in a monasterie To which order most of the other Philosophers reduced their colledges in Athenes where the maisters liued with the schollers instructing them in doctrine and cōsocietie of loue and friendship So that schollers liuinge and leading conuersation togyther in a colledge as in one house are induced to conciliation of loue and learned to enterteyne and retain frendship for euer which Cicero estéemeth a strong leage and knot of societie and inseparable amitie Then séeing it is a great and common benefite to a whole countrey that young childrē take knowledge and loue togither to the ende that as they rise greater in body and yeares so they may increase in cōmunitie of mind with perpetuall peace and concorde It can not but be most necessarie that they leade a common lyfe togither in their youth in one Colledge vnder one principall and by the conduct of many Regentes the same being the cause why in the beginning of the booke I alleadge a necessitie to builde Colledges large and roomie the better to conteyne all the schollers of a Countrey wishing the whole multitude to obserue the institutions of the house and aswel forreinors as houshold Colledgers being subiect to their Principall and Regentes to obeye the disciplines doctrines and common statutes of the house without any diuersitie and contradiction ¶ In a Colledge or Schoole there ought to bee statutes authorised by the Vniuersities the dutie of Gouernours and townesmen to the Principalles and Regentes the office of maisters to their Disciples and of the schollers to their maisters Chapter xij I Néede not now repete what ought to be the qualitie and estate of the Principall and Regentes hauinge resolued that before and much lesse entreat of the nūber séeing it restes onely in the iudgement of the Gouernours and principal of their colledge to rate that according to the multitude and capacitie of schollers onely I beséeche the founders and gouernours to erect lawes and inuiolable statutes for the establishment and guide of their Colledge with the iudgement of their Principall authorising their
them If to men vsing great estates and offices be reserued an vniuersall reuerence What lesse honour is due to him that makes them worthy of it and by his industry brings them into the merit of such high calling If wise and learned men be famous through the world for the benefites that growe by their counsell commaūdement and authoritie is there lesse dutie of renoume and immortall praise to such as are the authors of those benefites by their learning If men learned in the lawes profite so much common weales If Phisitions be so necessary for that in them resteth the cure of bodies If lastly by the deuines wée finde comfort to our heauie soules how much are we bound to such as are the first causes of these deuine fruites who are the schoolemasters without whom and the foundation by them layed in those doctrines they had neuer ascended to those seates of honour when we sée a goodly building so excellent in beautie that the worlde giues it singuler estimation what can we ascribe lesse to him who laied the foundation and raised the worke to that excellencie then the principall praise For if faire delitefull and profitable workes be so generally praysed nothing lesse is due to the hand that fashioned them Who delites to behold a goodly picture doth great wrong to the painter if he ascribe not much to the commendation of his skill yea if there were layd on but the first coollers yet the beholder ought to be thankfull to his industrie and labour But if such as nourish our mortall bodies deserue great affection memorable renoume much more are we bound both in loue and perpetuall dutie to them that minister foode to the immortall spirites of little children if so great reuerence be reserued to Phisitions for helping the health of bodies which one day must die notwithstanding Is there not more merit of honour to such as cure our soules of immortal diseases The scripture pronounceth many textes to the shame of those which despise scholemasters of which profession Christ séemed to make his Apostles when he spake to Peter if thou louest mée féede my Lambes What other thing is it to féede then to nourish teach in good doctrine and the Lambes of the flocke of Iesus Christ according to the natural propertie of speaking are young children whom he holdes no lesse deare then his proper fleshe I saye not that vnder that name are ment all sortes of people and yet it can not be denied but that those littleones deserue chief instruction For S. John after he had taught in diuers countreys being compelled to leaue them for a time and go elswhether by speciall writing sayd to the little ones comfort your selues O ye young ones in that you are by the grace word of God strong and vertuous for that the woord of God remaynes in you and that you haue vanquished the wicked spirit through the grace and merit of Iesus Christ Yea Christ him selfe caused the little children to come into his schoole blaming the Apostles being yet of the flesh by cause they let those littleones for comming to him as though he would not haue taught and holpen them aswell as euen the greatest but he commaunded to bring them to him and pronounced them in that instruction and imposition of hands which hée gaue them worthy of the kyngdome of GOD saying that to those and such like the euerlasting worlde belongeth Then such as receiue little children into discipline exercise the office of Iesus Church the same sturring vp the Bishops in old time to take into charge of discipline and teaching little children as also did both the one and the other S. Iohn and the Prophets had many disciples who otherwayes were called the children of the Prophets it is written that many holy men went thorough the world to teach schollers with this intention that with the rules of learning they should also instruct them in the principles of faith and by that meane winne the Fathers mothers to Iesus christ amongest these Origen was not the least zealous and S. Gregorie the Pope refused not this vocation for certaine houres of the day For which considerations a certaine learned doctor of our time and chauncellor of a famous vniuersitie had no shame to go thorow the Colleadges of the vniuersities at certaine conuenient houres and teach little children in familiar doctrines which he did for the loue zeale of God And being oftentimes reproched by other doctors that he shewed an example vnworthy his place specially for that there were sufficient tuters to that purpose he aunswered that they were as fleshly doctors resembling the Apostles not yet in full libertie of the spirite who by glorious opinion forbad little children to approche neare to Iesus Christ alleadging that there was no dutie of accesse to him but by those that were graue I aske of those fleshly doctors whether the shepeheard that kéeps the Lambes of a Father of houshold do not as good and agréeable seruice to his Master as if he had in charge greater shéepe If a Father shew more deare loue to his little children then to those that haue riper age foloweth it not by congruent reason that such as giue succoures to those little ones and kéepe them from daunger deserue better recompence of the Father then if they had done seruice to his greater sonnes If the little plant in the garden of any Farmer be so much cherished that the eye of the owner is seldome from it hée then that watreth it prunes it and defends it from the cropping of beastes and other iniuries what seruice doth he to the owner Yea what greater pleasure can he do to the Farmer whose young plant without this industrie were subiect to spoyle without hope to yéeld any fruite euen as if the little Lambes of the flocke were lost and the young children corrupt there were no exspectation of restitution of that losse and corruption The schoolemaster then hauing in charge these little lambes of Iesus Christ and the preparing of this tender plant of his gardeine which is the Church and lastly the leading of these little children being the delites of the Lord how acceptable is his loyall and diligent seruice to his Lorde and to God And if such as sclaunder these little ones through wicked doctrine example deserue to haue fastened to their necke a milstone and drowned in the bottome of the déepest Sea What recompence or reward is due to those tutors scholemasters by whome those littleones are instructed and led in example of all holines Are they not worthy as Daniell sayeth to shine as the firmament and starres of heauen in euerlasting glory and to be called the greatest of the kyngdome of God Yea according to Iesus Christ euen the most happie of all And if euerie one ought to receiue the reward of his trauels as there is no estate of more hard laboures more great paines more perpetuall perplexeties and
children ought to execute his authoritie and suffer in them no impunitie of vice such commission was giuen to fathers and mothers by the law that if they vnderstoode their sonne to be disobedient or rebellious they ought to produce him into iudgement prosecute him to sentence to be stoned where the father and mother ought to cast the first stone against him But as the father is bound to seueritie towardes his children that are arrogant disobedient and corrupt so to such as are humble obedient and of most seruice to him Christianitie and natural office bind him to more franke curtesie and cōsideration So did Noe reknowledge Sem and Japhet by blissings because they had bene his good and faithefull children Abraham for the obedience of his sonne Jsaac made him his heire giuing but legacies to his other children And Iacob recompensed Ioseph with porcion double aboue the others Touching Maydes the scripture enioineth parentes to kéepe them short to haue their eye continually vpon them and neuer to accustome them to familiaritie for that sexe without subiection in youth beares a nature easie to slyde and is frayle aboue all other creatures more daungerous to be preserued thē any other brickle vessell Dyna went but to visit the maydes of the Citie of Sichem and was forthwith rauished by the prince of the countrey Thamar Dauids daughter going onely to comfort her brother Ammon whom they sayd was sick fell into violacion of hir bodie many there are of whō nothing is more required then opportunitie to expresse their corrupt willes for which cause it belonges specially to the mother to giue them no libertie out of her companie nor licence to speake to men without testimonie For there néedeth but one woorde to infecte a mayd as one word of the serpent was sufficient to seduce Eue notwithstanding hir wisedome A mayd is as a brickle glasse which as if you touche but with your least finger it is enough to make it fall and breake so the very type of a wicked toung suffiseth to entyce to euill a young maid being not instructed in the feare knowledge of God so daungerous saith the scripture is the virginitie of a maid therfore according to Salomon that father doth a great work when hée marieth his daughter And in the mean let him kepe hir in extreme subiection feed hir in sobrietie kepe hir in expresse exercise of some worke of the hand the better to restraine hir from thought of euill if they be pore let the parents prouid some occupation which with diligence and chastitie is a rich dowrie in mariage And to the riche science and labor are occupations necessarie to draw the mind from foolish and vaine thoughts for end as ther be sixe things to kepe maids from corruption doctrine shame feare subiection sobrietie and perpetual trauell So in the consideration of the charge of parents to their children let fathers remember that séeing they know by faith that they are ordeyned of God to serue him in propagation noriture and aduancement of the children which he giues them for they are as his ministers and lieftenaunts in that behalfe let them raise themselues to him in faith and hope that he will neuer abandone them seing the children do more aperteine to him then to them as hauing endewed them with a soule the figure of his deuinitie forming their bodies of wonderfull composition created infinit sortes of creaturs for their sakes let fathers confesse that they are but as nurses to God norishing his proper children and administring his seruice in those acts so deare to him they haue to receiue of him perpetuall rewardes if ther be honorable recompence in a king or prince of the earth to a comon nourse ministring noriture to the kings childe according to the will and prescript of his father Much more suretie haue fathers by their Faith ioyned with prayer that the heauenly King touching the necessities of common life will neuer for sake them if they norishe and féede his children according to his will and to his honour for that he neuer sendes children without Fatherly prouidence for their aduauncemēt By the same reason let fathers take héede that they suffer no vice or deformety of manners in them séeing that as God is pure holy and vndefiled so hee hath giuen children to fathers to fashion them such one 's for him wherein if they faile he will repute them as principall authors of their faults and with their children hold them guiltie in his terrible iustice Therfore let them not pamper nor corrupt them with wanton libertie let thē not make Idoles of them in the intrales of their hearts nor damne them selues to raise their children to riches and estates which they haue not deserued whereby perhaps for recompence they wyll procure perill to their liues But let them only obserue the will and prescript of God present them to him in the institution which he demaundes at their hands hauing no commaundement of him to make their children great Lords but rather men of honestie then possessers of great wealth which being duly obserued of fathers in the institucion of their children encreaseth the honor of their houses and bringes a recompence of eternall glorye to their whole posteritie ¶ In what dutie children are bound to their Fathers and Mothers Chapter vj. THE Scripture by many commaundements bindes children to honour and obey their fathers and mothers And by all right of nature and lawes humaine Ciuill and barbarous they are enioyned to disobey them in nothing I meane concerning humane honestie naturall dutie and diuine ordenance For if the commaundements of Fathers and mothers stretch to other things they abuse their authoritie séeing as I haue sayd they represent God in earth in the procreation and noriture of their children as the ministers of his prouidence and will and therefore their commaundements ought to agrée with the prescript rule of Gods will. And touching the disobedience of the child to the Father mother it is well expressed in the lawe of GOD giuen to Moyses how grieuous that disobedience was béeing commaunded to stoning euen a like punishment as if the disobedience had ben don against God as in déede the transgression and faulte retorned against the same Lord who being the great soueraigne Father hath ordeined this father fleshly in nature as his Liefetenant and executor of his will he cursed likewise the child that was guiltie in disobedience as in the lawe naturall Noe punished his sonne Cham with curses for that he mocked him which God ratefied Jacob depriued his sonne Ruben of his discent bycause he did outrage against him The Scripture afordes many curses to the child that either in act or word disobeyeth his Father and Mother and the Sonne that scorneth or disdaineth either of them is iudged worthy that the Rauens and crowes picke out his eyes meaning that in no sort such one deserues the vse of common light nor
obseruatiō amongst the Lacedemonians who vsed not only the lawe of perfect pietie to their proper and fleshly parents but also euen to all old people whome they honored as their fathers and gaue succor to all their affaiers as if they had bene their naturall children They estemed them happie if they were called to do seruice to olde men tacking it for the greatest prayse that coulde be ascribed to the actions of their life to pushe forward the affires of auncient men wherby it was sayde in comon prouerbe that happie was he that became olde in Lacedemonia as hauing so many childrē readily disposed to honor serue and support him as there was young people in the towne ¶ The dutie of Maisters towards their Seruauntes Chapter vij THe third ground of a cōmon weale and order of pollecie conteineth the authoritie of Maisters ouer Seruauntes and obedience of seruants to maisters wherein the maister mai be considered in two manners either as Lord buying with his money his seruaunt which they call bondman or slaue or conquering him in warre by victorie as his enemie or else he is maister not as Lord proper or owner but as trying and vsing the seruaunt only for a time as in England we haue no others So that this second sorte of seruaunt is no bond man but rather in the nature of a hyreling or marcenarie reteyned for a season when the scripture speakes in the Hebrew woorde of this name aued and the auncient Latines of seruus as also the Gréekes of their Donlos thei meane no other commonly then the perpetuall bondman This maister called Lord hath borne afore time supreme power ouer hys seruauntes putting them to death by his discretion without lawe of reprehension For so we reade Metellus a Citizen of Rome handled so many bond men as brake him cuppes of Crystall and was not called to punishement for it which comming to the knowledge of Augustus an Emperour pitifull he entred the house of the said Romane and to take away the occasion of a second crueltie to his poore bond men passhed in péeces al the vesselles of Crystall and glasses that hée founde in the house Olde Cato otherwayes reputed very wise was so tyrannous ouer his bondmen that whē by extréeme age they had no further abilitie to serue hym hée caused some to be committed to slaughter and suffered others to dye of hūger which cōmō humanitie denieth euen to a dogge or horse that had ben long vsed in seruice but that libertie or rather imperious and vnnatural authoritie of Maisters was afterwardes bridled and limited by many lawes as is written in Exodus who strikes his bond man or bond woman with a rod and they dye presently vppon the blow is guiltie of capitall crime but if they liue a daye or two after he shal not be punished for he hath bought them with his money as if the law had saied he thought not to kil them and so loose the money which they had cost him And albeit God often times recommendes vnto maisters to handle their bond men gentlie wherein to drawe them to more pitie hée puttes them in remembrance of the miserable seruitude which they endured in Egypte yet the hautie couetous and malicious nature of manye maisters draw them often tymes into actes of great tyrannie towardes their bond men vsinge them more cruelly then their necessary and trauelling cattell yea in no other estimacion nor vse then as brute beastes For the which God by his prophete declares howe angrie he is and sending ruine spoyle to their townes he suffereth some of them to be murdered and others made slaues to straunge and barbarous nations The Jewes had commaundement to giue libertie to the bond men of their nation the vii yeare which was as a sabboth sanctified to god But because aboue their prescript limite thei retayned their poore bondmen in hard subiection and if they complayned redoubled the straynesse of their bondage eyther not suffered them to appeare in the court to demaund iustice or else corrupted the Iudges and so choak the way of their remedie the Lord partly for this transgression sent desolation vpon Juda and transmigration into Babylon Let vs nowe sée the office of a maister to his bonde seruauntes wherein we shall finde that by reason hée ought with much more lenitie to behaue him selfe towards those which are not to him but as temporall seruauntes First séeing their slaues are men as well as they they ought to loue them as their neighbours for all men are our neighbours and if he were a Pagan or ennemie should a man doe wrong to him whom he loueth would hée enioyne him to thinges vnrighteous hurtfull hard and too full of labour If euery one by the law of nature be bounde to doe to an other as hee would be done vnto him selfe would he in the state of such subiection be commaunded to things aboue his abilitie to execute Secondly if the bond men or slaues be Christians religion much more then the law of nature ought to draw vs to affection towardes them If they be young we ought to hold them in the reputacion of our brethren if they be auncient let vs giue them reuerence as to Fathers I meane touchinge loue for concerning the bond ciuill and seruile it is not cancelled by the law of the gospell why should wée then with so arrogant proud and angrie hart commaund such rigorously whom we ought to loue and cherish with Christian humanitie If we be al vnited by one IESVS Christe as are the members of one bodye vnder this Lord which is made our head should it bée possible that the maister who in this body is as the eye or hand and the bond seruaunt to him is as the foote or least toa of his foote to obey and serue him should commaund or enioyne to this bond man any thing which should not bée reasonable honest and profitable the same agréeinge with the commaundement of Saint Paule not to doe any displeasure damage or wrong to that low part being so conioyned to him by naturall harmonie no rather if it suffer necessitie grief or anguish the superior parte is bound to trauell for it and yéeld compassion to his sorrow The Maister not touched with this spirituall iudgement and lesse féeling of this inwarde sence touching his office to his seruaunt doth not rightly acknowledge him selfe to be a man but much lesse a true Christian and faithfull member of the mysticall body of this Lord The same being the cause why many Christian nations in the consideration of suche loue according to nature and grace will not vse that imperious authoritie in their house ouer any bond man But taking certayne infidelles prisoners in lawfull warres as soone as they become Christians they giue them libertie and receyue them into their houses with wages and hyers for their labours obseruinge the vertues of the auncient Nations who after long proofe of their bond mē in
calling them villains peasantes and varlettes who notwithstāding are their norsses that put the bread into their hande wherewith they liue they make readie the meat and wine wherwith they are fedde they prepare the garmentes that cloth their bodies the horses whereupon they are moūted and put into their pursses the money that supplieth their common vses and for recompence they are beaten if they whyne as the saying is when they iustly complayne Such Gentlemen also whose delite is laid vp in dronkenes and whoredome to the dishonour of God and slaunder of the people such whose couetousnes is not satisfied but with the spoyle of their people yea drawing the skinne quicke from the carkasse taking the pullettes from the widow and the best shéepe from the farmor and from the poore husband man the haye and oates wherwith his traueling cattell should liue such as promise and performe not borrowe and paye not againe follow their hawking and huntinge oftentymes to the hurt of the countrey as when corne and grasse are in their encreasing season suche as are serued with the labors of their tenantes without recōpense and straine their horse their oxe and cariadge to their proper worke without satisfaction To be short who so euer wrongeth in any sort the meanest that is can not in any equitie merit the name of Gentlemen and much lesse enterprise vpon a title so honorable in whose life are expressed suche apparant effectes of dishonour and publique infamie can they in actes of villainy and vices worthely displaye the honourable enseignes of vertue and nobilitie will they make noblenes the cloake to oppressions and wronges which by vertuouse actes is raised the beautie excellencie and dignitie of houses he is not gentle in whom is founde violence or tyrannie and farre from the name of a Gentleman whose conuersation expresseth dissolute deformed dispositiō no he is a villain in equitie whose lyfe is stayned with actes of villainy as of the contrary vertue doth rayse and enoble villains of blud and race yea vertue only is as the soule of noble families without the which they were but as vaine and dead By which reason as to our place and estate of nobilitie is tyed higher and greater pretences of vertue so also by reasonable congruence the more higher wee stande in title and dignitie the more notable are our vices and faultes as a skar or deformitie in the face showes more then if it were in the hand or foote because those partes be more inferior and lesse apparant yea one small vice in a Gentleman is more reprocheable to the world and damnable afore God then many faultes in manye meaner people as in the law a prince ouer a whole nation offered as much sacrifice to God for his sinnes as the whole multitude for their common offences for the in place where hée should expresse to his people exāples of vertue and leade them in conuersation of ciuill lyfe he giues publike occasion to doe euill for that his errors being knowen draw the multitude to imitacion If a Gentleman so often as he falleth vnderstood the grauitie of his damnation where as his lightnes leades him some times to glorifye or vaunt his nobilitie to shake his sword to manage his great horses and to muster in gorgious garmentes and armour as pompes of his nobilitie he would euen so often common with his carefull thoughts how to discharge and acquite that dutie of a good and Christian Gentleman such one according to our prescription I denie not but touchinge his generall estimation with the world he must maintayne place and countenance according to his house and race both for the honor of the vertues of his auncestors and to expresse in him selfe fruits resembling and worthie of such trées Let him haue castels horses armour and ornamentes aunswering the estate and maiestie of his house and withall let him to that honorable prerogatiue expressed in those visible fignes ioyne the consideration of his office which is to leade his people whose nature is to beare reuerēce and loue to suche as are worthie of them in equitie obedience order and feare as in déed it hath ben a perpetuall custome in all ages and Countreys that as in Kings Princes Noble men and Magistrates haue ben more perfecte exāples of ciuill and christian order so to such hath ben alwayes moste due and decent all stately pompes whether in ritch iewelles apparell horses or costly houses wherin this care is carefully and continually to bee applied not as preposterous men to make of the accessary the principall of the shadow the body and of the accidence the substance but alwayes to entertain the autētike first causes of the nobilitie of the house which ar religiō Iustice and zeale to Gods honour and the defense of his Countrey accompanied with wisedome aduise sobrietie temperance and inuincible magnanimitie by whiche vertues Josua Othoniel Sampson Jeptha and Dauid haue wonne honour to them selues and perpetual noblenes to their houses ¶ The dutie of Aduocats or Councellours at law Chapter ix ADuocates or Councellours at law are not as coadiutors to Iudges and Gentlemen Presidents and chiefe Iustices to decyde and determine but onely with their aduise by opinions and reasons alleadginge customes ordinances statutes and lawes they serue to explayne causes of their clyentes leauing the iudgement to the Iudges called and constituted To euery one of those the wise man speaketh open thy mouth to the dombe meaning speake for the ignorant man and vnderstand the causes of al persons consider well that which is iuste and take vppon thée the cause of the poore and néedie as if he had saied thou which art Aduocat receyue the causes of all suche as come vnto thée and their complaintes for that thou art bound to all by thine estate speake liberally for the poore in whom being no knowledge to deduce their case they haue lesse meane to informe the Iudge such instructe both what they shall saye and doe be no partie eyther in councell or mayntenance to a wicked cause nor suffer any to doe wronge to the poore to whom the wise man séemes to perswade moste compassion for that to such is seldome showed fauour or credite of men for God hath giuen thée grace to speake and opened to thée the vnderstanding of the Lawes to the ende to minister helpe to others as to the toong hée hath gyuen the facultie of spéech to speake for the whole bodie and for euery perticuler member chiefly when any of them is grieued and in cases of wrong euen so the Lawyer which is the toūg and interpretor to the body polletike and of all men being in affaires and busines ought to spare no compassion to the cause of the poore disposing his office to iustefie right and bring all wrong to punnishment wherein besides that he satisfieth at the full the office of his vocation yet in soliciting for the poore he doth a seruice of greatest merit with God in seeing iustice to
their wealth a kinde of Idolatrie to honor a creature vile and insensible in a man as is riches and not reuerence the pore by reason of his pouertie which notwithstanding is most acceptable and honorable with God as being innocent and without hurt where in the riche man according to the Apostle is founde many actes of oppressions which haue fauour of impunitye albeit they deserue extreame iudgement To dispise also the pore man is double sinne as both retorning in iniurie against God who hath made the pore aswell as the riche yea honoreth him with his more singuler graces as apeared euen since the time of the lawe chusing for his prophetts men extremelye pore as also againste the pore man himselfe who with his present pouertie feeles yet an other affliction when he findes him selfe dispised Secondly riche men ought to be perswaded by faith that their welth comes not altogether by their labors their witts nor prouidences for sayeth Salomon the blessing of God makes men riche and keepes them from suffering affliction it is of mear grace that God makes some to prosper in the goodes and affairs of the worlde with out suffering losse or vexation And as ther be many that trauell no lesse then they yea with equall industrye prouidence and care and yet are vnder the yoke of pouertie So then let riche men attribute nothing to them selues but all to the bountifull prouidence of God by the mean of some little labor which they take as if they would attribut the fertilytie of a good ground yelding for one graine aboundance of corne being but simply tilled to the prouident ordenance of God and not to their industrie manuring seeing there is no ground which though it be tilled and fatted with great labour and sowen with neuer so good séedes will yet yéeld no fruite neither in plentie nor price because the blessing of God hath not bene giuen to that ground to make it riche in corne euen so the poore are ordayned of God to their estate of pouertie I meane the good sort for such as by negligēce by whoredome or other vnthriftines become poore are causes of their owne decaye as there be that contrary to the ordenāce of God get riches by vseries and other vnlawfull meanes deseruing not to bée called the rich men of God but of Sathan as also such as by misgouernement become poore are not called by the poore of God and as such are not true poore falling into pouertie by their owne vices and not poore by God but by his permission so also riche men are rauinors by the suffring power of God and not by his will. Thirdly rich mē by faith may apprehend Gods prouidence bearing them fauour and frendship to establish them in prosperitie ease aboue their other bretherne as belonging all to one heauenly Father drawne out of one mother which is nature and qualified of cōmon elementes touching the constitution of the body whom they sée subiect to more pouertie and affliction for the which as they are bound to a more action of thankes to God so let them search the cause why he reserueth such fauour for them and why also and for what ende there bée so many poore euen to the ende of the world which can neuer attaine to ritches on whom if it had so pleased him he might by the opening of his plentiful hand haue bestowed great ritches as he did vppon Job after his extréeme pouertie In consideration of all which causes it will fall out necessarie with our purpose to prescribe aswell to the ritch as the poore their particular dutie according to god First then the riche ought not to swell or presume by any opinion of his ritches nor the poore fall into infirmitie of hart by reason of his pouertie and much lesse estéeme him selfe of inferiour grace with God or estimacion amongest men according to one self iudgement of reason but with Saint James let him take occasion to glorifie him selfe in God of his poore and abiect condition in hope to be exalted as of the contrary the ritch arrogant man hath to feare to be throwne downe after this life the same being expressed in the example of the wicked riche man cast by wicked spirites into extréeme necessitie and horrible tormentes of hel where the soule of poore Lazarus was caried by Angelles into the bosom of Abraham The promise of Gods kingdome is made onely to the poore and therefore if the riche wil be saued let them buy it of the poore by true faith and charitie and almes with deedes of compassion You rich men saith Iesus Christ make you friendes of the Mammon of iniquitie that is of the richesse which induce men to much euill draw mindes to vnlawfull lustes torment hartes with wicked cares make their owners idolators being vniustly gotten are also carefully kept and by their abuses are the causes to infinit people of euerlasting damnacion In this also the rich sort ought to feare for that GOD giues riches to many as their porciōs which they haue to looke for from him according to the saying of Abrahā to the riche man in the Gospell My sonne thou hast already receyued thy pleasures and Lazarus likewise his paynes in the world content thy selfe if thou hast at any time dou any good as prayed to GOD or heard his word thou hast ben sufficiently payed for it thou canst not passe from a vaine pleasure to a true and perpetuall pleasure from temporall richesse which thou didst abuse to an euerlasting felicitie from worldly glorie honour whiche were thy delites to a glorie eternall which as a swéete reward is reserued for this man on whom the world threw contempt because of his pouertie Wherein then as the rich men of the worlde haue more occasiō to submit in humilitie and feare so to the poore is giuen comfort and hope to bée exalted for whō the more miseries perplexities and contemptes they haue suffered in the world the greater recompence is layed vp in the ioyes felicities and eternall delites of heauen ¶ Still touching the qualities of personnes Chapter ij RIch men considering in thē selues that wealth is a gift of God and not the onely fruite of their industrie as they ought to glorifie the Lord so by how much hée fauoureth thē aboue others by so much are they bound to submission and humble recompence of thankes giuing with encrease of loue towardes him because without their merite he hath aduaūced them to goods as foreséeing that they could not easely beare the pouertie and miserie of the world They haue also to consider that he hath blissed them with so great store to the end to make distribucion to their poore bretheren for which purpose as their heauenly father raised them to that plentie to the ende that in their liberalitie might be expressed their office of brothers So if they failed in this zeale what iniquitie did they to their brethren hauing right in the goods
prouide so that this soule I meane the diuine law entertayning with it the lawe naturall and politike as the reasonable soule in man comprehēdes vnder her regiment the spirit sensitiue and vegatiue be Lady and mistres chiefly ouer your selues as gouerning your dooings according to hir direction to the ende that by your guyde she gouerne and entertayne all the rest of the body politike without being hindered by you in fauours or other corruptions ciuill yea let her fréely stretche out her selfe in vigour and vertue equally to euery generall and particular parte for the better abilitie of his proper and naturall action I meane let euery one exercise the particular vocation whereunto he is called for the better regiment of the whole in one equall faith without acception of persones euery one with franke readines enclining to the prescript of that law according to the limite of his particular charge by which obseruation there can not happen eyther to the whole or any peculiar proporcion of the body any disorder disagréement contencion or confusion And euen as when the humane body of man is gouerned and ruled by phisicke it seldome falles into disease for that in that Science is prescription of all thinges necessarie to conserue health euen so by this lawe the true Phisicke medcine of mindes so long as they obserue the rules of it common weales are not onely entertained in plausible and constant prosperitie but withall armed against the assaultes of al casuall inconueniēces eyther by suttletie malicious force or pollecie But as the body then slides into infirmities and diseases when it giues ouer the counsell and iudgement of phisicke so the body ciuill neglecting the rule of the law prepares to it self occasions of many passions as warre famine with such miseries as God vseth to sende for the transgression of his law God in many places in his law but specially in Deuteronomie forespeakes blissinges and happy successe to the good obseruers of his lawe that aswell in their houses as their Cities Countreys and whole affaires as of the contrary his threates be terrible to the trāsgressors prophesying all miseries to their families their goods their cattell yea to their owne bodies with these miseries the Prophetes often tymes threaten the Israelites for their transgression as also other straunge nations for that they had ben cruel to the desolate people of Jsraell There are none more imediat causes of the miseries afflicting men in priuate or common weales in generall then the transgression of the lawe and obstinate constancie in wickednes For we find that in all times miserie hath followed sinne as the smoke doth the fier aswell to perticular men as in Cayn Lamech Agar I●maell Esau Hei Onan with many such from the beginning of the world as to whole commō weales suffring impunitie of sinne as in Josua it is sayed that for Acham who contrary to Gods commaundement tooke a wedge of gold and for the sacrileage of Hiericho all the Armie of Jsraell to whom was promised victory was put to flight so grieuous to God is sinne how secret so euer it be who will haue it punished for that cause Salomon sayth that sinnes makes people and nations vnhappy which then appeareth most when it is knowne and the common weale makes no care to do iustice of it as we sée hapned in Gabaon of the Beniamits in which Citie for the vnchast violacion of a woman dying of the violence almost all the sayd Beniamites were ouerthrowen by the other Jsraelites God ordeyning this iudgement for the reuenge of the womans dishonour oftentimes the man that hath done euill is not punished only but also the affliction stretcheth to his house as hapned to Cham for mocking his Father with whom his sonne Canaan with all his Chananites were scourged The sinne of Loth and his daughters is not punnished only with the penance of the good Patriarch but also vppon his children The Moabites and Ammonites who were reiected frō the alliāce with the Jsraelites for their reproued generatiō yea forbidē to enter into the temple albeit thei were cōuerted to god much more grieuously is punished the sin of the Prince the Magistrate not vppō themselues only but what they loue is touched their whole people visited as is manifest in Dauid who notwithstanding he did penāce for his adultery murder yet his sonne died for the punishmēt or satisfaction of those two sinnes as also for the adultery he did to an other mās wife his owne cōcubines in the meane while were polluted And for that he rose into pride he was striken with plague by the death of three score and ten thousād persons who consenting with their Prince in his vain glory and vices had their share in his iudgement and punishment when all the world was resolued into sin God spared not a generall punnishment by the great flood which had power ouer all flesh sauing eight persons preserued in the Arke In Sodome and Gomorrhe the fier of heauen consumed all but Loth his wife his two daughters And in the first sacking of Ierusalem but much more in the last and generall spoyle of Titus Vespatian to the ruine of all Iuda according to the prophesie of Iesus Christ For all the world had erred eyther actually or by manifest consent or secretly and to come yea euen the little-children who albeit had yet done none euill yet if they had had then iudgement or ripe age they had had the same will with their parēts as with all children in some sort are the substance and principall goods of their parents So that their fathers offending and deseruing to be grieuously punished the scourge falles also vpon their goods children I meane touching temporall paines for concerning the soule the sinne followeth the author according to the iudgement of God who as a iust and soueraigne Lord punisheth the man for his proper vice and euery vice in the man as we sée hee did in the first ruine of the worlde when he drowned fathers mothers children seruants with all sortes of beastes sauing such as he reserued for propagation and sacrifice ¶ Counsell of the remedies to cure and preserue common weales from miserie Chapter v. IT belongs then to gouernours of a common weale as to good Phisitions by the doctrine of the law both deuine and humaine the true medecine and preseruatiue of Christian soules to kéepe and conteyne their people and gouerning them both in generall and perticular by this law that they fall into no daungerous sinnes and mortal diseases of the soule they are restrained to no lesse care art and dutie to preserue them then the Phisitions corporall are bound to defend the bodies from sicknesses by iudgement rule of good regiment And not confounding the two estates Ecclesiastical and pollitike or secular from doing their perticular functions albeit in profession diffring yet tēding to one generall end to erect Gods kyngdome
follow All which hapneth by the default of the head in whom was vnderstanding both to kéepe him selfe and the body from euill and also to prouide remedy if it did happen euen so when there is either ill prouidence to preuent an euill or worse negligence to purge and cure it nor seeking out the cause till the effect be expressed it is then we see plagues famine with other rodds of God wherewith yet as he doth not scourge specially a countrey or common weale without great offence as one that will not strike with his staffe but where he finds obstinacie and resistance So let vs then do as children to their father whō they haue offended for he strikes as a father and seeing him stād with rods in his hand ready to discipline fall vpon their knées at his feete and with teares demaund pardō on whom in respect of their hartie submission as he is cōtent to bestow but two or thrée little lashes presently cast the rods in the fier so also if their wéeping humilitie had appeared afore he tooke the rods in his hād they had not at all felt the smart euen so deales GOD with vs correcting vs with easie discipline as his children and if we crie him mercy there is nothing more familiar with him then forgiuenes yea he will burne his roddes and embrase our conuersion withall such is his goodnes towardes vs that afore he enter into correction be inuites vs to submit acknowledge to the end he be not constrayned being a iust iudge to lift vp his hand and make vs feele the rod conuert sayth he by his Prophets to me and I will be conuerted to you I will kéepe no remembrance of your faultes yea I will repent me that I went about to strike you it is grieuous to him to scourge his people and an act which becomes him not properly his nature is to do mercy for the which he is called mercifull long suffring patient and mercy it selfe he would not punish Dauid vppon his person notwithstanding he had deserued extreame Iustice but pardoned his sinnes when hee asked forgiuenes with great contrition griefe Touching the rods which he holdeth in his hand and strikes not but sheweth them as matters of feare to offenders we sée that Josophat being threatned with such roddes which were the Moabites Ammonites Sirians his enemies withdrew himself altogether to god published fastings through all the coūtrey of Juda assēbling all the people to pray to god in the tēple he in the middest of thē made this oration O Lord God which art the god of our fathers the god of heauē and hast dominion ouer the kingdoms of all nations in thy hand is force and power there is none that can resist thée is it not thou O Lorde that hast killed all the inhabitants of this land being idolators and pagans before thy people of Jsraell We haue not force to resist so great a multitude and therfore not knowing what we should do there restes nothing to vs but to turne our eyes to thée O Lord as hoping in thée only for ayde and succours And as he continued thus in prayer wherin there was not so meane a woman and least childe which did not pray with him in the temple behold the prophet spake vnto him feare not this multitude it shall not be thy warre but the warre of God which hapned accordingly for all those armed enemies forsaking their purpose fell vpon the Jdumeans and after slaughtered one an other without any necessitie of him to go to the battell so happened it in the time of Ionas to the towne of Niniuie where the king vnderstanding the hand of God to be ready to destroy them with in xl dayes commaunded a general fast for thrée daies yea euen little children and beastes were restrained to abstinence and ioyning to this penance contrition and supplication for mercy it fell out that the Citie felt not the roddes of God otherwaies then in feare Touching the whippes wherewith hee scourgeth for not hauing thus preuēted and yet in correcting them selues and asking pardon he forgiueth them it is written of the Jsraelites that they cryed to God when they were in tribulaciō he deliuered them from their necessities which is amplie declared in their deliuerance from the captiuitie of Egypt wherein they felt sharppe and smartinge roddes yet crying mercy to God they were heard and deliuered Dauid seeing the furie of the plague vppon his people and lifting vp his eyes to heauen where hée saw an Aungell holding a sword ouer Jerusalem in signe of the punishement which hee made of the people by plague cryed with a lowd voyce O Lord God it is I that haue offended punish me afterwardes he offereth sacrifice to God and the death ceased Ezechias for particular example who féeling in his persone the discipline of God by a disease whereof he must dye after he had acknowledged him selfe and cryed to God for grace had answer to liue yet xv yere with the receipt of the remedie to heale his infirmitie And touching the publike affliction which he and his town of Ierusalem suffered by the Assirians that had besieged the town made breaches to enter the same night by great miracle the Aungell of God slew a hundreth foure score and sixe thousand of his enemies which brought such confusion and feare to their King Senacherib that he fled early in the next morning In these maibe noted as it were by the way that as it is said in the booke of Iudith accordinge to the promises which God made in his lawe when the people of Jsrael serued God well and obserued his law they were not vexed of straungers nor felt common miseries but such as offered to oppresse them were confounded as Pharao and his ofte in the chase of these people were swallowed in the red sea euen so when the Israelites fell frō this course and offended God he stirred by enemies on all sides of whom they were either ouercome slaughtered or at least by other hurtes felt and found the certein tokens of gods wrath whose effects thei proued w extréeme miserie if they did not repent many nations people were not reformed by preachings nor threats of gods iudgements but scorned the prophets that pronounced them calling them fooles mad men and sedicious and deliting in their owne scornes they saied let the day of God come we s●are it not for wée haue the temple Many trusted in Idolles and others hoped for succours of Kings to be strong against their enemies yea there were that persecuted the good Prophetes that foretold their calamities to come and the false Prophetes reassured them againe with promises of all good successe yea when famines diseases or other punishements hapned they laid the occasions to the good Prophetes and catholike people as some of them attributed their plagues to the starres which were the Chaldeis others