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A05099 The second part of the French academie VVherein, as it were by a naturall historie of the bodie and soule of man, the creation, matter, composition, forme, nature, profite and vse of all the partes of the frame of man are handled, with the naturall causes of all affections, vertues and vices, and chiefly the nature, powers, workes and immortalitie of the soule. By Peter de la Primaudaye Esquier, Lord of the same place and of Barre. And translated out of the second edition, which was reuiewed and augmented by the author.; Academie françoise. Part 2. English La Primaudaye, Pierre de, b. ca. 1545.; Bowes, Thomas, fl. 1586. 1594 (1594) STC 15238; ESTC S108297 614,127 592

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so some of them are brideled and restrained by others For the first enuy hat●ed and anger spring of loue For they are motions of the heart that loueth against him that hateth or hurteth her who is de●re or beloued And desire riseth of reuenge and the ioy that commeth thereby proceede from anger and malice If a man loue any thing he wisheth it would come and hopeth also that he shall enioy it and contrariwise hee feareth that it will not come to passe If it come to passe hee reioyceth If it come not to passe when hee thinketh it will or when hee expecteth it he is grieued In like manner great ioy is lessened through greefe and enuy through mercy or through feare And one greefe altereth another when it is greater and feare maketh griefe to be forgotten and causeth the lame to runne To be short these sundry motions of affections are like to stormy waues and billowes which being driuen one of another doe either augment or diminish or wholy oppresse one another Wherefore the like happeneth in the motion of our affections that commeth to passe in a sedition and ciuill dissention in which no man considereth who is the worthier person to obey and folow him but who is the stronger and most mighty So in the fight of the affections there is no respect had to that which is most iust but only to that which is strongest and most violent and which hath gotten such power ouer the soule that it hath wholly subdued her to it selfe which thing wee ought to stand in great feare of But whatsoeuer affections are in vs there is alwayes some griefe or some ioy ioyned with them Therefore following our matter it shal be good for vs to consider particularly of the nature of these two contrary motions of which ioy serueth greatly for the preseruation of life but griefe drieth vp and consumeth the heart euen vnto the death of it as wee shall now learne of ACHITOB. That Ioy or Griefe are alwayes ioyned to the affections and what Ioy and Griefe are properly Chap. 44. ACHITOB. The knowledge of the Affections of the heart and soule is very necessary for euery one because they are very euill and dangerous diseases in the soule but yet being knowen they may be cured more easily This cause hath mooued vs after wee haue spoken of the heart and of the naturall motion thereof and of the vse it hath in this life of the body to enter into the consideration of a second motion it hath which serueth not onely for this corporall life but also for that spirituall life in regard of which it was chiefely giuen and of which we saide that there was as it were an image and representation thereof in the first motion Now we shall better vnderstand this by the subiect of this discourse propounded vnto vs being handled particularly as wee intend to doe For as by the first naturall motion of the heart it receiueth such refreshing as is necessary for the sending of life vnto the whole body and for the maintenance and preseruation of the same as also for the expelling and driuing out of all such things as might hurt and stifle it euen so is it in this second motion as farre as wee can conceiue of the nature of it For seeing God hath appointed ioy as a meanes to preserue life hee hath likewise put this affection in the heart whereby it is as it were enlarged to receiue within it selfe and to embrace all Good that is offered vnto it as also it restraineth and shutteth it selfe vp through griefe which is contrary thereunto Moreouer wee shall finde that there is no affection in vs which is not intermingled with some griefe or else with some ioy For seeing the heart is the proper seate and instrument of all the affections when it is as it were stricken and beaten with some vnpleasant thing that is offered vnto it then doeth it retire close vp it selfe and feele griefe as if it had receiued a wound then doeth it flie from the thing it liketh not Yea the heart doeth alwayes either enlarge or shut vp it selfe according to those affections that are within it the causes of which are in it owne nature God hauing so disposed and willed the same for the reasons which we haue already touched For if the heart be ioyfull the ioy that it hath doeth bring so great pleasure vnto it that thereby it is opened and enlarged as if it would receiue imbrace and lay holde vpon that thing which reioyceth it and bringeth vnto it that pleasure which it hath in this ioy Nowe because there is ioy in loue and hope the blood and spirites are gently and mildely dispersed by their moouings by reason of the reioycing at the Good that is present or that is expected as if it were already present And forasmuch as such motions are made by the enlarging of the heart whereby we embrace the thing offered vnto vs the face also appeareth smiling cheerefull and ruddy For a man may easily iudge that the obiect presented to the heart mooueth that power whereby it is stirred vp because that before the heart doth mooue it selfe it must know the thing that offereth occasion vnto it to be moued either with ioy or griefe or some such like affection For as wee haue learned already the outward senses do first perceiue the things that are offered vnto them and then they present them vnto the common sense which presently by a singular prouidence of God sendeth them to al the other senses and to al those powers that are in the sundry parts of the soule and body This done if there be matter of ioy the heart being striken with that which is acceptable vnto it enlargeth it selfe and being thus gently enlarged as it were to embrace the same it disperseth much naturall heate with the blood besides great quantitie of spirites of which it sendeth a good portion to the face if the ioy be so great that it mooueth a man to hearty laughter For the face it selfe is in some sort blowen vp and enlarged the forehead is made cleere and smoothe the eyes glister and shine the cheekes become ruddy and the lippes gather in themselues In a worde the heart doeth so enlarge it selfe that it is represented in the face as it were in a glasse or in an image framed to expresse the ioy and gladnes which it hath Moreouer experience teacheth vs sufficiently what difference there is between a cheerfull and a sad countenance Therfore when we loue one wee embrace him as if wee woulde ioyne him to our selues and put him into our bosome and heart as some deere and very pretious thing Which wee see chiefly in mothers when they holde their little infants betweene their armes and embrace them with great affection of heart For this cause Saint Paul being desirous to let the Corinthians vnderstand what good will hee bare them howe louing ready and
afraide what man can do vnto me In the feare of the Lorde saith the wise man there is assured strength and his children shall haue hope Therefore Iesus Christ saieth to his Disciples Let not your heart bee troubled And then hee sheweth them the meanes saying Ye beleeue in God beleeue also in me For nothing but faith in God through Iesus Christ is able to giue vs this assurance On the other side if wee be not armed with the feare of GOD and with true faith that wee may be certaine of his helpe and prouidence and of his loue towards vs there is nothing that can assure vs but rather that which is written in the Lawe will befall vs I will saieth the Lorde send a faintnesse into their heartes in the land of their enemies and the sound of a leafe shaken shall chase them and They shall flee as fleeing from a sworde and they shall fall no man pursuing them And in an other place where mention is made of them that despise the Lawe of GOD and rebell against the Lorde it is saide The Lord shall giue thee a trembling heart and looking to returne till thine eies fall out and a sorrowfull mind Thy life shall hang before thee thou shalt feare both night and day and shalt haue none assurance of thy life In the morning thou shalt say would God it were euening and at euening thou shalt say woulde God it were morning for the feare of thine heart which thou shalt feare and for the sight of thine eies which thou shalt see Therefore when wee see that in many great and dangerous affaires the boldest and most couragious are oftentimes the greatest cowardes and most astonished and carried away with feare and terrour and euen many times without any great cause are amased and voyde of counsaile whereas contrariwise cowardes by nature growe to bee most hardy in the middest of dangers thereby GOD sheweth very well whether strength and courage come from him or from men and who is to haue the praise thereof But nowe that wee haue seene the first motions of the heart in the affections of ioy of sorrowe of hope and of feare and knowe that they haue respect to good or euill either present or to come let vs learne in the next place that as contemplation consisteth in the rest of the Spirite after the discourse of reason and iudgement so after the heart hath the fruition of that Good which belongeth vnto it it is still and quiet resting it selfe therein which rest is called Delight or pleasure of which the order of our speech requireth that thou shouldest dilate ARAM at this present Of the delight and pleasure that followeth euery ioy and of the moderation that is required therein of diuers degrees of pleasures and howe men abuse them especially those pleasures which are receiued by the corporall senses Chap. 47. ARAM. It is certaine that all the affections which God hath placed in the nature of man were giuen vnto him in regarde of so many good things which were meete and conuenient for his will to long after and to desire For ioy and hope which affoord pleasure and consolation to the heart were bestowed vpon him to bee spurres and sollicitours to induce him to seeke after God his soueraigne Good in whom alone he may finde all delight rest and pleasure As for sorow and feare they are sure testimonies vnto men of the iudgement of God and executioners of his vengeance to this end that the feare of euill which may come vnto them should keepe them in awe and that sorow and griefe for euill which they haue already committed should be vnto them both hangman and punishment It is true that these affections being naturall in euery one bring forth contrary effects both in the good and in the bad For the children of God neuer separate his power from his goodnesse and the feare which they haue of him is not ioyned with hatred but with trust in his mercie which mooueth them to be grieued for offending him and to loue him to seeke him and to reioyce in him and to haue him in singuler honour and veneration But the wicked who feare and tremble like to malefactors fearing their iudge hate and despite God desiring nothing more then to escape his hands and to flee from him as farre as they can If they be grieued it is because they may not enioy false ioyes and vnlawfull pleasures Therefore that which is giuen them for Good is turned by them into sinne and euill and pleasure into paine and griefe But here we must call to minde what we haue spoken already concerning the signification of this worde Good as it is commonly taken not considering whether it be true or false but onely according to that opinion which men haue of it For there are many whose fancie is sufficient to affoord them as much pleasure as if indeed they enioyed that Good which they thinke to haue We see many such fooles in the world For some are Popes or Cardinals by fantasie others Emperors or Kings and great Princes or otherwise very riche or possessours of some such great Good And yet such fantasticall fellowes are better contented and pleased with that which they thinke they haue in their foolishe imagination then they that haue them in trueth vnto whome commonly they serue for nothing but to torment them more Therefore I knowe not which of them I shoulde esteeme more foolish and fantasticall For none ought to bee taken for truely wise men and of ripe iudgement but they who knowe that all thinges in the worlde and vnder the sunne are onely vanitie as Salomon sheweth in his booke of the Preacher Therefore hee saieth thus I saide in mine heart Goe to nowe I will prooue thee with ioy therefore take thou pleasure in pleasaunt thinges and behold this also is vanitie I said of laughter thou art mad and of ioy what is this that thou doest But to goe forwarde with our matter let vs consider what delight and pleasure is so farre as men may enioy it in this life It is then a rest which the heart taketh in the enioying of some Good that it liketh euen as contemplation is the rest of the spirite after the discourse of Reason and Iudgement Now wee are to note that there is no delight and pleasure in any thing except there be some agreement betweene that part or power that receiueth pleasure and that which bringeth the same vnto it This agreement cannot bee without good proportion of the one with the other whereby there is some similitude and resemblance betweene them For this cause also the thing that bringeth delight must not exceede too much either in greatnesse or in smalnesse aboue the power which receiueth it in regarde of that part or instrument whereby the pleasure is receiued Heereupon when wee spake of the eyes and eares wee shewed that light was to bee
the soule attained to the vnderstanding of the diuine essence Aristotle also taking the same way in his 8. booke of naturall Philosophy sheweth that he knew God vnder the name of the first moouer who was perpetual and vnmoueable But we may attaine to the knowledge of God of our selues a great deale better then al the Philosophers could who were ignorant of the true beginning and end of things if we be guided by the word which is the light of the trueth and whereof al the humane philosophy of the wisest that were is but a li●●e shadow Now then if vnder this heauenly guide wee feede our spirites with a doctrine that teacheth man to know himselfe well wee beginne at that science which of all other is most necessary profitable and pleasant I say necessary as that which guideth and leadeth vs as it were by the hand to find out God profitable because it bringeth a maruailous commoditie to this present life both in regarde of bodily health as also of ruling all our actions according to vertue and pleasant because a man may see therein as it were in a sacred temple all the images of the wonderfull workes of the world ACHITOB. I cannot but greatly commend those Philosophers that reprehended and condemned them who spent all their time only in the contemplation of heauen and earth and of the nature of other creatures and in the meane while descended not into themselues to know themselues and their nature but especially their soule For what will it profite a man to take so great paines as to measure the whole world and to compasse on euery side all the elementarie region to knowe the things that are contained in them and their nature and yet in the meane time hee can not measure or knowe himselfe being but alittle handfull of earth For although the knowledge of the rest of the creatures that are in this great visible worlde will greatly helpe to leade him to the knowledge of God the Creatour neuertheless● he shall neuer be able to know him well if withall he know not himselfe Yea these two knowledges are so ioyned togither that it is very hard matter to seuer them For as a man can not know himselfe if he know not God so he cannot know God wel if in like sort he know not himselfe So that I take this for most certain that neither Astronomy Geometry Geography or Cosmography nor any other Mathematical science is so necessary for man as that whereby he may learne to know himselfe wel to measure himselfe wel by the measure of his owne nature that he may thereby know how to contayne himselfe within the limits thereof As for Mathematicians natural Philosophers Phisicions who bestow their trauaile in the knowledge of nature and natural things and in the meane time forget God and themselues whereas they ought to learne both the one and the other by that knowledge that God hath giuen them of his works I say they are not worthy to be taken for naturall Philosophers Phisicions or Mathematicians but rather for blockheaded beasts In my opinion they behaue themselues as if a man should be alwayes occupied in looking vpon his house and handling of his mooueables and houshold stuffe and in the meane time did not put them to those principall and speciall vses for which they ought to serue but were altogether forget full of himselfe of his wife and of his children Moreouer concerning Phisicions if their care to know their own soule with the nature and parts therof be not more to minister that food and phisicke which is necessary for it to liue wel and happily and that for euer then to know the nature of mens bodies that they may cure others it may worthly be said vnto them Phisicion heale thy selfe For if he be worthily derided that taketh in hand the cure of other men and cannot heale himselfe or at the least hath no care to doe it surely that man is well worthy to be had in greater derision that is more carefull not only of his owne but also of other mens bodies then he is of his owne soule whereby he differeth from brute beasts and is made partaker of an immortall nature Wherefore it is very requisite that all students in naturall philosophy should profit so well in the study thereof as to be able to turne it into true naturall diuinity whereby they may learne to know God their creator in that nature which he hath created to this end to make himselfe seene and knowen therein to all men We haue therefore good cause my companions to bestow al possible paines trauaile that we may proceede on in so necessary profitable a knowledge Wherfore we must lay before our eyes two bookes which God hath giuen vnto vs to instruct vs by and to lead vs to the knowledge of himselfe namely the booke of nature and the booke of his word which we must ioyne both together as also that doctrine which is set forth vnto vs in them concerning the knowledge of our selues especially of the soule which is the true man For the first booke would stand vs in small stead without the second as we see it dayly by experience yea euery one of vs hath trial thereof in himselfe Therefore God of his great mercy hath added the second booke vnto the first to supply the want that is in our nature through sinne For if man had not sinned this booke of nature would haue sufficed to haue kept him alwayes in the knowledge contemplation and obedience of God his creator For then he should himselfe haue caried the booke whole and perfect imprinted in his heart and mind neyther should his soule haue needed any teacher to know to selfe but in it selfe it should haue cleerely beheld and contemplated it selfe so long as she preserued ●er first light and aboad in that harmony wherein God had created her But now that she is in the body as it were some excellent picture of Apelles fallen into a sinke of mire couered and compassed about with thicke mists and obscure darknesse it is very needfull that we should haue another new light brought vnto vs from heauen which is not naturall as the first but supernaturall For this cause God hath farther giuen vs this second booke of which I spake euen now by means wherof and by the vertue of his holy spirit hee communicateth vnto vs as much celestiall and heauenly light as is needfull for the knowledge of our selues and of his high Maiestie Being therefore guided by the spirit of God whereby our spirit doth see and contemplate let vs read in these two bookes diligently note in them the parts and powers force and vertue aswell of the body as of the soule of man especially the immortality thereof whereby we shall make the way easie for vs to walke and sport our minds hereafter in the large and goodly fields of the whole world by discoursing of
consumed but haue also their proper action to congele and gather it together Nowe we must vnderstand that of this first matter which contained all the elements and which God made the mother of all things and capable of all formes euery bodie is compounded euery one returneth into the same againe of that taketh a new forme so that the true matter of all corporall things doth not turne into nothing neither increaseth or decreaseth in any sort So that euer since the Eternall that can doe all things made this whole great frame of nothing no one thing is made of nothing neither doth any thing vanish into nothing but the change of euery thing that is bred or that dieth is only in forme Now by this knowledge of the matter of the first mans body we may easily vnderstand of what matter al mens bodies are made For certain it is that of one only man al others haue had their beginning being all his seed offspring multiplying daily according to his first vertue The reason hereof is this because this power is naturally ingraffed in euery thing to bring forth his like to continue it selfe in the same kind being inhabled therunto through a quickening vertue infused into it by that diuine reason which is the efficient preseruing cause of all creatures Now I doubt not but the Epicures Atheists such like deriders of God his word with whom this age is pestred more then any age past will account all this to bee a very fable that hath bene hitherto spoken of the creation of the first man For they giue no more credite to the writings of Moses and of all the Prophets Apostles then to an old wiues tale or to the fables of doting dreames Neither wil they beleeue any more of God of his prouidence and of his workes then they are able to vnderstand know and comprehend by their naturall reason They will say then that they haue not seene the like workes in nature which they put in stead of God and so by the same reason they wil account for lies whatsoeuer the word of God teacheth vs cōcerning the creation of this great visible world of all things contayned therein as also that which we shal heare anon touching the creation of woman And thus because they saw not when God created the worlde because he did set another order in nature after the creation thereof then there was before he had created nature therefore according to their goodly phylosophie there shal be neither God nor Creator nor difference betwixt the workes of the creation in which nature it selfe was created and those that sollowed after God and disposed the order of nature created by him What then shall we say of man of al the world Shal he be without a creator and eternall or made of some matter that was eternall with God or shall he be God himselfe For eyther he was created or he was not created If he were not created then is he eternall as euen Aristotle saith following the discourse of humane reason which notwithstanding blinded him in this marter of creation Wherein hee is not onely contrarie to the worde but also to his master Plato and to the best and most excellent amongst the Philosophers But if the worlde was created it must needes bee that it had some beginning that the first man as likewise euery other creature was begotten after another maner then the vse is at this present But what would these sharpe wittes or rather dull beasts say if they had not seene by experience the woorke of God which they call the worke of nature onely in the generation of men For of what are they daily begotten and conceiued but of a supersluitie and as it were of an excrement of mans body as hereafter we shall vnderstand more at large Is this farre more easie to digest in humane reason then the first creation of man If these skorners had neuer seen such a thing and if they were not conuicted heereof by dayly experience they would giue as litle credite to those that should tell them of it as they doe to the spirite of God speaking of his workes by the mouth of his Prophets As for those that set nature in the place of God what greater brutishnes can proceede from them For doeth not the very same of nature declare sufficiently that nature is a thing made and created and so consequently hath her creation and her birth of God as all other creatures haue But God punisheth these poore ignorant fellows with the like iudgement that he doeth many other skilfull and great Philosophers whome hee oftentimes giueth ouer into a reprobate sence because through their pride and ingratitude they abuse the knowledge of naturall things which God giueth them and so that science which should lead them to a greater knowledge of God maketh them more beast-like then any other through their owne fault For it cannot be otherwise but that euery one considering the nature and composition euen of one only member of mans body most of necessitie acknowledge and confesse that some Woorke-master made it and that this Woorke-master is of no bodily or humane nature but of a spirituall and diuine being that hee hath not onely vnderstanding and knowledge of all things but also that hee is vnderstanding it selfe that hee knoweth loueth and is the authour of all order and that his wisedome and vertue is so infinite that it surmounteth all mens vnderstandings Heereupon it followeth that hee is worthie to be esteemed for God and to bee woorshipped of all men There are others that aske why man was not created an infinite space of time before hee beganne to be by the testimonie of the holy Scripture which teacheth vs that it is not yet fully 6000. yeeres since his creation as though he had bene created very late But if the shortnesse of time offendethe them because they thinke that there are so fewe yeers since we reade in holy Scripture that man was created let them consider that nothing lasteth long if it haue any ende and that the whole space of ages past if it be compared with eternitie that is endlesse is not onely not to be thought litle but none at all Therefore that question which now they aske after 5000. yeres they might with the same curiositie demaund after sixe hundred thousand yeeres if the world had endured so long They also that were before vs when man was but newely created might haue moued this question yea the first man might haue enquired also assoone as hee was made why he was not made before And so this controuersie about the beginning of mans being had neuer at any time heretofore any other reasons then it hath nowe neither shall haue heereafter Let vs knowe then that God being eternall and without beginning began time and in time made man whome hee had neuer made before being ledde thereunto not
best of his woorkes so much life as is in a reddish or in any other lesser hearb or plant nor so much motion sense and industry as a Flie or an Aut hath or the least worme in the earth Nowe to proceede in beholding the vse of the hand wee must vnderstand that God gaue vnto men armes and handes chiefly to helpe one another more then with any other member of their body in so much that they ought to referre al their works artes and exercises to common benefite and profite But it is farre otherwise For there is no member whatsoeuer with which they hurt one ano●her more so that their hands are more dangerous without al comparison then the pawes of all sauage beasts For those beasts that are most cruell spare the blood of their kinde but men delight to imbrew their handes in mans blood yea in the blood of their nearest kindred There are some also who shamefully abuse their handes in causing them to serue for diuinations from whence the Arte of Palmestrie proceeded which is full of superstition and of fooleries well woorthy to bee laughed at and such are all the other kindes of diuinations inuented by the vanity of mans braine They that would seeme to alleadge some shewe and likelihoode of foundation for it say that nature hath imprinted in the lines of the handes woonderfull significations of the temperature and disposition of the whole bodie Therefore they call the long line in the middest of the hand the line of life and say that they who haue it whole throughout are long liued But suppose this were so yet what probabilitie is there for any to seeke in the lines of the hand for the knowledge and signification of all thinges that shall befall men and to foretell them as they say their good and ill fortune For although it were so that by looking vpon the handes a man might in some sorte iudge of the temperature and disposition of the body yet what reason is there to extend this consideration to the foretelling of all thinges as if God or nature as they speake had set markes in the handes so that a man might knowe I say not by the Science but by the vanitie of Chiromancie whatsoeuer good or euill shall come vnto men For they that deale with this kinde of diuination doe not only foretel whereunto the body may be disposed according to the temperature therof as a Physicion may iudge of the sicknes or soundnes of the body by those tokens which he seeth therein folowing his Arte but they go a great deale further For they take vpon them to foretel al good ill aduentures namely whether a man shal be rich or poore married or no whether he shal haue many wiues what they shal be whether maidens or widows whether rich or poore with such other toyes and olde wiues tales whereof their Bookes of Palmestrie are ful They therefore are very fooles that giue credite to such praedictions But Christians haue a true and sure kinde of Chiromancie which they may vse For if men consider onely their handes with what workemanship they are made for how many vses they may serue and howe profitable and necessary they are for them they shall finde in them an infinite number of markes to make them good diuiners yea it will teach them to diuine that of necessitie there was a God and a Creatour who was the workemaster that made that worke and those so excellent instrumentes whose vse and commoditie can not sufficiently bee conceiued For although wee had neuer heard of God or of his prouidence this onely consideration ought to bee sufficient to teach vs to seeke him and to holde vp towardes him those handes which hee hath giuen vs. If therefore by the contemplation of our handes and by those markes of the power wisedome goodnesse and prouidence of God which are imprinted in them wee can learne such a Science and Arte of Diuination as will the better induce vs to glorifie God in the workmanship of our bodies then doe wee profite greatly therein And this wee ought to doe not onely by the contemplation of our handes but also of all the residue of the members and parts of our body euen vnto our very haires and nailes For wee haue not so many Preachers onelie of his glorie and magnificence in our bodies as wee haue members but also as there are haires in the head For there is nothing no not so much as a little haire as wee shall see heereafter whereby God doeth not testifie his diuine prouidence Wherefore if wee shoulde by peece-meale lay open onely those principall things which are to be considered in all the partes of the arme and hand and those testimonies of the great prouidence of God that may be found and noted in them a whole day would not suffice although we did onely behold the great workemanship that is I say not in the whole hand but in one finger thereof For it is an instrument which God hath giuen onely to man to touch and to take with to gripe and to vse in his owne behalfe in steade of all kinde of defensiue weapons In this respect he made it of such a fashion that he can lay hold of and apprehend all things either great or small of what forme or figure soeuer they be whether round square or otherwise And therefore it was requisit that the fingers of the hand should be vnequal that they should be placed and disposed as they are thereby the better to gripe and to lay holde of all thinges For albeit some of them be longer then others yet when we close our hand and gripe anything they are all equall And as God hath giuen to man a mind capable of vnderstanding knowledge so also he hath adorned him with this excellent instrument which is so necessary for all Artes that without this those other would remaine idle In a word it is an instrument which man could not want neither in peace nor warre Neither is there any thing to be found therein which doth not serue very fitly for al dueties of the hand as also nothing is wanting that is necessary The very nailes haue two excellent properties the one is that they serue for a couering and an ornament to the ends of the fingers the other that they help to take hold of and to gather litle and hard things For this cause also they are so conuenient both for matter and forme and so fitly fastned and set in their places as better could not be deuised But let vs consider of the whole arme or hand to see the composition and diuision thereof As we said before of the legge so there is in the whole arme three great and principall partes taking all that member which is from the shoulders vnto the endes of the fingers The first is the hand which likewise hath three chiefe partes namely that which is ioyned with the lower
rehearse manie moe vses if we woulde speake more particularly of this matter whereof wee meane to speake but generally as also of all the rest that concerne the anatomie of the bodie according to that ende which wee propounded to our selues in the entrie of our speeches namely to open a gappe onely to the consideration first of the matter whereof mans bodie is compounded and of the diuersitie thereof then of that forme which God hath giuen vnto it and lastly of the profit and vse of both to the ende wee might dayly learne the better to knowe the great power skill wisedome goodnesse and prouidence of him that hath created and disposed all things in so good order But as touching that which we spake of the pappes and of their substance wee haue yet to consider of two poynts well worthie the noting concerning the place where God hath seated them First they are there placed where they serue to shroude and to defend the noblest and most necessarie partes for life that are in the breast namely the heart and the lungs For they are set before them to countergard and keepe them both from ouer great heate and from excessiue colde and from many other inconueniences And as they serue for the heate of the heart so their owne heate is increased by reason they are so neere the heart whereby the milke that is ingendred in them is the better baked So that wee see that although GOD hath not giuen men pappes for the generation of milke and nourishing of children as women haue neuerthelesse they are not without profite and vse in them as wee haue hearde Whereunto also wee may adde the beautifying of that part of the bodie where they are placed especially in women Againe could they possibly be set in any place that were more fit and more easie both for Mothers and Nurses and for the children to whome they giue sucke and nourishment For if the mother bee disposed to giue her childe sucke shee hath this commoditie to sitte downe if she will to holde it in her bosome and vpon her knees and likewise to imbrace it in her armes whether she sit lye downe or stande also shee may carie it vp and downe whither shee please euen whilest shee giueth it sucke and feedeth it This commoditie is not graunted to the females of beastes when they giue sucke and nourish their little ones with their teates Wherein wee haue to marke one notable difference which GOD hath put betweene men and beastes For beastes haue no other care of their yong ones but onely to nourish their bodies with foode vntill they bee able to feede and gouerne themselues afterward both syre and damme and little ones forget one another taking no more knowledge eche of other nor louing one another more then other beastes of their kinde But amongst men both the father and the mother are caried with an affection towardes their little children which is the cause why they forget them not as beastes doe And as they loue their children so are they loued of them insomuch that there is a mutuall loue proceeding from that naturall affection which they beare one towardes another On the other side this loue causeth parents to let their children haue instruction that they may bee wise and vertuous And therefore it is not without good cause that womens pappes are placed in the breast namely to the ende they shoulde bee vnto them as signes and testimonies of the affection of the heart and of that loue which they ought to beare towardes their children whereof they ought to make them partakers aswell as of the milke of their breastes and as if they gaue vnto them their heart as they giue them their blood turned into milke Likewise children are by the selfe-same meanes to bee admonished of that mutuall affection and loue which they ought to carie towards their mothers as if they had sucked it out of their breasts and from their heart together with their milke that they may returne the like vnto them againe Wherefore mothers and children haue a wise mistres in nature and in the prouidence of God that appeareth therein if they knew how to followe it well Againe for this cause mothers ought to take greater delight in nourishing their owne children then in committing them to the handes of strangers and hyred Nurses For out of doubt the mutuall affection and loue of eche to other woulde greatly increase thereby Nowe hauing spoken of the place which God hath assigned to the pappes let vs consider his prouidence in their forme which is such that fayrer and more fitte for that office of theirs coulde not bee deuised For wee see howe they hang there in the breast of the mother and Nurse as it were two bottles hauing nipples and holes made fit for the infants mouth that hee might take holde of them and drawe and sucke the milke that is within the dugges which are filled presently after the child is borne so that hee is no sooner come into the worlde but hee hath such foode and nourishment readie drest as is meete for him For albeit the infant bringeth his teeth with him from his mothers wombe yet because they are hidde within the gummes and are not yet come foorth hee must haue such meate as needeth no chewing but may bee sucked which GOD hath prouided for him Wherein wee haue a woonderfull testimonie of the care hee hath ouer vs and what kinde of Father and cherisher hee is For this cause Dauid had good reason to say Out of the mouth of babes and suckelings hast thou ordeyned strength because of thine enemies For if one consider the prouidence of God which dayly sheweth it selfe ouer children onely there is no Atheist Epicure or other enemie of God so great which shall not bee confounded conuinced and constrayned will hee nill hee to giue glorie to GOD. For before children can speake euen from their mothers breastes they shewe foorth and preache the prouidence of God in prouiding milke for them But wee shall finde it a matter of greater admiration if wee consider not onely in what manner they are nourished presently after their birth but also howe they are nourished in their mothers wombe For there they are not sustayned by the mouth nor with milke as they are after their byrth but with their mothers owne blood receiued by the Nauill which is in the middest of the bodie But God hath made such an agreement betweene the wombe in which the little childe is nourished in his mothers belly and betwixt her breasts that that blood wherewith the Infant was feede before it was borne presently after the birth ascendeth into her pappes in which by reason of the aboade it maketh there it becommeth white and is so well heated and prepared that it hath as conuenient and pleasant a taste as can be put into the infants mouth And as for the substance of the milke there cannot be any
from bruzing and wasting There is also in many places a certaine humour which serueth to annoint the ioynts and their ligaments and the small endes of the gristles For moisture helpeth motion very much and preserueth those partes that are mooued as wee see by experience in chariot wheeles For when the axeltrees are greazed about which they mooue they doe not onely turne about more easily but also last and continue longer whereas although they were all of yron yet they woulde weare away and be set on fire of themselues if they were not annointed and moistned with some humour Nowe let vs come to consider of the couering of mans body As therefore a man vseth not one onely garment but diuers so is it with the body For first hee is clothed with three skinnes that are great long and large with which hee is couered cleane ouer from the sole of the foote to the toppe of the head The first is a little skinne very thinne which of it selfe hath no feeling being made of the second skinne which it couereth and this second skinne is made of sinewes flesh and litle veines and in some places of little arteries being as it were of a middle nature betweene the sinewes and the flesh Therefore this skinne hath feeling throughout and is not without blood as the first is There is also a third skinne vnder the second which is more fleshy and therefore it is thicker and more strong vnto which the muscles cleaue and through which very thinne arteries and productions of sinewes passe which tie it with the other skinne The fatte of the body is betweene these two skinnes which serue the whole body not onely for a couering but also for an ornament especially those that are most without which in mens bodies stand in steade of that skinne wherewith the bodies of beasts are couered Besides these three skinnes that couer all the body there are within many other particular skins of diuers sortes to couer the members that are there which the Physicions call Membranes and Tunicles with such other names agreeable to their Arte to distinguish them one from an other according to each of their offices For there are many in the head to couer folde vp and to containe the inward partes thereof and of the braine as also in the breast and consequently in other partes and members within Among the rest some are like to nettes and coiffes others resemble littl● sackes or bandes according as those members are which they are to couer seruing also for defence vnto them and to distinguish and separate the partes one from an other Wee will leaue to the Physicion to number and to distinguish them and to name euery one by their proper name and nowe come to consider the last couering which is vpon the body in certaine places especially vpon the head and that is the haire which principally aboundeth in the head both in men and women because it proceedeth out of a moyst and soft place And to the ende it might take the better roote there the skinne that is vnderneath it is very thicke and fleshy The profite of the haire is great and serueth for many thinges First it is the ornament and beauty of the head For as the face woulde bee euill fauoured and vnsightly if it were hairy so contrariwise the head woulde bee very deformed if it were skinnelesse where it is couered with haire as we may iudge by them that haue balde heades Therefore because it is the toppe of the building of mans body God woulde haue it adorned with such a couering which also standeth him in some steade to defend his braine and to consume the grossest and most fumy excrements of which the haires of the head are ingendred so that they are a kinde of purgation for it Besides it serueth for a couering to the head which it may vse at pleasure as neede requireth against both heate and colde For it doeth not alwayes neede to bee alike couered at one time and in one age as at an other Therefore a man may let them growe or cut them or shaue them cleane off as is most commodious for euery one And when they waxe gray and white through age they put men in minde of two things First that they drawe towards the graue and death to the ende they might in good time frame themselues thitherward and if they haue gone astray in youth and forgotten God that then at length they should bethinke themselues and consider that they are no more yong and that they must shortly die for although it be late yet better late then neuer But it is best to follow Salomons counsell who admonisheth yong men to remember God before the Almond tree flourish comparing an olde man that is gray and white with age to a blossomed tree by reason of the whitenes of the floures For when a man flourisheth in this sort his floures put him in minde that the tree of his body drieth vp and that it looseth his naturall strength whereas the floures of trees are testimonies of the vigor that is yet in them to beare fruit Therfore we are very miserable if we do not glorify God in our youth neither thinke vpon any other life then this For we come farre short of the life of trees and are not of so long continuance neither are wee yeerely renued as they are which seeming to be dead in winter florish and wax greene in spring time as if they became yong againe Which thing we are not to looke for in this worlde wherein we flourish contrary to trees namely in winter which is our olde age Secondly gray and white haires warneth men to haue such manners as becommeth that age and colour that they may make olde-age reuerent according to that saying of the wise man The glory of the aged is the gray head For such are those ancient men whome God in his Law commaundeth to be honoured when hee saieth Thou shalt rise vp before the horehead and honour the person of the olde man and dread thy God I am the Lorde The same consideration also ought to be in the beard which is a great ornament to the face and serueth to distinguish the sexes and likewise the ages of men vnto whome they bring authoritie and maiestie For this cause the auncients did shaue or powle their beardes and haire in the time of mourning and affliction so that when the Prophets denounced some great aduersitie and desolation they foretolde that euery head should he ●ald and cut and shauen and the beards in like manner as it appeareth in the Prophecie of Esay against Moab and such like Wee 〈◊〉 also that Hanun king of the Ammonites shaued off the halfe of the beards of Dauids messengers to bring them in derision whereupon they would not shewe themselues openly to the people vntil their beards were growen Concerning womens haire Saint Paul testifieth expresly that God
God to men that they might serue to receiue the doctrine and instruction of wisedome as we may perceiue if we consider diligently their nature and vse The eares then in mine opinion are also as it were watchmen ouer the whole body aswell as the eyes For it is not onely required that a watchman should see but also that he should both heare and speake Therefore are the eares placed harde by the eyes on eche side aswell for an ornament to the head as for the commoditie and vse of the whole body For that place is fit for them that they may so much the more conueniently receiue those sounds that come vnto them and cause them to heare euen as the eyes receiue the light which causeth them to see Therefore as God hath disposed the matter whereof it pleased him to make the eyes and hath giuen them such a forme as agreeth best to that office which bee would haue them performe so hath he done in regard of the cares as also of all the other members of the body For this cause hee hath made them of gristles which are a great deale harder and more firme then either flesh kernels sinewes or ligaments but yet nothing so hard as the bones are as we haue already learned by that which was spoken before Besides neere about the place where the eares are he hath set the hardest and firmest bones that are about the head Therefore they are called stony bones by reason of their hardnesse and of their naturall agreement with stones whereby the cares are strongly fortified and that very agreeable to their nature and office As for their forme it is halfe round and very well compassed They are also doubled in about the ends as if nature had wrought them about with litle ledges turned in of the same matter in most excellent and decent maner And amongst all liuing creatures God hath giuen vnmoueable eares to none but only to man and to an ape for the rest can moue them vp and downe And as for this externall and eminent part of the eare that appeareth without if it serued onely to beautifie the head the vse of it were not to bee despised For it is euident by such as haue their eares cut off how deformed and vnseemely the head would bee to looke vpon if it were not decked with that part of the ●ares planted there by God for their greater ornament as it were two goodly bruches Heereof it is that those men haue this part cut off who are to be made deformed and infamous for some notorious offence But besides the honour and ornament which this part of the ●ares bringeth to the head it serueth also to couer the brayne which is next to the cares least it should bee hurt And to the ende that they might not bee easily bruzed or broken nor yet hang downewarde they are as I haue saide of a gristly substance as are all those partes that are bare and appeare outward and which are in daunger to receiue iniuries and discommodities from without Likewise this outward growing of the eares bringeth a double commoditie with it to the rest of that member The first is that it keepeth backe the rayne and sweate of the head and much filth that might enter into the eares if those places were flatte and had nothing but the holes of the eares without these bulwarkes Therefore their forme is made so that they ascend and bende vpward without but are hollowe within The other is that it helpeth much for the better receiuing in of the soundes that are brought to the eares by the ayre because thereby the soundes are better conueyed vnto that place which is properly appoynted for the hearing For this cause the cares are not pierced straight outright but their holes are made winding in like the shell of a snayle whose forme they represent so that one cannot thrust straight foorth so much as a litle threede or the bristle of a hogge For if they were boared outright many inconueniences would befall them The first is that the soundes woulde not be conueyed in so well as they are in places that bend and giue backewarde where they haue rebounds which causeth them to stay and sound better The second is that the eares should receiue ouer-great sound and too thick and so being more confused they could not bee discerned and vnderstood so well Againe as too great light doth not onely dazell the eyes but hurteth them withall so ouergreat soundes would marre the instrument of hearing if they were not distributed and compassed according to the capacity therof For there must alwaies be an answerable and apt proportion between the sense the thing subiect to sense and the meane by which the sense is made Hereupon it falleth out oftē that many become deafe by hearing ouergreat soundes whereof wee haue experience in Smithes amongest whome many are thicke of hearing because their eares are continually dulled with the noyse and sound of their hammers and anuiles The like oftentimes happeneth to those that deale with artillery by reason of the continual vse and greatnes of the sound Moreouer wee must note that there is a very litle hole in ech of these stonie bones in which the hearing is properly made and within which also there are three very small bones whereof the one is called an anuile the other the hammer because they are made almost of the same fashion so that a man would say that nature had framed a little anuile and a little hammer to make soundes and to cause them to be heard The third small bone was founde out by certaine Phisicions and Anatomists and being boared in the middest is fashioned like to a litle stirrope and is alwaies lesse then any of the other twaine Phisicions that write of Anatomie make no mention of this last or if any speake of it they are but fewe and of late time And in deede it is a harde matter euen for them that are most skilfull and expert to look vnto all how diligent and able so euer they be in Anatomie especially in the view of many instruments of their sundry parts which are so small that hardly can we discerne them with our eyes if we look not very narrowly vnto them and that after we are tolde thereof before As for these small bones whereof I speake nowe and namely the third a man may perceiue them better in a dry Anatomie and in some skull that hath nothing but the bare bones then he shall in a whole bodie Therefore the skilfullest Phisicions and Anatomists confesse that the body of man hath such woonderfull arte in it that euery day they finde some newe thing in it which was not obserued by any in former times But let vs returne to our speech concerning that which remayneth of the composition of the eares Besides these litle bones there are two small skinnes full of nerues which holde and binde these bones
in such wise that they are as it were a litle tabour stretched out in that place These small skinnes haue their originall from those sinewes by which the vertue of hearing proceedeth from the brayne to the eares For after the sounds are made in the ayre they are caried to these skinnes and then heard and discerned by them Heereupon they are made hollowe to receiue the soundes that come from without hauing a nature that agreeth very much with the ayre as the eyes do with the fire I meane in respect of their vertue which is burning and glistering albeit their substance bee moyst Therefore as the eyes iudge of light and colours and by that meanes bring great pleasure and profite to men so the eares iudge of sounds and of the voyce of notes harmony and of melodies whereby man receiueth commoditie and delight And if there were but the sundry notes of birdes what solace doeth hee receiue by it But besides how many instruments are there of most excellent and melodious musicke what voyces and pleasant songs framed very cunningly and with great grace and harmonie by the arte of musicke For we see by experience that this science is giuen of God to men that it might be chiefly dedicated to their eares to the end that by the sounds songs which they heare they might be stirred vp to praise God the giuer of them Therefore Salomon not without good reason called them the daughters of singing or of musicke because of the delight which they take therein and also because this whole arte and all songs and melody would bee vaine and vnprofitable to the life of man without hearing But aboue all the chiefest profite that the eares bring to men is by the meanes of speeche whereby they communicate one with another all their conceiptes imaginations thoughtes and counsailes so that without them the whole life of man would bee not onely deafe but dumbe also and very vnperfect as if man had neyther tongue mouth nor speech And on the other side seeing man hath alwayes neede of doctrine and instruction albeit all the other bodily senses helpe him therein neuerthelesse none is so fitte or more seruiceable to this purpose next to the eyes then the eares Wherefore if Salomon for the cause aboue rehearsed called them the daughters of singing a man may also call them the daughters of discipline and of knowledge For as man hath nothing more proper then speech whereby hee letteth others knowe what hee hath in his minde and heart so hee hath nothing more fitte then that to teach all thinges by whose doctrine is alreadie begunne by meanes of the other senses but principally of the eyes For the other senses together with the sense of seeing are as masons that lay the first foundation of the frame of doctrine and afterwarde speech buildeth vpon this grounde-woorke which it cannot doe if it bee not holpen by the eares and by hearing which agree with the voyce pronounced by the mouth whereby speech is sent and conueyed to the eares that it may bee hearde and vnderstoode of them Thus after the knowledge of things is found out and artes begunne by meanes of the sight after the same manner that was declared before by vs when wee intreated of the eyes then the sense of hearing teacheth a great deale more both greater matters and sooner For wee receiue and vnderstande in a short space that which our master who teacheth vs hath obtayned and prepared in a very long time For howe many thinges must wee see and what bookes must we reade before we shall attaine to the knowledge of that which we may learne by hearing one lecture at which we shal be auditors onely one houre or lesse Let vs consider then how conueniently and bountifully God dealeth with men in this behalfe when that thing which is very profitable and most necessary is made so easie for them For nothing is more profitable or more necessarie then to learne much nor any thing more easie then to heare much Therefore Salomon saieth That a wise man shall heare and increase in learning and a man of vnderstanding shall attaine vnto wise Counsels to vnderstand a parable and the interpretation the wordes of the wise and their darke sayings This also is the meanes whereby GOD hath appoynted that men shall learne and vnderstand his will And therefore as we heard that eyes were giuen vnto vs to this ende especially that they should contemplate the workes of God their and our Creator so we ought to know that eares were giuen vs that before all things we should heare and vnderstand his voyce and worde and consecrate them wholly to that purpose to the end that after the eares of the body haue heard it they should be the messengers to declare it to the eares of the soule and minde to cause them also to heare and vnderstand the same For this cause as the aire that entreth into the eares and bringeth vnto them the sound made in it selfe when it is stricken and moued moueth the litle hammer of the eares and causeth seth it to strike vpon the anuile and so maketh a sound by meanes of the litle taber through whose sounde the spirites of hearing are awakened so God by inspiration worketh in his Prophets and Ministers who receiue his voyce after a diuine manner and then are they as it were the hammers that strike vpon the anuiles of mens mindes and heartes by which sounde the spirites of the hearers are awakened and stirred vp But my desire is that wee should throughly consider heere this great secrete of GOD that lyeth hidde in nature namely the meanes whereby the hearing is made and framed in the eares which wee cannot see or comprehende as it is in it selfe Neuerthelesse God giueth vs great light thereunto by the matter and forme of the instruments which he hath made for the hearing Wherefore seeing the eares are framed so artificially as wee haue hearde as appeareth to the eye by their Anatomie wee cannot doubt but that God would haue their vse and artificiall composition knowen to them that may beholde with their eies the instruments of hearing when they are laid open vnto them as they are to Anatomists to the end that by the view and contemplation of thē they might iudge of that secret worke of nature which God hath wrought in hearing which cannot bee seene with eyes when it is in doing For we knowe by experie●ce whereto serueth a hammer an anuile and a taber and what sound they make when the one striketh and the other is stricken and howe that hollow things are more fitte to receiue sounds and to cause them to be heard better then things that are solide and more thicke So that when we see instruments like to these in the composition of the eares we may easily iudge that God hath not placed them there but to doe that seruice which may be perfourmed by such instruments to
heart should vtter and declare another For before the tongue and mouth speake or speach be framed in them it must first be conceiued and bred in the heart and minde and then brought foorth and pronounced by the tongue and mouth Therefore Elihu saieth to Iob I pray thee heare my talke and hearken vnto all my wordes Beholde now I haue opened my mouth my tongue hath spoken in my mouth My wordes are in the vprightnesse of my heart and my lips shall speake pure knowledge We see heere how Elthu ioyneth the heart with the mouth the tongue the palat and the lippes all which are instruments of the speach as we heard before Therefore there must always be a good general agreement betweene al these things This good cōcord beginning in our selues according to euery mans particular place ought to stretch it self generally to al that we may al agree together as the spirite of God so often exhorteth vs thereunto in his holy word And therefore it calleth them men of double hearts and double tongues that are not vpright in heart nor true and certaine in word Our Lorde saieth that of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh and that a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth good thinges and an euill man out of an euill treasure bringeth foorth euill things For as the tree is knowen by his fruite so speach maketh manifest both the heart and mind of a man Therefore hee shall be a great deale better knowen by his speach then by the sight of his face For his face doth not so wel lay open to the eyes his heart mind maners as his speach discloseth thē to the eares as we may iudge by that which we learned to this effect in the former discourse Therefore before the bellows of the lungs blow to frame afterward voice speach in the tongue and mouth the draught must be first drawne and framed in the hart that the tongue mouth may represent and expresse it afterward otherwise they will speake to no purpose but onely giue testimony that there is litle wisedome vpright affection in the hart Hereof it is that Salomon sheweth oftentimes that a wise mans toong is not lightly set on worke without the direction and counsaile of the heart and mind whose seruant and messenger it ought to bee but a foole powreth forth al his mind at once For he vttereth al that commeth in his mouth and speaketh before he hath considered what hee ought to say so that his words are sooner spoken then thought vpon The heart of the wise guideth his mouth wisely and addeth doctrine to his lippes Faire words are as an hony combe sweetenesse to the soule and health to the bones The wise in heart shal be called prudent and the sweetenesse of the lippes shall increase doctrine A wise man concealeth knowledge but the heart of fooles publisheth foolishnesse A foole powreth out all his mind but a wise man keepeth it in till afterward There are many such like places in the Prouerbs which I coulde alleadge to this purpose And wee know what is commonly spoken when a man speaketh of a good affection and in trueth that hee speakes from his heart but if hee be knowen to be a lyar craftie and deceitfull we say that he speaketh not from his heart Which is as much as if one should say that the same thing is not in his heart which he hath in his mouth Although in truth when those speaches are thought vpon before such contrarieties are found as wel in the heart as in the tongue and mouth For if they were not first in that they would not be in the tongue which is the messenger of the heart This is the cause of that double heart which we said was in wicked close and disguised persons You see then what wee haue to note both in regard of the bellowes that blow the Organs of mans body also of the player that ought to blowe and direct them Now let vs speake of the instruments and pipes into which the winde breath of these bellows doth enter giueth motion conuenient sound to euery one of them They haue bene named all vnto vs before Wherefore we haue to consider of that pipe which is called the rough Artery or wind-pipe which is made like to a flute and in regard of the matter is of the nature of a gristle and of skin It was necessary that it should be of such matter because it is to moue when it receiueth in or giueth out the aire and to be inlarged or restrained as need requireth Needful therfore it was that it should be compounded of such skins as are easie to moue to open shut and which might serue for soft tender ligaments And bicause the voice cannot be framed if the aire whereof it is made be not beaten backe with some thing it was in like maner requisite that some gristles should be mingled therewith and linked together as it was needful for the eares to be made winding in that the aire might rebound the better and receiue the sounds as wee heard before For this cause it is called a rough artery as wel in respect of the matter whereof it is compounded as of the figure For it is made after the maner of small circles and rings placed in a ranke one by another throughout the whole length thereof like to the taile of a Creuis and that with such moderation that it is thicke slender and dri● according as neede requireth to make the voyce of a reasonable bignesse If it be too drie it malieth the voyce shrill and hard to bee pronounced as experience sheweth in burning feauers and in great droughts Againe the pipe thereof is larger beneath then aboue and so lesseneth vpward where neede is like to the pipe of a Bag-pipe to the end that the blast should neither be too slow and weake in ascending nor yet ouer hastie and ●odaine For if it be ●lowe and languishing it will turne to wind without any noise and sound and if it be hasty and sodaine it will breed sighes in stead of voyce as it falleth out to them that are diseased and weake whose breath is short and to old men who haue small vertue of respiration and much lesse of singing Therfore some expound that place of Ecclesiastes where it is said that all the daughters of singing shal be abased of the voyce of olde men and of the instruments which breede and pronounce it and of their vertue and strength although others will haue it to be vnderstoode of the eares But it may be referred to them both Now the principal instrument of the voice is in the head of the rough artery namely in that place which is commonly called the knot or ioynt of the necke or Adams morsel being fashioned likest to an Almaine flute I abstaine frō speaking more
deformitie in stead of beautie But if wee consider onely the beautie of the head and of the face thereof whereof wee discoursed yesterday wee shall not finde any one member that hath not singular beautie in it and that agreeth not very fitly with the rest being of so good proportion and measure and hauing such a great and excellent grace that a man may truely say that the whole woorke hath in each part thereof so great perfection that nothing can bee added or taken away nothing can bee wished to make it more faire profitable excellent or perfect then it is in it owne nature To the setting foorth of this beautie the nose whereof wee are to speake serueth very much yea so much that hardly any member in all the face or head so disfigureth a man or maketh him more deformed then the nose if it bee euill fauoured disfigured or taken cleane away But besides this beautie which it bringeth to a mans head we are to knowe that it is very seruiceable to the whole bodie and chiefly to the brayne lodged in the top thereof as it were the Lorde and Master that as it giueth motion and sense to all the members so it might bee compassed about with all the senses as it were with seruitours men of garde Therefore as it hath neere about it the eyes eares tongue and palat which are the instruments of seeing hearing and tasting so the nose is needfull to serue the sence of smelling Neither is it placed so neere the sense of tasting without the great prouidence of God For there are many things in nature which if they be tasted onely are deadly or at leastwise very dangerous and hurtfull as appeareth chiefly in thinges that are venimous and poysonfull For this cause albeit the sence of smelling bee not altogether so necessary for liuing creatures namely for such as are most perfect as the other sences so that they may more easily want it neuerthelesse GOD hath giuen it them to the ende it might bee as it were a messenger to the taste to shewe what is good for it and what not and this chiefly for two reasons The first is to keepe men from hazarding themselues through an immoderate desire to eate and drinke before they haue discerned by the smell of such things as are to be taken whether they bee profitable or hurtfull for them The second reason is to take all suspicion and feare from them which otherwise might cause them to abstayne from those thinges that are good and profitable for them And therefore this sense of smelling is neerely conioyned and hath great agreement with the sense of tasting For this is a generall rule that albeit euery thing that smelleth well hath not alwayes a good taste yet whatsoeuer a man findeth good to his taste the same hath also a good smell and contrariwise that which is founde to haue an ill relish the same hath also the like smell For the taste and smell are giuen not onely for profite but for pleasure also and delight Neyther doe those thinges which serue for delectation alwayes bring profite but sometime the contrarie principally through their fault that knowe not howe to vse them moderately For they are so subiect to their pleasures that they can neuer keepe measure in anything as wee see by experience especially in these two senses of taste and smell For as the ordinary meates satisfie not the delicate appetites of men but they must haue new dainties daily inuented to prouoke their appetite further and to cause them to eate and drinke more then is needefull to their great hurt so men are not contented with naturall odours which nature bringeth foorth of it selfe but nowe they must haue muskes and perfumes with infinite varietie of distilled waters and artificial smelles in regard of which naturall fauours are nothing set by And yet if they were vsed with sobrietie there were no cause of reprehension seeing all the creatures of God are good if they be vsed moderately and a they ought with thankesgiuing Heereof it is that they are oftes mentioned in Scripture in the good part And not to seeke farre off for examples we haue the testimonies of the holy Euāgelists as our Lord Iesus Christ himselfe who was neither nice nor voluptuous but the perfect paterne of al sobriety and temperance did not reiect nor condemne pretious ointments and sweete odours but sometime permitted the vse of them vpon his owne person Moreouer it is certaine that the animal spirites in the braine are greatly relieued and recreated by those good and naturall smels that are conueyed vnto them by means of the nose and of the sense of smelling placed therein as contrariwise they are greatly offended by euill odours yea oftentimes by artificial sauours which commonly cause rhumes catharres and great head-aches For the spirits of the head are subtile pure and very neate so that sweete smelles are good for them and stinking sauours contrary vnto them To this end therefore that the braine might receiue this benefit of good odours God hath placed both the sense and instrument of smelling so neare vnto it the instrument to keepe and conuey odours vnto it the sense to discerne and iudge of them Therefore this sense of smelling hath some agreement both with the fire and with thicke aire because smels are stirred vp by heate as smoke is by fire which are after carried by meanes of the aire vnto the sense and receiued and kept by the nose Forasmuch also as the braine needeth aire to nourish and preserue the animal spirites the nose in this respect also standeth it in great steade Therefore God hath created it not only to serue the sense of smelling but also for respiration that it should be the principall pipe and passage by which both the braine and lungs may draw in or let out breath as neede requireth For this cause the braine doeth stretch out and restraine it selfe and as by stretching foorth it selfe it draweth in the aire by the nosethrilles so by keeping it selfe close together it retaineth the aire And so the externall aire being drawen in by the nosethrilles is distributed by the cranies that are open in the palat in such sort that the greatest part is drawen into the lungs and the residue goeth to the braine by the passages holes that leade vnto it And although the mouth serueth also for respiration yet the nose is appointed more especially for that purpose and is much more fit and apte for the same Therefore God hath giuen it both matter and forme agreeable for that office For first concerning the matter it is not made all of bone nor all of gristles because if it were all of bone a double inconuenience woulde ensue thereof The first is that the bones would be in danger of breaking chiefely about the end of the nose when it should hit against any hard thing because they would not bend and giue
wayes First because wee may in some sort take a viewe of nature by searching out therein those thinges of which shee doeth heere set before vs very euident testimonies euen those thinges which may bee demonstrated although grossely according to the capacitie of our dull vnderstandings The second way which is the chiefest and most sure is by that testimonie which himselfe affoordeth vs in his worde For let vs not thinke that the minde can pronounce any thing for certayne but as it is directed by the testimonie of GOD seeing the senses which hee hath giuen vs come short herein and are not able to ascende vp so high For the excellencie of this creature and of the nature thereof is such and so great that it cannot perfectly knowe and comprehend itselfe especially where it is of greatest dignitie So that if wee desire to haue certaine knowledge whither should we haue recourse in this defect of our senses but vnto him that is able to certifie vs truely in this poynt And who can testifie the trueth of the worke but the Workemaster that made it and therefore knoweth it better then any other and all the perfection that is in it Why then doe wee not yeelde to GOD that honour in a thing not to bee comprehended by vs which wee doe to men of whome wee are well perswaded in thinges which wee cannot knowe but by their testimonie For howe manie thinges doe wee beleeue of which wee knowe not the causes and for which wee haue no other reason shewed vs but onely the testimonie and authoritie of men whome wee iudge woorthie of credite who notwithstanding may themselues bee deceiued and deceiue others But GOD cannot bee deceiued nor deceiue those that giue credite to his testimonie which hee hath not so hidden from men but that it is manifested vnto them yea hee hath chosen some amongst them to testifie the same from him to others And if it hath pleased him to haue such witnesses amongest them a man may soone see that hee hath chosen them in whome hee hath caused his image to shine most excellently and whome hee hath made more like to himselfe aswell by the reuelation of his holy spirite in all those excellent graces and vertues wherewith hee hath indued them as also by those holy and heauenly woorkes which he effecteth by them whereby hee hath as it were marked them with his seale to giue them authoritie and to cause them to bee acknowledged of all for his faithfull witnesses and seruants If then wee desire to haue certaine and true witnesses in any such matter where can we finde them sooner then amongest the Patriarkes Prophets and Apostles with all those Martyres and other holy personages whose doctrine and life testifie vnto vs howe farre they differ from other men But aboue all howe highly ought wee to esteeme the testimonie of the very Sonne of GOD who is to bee preferred before all others Seeing therefore wee haue so many faithfull witnesses let vs keepe vs to their testimonie wayting for that perfect light and more cleare and ample knowledge which shall bee reuealed vnto vs in that heauenly glorie In the meane time let vs consider howe wee are able to comprehende the infinite nature of the Creator of our soule seeing wee cannot conceiue the nature of the soule which he hath created and let vs reiect those dogges and hogges those Atheists and Epicures who iudge of God and of the soule of man so farre foorth onely as they are able to knowe and comprehend by their naturall sense whereby they see no further into the soule of man then they doe into the soules of beasts whome themselues resemble But suppose they had no other testimony of the celestiall and diuine nature of the soule but that which it affoordeth vs daily by those faculties and vertues where with God hath endued it and the effectes it sheweth vs yet ought they to learne to iudge otherwise Now to morrowe it will be thy part ASER to beginne the particular handling of these goodly internall senses whose vesselles and instruments wee haue considered of in this speach as also thou art to teach vs who be the chiefe ministers of the soule for all her actions The end of the third dayes worke THE FOVRTH dayes worke Of the seate of voluntary motion and sense of the office and nature of the common sense of imagination and of fantasie and howe light and dangerous fantasie is of the power which both good and bad spirites haue to mooue it Chap. 25. ASER The knowledge of many things is so natural to men that being borne with them it is like to a light attending vpon the minde as the sight doeth vpon the eyes For the knowledge of numbers and of order the Principles and beginning of Artes the knowledge and distinction of things honest and dishonest proceede from such a light And when Saint Paul sayeth that the Gentiles and all that haue not receiued of God the Lawe of the two Tables as the people of Israel did haue notwithstanding a Law written in their hearts that doeth accuse or excuse them no doubt but by this Lawe hee vnderstandeth that naturall knowledge which men haue both of God and of good and euil which issueth from a higher spring then from the outward sences and which euery one hath for a schoolemistress within himselfe euen they also that would extinguish wholly this light if they could For although God hath imprinted many similitudes and testimonies of himselfe in all creatures whereby hee manifesteth himselfe vnto vs yet should we know nothing more then the brute beasts do if there were not a light in our mindes that causeth vs to see and knowe them and to conclude that which wee doe which light is not in beasts albeit they haue outward senses as wel as wee But it is commonly said that there is nothing in the vnderstanding which hath not first beene in the outward senses that is to say that it can know nothing which is not first discouered and manifested vnto it by them But wee must vnderstand that saying of such things as fall vnder their powers and faculties which being knowen and noted by the senses doe awaken and stirre vp the vnderstanding which after by that vertue it hath in it selfe proceedeth forward namely from signes and effects vnto causes from accidents to substances and from particular things to vniuersalities But let vs consider how We must first remember the diuision which before wee made of the animal facultie and power and thereupon wee note that the sensitiue and motiue powers whereby the soule vsing the meanes of the sinewes and muscles giueth voluntary sense and motion to all the body haue no speciall place or seate in the braine as the other internall senses haue but are dispersed throughout the whole substance thereof Concerning the chiefe power and facultie we were told before how some distinguish betweene Imagination fantasie and the Common sense
and how others comprehend them all in one But be it that we ioyne or separate them let vs nowe consider of the nature and places of each of them The Common sense is so called because it is the first of all the internall fenses of which we are to speake as also the Prince Lord of all the externall sense who are his messengers and seruants to minister and make relation vnto him of things in common For it receiueth all the images and shapes that are offered and brought vnto it by them yea all the kindes and resemblances of materiall things which they haue receiued only from without as a glasse doth and al this for no other cause but that they should discerne and seuer euery thing according to it owne nature propertie and afterward communicate them to the internall senses For although all the knowledge that is in the minde of man proceedeth not from the outward senses as we shewed in the beginning of our speach neuertheles they are created of God to the end they should send to the vnderstanding the similitudes of things without and be the messengers of the minde and witnesses of experience and also to the ende they should awaken and stirre vp the mind to behold and marke the things that are without it that by considering of them it may iudge of and correct the faultes Wee must then obserue that the externall senses haue no iudgement of that which they outwardly receiue but by meanes of the common sense vnto which they make relation and then that iudgeth so that they ende where that beginneth In this manner therefore as the Common sense of all the internall senses is next vnto the external so is it the meanes whereby they communicate one with an other For afterward it caryeth to the other internall senses whatsoeuer hath beene communicated vnto it by the externall Now after this sense hath done his duety Imagination and Fantasie execute their offices both which are taken by many for one and the same facultie and vertue of the soule but yet distinguished from the Common sense others ioyne them both with the Common sense because these three senses whether they be distinguished or taken all for one haue their seates vessels and instruments in the former part of the braine Therefore there will be no danger if we vse these two names Fantasie and Imagination indifferently For Fantasie is deriued from a Greeke worde that signifieth as much as Imagination and it is translated by Cicero into a Latin word which is as much as Vision This faculty therfore and vertue of the soule is called Fantasie because the visions kindes and images of such things as it receiueth are diuersly framed therein according to the formes and shapes that are brought to the Common sense Therefore Daniel called the dreame of Nebuchadnezzar the visions of his head which hee had vpon his bed according to the thoughts whereupon he mused and fell on sleepe For although this was a heauenly dreame yet God vsed therein the internall senses which hee had giuen to Nebuchadnezzar vnto which hee represented the image of those things hee woulde haue him to vnderstand and knowe as afterward they were expounded vnto him by Daniel Moreouer this facultie of the fantasie is sudden so farre from stayednes that euen in the time of sleep it hardly taketh any rest but is alwaies occupied in dreaming doting yea euen about those things which neuer haue bin shal be or can be For it staieth not in that which is shewed vnto it by the senses that serue it but taketh what pleaseth it and addeth thereunto or diminisheth changeth and rechangeth mingleth and vnmingleth so that it cutteth asunder and seweth vp againe as it listeth So that there is nothing but the fantasie will imagine and counterfaite if it haue any matter and foundation to worke vpon without which it can build nothing as wee may iudge by that which hath bene already shewed namely that man can neither think imagine or doe any thing else of which hee hath not some beginning and ground in nature and in the woorkes of God from which after hee hath his inuentions But although fantasie can doe nothing without this gappe and entrance yet it is a wonder to see the inuentions it hath after some occasion is giuen it and what newe and monstrous things it forgeth and coyneth by sundry imaginations arising of those images and similitudes from whence it hath the first paterne So that in trueth fantasie is a very dangerous thing For if it bee not guided and brideled by reason it troubleth and mooueth all the sense and vnderstanding as a tempest doeth the sea For it is easily stirred vp not onely by the externall senses but also by the complexion and disposition of the body Heereof it proceedeth that euen the spirites both good and bad haue great accesse vnto it to stirre it either to good or euill and that by meanes vnknowen to vs. For as wee haue many meanes to prouoke one anothers imagination and fantasie which are not in beastes neither can be comprehended by them so these spiritual natures by reason of the agreement of their nature haue one towardes an other which wee neyther knowe nor can comprehend whereby they haue accesse to mooue our fantasie diuers wayes Wherefore as the Angelles haue meanes to represent to our mindes the images of good heauenly and diuine things both waking and sleeping so can euill spirites greatly trouble them by diuers illusions the proofe whereof wee haue in many whome badde spirites find apt and disposed thereunto and namely in sorcerers whose minde they trouble in such sort by sundry strange illusions that they verily thinke they haue seene heard spoken and done that which the deuill representeth to their fantasie yea such things as neither men nor deuilles themselues can possibly perfourme and yet all that while they stirre not out of their bedde or out of some one place But the diuell hauing once power ouer them doeth in such sort print in their fantasie the images of those things hee representeth vnto them and which he woulde haue them beleeue to be true that they can not thinke otherwise but that it is so that they haue done such things and that they were awake when indeed they slept For as God appeareth to his seruants by heauenly visions both when they sleep when they wake and printeth in their mindes the images of those things which it pleaseth him to reueale vnto them so the diuell who endeuoureth to counterfait all the woorkes of God to deceiue men hath his deuilish illusions for his visions whereby he mooueth and troubleth the fantasie and mindes of those ouer whome hee raigneth through their infidelity and wickednesse Therefore it is very needefull that men should recommend themselues to God to the ende these euil spirites may haue no such power ouer them and that their iudgements may be
and disagreement of things that ioyneth together whatsoeuer is to be ioyned and separateth that which ought to bee separated that distinguiseth things which followe or are contrary each to other by comparing one thing with another by considering all circumstances by referring euery thing whither it ought to be referred It is requisite therefore that he should keepe his owne place and not be shuffled vp and confounded with imagination and fantasie of which hee is the Iudge to approoue or condemne that which is good or euill as also to correct to stay and to keepe them in awe For if reason intermeddle and mingle it selfe with them it will be so troubled that it will not be able to iudge as it ought of those things which they present and bring vnto it but will bee so carried away as if it were deposed and thrust out of it owne place and as if maides shoulde rule their Mistresse and take place before her The like also happeneth vnto it when it is carried away with the affections which it ought to rule moderate and gouerne But if it be vpright and sound after it hath well considered and debated of the whole matter brought and laide before it by the former senses it giueth sentence as Iudge and iudgeth finally without appeale For there is no other iudgement after that Hereof it is that it hath a iudiciall seate in the middest wherein being placed it heareth sutes and causes Besides it hath neare vnto it Memorie which is in place of a Notary and Secretary and as it were a register booke in which is entred whatsoeuer is ordained and decreed by reason For as we haue neede of such a Iudge as reason is to conclude and determine finally in the minde whatsoeuer may bee called into question and doubted of so it is requisite that the conclusion and definitiue sentence should be registred in Memory as it were in a roll or booke of accompt that it may alwayes be ready and found when neede requireth For what good should we get by that which imagination fantasie and reason conceiue and gather together if it shoulde all vanish away presently through forgetfulnesse and no more memorie thereof should remaine in man then if nothing at all had bene done The like would daily happen to vs that befel Nebuchadnezzar when God reuealed vnto him by dreame in the vision of an Image what should become of his Monarchie and Empire and of those that followed him For he remembred well as himselfe testifieth that he had dreamed a dreame whereupon his spirite was troubled whilest he laboured to vnderstand it but hee was so farre from knowing the signification of his dreame that he remembred not what he had dreamed and seene therein Where wee see that his imagination and fantasie were so mooued by the image and vision represented vnto them in this dreame that they imprinted in his memory how they had seene a vision and that it was very strange and woonderfull Yea reason it selfe iudged that the vision and image was of another nature then those that are cōmonly in the imagination or fantasie or those which they coyne themselues in sleeping and dreaming and that it had some diuine signification And this did reason imprint in the Kings memorie who remembred all these things generally but when he beganne to enquire of the matter more specially and particularly hee could not call to minde the kinde and manner of his dreame but confessed that the thing was gone from him Afterward hauing heard and vnderstoode Daniel hee knewe that hee spake a trueth and then remembred what hee had dreamed and was gone from him because it was not well imprinted in his memorie but had passed ouer lightly by it Heere then wee see how necessary this secretary and register whome wee call Memorie is for the vnderstanding and spirite not onely to marke lightly such things as passe by it but also to note and ingraue them as it were in tables or pillars of stone or brasse Therefore hath God assigned his seate and lodging in the hindermost part of the braine to the ende that after such things as are to be committed vnto it haue passed by all the other senses they should be committed to it to keepe as to their secretary And for this cause that part of the braine is lesse moist and most solide and firme for two manifest and apparant reasons First because it is the fountaine of the marrowe in the back bone of which those sinews are deriued that giue the strongest motions to al the members of the body Therefore also it was requisite that they shoulde bee of a more firme and solide matter then the rest that are taken from the substance of other partes of the braine which are not to sustaine so great stresse Secondly forasmuch as the memory is as it were the Register and Chancery Court of all the other senses the images of all things brought and committed vnto it by them are to be imprinted therein as the image and signe of a ring or seale is imprinted and set in the waxe that is sealed Therefore it is needefull that the matter of the instrument of Memorie shoulde bee so well tempered that it be neither too soft nor too hard For if it be too soft the images will be soone ingrauen but they will not stay there any long time as they that will be quickely blotted out Contrariwise if it be ouer hard it wil be a harder matter to imprint them therein But when it is well tempered it receiueth the images easily and keepeth them well For the Memorie hath two dueties as well as the hand namely to receiue and to hold fast Therefore they that are of a moist braine receiue more easily into their memories that which is offered vnto them and they that haue a drie braine retaine and keepe better in memorie But following that which wee haue hitherto spoken of all the internall senses we are nowe to obserue and note this that the knowledge of things which wee haue by the outward senses is as if wee beheld the shadowes of them and that knowledge which wee haue by the common sense by Imagination and Fantasie is as if wee did looke vpon the images which represent vnto vs those things whereof they are images moreliuely and cleerely then their shadowes can do And the knowledge wee haue by vnderstanding of which facultie wee will intreate heereafter is as if wee viewed not onely the shadowes or images of things but also their very bodies which is more And that knowledge which wee haue by reason is as if besides all this wee sawe their effectes and vertues Therefore there is as much difference betweene the knowledge that a man may haue by euery one of these faculties and powers as there is betwixt the shadow and image and body and effects or vertues of one and the same thing to the end that the nature thereof may be throughly knowen
that the foggy blood may not euaporate and sweate through For this cause it is called the veiny artery because it holdeth of the nature both of an artery and of a veine and hath this office belonging properly vnto it to carry the ayre and the spirit There are also in the heart other small peeces which Anatomists distinguish from it as the two little eares the right and the left which are as it were little doores as there is also in all the pipes thereof which are so small that vnneth may they be discerned by the eyes These doores and pipes that are in them ●erue partly to this ende that when the heart sucketh such blood as is necessary for it selfe the veine wherewith it draweth shoulde not breake through any ouer-great vehement and sodaine attraction and partly that the ayre might enter in more gently and better wrought according as neede requireth For this cause also it is why the heart doeth not drawe the ayre immediately from the mouth both because if this space were not betweene it coulde not drawe so much as it wanteth and so woulde bee choaked as also because it shoulde receiue it in too colde whereupon it woulde be greatly hurt Therefore it hath pipes passages and instruments not onely to bring this ayre vnto it as it is brought to the lungs but also to dispence and prepare it as is most conuenient for it as wee haue learned already by our speach of the rough artery and of other instruments of the voyce and of respiration Out of which wee are to note two goodly points of the prouidence and wisedome whereby hee doeth admonish vs of that moderation which wee ought to keepe in all things and how we ought to behaue our selues not only in one worke but also in all things that wee take in hand For concerning the first GOD hath prouided alwaies throughout the whole worke of mans body in such sort that there should be no violēt thing but hath so wel framed disposed and linked all together that no one part or member shoulde receiue hurt of another but al might help support ech other Therfore if there be any burthen to cary from one to an other God hath so distributed it by little and little and by such conuenient means that no part is pressed teaching vs thereby that he loueth moderation and hateth violence in all things for which cause hee dispenseth all and distributeth drop by drop as it were by destillation And to the end he may conioyne in one things of a contrary nature hee alwayes placeth between two contraries things of a middle disposition which are most apt to tie them together and to keep them Besides we see howe hee hath ordred al the parts of the body so wel that one only member and instrument serueth oftentimes for many offices vses as we haue already touched it Wherin God doth admonish vs further of two things wel worthy the noting The first is that we ought to looke so wel vnto al things that we neither forget nor omit any thing that shal be requisit necessary The other that we should imploy our selues about euery thing that we can and may do according to those gifts and graces which wee haue receiued of God and that we should vse al things to euery such purpose as they will serue and so auoid al vaine and superfluous charges For as it is commonly said nothing is to be done by many things that can be performed by fewer otherwise there will be more hindrance then helpe and greater losse then profit For this cause as God hath not giuen to the body one member lesse then there ought to be so he hath not giuen it one more For if there were either more or lesse it would not only be monstrous but there would be eyther some want or some let hinderance And when as one member is able to satisfy two offices he hath not created many to do it if either profit or necessitie required not the help of many Whereupon gouernours of Common-wealths ought to learne that their people are not to bee burthened with vnprofitable and vnnecessary offices and persons If therefore men woulde learne those lessons that God giueth them in their owne bodies and in the members thereof they woulde alwayes keepe a meane in all things following this heauenly example and neuer offend either with too little or too much But notwithstanding wee haue all Nature to be our Mistres so that shee keepe a schoole within vs and teach vs these things her selfe yet wee profite little thereby Nowe leauing this speach seeing wee haue taken a viewe of the nature of the body and of the naturall motion thereof which is commonly called the Pulse and what vse it hath in this corporall life as also of other things concerning this matter it shall be good for vs nowe to speake of another motion that is in the nature of the soule which serueth not onely for this life but also for the spirituall in respect of which especially it is giuen vnto it an image and representation whereof wee haue had in this motion of which wee haue already spoken It belongeth to thee ARAM to discourse vpon this matter Of the second motion of the heart which belongeth to the affections of the soule and of those that goe before or follow after iudgement of the agreement that is betweene the temperature of the body and the affections of the soule Chap. 39. ARAM. As God is not onely an eternall and infinite essence but also infinitely good and happy so hath hee not rested in giuing vnto his creatures life and beeing as it were imparting to them some part of his being but it hath pleased him also to make them partakers of that Good which is essentiall in him and of his blessednesse and felicitie according as euery one was capable thereof in his kinde For he will not onely haue them to be but also to be well For this cause we see that although men desire much to be and therefore are greatly afraid of death as of an enemy that seeketh to vndoe them yet many times it falleth out so that they desire death to the end they might be no more because they thinke it a greater good or at leastwise a lesse euil to be no more thē to be miserable vnhappy And by this we may knowe that man was not created of God only to be neither was that his principal end but also to be blessed For this cause as God hath giuen to the creatures an inclination to preserue themselues in their life to the end they might be so he hath put into them a natural appetite desire of that which is good to the ende they might be well and that good might be fall them but man specially is thus affected which desire of good is also ioyned with an eschewing of euill For in the pursuite of good his contrary which is
may more easily take holde then in another that is more contrarie to it It is otherwise with flegmatike or melancholike men according as the humours which rule in them dispose and incline them more to be caried with one affection rather then with another Therefore wee see that they which are of a cholericke complexion as they are of a more hote and dry nature so their affections are more sodain burning and violent like to fire Flegmatike and melancholy persons as they are colder so they are not so easily mooued but are more slowe and heauy and haue also other inclinations and other affections And as they that are cōmonly said to be sanguine are of the best temperature so their affections are for the most part more cheerful more temperate And as there are diuers mixtions of bodily qualities so there are sundry sorts of temperatures and complexions of the body and consequently of soules in regard of their saculties and affections Therfore also there is great agreement betweene corporall and spirituall Physicke For this cause the Physicions both of the bodies and soules of men are to follow almost one the same methode and obserue a like order in their arte practise euery one according to the subiects propounded vnto them insomuch that looke what the one doeth vnto the body the other is to deale so with the soule such things being applied as best agree with their seuerall natures Wherein they may further eche others worke greatly obseruing that ende at which both of them aime which to the one is the health of the body and to the other the cure of the soule considering that the one may helpe the other as hath bin already touched For if the body be not temperant hardly wil the soule be if the soule be intemperate the body desireth not to be temperant Therefore also we see that not only Physicions for the body appoint men diets both for the preseruation of their bodily health and also for the recouery restoring thereof again but also spiritual Physicions doe the like in regard of the soules health so farre foorth as bodily sobriety wil serue greatly to that purpose For this cause not only ordinary sobriety moderation which ought to be kept throughout the whole life of man is so greatly recommended vnto vs in the holy scriptures but fasts also which being more strict abstinēces are very profitable yea necessary oftentimes according to times places and persons For they serue to tame and humble the flesh that it may be the better kept in lesse hinder the spirit which thereby is the better inabled to attend to euery good worke to the contemplation of diuine celestial things Therfore the people of God holy men fasted oftē wherof wee haue many testimonies in the scriptures And as it is necessary that bodily Physicions should know wel the tēperatures complexions of mens bodies and their natures their health and diseases also with their conuenient and apt remedies so is it needfull that spirituall Physicions shoulde knowe the nature of soules of their faculties powers affections the natures of vertues which are their health and of vices which are their diseases together with those medicines remedies that are necessarie for the preseruation increase of vertues and for the diminution abolishing of vices For without this knowledge neither of them can be good Physicions but it may bee feared least they make the diseases worse or in steed of curing the sick persons kill them outright But we must yet draw more instruction out of this matter here offered vnto vs. For whatsoeuer hath beene hitherto spoken concerning the agreement between the temperature of the body and the affections of the soule or concerning the health diseases of them both or the knowledge that is requisit in Physicions to follow a good method in their art practise for the healing of their patiēts I say the vnderstāding of al these things is not only necessary for the Physiciōs both of soules bodies but euen for euery one of vs particularly For if we were all skilfull in the art of corporall Phisicke I meane not such skil as is needful for them that make publike profession thereof to all but onely so much as is necessary for the preseruation of our owne health I doubt not but we might easily auoyde many infirmities and diseases whereinto we fall daily for want of good diet good gouernment and the vse of those meanes which might either retaine vs in health or restore it quickly vnto vs when it is somewhat altered or impeached Moreouer we should haue this aduantage besides if we fell into any disease that we should know the better howe to keepe and gouerne our selues more moderately and wisely and obey the Physicions counsell the better because we should haue greater knowledge of that which we ought to doe of the danger whereinto we might fall or which we might easily auoyde Wee may say as much of the soules phisicke the knowledge whereof is a great deale more necessary for vs not onely because the soule is more noble and precious then the body but also because it is a harder matter to knowe the nature and diseases of the soule then of the bodie And if wee prooue so happie as to be able to comprehend any thing wee shall know daily better and better what things are in vs of God and what is his order as also what there is of Satans and what is that disorder and confusion which by meanes of sinne he hath brought into all things For as sinne is cause of that excesse which is in the qualities of which our bodies are made and consequently of the diseases that proceed from thence which afterward bring death to the bodie so is it in respect of the soule and of the excesse that is in the affections thereof and in all the other partes of it contrary to that nature in which God created the same And as sinne is the cause of the disorder and confusion that is in both of them so it is the cause that one helpeth to spoile another whereas there should be a pleasant harmonie and concord not onely of the bodily qualities among themselues and so likewise of the qualities of the soule among themselues but also of the qualities both of soule and bodie one with another For God hath put nor onely into our soules but into our bodies also the seedes of all the vertues and the pricks and meanes to incite and to leade vs vnto them in such manner and forme as shal be declared hereafter Although wee may learne somewhat by that which we haue heard alreadie of the conueniencie that is betweene the body and the soule betweene the temperature of the one and the affections of the other For if the one bee answerable and correspondent to the other no doubt but God so disposeth of
and euill to the ende that all the actions therof might agree with these rules which are the beames of heauenly wisedome in our selues For it is an order which God hath so ordained established And forasmuch as the soule was to dwell in the body God gaue vnto it this naturall power of the affections that it might bee wakened and stirred vp by them as it were with prickes thereby to be kept from idlenesse and from being lulled asleepe and oppressed with the heauines of the body and so neglect all care of good things of that which is very expedient profitable for it self For this cause the soule hath her affections of which some serue for spurres to pricke her hither thither as oftē as need requireth others serue for a bridle to keep her back to stay her from rushing vnto euill from following those things that are hurtful for her And indeede we stand in need of such spurtes and bridles but herein we erre greatly in that we knowe not howe to keepe a moderation betweene these twaine For because wee make these spurres too sharpe and pricke the horse too much which we haue to guide the bridle on the other side is two grieuous vnto him so that he lifteth vp and girdeth forward ouer furiously And this commeth to passe because wee doe not content our selues with that which is requisite for the succouring of our naturall necessities but we adde there vnto infinite superfluities For vpon some light necessitie that might soone be dispatched we torment our selues a great deale more then neede is because wee perswade our selues that our necessities are greater then they bee and so seeke after moe remedies and helpes then is requisite Of this wee haue daily experience in that care which wee take for thinges necessarie for this life which is the cause that wee burne continually with insatiable couetousnesse which is such a marueilous spurre vnto vs that wee take very little rest for it For if wee woulde bee contented with enough it woulde not put vs to that torment which wee dayly suffer But nothing sufficeth vs and therefore the affections are in our soule as the windes vpon the sea For some windes are very small and mooue the water but a little others are more vehement and rayse vp certaine waues and some againe are so tempestuous and make such horrible stormes and gustes whereby the Sea is so mooued that sea and sande and fishe and all seeme to bee turned topsie toruie The like may bee sayde of the motions of the soule For some are so light that they seeme to bee nothing els but small beginnings of moouing There are others stronger which moue it somewhat more And some also are so violent that they altogether trouble the soule euen in such a vehement manner that they driue her from her seate of iudgement Therefore these two first kindes of motions are properly called affections and the other that are so violent are termed Commotions and Perturbations For they bring a kinde of blindnesse with them which is the cause that iudgement and reason see neuer a whit Whereupon it followeth seeing neither Reason nor Iudgement beare any more rule that the soule is as if shee had no more power ouer her selfe but were subiect to the iurisdiction of some other The Grecians terme such affections with a worde that signifieth as much as if wee shoulde say passions And in deede wee commonly say that a man is passionate when hee is tormented by such violent affections For as the whole bodie suffereth when it is mooued or thrust too and fro and stricken on euerie side so is it with the soule beeng violently mooued euerie way And as the moouing is more or lesse moderate so shee suffereth more or lesse and if the motion bee verie violent confusion followeth thereupon Nowe for the sequele of this speech let vs consider how the affections are more or lesse moderate according to the disposition of the iudgement and what is the spring and originall of so many sundry affections as we see in men It belongeth then to thee ARAM to handle this matter That according to the dispposition of the iudgement the affections are more or lesse moderate or immoderate of the cause of all the motions of the soule and heart of the varietie of affections of the generation nature and kindes of them Chap. 43. ARAM. Whatsoeuer we doe or wish for wee doe or desire it for some Good whether that which we iudge to bee good bee so in trueth or in opinion onely And therein wee resemble God our Creator who is not only good but also goodnes it selfe euen the perfection of all Good Wherefore if we desire to know what is the true Good we must vnderstand that there is but one onely true Good euen the same by participation of which we are first made good and then of good most happie For we cannot be happy and blessed which is the end we all looke for but we must first become good For as there is no true felicitie and blessednes but in Good being th source and fountaine yea the perfection of all happines and contentation so also there is no felicitie nor blesse dues but in goodnes which is as proper to God as his very diuinitie because that as he cannot be God except he be good so he cannot be good with that goodnesse that is in him but he must bee God And as he is the essence of all essences so he is the essential Good and the essential Goodnes of al Goods and of al Goodnesses But although our nature doeth of it selfe alwayes tend to that which is Good as wee haue shewed in the handling of the chiefe powers of the soule Vnderstanding and Will neuertheles we differ much nay we are cleane contrary to God when wee come to the election of Good because of the bad iudgement we haue by reason of the darknes of ignoraunce wherewith our mindes are blinded Hereof it commeth that the more the iudgement is corrupted infected and deeper plunged in the flesh the more euill and carnal are the affections the moe in number and the more violent yea such as doe not onely trouble and peruert the internal senses of the soule but the external senses also of the body This we may obserue in them that are caried away with loue who thinke oftentimes and are verily perswaded that they see and heare those thinges which indeede are nothing so Contrariwise the purer the iudgement is and the higher it is lifted vp from the fleshe and from the earth the fewe● and lighter are the affections which trouble and molest it For then it taketh greater heed and marketh what trueth or what falsehood what good or what euill there is in all thinges Whereupon it commeth to passe that the iudgement is not so often nor so easily mooued And when it is mooued it is not so violent nor headie but more mature
will note what he meaneth by these flames of fire For if the face waxe pale through feare as it falleth out for the most part it seemeth that it cannot be enflamed for then it would be red rather then pale But we are to know that when nature will strengthen the heart she sendeth vnto it from all parts succours of heat and blood to encourage it the more Therefore they that haue but a little warme blood in the heart are naturally the greater cowardes so that it is a better token of courage when the face is pale through feare then when it waxeth redde For this cause Cato misliked that a child should becom pale in the face through shame in stead of being red and that a souldier should looke red in time of danger in stead of being pale For as it is a token of impudencie in a child not to blush for shame so is it a signe of cowardlinesse in a man of warre to looke redde when hee seeth himselfe in any danger Therefore a pale countenance sheweth that the blood and naturall heate are gone to the heart to strengthen it but when it is redde that argueth that the blood and heate are not much gone inward to strengthen the heart whereupon it is made more weake and so the feare of it is greater and the trembling much more And because the blood and naturall heate mount vpward in steade of descending therefore doth the face looke red Which argueth want of courage and a fainting heart as it befell the Babylonians whose heartes were possessed with feare and terrour at the comming of their enemies because God woulde giue them ouer into their hander Wee might also referre this rednesse and inflammation of visage to the paines and griefs which they were to endure For when one is pressed with griefe his countenance is redde and fierie because men are then as it were shut vp in a fire And as the face is red through Feare for the reasons set downe by vs so if the naturall heate leaue the heart and goe downeward the feare is not onely encreased but it bringeth withall a loosenesse of the belly Therefore it is written in the Booke of Iob where it is spoken of the feare that Liuiathan bringeth vpon men that the mightie tremble at his maiestie and purge themselues through his moouings that is through feare of him Hereupon a heathen Poet when hee would note a fearefull and dastardly fellowe saieth to this purpose That his heart was fallen into his heeles Nowe if feare mooueth all the body in this sorte no doubt but it greatly mooueth also the minde and the whole soule of man For it so troubleth the minde that it confoundeth all the thoughts thereof as wee may trie by this that many times the least fancie of euill that entreth into our braine is enough to trouble the minde very much For as imagination and fancie beare great sway ouer the affections so they shewe what power they haue chiefely in the affection of Feare And surely among all liuing creatures none hath such a confused feare or is more amazed therewith then man is Therefore we may well say that no misery is greater no bondage more shamefull seruile or vile then feare is For it maketh men very abiects flatterers and suspicious and so daunteth their courage that it leaueth them as it were halfe dead yea causeth them sometimes to despaire vtterly so that they are as it were Images destitute of counsaile not knowing which wayes to helpe themselues For this cause the holy Scriptures make often mention of a heart that is powred out like water for feare or that melteth like waxe And in Ieremy it is saide In that day saieth the Lorde the heart of the king shall perish and the heart of the Princes and the Priests shall be astonished and the Prophets shall wonder For truely if a man be once possessed with feare especially if hee bee enclined thereunto by nature but aboue all if GOD terrifie him a man may well exhort him to boldenesse and to take courage vnto him and alleadge all the reasons that can be to strengthen him against Feare but it will be to small purpose Therefore one saieth very well that no harnesse can be founde which is able to incourage feare and to make it hardy For if any Armorers had the skil to make such harnesse they should want no customers But onely God is able to arme vs against this because it is he that giueth or taketh away the heart of man that sendeth feare or boldenesse as pleaseth him For although hee hath sowed the seedes of them both in the nature of the body and soule of man with the meanes also that leade thereunto yet he hath not subiected himselfe to all those meanes no more then hee hath to the whole order of nature but hath alwayes reserued in his power both Feare and faintnesse of heart and boldenesse and assurance which are their contraries For assurance is a certaine perswasion and trust whereby wee are confirmed in danger against euilles that threaten vs and come neere vs and boldenesse is a confidence which pricketh forward the courage either to repulse euilles or to followe after good things which are excellent and harde to obtaine Therefore when GOD is minded to punish men hee taketh away their heartes whome hee will destroy causing them to tremble and to flie for feare as it is written in Ioshua where Rahab speaking to the spies of the Israelites that were sent to Iericho vseth these wordes I know that the Lorde hath giuen you this land for the feare of you is fallen vpon vs and all the inhabitants of the land faint because of you Contrariwise our GOD heartneth and emboldeneth those by whome hee will ouerthrow others and to whome hee mindeth to grant victorie Therefore it is written that hee will cause the feare of his seruants to fall vpon his enemies that the wicked and such as haue not called vpon GOD shall feare where there is no cause of feare and shall tremble and flie for feare although there be none that persecute them So that if wee doe desire to finde a harnesse that will arme our heart thorowly against all feare let vs put on the armour of the true feare of GOD and of sounde Faith in him For as the Prophet Dauid sayeth Blessed is the man that feareth the Lorde the iust shall liue in assured hope hee shall neuer be moued hee shall not be afraide of euill tidings for his heart is fixed and beleeueth in the Lorde his heart is stablished therefore hee will not feare For whosoeuer feareth God and walketh in innocencie God is with him and hee that hath God on his side what can hee or ought he to feare For when hee is with vs who shal be against vs May hee not well say with Dauid When I was afraide I trusted in thee In God doe I trust I will not be
receiue and to embrace it Wherupon ariseth a desire of coniunction to knit the same thing to it selfe and this loue is called Cupiditie Lusting or Coueting But because this affection is so out of square in this our corrupt nature these names are commonly taken more in the euill then in the good part Nowe this affection of desire or coueting hath respect either to that good which we enioy alreadie or which we haue yet in hope onely and in expectation If it be already present this cupiditie breedeth a desire to retaine and keepe it still if it be yet in expectation it bringeth forth a desire and longing to enioy it And in this sort we loue all those things which we esteeme and take to bee profitable for vs either for the soule or for the body or for the external goods For this cause many loue God because they know that it is he who giueth good things vnto men But this is not that true loue wherwith we must loue him For although they are very wicked and too vnthankfull which loue him not at leastwise with such a loue and for that cause yet if we goe no further we loue our selues more then wee doe him in this kind of loue seeing the chiefe cause for which we loue him is not in respect of himselfe but of vs. For we loue him by reason of that good which we receiue from him But true loue is that which causeth vs to loue a thing because it is good in it selfe and not in respect of any profite that may come vnto vs thereby With this loue we ought to loue God and our neighbours and friendes and of this loue wee haue a very cleare and manifest image in the loue of Fathers and mothers towards their children For they loue them not because they haue respect to some good which they may receiue of them but because they are their children For although they receiue nothing but trouble by them from the time of their childehood and expences rather then profit yet that letteth them not from louing them tenderly and with great affection Nowe if by this loue grounded vpon such a cause we iudge the like of the loue of God towards vs seeing it is hee that hath imprinted the same in the heartes of parents towards their children as an image of his loue towards vs we conclude well For seeing he is the fountaine of all true and perfect loue all other loues are but as it were little riuers which flowe from this liuely spring But there is none so expresse an image thereof in all the creatures as in the loue of fathers and mothers towards their children For doeth God loue vs in respect of any profite which hee looketh for at our hands Hereof it is that he setteth forth himselfe vnto vs as a Father to the end we may the better know that he loueth vs with a right fatherly loue Therefore also hee will haue vs to call him Father and so to accoūnt of him yea hee will not haue vs to take any other for our Father of whome to depende wholly but him alone And no doubt but we shoulde receiue wonderfull ioy and consolation if we coulde as well feele within vs that loue which this good Father beareth vs as we feele the loue which we beare towardes our children Now when loue is reciprocall and mutuall so that he which is loued doeth also loue for his part the partie that loueth him then is friendship bred of loue wherein there is mutuall beneuolence and goodwil Wherefore as God loueth vs so muust we for our partes loue him seeing this is the chiefe cause why he hath created man according to his image and similitude and hath giuen him a soule that is immortall and endued with vnderstanding and reason to knowe him first and then to loue him Therefore if wee consider by what steppes wee ascend vp to God we shall finde that as by the loue which he first bare vs we descended from the highest to the lowest so likewise we mount vp againe from the lowest vnto the highest by that loue which wee beare him For our soule descendeth from the highest which is God vnto the lowest which is the bodie by the loue of the Creator towards her who by meanes of this descending and coniunction communicateth his blessednesse both with the soule and with the bodie And as she came downe from him so through the knowledge which she hath of God and loue which she beareth him she ascendeth vp again returneth to her first birth Cōcerning those degrees by which we come thither we begin first at materiall and corporal things as the beginning of mans generation and birth teacheth vs then we come to the senses of the bodie by that vse which we haue of them Afterwarde we vse imagination and fantasie and from that we come to reason and iudgement next to contemplation and last of all to loue Heereby we may learne also to know the steppes of descending seeing they are the same but begunne at the contrarie ende Wherefore if iudgement bee gouerned and ouercome by the affections and reason by fantasie the estate of the soule is wholly ouerturned and peruerted as if the bodie beeing minded to walke shoulde set the head vpon the ground and lift the heeles vpwarde So likewise is it if in steede o mounting vp to God by loue we descend in such sort to the creatures that we ascend vp no more to him that wee may bee one with him For loue maketh all things one Therefore if we be vnited with God there must needes be perfect friendshippe betweene him and vs. For as he loueth vs so we loue him and then our selues for loue of him And from the loue of our selues springeth our loue towards our wiues and children as though they were a part of vs as also towardes our like and towards our woorkes For similitude and likenesse is a great cause of loue seeing that when one resembleth vs it is as if wee our selues were another because similitude maketh many things to be as one and the same thing Wherefore seeing God hath created vs to his image and likenesse it cannot bee but that he loueth his image and similitude in vs and vs also in respect of that as if it were himselfe For this cause the more this image is reformed and renewed in vs the more no doubt hee loueth vs and the like also may be said of our loue towards him In like manner beautie hath great vertue to procure loue and that for many causes For first the beautie which appeareth without in any body is as it were a witnesse and testimonie of the beautie in the soule according to that which we haue already spoken of the agreement of the powers affections thereof with the temperature of the bodie For God hath created all things in such manner that he hath commonly ioyned beautie and goodnes together
it is cleane contrary in regarde of euilles For they quickely finde whereupon to stay and to plant themselues within vs and to spreade their rootes so deepe and broade that they cannot easily be plucked vp Whereupon they are felt a great deale more and continue longer in our heart and memory Not without cause then doe men say that the pleasures seruices and good things done vnto vs are madeof feathers and therefore they are easily carried away by reason of their lightnesse but offences euilles and displeasures are made of lead and therefore they abide in the bottome of the heart by reason of their waight And forasmuch as loue proceedeth of that which is good and hatred of euill whether it bee euill in trueth or in opinion onely as euill is commonly greater and of longer continuance then Good for the causes spoken of so is it with Loue and Hatred and with their rootes and long abode Now of Hatred commeth backebiting and euill speaking which being kindled bringeth foorth bitternesse and crueltie and as loue whetteth a man on to doe well so contrariwise Hatred turneth men aside from well doing and prouoketh them to hurt For this cause it soweth the seedes of enmitie and laboureth craftily to cause the party hated to fall into danger For it desireth to hurt him and to bring euill vpon him either by it selfe or by an other secretely or openly In a worde seeing it is wholly contrary to Loue wee may without any long discourse knowe the nature thereof by that which hath beene spoken of the nature of Loue taking it cleane contrary thereunto But let vs see whether the affection of hatred bee altogether together euill of it selfe or whether a man may reape any profite thereby We may say of this as we did of anger and of other affections already spoken of For it is giuen to man to cause him to withdrawe himselfe from all euill that may hurt him to flee from it and to repell it as being contrary vnto him Therefore Saint Paul sayeth Hate that which is euill and cleaue to that which is good For true and perfect hatred shoulde hate nothing but that which is euill indeede as true loue shoulde loue that onely which is good indeede But contrariwise wee commonly hate the Good and good men and loue the Euill and the workers thereof Besides wee are faulty in this that in steade of hating mens vices wee hate their persons Wherefore it is needefull that in this matter of Hatred wee shoulde put that in practice which wee haue already saide of Anger namely that wee shoulde aboue all things hate our owne vices and that euill which is in vs and in ours But wee that practise the cleane contrary change Loue into Hatred and Hatred into Loue. For when wee supporte and beare with our owne vices or with the vices of our friendes and kinsemen which are not to be suffered or borne withall it seemeth that this toleration proceedeth from the loue wee beare either to our selues or to others but it is farre otherwise For if wee loued our selues well and our neighbours as our selues wee woulde bee carefull to remooue all hurtefull things farre from our soules and to furnish them with that which is conuenient and wholsome for them and so likewise for our friendes whereas wee procure vnto them that which turneth to their dishonour hurt and ouerthrowe by nourishing them in their vices through our dissembling and bearing with them And thus much for that profite which wee may receiue by this affection of hatred being well guided according vnto the will of GOD and to a sound and reasonable nature Nowe against the passion of euill Hatred amongest a great number of remedies which may very well bee applied thereunto we haue two principall ones that are very good and profitable The first remedie is the example of the loue of GOD and of Iesus Christ towardes vs of which wee haue spoken already with those holie Preceptes which doe commaunde Loue and forbidde Hatred The second remedie is the contempt of all earthly things and the regarde that is to be had vnto the things that are Celestiall and Eternall For if wee shall set light by all mortall and corruptible things and lift vp our heartes to higher thinges wee shall verie easilie breake off all hatred and enmitie neither wil we take any thing greatly to heart but when we see God offended Now as concerning Enuy that alwayes accompanieth hatred it is an affection quite contrary to mercy which is a sorrowe conceiued by reason of the miseries of an other whereas Enuy is a griefe arising of other mens felicitie Therefore it doth naturally reioyce at another mans harme and is grieued at his good so that according to the varietie of good things that may befall other men so there are diuers kinds of Enuy. For first some are enuious when other mens profite is so great that it hindreth theirs There is also a kinde of enuy at the wellfare of another which albeit it neither hurt nor hinder vs yet wee are grieued because the like is not befallen to vs or not rather to vs or not aswell to vs as to another to whome it is happened And this is a spice of couetousnesse There is yet a third kinde of Enuy which maketh vs vnwilling that others shoulde obtaine that good which wee haue or which wee desire or haue wished for but coulde not get it And when the question is of those good things which it seemeth we shuld enioy but doe not or which we thinke belong to vs but are bestowed vpon others then is our enuy greater and may also be called iealousie Moreouer there is a fourth kinde that is worst of all to which the name of Enuy agreeth more properly as being often bredde of the former kindes when a man giueth them the bridle and suffereth them to raigne too much ouer him This enuy is a griefe conceiued at anothers good without any regard of it owne profite but onely because it iudgeth it selfe hurt when others receiue good or do good And this is the very enuy of the Deuil and of his children which is an affection that is mingled of hatred and of ioy For it hateth vertue and reioyceth at vice and at the prosperitie of the wicked Contrariwise it is grieued at the felicitie of good men and glad of their miseries But what kinde soeuer of enuy is in a man there is in him griefe and as it were a biting that gnaweth him by reason that the heart in this affection shrinketh in as it were and closeth vp it selfe at the good and benefit of another So that sorrowe is alwayes ioyned therewith The goods against which enuy rusheth most are such as are in greatest reputation amongst men as honour and glory insomuch that it is more moued at the good renowme honour and praise giuen to men in respect of the good things that are in them
treatise of these two affections The end of the seuenth dayes worke THE EIGHT dayes worke Of Iealousie and of the kindes thereof howe it may be either a vice or a vertue howe true zeale true iealousie and indignation proceede of loue of their natures and why these affections are giuen to man Chap. 57. ASER The holy Scripture applying it selfe to the capacitie of mans vnderstanding describeth mens affections oftentimes by those testimonies which their outward members affoorde conuincing them of vices rooted in their heart by the carriage of their eies of their eie-liddes of their forehead and of their whole countenance Which is to this ende chiefly that when they know that men may reade one in anothers face as it were in a Booke that which is couered and hidden in the heart they shoulde perswade themselues that God soundeth and seeth more easily the most secret thoughts of their heartes and that they can hide nothing from him Likewise the holy spirite to condescend to our rudenesse and to teach vs to knowe God by our selues not onely by our soule which we see not but also by our body which wee see speaketh often of his high infinite and incomprehensible maiestie as it were of a man attributing vnto him eies eares a nose a mouth armes legges feete hands a heart and bowelles Moreouer albeit this pure simple and eternal essence be in no wise passionated with affections yet the same heauenly word doth not only attribute vnto him wrath reuenge anger iealousie and other affections but doth oftentimes propound him vnto vs as an yrefull man hauing the face behauiour and whole countenance of one greatly stirred vp to wrath reuenge yea euen to great fury Which is done to this end both that by the knowledge which we may haue of the nature of these affections whereunto wee are enclined and of the effectes which they bring foorth and causes from whence they proceede wee shoulde meditate the same things to bee in God when wee offend him and knowe what rewarde wee are to looke for and also to teach vs that right rule of all our affections which wee haue in his diuine goodnesse Nowe if wee remember what hath beene declared vnto vs of the nature of Loue wee heard that true and pure loue was without iealousie and that this affection sprang of the loue of concupiscence and yet it was tolde vs yesterday that Iealousie was placed amongst the kindes of enuy Let vs then see what this affection is properly and whether all iealousie be vicious I vnderstand by Iealousie a feare which a man hath lest an other whome hee woulde not should enioy something This commeth to passe two wayes namely either because wee our selues woulde enioy it alone or else because we would haue some other to whom we wish the same thing to enioy it alone the reason heereof is because we iudge it hurtfull either to our selues or to those whome wee loue if others should enioy it As if the question were of some honour or of some other good which we would haue to our selues alone or for some one whome wee loue and should be greeued that an other enioyeth it and thereupon enuy him either because wee are afraide hee shall enioy it or because hee enioyeth it already heerein appeareth enuy and euill iealousie which bringeth with it great mischiefes For as Saint Iames saieth From whence are warres and contentions among you are they not hence euen of your lustes that fight in your members yee lust and haue not ye enuy and are iealous or haue indignation and can not obtaine ye fight and warre and g●t nothing Wherefore to auoide this enuy and euill iealousie wee must consider of what nature that Good is which stirreth vs vp to this affection For according to the nature thereof our iealousie may be either a vice or a vertue For if the question be of some Good thing which belongeth in such sort to mee alone or to any other whome I loue that none may enioy it except it be vniustly and to the dishonour of God it is no euill iealousie if I feare lest any shoulde abuse it or bee grieued when it falleth out so If it concerneth some body whome I l●●ue who is abused by another to the displeasure of God and to the dishonour and hurt of the party beloued I haue yet greater occasion to feare to bee greeued and euen to bee iealous both ouer my owne Good and ouer the good of the partie beloued And as I haue iust cause of Iealousie in this case in that thing which properly belongeth vnto mee so also I haue like occasion when an other vniustly enioyeth that Good which belongeth to him whome I loue and of whome I ought to bee carefull and be greeued when any reproch or wrong is offered vnto him As for example seeing the husband hath such an interest in his wife and the wife in her husband as no other eyther may or ought to haue the like both of them haue iust cause to beware that no other haue the fruition heereof but themselues to take the matter heauily if it fall out otherwise and to bee very much offended and full of indignation against him that shoulde attempt any such thing For that can not be done as not without the great dishonour and dammage of the parties so knit together so also not without the great dishonour of GOD whose lawe and couenant is thereby violated On the other side that mutuall loue which ought to be betwixt the husband and the wife doth binde them to desire and to procure the honour and profite eache of other and to keepe backe all dishonour and hurt that may befall them Wherefore both of them haue iust cause to bee offended with those that seeke to procure any blemish in this respect The like may bee saide of fathers mothers and children and of all that haue anie charge ouer others or that are linked together by friendship But on the other side a man must beware that he be not too suspicious and that hee carry not within himselfe matter of Iealousie and so torment himselfe and others without cause as likewise hee must bee very carefull that hee giue no occasion of Iealousie to any other And thus you see howe there may be a good iealousie notwithstanding that in this case it be mingled with loue and anger For Iealousie causeth the party that loueth to be angry with him by whome that thing which hee doeth loue receiueth any dishonour or detriment Therefore this anger commeth of loue which inciteth him to set himselfe against him that offendeth the thing beloued So that these affections are alwayes commendable arising of this cause and being ruled according to that Zeale and Iealousie which the holy Scripture attributeth vnto GOD in regarde of vs. For hee is called a iealous GOD not onely in regard of his honour and glory which hee will not
punishment and that findeth not a Iudge euen in him that committed it to take vengeance thereof by meanes of the affections which God hath placed in man to that ende Among which Shame occupieth a place which we ought well to consider of Concerning this affection there are some that are ashamed in regarde of some feare of dishonour of which there followeth no dammage or in respect of some griefe or perturbation of the soule arising of some thinges that seeme to bring some dishonour with them Forasmuch therefore as Shame is a feare of dishonour it is of great force in them that loue honour For the more they loue it the more doe they feare dishonour which is the contrary thereof as a very great euill And for this cause there is in Shame not onely a feare of villanie but indignation also after the committing of some fault For hee that is faulty chafeth and is angry with himselfe because of the dishonour hee receiueth through his offence And this kind of Shame is the simplest and lightest and may be called Blushing being very common especially in children and virgins Now for asmuch as herein the spirits withdraw themselues vnto the hart as vnto a center and presently as it were in the same instant returne backe againe the face is painted with a vermillion colour which is very pleasant and comely namely in that age and in those persons Therefore is this colour rightly called the colour of vertue For God hath placed this affection of shame in the nature of men to the end it should be vnto them as a bridle to stay them from committing vile things and as a Iudge and Reuenger to punish them after they haue done such things Therfore also there is yet another kind of shame more vehemēt which approcheth neare vnto the affection of anger and is mingled with wrath and feare For it is a motion of the heart in which he that feeleth himselfe guiltie of any dishonest crime or act is angry with himselfe for the same and punisheth and reuengeth himselfe vpon himselfe and withall feareth the iudgements of others and the rebuke and dishonour that may come vnto him for it For as we haue heard already God hath placed in the nature of man sundry affections of which some are sweete and pleasant to the end they should be vnto vs as it were spurres vnto vertue others are bitter and vnpleasaunt that they might bee vnto vs in steade of punishmentes and that the greefe which they bring might teach vs to knowe more cleerely what diuersitie there is betweene vertue and vice and what difference wee ought to put betweene good and euill deedes Therefore there is not a woorse thing in man nor any disease more dangerous to the soule then impudencie which is wholly contrarie to Shame and Blushing For whosoeuer is once past all Shame hee hath no care at all of his honour much lesse of the honour of GOD. Heereof it is that the holie Ghost by the Prophetes doeth greatly accuse the impudencie of the wicked saying vnto them by way of reproch that they had whoores foreheads and woulde not bee ashamed that they were impudent children and stiffe hearted and that they did glorie in their wickednesse after they had done euill in steade of being ashamed and amending their faults Nowe whereas wee sayde that Shame painteth the face with a vermilian colour wee are to knowe that the passions and affections of the soule breede great change in our bodies as they that mooue the spirits and the naturall heat by opening and shutting vp of the heart whereby the spirits are eyther inlarged or restrained Thus it commeth to passe that the colour of the face is changed it being a propertie of the heart to set in it certaine markes and signes of the affections that are in it as wee haue already heard Therefore doeth Shame paint the cheekes with rednesse because the danger that springeth of feare is of that nature that the heart standeth in neede of helpe to repell and driue it away namely of that heate that retireth backe vnto it Nowe forasmuch as there is perturbation in Shame by reason of the opinion and feare of dishonour and blame heate is drawen vp to the head and so from thence it is dispersed ouer the face And although Shame doeth not trouble the heart and minde so much as feare doeth yet doeth it confound the head and causeth it oftentimes to forget what it thought and was purposed to haue done As wee see it sometimes in very wise and skilfull men when they are to speake or to doe something before personages or companies whome they reuerence And this is incident for the most part to such as are most modest and to them that presume least of themselues who indeede can not heare their owne praises without shame and blushing such is their nature and modestie or else it is because their hearts are very litle which maketh them also fearefull Nowe although too much shamefastnesse when it is causelesse is woorthy of blame because it often keepeth them that are ouertaken therwith from doing many good things from imploying the giftes which they haue receiued of God as it becommeth them yet is it more praise-woorthy then impudency which as it maketh men altogether shameles brasenfaced so it vsually accompanieth proud arrogant persons For it is cleane contrary to modesty Seeing therfore we learn that shame is a feare of dishonour and blame and of doing that that might procure it we must take good heed that we iudge aright of that which is to bee accounted vile and dishonest and of that which may bring vnto vs honour or dishonour praise or dispraise For our nature being ful of darknes through sinne that raigneth in it our natural iudgment is not so intire and vpright as it ought to be to iudge well either of that which is truely honest and which bringeth with it honour and commendation or otherwise of the contrary vnto it Whereupon it commeth to passe that we oftentimes take one for another so light vpon that which we least sought for or desired Therfore let vs know and learne this that there is nothing honest but vertue nor any thing dishonest but vice and that as nothing is more beautifull and of greater renowme then vertue so nothing is more ilfauoured dishonourable and infamous then vice But forasmuch as there is great diuersitie of opinions what is to be accounted honest and dishonest what vertue what vice what praise what dispraise let vs learne to frame our iudgement out of the law and word of God which is the rule of all iustice and trueth Otherwise it will come to passe that we shal be oftener ashamed of well doing then of euill doing and of vertue then of vice which were a vile shame and such a one as that we ought to be greatly ashamed thereof For in well doing we must neuer
iudgementes of God whereby he punisheth men neuertheles these water-floods which we alwaies carie about vs ought to admonish and induce vs to feare him to call vpon him by prayer and day and night yea hourely to recommend our life vnto him seeing he can take it from vs by stopping our breath yea by a very small matter or at least depriue vs of all motion and sense as though our bodies had neither soule nor life in them but were like to poore dead carkases For the doing hereof hee needeth not to thunder or lighten from heauen against vs but onely to cause a small showre of water to powre downe from our head which is the highest the goodliest and most noble part of all the bodie and as it were the heauen of the litle world or if it please him to cause a fewe droppes onely to distill downe vpon the sinewes and ioyntes it will torment men more grieuously then if they were in some continuall torture as the daily songs of such gowtie persons doe testifie who are impatient and voyde of the feare of God Now besides this profitable aduertisement which euery one may take by that which hath bin here vttered wee ought on the other side to consider the prouidence and goodnesse of God towardes men in that as he holdeth vp in the aire and cloudes the water that hangeth ouer vs not suffering them to breake downe vpon vs all at once to ouerwhelme all the earth by them with all the beastes and other creatures conteined in it but distributeth them by good and iust measure so dealeth he with the humours that ascend vp continually and are kept in our braine where they haue their vessels to retaine them in as it were in sponges which yeeld foorth water according as they are either loosened or restrayned and closed together And as for that which is said of the testimony which we haue of the frailtie of our life appearing in the principal and most noble part of our bodie as the like was shewed vs before in that instruction which we learned by the office that God assigned to our lungs and to the passages allotted by him for the taking in end letting out of the aire so wee haue a very notable lesson in the consideration of the liuer and of the blood of which that is the forge and fountaine and of the distribution thereof into all the partes and members of the bodie by meanes of the veynes as wee hearde yesterday For as a man may iudge by outward appearance that the life of man consisteth in his breath and that he giueth vp both soule and life when hee dyeth as it were in giuing vp the last gaspe so it seemeth also that it is placed in the blood as that which goeth as it were with the blood so that when the blood is drawen out of a mans bodie the life also may seeme to bee drawne out therewithall Herevpon as the soule is oftentimes in holy Scripture put for the life because it giueth life to the bodie so it is also put for the blood and the blood likewise called soule because it is the instrument and meanes whereby the soule giueth life and when the Lorde forbiddeth his people to case the flesh with his soule that is the blood thereof Whereby his meaning is to teach men to abhorre the effusion of mans blood and therefore hee sayeth further I will require your blood euen the blood of your soules Wherefore hee that sheadeth blood doeth as much as if hee drewe the soule out of the bodie Nowe forasmuch as the blood is so necessarie vnto life wee are likewise to vnderstande that as it is either pure and sounde or vnpure and corrupted so is it disposed either to health or sicknesse and to life or death For as the naturall life of man consisteth especially in heate and moysture so a man may easily iudge that as euery thing is bred by meanes of them chiefely liuing and sensible creatures so nothing can bee preserued in this bodily life without these two qualities that are proper to the ayre and to blood as wee haue alreadie hearde But these qualities must bee so tempered that there bee no excesse on either side And for this cause GOD woulde haue all the humours to bee mingled together with the blood that so it might bee tempered as is requisite for the life of man For if it bee too hote and drie or too moyst and colde it cannot doe that office for the performance whereof it is ordayned but in steede of bringing health and life it will breede diseases and in the ende cause death For naturall death commeth onely of diseases amongest which olde age is to bee reckoned which is an incurable sicknesse that lasteth vntill death Neither doe diseases proceede but onely of the distemperature that is in mens bodies and in the humours of which they are compounded For as long as they are in a good moderate and proportionable temper and are distributed to all the partes of the bodie according as neede requireth so that none of them exceedeth then is there an equalitie in all the bodie which doeth not onely preserue it in life but in health and good disposition For there is the like concorde and harmonie betweene these humours that is betweene the partes of a good consort of musicke agreeing well together or of an instrument of musicke well tuned from which you shall heare nothing but pleasaunt melodie Whereas if all the partes thereof agree not well together there will bee no musicall harmonie but onely a very vnpleasant discorde The like may bee saide of all the concordes and discordes that may fall out in the humours of our bodies And therefore GOD had so tempered them in the first creation of man as was requisite so that hee woulde haue preserued him in a perpetuall life if by true obedience hee had alwayes beene knit and vnited vnto God his Creatour But since man fell at variance with God through sinne all this goodly concorde which God had placed not onely in mans bodie but also betweene the rest of his creatures hath been troubled and turned into discord by meanes of sinne So that all this goodly temperature and harmonie of the humours in which mans bodie was created was dissolued and broken asunder and that in such sort that it was neuer since sounde and perfect in any man of howe good constitution soeuer hee hath beene For euen in the best complexions there is alwayes some defect or excesse in some of the humours so that if there were no other cause yet no body coulde naturally bee immortall For alwayes in the ende the excesse or defect that is in it woulde cause it to decay and finally bring it to corruption But besides this there are so many other wantes and superfluities throughout the whole life of man whereby this euill alreadie become naturall is so much augmented that there die moe without
the cause that so fewe contemplate as they ought the forme and fashion of their beeing or that giue due glorie to him who daily bringeth them into the worlde by such woonderfull workemanship Neither is it possible that men shoulde giue such glorie to GOD as they ought except they esteeme all those workes which hee effecteth daily amongest them to be so many miracles woorthie admiration which way soeuer they turne their eies Moreouer let them knowe that what measure of knowledge soeuer they are able to get of his woorkes yet that which they doe knowe is very little yea almost nothing in regarde of that whereof they are ignorant euen in that which concerneth their creation and generation Nowe following that which wee haue already heard touching this matter we are to consider a maruailous prouidence of God in the similitude that is betweene the creature engendering and that which proceedeth from it Where by the way we may obserue this that there is greater resemblance in the Generation of plants then in that of liuing creatures and more in that of beasts then in that of men forasmuch as plants are void of imagination and that imagination which is in beasts is more firme and staied then that which is in men because our mindes are more floting and vnstable But it is woonderfull to consider what great similitude there is insomuch as we commonly see that the infirmities of some members in the parents are founde also in their children and that oftentimes they expresse their very lookes countenances and gesturs Which also may serue for a further confirmation of that which wee haue already touched concerning the agreement of euilles with the complexion and temperature of the humours of mens bodies Againe it appeareth by the strength or weakenesse that is founde to bee as well in children as in their fathers and mothers that the seede of which they are begotten descendeth not onelie from the braine as some haue thought but that it is also taken from all the other members and from all partes of the body And because it is a profitable superfluitie taken from the nourishment of the blood scattered throughout the whole body after the fourth digestion it hath peculiar vesselles in the body some to drawe it others to perfect and preserue it for generation and some to expell it out And as this expulsiue vertue is necessary in Generation on the behalfe of the male so in regarde of the female it is requisite that there shoulde be a vertue to containe and preserue and secondly to change mingle and temper it with the womans seede so farre foorth as shall bee expedient for the temperature of the whole bodie and of euery member thereof Besides there must bee another vertue to fashion into members all this matter mingled and tempered and to giue vnto them that figure and shape which agreeeth to euery one of them Lastly there is an other vertue requisite which shoulde driue out the childe after it is fashioned at the time which GOD hath appointed in nature for that purpose And these are all the partes with their offices which are to bee founde in the Generatiue power of the vegetatiue soule Nowe because there are so many sortes of them it is very meete that they shoulde haue sundrie places and diuerse instrumentes in the bodie for the exercise of them For this cause there are to serue all these offices sundrie partes and many members composed with woonderfull Arte and distinguished in most admirable fashion both with figures and qualities But our meaning is not to make any long particular narration both by reason of the matter which woulde bee very long as also because sinne hath made the Generation of man so full of shame that men can hardly speake of it or of those members that serue thereunto especially of one part of them without shame Neuerthelesse as before wee haue considered the counsaile and prouidence of God in that hee hath ioyned to man created to immortalitie that part wherein the light of his diuine wisedome shall shine the loue of God shall be feruent and righteousnesse shall dwell for euermore with the kitchin of mans body whose vse shall passe away after this life so wee must consider the cause why hee hath ioyned vnto this kitchin the Generatiue power and wherefore hee hath giuen it to man Let vs knowe then that as man was created for an other ende then plants and beastes so God hath giuen to him the power of Generation to an other ende then hee hath to them vpon whome it is bestowed onely for the preseruation of their kindes For it was especially giuen him because the Creatour of the whole worlde purposed to collect and gather together a perpetuall Church out of mankinde that is a companie of men begotten after this manner to bee dedicated and consecrated vnto him Therefore wee ought diligently to meditate and to thinke often vpon this woonderfull counsaile of GOD and to yeelde him praise in that hee hath manifested himselfe vnto vs and of this weake and corrupt masse of flesh hath assembled and culled out an euerlasting Church and in that hee aydeth nourisheth and preserueth vs yea is carefull ouer vs and heareth vs calling vpon him Neyther doeth hee onely preserue the whole course of nature for our sakes but also giueth himselfe vnto vs which are such benefites as exceede all the imagination and eloquence of man Wherefore wee ought so much the rather to awaken our mindes to consider them well and bee very much displeased with our selues because wee do● not so well as wee ought beholde this presence of GOD in that obscuritie and darkenesse wherein wee liue as also because wee are no more stirred vp to loue serue and honour him in regarde of that true and great loue wherewith hee loueth vs. But to goe forward with our matter of Generation wee must call to minde what wee heard before of the vse of the kidneis for the purging of blood in respect whereof wee call all that part of the body wherein they are seated by the name of Reines And by reason of the neerenesse that is betweene them and the seede vessels seruing for Generation which are many in number all that part is taken chiefely in the holy Scriptures for the seate and spring thereof and as it were for the seminary of mankinde Therefore it is written in the Hebrewes that Leui was yet in the loines of his father Abraham when Melchisedec met him And Moses speaking in the person of the Lorde of the promise made to Iacob sayeth Kings shall come out of thy loines Dauid also minding to shewe what knowledge God hath of men whome hee hath created saieth Thou hast possessed my reines thou hast couered mee in my mothers wombe And Iob declaring the selfe same thing more fully and speaking of the seed whereof he was begotten after hee had saide Hast thou not powred mee out as milke
no more after that fashion so hee is in an estate that differeth much from the former So fareth it with man when hee is to depart out of the life of this worlde as if hee were to bee deliuered of it in childbirth for another life For hee dieth in regarde of this life to the ende he may liue another life which as farre excelleth this as this is better then the other which hee enioyed before in his mothers bellie yea it is so much the better of higher price in that the length of time of this second and blessed life shal be eternall and endles Moreouer as a childe commeth out when hee is borne so doth a man when he dieth And in comming forth both of them enter into a new and vnacquainted light into a place where they finde all things much altered and farre differing from those which they vsed to haue in their other kind of liuing For which cause both the one the other being troubled and scared with this nouelty are vnwilling to come forth of their clapper to forsake their closet were it not that they are vrged constrained thereunto by the arte lawes rights of nature wherby God hath better prouided for our affaires then wee our selues could conceiue or cōprehend both in our natiuity life also in our death The ignorance whereof causeth our spirit to abhorre the departure out of this life in regard of this great chāge that is therein because it knoweth not what good is brought to it thereby no more then the litle child knoweth wherefore he is borne into the world or what he shall finde there And therefore albeit nature presseth to come foorth neuerthelesse according to that sense which it can haue it weepeth by and by after it is borne as if it were fallen into some great inconuenience and that some great euil were fallen vnto it as we doe also at our death for the cause before alleged not considering that it is our second and better birth Thus you see what I haue thought requisite to be noted in the discourse of our generation and to morow God willing we must looke into the life and death of mans bodie But it shall not be without profite if first we speake somewhat of the causes why God created man naked and with lesse defence for himselfe then hee did other liuing creatures It belongeth then to thee ASER to speake of this matter The end of the ninth dayes worke THE TENTH dayes worke Why God created man naked and with lesse naturall defence then hee did all other liuing creatures how many wayes he recompenceth this nakednes of the generall beautie of the whole bodie of man ioyned with profit and commoditie Chap. 73. ASER As often as men shall consider in such sort as becommeth them that they are borne men and not brute beasts they wil be suffciētly admonished of the ciuil and sociable nature in which God hath created them of that humanitie for which he hath endued them with such a nature so that they wil keepe them selues from being transformed into sauage cruell beasts to hurt one another as commonly they do Truly it is not without some great and notable cause that among al liuing creatures there is not one to be found that hath a more delicate tender skin lesse furnished with couerings for the defence thereof then man hath considering that God himselfe created him as his principall woorke amongest all visible creatures and made him as it were Lorde of the whole worlde And yet hee is of that nature that the skinne wherewith he is clothed is not so sufficient a garment for him as is necessary to keep him from heat cold from other inconueniences that might happen vnto him except he be clad with some other couering then that which he bringeth frō his mothers belly For hee neither hath feathers as birds haue nor wooll as sheepe haue nor bristles as swine haue neither yet any skin or hide so hard nor so well couered and furnished with haire as foxes wolues beares bulls and other foure footed beasts haue Neither hath he any skales as fishes haue nor any shells as cockles sea creuisses tortoises and such other creatures haue But we haue foure things to consider of touching this point The first is that if man had not sinned after that God by creation had in great larges made him partaker of his heauenly giftes and graces he should not haue bene subiect to the want either of garments or of any such like thing whereunto he is nowe after a sort brought in subiection at leastwise he should haue had all these things without paine and griefe For this cause it is sayd in Genesis that after our first parents had transgressed the ordinance of God by eating of the forbidden fruite they knewe that they were naked and couered themselues with leaues And for a punishment of their offence it was sayd vnto them that they should eate their bread in the sweate of their face vnder which worde of bread was comprehended all things whereof they stood in neede for the maintenance preseruation of their life as we vnderstand it in that prayer which we dayly make to God when wee demaund of him our dayly bread The second point which we ought to note in this matter touching the nakednes of man is this that God would admonish him not onely by the whole frame and composition of his body and of all his members but also by his very skinne that he created him to liue in company and felowship and in peace with those of his owne kinde to helpe all and to hurt none Therefore hee did not create him with naturall weapons as he did other liuing creatures vnto whome he gaue all things necessary for their defence preseruation For some of them haue strength and weapons by nature to resist their enemies others wanting this haue swiftnes to conuey themselues out of all dangers and some wanting both these haue yet subtiltie places of refuge to defend themselues withall As for man God hath placed him in this world vnarmed and naked so that if men be disposed to hurt and to warre one vpon another they must deforme themselues and borowe weapons from others wherby they transforme themselues become monstrous as though they were transfigured into sauage beasts into monsters For they haue not as hath bene said hard strong hydes as some brute beasts haue neither prickles darts in them as Hedge-hogs and Porcupines haue Neither are their feete hands nailes like to the hoofes of Horses Asses Mules or to the tallents of birds that liue by praye or to the pawes of wild beasts neither yet are their teeth like to theirs God hath not giuen them sharp bils like to birds neither hath he armed them with stings or with venim as he hath done venimous beasts True it is that man hath
woman is of short continuance and full of trouble He shooteth forth as a flowre and is cut downe he vanisheth also as a shadow and continueth not Nowe it is certaine that if we looke to the causes of the life death of men layd downe by vs we shal thinke that all this is done naturally that there is a certaine order of nature vnto which we must all be subiect and a naturall necessitie which none can eschew But wee see that Moses mounteth aloft and searcheth higher for the cause for hee seekth it in God and in his determination yea in his wrath conceiued against our sinnes Therefore the children and seruants of God that haue bene instructed in his worde doe not onely consider of that in death which prophane men beholde there but they mount vp euen to this highest cause and behold there the wrath of God against sinne against all mankinde for the same So that wee may knowe by that whith hath bene sayd what difference there is betweene humane and naturall Philosophie and that which is diuine and supernaturall and wherein they deceiue themselues that stay altogether in naturall Philosphie And hereby also wee may learne the cause why so many become Atheists and Epicures thereby whereas it should serue them in place of steps and degrees to cause them to ascend vp to that Philosophie that is supernaturall and heauenly For their noses are altogether poring in this base kitchin of which we haue intreated in our former discourses as though God had not created men for another life and end then hee hath done beasts Whereupon we may imagine what true ioye and consolation they can haue I say not only in death but also throughout their whole life seeing their life wil they nill they must passe through so many dangers and miseries For whether they will or no they must be subiect to this sentence passed from God against all mankinde in the person of our first parents when hee sayd to Adam Cursed is the earth for thy sake in sorow shalt thou eate of it all the daies of thy life Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee and thou shalt eate the herbe of the fielde In the sweate of thy face shalt thou eate bread till thou returne to the earth for out of it wast thou taken because thou art dust to dust shalt thou returne Therefore Eliphaz sayth in the booke of Iob that miserie proceedeth not out of the dust that affliction buddeth not out of the earth Which is asmuch to say as that the cause of barrennes of ground proceedeth not from the earth but from the sinne of man Wherefore men cannot lay the blame vpon any other beside themselues as being the cause of all the euils which they suffer because they beare the matter of them in themselues Now if any thinke that this sentence pronounced by God against all mankinde is not so much executed vpon the wicked that are without God as vpon others because wee see commonly that they are richest liue in greatest ease in pleasures in delightes we must know that they are not therefore exempted from those miseries whereunto the life of man is subiect and which are all comprehended vnder this sweate of the face mentioned in the holy Scriptures For there is not one of them to be found that can so saue himselfe but that he hath alwayes his part portion in these things And if we could consider wel the whole course of their life who seeme to be the happiest amongst them and had the patience to waite vntill the end of their race we should still finde by experience the trueth of that we speake of But let vs goe on with our speeches touching the causes of the length and shortnes of this bodily life and of naturall death as also of that which is violent whereof wee haue not yet spoken Also let vs consider of the things that are chiefly required for the vpholding of this bodily life and without which it could not consist This then shall be the matter subiect of which thou ARAM shalt take vpon thee to discourse Of the causes generally of the length and shortnes of bodily life of naturall and of violent death in what manner the life of man consisteth in his breath of the principall things required to life and without which it cannot be of the difference betwixt the life of men the life of beasts of the image of the spirituall death in the corporall of the true comfort which we ought to haue therein Chap. 75. ARAM. This lawe was layde vpon nature by GOD the Creator thereof that the things which it should bring forth in this inferiour world should haue small beginnings at the first and after growe by litle and litle when they were come to their full greatnes should stand a while at a stay and then fall by litle and litle and returne to their originall and first beginning as we see a patterne hereof and an example twise a day in the Ocean sea For after it is mounted vp to the highest and hath spread it selfe in length and breadth as much as it may it returneth againe vnto the fountaine and wombe from whence it came and there closeth vp it selfe For God hath compassed it with certaine bounds beyond which it cannot passe So likewise euery thing hath his course and set time of continuance neither doe we see any thing vnder the Moone either of the workes of God or of the inuentions of men which keepeth not this course And so is it with the body which being created by litle and litle decayeth after the same maner as it were by the same degrees by which it mounted vpward And that which we see in euery particular body the same we perceiue to be in the whole frame and course of the world in all the estates thereof For the world hath had his infancie next his youth then his mans estate and now he is in his olde-age For we see howe all things decline dayly and continually waxe worse and worse as it were approching to their end In like maner if we would consider the course and estate of all Common-wealths Principalities Kingdomes and Empires and of all the greatest and chiefest Monarchies that euer were from the creation of the world we should finde that all of them were very small and weake in their beginnings and that afterwards they increased and mounted vp vntill they came to their highest degrees and after they had attained thither they descended fell by litle and litle continually vntill in the ende they were wholy ruinated Nowe the first causes of all these things proceeding from God and from his eternall counsell we know that the second causes are in the nature of euery thing that hath beginning and must end and chiefly in the nature of mens bodies By our formmer speech wee haue learned already howe
mainteineth that the vegetatiue and sensitiue soule is no other thing then the temperament of the liuer and of the heart which are assigned to be the seats and chiefe instruments of the nourishing and vitall power and vertue And as for the animall or reasonable power whose seat is commonly placed in the braine we haue alreadie shewed his opinion Now of this part there are many euen of them who greatly magnifie it that are not yet well resolued whether they ought to take it for the animal spirit or for the temperament or for an incorporeall nature that commeth elswhere then from the body Aristotle he calleth the soule by a new Greeke name that signifieth asmuch as a perpetuall motion and sayth that it proceedeth from a fift nature and beginning which he calleth Heauen But he speaketh not so plainly that a man may iudge by his words what he thinketh of the reasonable soule in man whether it be mortall or immortall Neuerthelesse he confesseth that there is great difference betweene that power of the soule which we call more specially by the name of spirite and betweene the other twaine which he calleth the Nutritiue and Sensitiue powers For he vseth this worde Powers and affirmeth that these two first proceede onely from the bodie and are bredde there and that the Vegetatiue soule and power is more in the seede and burden then the Sensitiue But as for the third hee saieth plainely that it onely commeth from without els-where and that this onely is diuine not communicating her action with any corporall action Thus we see sufficient agreement betweene the Philosophers and the Phisitions concerning the Vegetatiue and Sensitiue soule or power but there is not so good accord about the reasonable soule and power Yea many great Diuines Doctors agree with them in the two first points For this cause Occam saith plainly that there are two distinct soules in man the one reasonable the other sensuall the reason is because it is manifest that the Sensitiue soule hath no actions but instrumentall that is to say by meanes of those instruments whereby shee exerciseth her actions and from which she hath them Whereupon he concludeth that this sensuall soule seemeth to haue her originall and generation from the seede and that it is either the temperament or some facultie and power in the bodie He confirmeth this opinion by another argument taken from the contrarie appetites and desires of the reasonable and sensuall soule out of which he draweth this conclusion That it is very likely that these are two distinct substances because it seemeth inconuenient in one and the same nature not diuided or distinguished to place appetites so wholly contrary each to other Hee addeth farther that it is a thing very agreeable to nature that euery liuing creature shoulde beget his like therefore man begetteth man like himselfe at leastwise in respect of the Sensitiue soule if not of the reasonable soule Whereupon it followeth that the Vegetatiue and Sensitiue soule proceede from the nature of the seede The Platonicall Philosophers were of opinion that soules were bred in heauen and were taken out of the diuine nature as a portion thereof and that there they were instructed and adorned with sundry sciences with knowledge and vertue and that afterwarde beeing giuen of God they descended from thence into the bodies of men as into stinking filthy and contagious prisons Whereof it followed that through the infection of these prisons they were corrupted by euill affections as it were with the filthinesse of them So that they forgate all those gifts and celestial vertues where with they had been endued and adorned in their first birth and which they had brought with them And being thus detained as prisoners in this darke and filthy prison they could no more vse all those goodly gifts but onely so farre foorth as they were taught and instructed againe by doctrine which in respect of them may be compared to a light brought to prisoners kept in a darke dungeon to light refresh them For this cause those that were of this opinion affirmed that the knowledge of men is but a remembrance and calling againe to minde of that which their soules had learned and did know in heauen at their first birth before they entred into their bodies according as we heard euen now For being descended into this base and obscure prison and hauing forgotten that which they knew their memories are rubbed vp by doctrine and instruction bestowed vpon them which kindleth againe these celestiall sparkles of their mind and portions of the diuine fire by inflaming them and causing them to burne that were almost vtterly quenched Wherupon like Philosophers they conclude that soules so infected by descending and entring into their bodies cannot returne againe nor be receiued into heauen and into the place assigned for the blessed spirits vnlesse they returne pure and cleane decked with the selfe-same ornaments wherwith they were adorned at their first birth And this they say may bee wrought by good instruction by vertue by good workes or otherwise they say they haue sundry purgings being separated from their bodies Some diuines among the Grecians haue followed at least wise in some part the opinion of these philosophers by name Origen of whom S. August thus writeth But we may marueile much more that some beleeuing with vs that there is but one only beginning of all things that no nature which is not God can haue any being but from the Creator neuertheles would not beleue rightly and simply this point of the creation of the world that is so good and simple namely that God creating all those good thinges that were after him although they were not the same that God is notwithstanding they were al good But they say that the soules not being parts of God but made of God sinned in departing from the Lorde and so by sundrie degrees according to to the diuersitie of sinnes from the heauens vnto the earth haue merited sundry sortes of bodies to be as it were their chaines and fetters This say they is the world and this was the cause of making the worlde not to the ende that the good things might be created but that euill things might be stayed and repressed Of this opinion is Origen who is worthily to be blamed These are the very wordes of this great Doctor of the Church And by that which followeth in the same place hee plainely confuteth Origens errour who in his first booke of Beginnings writeth that things without bodies were first made of God and that amongst spirituall things our spirites or mindes were also created which declining from their estate and dignitie were made or named soules of which the Greeke worde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth as it were to grow colde and to decline from a better and more diuine estate beeing so called because it seemeth that the spirite or mind is waxen cold fallen
creatures forged by them but men through ignoraunce haue taken them in a wrong sence and so reaped small profite by them No marueile then if this hath happened both to Philosophers and Poets in their doctrine and manner of teaching seeing there are so manie that profite so little by the doctrine of the holie Scriptures themselues and by the studie thereof For were there euer any Heretikes that did not wrest the sence of manie places of Scripture to make them serue for their heresies And doe wee not dayly see the like in all seducers and false prophetes It is verie certayne that there were neuer anie so absurde and straunge heresies which the fauourers of them haue not laboured to mainteyne by the holy Scriptures themselues But to returne to our purpose what meaning soeuer the Authors and inuenters of such things had their doctrine was so vnderstood that manie helde this opinion that mens soules passed from bodie to bodie as we haue heard Insomuch that this errour howe grosse soeuer it were came not onelie to the Iewes but to the Christians also who boast of true religion and of the authoritie and knowledge of the holy Scriptures I speake not of the Manichees auncient Heretikes who were open mainteiners of this opinion But what shall wee say of them who not onely haue their braines infected with this follie but which is woorse imagine they can confirme and prooue it by testimonies out of the worde of God As where it is reported that when Herode hearde the fame of Christ Iesus spread throughout all Iudea hee sayde This is Iohn Baptist hee is risen againe from the dead and therefore great woorkes are wrought by him And Saint Luke sayeth expressely That Herode doubted because that it was sayde of some that Iohn was risen againe from the dead and of some that Elias had appeared and of some that one of the olde Prophets was risen againe We reade likewise that when Iesus Christ demaunded of his disciples saying Whome doe men say that I the Sonne of man am they answered Some say Iohn Baptist and some Elias others Ieremias or one of the Prophets and some that one of the olde Prophetsis risen againe A man my iudge by these speeches that not onelie Herode was tainted with this Pythagoricall and Platonicall opinion but also that it was very common among the Iewes with whome hee conuersed and whose religion hee followed at least in part and in outwarde shewe For Iesus Christ was knowen well enough in Iudea and in Galilee and amongst all the Iewes as it appeareth by the testimonie of the Euangelists They knewe his kinred according to the flesh and coulde tell that he was brought vp in Nazareth in the countrey of Galilee for which cause they called him him a Galilean a Nazarean a Carpenter the sonne of a Carpenter and the sonne of Ioseph and Marie They saide that they knewe his brethren and sisters whereby according to the Hebrewe manner of speaking they meant his cousins Neeces and his kinred taking occasion thereby to despise and reiect him But on the other side many seeing the woorkes and miracles which hee wrought were constrayned to passe farther euen Herode himselfe hearing onely the fame that went of him throughout the countrey so that some tooke him to bee that Christ others to be some great Prophet And of them that helde him for a Prophet it appeareth by those sundry opinions that were among the people that they did not thinke him to bee a Prophet borne at that time but that some one of the olde Prophets was risen againe in him not in bodie but in spirite For they knewe well whence hee issued in respect of his bodie as that which was commonly knowen throughout the countrey Therefore it is easie to iudge that they spake of resurrection in regarde of the soule as the skilfullest Interpreters expounde these places referring these speeches of Herode and of the people vnto that Pythagoricall opinion of the transmigration of soules from bodie to bodie For according thereunto those soules that had behaued themselues vertuously in their first bodies in which they dwelt were sent into other more honourable bodies endued with greater giftes of God according to their deseruing Nowe because Saint Iohn the Baptist had not the gift of miracles annexed to his Ministerie neyther did woorke anie all his life time it might bee thought that this gaue occasion to Herode to thinke thus of him that beeing risen againe from the dead after a Pythagoricall manner hee had this gift and vertue added vnto his former graces that so he might haue the greater authoritie Neither ought wee to thinke it verie strange if a great part of the Iewes were infected with manie foolish and naughtie opinions seeing they were not onely corruptly instructed by their teachers but also had sectes amongst them there which plainely denied the resurrection of the bodie the immortalitie of soules and that there was any Angel or spirite Therefore wee see their great brutishnesse who woulde ground their transmigration vpon that which is saide in the Scriptures touching the opinion of the Iewes in this point which notwithstanding is openly reprehended and condemned by the selfe-same worde of GOD. True it is that the ignorance of the true sense thereof gaue occasion to many to fall into such dreames For the Lorde speaking thus by Malachie Beholde I will sende you Elijah the Prophet before the comming of the great and fearefull day of the Lorde the Iewes vnderstood this place diuersly Some of them thought that the auncient Prophet Elias who was rapt vp into heauen shoulde be sent againe in proper person others vnderstoode it onely of the transmigration of his soule and spirite into an other body For this cause they asked of Iohn Baptist whether hee were Elias but Iesus Christ himselfe expounded those wordes of Malachy and declared vnto the Iewes that Iohn Baptist was that Elias which should come and that although hee were come yet they did not knowe him For when he spake so of him hee meant not that hee was the very person of Elias in body and soule or that the naturall soule and spirite of Elias was entred into his body but his meaning was according as the Angel spake to Zachary when he tolde him of the Natiuitie of Saint Iohn his sonne saying He shall be filled with the holy Ghost euen from his mothers wombe And many of the children of Israel shall he turne to their Lorde God For he shall go before him in the spirite and power of Elias A man may easily iudge by these words that he meant not to say that the naturall spirite of Elias shoulde enter into the body of Saint Iohn Baptist but that God would giue a spirite adourned with such giftes and spirituall graces and with such zeale and constancie as he gaue long before to Elias Therefore he addeth power vnto spirite thereby
deny nothing of all this but they say onely that God did then establish this order nowe spoken of which hee daily continueth in the generation of man I omit heere many other opinions touching this matter which come not so neere vnto the trueth namely a great controuersie betweene the Doctors in Diuinitie and in Physicke touching the vegetatiue and sensitiue soule and the time when the burthen beginneth to bee nourished and to haue sence thereby considering that it is a great deale better to inquire of these things to sobrietie and to leaue the resolution to GOD who knoweth that which is hidde from vs then by vaine questions and curious disputations to thinke to determine of the matter according to trueth and to the contentation of euery one For as we haue before touched we can knowe nothing either of the generation or original or of the substance and nature of our soule or of the immortalitie thereof but onely by those testimonies which by the effects it aftoordeth vnto vs and which God setteth downe in his word Wherefore according to that which hath beene already handled wee must distinguish those things vnto which our mindes may in some sort reach and of which wee may haue some knowledge from them that are so hidden from vs that wee can not knowe or iudge of any thing but like blinde men by groping and gessing This is a matter then of which wee must speake very soberly and with great reuerence of God contenting our selues with that which it pleaseth him to make knowne vnto vs by the meanes aforesaid and goe no further by desiring to knowe that which wee can not conceiue or comprehend vntill such time as God himselfe shall giue vs more ample and cleere knowledge thereof And I suppose wee shall not erre if wee say the like touching the question propounded by vs in the beginning of our speech about this matter namely of the meanes by which the reasonable soule shoulde bee infected with originall sinne seeing it is not engendered of that corrupt seede of which the bodie is bredde Let it then suffice vs to knowe that albeit the soule can not be defiled with sinne as it is created of God yet as God created all mankinde in Adam so when he fell all the rest of the worlde fell with him and in him was bereaued both of originall iustice and of other gifts which he lost by his fall So that albeit mens soules are created and produced of God pure and entire yet they keepe not that puritie stil neither can they be the soules of men and ioyned vnto their bodies and so become members of mankinde in them with any other condition then with that into which the first Father brought all his children by his sinne as we haue before touched Wherefore we must not search for the cause of that original sinne wherewith they are infected either in their creation because they are created by God of a diuine and immortall essence or in the generation of the body and in that seede of which it is engendred as if the soule took her originall infection together with the body frō the seede Moreouer we must not as the Pythagoreans do search for the corruption of soules in their entrance and coniunction with their bodies as if they receiued it from them but we must seeke it in that blot of sinne vnto which the whole race of mākind was made subiect through the fall corruption of the first stocke and in that decree of God whereby hee hath condemned all mankinde by his iust iudgement without any further enquirie after the meanes and manner how it came to passe For this cause Saint Paul doth bring vs backe to this consideration when in propounding vnto vs the first stock of mankind he saith that by one man sinne entred into the world and by sinne death And then hee propounded vnto vs this stocke of sinne so on the contrary side he propoudeth to vs the stock of iustice and righteousnesse namely Christ Iesus the new man who is an other stocke of mankinde regenerated renewed and reformed after the image of GOD. Therefore hee saieth that as by the disobedience of one man many were made sinners so by the obedience of one many are made righteous Now as humane Philosopie knoweth not either the corruption of all mankinde such as it is or the fountaine thereof so it is ignorant of the meanes whereby it must bee restored neither knoweth it that the wound is so great and mortall as that it cannot be cured but onely by the hand of God For which cause hee was to giue vs his owne sonne to be the Surgion and Physicion The ignorance heereof is the cause why humane Philosophie so greatly magnifieth the nobilitie and excellencie of the soule as it is well worthy being considered in the first nature in which it was created But the sequele of this matter wee will heare of thee ARAM. Of those powers and properties which the soule of man hath common with the soule of beastes of those powers and vertues which are proper and peculiar to it selfe according to the Philosophers of the difference and agreement that is betweene humane philosophie and Christian doctrine touching these things Chap. 87. ARAM Amongst the heathen they that were most ancient and neerest to the true Church of God and conuersed most with his seruants had greater knowledge and better vnderstanding of the nature of God of Angelles and of mens soules and of other matters belonging to true religion then they that were farthest off and succeeded latest after the other For the farther off that the doctrine of heauenly things was drawne from the fountaine of it the more hath it beene altered and corrupted both by ignorance ouerwhelming it and by false vnderstanding of it as also because euery one hath added to and taken away what seemed him best and that either to boast themselues that they may seeme some body or to couer their thefts that none might knowe from whence that thing was first taken and borrowed that so they might bee thought to bee the first members thereof or lastly to please and satisfie the curiositie and vanitie of the minde of man No maruell therefore if there were heathen Philosophers among the ancients who beleeued and taught many things agreeable to the worde of God and if there be now some amongst vs who boast of their study in philosophie and yet haue no part of that first innocencie and puritie but haue their mindes filled with strange opinions contrary to all reason and trueth We see wel enough by experience what impietie raigneth in this our age For there are an infinite number to be founde of whose religion no man can iudge except it be heerein that they thinke there is none at all and therefore mocke at all religion what shewe soeuer they make to the contrary But I knowe not why they shoulde not blush for shame when they
heare from heathen Philosophers so many goodly instructions as they haue left vs concerning the nature and immortalitie of the soule It is true that the reason of man cannot of it selfe contemplate the soule in her first perfect nature in which it was created but it doth consider of it as it is at this present and yet as though it were verie sound Whereupon the Philosophers greatly magnifie the nobilitie and excellencie thereof Therefore when they are to consider of those points vpon which they ground the powers and vertues of the soule for the first they take the vegetatiue vertue which it hath common not onely with the beasts but also with the plants and this comprehendeth three other faculties vnderneath it namely the vertue of nourishing secondly of encreasing lastly of procreation as it hath bene already declared vnto vs. This vertue with the rest that are comprehended vnderneath it is the basest most earthy and vilest of them all besides that it followeth the sensitiue vertue which may be referred aswell to the internall as to the externall senses So that we may diuide it into two parts and more properly call that the sensitiue vertue which the soule hath in taking knowledge of corporall things by corporall senses and by their vse in the body The other part that belongeth to the internall senses may more specially be called the cogitatiue vertue And because these two powers serue to encrease knowledge and vnderstanding they are as it were the fountaine thereof or rather helps and instruments The Astronomers who referre all to the vertue of the starres and planets place the influence of the vegetatiue power with the parts of it vnder the Moone of which the soule as they say receiueth it the other two parts of the sensitiue power of which I spake euen now they place vnder the Sunne as they doe the fourth which is the will and vertue of desiring vnder the planet Venus The fift which is called the angry faculty giuing heart courage to a man and moouing him to wrath vnder the planet Mars Then for the sixt they place the vertue that giueth motion from one place to another For the seuenth that which the Physicians call the vitall vertue and others the spirituall because it conteineth vnder it the power of respiration and both these are attributed to the same because it is a propertie of the sensitiue power to moue and breathe Now all these powers of the soule are common to man with beasts or at least wise there is no great difference But these which now follow are proper and peculiar vnto him namely the reasonable power of which the other that ensue are kindes of which number the Philosophers or Astronomers place in the first ranke the vertue of speech where by the soule expresseth her conceits thoughts affections And although all mē vse northe same words to vtter their thoughts ech to other by reason of the diuersitie of languages that is amongst them notwithstanding as the things which they vnderstand conceiue and by which they are moued to speake are al of one substance and nature amongst all nations so all the conceits and affections of men which are signified by their language are alike in their soule and minde where they are written and ingrauen This vertue they attribute to Mercurie as the other that followeth to Iupiter which they call the practicke and actiue vertue whereby a man that hath his will at libertie doeth by counsaile and setled reason exercise and bring to passe through arte prudence and wisedome those things of which he hath sure knowledge For it is not enough to haue the contemplatiue vertue vnles the actiue also be ioined vnto it to declare it by effect Thus you see where they place free will which comprehendeth vnder it first election then action which is the practicke that followeth it And because the practicke dependeth of the theoricke which is the speculatiue and contemplatiue vertue and goeth before the actiue vertue therfore they ioyne this to that and so referre it to the planet of Saturne which is melancholicke And this is that vertue of the soule whereby man hath vnderstanding knowlege wisedome it comprehendeth the seats of such things as the minde is able to vnderstand and comprehend as also those generall rules and principles which it must afterward bring into vse and practise For this cause this speculatiue vertue must of necessitie go before the actiue because the practike is not very certain and sure without the theorike Afterward followeth that which they call the pollitike vertue which hath for her subiect al morall philosophie They vnderstand by this vertue of the soule that whereby a prudent wise and well experienced man moderateth his naughty desires pernicious affections through his vertue wherby he declareth by practise and setled reason that vertue goodnes which is requisit in the publike societie of men that not onely in his priuate behauiour but also in his publike affaires The principall vertues contained vnderneath it are prudence iustice fortitude and temperance which are commonly called cardinall vertues because they are chief containe vnder euery one of them many other vertues which depend of them as branches do of their stock He is accompted a ciuil good man a iust that hath this vertue which is diuided into sundry kinds according to the diuersity of estats that are in common societie For it is sufficient for a priuate person to haue so much of it as whereby he may know how to guide himselfe honestly according to his estate If he be a father of a family he hath need of that prudēce skil which is necessary for the gouernment of his house If he haue any publicke charge concerning ciuil affaires it is needful for him to haue that art skil and those vertues without which he cannot wel execute his office according to that place degree in which he is set For if he occupieth the roume of a Lawier or Counsailour at the Law he must haue skill and knowledge of the lawes If he be a captaine or souldier he must be skilful in military discipline If he be a iudge magistrate it is necessary likewise that he vnderstand what belongeth to his office If he be a diuine and pastour in the Church the science of Diuinitie which is the knowlege of the holy scriptures is necessary for him not only so much as is requisit for his owne saluation but also that he may be able to instruct others and to direct them in those things that appertaine to religion Besides to al these vertues they adde the heroicall vertue which is no vulgar common vertue but very rare and excellent if I may so speak rather diuine then humane In regard wherof they that were endued with this vertue among the Heathen were placed in a ranke degree by themselues betweene
recouery neither was any knowen that hath returned from the graue For we were borne at all aduenture and wee shall be heereafter as though wee had neuer beene for the breath is a smoke in the nosethrilles and the woordes as a sparke raised out of our hearts Which being extinguished the body is turned into ashes and the spirite vanisheth as the soft ayre Our life shall passe away as the trace of a cloude and come to naught as the mist that is driuen away with the beames of the Sunne and cast downe with the heate thereof Our name also shall be forgotten in time and no man shall haue our woorkes in remembrance For our time is as a shadowe that passeth away and after our ende there is no returning for it is fast sealed so that no man commeth againe Come therefore let vs enioy the pleasures that are present and let vs cheerfully vse the creatures as in youth Let vs fill our selues with costly wine ointments and let not the floure of life passe by vs. I omit other speeches of a voluptuous wicked vniust life which they purpose to lead exercising al iniustice violence cruelty without al regard had to any right or iustice either to poore or rich yong or old but chiefly against the seruants of God who approue not their kind of life but reproue condemne it Therefore it is said after al the discourse that they imagined such things and went astray For their owne wickednes blinded them They do not vnderstand the mysteries of God neither hope for the reward of righteousnes nor can discerne the honor of the soules that are faultlesse For God created man without corruption and made him after the image of his owne likenesse Neuerthelesse through enuy of the deuill came death into the world and they that hold of his side proue it But the soules of the righteous are in the hands of God and no torment shall touch them In the sight of the vnwise they appeared to die and their end was thought grieuous and their departing from vs destruction but they are in peace Wee see then that these men go no farther then they can see with their bodily senses and because they see that man liueth by breathing and cannot liue without and that hee dyeth when his breath faileth they thinke that the soule of man is but a litle winde and breath and so is scattered and vanisheth away as it were winde and breath or as a cloude in the ayre The same iudgement they are of in regard of the blood because life leaueth the body with the blood as if it had no other soule but the blood or breath And forasmuch as the eye discerneth no difference betweene men and beasts in death they iudge also that there is no difference betweene their soules But if they be resolued to giue credit to nothing but to their corporall senses and in death consider only what difference there is betweene men and beasts they wil not beleeue that either beasts or men haue any soule at all that giueth them life because they see nothing but the body onely And then by the like reason we must conclude that not onely the whole man is no other thing but this body which we see but also that there is nothing in all the world but that which may bee seene by the eyes and perceiued by the other senses and so all that which we haue not seene and knowen by them shal be nothing Which being so men shal differ nothing from beasts as indeed we can say no better of these men For beastes thinke of nothing but that which they beholde and perceiue by their senses and goe no further which is so farre from all science and discipline and from all iudgement of man as nothing can be more Therefore they that beleeue nothing but their corporall senses deserue to be compared not onely to little children or to fooles who when they see pictures or their face in a glasse suppose they are liuing men because they goe no farther then they see but euen to the brute beastes who haue lesse sense and vnderstanding then children It is woonderfull to consider howe men take such great pleasure paines to become brutish For if they doe but see a smoke come out of a place they will iudge that there is some fire within although they behold it not and if they smell any ill sauour their nose will tell them that there is some place infected or some carion lying not farre off albeit they see it not What is the cause then that when by their senses they perceiue somewhat more in men then in beastes they are not induced thereby to thinke that of necessitie there must be some what within them which causeth them to differ much from beasts Which is not by reason of the bodie but of the soule that is not seene but onely by her actions workes and effects Whereupon it followeth that if their actions differ from the actions of that soule whereby beastes liue the cause also from which they proceed must needes differ and so consequently that there is great difference betwixt the soule of men and the soule of beastes For let them consider onely the diuersitie of artes which man exerciseth with his hands and the varietie of so many wittie and woonderfull workes as are wrought by him which cannot proceede but from a great spirite and from a passing excellent nature the like whereof is not to bee seene in beastes or in anie thing they can doe Besides doe they not see how the spirite of man discourseth throughout all nature what reason is in him and howe his speech followeth reason which are such things as haue a certaine vertue and the image of a diuine spirite shining in them Wherefore albeeit wee shoulde make man wholly like to a beast by reason of his bodie both in regarde of his birth and death yet wee must needes confesse that hee is of a farre more excellent nature in respect of that great and manifest difference which wee see is in his soule If then the soule of man bee mortall as well as that of beastes to what purpose serue those graces which it hath aboue the other and from what fountaine shall wee say they flowe in it and to what ende were they giuen vnto it But for this time I will leaue these Atheists hoping that to morowe wee will not leaue any one naturall reason able to vrge them in their demnable opinion which shal not bee laide out at large And I demaund of them that haue anie taste of the holy Scriptures and yet seeme to doubt of the immortalitie of the soule or at leastwise are not fully resolued therein howe man is said to be created after the image of God if he shall be altogether dissolued and brought to nothing and where shall we then seeke for this image in him It is certaine that this is not in
of Gods Spirite which illuminateth the eies of the minde a great deale more cleerely then any naturall light can doe as being grounded vpon the testimonie of God himselfe Some also there are who persuade themselues that Salomon putteth no difference betwene the soule of men and of beasts and that he doeth not affirme that one of them is more or lesse mortall or immortall then the other I considered in mine heart saith the Wiseman the state of the children of men that God had purged them yet to see to they are in themselues as beasts For the condition of the children of men and the condition of beasts are euen as one condition vnto them As the one dieth so dieth the other for they haue all one breath and there is no excellencie of man aboue the beast for all is vanitie All goe to one place all was of the dust and all shall returne to the dust Who knoweth whether the spirite of man ascend vpward and the spirite of the beast descend downeward to the earth But they are greatly deceiued that thinke to defend their impietie by this saying of Salomon For it is most certaine that his meaning is not to conclude that it is so indeede as hee speaketh in that place as it appeareth manifestly by his finall resolution in the same Booke made of the matter hee hath in hand wherein he concludeth touching the body of man that dust returneth to the earth as it was and that the spirite returneth to God that gaue it Nowe wee may well thinke that this excellent man or rather the Spirite of God which spake by him woulde not contradict himselfe especially in the very same Booke Wherefore wee must rest in the conclusion he maketh therein in which hee giueth vs the meaning of al his former speech And as for the place alleadged by vs which as Epicures and Atheists thinke maketh for them he would giue vs to vnderstand thereby what a man may iudge of the life and soule both of men and beasts and of the difference between them according to that wee see and perceiue by our corporall sences and that may bee comprehended by the minde and reason of man if wee haue no other testimonie that looketh beyond this life in which these dogges and hogges and all carnall and brutish men stay themselues For if there remained no more of man after his death then there doeth of a beast both the one and the other woulde come to one passe Nay the life of man shoulde bee so farre from happinesse that it woulde bee a great deale more miserable then that of beastes So that it shoulde seeme to bee better for men to passe away the time merrily and to liue like beasts according to the Philosophie of Epicures And although they shoulde take this course yet in the ende all woulde be but vanitie according to Salomons theame which hee handleth in his Booke of the Preacher Therefore being to set downe the conclusion of his Booke hee saieth Remember nowe thy Creatour in the dayes of thy youth whiles the euill dayes come not nor the yeeres approch wherein thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them Nowe if there were no difference betweene the soule of men and the soule of beastes both which the Prophet calleth by the name of Spirite taking spirite for soule what profit should men reape by this instruction and exhortation For what greater benefite coulde hee looke for who from his youth had giuen ouer himselfe to the seruice of God and had alwayes remembred him then he that forgat him and turned himselfe away from him Thus ye see how Epicures and Atheists feare not to prophane the holy Scriptures by snatching at some places of them very maliciously to the ende to set some colour vpon their damnable opinion against the immortalitie of the soule But wee see what a goodly bulwarke they are able to make euen all one with the rest of the arguments which wee haue already heard of the same matter And although they alleadge heere in defence of their cause Lucian and Lucretius two other Patriarkes and Patrons beside Pliny whome they accompt as principall pillers of their impietie yet wee can heare from them no other arguments woorthie to be so much as once thought vpon besides those which wee haue already handled But wee may obserue the like iudgement of GOD vpon them that was vpon Pliny the great searcher of Nature For Lucian according as Suidas testifieth was torne in peeces and eaten of dogs and Lucretius being madde and franticke slew himselfe For hauing abused so vilely that good wit and skill which God had giuen him did he not worthily deserue to loose it vtterly and to haue lesse of it then brute beasts Hee became so brutish that hee woulde not acknowledge that any either GOD or man had brought so great a benefite to the whole race of mankinde or that was for this cause more woorthie of greater prayse then Epicurus was because by his Philosophie and Doctrine hee abolished all diuine prouidence and so consequently all Diuinitie and immortalitie of the soule all hope of an other life all religion and conscience all difference betweene vertue and vice betweene honest and dishonest thinges and reduced all nature both Diuine and Humane into meere brutishnesse This beastly fellowe thus admiring Epicurus concludeth that men can not but be wretched and miserable all their life time so long as they haue anie opinion of all these thinges because they will holde them in continuall feare and so consequently in perpetuall torment but being dispossessed of all such thoughtes and so of all feare of GOD it will followe thereupon that they shall haue no more conscience to resist or gaine-say them whatsoeuer they thinke speake or doe And so their conscience shall not torment them with any feare and terrour especially of any iudgement of GOD but will suffer them to bee in quiet and not hinder in any respect their carnall pleasures and brutish affections Nowe when they are come to this point they accompt themselues happie For then they are all of them not onely as Kings and Princes but euen as it were gods fearing no other power aboue themselues and hauing no bodie to hinder their pleasure but that they may freely followe their owne heartes lustes So that the last and best conclusion of all this Philosophie will bee this that men can not bee happy except they become very beasts and being spoiled of all things wherein they excell them waxe altogether brutish and retaine nothing at all of mans nature but onely the outward shape of a man Therefore wee may iudge by the examples of these personages of so great skill and so highly esteemed among men what man can doe by his naturall light if it bee not guided by GOD but vtterly forsaken of him seeing those selfe same men who haue beene such great inquisitours and admirers of nature haue
fallen into such execrable beastlinesse and such horrible blasphemies as in a manner to say that God or Nature had brought men into the worlde onely to make them more miserable and more wretched then all other creatures so that they can finde no better happinesse and felicitie for themselues then during their life to become like to beastes or plants or some other insensible creatures or else after their death to bee brought to nothing as they were before their conception and birth Is it possible for a man to thinke of a straunger thing more against GOD more vnwoorthie mankinde or more iniurious to all nature For the Atheists themselues that reiect God doe yet confesse if they be Philosophers that nature doeth nothing without cause or if they confesse it not they haue testimonies enow in nature to conuince them of it And yet if their doctrine were true God and Nature haue done woorse in the creation and production of men then to doe some thing without cause For this were a cause most vnwoorthie of God and of Nature to create and bring foorth men into the worde onely for this cause and to this ende that they shoulde bee more miserable and more wretched then all other creatures and to make mankinde onelie to beholde in him the perfection of all miserie and vnhappinesse as though God and Nature tooke pleasure in beholding such cruell pastime as is the viewe of mans miseries in such a cursed estate Wherefore seeing all the doctrine and Philosophie of these dogges bringeth with it so many so strange so beastlike and so horrible absurdities euen once to thinke of them being so vnbeseeming God all mankinde and whole nature and so contrary to al the testimonies which the whole world affordeth vnto vs in the behalfe of Gods eternal prouidence ouer al his creatures I thinke there is no body except hee be as brutish as the Authours and Teachers of such kinde of Philosophie and doctrine but hee can easily iudge that it is altogether impossible to bee true or to haue any foundation ground in reason seeing it confoundeth and ouerthroweth al reason al nature Which causeth me to be so much the more abashed that there are men found euen among Christians yea a great number who rather followe the false opinion of these masties and giue greater credite to these sottish and vain arguments which they propound both against God and all diuinitie and against all nature and trueth then to the true sentence of so many vertuous learned holy men as haue bin in the world from the beginning and to the common and publike testimony of all mankind and of al people and nations But if God hath not spared the very heathen who so shamefully abused that knowledge which he gaue them of his works in nature and of the testimonies of his diuine nature prouidence manifested vnto them therein but punished them with such a horrible iudgement as to deliuer them vp into are probate sense into a woorse estate then is that of brute beasts we are not to maruell if he deale so and more hardly at this day with them that deserue a great deale more then they did because he hath manifested him self more cleerly without all comparison to these men if they would see and know him yea we ought to thinke it more strange if he dealt otherwise For the moe means he affordeth vnto men to know him the greater iudgement they deserue when they abuse the same and labour to blind themselues by their own ingratitude peruerse malice As for vs we cannot God be thāked doubt in any sort of the immortalitie of the soule seeing wee see on our side the aduantage euery way in defence therof namely multitude authoritie nature reason and which is most of all the testimonie of God who alone is sufficient I doubt not but that some to whome God hath giuen more knowledge and greater graces then to vs are able to alleage other arguments and reasons for the confirmation of this matter which we haue omitted For truth is not vnprouided but hath great abundance of all sorts But wee haue alleaged the chiefest taken out of the writings of learned men that haue written best of this matter especially of them that in our time haue written most Christianly And although there are other reasons then those which wee haue set downe yet I thinke there are enow in our discourses to stoppe the mouthes of all Epicures and Atheists at leastwise to conuince them if we cannot confound them For what can they alleage against them that is of any great shew or strength It may easily bee iudged by their best arguments discoursed vpon by vs. What will they haue more Do they expect or desire of vs that we should point with the finger at soules when they depart out of bodies that dye Then they shoulde bee no soules and inuisible spirits but bodies that may be seene And yet vnles they may behold them comming forth as they do smoke from the fire they will not beleeue that they depart at all from the bodies or that they haue any beeing at all Surely I think that these men who would so faine haue soules to bee mortall and to bee extinguished by death with their bodies would not beleeue that they were departed and that they once liued their bodies being dead no not although they had seen them come foorth visibly but woulde perswade themselues that they were some illusions and that their eyes had some mist before them so strong is a lying perswasion in a man when he wil iudge of a thing not according to reason but according to his affection Now seeing we are come to the end of our purpose namely to lay before our eies as it were a naturall history of man by the consideration of the matter of his body of the diuersitie of that matter and of the forme that God hath giuen it together with the profite and vse both of the one and the other and also by a description of the partes powers vertues and faculties of his soule therby to be instructed at large in the nature and immortality thereof by causing the soule to behold her selfe in the glasse of her marueilous actions and all to this ende that wee should know our selues as it becommeth vs there remaineth nothing now but that wee shoulde draw out a generall instruction from these aduertisements and lessons which God giueth vs in the admirable composition of our nature to the end that hereafter we should become more fitte for the contemplation of this diuinitie by the consideration of the wonderfull works thereof in the heauens and in the earth of which we desire if God giue vs grace hereafter to discourse Therfore doe thou ACHITOB put an ende to the cause of our present assembly meeting by some goodly discourse vpon all these matters of which we haue intreated Of the image of God in the soule
22. Of the ioy of the godly Lu●e 6. 21. matth 5. 4. Esay 61. 3. Ioh. 16. 20 21. Philip. 44. Eccles. 7. 4 6. Prou. 6. 25. How worldlings deceiue themselues What hope is Difference betweene ioy and hope Of the true and certaine hope The profite and necessitie of hope Ephes 4. 4. Rom. 5. 3 4 5. Psal 25. 3. Rom. 5. 2. Rom. 12. 12. 15. 13. Hebr. 6. 19. Ier. 17. 7 13 17. psal 65. 5. and 91. 2 9. psal 31 1. and 71. Psal 118. 8 9. Prou. 10. 28. Iob 8. 13 14 15 The wick●d can not abide to speake or heare of God What feare is How palenesse colde and shaking are b●ed in the body How death commeth through feare Esay 13. 7 8. A place of Esay expounded The cause of cowardlines and the signe of courage Iob 41. 16. Effects of Feare in the soule Iosua 7. 5. Psal 22. 14. Ierem. 4. 9. The definitions of assurance and boldnesse Iosua 2. 9. Psal 53. 5. Psal 112. 1 7 8 Psal 56. 3 11. and 118. 6. prou 14. 26. Iohn 14. 1. L●uit 26. 36. Deu. 28. 65 66 67. God is the authour of courage Why God hath giuen men affections The diuers effects of feare in the godly and in the wicked A fantasticall Good Who are to bee accounted wise men Eccles. 2. 1. Of delight and pleasure what it is and how it is receiued How God communicateth himselfe vnto men Of the diuers degrees of pleasures according to euery mans nature The delights of the bodily senses The delights of the internall senses Cōtemplation is the greatest delight of the soule Of the abuse of pleasures Against the immoderate vse of pleasures The cause why a little griefe is stronger in vs thē a great pleasure Of the pleasures of fantasie The pleasures of reason and of the minde How we descend from true pleasures to false delights Of pleasures which men seeke crosse-wayes Of the vse of the delights of the spirite How the spirit is hindred in his actions How the spirite must bee occupied How corporall and spirituall pleasures chase each other Natural pleasures are more purethen artificiall Degrees to ascend vpto sound and perfect delight The knowledge of the affections very requisite What loue is How loue is engendred Of the kindes of desire Of the loue of men towards God The loue of parents towardes thir children The loue of God towards men The originall of friendship In what sort by loue we ascend vp to God and descend againt Of the vnion that is in loue Similitude is a cause of loue Beautie draweth loue Gen. 1. Beautie a flower of goodnes A caueat for faire women The force of Beautie The causes of the abuse in beautie Beautie maketh vice more vgly A good vse of Looking-glasses Three kindes of Loue. God created the world by Loue. Diuers kindes of beauty and loue Loue tendeth to vnitie Iohn 17. 21. Iohn 11. 52. 1. Iohn 3. 8. Sinne the cause of our seperation from God A double ground of loue Loue is free Iob 1. 9. Two sortes of hired loue Actes 20. 35. Loue descendeth but doth not ascend 1. Iohn 4. 8. Loue breedeth Loue. The heart of a louer compared to a looking glasse Loue ought to shew it selfe by workes Euils must be resisted in the beginning What Desire is Diuersitie of Goods Good● belonging to this life Goods of fanci● and in opinion onely The effects of ambition and couetousnesse Of the false opinion of want The right vse of coueting The diuerse kinds of Desires Two sorts of Loue. The last ende of Loue. Acts 4. 32. Communitie among friends Loue bringeth equalitie Loue must first beginne at God Three meanes of knowledge The benefites that come of true loue whose scope is God The first benefite of true loue Diuers estimations of Loue. The cause of mens errour from the true Good The second benefite that is in true Loue. The third benefit Galat. 2. 20. The highest degree of Loue. Knowledge requisit in Loue. Two sortes of knowledge in Loue. The difference betweene Loue and Desire Rom. 8. 22. 1. Cor. 13. 12. Of friendship betweene wicked men What foundation the friendship of good men hath 1. Corint 13. 8 A similitude shewing the vanity of the loue of worldly delights What sauour is Why God fauoureth vs. Of reuerence The caause of humilitie A good lesson for princes Reuerence requisite in true friendship Of honour and of maiestie Rom. 12. 16. Of the signes of honour and of reuerence Of Mercie and Compassion Rom. 12. 8 9 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Cor. 12. Heb. 13. 3. Math. 5. 7. Luke 6. 36. Prou. 21. 21. Iam. 2. 13. Foure causes of all the troubles of the soule The nature of corporall goods How the passions may be good Of offence What euill may offend vs. Why men are so easily offended What offences are most grieuous Of the nature of mankind how hardly it is pleased Of the degrees of offence How offence may be wel● vsed The remedy to cure offences What contempt is Of mockery Esay 53. 7. Diuers opinions of the Philosophers touching the affections What anger is How it differeth from offence Of rancour The violence of anger Prou. 27. 4. Ecclus. 8. The fruites of anger What effect it hath in the body The fountaine of the appetite of reuenge The causes of looking pale and red How anger troubleth the braine The best remedy against anger Ecclus. 28. Another remedy against anger Why the affection of anger is naturall what good commeth by it What Hatred is The causes of it Why it is an easier matter to hate then to loue 1. Ioh. 3. 10 12. The fruits of Hatred Of a good kinde of hatred Rom. ●2 9. Amos 5. 15. How loue is turned into hatred Remedies against the euill kinde of hatred Description of Enuy. Diuers sorts of Enuy. Enuy is neuer without griefe Against what good things Enuy is most bent How an enuious body is tormented The countenance of an enuious man Prouer. 14. 30. Ecclus. 30. 17 24. Of a good kinde of enuy 1. Cor. 12. 31. 2. Cor. 9. 2. Roman 13. galat. 5. 21. Esay 3. 16. and 48. 4. Ezech. 3. 8 9. Psal 34. 15. 1. Pet. 3. 22. Esay 29. 23. Exod 13. 14. Iob 40. 4. Exod. 15. 7 8. Iob 9. 17. What Iealousie is Iames 4. 1 2. A good kinde of iealousie What mutuall loue ought to be betweene man and wife Why Iealousie is attributed to God What Indignation is From whence Zeale proceedeth Ioel 2. 18. Isaiah 9. 7. What Zeale is 2. Cor. 11. 2. A good lesson for Princes and Pastors The abuse of Indignation and of Zeale Rom. 10. 2. 1. Timot. 1. 13. Act. 26. 10 11. Hebr. 10. 30. Matth. 10. 28. Luke 21. 19. prouer 20. 22. What reuenge is What Rage is Of Crueltie Three sortes of Crueltie How magistrates ought to punish With what affection God punisheth offendors What Shame is Blushing commendable in some persons A second kind of
dispensed to the eyes and sounde to the eares in good measure and moderation For if the light bee too great the eyes cannot receiue it insomuch that they will bee hurt and offended in steade of receiuing delight On the other side if it bee too little it will not suffice them and therefore it must bee betweene both And as euery mans sight is sharper and stronger or more dull and weaker so must the light bee dispensed according to that measure The like may bee sayde of soundes in regarde of the eares and of all other thinges in respect of those sences vnto which they agree And if this moderation bee requisite for the outwarde sences it is no lesse necessary in respect of the inward senses and of all the powers of the soule Therefore as God is incomprehensible and infinite so is hee receiued with delight of that part of the soule which commeth neerest vnto his nature and which is most incomprehensible most ample and most infinite in regarde of other partes and that is the Spirite and Vnderstanding On the other side because there is no proportion or agreement in greatnesse and infinitenesse betweene GOD and the Soule shee receiueth and comprehendeth him by such meanes whereby hee may bee applied vnto her and shee made after a sort capable of him For if hee shoulde present himselfe vnto her such as hee is in his high and diuine maiestie especially man beeing in this estate wherein hee is in this mortall life shee coulde not beare so high maiestie as beeing too exceeding great for her So that insteede of receiuing pleasure ioy and delight shee shoulde not onely bee very much frighted but euen wholly ouerwhelmed and swallowed vp as a droppe of water woulde bee consumed beeyng throwen into a great fire as wee may iudge by so many examples as are in the holie Scriptures to this purpose For when God manifested himselfe to the Patriarkes hee neuer appeared vnto them in the greatnesse of his maiestie but tooke vnto him alwayes some shape and vsed such meanes as were agreeable to their nature Therefore also it is verie requisite that GOD shoulde descende and applie himselfe vnto our small capacitie to the ende wee may enioy him and his Goodes and take pleasure and delight in them For this cause hee hath not onely appointed the ministerie of his worde and Sacraments to shewe and communicate himselfe vnto vs by them applying himselfe vnto our nature and capacitie but hath also manifested himself in flesh in the person of his sonne Iesus Christ to become more like vnto vs and to drawe neerer vnto vs in our owne nature to this ende that wee might enioye him and all his benefites the better and receiue more true and entire delight in them And thus much for this poynt of the agreement that ought to bee betweene the thing that delighteth and that which receiueth pleasure Next wee are to note that a man may take pleasure by all those partes whereby hee may knowe as well by the internall as the externall senses and by all the powers of the minde and soule Whereupon it followeth that as euerie one is more or lesse addicted to any of these partes so hee delighteth most in those pleasures which hee may receiue by that part vnto which hee is most giuen Therefore wee see that the baser and more vile sort of people and such as are most rude and ignoraunt are more mooued by corporall and externall thinges which moue the bodily senses then by spirituall and high things that are more meete for the spirite and wherein it taketh greater pleasures But with prudent and wise men and such as are more spirituall it is otherwise So that as euery ones nature is more noble and excellent or more vile and abiect and according to the nature of those things wherein euery one delighteth so is the delight either more noble and excellent or more base and contemptible more pure quiet or more impure and troublesome of longer or of shorter continuance and hath moe or fewer pleasures and those either more or lesse tedious Now among those delights which a man may take by the bodily senses the basest and most abiect of all is that which is receiued by the sense of touching For as it is most earthy of all the external senses so are the pleasures that are taken by it That delight which is taken by the sense of tasting is a litle more honest and lesse contemptible and yet is it brutish enough As for the delight that may bee receiued by the sense of smelling it is very light and nothing so pleasant as the yrkesomnesse that commeth of the contrary is vnpleasant For a good smel bringeth not so great pleasure as an euill smell causeth displeasure besides that this sense of smelling is not so sharpe in man as in beasts And concerning those pleasures which a man may receiue by the eares they haue some more beautie and excellency in them For the more they holde of the nature of the ayre they are so much the lesse earthy and brutish And those which we receiue by the eyes are yet more excellent then all the rest because the eyes are of the nature of the fire which commeth neerest to the celestial nature And thus much for those pleasures which a man may receiue by the corporall senses of which the noblest and best are baser and of lesse excellency then the least of those which we may receiue by the basest parts powers of the soule For as much as the soule is more noble and more worthie then the body so much is the least thing in it greater and more magnificall then that which is most noble and most excellent in the bodie And as there are diuers degrees of pleasures according to the varietie of the externall senses and according to the difference that is betwixt them and the powers of the soule so is it betweene the powers of the soule as some of them are more noble and more diuine then others For those which appertaine to the nourishing and generatiue powers are more corporall earthy and brutish then those that belong to the vitall partes and to the heart And those that are proper to the spirite and minde are purest and best of all among which that delight that is in contemplation is the chiefest as we may iudge by that which we haue alreadie spoken Wherefore if we would consider well of all these degrees of delight and pleasure and could iudge well of them we should not be so deceiued in them as commonly we are preferring the least before the greatest the basest before the noblest those that are most earthy before them that are most heauenly and those that fade soonest before them that continue longest Besides the very enioying of euery one of them ought to suffice to make vs know their nature and the difference betweene the one and the other and how farre one is to be