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A03771 Examen de ingenios. = The examination of mens vvits In whicch [sic], by discouering the varietie of natures, is shewed for what profession each one is apt, and how far he shall profit therein. By Iohn Huarte. Translated out of the Spanish tongue by M. Camillo Camili. Englished out of his Italian, by R.C. Esquire.; Examen de ingenios. English Huarte, Juan, 1529?-1588.; Carew, Richard, 1555-1620. 1594 (1594) STC 13890; ESTC S118803 216,544 356

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And for this cause we haue seene many men to feigne miracles in houses and places of deuotion for straightwaies the people flockes vnto them and holds them in great reuerence as persons of whome God makes a speciall account and if they be poore they fauour them with large almes and so some sinne vpon interest The third reason is that men haue a liking to be well at their ease whereas naturall causes are disposed with such order and conceit that to obtaine their effects it behooues to bestow labour Wherefore they would haue God demeane himselfe towards them after his omnipotencie and that without sweating they might come to the well-head of their desires I leaue aside the malice of those who require miracles at Gods hand thereby to tempt his almightinesse and to prooue whether he be able to do it and othersome who to be reuenged after their hearts desire cal for fire from heauen and such other cruell chastisements The last cause is for that many of the vulgar are reliligiously giuen and hold deere that God may be honored and magnified which is much sooner brought about by way of miracles than by naturall effects but the common sort of men know not that workes aboue nature and woonderfull are done by God to shew those who know it not that he is omnipotent and that he serues himselfe of them as an argument to prooue his doctrine and that this necessitie once ceasing he neuer doth it more This may well be perceiued considering that God dooth no longer those vnwoonted things of the new testament and the reason is for that on his behalfe he hath performed all necessarie diligence that men might not pretend ignorance And to thinke that he will begin anew to do the like miracles and by them once againe to prooue his doctrine in raising the dead restoring sight to the blind and healing the lame and sicke of the palsie is an errour very great for once God taught men what is behooffull and prooued the same by miracles but returnes not to do it any more God speakes once sayth Iob and turnes not to a second repliall The token whereon I ground my iudgement when I would discouer whether a man haue a wit appropriat to Naturall Philosophie is to see whether he be addicted to reduce all matters to miracle without distinction and contrariwise such as hold not themselues contented vntill they know the particular cause of euerie effect leaue no occasion to mistrust the goodnesse of their wit These doe well know that there are effects which must be reduced to God immediatly as miracles and others to nature and such are those which haue their ordinarie causes frō whence they accustome to spring but speaking both of the one manner and the other we alwaies place God for author for when Aristotle sayd that God and nature did nothing in vaine he meant not that nature was an vniuersall cause endowed with a iurisdiction seuered from God but that she was a name of the order and concent which God hath bestowed in the frame of the world to the end that the necessarie effects might follow for the preseruation thereof For in the same manner it is vsually sayd that the King and Ciuile Reason do no man wrong In which kind of speech no man conceiueth that this name Reason signifieth a Prince which possesseth a seuerall iurisdiction from that of the king but a terme which by his signification embraceth al the roiall lawes and constitutions ordained by the same king for the preseruation of his common wealth in peace And as the king hath his speciall cases reserued to himselfe which cannot be decided by the law for that they are vnusuall and waightie in like manner God left miraculous effects reserued for himself neither gaue allowance vnto naturall causes that they might produce them But here we must note that he who should know them for such and difference them from naturall workes behooues to be a great naturall Philosopher and to vnderstand the ordinary causes that euery effect may hold yet all this sufficeth not vnlesse the Catholike church ratifie them to be such And as the Doctors labour and studie in reading this ciuile Reason preseruing the whole in their memorie that they may know and vnderstand what the kings will was in the determination of such a case so we naturall Philosophers as doctors in this facultie bestow all our studie in knowing the discourse and order which God placed that day when he created the world so to contemplat and vnderstand in what sort and vpon what cause he would that things should succeed And as it were a matter worthy laughter that a doctor should alleage in his writings though approoued that the king commaunds a case should be thus determined without shewing the Law and Reason through which it was so decided so naturall Philosophers laugh at such as say This is Gods doing without assigning the order and discourse of the particular causes whēce they may spring And as the king wil giue them no eare when they require him to breake some iust law or to rule some case besides the order of iustice which he hath commaunded to be obserued so God will not hearken when any man demaunds of him myracles and workes besides naturall order without cause why For albeit the king euery day abrogates and establisheth new lawes and changeth iudiciall order as wel through the variation of times as for that it is the iudgement of a fraile man and cannot at one only time attain to perfect right and iustice notwithstanding the naturall order of the vniuerse which we call nature from that day wherein God created the world vnto this hath had no need of adioining or reauing any one iot because he framed the same with such prouidence and wisedome that to require this order might not be obserued were to say that his workes were vnperfect To returne then to that sentence so often vsed by naturall Philosophers that Nature makes able we must vnderstand that there are Wits and there are Abilities which God bestoweth vpon men besides naturall order as was the wisedome of the Apostles who being simple and of base account were miraculously enlightened and replenished with knowledge and learning Of this sort of abilitie wisdome it cannot be verefied that nature makes able for this is a worke which is to be imputed immediatly vnto God not vnto nature The like is to be vnderstood of the wisedome of the prophets and of all those to whome God graunted some grace infused Another sort of abilitie is found in men which springs of their being begotten with that order and consent of causes which are established by God to this end and of this sort it may be sayd with truth Nature makes able For as we will proue in the last chapter of this worke there is to be found such an order and consent in naturall things that if the fathers in time of procreation haue
the imagination so it is of force that they faile in vnderstanding and be such as the prouerb paints them forth To the second probleme may be answered that Galen enquiring out the wit of men by way of the temperarature of the region where they inhabit saith that those who make abode vnder the North haue all of thē want of vnderstanding but those who are seated between the North and the burned Zone are of great wisedome Which situation answereth directly to our region And verily so it is for Spaine is not so cold as the places subiected to the Pole nor so hot as the burned Zone The same sentence doth Aristotle produce demanding for what cause such as inhabit verie cold regions partake lesse vnderstanding than those who are born in the hotter and in the answere he verie homely handles the Flemmish Dutch English and French saying that their wits are like those of drunkards for which cause they cannot search out nor vnderstand the nature of things this is occasioned by the much moisture wherwith their brain is replenished and the other parts of the bodie the which is knowen by the whitenesse of the face and the golden colour of the haire and by that it is a miracle to find a Dutchman bald and aboue this they are generally great and of tall stature through the much moisture which breedeth encrease of flesh But in the Spaniards we discerne the quite contrarie they are somwhat browne they haue blacke haire of meane stature and for the most part we see them bald Which disposition saith Galen groweth for that the braine is hot and drie And if this be true it behooueth of force that they be endowed with a bad memorie and a good vnderstanding but the Dutchmen possesse a great memorie small vnderstanding For which cause the one can no skill of Latine and the other easily learne the same The reason which Aristotle alleaged to proue the slender vnderstanding of those who dwell vnder the North is that the much cold of the country calleth backe the naturall heate inward by counterposition and suffereth not the same to spread abroad for which cause it partaketh much moysture and much heate and these vnite a great memorie for the languages and a good imagination with which they make clocks bring the water to Toledo deuise engins and workes of rare skill which the Spaniards through defect of imagination cannot frame themselues vnto But set them to Logicke to Philosophie to Schoole-diuinitie to Phisicke or to the Lawes and beyond comparison a Spanish wit with his barbarous termes will deliuer more rare points than a stranger For if you take from them this finenesse and quaint phrase of writing there is nothing in them of rare inuention or exquisite choice For confirmation of this doctrine Galen said that in Scithia one onely man became a Philosopher but in Athens there were many such as if he should say that in Scithia which is a Prouince vnder the North it grew a myracle to see a Philosopher but in Athens they were all borne wise and skilfull But albeit Philosophie and the other Sciences rehearsed by vs be repugnant to the Northren people yet they profit well in the Mathematicals and in Astrologie because they haue a good imagination The answere of the third probleme dependeth vpon a question much hammered between Plato Aristotle the one saith that there are proper names which by their nature carrie signification of things and that much wit is requisite to deuise them And this opinion is fauoured by the diuine scripture which affirmeth that Adam gaue euerie of those things which God set before him the proper name that best was fitting for them But Aristotle wil not grant that in any toung there can be found any name or maner of speech which can signifie ought of it own nature for that all names are deuised and shaped after the conceit of men Whence we see by experience that wine hath aboue 60. names and bread as manie in euerie language his of none we can auouch that the same is naturall and agreeable thereunto for then all in the world would vse but that But for all this the sentence of Plato is truer for put case that the first deuisers fained the words at their pleasure and will yet was the same by a reasonable instinct communicated with the eare with the nature of the thing with the good grace and well sounding of the pronunciation not making the wordes ouer short or long nor enforcing an vnseemly framing of the mouth in time of vtterance setling the accent in his conuenient place and obseruing the other conditions which a tongue should possesse to be fine and not barbarous Of this selfe opinion with Plato was a Spanish gentleman who made it his pastime to write books of chiualrie because he had a certain kind of imagination which entiseth men to faining and leasings Of him it is reported that being to bring into his works a furious Gyant he went manie daies deuising a name which might in al points be answerable to his fiercenesse neither could he light vpon any vntill playing one day at cardes in his friends house he heard the owner of the house say Ho sirha boy traquitantos the Gentleman so soone as he heard this name Traquitantos sodainly he took the same for a word of ful sound in the eare and without any longer looking arose saying gentlemen I wil play no more for many dayes are past sithence I haue gone seeking out a name which might fit well with a furious Gyant whom I bring into those volumes which I now am making and I could not find the same vntill I came to this house where euer I receiue all courtesie The curiositie of this gentleman in calling the Gyant Traquitantos had also those first men who deuised the Latine tongue in that they found out a language of so good sound to the eare Therefore we need not maruell that the things which are spoken and written in Latine doe sound so well and in other tongues so ill for their first inuenters were barbarous The last doubt I haue been forced to alleage for satisfieng of diuers who haue stūbled theron though the solution be very easie for those who haue great vnderstanding are not vtterly depriued of memorie in asmuch as if they wanted the same it would fall out impossible that the vnderstanding could discourse or frame reasons for this power is that which keepeth in hand the matter and the fantasies whereon it behooueth to vse speculation But for that the same is weake of three degrees of perfection whereto men may attaine in the Latine tongue namely to vnderstand to write and to speake the same perfitly it can hardly passe the first without fault and stumbling CHAP. IX How it may be prooued that the eloquence and finenesse of speech cannot find place in men of great vnderstanding ONe of the graces by which the vulgar is best
commanded vnto him The same may be said of S. Pauls Epistles that the holy Ghost dwelled in him when he wrote them to the end he might not erre but the language and maner of speech was S. Pauls natural applied to the doctrin which he wrote for the truth of Shool-diuinitie abhorreth manie words But the practise of languages and the ornament and polishment of speech may verie well be ioyned with positiue diuinitie for this facultie appertayneth to the memorie and is nought els saue a masse of words and catholicke sentences taken out of the holie doctors and the diuine Scripture and preserued in this power as the Grammarian doth with the flowers of the Poets Virgill Horace Terence and other Latine authours whom he readeth who meeting occasion to rehearse them he comes out straightwaies with a shred of Cicero or Quintilian whereby he makes his hearers know what he is able to do Those that are endowed with this vnion of the imagination and of the memorie and trauaile in gathering the fruit of whatsoeuer hath been said or written in their profession and serue themselues therewith at conuenient occasions with great ornament of words gratious fashions of speech for that so many things are alreadie found out in all the Sciences it seemeth to them who know not this doctrin that they are of great profoundnesse whereas in trueth they hold much of the Asse for if you grow to trie them in the foūdations of that which they alleage and affirme they then discouer their wants And the reason is because so great a flowing of speech cannot be vnited with the vnderstanding whereto appertaineth to search out the bottome of the trueth Of these the diuine scripture said Where there is plentie of words there raigneth great scarsitie as if he had said that a man of many words ordinarily wanteth vnderstanding and wisdome Those who are endowed with this vnion of the imagination and memorie enter with great courage to interpret the diuine scripture it seeming to them that because they vnderstand well the Hebrue Greeke and Latine tongues they haue the way made smooth to gather out the verie spirit of the letter but verily they ruinate themselues first because the words of the diuine text and his maners of speech haue manie other significations besides those which Cicero vnderstood in Latine And then because their vnderstāding is defectiue which power verifieth whether a sense be Catholicke or depraued and this is it which may make choice by the grace supernatural of two or three senses that are gathered out of the letter which is most true and catholicke Beguilings saith Plato neuer befall in things vnlike and verie different but when manie things meet which carrie neere resemblance For if we set before a sharpe sight a litle salt sugar meale and lyme all well pounded and beaten to powder and ech one seuerally by it selfe what should he doe who wanted tast if with his eyes he should be set to discern euerie of these powders from other without erring saying this is salt this sugar this meale and this lyme For my part I beleeue he would be deceiued through the great resemblance which these things haue betweene themselues But if there were a heape of salt one of sugar one of corne one of earth and one of stones it is certaine he would not be deceiued in giuing ech of these heapes his name though his sight were dimme for ech is of a diuers figure The same we see befalleth euerie day in the senses and spirits which the diuines giue to the holie scripture of which two or three being looked on at first sight they all carrie a shew to be Catholicke and to agree wel with the letter but yet in trueth are not so neither the holie Ghost so meant To chuse the best of these senses and to refuse the bad it is a thing assured that the diuine emploieth not his memory not his imagination but his vnderstanding Wherefore I auouch that the positiue diuine ought to conferre with the Schoole-man and to enquire at his hands that of these senses he may chuse that which shal appeare to be soundest vnlesse he wil be sent to the holie house For this cause doe heretickes so much abhorre Schoole-diuinitie and learne to banish it out of the world for by distinguishing inferring framing of reasons and iudging we attaine to vnderstand the trueth and to discouer falshood CHAP. X. How it is prooued that the Theoricke of Diuinitie appertaineth to the understanding and preaching which is his practise to the imagination IT is a probleme often demanded not onely by folke learned wise but also the vulgar will put in their oare and euerie day bring in question For what cause a diuine being a great man in the Schooles sharp in disputing readie in answering and in writing and lecturing of rare learning yet getting vp into the pulpit cannot skill of preaching and contrariwise if one prooue a gallant preacher eloquent gratious and that drawes the people after him it seemes a miracle if he be deeply seene in Schoole-diuinitie Wherefore they admit not for a sound consequence such a one is a great Schoole-diuine therfore he will prooue a good preacher and contrariwise they will not grant he is a good preacher therefore he hath skill in Schoole-diuinitie For to reuerse the one and other of these consequences there may be alleaged for ech more instances than are haires on our head No man hitherto hath been able to answer this demand saue after the ordinarie guise vz. to attribute the whole to God and to the distribution of his graces and to my liking they doe very well in asmuch as they know not any more particular occasion thereof The answere of this doubt in some sort is giuen by vs in the foregoing chapter but not so particularly as is requisite and it was that School-diuinitie appertaineth to the vnderstāding but now we affirme and will prooue that preaching and his practise is a worke of the imagination And as it falles out a difficult matter to ioyne in one self brain a good vnderstanding and much imagination so likewise it will hardly fall that one selfe man be a great Schoole-diuine a famous preacher and that School-diuinitie is a worke of the vnderstanding hath tofore been prooued when we proued the repugnancie which it carried to the Latine tongue For which cause it shall not now be necessarie to prooue the same anew onely it shall suffice to giue to vnderstand that the grace and delightfulnesse which good preachers haue whereby they draw their audience vnto them and hold them well pleased is altogither a worke of the imagination and part thereof of a good memorie and to the end I may better expound my selfe and cause it as it were to be felt with the hand it behooueth first to presuppose that man is a liuing creature capable of reason of cōpanie and of ciuilitie and to the end that his nature might be the
be able to discouer to the world the comming of his sonne and haue the way to prooue and persaude That Christ was the Messias and promised in the law For making him of great vnderstanding of much imagination it fell out of necessitie keeping the naturall order that he should also make him cholericke and adust And that this is true may easily be vnderstood by him who considereth the great fire furie with which he persecuted the church the greefe conceiued by the synagogues when they saw him conuerted as they who had forgone a man of high importance and of whom the contrarie partie had made a gainfull purchace It is also knowen by the tokens of the reasonable choler with which he spake and answered the deputy Consuls and the Iudges who had arrested him defending his owne person and the name of Christ with so great a●t and readinesse as he conuinced them all yet he had an imperfection in his tongue and was not very prompt of speech which Aristotle affirmeth to be a property of the melancholicke by adustion The vices wherto he confessed himselfe to be subiect before his conuersion shew him to haue been of this temperature he was a blasphemer a wrong doer and a persecutor all which springeth from abundance of heat But the most euident signe which shewed that he was cholericke adust is gathered from that battaile which himselfe confesseth he had within himselfe betwixt his part superiour inferiour saying I see another law in my members striuing against the law of my minde which leadeth me into the bondage of sinne And this selfe contention haue we prooued by the mind of Aristotle to be in the melancholicke by adustion True it is that some expound very well that this battaile groweth from the disorder which originall sinne made betweene the spirit and the flesh albeit being such and so great I beleue also that it springs from the choler adust which he had in his naturall constitution for the roiall prophet Dauid participated equally of original sin and yet complained not so much as did S. Paul but saith that he found the inferiour portion accorded with his reason when he would reioice with God My heart saith he and my flesh ioyed in the liuing God and as we will touch in the last chapter saue one Dauid possessed the best temperature that nature could frame and heereof we will make proofe by the opinion of all the Philosophers that the same ordinarily enclineth a man to be vertuous without any great gainstriuing of the flesh The wits then which are to be sorted out for preachers are first those who vnite a great vnderstanding with much imagination and memorie whose signes shalbe expressed in the last chapter saue one Where such want there succeede in their roome the melancholicke by adustion Those vnite a great vnderstanding with much imagination but suffer defect of memorie wherthrough they are not stored with copie of words nor can preach with full store in presence of the people In the third rancke succeed men of great vnderstanding but defectiue in their imagination and memorie These shall haue but a bad grace in preaching yet will preach sound doctrine The last whom I would not charge with preaching at all are such as vnite much memorie with much imagination and haue defect of vnderstanding These draw the auditorie after them and hold them in suspense and well pleased but when they least misdoubt it they fetch a turne to the holy house for by way of their sweet discourses and blessings they beguile the innocent CHAP. XI That the Theoricke of the lawes appertaineth to the memorie and pleading and iudging which are their practise to the vnderstanding and the gouerning of a common-wealth to the imagination IN the Spanish toung it is not void of a mysterie that this word Lettered being a common tearme for all men of letters or learning as well Diuines as Lawyers Phisitions Logicians Philosophers Orators Mathematicians and Astrologers yet in saying that such a one is learned we all vnderstand it by common sence that he maketh profession of the lawes as if this were their proper and peculiar title and not of the residue The aunswer of this doubt though it be easie yet to yeeld the same such as is requisit it behooueth first to be acquainted what law is and wherevnto they are bound who set themselues to studie that profession that afterwards they may imploie the same to vse when they are iudges or pleaders The law who so well considereth thereof is nought else but a reasonable will of the law maker by which he declareth in what sort he will that the cases which happen dayly in the common wealth be decided for preseruing the subiects in peace and directing them in what sort they are to liue what things they are to refraine I sayd a reasonable will because it sufficeth not that the king or emperour who are the efficient cause of the lawes declaring his will in what sort soeuer doth thereby make it a law for if the same be not iust and grounded vpon reason it cannot be called a law neither is it euen as he cannot be tearmed a man who wanteth a reasonable soule Therefore it is a matter established by common accord that kings enact their lawes with assent of men very wise and of sound iudgement to the end they may be right iust and good and that the subiects may receiue them with good will and be the more bound to obserue and obey them The materiall cause of the law is that it consist of such cases as accustomably befall in the common wealth according to the order of nature and not of things impossible or such as betide very sildome The finall cause is to order the life of man and to direct him what he is to do and what to forbeare to the end that being conformed to reason the common wealth may be preserued in peace For this cause we see that the lawes are written in plaine words not doubtfull nor obscure nor of double vnderstanding without ciphers and without abbreuiations and so easie and manifest that whosoeuer shall read them may readily vnderstand and retaine them in memorie And because no man should pretend ignorance they are publikely proclaymed that whosoeuer afterward breaketh them may be chastised In respect therefore of the care and diligence which the good law makers vse that their lawes may be iust and plaine they haue giuen in charge to the iudges and pleaders that in actions or iudgements none of them follow his owne sence but suffer himselfe to be guided by the authoritie of the lawes as if they should say We commaund that no iudge or aduocat imploy his conceit nor intermeddle in deciding whether the law be iust or vniust nor yeeld it any other sence than that that is contained in the text of the letter So it followeth that the lawyers are to construe the text of the law and to take that
made the lawes Whence oftentimes it falleth out that a Iudge of good wit giueth a sentence without knowing the decision of the law and afterwards findeth the same so ruled in his books and the like we see somtimes betideth the pleaders when they giue their iudgement in a case without studying The lawes and rules of reason whosoeuer well marketh them are the fountaine and originall whence the pleaders gather their arguments and reasons to prooue what they vndertake And this worke for certaine is performed by the discourse which power if the pleader want he shall neuer skill to shape an argument though he haue the whole ciuill law at his fingers ends This we see plainly to befall in such as studie the art of oratorie when the aptnesse thereunto is failing for though they learne by art the Topicks of Cicero being the spring from which flow the arguments that may be inuented to prooue euerie probleme both on the affirmatiue and the negatiue part yet they cannot thereout shape a reason Againe there come others of great wit and towardnes who without looking in booke or studying the Topicks make 1000 arguments seruing for the purpose as occasion requireth This selfe falleth out in the lawyers of good memorie who will recite you a whole text very perfectly and yet of so great a multitude of lawes as are comprised therein cannot collect so much as one argument to prooue their intention And contrariwise others who haue studied simply without books and without allowance worke miracles in pleading of causes Hence we know how much it importeth the common wealth that there may be such an election and examination of wits for the sciences inasmuch as some without art know and vnderstand what they are to effect and others loden with precepts and rules for that they want a conuenient towardlinesse for practise commit a thousand absurdities which verie ill beseeme them So then if to iudge plead be effected by distinguishing inferring arguing chusing it standeth with reason that whosoeuer setteth himselfe to studie the lawes enioy a good vnderstanding seeing that such actions appertain to this power and not to the memorie or to the imagination How we may finde whether a child be endowed with this difference of wit or no it would do well to vnderstand but first it behooueth to lay downe what are the qualities of discourse how many differences it compriseth in it selfe to the end we may likewise know with distinction to which of these the lawes appertaine for the first we must weet that albeit the vnderstanding be the most noble power and of greatest dignitie in man yet there is none which is more easily led into errour as touching the trueth than the vnderstanding This Aristotle attempted to prooue when he said That the sense is euer true but the vnderstanding for the most part discourseth badly the which is plainly seen by experience for if it were not so amongst the Diuines the Phisitions the Philosophers and the Lawyers there would not fall out so manie waightie dissentions so diuers opinions and so many iudgements and conceits vpon euery point seeing the trueth is neuer more than one Whence it groweth that the senses hold so great acertaintie in their obiects and the vnderstanding is so easily beguiled in his may well be conceiued if we consider that the obiects of the fiue senses and the spices by which they are known haue their being reall firme and stable by nature before they are knowen But that truth which is to be contemplated by the vnderstanding if it selfe do not frame and fashion the same it hath no formall being of his owne but is wholly scattered and lose in his materials as a house conuerred into stones earth timber tiles with which so many errors may be committed in building as there shall men set themselues to build with ill imagination The like befalleth in the building which the vnderstanding raiseth when it frameth a trueth for if the wit be not good all the residue wil worke a thousand follies with the selfe same principles Hence springs it that amongst men there are so sundrie opinions touching one selfe matter for euery one maketh the composition and figure such as is his vnderstanding From these errours and opinions are the fiue senses free for neither the eies make the colour nor the tast the sauours nor the feeling the palpable qualities but the whole is made and compounded by nature before anie of them be acquainted with his obiect Men because they carrie not regard to this bad operation of the vnderstanding take hardinesse to deliuer confidently their owne opinion without knowing in certaintie of what sort their wit is and whither it can a fashion a truth well or ill And if we be not resolued heerein let vs ask some of these learned mē who after they haue set down in writing and confirmed their opinions with many arguments and reasons and haue another time changed their opinions and conceit when or how they can assure themselues that now at last they haue hit the nail on the head themselues will not denie but that they erred the first time seeing they vnsay what they said tofore Secondly I auouch that they ought to haue the lesse confidence in their vnderstanding because the power which once ill compoundeth the trueth whilest his patrone placed so much assurance in his argumentes and reasons should therefore the sooner take suspect that he may once again slide into error whilest he worketh with the selfe same instrument of reason and so much the rather for that it hath been seen by experience that the first opinion hath borne most trueth and afterwards he hath relied vpon a worse and of lesse probabilitie They hold it for a sufficient token that the vnderstanding compoundeth well a trueth when they see it inamored of such a figure and that there are arguments reasons which moue it to conclude in that sort and verily they misse their cushion for the same vnderstanding carrieth the same proportion to his false opinions that the inferiour powers haue ech with the differences of their obiect for if we demand of the Phisitions what meat is best and most sauoury of al that men accustomably feed vpon I beleeue they will answere that for men who are distempered and of weake stomacke there is none absolutely good or euill but such as the stomacke is that shal receiue it for there are stomacks saith Galen which better brooke beefe than hennes or cracknels and othersome abhorre egges and milke and others againe haue a longing after them and in the maner of vsing meates some like rost and some boild and in rost some loue to haue the bloud run in the dish and some to haue it browne and burned And which is more worthie of consideration that meat which this day is fauourly eaten and with good appetite to morrow will be lothed and a farre worse longed for in his roome All this is
that if a 100000 men be begotten ech of them comes to the world with a health so peculier and proper to himselfe that if God should on the sodaine miraculously change their proportion of these first qualities they would all become sicke except some two or three that by great disposition had the like consonance and proportion Whence two conclusions are necessarilie inferred The first is that euerie man who falleth sicke ought to be cured conformable to his particular proportiō in sort that if the phisition restore him not to his first consonance of humours he cannot recouer The second that to performe this as it ought is requisite the phisition haue first seen dealt with the patient sundry times in his health by feeling his pulse perusing his state and what maner countenance and complexion he is of to the end that when he shall fall sicke he may iudge how farre he is from his health and in ministring vnto him may know to what point he is to restore him For the first namely to weet and vnderstand the Theorick and composition of the art saith Galen it is necessarie to be endowed with great discourse and much memorie for the one part of phisick consisteth in reason and the other in experience and historie To the first is vnderstanding requisite and to the other memorie and it resting a matter of so great difficultie to vnite these two powers in a large degree it followeth of force that the phisition become vnapt for the Theorick Where-through we behold many Phisitions learned in the Greeke Latine tongue and great Anotomists and Simplicists all workes of the memory who brought to arguing or disputations or to finde out the cause of anie effect that appertaineth to the vnderstanding can small skill thereof The contrarie befalleth in others who shew great wit and sufficiencie in the Logicke and Philosophie of this art but being set to the Latine and Greeke tongue touching simples and anotomies can do little because memorie in them is wanting for this cause Galen said verie wel That it is no maruell if among so great a multitude of men who practise the exercise and studie of the art of Phisicke and Philosophie so few are found to profit therein and yeelding the reason he saith It requires a great toile to find out a wit requisite for this Science or a maister who can teach the same with perfection or can studie it with diligence and attention But with all these reasons Galen goeth groping for he could not hit the cause whence it comes to passe that few persons profit in Phisick Yet in saying it was a great labour to find out a wit requisit for this science he spake truth albeit he did not so far-forth specifie the same as we will namely for that it is so difficult a matter to vnite a great vnderstanding with much memorie no man attaineth to the depth of Theoricall phisick And for that there is found a repugnancie between the vnderstanding and the imagination whereunto we will now prooue that practise and the skill to cure with certaintie appertaineth it is a miracle to find out a Phisition who is both a great Theorist and withall a great practitioner or contrariwise a great practitioner and verie well seen in Theorick And that the imagination and not the vnderstanding is the power wherof the phisition is to serue himself in knowing and curing the diseases of particular persons may easily be prooued First of all presupposing the doctrine of Aristotle who affirmeth That the vnderstanding cānot know particulars neither distinguish the one from the other nor discerne the time and place other particularities which make men different ech from other and that euery one is to be cured after a diuers maner and the reason is as the vulgar Philosophers auouch for that the vnderstanding is a spiritall power and cannot be altered by the particulars which are replenished with matter And for this cause Aristotle said That the sense is of particulars and the vnderstanding of vniuersals If then medicines are to worke in particulars and not in vniuersals which are vnbegotten and vncorruptible the vnderstanding falleth out to be a power impertinent for curing Now the difficultie consisteth in discerning why men of great vnderstanding cānot possesse good outward senses for the particulars they being powers so repugnant And the reason is verie plain and this is it that the outward senses cannot well performe their operations vnlesse they be assisted with a good imagination and this we are to prooue by the opinion of Aristotle who going about to expresse what the imagination was saith it is a motion caused by the outward sense in sort as the colour which multiplieth by the thing coloured doth alter the eie And so it fareth that this selfe colour which is in the christallin humour passeth farther into the imagination and maketh therin the same figure which was in the eie And if you demād of which of these two kindes the notice of the particular is made all philosophers auouch and that verie truely that the second figure is it which altereth the imagination and by them both is the notice caused conformable to that so commō speech From the obiect and from the power the notice springeth But from the first which is in the christallin humour from the sightfull power groweth no notice if the imagination be not attentiue thereunto which the phisitions do plainly prooue saying That if they lance or sear the flesh of a diseased person who for al that feeleth no pain it shews a token that his imagination is distracted into some profound contemplation whence we see also by experience in the sound that if they be raught into some imagination they see not the things before them nor heare though they be called nor tast meat sauorie or vnsauory though they haue it in their mouth Wherefore it is a thing certaine that not the vnderstanding or outward senses but the imagination is that which maketh the iudgement and taketh notice of particular things It followeth then that the phisition who is well seen in Theoricke for that he is indowed with great vnderstanding or great memory must of force prooue a bad practitioner as hauing defect in his imagination And contrariwise he that prooueth a good practitioner must of force be a bad Theorist for much imagination cannot be vnited with much vnderstanding and much memorie And this is the cause for which so few are thoroughly seen in phisicke or commit but small errors in curing for not to halt in the worke it behooueth to know the art and to possesse a good imagination for putting the same in practise and we haue prooued that these two cannot stick togither The Phisition neuer goeth to know and cure a disease but that secretly to himselfe he frameth a Syllogisme in Darij though he be neuer so well experienced and the proofe of his first proportion belongeth to the vnderstanding and of the second
to the imagination for which cause the great Theorists doe ordinarily erre in the minor and the great practitioners in the maior as if we should speake after this maner Euerie feuer which springeth from cold and moist humours ought to be cured with medicins hot and drie Taking the tokening of the cause this feuer which the man endureth dependeth on humors cold and moist therefore the same is to be cured with medicines hot and drie The vnderstanding will sufficiently prooue the truth of the maior because it is an vniuersall saying That cold moist require for their temperature hot and drie for euerie qualitie is abated by his contrarie But comming to prooue the minor there the vnderstanding is of no value for that the same is particular and of another iurisdiction whose notice appertaineth to the imagination borowing the proper and particular tokens of the disease from the fiue outward senses And if the tokening is to be taken from the feuer or from his cause the vnderstanding cannot reach therunto onely it teacheth the tokening is to be taken from that which sheweth greatest perill but which of those tokenings is greatest is only known to the imagination by counting the damages which the feuer produceth with those of the Syntomes of the euill and the cause and the small or much force of the power To attain this notice the imagination possesseth certain vnutterable properties with which the same cleereth matters that cannot be expressed nor conceiued neither is there found any art to teach them Where-through we see a phisition enter to visit a patient and by meanes of his sight his hearing his smelling and his feeling he knoweth things which seem impossible In sort that if we demand of the same phisition how he could come by so readie a knowledge himselfe cannot tell the reason for it is a grace which springeth from the fruitfulnesse of the imagination which by another name is termed a readinesse of capacitie which by common signes and by vncertain coniectures and of small importance in the twinckling of an eie knoweth 1000 differēces of things wherein the force of curing and prognosticating with certaintie consisteth This spice of promptnesse men of great vnderstanding do want for that it is a part of the imagination for which cause hauing the tokens before their eies which giue them notice how the disease fareth it worketh no maner alteration in their senses for that they want imagination A phisition once asked me in great secresie what the cause was that he hauing studied with much curiositie all the rules and considerations of the art prognosticatiue being therin throughly instructed yet could neuer hit the truth in any prognostication which he made To whom I remember I yeelded this answer that the art of Phisick is learned with one power and put in execution with another This man had a verie good vnderstanding but wanted imagination but in this doctrin there ariseth a difficultie verie great and that is how phisitions of great imagination can learn the art of phisicke seeing they want that of vnderstanding and if it be true that such were better than those who were well learned to what end serueth it to spend time in the schooles to this may be answered that first to know the art of phisicke is a matter verie important for in two or three yeares a man may learn al that which the ancients haue bin getting in two or three thousand And if a man should heerin ascertain himselfe by experience it were requisit that he liued some thousands of yeeres and in experimenting of medicines he should kill an infinit number of persons before he could attain to the knowledge of their qualities from whence we are freed by reading the books of reasonable experienced phisitions who giue aduertisment of that in writing which they found out in the whole course of their liues to the end that the phisitions of these daies may minister some receits with assurance and take heed of other-some as venomous Besides this we are to weet that the common vulgar points of al arts are verie plain and easie to learn and yet the most important of the whole worke And contrariwise the most curious and subtile are the most obscure and of least necessitie for curing And men of great imagination are not altogither depriued of vnderstanding nor of memorie Wher-through by hauing these two powers in some measure they are able to learn the most necessarie points of Phisicke for that they are plainest and with the good imagination which they haue can better looke into the disease and the cause thereof than the cunningest doctors Besides that the imagination is it which findeth out the occasion of the remedie that ought to be applied in which grace the greatest part of practise consisteth for which cause Galen said that the proper name of a phisition was The finder out of occasion Now to be able to know the place the time and the occasion for certain is a worke of the imagination since it toucheth figure and correspondence but the difficultie consisteth in knowing amongst so many differences as there are of the imagination to which of them the practise of Phisicke appertaineth for it is certaine that they all agree not in one selfe particular reason which contemplation hath giuen me much more toile and labour of spirit than all the residue and yet for all that I cannot as yet yeeld the same a fitting name vnlesse it spring from a lesse degree of heat which partaketh that difference of imagination wherewith verses and songs are endited Neither do I relie altogether on this for the reason whereon I ground my selfe is that such as I haue marked to be good practitioners do all piddle somwhat in the art of versifieng and raise not vp their contemplation very high and their verses are not of any rare excellencie which may also betide for that their heat exceedeth that tearme which is requisit for poetrie and if it so come to passe for this reason the heat ought to hold such qualitie as it somewhat drie the substance of the braine and yet much resolue not the naturall heat albeit if the same passe further it breedeth no euill difference of the wit for Phisicke for it vniteth the vnderstanding to the imagination by adustion But the imagination is not so good for curing as this which I seeke which inuiteth a man to be a witch superstitious a magician a deceiuer a palmister a fortune teller and a calker for the diseases of men are so hidden and deliuer their motions with so great secrecie that it behooueth alwaies to go calking what the matter is This difference of imagination may hardly be found in Spaine for tofore we haue prooued that the inhabitants of this region want memory and imagination and haue good discourse neither yet the imaginatiō of such as dwell towards the North is of auaile in Phisicke for it is very slow and slacke only the same is
himselfe to fall to the ground and so fitted his imperiall robe about him that after his death they found him couched with great honestie with his legs and other parts couered that might any way offend the sight The seuenth propertie and of greatest importance is that the Generall haue good fortune and be luckie by which signe we shall perfectly find that he is seized of the wit and habilitie behooffull for the art martiall for in substance and truth there is nothing which ordinarily maketh men vnfortunat and that their enterprises do not alwaies take successe after their desire saue that they are depriued of wisedome and lay not hold on the conuenient means for achieuing their exploits For that Iulius Caesar shewed such wisedome in the affairs which he managed he bare away the bell in respect of fortunatenesse from all other captains of the world so as in perils of importance he encouraged his souldiors saieng Feare not for you haue Caesars good fortune to fight on your partie The Stoicks held opinion that as there was a first cause euerlasting almightie and of infinit wisedome knowne by the order and concert of his maruellous works so also there was another vnwise and vnconcerted whose workes prooued without order without reason and void of discretion for with an affection no way reasonable it giueth and reaueth from men riches dignitie and honour This they tearmed Fortune seeing hir a friend to men who performe their businesse by hap hasard without forecasting without wisedome and without submitting themselues to the gouernmēt of reason They pourtraied her the better to make her manners and malice knowne in fourme of a woman a roiall scepter in her hand her eyes vailed her feet vpon a round ball accompanied with persons sottish and void of all trade of liuing By painting her like a woman they noted her great lightnesse and little discretion by her roiall scepter they acknowledged her soueraigntie ouer riches and honour her veiled eyes gaue to vnderstand the ill fashion which she held in distributing her gifts her feet standing on the round ball betokened the small firmenesse in the fauours which she imparted for she snatcheth them away with the like facilitie that she reacheth them foorth without keeping stedfastnesse in ought whatsoeuer but the worst part they found in her was that she fauoureth the wicked and persecuteth the vertuous loueth the foolish and abhorreth the wise abaseth the noble aduanceth the base what is foule pleaseth her and what is faire worketh her annoiance Many men placing cōfidence in these properties because they know their owne good fortune take hardinesse to vndertake fond and headlong enterprises which yet prosper with them very luckily and yet other men very wise and aduised dare not aduenture to execute those enterprises which they haue begun with great discretion finding by experience that such find worst successe How great a friend Fortune sheweth her selfe to bad people Aristotle maketh knowne by this probleme Whence groweth it that riches for the most part are possessed rather by the wicked than by men of worth Whereto he shapeth answer Perhaps because Fortune being blind cannot know nor make choice of what is best But this is an answer vnworthy of so great a philosopher for it is not Fortune that bestoweth wealth on men and though it were yet he yeeldeth no reason why she alwaies cherisheth the bad and abandoneth the good The true solution of this demand is that the lewd sort are verie witty and haue a gallant imagination to beguile in buying and selling and can profit in bargaining and employing their stocke where occasion of gaine is offered But honest men want this imagination many of whom haue endeuoured to imitate these bad fellowes and by trafficquing trucking within few daies haue lost their principall This Christ our redeemer pointed at considering the sufficiencie of that steward whom his maister called to accompt who reseruing a good portion of the goods to his owne behoofe salued vp all his reckonings and got his quietus est Which wisdome though it were faultie yet God commended saying The children of this world are more wise in their kinde than the children of light for these ordinarily enioy a good vnderstanding with which power they place their affection on their law and haue want of imagination whereto the knowledge how to liue in this world appertaineth wherethrough many are morally good because they lacke the wit how to be naught This maner of answering is more easie and apparent The naturall philosophers because they could not reach so farre deuised so fond and ill iointed a cause as lady Fortune to whose power they might impute good and bad successes not to the vnskilfulnesse and little knowledge of men Foure sorts of people there are in euerie common-wealth if a man list to marke them For some men are wise and seeme not so others seeme so and are not others neither are nor seem and some both are and seem so Some men there are silent slow in speech staid in answering not curious nor copious of words yet they retain hidden within them a naturall power appertaining to the imagination whereby they know the fit time and occasion to bring their purpose to passe and how they are therein to demeane themselues without communicating or imparting their minde to any other These by the vulgar are called happy and luckie them seeming that with little knowledge and lesse wit euery thing falleth into their lap Others contrariwise are of much eloquence in words and discourse great cōuersers men that take vpon them to gouerne the whole world who go about hunting how with small expense they may reape great gains and therein after the vulgars conceit no man in iudgement can step an acc beyond them and yet comming to the effect all falleth to the ground betweene their hands These crie out vpon fortune and cal her blind buzzard and iade for the matters which they disseigne worke with much wisdome she suffereth not to take good effect but if there were a Fortune who might plead her own defence she would tell them Your selues are the buzzards the sots and the doo-noughts whome you speake of that being vnskilful hold yourselues wise and vsing vnfit means would yet reape good successes This sort of people haue a kind of imagination which decketh vp and setteth foorth their words and reasons and maketh them seeme to be what in deed they are not Wheron I conclude that the Generall who is endowed with a wit requisit for the art militarie and doth duly forecast what he is to exploit shall be fortunate and happie otherwise it is lost labour to looke that he euer preuaile to victorie vnlesse God do fight for him as he did for the armies of Israell and yet withall they chose the wisest and skilfullest amongst them to be commaunders for we must not leaue all vpon Gods hands neither yet may a man wholy affie on his own wit and sufficiencie
saith the Psalme goodnes discipline and knowledge And this the royall Prophet Dauid spake seeing that it auaileth not for a king to be good and vertuous vnlesse he ioyne wisedom and knowldge there withall By this example of king Dauid it seemeth we haue sufficiently approoued our opinion But there was also another king borne in Israel of whom it was said Where is he that is borne king of the Iewes And if we can prooue that he was abourne haired towardly of meane bignesse vertuous healthfull and of great wisedom and knowledge it will be no way damageable to this our doctrin The Euangelists busied not themselues to report the disposition of Christ our redeemer for it serued not to the purpose of that which they handled but is a matter which may easily be vnderstood supposing that for a man to be temperat as is requisit compriseth all the perfection wherewith naturally he can be edowed And seeing that the holy spirit-compounded and instrumentalized him it is certaine that as touching the materiall cause of which he formed him the distemperature of Nazareth could not resist him nor make him erre in his worke as do the other naturall agents but he performed what him best pleased for he wanted neither force knowledge nor will to frame a man most perfect and without any defect And that so much the rather for that his comming as himselfe affirmed was to endure trauels for mans sake and to teach him the trueth And this temperature as we haue before prooued is the best naturall instrument that can be found for these two things Wherethrough I hold that relatiō for true which Publius Lcntulus Viceconsul wrote from Hierusalem vnto the Roman Senat after this maner There hath been seen in our time a man who yet liueth of great vertue called Iesus Christ who by the Gentiles is termed the prophet of truth and his disciples say that he is the sonne of God He raiseth the deceased and healeth the diseased is a man of meane and proportionable stature and of very faire countenance his looke carrieth such a maiesty as those who behold him are enforced both to loue and feare him He hath his haire coloured like a nut full ripe reaching down to his eares and from his eares to his shoulders they are of waxe colour but more bright he hath in the middle of his forehead a locke after the maner of Nazareth His forehead is plain but very pleasing his face void of spot or wrinckle accompanied with a moderat colour his nosthrils and mouth cannot by any with reason be reprooued his beard thicke and resembling his haire not long but forked his countenance verie gratious and graue his eies gracefull and cleere and when he rebuketh he daunteth and when he admonisheth he pleaseth he maketh himselfe to be beloued and is cheerfull with grauitie he hath neuer been seen to laugh but to weep diuers times his hands and arms are verie faire in his conuersation he contenteth verie greatly but is seldom in company but being in company is very modest in his countenance and port he is the seemliest man that may be imagined In this relation are contained three or foure tokens of a temperat person The first that he had his haire and beard of the colour of a nut fully ripe which to him that considereth it well appeareth to be a browne abourne which colour God commanded they heifer should haue which was to be sacrificed as a figure of Christ and when he entred into heauen with that triumph and maiestie which was requisit for such a Prince some Angels who had not been enformed of his incarnation said Who is this that commeth from Edon with his garments died in Bozra as if they had said Who is he that commeth from the red Land with his garment stained in the same die in respect of his haire his red beard and of the bloud with which he was tainted The same letter also reporteth him to be the fairest man that euer was seen and this is the second token of a temperat person and so was it prophesied by the holy scripture as a signe wherby to know him Of faire shape aboue all the children of men And in another place he saith His eies are fairer than the wine and his teeth whiter than milke Which beautie and good disposition of body imported much to effect that all men should beare him affection and that there might be nothing in him worthy to be abhorred For which cause the letter deliuereth that all men were enforced to loue him It reciteth also that he was meane of personage and that not because the holy Ghost wanted matter to make him greater if so it had seemed good but as we tofore haue prooued by the opinion of Plato and Aristotle because when the reasonable soule is burdened with much bones and flesh the same incurreth great dammage in his wit The third signe namely to be vertuous and wel conditioned is likewise expressed in this letter and the Iews themselues with al their false witnesses could not proue the contrarie nor reply when he demanded of them VVhich of you can reprooue me of sinne And Ioseph through the faithfulnes which he owed to his history affirmed of him that he partaked of another nature aboue man in respect of his goodnesse wisedom Only long life could not be verefied of Christ our redeemer because they put him to death being yong where as if they had permitted him to finish his naturall course the same would haue reached to 80 years and vpwards For he who could abide in a wildernesse 40 daies and 40 nights without meat or drinke and not be sicke nor dead therwithall could better haue defended himselfe from other lighter things which had power to breed alteration or offence Howbeit this action was reputed miraculous and a matter which could not light within the compasse of nature These two examples of kings which we haue alleaged sufficeth to make vnderstood that the scepter royal is due to men that are temperate and that such are endowed with the wit and wisdom requisit for that office But there was also another man made by the proper hands of God to the end he should be king and Lord of all things created he made him faire vertuous sound of long life and verie wise And to prooue this shal not beamisse for our purpose Plato holdeth it for a matter impossible that God or nature can make a man temperat in a countrey distemperat wherethrough he affirmeth that God to create a man of great wisdom temperature sought out a place where the heat of the aire should not exceed the cold nor the moist the dry And the diuine scripture whence he borrowed this sentence saith not that God created Adam in the earthly paradise which was that most temperat place whereof he speaketh but that after he had shaped him there he placed him Then our Lord God saith he tooke man and set
science which he pretendeth to study is the matter which most makes for the purpose for with this we haue seene that diuers men haue begun to studie after their youth was expired and were instructed by bad teachers with euill order and in their owne birth-places and yet for all that haue prooued great clearks But if the wit faile sayth Hippocrates all other diligences are lost But there is no man who hath better verefied this than the good Marcus Cicero who through greefe of seeing his sonne such a doo-nought with whome none of the means could preuaile that he had procured to breed him wisedome sayd in the end after this sort What else is it after the manner of the Giants to fight with the gods than to resist against nature as if he should haue sayd What thing is there which better resembles the battaile which the giants vndertooke against the gods than that a man who wanteth capacitie should set himselfe to studie for as the giants neuer ouercame the gods but were still vanquished by them so whatsoeuer scholler will labour to ouercome his owne vntoward nature shall rest vanquished by her For which cause the same Cicero counselleth vs that we should not vse force against our nature nor endeuour to become Orators if she assent not for we shall vndergo labour in vaine CHAP. II. That Nature is that which makes a man of habilitie to learne IT is an opinion very common and ordinarie amongst the antient Philosophers to say That Nature is she who makes a man of habilitie to learne and that art with her precepts and rules giues a facilitie therevnto but then vse and experience which he reapes of particular things makes him mightie in working Yet none of them euer shewed in particular what thing this nature was nor in what ranke of causes it ought to be placed only they affirmed that this wanting in him who learned art experience teachers bookes and trauaile are of none auaile The ignoraunt vulgar seeing a man of great wit and readinesse straightwaies assigne God to be the author thereof and looke no further but hold euery other imagination that goes beyond this for vanitie but naturall Philosophers despise this manner of talking for put case that the same be godly and containe therein religion and truth yet it groweth from not knowing the order and disposition which God placed amongst naturall things that day when they were created and so couer their ignorance with a kind of warrantise and in sort that none may reprehend or gainsay the same they affirme that all befals as God will and that nothing succeeds which springs not from his diuine pleasure But though this be neuer so apparant a truth yet are they worthie of reproofe because as not euerie kind of demaund sayth Aristotle is to be made after one fashion so not euerie aunswer though true is to be giuen Whilest a natural Philosopher reasoned with a Grammarian there came to them an inquisitiue Gardener and asked what the cause might be that he cherishing the earth so charilie in deluing turning dunging and watering it yet the same neuer well brought foorth the herbage which he sowed therein whereas the hearbes which she bred of her selfe she caused to increase with great facilitie The Grammarian aunswered This grew from the diuine prouidence and was so ordained thorow the good gouernment of the world at which answer the naturall Philosopher laughed seeing he reduced this to God because he knew not the discourse of naturall causes nor in what sort they proceeded to their effects The Grammarian perceiuing the other laugh asked whether he mocked him or wherat else he laughed The Philosopher answered that he laughed not at him but at the maister who taught him so ill for the knowledge and solution of things which spring from the diuine prouidence as are the workes supernaturall appertaine to the Metaphisicks whom we now tearme Diuines but this question propounded by the Gardener is naturall and appertaineth to the iurisdiction of the naturall Philosophers because there are certaine ordered and manifest causes from which this effect may spring And thus the naturall Philosopher answered saying that the earth is conditioned like a stepmother who very carefully brings vp her owne children which shee breeds her selfe but takes away the sustenance from those which appertaine to her husband and so we see that her owne children are fat and fresh and her step-children weake and ill coloured The hearbs which the earth brings foorth of her selfe are borne of her proper bowels and those which the Gardener makes to grow by force are the daughters of another mother wherethrough she takes from them the vertue and nourishment by which they ought to increase that she may giue it to the hearbs which are borne of her selfe Hippocrates likewise reports that he going to visit the great Philosopher Democritus he told him the follies which the vulgar speake of Phisicke namely that seeing themselues recouered from sicknesse they would say it was God who healed them and that if his wil were not little had the good diligence of the Phisition auailed This is so antient a manner of talke and the naturall Philosophers haue so often refuted it that the seeking to take the same away were superfluous neither is it conuenient for the vulgar who know not the particular causes of any effect answereth better and with more truth as touching the vniuersall cause which is God than to say some other vnfitting thing But I haue often gone about to consider the reason the cause whence it may grow that the vulgar sort is so great a friend to impute all things to God and to reaue them from nature do so abhor the naturall means and I know not whether I haue bene able to find it out The vulgar at least giues hereby to vnderstand that forasmuch as they know not what effects they ought to attribute to God immediatly and what to Nature they speake after this maner Besides that men are for the most part impatient and desirous to accomplish speedily what they couet But because the natural means are of such prolixitie and work with length of time they possesse not the patience to stand marking thereof and knowing that God is omnipotent and in a moment of time performeth whatsoeuer him pleaseth whereof they find many examples they would that he should giue thē health as he did to the sicke of the palsie and wisedome as to Salomon riches as to Iob and that he should deliuer them from their enimie as he did Dauid The second cause is for that men are arrogant and vaine conceited many of whom desire secretly in their hearts that God would bestow vpon them some particular graces which should not befall after the common vse as is that the sunne ariseth vpon the good and bad and that the rainè fals vpon all in generall for benefits are so much the more highly prized as they are the more rare
regard to obserue the same all their children shall prooue wise and none otherwise But the whilest this significatiō of nature is very vniuersall and confused and the vnderstanding contents not it selfe nor staieth vntill it conceiue the particular discourse and the latest cause and so it behooues to search out another signification of this name Nature which may be more agreeable to our purpose Aristotle and other naturall Philosophers discend into more particularities and call Nature whatsoeuer substantiall forme which giues the being to any thing and is the originall of all the working thereof in which signification our reasonable soule may reasonably be tearmed nature for from her we receiue our formall being which we haue of being men and the selfe same is the beginning of whatsoeuer we doe and worke But all soules being of equall perfection as well that of the wiser as that of the foolish it cannot be affirmed that nature in this signification is that which makes a man able for if this were true all men should haue a like measure of wit and wisedome and therefore the same Aristotle found out another signification of nature which is the cause that a man is able or vnable saying that the temperature of the foure first qualities hot cold moist and drie is to be called nature for from this issue al the habilities of man all his vertues and vices and this great varietie of wits which we behold And this is clearely proued by considering the age of a man when he is wisest who in his childhood is no more than a brute beast and vseth none other powers than those of anger and concupiscence but comming to youth there begins to shoot out in him a maruellous wit and we see that it lasteth till time certaine and no longer for old age growing 〈◊〉 goes euery day loosing his wit vntill it come to be 〈◊〉 decaied The varietie of wits it is a matter certaine that it springs not from the reasonable soule for that is one selfe in all ages without hauing receiued in his forces and sub●●●unce any alteration but man hath in euery age a diuers temperature and a contrarie disposition by means whereof the soule doth other workes in childhood other in youth and other in old age Whence we draw an euident argument that one selfe soule doing contrarie workes in one selfe bodie for that it partakes in euery age a contrarie temperature when of young men the one is able and the other vnapt this growes for that the one of them enioi●● 〈◊〉 temperature from the other And this for that it is the beginning of all the workes of the reasonable soule was by the Phisitions and the Philosophers termed Nature of which signification this sentence is properly verefied that Nature makes able For confirmation of this doctrine Galen writ a booke wherein he prooueth That the maners of the soule follow the temperature of the body in which it keepes residence and that by reason of the heat the coldnesse the moisture and the drouth of the territorie where men inhabit of the meats which they feed on of the waters which they drinke and of the aire which they breath some are blockish and some wise some of woorth and some base some cruel and some merciful many straight brested and many large part lyers and part true speakers sundrie traitors and sundrie faythfull somewhere vnquiet and somewhere stayed there double here single one pinching another liberall this man shamefast that shamelesse such hard and such light of beleefe And to prooue this he cites many places of Hippocrates Plato and Aristotle who affirme that the difference of nations as well in composition of the body as in conditions of the soule springeth from the varietie of this temperature and experience it selfe euidently sheweth this how far are different Greeks from Tartarians Frenchmen from Spaniards Indians from Dutch and Aethiopians from English And this may be seene not only in countries so far distant but if we consider the prouinces that enuiron all Spaine we may depart the vertues and vices which we haue recounted amongst the inhabitants giuing ech one his peculiar vice and vertue and if we consider the wit and manners of the Catalonians Valentians Mercians Granatines Andaluzians Estremenians Portugals Gallesians Asturians Montagneses Biscanes Nauarrists Arragonois and of the kingdome of Castile who sees not and knowes not how far these are different amongst themselues not only in shape of countenaunce and in feature of body but euen in the vertues and vices of the soule Which all growes for that euery of these prouinces hath his particular and different temperature And this varietie of manners is knowne not onely in countries so farre off but in places also that are not more than a little league in distance it cannot be credited what ods there is found in the wits of the inhabitants Finally all that which Galen writeth in this his booke is the groundplot of this my Treatise albeit he declares not in particular the differences of the habilities which are in men neither as touching the sciences which euerie one requires in particular Notwithstanding he vnderstood that it was necessarie to depart the sciences amongst yoong men and to giue ech one that which to his naturall habilitie was requisit in as much as he sayd That well ordered common wealths ought to haue men of great wisedome and knowledge who might in their tender age discouer ech ones wit and naturall sharpnesse to the end they might be set to learne that art which was agreeable and not leaue it to their owne election CHAP. III. What part of the body ought to be well tempered that a young man may haue habilitie MAns body hath so many varieties of parts and powers applied ech to his end that it shal not stray from our purpose but rather growes a matter of necessitie to know first what member was ordained by nature for the principall instrument to the end man might become wise and aduised For it is a thing apparant that we discourse not with our foot nor walke on our head nor see with our nostrils nor heare with our eies but that euery of these parts hath his vse and particular disposition for the worke which it is to accomplish Before Hippocrates and Plato came into the world it held for a generall conceit amongst the naturall Philosophers that the heart was the principall part where the reasonable facultie made his residence and the instrument wherewith the soule wrought the workes of wisedome of diligence of memorie and of vnderstanding For which cause the diuine scripture applying it selfe to the ordinary speech of those times in many places cals the heart the soueraigne part of a man But these two graue Philosophers comming into the world gaue euidence that this opinion was false and prooued by many reasons and experiments that the braine is the principall seat of the reasonable soule and so they all gaue hands to this opinion saue
only Aristotle who with a purpose of crossing Plato in all points turned to reuiue the former opinion and with topicall places to make it probable with which of these opinions the truth swaieth time serueth not now to discusse For there is none of these Philosophers that doubteth but that the braine is the instrument ordained by nature to the end that man might become wise and skilfull it sufficeth only to declare with what conditions this part ought to be endewed so as we may affirme that it is duly instrumentalized and that a yong man in this behalfe may possesse a good wit and habilitie Foure conditions the braine ought to enjoy to the end the reasonable soule may therewith commodiously performe the workes which appertaine to vnderstanding and wisdome The first good composition the second that his parts be well vnited the third that the heat exceed not the cold nor the moist the drie the fourth that his substance be made of parts subtile and verie delicate In the good composition are contained other foure things the first is good figure the second quantitie sufficient the third that in the braine the foure ventricles be distinct and seuered each duly bestowed in his seat and place the fourth that the capablenesse of these be neither greater nor lesse than is conuenient for their workings Galen collects the good figure of the braine by an outward consideration namely the forme and disposition of the head which he sayth ought to be such as it should be if taking a perfect round ball of wax and pressing it together somewhat on the sides there will remaine after that manner the forehead and the nape with a little bunchinesse Hence it followes that the man who hath his forehead very plaine and his nodocke flat hath not his braine so figured as is requisit for wit and habilitie The quantitie of the braine which the soule needeth to discourse consider is a matter that breeds feare for amongst all the brute beasts there is none found to haue so much braine as a man in sort as if we ioine those of two the greatest oxen together they will not equall that of one onely man be he neuer so little And that whereto behooues more consideration is that amongst brute beasts those who approch neerest to mans wisedome and discretion as the ape the fox and the dog haue a greater quantitie of braine than the other though bigger bodied than they For which cause Galen said that a little head in any man is euer faultie because that it wanteth braine notwithstanding I auouch that if his hauing a great head proceedeth from abundance of matter and ill tempered at such time as the same was shaped by nature it is an euill token for the same consists all of bones and flesh and containes a smal quantitie of braine as it befals in very big orenges which opened are found scarce of iuice and hard of rinde Nothing offends the reasonable soule so much as to make his abode in a body surcharged with bones fat and flesh For which cause Plato sayd that wise mens heads are ordinarily weake and vpon any occasion are easily annoied and the reason is for that nature made them of an emptie skull with intention not to offend the wit by compassing it with much matter And this doctrine of Plato is so true that albeit the stomacke abides so far distant from the braine yet the same workes it offence when it is replenished with fat and flesh For confirmation hereof Galen alleageth a prouerbe which sayth A grosse bellie makes a grosse vnderstanding and that this proceeds from nothing else than that the brain and the stomacke are vnited and chained together with certaine sinewes by way of which they interchangeably communicat their dammages And contrariwise when the stomacke is drie and shrunke it affoords great aid to the wit as we see in the hungerstarued and such as are driuen to their shifts on which doctrine it may be Persius founded himself when he said That the belly is that which quickens vp the wit But the thing most pertinent to be noted for this purpose is that if the other parts of the body be fat and fleshie and therethrough a man growes ouer grosse Aristotle sayes It makes him to leese his wit For which cause I am of opinion that if a man haue a great head albeit the same proceed for that he is endued with a very able nature and that he is furnished with a quantitie of well tempered matter yet he shall not be owner of so good a wit as if the same held a meaner size Aristotle is of a contrary opinion whilest he enquires for what cause a man is the wisest of all liuing creatures to which doubt he answers That you shall find no creature which hath so little a head as man respecting withall the greatnesse of his bodie but herein he swarued from reason for if he had opened some mans head and viewed the quantitie of his braine he should haue found that two horses together had not so much braine as that one man That which I haue gathered by experience is that in little men it is best that the head incline somewhat to greatnesse and in those who are big bodied it prooues best that they be little and the reason is for that after this sort there is found a measurable quantitie with which the reasonable soule may wel performe his working Besides this there are needfull the foure ventricles in the brain to the end the reasonable soule may discourse and Philosophize one must be placed on the right side of the braine the second on the left the third in the middle of these and the fourth in the part behind the braine Whervnto these ventricles serue and their large or narrow capablenesse for the reasonable soule all shall be told by vs a little hereafter when we shall intreat of the diuersities of mens wits But it sufficeth not that the braine possesse good figure sufficient quantitie and the number of ventricles by vs forementioned with their capablenesse great or little but it behooues also that his parts holds a certaine kind of continuednesse and that they be not diuided For which cause we haue seene in hurts of the head that some men haue lost their memorie some their vnderstanding and others their imagination and put case that after they haue recouered their health the braine re-vnited it selfe againe yet this notwithstanding the naturall vnion was not made which the braine before possessed The third condition of the fourth principall was that the braine should be tempered with measurable heat and without excesse of the other qualities which disposition we sayd heretofore that it is called good nature for it is that which principally makes a man able and the contrarie vnable But the fourth namely that the braine haue his substance or composition of subtle and delicate parts Galen sayth is the most important of all the rest For when he
would giue a token of the good disposition of the brain he affirmeth that a subtile wit sheweth that the braine is framed of subtile and very delicat parts and if the vnderstanding be dull it giues euidence of a grosse substance but he makes no mention of the temperature These conditions the braine ought to be endewed withall to the end the reasonable soule may therethrough shape his reasons and syllogismes But here encounters vs a difficultie very great and this is that if we open the head of any beast we shall find his braine composed with the same forme and manner as a mans without that any of the fore-reported conditions will be failing Whence we gather that the brute beasts haue also the vse of Prudence and reason by means of the composition of their braine or else that our reasonable soule serues not it selfe of this member for the vse of his operations which may not be auouched To this doubt Galen answereth in this manner Amongst the kinds of beasts it is doubted whether that which is termed vnreasonable be altogether void of reason or not For albeit the same want that which consists in voice which is named speech yet that which is conceiued in the soule and termed discourse of this it may be that all sorts of beasts are partakers albeit the same is bestowed more sparingly vpon some and more largely on other some But verely how far man in the way of reason outgoeth all the rest there is none who maketh question By these words Galen giues vs to vnderstand albeit with some fearfulnesse that brute beasts do partake reason one more and another lesse and in their mind do frame some syllogisines and discourses though they cannot vtter them by way of speech And then the difference betweene them and man consisteth in being more reasonable and in vsing Prudence with greater perfection The same Galen prooues also by many reasons and experiments that Asses being of all brute beasts the bluntest do ariue with their wit to the most curious and nice points which were deuised by Plato and Aristotle and there on he collects saying I am therefore so far from praysing the antient Philosophers in that they haue found out some ample matter and of rare inuention as when they say We must hold that there is selfe and diuers one and not one not only in number but also in kind as I dare boldly affirme that euen the very Asses who notwithstanding seeme most blockish of all beasts haue this from nature This selfe same meant Aristotle when he enquired the cause Why man amongst all liuing creatures is wisest and in another place he turnes to doubt For what cause man is the most vniust of all liuing creatures in which he giues vs to vnderstand the selfe same which Galen sayd That the difference which is found between man and brute beast is the selfe same which is found betweene a foole and a wise man which is nought else than in respect of the more and the lesse This truly is not to be doubted that brute beasts enioy memorie and imagination and another power which resembles vnderstanding as the Ape is very like a man and that his soule takes vse of the composition of the braine it is a matter apparant which being good and such as is behooffull performes his workes very wel and with much prudence and if the braine be ill instrumentalized it executes the same vntowardly For which cause we see that there be asses which in their knowledge are properly such and others againe are found so quicke conceipted and malicious that they passe the propertie of their kind And amongst horses are found many iadishnesses and good qualities and some there are more trainable than the rest all which growes from hauing their braine well or ill instrumentalized The reason and solution of this doubt shall be placed in the chapter which followeth for there we returne to reason anew of this matter There are in the body some other parts from whose temperature as well the wit as the braine depend of which we will reason in the last chapter of this worke But besides these and the braine there is found in the body another substance whose seruice the reasonable soule vseth in his operations and so requireth the three last qualities which we haue assigned to the braine that is quantitie sufficient delicate substance and good temperature These are the vitall spirits and arteriall blood which go wandring through the whole body and remaine euermore vnited to the imagination following his contemplation The office of this spirituall substance is to stir vp the powers of man and to giue them force and vigour that they may be able to worke This shall euidently be knowne to be their manner if we take consideration of the motions of the imaginations and of that which after succeeds in working For if a man begin to imagine vpon any iniurie that hath bene profered him the blood of the arteries runs sodainly to the heart and stirs vp the wrathfull part and giues the same heat and forces for reuenge If a man stand contemplating any faire woman or stay in giuing receiuing by that imaginatiō touching the venerious act these vitall spirits run foorthwith to the genitall members and raise them to the performance The like befals when we remember any delicat and sauourie meat which once called to mind they straight abandon the rest of the body and flie to the stomacke and replenish the mouth with water And this their motion is so swift that if a woman with child long for any meat whatsoeuer and still retaine the same in her imagination we see by experience that she looseth her burthen if speedily it be not yeelded vnto her The naturall reason of this is because these vitall spirits before the woman conceiued this longing made abode in the bellie helping her there to retaine the creature and through this new imagination of eating they hie to the stomacke to raise the appetite and in this space if the belly haue no strong retentiue it cannot sustaine the same and so by this means she leeseth her burthen Galen vnderstanding this condition of the vitall spirits counsaileth Phisitions that they giue not sicke folke to eat when their humors are raw and vpon digestion for when they first feele the meat in the stomacke they straightwaies abandon the worke about which before they were occupied and come thervnto to helpe it The like benefit and ayd the braine receiues of these vitall spirits when the reasonable soule is about to contemplat vnderstand imagine or performe actions of memorie without which it cannot worke And like as the grosse substance of the braine and his euill temperature brings the wit to confusion so the vitall spirits and the arteriall blood not being delicat and of good temperature hinder in a man his discourse and vse of reason Wherefore Plato sayd That the supplenesse and good temperature of the heart makes the
wit sharpe and quicke-sighted Hauing prooued before that the braine and not the heart is the principall seat of the reasonable soule And the reason is because these vitall spirits are engendred in the heart and partake of that substance and that temperature which rested in that which formed them Of this arteriall blood Aristotle meant when he sayd That those men are well compounded who haue their blood hot delicat and pure for they are also of good bodily forces and of a wit well disposed These vitall spirits are by the Phisitions termed Nature for they are the principall instrument with which the reasonable soule performeth his workes and of these also may that sentence be verefied Nature makes able CHAP. IIII. It is prooued that the soule vegetatiue sensitiue and reasonable haue knowledge without that any thing be taught them if so be that they possesse that conuenient temperature which is requisit for their operation THe temperature of the four first qualities which we heretofore termed Nature hath so great force to cause that of plants brute beasts and man each one set himselfe to performe those workes which are properto his kind that they ariue to that vtmost bound of perfection which may be attained sodainly without any others teaching them the plants know how to forme roots vnder ground and by way of them to draw nourishment to retaine it to digest it and to driue foorth the excrements and the brute beasts likewise so soone as they are borne know that which is agreeable to their nature and flie the things which are naughtie and noisome And that which makes them most to maruell who are not seene in naturall Philosophie is that a man hauing his braine well tempered and of that disposition which is requisit for this or that science sodainly and without hauing euer learned it of any he speaketh and vttereth such exquisit matters as could hardly win credit Vulgar Philosophers seeing the maruellous works which brute beasts performe affirme it holds no cause of maruell because they do it by naturall instinct in as much as nature sheweth and teacheth each in his kind what he is to do And in this they say very well for we haue alreadie alleaged and prooued that nature is nothing else than this temperature of the foure first qualities and that this is the schoolemaister who teacheth the soules in what sort they are to worke but they tearme instinct of nature a certaine masse of things which rise from the noddocke vpward neyther could they euer expound or giue vs to vnderstand what it is The graue Philosophers as Hippocrates Plato and Aristotle attribute all these maruellous workes to heat cold moisture and drouth and this they affirme of the first principle and passe no farther And if you aske who hath taught the brute beasts to doe these works which breed vs such maruell and men to discourse with reason Hippocrates answereth It is the natures of them all without any teacher as if he should say The faculties or the temperature of which they consist are al giuen them without being taught by any other Which is cleerely discerned if they passe on to consider the workes of the soule vegetatiue and of all the rest which gouerne man who if it haue a quantitie of mans seed wel digested and seasoned with good temperature makes a body so seemly and duly instrumentalized that all the caruers in the world cannot shape the like For which cause Galen woondring to see a frame so maruellous the number of his seuerall parts the seating the figure and the vse of each one by it selfe grew to conclude it was not possible that the vegetatiue soule nor the temperature could fashion a workmanship so singular but that the author thereof was God or some other most wise vnderstanding But this maner of speech is alreadie by vs heretofore refuted for it beseemes not naturall Philosophers to reduce the effects immediatly to God and so to slip ouer the assigning of the second reasons and especially in this case where we see by experience that if mans seed consist of an euill substance and enioy not a temperature conuenient the vegetatiue soule runs into a thousand disorders for if the same be cold and moist more than is requisit Hippocrates sayth that the men prooue Eunuches or Hermofrodites and if it be very hote and drie Aristotle sayth that it makes them curle-pated crooke-legged and flat nosed as are the Aethiopians and if it be moist the same Galen sayth that they grow long and lithie and if it be drie low of stature All this is a great defect in mankind and for such works we find little cause to giue nature any commendation or to hold her for aduised and if God were the author hereof none of these qualities could diuert him Only the first men which the world possessed Plato affirms were made by God but the rest were borne answerable to the discourse of the second causes which if they be well ordered the vegetatiue soule dooth well performe his operations and if they concur not in sort conuenient it produceth a thousand dammageable effects What the good order of nature for this effect must be is that the vegetatiue soule haue an endowment of a good temperature or else let Galen and all the Philosophers in the world answer me what the cause is that the vegetatiue soule possesseth such skill and power in the first age of man to shape his body and to increase and nourish the same and when old age groweth on can yeeld the same no longer For if an old man leese but a tooth he is past remedie of recouering another but if a child cast them all we see that natures return to renew them againe Is it then possible that a soule which hath done nought else in all the course of life than to receiue food retaine the same digest it and expell the excrements new begetting the parts which faile should towords the end of life forget this and want abilitie to do the same any longer Galen for certaine will answer that this skill and habilitie of the vegetatiue soule in youth springs from his possessing much naturall heat and moisture and that in age the same wants skill and power to performe it by means of the coldnesse and drinesse to which a bodie of those yeares is subiect The knowledge of the sensitiue soule takes his dependance also from the temperature of the braine for if the same be such as his operations require that it should be it can perform with due perfection otherwise the same must also erre no lesse than the soule vegetatiue The manner which Galen held to behold and discerne by eysight the wisedome of the sensitiue soule was to take a yoong kid but newly kidded which set on the ground begins to go as if it had bene told and taught that his legs were made to that purpose and after that he shakes from his backe the superfluous moisture which he brought
with him from his mothers belly and lifting vp the one foot scrapes behind his eare and setting before him sundrie platters with wine water vinegre oile and milke after he hath smelt them all he fed onely on that of milke Which being beheld by diuers Philosophers there present they all with one voice cried out That Hippocrates had great reason to say that soules were skilfull without the instruction of any teacher But Galen held not himselfe contented with this one proofe for two months after he caused the same kid being very hungrie to be brought into the field where smelling at many hearbs he did eat only those whereon goats accustomably feed But if Galen as he set himselfe to contemplat the demeanure of this kid had done the like with three or foure together he should haue seene some gone better than other some shrug themselues better scratch better and performe better al the other actions which we haue recounted And if Galen had reared two colts bred of one horse and mare he should haue seene the one to pace with more grace than the other and to gallop and stop better and shew more fidelitie And if he had taken an ayrie of Faulcons and manned them he should haue found the first good of wing the second good of prey and the third rauening and ill conditioned The like shall we find in hounds who being whelpes of the same litter the one for perfection of hunting will seeme to want but speech and the other haue no more inclination therevnto than if he had bene engendered by a heardmans bandog All this cannot be reduced to those vaine instincts of nature which the Philosophers faine For if you aske for what cause one dog hath more instinct than another both comming of one kind and whelpes of one sire I cannot coniecture what they may answer saue to flie backe to their old leaning post saying That God hath taught the one better than the other and giuen him a more naturall instinct And if we demaund the reason why this good hound being yet but a whelpe is a perfect hunter and growing in age hath no such sufficiencie and contrariwise another being yoong cannot hunt at all and waxing old is wylie and readie I know not what they can yeeld in replie My selfe atleast would say that the towardly hunting of one dog more than an other growes from the better temperature of his brain and againe that his well hunting whilest he is yoong and his decay in age is occasioned by means that in one age he partakes the temperature which is requisit to the qualities of hunting and in the other not Whence we infer that sithens the temperature of the foure first qualities is the reason and cause for which one brute beast better performs the works of his kind than another that this temperature is the schoolemaister which teacheth the sensitiue soule what it is to do And if Galen had considered the demeanure and voiages of the Ant and noted his prudence his mercie his iustice and his gouernment he would haue taken astonishment to see a beast so little endewed with so great sagenesse without the helpe of any maister or teacher to instruct him But the temperature which the ant hath in his braine being knowne and how aptly it is appropriated to wisedome as hereafter shall be showne this woonderment will cease and we shall conceiue that brute beasts with the temperature of their braine and the fantasmes which enter thereinto by the fiue sences make such discourses and partake those abilities which we do so note in them And amongst beasts of one kind he which is most schooleable and skilfull is such because he hath his braine better tempered and if through any occasion or infirmitie the temperature of his braine incur alteration he will sodainly leese his skill and abilitie as men also do But now we are to treat of a difficultie touching the reasonable soule which is in what sort he hath this naturall instinct for the operations of his kind namely Sapience and Prudence and how on the sodaine by means of his good temperature a man can be skilled in the sciences without the instruction of any other seeing experience telleth vs that if they be not gotten by learning no man is at his birth endewed with them Betweene Plato and Aristotle there is a waightie question as touching the verefieng the reason or cause from whence the wisedome of man may spring One sayth That the reasonable soule is more antient than the bodie for that before such time as Nature endowed the same with these instruments it made abode in heauen in the company of God whence it issued full of science and sapience but when it entered to forme this matter through the euill temperature which it found therein it forewent the whole vntill by processe of time this ill temperature grew to amendment and there succeeded another in steed thereof with which as more appliable to the sciences it had lost it grew by little and little to call that to remembrance which before it had forgotten This opinion is false and I much maruel that Plato being so great a Philosopher could not render the reason of mans wisedome considering that brute beasts haue their prudencies and naturall habilities without that their soule departs from their bodie or sties vp to heauen to learne them In which regard he cannot go blamelesse especially hauing red in Genesis whereto he gaue so great credit that God instrumentalized the body of Adam before he created his soule The selfe-same befals also now saue that it is nature who begets the body and in the last disposing thereof God createth the soule in the same body without that it be sundred therefrom any time or moment Aristotle tooke another course affirming that euerie doctrine and euery discipline comes from a foregoing knowledge as if he would say all that which men know and learne springs from that they haue heard the same seene it smelt it tasted it or felt it For there can grow no notice in the vnderstanding which hath not first taken passage by some of the fiue sences For which cause he sayd that these powers issue out of the hands of nature as a plaine table in which is no maner of painting which opinion is also false as well as that of Plato But that we may the better prooue and make the same apparant it behooues first to agree with the vulgar Philosophers that in mans body there rests but one soule and that the same is reasonable which is the originall of whatsoeuer we do or effect albeit there are opinions and there want not who against this defend that in company of the reasonable soule there are associated some two or three more This then standing thus in the workes which the reasonable soule performes as it is vegetatiue we haue alreadie proued that the same knowes how to shape man and to giue him the figure which he
great a contentment as if it had bene true I rest now in far woorse case finding my selfe in troth to be but a poore page and to morrow I must begin againe to serue one who whilst I was in mine infirmitie I would haue disdayned for my footman It skils not much whether the Philosophers admit all this and beleeue that it may be so or not but what if I should prooue by verie true stories that ignorant men strooken with this infirmitie haue spoken Latine which they neuer learned in their health and that a franticke woman told all persons who came to visit her their vertues and vices and sometimes reported matters with that assurance which they vse to giue who speake by coniectures and tokens and for this cause none almost durst come in to visite her fearing to heare of those true tales which she would deliuer and which is more to be maruelled at when a barber came to let her blood Friend quoth she haue regard what you do for you haue but few daies to liue and your wife shall marrie such a man and this though spoken by chaunce fell out so true as it tooke effect before halfe a yeare came to an end Me thinks I heare them who flie natural Philosophy to say that this is a foule leasing that put case it were true the diuell as he is wise and craftie by Gods sufferance entred into this womans body and into the rest of those frantike persons whom I haue mentioned and caused them to vtter those strange matters and yet euen to confesse this they are very loath for the diuell foreknoweth not what is to come because he hath no propheticall spirit They hold it a very sufficient argument to auouch This is false because I cannot conceiue how it may be so as if difficult quaint matters were subiect to blunt wits and came within the reach of their capacities I pretend not hereby to take those to taske who haue defect of vnderstanding for that were a bootlesse labour but to make Aristotle himselfe confesse that men endowed with the temperature requisit for such operations may conceiue many things without hauing receiued thereof any particular perseuerance or learned the same at the hands of any other Sundry also because this heat is a neighbour to the seat of the mind are wrapped in the infirmitie of sottishnesse or are heated by some furious instinct whence grew the Sibils and Bacchants and all those who men thinke are egged on by some diuine inspiration whereas this takes his originall not from any disease but from a naturall distemperature Marcus a citizen of Siracusa was excellentest poet after he lost his vnderstanding and those in whom this abated heat approcheth least to mediocritie are verely altogether melancholike but thereby much the wiser In these words Aristotle cleerely confesseth that when the braine is excessiuely heated many thereby attaine the knowledge of things to come as were the Sibils which Aristotle sayth growes not by reason of any disease but thorow the inequalitie of the naturall heat and that this is the very reason and cause thereof he proues apparantly by an example alleaging that Mark a citizen of Siracuse was a Poet in most excellencie at such time as through excessiue heat of the braine he fell besides himselfe and when he returned to a more moderat temperature he lost his versifying but yet remayned more wise and aduised In so much that Aristotle not only admits the temperature of the braine for the principall occasion of these extrauagant successes but also reprooues them who hold the same for a diuine reuelation and no naturall cause The first who tearmed these maruellous matters by the name of diuinesse was Hippocrates and that if any such point of diuinesse be found in the disease that it manifesteth also a prouidence Vpon which sentence he chargeth Phisitions that if the diseased vtter any such diuine matters they may thereby know in what case she rests and prognosticate what will become of him But that which in this behalfe driues me to most woonder is that demaunding of Plato how it may come to passe that of two sonnes begotten by one father one hath the skill of versifying without any other teaching and the other toiling in the art of poetrie can neuer beget so much as one verse he answereth That he who was borne a Poet is possessed and the other not In which behalfe Aristotle had good cause to find fault with him for that he might haue reduced this to the temperature as else where he did The frantike persons speaking of Latine without that he euer learned the same in his health time shewes the consonance which the Latin toong holds with the reasonable soule and as we will prooue hereafter there is to be found a particular wit appliable to the inuention of languages and Latine words the phrases of speech in that toong are so fitting with the eare that the reasonable soule possessing the necessarie temperature for the inuention of some delicat language sodainly encounters with this And that two deuisers of languages may shape the like words hauing the like wit and habilitie it is very manifest presupposing that when God created Adam and set all things before him to the end he might bestow on each his seuerall name whereby it should be called he had likewise at that instant molded another man with the same perfection and supernaturall grace now I demaund if God had placed the same things before this other man that he might also set them names whereby they should be called of what manner those names should haue bene for mine owne part I make no doubt but he would haue giuen these things those very names which Adam did and the reason is very apparant for both carried one selfe eye to the nature of each thing which of it selfe was no more but one After this manner might the frantike person light vpon the Latine toong and speake the same without euer hauing learned it in his health for the naturall temperature of his braine conceiuing alteration through the infirmitie it might for a space become like his who first inuented the Latine toong and faine the like words but yet not with that concert and continued finenesse for this would giue tokē that the diuel moued that toong as the church teacheth hir exorcists This selfe sayth Aristotle befel some children who at their birth-time spake some words very plainly and afterward kept silence and he finds fault with the vulgar Philosophers of his time who for that they knew not the naturall cause of this effect imputed it to the diuell The cause why children speake so soone as they are borne and after foorthwith turne to hold their peace Aristotle could neuer find out though he went much about it but yet it could neuer sinke into his braine that it was a deuise of the diuels nor an effect aboue nature as the vulgar Philosophers held opinion who
not of those which appertaine to the vnderstanding or to the memorie And frenzie peeuishnesse and melancholy being hot passions of the braine it yeelds a great argument to prooue that imagination consists in heat One thing breeds me a difficultie herein and that is that the imagination carrieth a contrarietie to the vnderstanding as also to the memorie and the reason hereof is not to be gotten by experience for in the braine may very wel be vnited much heat and much drinesse and so likewise much heat and much moisture to a large quantitie and for this cause a man may haue a great vnderstanding and a great imagination much memorie with much imagination and verely it is a miracle to find a man of great imagination who hath a good vnderstanding and a sound memorie And the cause thereof behooues to be for that the vnderstanding requires that the braine be made of parts very subtile and delicat as we haue prooued heretofore out of Galen and much heat frets and consumes what is delicat and leaues behind the parts grosse and earthly For the like reason a good imagination cannot be vnited with much memorie for excessiue heat resolueth the moisture of the braine and leaveth it hard and drie by means whereof it cannot easily receiue the figures In sort that in man there are no more but three generall differences of wits for there are no more but three qualities whence they may grow But vnder these three vniversall differences there are contained many other particulars by means of degrees of accesse which heat moisture and drinesse may haue Notwithstanding there springs a difference in wits from euery degree of these three qualities for the drie the hot and the moist may exceed in so high a degree that it may altogether disturbe the animal power conformable to that sentence of Galen Euery excessiue distemperature resolues the forces and so it is For albeit drinesse giue helpe to the vnderstanding yet it may be that the same shal consume his operations Which Galen and the antient Philosophers would not admit but affirme that if old mens brains grew not cold they should neuer decay though they became drie in the fourth degree But they haue no reason for this as we will prooue in the imaginatiue for albeit his operations be performed with heat yet if it passe the third degree foorthwith the same begins to resolue and the like doth the memorie through ouer-much moisture How many differences of wits grow by means of the superabounding of each of these three qualities cannot for this present be particularly recited except tofore we recount all the operations and actions of the vnderstanding the imagination and the memorie But the whilest we are to know that the principall works of the vnderstanding are three the first to discourse the second to distinguish and the third to chuse Hence comes it that they place also three differences in the vnderstanding into three other is the memorie deuided one receiues with ease and suddenly forgetteth another is slow to receiue but a long time retaineth and the last receiueth with ease and is very slow to forget The imagination containeth many more differences for he hath three no lesse than the vnderstanding and memorie and from each degree ariseth three other Of these we will more distinctly discourse hereafter when we shall assigne to each the science which answereth it in particular But he that will consider three other differences of wit shall find that there are habilities in those who studie some which haue a disposition for the cleare and easie contemplations of the art which they learne but if you set them about matters obscure and very difficult it will prooue a lost labour for the teacher to shape them a figure therof by fit examples or that they frame themselues the like by their owne imagination for they want the capacitie In this degree are all the bad scholers of whatsoeuer facultie who being demaunded touching the easie points of their art answer to the purpose but comming to matters of more curiousnesse they will tell you a hundred follies Other wits aduaunce themselues one degree higher for they are pliant and easie in learning things and they can imprint in themselues all the rules and considerations of art plaine obscure easie and difficult but as for doctrine argument doubting answering and distinguishing they are all matters wherewith they may in no wise be combred These need to learne sciences at the hands of good teachers well skilled in knowledge and to haue plentie of bookes and to studie them hard for so much the lesse shall their knowledge be as they forbeare to reade and take paines Of these may be verefied that so famous sentence of Aristotle Our vnderstanding is like a plaine table wherin nothing is pourtraied For whatsoeuer they are to know and attaine it behooues that first they heare the same of some other and are barren of all inuention themselues In the third degree nature maketh some wits so perfect that they stand not in need of teachers to instruct them nor to direct in what sort they are to philosophise for out of one consideration endicted to them by their schoolmaister they will gather a hundred and without that ought be bestowed vnto them they fill their wit with science and knowledge Those wits beguiled Plato and made him to say That our knowledge is a certaine spice of remembrance when he heard them speake and say that which neuer fell into consideration with other men To such it is allowable that they write bookes and to others not for the order and concert which is to be held to the end that sciences may dayly receiue increase and greater perfection is to ioine the new inuention of our selues who liue now with that which the auntients left written in their bookes For dealing after this manner each in his time shall adde an increase to the arts and men who are yet vnborne shall enioy the inuention and trauaile of such as liued before As for such who want inuention the common wealth should not consent that they make bookes nor suffer them to be printed because they do nought else saue heape vp matters alreadie deliuered and sentences of graue authours returning to repeat the selfe things stealing one from hence and taking another from thence and there is no man but after such a fashion may make a booke Wits full of inuention are by the Tuscanes called goatish for the likenesse which they haue with a goate in their demeanure and proceeding These neuer take pleasure in the plains but euer delight to walke alone thorow dangerous and high places and to appproch neere steepe down-fals for they will not follow any beaten path nor go in companie A propertie like this is found in the reasonable soule when it possesseth a braine well instrumentalized and tempered for it neuer resteth setled in any contemplation but fareth forth with vnquiet seeking to
knowne is a worke of the imagination as to write and returne to read it is a worke of the Scriuener and not of the paper Whereby it falleth out that the memorie remayneth a power passiue and not actiue euen as the blew and the white of the paper is none other than a commoditie whereby to write To the fourth doubt may be answered That it maketh little to the purpose as touching the wit whether the flesh be hard or tender if the braine partake not also the same qualitie the which we see many times hath a distinct temperature from al the other parts of the body But when they concur in one selfe tendernesse it is an euill token for the vnderstanding and no lesse for the imagination And if we consider the flesh of women and children we shall find that in tendernesse it excee deth that of men and this notwithstanding commonly men haue a better wit than women and the naturall reason heereof is For that the humours which make the flesh tender are fleagme and bloud because they are both moist as we haue aboue specified and of them Galen said That they make men simple dullards and contrariwise the humours which harden the flesh are choler and melancholie and hence grow the prudence and sapience which are found in man In sort that it is rather an ill token to haue the flesh tender than drie and hard And so in men who haue an equall temperature throughout their whole bodie it is an easie matter to gather the qualitie of their wit by the tendernesse or hardnes of their flesh For if it be hard rough it giueth token either of a good vnderstanding or a good imagination and if smooth and supple of the contrary namely of good memory and small vnderstanding and lesse imagination and to vnderstand whether the brain haue correspondence it behooueth to consider the haire which being big blacke rough and thicke yeeldeth token of a good imagination or a good vnderstanding and if soft and smooth they are a signe of much memorie and nothing els But who so will distinguish and know whether the same be vnderstanding or imagination when the haire is of this sort it must be considered of what forme the childe is in the act of laughter for this passion discouereth much of what qualitie he is in the imagination What the reason and cause of laughter should be many Philosophers haue laboured to conceiue and none of them hath deliuered ought that may well be vnderstood but all agree that the bloud is an humour which prouoketh a man to laugh albeit none expresse with what qualitie this humour is indewed more than the rest why it should make a man addicted to laughter The follies which are committed with laughing are lesse dangerous but those which are done with labour are more perillous as if he should say When the diseased become giddie and doting do laugh they rest in more safetie than if they were in toyle and anguish for the former commeth of bloud which is a most mild humour and the second of melancholie but we grounding vpon the doctrine whereof we intreat shall easily vnderstand all that which in this case may be desired to be knowen The cause of laughter in my iudgement is nought els but an approouing which is made by the imagination seeing or hearing somewhat done or said which accordeth very well and this power remaineth in the braine when any of these things giue it contentment sodainly it mooueth the same and after it all the muscles of the body and so manie times we do allow of wittie sayings by bowing downe of the head When then the imagination is verie good it contents not it selfe with euery speech but onely with those which please verie well and if they haue some litle correspondence and nothing els the same receiueth thereby rather paine than gladnesse Hence it groweth that men of great imagination laugh verie seldome and the point most worthie of noting is that ieasters and naturall counterfeiters neuer laugh at their own meriments nor at that which they heare others to vtter for they haue an imagination so delicat that not euen their own pleasanteries can yeeld that correspondence which they require Heereto may be added that merimentes besides that they must haue a good proportion and be vttered to the purpose must be new and not to fore heard or seene And this is the propertie not onely of the imagination but also of all the other powers which gouerne man for which cause we see that the stomacke when it hath twise fed vpon one kinde of meate straightwaies loatheth the same so doth the sight one selfe shape and colour the hearing one concordance how good soeuer and the vnderstanding one selfe contemplation Hence also it proceedeth that the pleasant conceited man laugheth not at the ieastes which himselfe vttereth for before he send them forth from his lips he knew what he would speake Whence I conclude that those who laugh much are all defectiue in their imagination where-through whatsoeuer merriment pleasanterie how cold soeuer with them carrieth a verie good correspondencie And because the bloud pertaketh much moisture wherof we said before that it breedeth dammage to the imagination those who are very sanguine are also great laughers Moisture holdeth this propertie that because the same is tender and gentle it abateth the force of heate and makes that it burne not ouermuch For which cause it partakes better agreement with drinesse because it sharpneth his operations Besides this where there is much moisture it is a signe that the heat is remisse seeing it cannot resolue nor consume the same and the imagination cannot performe his operations with a heate so weake Hence we gather also that men of great vnderstanding are much giuen to laughter for that they haue defect of imagination as we read of that great Philosopher Democritus and many others whom my selfe haue seene and noted Then by meanes of this laughter we shall know if that which men or boyes haue of flesh hard and tough and of haire blacke thicke hard and rough betoken either the imagination or the vnderstanding In sort that Aristotle in this doctrine was somwhat out of the way To the fifth argument we answer that there are two kindes of moisture in the braine one which groweth of the aire when this element predominateth in the mixture and another of the water with which the other elements are amassed If the braine be tender by the first moisture the memory shall be verie good easie to receiue and mightie to reteine the figures for a long time For the moisture of the aire is verie supple and full of fatnesse on which the shapes are tacked with sure hold-fast as we see in pictures which are lymned in oyle who being set against the sunne and the water receiue thereby no dammage at all and if we cast oyle vpon any writing it will neuer be wiped out but marreth the same
and that which cannot be read with oyle is made legible by yeelding thereto a brightnesse and transparence But if the difference of the braine spring from the second kinde of moisture the argument frameth verie well For if it receiue with facilitie with the same readinesse it turneth again to cancell the figure because the moisture of the water hath no fatnesse wherein the figures may fasten themselues These two moistures are knowen by the haire For that which springs from the aire maketh them to prooue vnctious and ful of oyle and fat and the water maketh them moyst and verie supple To the sixth argument may be answered that the figures of things are not printed in the braine as the figure of the seale is in waxe but they pearce thereinto to remaine there affixed in sort as the sparrowes are attached to birdlime or the flies sticke in honnie For these figures are bodilesse and cannot be mingled nor corrupt one the other To the seuenth difficultie we answer that the figures amasse and mollifie the substance of the braine in such sort as waxe groweth soft by plying the same betweene our fingers besides that the vitall spirites haue vertue to make tender and supple the hard and drie members as the outward heate doth the yron And that the vitall spirites ascend to the braine when any thing is learned by heart we haue prooued heeretofore And euery bodily and spirituall exercise doth not drie yea the Phisitions affirme that the moderate fatteneth To the eighth argument we answer that there are two spices of melancholy one naturall which is the drosse of the blood whose temperature is cold and drie accompanied with a substance very grosse this serues not of any value for the wit but maketh men blockish sluggards and grynnars because they want imagination There is another sort which is called choler ad-ust or atra bile of which Aristotle sayd That it made men exceeding wise whose temperature is diuers as that of vinegre Sometimes it performeth the effects of heat lightning the earth and sometimes it cooleth but alwaies it is drie and of a very delicat substance Cicero confesseth that he was slow witted because he was not melancholike adust and he sayd true for if he had bene such he should not haue possessed so rare a gift of eloquence For the melancholicke adust want memorie to which appertaineth the speaking with great preparation It hath another qualitie which much aideth the vnderstanding namely that it is cleere like the Agatstone with which cleerenesse it giueth light within to the braine and maketh the same to discerne well the figures And of this opinion was Heraclitus when he sayd A drie cleerenesse maketh a most wise mind with which cleerenesse naturall melancholy is not endowed but his blacke is deadly and that the reasonable soule there within the braine standeth in need of light to discern the figures the shapes we will prooue hereafter To the ninth argument we answer that the prudence and readinesse of the mind which Galen speaketh of appertaineth to the imagination whereby we know that which is to come whence Cicero sayd Memorie is of things passed and Prudence of those to come The readinesse of the mind is that which commonly they call a sharpenesse in imagining and by other names craftines subtiltie cauelling wilinesse wherefore Cicero sayd Prudence is a subtiltie which with a certaine reason can make choise of good things and of euill This sort of Prudence and readinesse men of great vnderstanding do want because they lack imagination For which reason we see by experience in great scholers in this sort of learning which appertaineth to the vnderstanding that taking them from their bookes they are not woorth a rush to yeeld or receiue in trafficke of worldly affaires This spice of Prudence Galen sayd very well that it came of choler for Hippocrates recounting to Damagetus his friend in what case he found Democritus when he went to visit him for curing him writeth that he lay in the field vnder a plane tree bare legged and without breeches leaning against a stone with a booke in his hand and compassed about with brute beasts dead and dismembred Whereat Hippocrates maruailing asked him whereto those beasts of that fashion serued and he then answered that he was about to search what humour it was which made a man to be headlong craftie readie double and cauillous had found by making an anotomie of those wild beasts that choler was the cause of so discommendable a propertie and that to reuenge himselfe of craftie persons he would handle them as he had done the fox the serpent and the ape This manner of Prudence is not only odious to men but also S. Paule sayth of it The wisedome of the flesh is enemie to God The cause is assigned by Plato who affirmeth that knowledge which is remooued from iustice ought rather to be tearmed subtiltie than prudence as if he should haue sayd It is no reason that a knowledge which is seuered from iustice should be called wisedome but rather craft or maliciousnesse Of this the diuell euermore serueth himselfe to do men dammage and S. Iames said that this wisedome came not from heauen but is earthly beastly and diuelish There is found another spice of wisedome conioyned with reason and simplicitie and by this men know the good and shun the euill the which Galen affirmeth doth appertaine to the vnderstanding for this power is not capable of maliciousnesse doublenesse nor subtilty nor hath the skill how to do naught but is wholly vpright iust gentle and plaine A man endowed with this sort of wit is called vpright and simple wherethrough when Demosthenes went about to creepe into the good liking of the iudges in an oration which he made against Eschines he tearmed them vpright and simple in respect of the simplicitie of their dutie concerning which Cicero sayth Dutie is simple and the only cause of all good things For this sort of wisedome the cold and drie of melancholie is a seruing instrument but it behooueth that the same be composed of parts very subtile and delicat To the last doubt may be answered that when a man setteth himselfe to contemplat some truth which he would faine know and cannot by and by find it out the same groweth for that the braine wanteth his conuenient temperature but when a man standeth rauished in a contemplation the naturall heat that is in the vitall spirits and the arteriall blood run foorthwith to the head and the temperature of the braine enhaunceth it selfe vntill the same arriue to the tearme behooffull True it is that much musing to some dooth good and to some harme for if the brain want but a little to arriue to that point of conuenient heat it is requisit that he make but small stay in the contemplation and if it passe that point straightwaies the vnderstanding is driuen into a garboile by the ouer plentifull presence of the vitall spirits and
memorie it were impossible to learne them with any other power How little the vnderstanding and the imagination make for the purpose to learne languages and manners of speech is easily prooued by childhood which being the age wherein man most wanteth these two powers yet saith Aristotle children learne any language more readily than elder men though these are endowed with a better discourse of reason And without farther speech experience plainly prooueth this for so much as we see that if a Biscane of 30. or 40. yeeres age come to dwell in Castilia he will neuer learn this language but if he be but a boy within two or three yeares you would thinke him born in Toledo The same befalles in the latine tongue and in those of all the rest of the world for all languages hold one selfe consideration Then if in the age when memorie chiefly raigneth and the vnderstanding and the imagination least languages are better learned than when there growes defect of memorie an encrease of vnderstanding it falles out apparent that they are purchased by the memorie and by none other power Languages saith Aristotle cannot be gathered out by reason nor consist in discourse or disputations for which cause it is necessarie to heare the word from another and the signification which it beareth and to keepe the same in mind and so he prooueth that if a man be borne deaffe it followes of necessitie that he be also dumbe for he cannot heare from another the articulation of the names nor the signification which was giuen them by the first deuiser That languages are at pleasure and a conceit of mens brains and nought else is plainly prooued for in them all may the sciences be taught and in each is to be sayd and expressed that which by the other is inferred Therfore none of the graue authors attended the learning of strange tongues thereby to deliuer their conceits but the Greekes wrot in Greeke the Romans in Latine the Hebrues in the Hebrue language and the Moores in Arabique and so do I in my Spanish because I know this better than any other The Romans as lords of the world finding it was necessarie to haue one common language by which all nations might haue commerce together and themselues be able to heare vnderstand such as came to demaund iustice and things appertayning to their gouernment commanded that in all places of there empire their should schooles be kept where the Latine tongue might be taught and so this vsage hath endured euen to our time Schoole-diuinitie it is a matter certaine that it appertaineth to the vnderstanding presupposing that the operations of this power are to distinguish conclude discourse iudge make choise for nothing is done in this facultie which is not to doubt for inconueniences to answer with distinction and against the answer to conclude that which is gathered in good consequence and to returne to replication vntill the vnderstanding find where to settle But the greatest proofe which in this case may be made is to giue to vnderstand with how great difficultie the latine tongue is ioyned with Schoole diuinitie and how ordinarily it falleth not out that one self man is a good latinist and a profound scholer at which effect some curious heads who haue lighted hereon much maruelling procured to search out the cause from whence the same might spring and by their conceit found that Schoole diuinitie being written in an easie and common language and the great latinists hauing accustomed their eare to the well sounding and fine stile of Cicero they cannot apply themselues to this other But well should it fall out for the latinists if this were the cause For forcing their hearing by vse they should meet with a remedie for this infirmitie but to speake trueth it is rather an head-ach than an eare-sore Such as are skilfull in the latine tongue it is necessarie that they haue a great memorie for otherwise they can neuer become so perfect in a tōgue which is not theirs and because a great and happie memorie is as it were cōtrarie to a great and high raised vnderstanding in one subiect where the one is placed the other is chased away Hence remaineth it that he who hath not so deepe and loftie an vnderstanding a power whereto appertaineth to distinguish conclude discourse iudge and choose cannot soone attaine the skil of Schoole diuinitie Let him that will not allow this reason for currant payment read S. Thomas Scot Durand and Caietane who are the principall in this facultie and in them he shall finde manie excellent points endited and written in a stile very easie and common And this proceeded from none other cause than that these graue authours had from their childhood a feeble memorie for profiting in the latine tongue But comming to logicke metaphisicke and Schoole diuinitie they reaped that great fruite which we see because they had great vnderstanding I can speake of a schoole diuine and manie other can verifie the same that knew and conuersed with him who being a principall man in this facultie not onely spake not finely nor with well shaped sentences in imitation of Cicero but whilest he red in a chaire his scholers noted in him that he had lesse than a meane knowledge in the latine tongue Therefore they councelled him as men ignorant of this doctrine that he should secretly steale some houre of the day from Schoole diuinitie and employ the same in reading of Cicero Who knowing this coūsell to proceed from his good friends not onely procured to remedie it priuilie but also publickly after he had red the matter of the trinitie how the diuine word might take flesh he meant to heare a lecture of the latine tongue and it fell out a matter worthy consideration that in the long time while he did so he not onely learned nothing of new but grew welneere to leese that little latine which he had before and so at last was driuen to read in the vulgar Pius the fourth enquiring what diuines were of most speciall note at the councell of Trent he was told of a most singular Spanish diuine whose solutions answeres argumentes and distinctions were worthy of admiration the Pope therefore desirous to see and know so rare a man sent word vnto him that he should come to Rome render him accompt of what was done in the Councell He came and the Pope did him many fauours amongst the rest commaunded him to be couered and taking him by the hand led him walking to Castle S. Angelo speaking verie good latine shewed him his deuise touching certain fortifications which he was then about to make the Castle stronger asking his opinion in some particulars but he answered the Pope so intricatly for that he could not speake latine that the Spanish Embassadour who at that time was Don Lewes de Requesens great Commander of Castilia was faine to step forth to grace him with his latine and to turne the Popes
discourse into another matter Finally the Pope said to his Chamberlains it was not possible that this man had so much skill in diuinitie as they made report seeing he had so little knowledge in the latine tongue But if as he proued him in this toung which is a work of memorie and in platforming and building which belong to the imagination so he had tried him in a matter appertaining to the vnderstanding he would haue vttered diuine considerations In the Catalogue of Sciences which appertaine to the imagination we placed poetry amongst the first and that not by chance nor for want of consideration but thereby to giue notice how farre off those who haue a speciall gift in poetry are from vnderstanding For we shall finde that the selfe difficultie which the latine tongue holdeth in vniting with Schoole diuinitie is also found yea and beyond comparison farre greater betweene this facultie and the art of versifiyng and the same is so contrary to the vnderstanding that by the self reason for which man is likely to proue singular therein he may take his leaue of all the other sciences which appertaine to this power and also to the latine tongue through the contrarietie which a good imagination beareth to a great memorie For the first of these two Aristotle found not the reason but yet confirmed mine opinion by experience saying Marke a Citizen of Siracusa was best Poet when he lost his vnderstanding and the cause is for that the difference of the imagination to which Poetrie belōgeth is that which requireth three degrees of heat and this qualitie so extended as wee haue before expressed breedes an vtter losse of the vnderstanding the which was obserued by the same Aristotle For he affirmeth that this Marke the Siracusane growing to more temperature enioyed a better vnderstanding but yet he attained not to versifie so well through default of heat with which this difference of the imagination worketh And this Cicero wanted when going about to describe in verse the heroicall actions of his consulship and the happie birth of Rome in that she was gouerned by him he said thus O fortunatam natam me consule Romam For which cause Iuuenall not conceiuing that to a man endowed with so rare a wit as Cicero poetrie was a matter repugnant did Satirically nip him saying If thou hadst rehearsed the Philippicks against Marck Antony answerable to the tune of so bad a verse it should not haue cost thy life But worse did Plato vnderstand the same when hee said that Poetrie was no humane Science but a diuine reuelation For if the Poets were not rauished besides themselues or full of God they could not make nor vtter any thing worthy regard And he prooueth it by a reason auouching that whilest a man abideth in his sound iudgement he cannot versifie But Aristotle reprooueth him for affirming that the art of Poetrie is not an abilitie of man but a reuelation of God And he admitteth that a wise man and who is free possessed of his iudgement cannot be a poet and the reason is because where there resteth much vnderstanding it behoueth of force that there befall want of the imagination whereto appertaineth the Art of versifieng which may the more apparently be prooued knowing that Socrates after he had learned the art of Poetrie for all his precepts and rules could not make so much as one verse and yet notwithstanding he was by the oracle of Apollo adiudged the wisest man of the world I hold it then for certaine that the boy who will prooue of a notable vaine for versifieng and to whom vpon euerie sleight consideration consonances offer themselues shall ordinarily incurre hazard not to learn well the Latine tongue Logicke Philosophie Phisicke Schoole-diuinitie and the other artes and sciences which appertaine to the vnderstanding and to the memorie For which cause we see by experience that if we charge such a boy to forme a nominatiue without booke he will not learne it in two or three daies but if there be a leafe of paper written in verse to be recited in any comedie in two turnes he fixeth them in his memorie These loose themselues by reading bookes of chiualrie Orlando Boccace Diana of Monte maggior and such other deuises for all these are workes of the imagination What shall we say then of the harmonie of the Organs and of the singing men of the Chappell whose wits are most vnprofitable for the latine tongue and for all other Sciences which appertaine to the vnderstanding and to the memorie the like reason serueth in playing on instruments and all sorts of musicke By these three examples which we haue yeelded of the Latine of Schoole-diuinitie and of Poetrie we shall vnderstand this doctrine to be true and that we haue duely made this partition albeit we make not the like mention in the other arts Writing also discouereth the imagination and so we see that few men of good vnderstanding doe write a faire hand and to this purpose I haue noted many examples and specially I haue knowen a most learned Schoole-diuine who shaming at himselfe to see how bad a hand he wrote durst not write a letter to any man nor to answere those which were sent to him so as he determined with himselfe to get a Scriuener secretly to his house who should teach him to frame a reasonable letter that might passe and hauing for many daies taken paines heerein it prooued lost labour and he reaped no profit thereby Wherefore as tyred out he forsooke the practise the teacher who had taken him in hand grew astonished to see a man so learned in his profession to be so vntoward for writing But my selfe who rest well assured that writing is a worke of the imagination held the same for a naturall effect And if anie man be desirous to see and note it let him consider the Schollers who get their liuings in the Vniuersities by copying out of writings in good forme and hee shall finde that they can little skill of Grammer Logicke and Philosophy and if they studie Phisick or Diuinitie they fish nothing neere the bottome The boy then who with his pen can tricke a horse to the life and a man in good shape and can make a good paire of it serues little to employ him in anie sort of learning but will do best to set him to some painter who by art may bring forward his nature To reade well and with readinesse discouereth also a certaine spice of the imagination and if the same be verie effectuall it booteth little to spend much time at his booke but shall do better to set him to get his liuing by reading of processes Heere a thing note-worthy offereth it selfe and that is that the difference of the imagination which maketh men eloquent and pleasant is contrarie to that which is behoofful for a man to reade with facilitie where-through none who is promptwitted can learne to reade without stumbling and putting too
persuaded and thinketh that a man hath much knowledge and wisdome is to heare him speake with great eloquence to haue a smooth tongue plentie of sweet and pleasant words and to alleage many examples fit for the purpose that is in hand but this verily springeth from an vnion which the memorie maketh with the imagination in a degree and measure of heat that cannot resolue the moisture of the brain and serueth to lift vp the figures and cause them to boile where-through are discouered many conceits and points to be vttered In this vnion it is impossible that discourse may be found for we haue alreadie said and prooued heeretofore that this power greatly abhorreth heat and moisture cannot support it Which doctrine if the Athenians had knowen they would not so much haue maruelled to see so wise a man as Socrates not to haue the gift of vtterance of whom those who vnderstood how great his knowledge was said that his words his sentences were like a wodden chest knobby and nothing trimmed on the outside but that in opening the same within it held liniamentes and portraitures of rare admiration In the same ignorance rest they who attempting to render a reason of Aristotles bad stile and obscurenes sayd That of set purpose because he would that his works should carrie authoritie he wrot vnder riddles with so slender ornament of words and simple manner of deliuerance And if we consider also the so harsh proceeding of Plato and the breefnesse with which he writeth the obscuritie of his reasons and the ill placing of the parts of his tale we shall find that nought else saue this occasioned the same For such also we find the works of Hippocrates the thefts which he committeth of Nowns and Verbs the ill disposition of his sentences and the weake foundation of his reasons to stuffe out the empty places of his doctrine What will you more vnlesse that when he would yeeld a very particular reckoning to his friend Damagetus how Artaxerxses king of Persia had sent for him promising him as much gold and siluer as he list himselfe and to make him one of the great ones of his kingdome hauing plenty of answers to so many demaunds he writ only thus The king of Persia hath sent for me not knowing that with me the respect of wisedome is greater than that of gold Farewell Which matter if it had passed through the hands of any other man of good imagination and memorie a whole leafe of paper would not haue sufficed to set it forth But who would haue bene so hardie to alleage for the purpose of this doctrine the example of S. Paule and to affirme that he was a man of great vnderstanding and little memorie and that with these his forces he could not skill of toungs nor deliuer his mind in them polishedly and with gracefulnesse if himselfe had not so sayd I reckon not my selfe to haue done lesse than the greatest Apostles for though I be ignoraunt of speech yet am I not so in vnderstanding as if he should say I confesse that I haue not the gift of vtterance but for science and knowledge none of the greatest Apostles goeth beyond me Which difference of wit was so appropriat to the preaching of the Gospell that choice could not be made of a better for that a preacher should be eloquent and haue great furniture of queint tearms is not a matter conuenient for the force of the Orators of those daies appeared in making the hearers repute things false for true and what the vulgar held for good and behooffull they vsing the precepts of their art persuaded the contrary and maintained that it was better to be poore than rich sicke than whole fond than wise and other points manifestly repugnant to the opinion of the vulgar For which cause the Hebrues tearmed them Geragnin that is to say Deceiuers Of the same opinion was Cato the more and held the abode of these in Rome for very dangerous in as much as the forces of the Romane empire were grounded on arms they began then to persuade that the Romane youth should abandon those and giue themselues to this kind of wisedome therefore in breefe he procured them to be banished out of Rome forbidding them euer to returne againe If God then had sought out an eloquent preacher who should haue vsed ornament of speech that he had entered into Athens or Rome auouching that in Hierusalem the Iewes had crucified a man who was very God and that he died of his owne accord to redeeme sinners and rose againe the third day and ascended into heauen where he now sitteth what would the hearers haue thought saue that these things were some of those follies and vanities which the Orators were woont to persuade by the force of their art For which cause S. Paule said For Christ sent me not to baptise but to preach the gospel and that not in wisdome of words least the crosse of Christ might prooue in vaine The wit of S. Paule was appropriat to this seruice for he had a large discourse to proue in the synagogues and amongst the Gentils That Iesus Christ was the Messias promised in the law and that it was bootlesse to looke for any other and herewithall he was of slender memorie and therefore he could not skil to speake with ornament and sweet and well relished tearms and this was that which was behooffull for preaching of the gospell I will not maintaine for all this that S. Paule had not the gift of toungs but that he could speake all languages as he did his owne neither am I of opinion that to defend the name of Christ the forces of his great vnderstanding sufficed if there had not bene ioined therewithall the meane of grace and a speciall ayd which God to that purpose bestowed vpon him it sufficeth me only to say That supernaturall gifts worke better when they light vpon an apt disposition than if a man were of himselfe vntoward and blockish Hereto alludeth that doctrine of S. Hierome which is found in his proem vpon Esay and Hieremie where asking what the cause is that it being one selfe holy-ghost which spake by the mouth of Hieremie and of Esay one of them propounded the matters which he wrot with so great elegancie and Hieremie scarsely wist how to speake to which doubt he answereth that the holy-ghost applieth it selfe to the naturall manner of proceeding of each Prophet without that his grace varrieth their nature or teacheth thē the language wherein they are to publish their prophesie Therefore we must vnderstand that Esay was a noble gentleman brought vp in court and in the citie of Hierusalem and for this cause had ornament polishednesse of speech But Ieremie was borne and reared in a village of Hierusalem called Anathochites blunt and rude in behauiour as a country person and of such a stile the holy ghost vsed the seruice in the prophecie which he
nought else to be considered this imagination hath force not onely to compound a figure possible with another but doth ioyne also after the order of nature those which are vnpossible and of them growes to shape mountains of gold and calues that flie In lieu of their owne inuention oratours may supply the same with much reading forasmuch as their imagination faileth them but in cōclusion whatsoeuer bookes teach is bounded and limited and the proper inuention is a good fountain which alwaies yeeldeth forth new and fresh water For retaining the things which haue been read it is requisite to possesse much memorie and to recite them in the presence of the audience with readinesse cannot be done without the same power For which cause Cicero said he shall in mine opinion be an oratour worthy of so important a name who with wisdome with copiousnesse and with ornament can readily deliuer euerie matter that is worth the hearing Heeretofore we haue said and prooued that wisdome appertaineth to the imagination copiousnesse of words and sentences to the memorie ornament and polishment to the imagination to recite so many things without faltring or stopping for certain is atchieued by the goodnesse of the memorie To this purpose Cicero auouched that the good oratour ought to rehearse by heart and not by booke It falleth not besides the matter to let you vnderstand that M. Antony of Lebrissa through old age grew to such a decay of memorie that he read his Rhetoricke lecture to his schollers out of a paper and for that he was so excellent in his profession and with good proofes confirmed his points propounded it passed for currant but that which might no way be tollerated was that where he died sodainly of an apoplexie the Vniuersitie of Alcala recommended the making of his funerall oration to a famous preacher who inuented and disposed what he had to say the best he could but time so pressed him as it grew impossible for him to con the same without booke Wherefore getting vp into the pulpit with his paper in his hand he began to speake in this sort That which this notable man vsed to do whilst he read to his schollers I am now also resouled to do in his imitation for his death was so sodaine and the commandement to me of making his funerall fermon so late as I had neither place nor time to studie what I might say nor to con it by heart Whatsoeuer I haue been able to gather with the trauell of this night I bring heere written in this paper and beseech your maisterships that you will heare the same with patience and pardon my slender memorie This fashion of rehearsing with paper in the hand so highly displeased the audience as they did nought els than smile and murmure Therefore verie well said Cicero that it behooued to rehearse by heart and not by booke This preacher verily was not endowed with any inuention of his own but was driuen to fetch the same out of his books and to performe this great studie and much memorie were requisite But those who borrow their conceits out of their owne brain stand not in need of studie time or memorie for they find all ready at their fingers ends Such will preach to one selfe audience all their life long without reapeating any point touched in twentie yeares before whereas those that want inuention in two Len●s cull the flowers out of all the books in a whole world and ransacke to the bottom all the writings that can be gotten and at the third Lent must go and get themselues a new auditory except they will heare cast in their teeth This is the same which you preached vnto vs in the yeare before The third propertie that a good orator ought to haue is that he know how to dispose his matter placing euerie word and sentence in his fit roome in sort that the whole may carrie an answerable proportion and one thing bring in another And to this purpose Cicero said Disposition is an order and distribution of things which sheweth what ought in what places to be bestowed which grace when it is not naturall accustomably breedeth much cumber to the preachers For after they haue found in their books many things to deliuer all of them cannot skill to apply this prouision readily to euerie point This property of ordering and distributing is for certaine a worke of the imagination since in effect it is nought els but figure and correspondence The fourth propertie wherewith good oratours should be endowed and the most important of all is action wherwith they giue a being and life to the things which they speake and with the same do moue the hearers and supple them to beleeue how that is true which they go about to persuade For which cause Cicero said Action is that which ought to be gouerned by the motion of the body by the gesture by the countenance by the confirmation and varietie of the voice As if he should say action ought to be directed in making the motions and gestures which are requisite for the things that are spoken lifting vp and falling with the voice growing passionate and sodainly turning to appeasement one while speaking fast another-while leisurely reproouing and cherishing mouing the bodie sometimes to the one side somtimes to the other plucking in the armes and stretching them out laughing and weeping and vpon some occasions beating the hands togither This grace is so important in preachers that by the same alone wanting both inuention and disposition of matters of small value and ordinary they make a sermon which filleth the audience with astonishment for that they haue this action which otherwise is termed spirit or pronunciation Heerein falleth a thing worth the marking whereby is discouered how much this grace can preuaile and it is that the sermons which through the much action and much spirite doe please much when they be set downe in writing are nothing worth nor will any wel-neer vouchsafe their reading and this groweth because with the pen it is impossible to pourtray those motions and those gestures which in the pulpit so far wan mens likings Other sermons shew verie well in paper but at their preaching no man listeth to giue eare because that action is not giuē them which is requisite at euerie close And therefore Plato said that the stile wherewith we speake is far different from that which we write well where-through we see manie men who can speake very well do yet endite but meanly and others contrariwise endite verie well and discourse but harshly all which is to be reduced to action and action for certaine is a worke of the imagination for all that which we haue vttered thereof maketh figure correspondence and good consonance The fifth grace is to know how to assemble alleage good examples and comparisons which better contenteth the hearers humour than any thing els For by a fit example they easily vnderstand the doctrine and without the
sense which is gathered out of the construction thereof and none other This doctrine thus presupposed it falleth out a matter very manifest for what reason the lawyers are termed lettered and other men of learning not so for this name is deriued from the word letter which is to say a man who is not licenced to follow the capacitie of his owne vnderstanding but is enforced to ensue the sense of the very letter And for that the well practised in this profession haue so construed it they dare not denie or affirme any thing which appertaineth to the determination of any case whatsoeuer vnles they haue lying before them some law which in expresse tearms decideth the same And if sometimes they speake of their owne head interterlacing their conceit and reason without grounding vpon some law they do it with feare and bashfulnesse for which cause it is a much worne prouerbe We blush when we speake without law Diuines cannot call themselues lettered in this signification for in the holy scripture the letter killeth and the spirit giueth life it is full of mysteries replenished with figures and cyphers obscure and not vnderstood by all readers the vowels and phrases of speech hold a very different significatiō from that which the vulgar and three-tounged men do know Therefore whosoeuer shall set himselfe to construe the letter and take the sence which riseth of that Grammaticall construction shall fall into many errours The Phisitions also haue no letter whereto to submit themselues for if Hippocrates and Galen and the other graue authors of this facultie say and affirme one thing and that experience and reason approue the contrarie they are not bound to follow them for in Phisicke experience beareth more sway than reason and reason more than authoritie but in the lawes it betideth quite contrary for their authoritie and that which they determine is of more force and vigour than all the reasons that may be alleaged to the contrary Which being so we haue the way layd open before vs to assigne what wit is requisit for the lawes For if a Lawyer haue his vnderstanding and imagination tied to follow that which the law auouched without adding or diminishing it falleth out apparent that this facultie appertaineth to the memorie and that the thing wherein they must labour is to know the number of the lawes and of the rules which are in the text and to call to remembrance ech of them in particular to rehearse at large his sentence and determination to the end that when occasion is ministred we may know there is a law which giueth decision and in what forme and maner Therefore to my seeming it is a better difference of wit for a lawyer to haue much memory and litle vnderstanding than much vnderstanding and litle memorie For if there fall out no occasion of employing his wit and abilitie and that he must haue at his fingers ends so great a number of lawes as are extant and so far different from the other with so manie exceptions limitations enlargements it serues better to know by heart what hath been determined in the lawes for euerie point which shall come in question than to discourse with the vnderstanding in what sort the same might haue been determined for the one of these is necessarie the other impertinent since none other opinion than the verie determination of the law must beare the stroke So it falles out for certaine that the Theorick of the law appertaineth to the memorie and not to the vnderstanding nor to the imagination for which reason and for that the lawes are so positiue and that because the lawyers haue their vnderstanding so tied to the will of the law-maker and cannot entermingle their own resolution saue in case where they rest vncertaine of the determination of the law when any client seeketh their iudgement they haue authoritie and licence to say I wil looke for the case in my booke which if the Phisition should answer when he is asked a remedie for some disease or the Diuine in cases of conscience we would repute them for men but simply seen in the facultie wherof they make profession And the reason heereof is that those sciences haue certain vniuersall principles and definitions vnder which the particuler cases are contained but in the law-facultie euery law containeth a seuerall particular case without hauing anie affinitie with the next though they both be placed vnder one title In respect whereof it is necessarie to haue a notice of al the lawes and to studie ech one in particuler and distinctly to lay them vp in memorie But heere against Plato noteth a thing worthy of great consideration and that is how in his time a learned man was held in suspition that he knew many lawes by heart seeing by experience that such were not so skilfull iudges pleaders as this their vaunt seemed to pretend Of which effect it appeareth he could not find out the cause seeing in a place so conuenient he did not report the same onely he saw by experience that Lawyers endowed with good memorie being set to defend a cause or to giue a sentence applied not their reasons so well as was conuenient The reason of this effect may easily be rendered in my doctrine presupposing that memorie is contrarie to the vnderstanding that the true interpretation of the lawes to amplifie restraine and compound them with their contraries and oppositions is done by distinguishing concluding arguing iudging and chusing which workes we haue often said heeretofore belong to discourse and the learned man possessing much memorie cannot by possibilitie enioy them We haue also noted heeretofore that memorie supplieth none other office in the head than faithfully to preserue the figures and fantasies of things but the vnderstanding and the imagination are those which work therewithall And if a learned man haue the whole art of memory and yet want vnderstanding and imagination he hath no more sufficiencie to iudge or plead than the verie Code or Digest which cōpassing within them all the laws and rules of reason for all that cannot write one letter Moreouer albeit it be true that the law ought to be such as we haue mentioned in his definition yet it falleth out a miracle to finde thinges with all the perfections which the vnderstanding attributeth vnto them that the law be iust and reasonable and that it proceed fullie to all that which may happen that it be written in plain termes void of doubt oppositions and that it receiue not diuerse constructions we see not alwaies accomplished for in conclusion it was established by mans coūsell and that is not of force sufficient to giue order for al that may betide and this is daily seen by experience for after a law hath bin enacted with great aduisement and counsell the same in short space is abrogated againe for when it is once published and put in practise a thousand inconueniences discouer themselues
they were fashioned to the forme And this artificialnesse grew to such force as it was conuerted into nature for in processe of time all the children that were born of nobilitie had their head sharp from their mothers womb So from thenceforth the art and diligence of the mid-wiues heerin became superfluous But so soon as they left nature to her liberty and her owne ordering without oppressing her any longer with art she turned by little and little to recouer again the figure which she had before In like sort might it befall the children of Israel who notwithstanding the region of Aegypt the Manna the delicat waters and their sorrowfulnesse wrought those dispositions of wit in that seed yet those reasons and respects surceasing and other contrary growing on it is certain that by little and little the qualities of the Manna would haue worn away and other far different therefrom haue grown on conformable to the countrey where they inhabited to the meats which they fed vpon to the waters which they dranke to the aire which they breathed This doubt in naturall philosophy holdeth little difficultie for there are some accidents to be found which are brought in at a moment afterwards endure for euer in the subiect without possibility of corrupting Others there are which wast asmuch time in vndoing as they occupied in engrafting some more some lesse according to the action of the agent and the disposition of the patient For example of the first we must know That a certain man through a great feare wher-into he was driuen rested so transformed and changed in colour that he seemed dead and the same lasted not only during all the time of his owne life but also the children which he begat had the same colour without that he could find any remedie to take it away Conformable heerunto it may be that in 430 yeares whilest the people of Israel led their liues in Aegypt 40 in the wildernesse and 60 in the bondage of Babilon there needed more than 3000 yeares that this seed of Abraham should take a full losse of their disposition of wit occasioned by this Manna seeing to reforme the bad colour setled vpon a sodain through feare more than 100 yeares were requisit But because the truth of this doctrin may be vnderstood from the root it behoueth to resolue two doubts which serue to the purpose and as yet I haue not cleered The first is whence it commeth that meats by how much the more delicat and sauoury they are as hennes and partridge so much the sooner the stomacke doth abhorre and lothe them and contrariwise we see that a man eateth beefe all the yeare long without receiuing any annoiance thereby and if he eat hennes flesh but three or foure daies togither the fifth he cannot abide the sauour thereof but that it will turne his stomacke vpside-downe The second is whence it commeth that bread of wheat and flesh of mutton not being of substance so good and sauoury as hen and partridge yet the stomacke neuer loatheth them though we feed theron all our liues long But wanting bread we cannot eat other meats neither do they content vs. He that can shape an answer to these two doubts shal easily vnderstand for what cause the descendents of the people of Israel haue not yet lost the dispositions accidents which Manna brought into that seed neither will the promptnesse of wit and subtletie wherof they then possessed themselues so soon take an end Two certain and very true principles there are in naturall philosophy on which the answer and resolution of these doubts dependeth The first is That al powers whatsoeuer which gouern man are naked and depriued of the conditions and qualities which rest in their obiect to the end that they may know and giue iudgement of all the differences The eies partake this property who being to receiue into themselues all figures and colours it was of necessitie vtterly to depriue them of figures and colours For if they were pale as in those who are ouercome with the yellow iandize all things wheron they looked would appeare to them of the same colour So the tongue which is the instrument of tast ought to be void of all sauours and if the same be sweet or bitter we know by experience that whatsoeuer we eat or drinke hath the like tast And the same may be auouched of hearing of smelling and of feeling The second principle is that all things created naturally couet their preseruation and labour to endure for euer and that the being which God and nature haue giuen them may neuer take end notwithstanding that afterward they are to possesse a better nature By this principle all naturall things endowed with knowledge and sense abhorre and flie from that which altereth and corrupteth their naturall composition The stomacke is naked and depriued of the substance and qualities of all meats in the world as the eye is of colours and figures and when we eat ought though the stomacke ouercome it yet the meat turneth against the stomacke for that the same is of a contrary principle and altereth and corrupteth his temperature and substance for no agent is of such force but that in doing it also suffereth Meats that are very delicat and pleasing doe much alter the stomacke first because it digesteth and embraceth them with great appetit and liking and then through their being so suttle and void of excrements they pierce into the substance of the stomacke from whence they cannot depart againe the stomacke then feeling that this meat altereth his nature and taketh away the proportion which he carrieth to other meats groweth to abhor the same and if he must needs feed thereon it behooueth to vse many sallets and seasonings thereby to beguile him All this Manna had euen from the beginning for though the same were a meat of such delicasie and pleasing relish yet in the end the people of Israell found it fulsome and therefore sayd Our soule loatheth this ouer light meat A complaint far vnworthie of a people so specially fauoured by God who had pretended a remedie in that behalfe which was that Manna had those relishes and tasts which well agreed with them to the end they might eat thereof Thou sentest them bread from heauen which had in it all pleasingnesse for which cause many amongst them fed thereon with good appetite for they had their bones their sinewes and their flesh so imbewed with Manna and his qualities that by means of the resemblance from each to other they longed after nothing else The like befalleth in bread of wheat and weathers flesh whereon we accustomably feed Grosse meats and of good substance as beefe haue much excrements and the stomacke receiueth them not with such desire as those that are delicat and of good relish and therefore is longer ere the same take alteration by them Hence commeth it that to corrupt the alteration which Manna made in one day it
the Diuines Originall Iustice by which they come to represse the brunts of the inferiour portion and the part reasonable remaineth superiour and enclined to vertue But when our first parents offended they lost this qualitie and the irascible and concupiscible remained in their nature and superiour to reason in respect of the strength of the three members that we spake of and man rested readie euen from his youth vnto euill Adam was created in the age of youth which after the Physitions is the most temperat of all the residue and from that age foorth he was enclined to euilnes sauing that little time whilst he preserued himselfe in grace by originall iustice From this doctrine we gather in good naturall Philosophie that if a man be to performe any action of vertue to the gainsaieng of the flesh it is impossible that he can put the same in execution without outward ayd of grace for the qualities with which the inferiour power worketh are of greater efficacie I sayd with gainsaying of the flesh because there are many vertues in man which grow for that he hath his powers of wrath and concupiscence feeble as chastitie in a cold person but this is rather an impotencie of operation than a vertue for which cause had not the catholicke church taught vs that without the speciall aid of God we could not haue ouercome our owne nature Philosophie naturall would so haue learned vs namely that grace comforteth our wil. That then which Galen would haue sayd was that a temperat man exceedeth in vertue all others who want this good temperature for the same is lesse prouoked by the inferiour part The fifth propertie which those of this temperature possesse is to be very long liued for they are strong to resist the causes and occasions which engender diseases and this was that which the roiall prophet Dauid meant The daies of our age in themselues are seuentie yeares but if in the potentates there be eightie or more it is their paine and sorrow as if he should say The number of yeares which men ordinarily do liue arriue vnto seuentie and if potentates reach vnto eightie those once passed they are dead on their feet He tearmeth those men potentates who are of this temperature for more than any other they resist the causes which abridge the life Galen layeth downe the last token sayeng that they are very wise of great memorie for things passed of great imagination to foresee those to come and of great vnderstanding to find out the truth of all matters They are not malicious not wily not cauillers for these spring from a temperature that is vitious Such a wit as this assuredly was not framed by nature to addict it selfe vnto the studie of the Latine tongue Logicke Philosophie Phisicke Diuinitie or the Lawes for put case he might easily attaine these sciences yet none of them can fully replenish his capacitie only the office of a king is in proportion answerable therevnto and in ruling and gouerning ought the same solely to be imploied This shal easilie be seene if you run ouer the tokens and properties of a temperat man which we haue laid downe by taking into consideration how fitly ech of them squareth with the roiall scepter and how impertinent they shew for the other arts and sciences That a king be faire and gratious is one of the things which most inuiteth his subiects to loue him and wish him well For the obiect of loue saith Plato is beautie and a seemly proportion and if a king be hardly fauoured and badly shaped it is impossible that his subiects can beare him affection rather they reake it a shame that a man vnperfect and void of the gifts of nature should haue sway and commaundement ouer them To be vertuous and of good conditions easily may we gather how greatly it importeth for he who ought to order the liues of his subiects and deliuer vnto them rules and lawes to liue conformably to reason it is requisit that he performe the same also in his owne person for as the king is such are the great the meane and the inferiour persons Moreouer by this means he shall make his commandements the more authenticall and with the better title may chastise such as do not obserue them To enioy a perfection in all the powers which gouern man namely the generatiue nutritiue wrathfull and reasonable is more necessarie in a king than any artiste whatsoeeuer For as Plato deliuereth in a well ordered common-wealth there should be appointed certain surueiours who might with skill looke into the qualities of such persons as are to be married and giue to him a wife answerable vnto him in proportion and to euerie wife a conuenient husband Through this diligence the principall end of matrimonie should not become vaine for we see by experience that a woman who could not conceiue of her first husbād marrying another straghtwaies beareth children and many men haue no children by their first wife taking another speedily come to be fathers Now this skill saith Plato is principally behooffull in the marriage of kings for it being a matter of such importance for the peace and quiet of the kingdome that the Prince haue lawfull children to succeed in the estate it may so fall that the king marrying at all aduentures shall take a barraine woman to wife with whom he shal be combred all daies of his life without hope of issue And if he decease without heires of his body straightwaies it must be decided by ciuill wars who shall command next after him But Hippocrates saith this art is necessarie for men that are distemperat and not for those who partake this perfect temperature by vs described These need no special choice in their wife nor to search out which may answere them in proportion for whom soeuer they marry withal saith Galen forthwith they beget issue but this is vnderstood when the wife is sound and of the age wherein women by order of nature may conceiue and bring forth in sort that fruitfulnesse is more requisit in a king than in any artist whatsoeuer for the reasons tofore alleaged The nutritiue power saith Galen if the same be gluttonous greedy and bibbing it springeth for that the liuer and stomack want the temperature which is requisit for their operations and for this cause men become riotous and short liued But if these members possesse their due temperature and composition the selfe Galen affirmeth that they couet no greater quantitie of meat and drink than is conuenient for preseruation of life Which propertie is of so great importance for a king that God holdeth that land for blessed to whose lot such a Prince befalleth Blessed is the land saith he in Ecclesiasticus whose king is noble and whose princes feed in due times for their refreshment and not for riotousnesse Of the wrathful facultie if the same be extended or remisse it is a token saith Galen that the heart is ill composed and partaketh
and moist and contrariwise she that is swart and browne is in the first degree therof of which two extreames is framed the second degree of white and well coloured To haue much haire and a little shew of a beard is an euident signe to know the first degree of cold and moist for all Phisitions affirme that the haire and beard are engendred of heat and drinesse and if they be blacke it greatly purporteth the same A contrary temperature is betokened when a woman is without haire Now she whose complexion consisteth in the second degree of cold and moist hath some haire but the same reddish and golden Foulnesse moreouer and fairenesse help vs to iudge the degrees of cold and moist in women It is a miracle to see a woman of the first degree very faire for the seed whereof she was formed being dry hindereth that she cannot be fairely countenanced It behooueth that clay be seasoned with conuenient moisture to the end vessels may be well framed and serue to vse But when that same is hard dry the vessell is soule and vnhandsom Aristotle farther auoucheth that ouermuch cold and moist maketh women by nature foule for if the seed be cold and very moist it can take no good figure because the same standeth not togither as we see that of ouer soft clay ill shaped vessels are fashioned In the second degree of cold and moist women prooue verie faire for they were formed of a substance well seasoned and pleasant to nature which token of it selfe alone affordeth an euident argument that the woman is fruitfull for it is certain that nature could do it and we may iudge that she gaue her a temperature and composition fit for bearing of children Wherethrough she answers in proportion welneer to al men and all men do desire to haue her In man there is no power which hath tokens or signes to descry the goodnesse or malice of his obiect The stomacke knoweth the meat by way of tast of smelling and of sight wherethrough the diuine scripture saith That Eue fixed her eies on the tree forbidden and her seemed that it was sweet in tast The facultie of generation holdeth for a token of fruitfulnesse a womans beautie and if she be foule it abhorreth her conceiuing by this signe that nature erred and gaue her not a fit temperature for bearing of children By what signes we may know in what degree of hot and dry euery man resteth § 1. A Man hath not his temperature so limited as a woman for he may be hot drie which temperature Aristotle Galen held was that which best agreed with his sex as also hot and moist and temperat but cold moist and cold and drie they would not admit whilst a man was sound and without impairment for as you shall find no woman hot and drie nor hot and moist or temperat so shall you find no man cold and moist nor cold and drie in comparison of women vnlesse in case as I shal now expresse A man hot and drie and hote and moist and temperat holdeth the same degrees in his temperature as doth a woman in cold and moist and so it behooueth to haue certain tokens whereby to discerne what man is in what degree that we may assigne him a wife answerable vnto him in proportion We must therefore weet that from the same principles of which we gathered vnderstanding what woman is hot and drie and in what degree from the selfe we must also make vse to vnderstand what man is hote and drie and in what degree and because we sayd that from the wit and manners of a man we coniecture the temperature of his cods it is requisit that we take notice of a notable point mentioned by Galen namely that to make vs vnderstand the great vertue which a mans cods possesse to giue firmnesse and temperature to all the parts of the body he affirmeth that they are of more importance than the heart and he rendereth a reason saying that this member is the beginning of life nought else but the cods are the beginning of liuing soundly and without infirmities How much it endammageth a man to be depriued of those parts though so small there need not many reasons to prooue seeing we see by experience that forth with the haire and the beard pill away and the big and shrill voice becommeth small and herewithall a man leeseth his forces and naturall heat and resteth in far woorse and more miserable condition than if he had bene a woman But the matter most worth the noting is that if a man before his gelding had much wit and habilitie so soone as his stones be cut away he groweth to leese the same so far foorth as if he had receiued some notable dammage in his very braine And this is a manifest token that the cods giue reaue the temperature from all the other parts of the body and he that will not yeeld credit hereunto let him consider as my selfe haue done oftentimes that of 1000 such capons who addict themselues to their booke none attaineth to any perfection and euen in musicke which is their ordinarie profession we manifestly see how blockish they are which springeth because musick is a worke of the imagination this power requireth much heat whereas they are cold and moist So it falleth out a matter certaine that from the wit and habilitie we may gather the temperature of the cods for which cause the man who showeth himselfe prompt in the works of the imagination should be hot and drie in the third degree And if a man be of no great reach it tokeneth that with his heat much moisture is vnited which alwaies endammageth the reasonable part and this is the more confirmed if he be good of memorie The ordinarie conditions of men hot and dry in the third degree are courage pride liberalitie audacitie and cheerefulnesse with a good grace and pleasantnesse and in matter of women such a one hath no bridle nor ho. The hote and moist are merry giuen to laughter louers of pastime faire conditioned very courteous shamefast and not much addicted to women The voice and speech much discouereth the temperature of the cods That which is big and somwhat sharp giueth token that a man is hot and dry in the third degree and if the same be pleasant amiable and very delicat it purporteth little heat and much moisture as appeareth in the gelded A man who hath moist vnited with heat will haue the same high but pleasant shrill Who so is hot and drie in the third degree is slender hard and rough fleshed the same composed of sinews and arteries and his veines big contrariwise to haue much flesh smooth and tender is shew of much moisture by means wherof it extendeth and enlargeth out the naturall heat The colour of the skin if the same be brown burned blackish greene and like ashes yeeldeth signe that a man is in the third degree of
like vnderstanding by means of the much heat and he shall want memorie through his abundance of drinesse These are woont to be very preiudiciall to the common wealth for the heat enclineth them to many vices and euils and giueth them a wit and mind to put the same in execution howbeit if we do keepe them vnder the common-wealth shall receiue more seruice by these mens imagination than by the vnderstanding and memorie of the others Hens capons veale weathers of Spaine are all meats of moderat substance for they are neither delicat nor grosse I said weathers of Spain for Galen without making any distinctiō saith that their flesh is of a grosse and noisom substance which straieth from reason for put case that in Italie where he wrot it be the worst of all others yet in this our countrey through the goodnesse of the pastures we may reckon the same among the meats of moderat substance The children who are begotten on such food shall haue a reasonable discourse a reasonable memory and a reasonable imagination VVherethrough they wil not be verie profoundly seen in the Sciences nor deuise ought of new Of these we haue said heretofore that they are pleasant conceited and apt in whom may be imprinted all the rules and considerations of art cleere obscure easie and difficult but doctrine argument answering doubting and distinguishing are matters wherewith their braines can in no sort endure to be cloied Cowes flesh Manzo bread of red graine cheese oliues vineger and water alone will breed a grosse seed and of faultie temperature the sonne engendred vpon these shall haue strength like a bull but withall be furious and of a beastly wit Hence it proceedeth that amongst vpland people it is a miracle to find one quicke of capacitie or towardly for learning they are all borne dull and rude for that they are begotten on meats of grosse and euill substance The contrarie hereof befalleth in Citizens whose children we find to be endowed with more wit and sufficiencie But if the parents carrie in verie deed a will to beget a sonne prompt wise and of good conditions let them six or seuen daies before their companying feed on Goats milke for this aliment by the opinion of all phisitions is the best and most delicat that any man can vse prouided that they be sound and that it answer them in proportion But Galen saith it behooueth to eat the same with honny without which it is dangerous and easily corrupteth The reason hereof is for that the milke hath no more but three elements in his composition cheese whey and butter The cheese answereth the earth the whey the water and the butter the aire The fire which mingleth the other elements and preserueth them being mingled issuing out of the teats is exhaled for that it is verie subtile but adioyning thereunto a little honny which is hot and dry in lieu of fire the milke wil so partake of al the 4 elements Which being mingled and concocted by the operation of our naturall heat make a seed verie delicat and of good temperature The sonne thus engendred shall at leastwise possesse a great discourse and not be depriued of memorie and imagination In that Aristotle wanted this doctrine he came short to answer a probleme which himselfe propounded demanding what the cause is that the yong ones of brute beasts carry with them for the most part the properties and conditions of their sires and dammes And the children of men and women not so And we find this by experience to be true for of wise parents are borne foolish children and of foolish parents children very wise of vertuous parents lewd children and of vitious parents vertuous children of hard fauoured parents faire children and of faire parents foule children of white parents browne children and of brown parents white and well coloured children And amongst children of one selfe father and mother one prooueth simple and another wittie one foule and another faire one of good conditions and another of bad one vertuous and another vitious VVhereas if a mare of a good harrage be couered with a horse of the like the colt which is foaled resembleth them aswell in shape and colour as in their properties To this probleme Aristotle shaped a very vntowardly answer saying that a man is caried away with many imaginations during the carnall act and hence it proceedeth that the children prooue so diuers But brute beasts because in time of procreation they are not so distraughted neither possesse so forcible an imagination as man doth make alwaies their yong ones after one selfe sort and like to themselues This answer hath euer hitherto gone for currant amongst the vulgar philosophers and for confirmation hereof they alleage the history of Iacob which recounteth that he hauing placed certaine rods at the watering places of the beasts the lambes were yeaned party coloured But little auailes it them to handfast holy matters for this historie recounteth a miraculous action which God performed therein to hide some sacrament And the answer made by Aristotle sauoreth of great simplicitie And who so wil not yeeld me credit let him at this day cause some shepheards to try this experiment and they shall find it to be no naturall matter It is also reported in these our partes that a ladie was deliuered of a sonne more brown than was due because a blacke visage which was pictured fell into her imagination Which I hold for a iest and if perhaps it be true that she brought such a one to the world I say that the father who begat him had the like colour to that figure And because it may be the better known how fromshapen this philosophy is which Aristotle bringeth in togither with those that follow him it is requisit we hold it for a thing certaine that the worke of generation appertaineth to the vegetatiue soule and not to the sensitiue or reasonable for a horse engendreth without the reasonall and a plant without the sensitiue And if we do but marke a tree loden with fruit we shall find on the same a greater variety than in the children of any man One apple will be green another red one little another great one round another ill shaped one soūd another rotten one sweet and another bitter And if we compare the fruit of this yeare with that of the last the one will be very different and contrary to the other which cannot be attributed to the varietie of the imagination seeing the plantes do want this power The error of Aristotle is very manifest in his own doctrine for he saith that the seed of the man and not of the woman is that which maketh the generation and in the carnal act the man doth nought els but scatter his seed without forme or figure as the husbandman soweth his corne in the earth And as the graine of corne doth not by and by take root nor formeth a stalke and leaues vntill some daies been expired so saith Galen
how powerfull the same is in the age of childhood and how weake and remisse in old age Againe in boyes estate the reasonable soule cannot vse his operations whereas in old age which is vtterly void of heat and moisture it performeth them with great effect In sort that by how much the more a man is enabled for procreation and for digestion of food so much he leeseth of his reasonable facultie To this alludeth that which Plato affirmeth that there is no humour in a man which so much disturbeth the reasonable faculty as abundance of seed only saith he the same yeeldeth help to the art of versifieng Which we behold to be confirmed by daily experience for when a man beginneth to entreat of amorous matters sodainly he becommeth a Poet And if before he were greasie and loutish forthwith he takes it at heart to haue a wrinckle in his pumpe or a mote on his cape And the reason is because these workes appertaine to the imagination which encreaseth and lifteth it selfe vp from this point through the much heat accasioned in him by this amorous passion And that loue is an hot alteration sheweth apparently through the courage and hardinesse which it planteth in the louer from whom the same also reaueth all desire of meat and will not suffer him to sleep If the common-wealth bare an eie to these tokens she would bannish from publicke studies lusty schollers and great fighters inamoured persons Poets and those who are verie neat and curious in their apparrell for they are not furnished with wit or abilitie for any sort of study Out of this rule Aristotle excepteth the melancholicke by adustion whose seede though fruitfull reaueth not the capacitie Finally all the faculties which gouern man if they be very powerfull set the reasonable soule in a garboile Hence it proceeds that if a man be very wise he proueth a coward of small strength of bodie a spare feeder and not verie able for procreation And this is occasioned by the qualities which make him wise namely coldnesse and drinesse And these selfe weaken the other powers as appeareth in old men who besides their counsell and wisdom are good for nothing els This doctrine thus presupposed Galen holdeth opinion that to the end the engendring of whatsoeuer creature may take his perfect effect two seeds are necessary one which must be the agent and former and another which must serue for nourishment for a matter so delicat as generation cannot straightwais ouercome a meat so grosse as is the bloud vntill the effect be greater And that the seed is the right aliment of the seed members Hippocrates Plato and Galen doe all accord for by their opinion if the bloud be not conuerted into seed it is impossible that the sinews the veins the arteries can be maintained Wherthrough Galen affirmed the difference betweene the veines and the cods to be that the cods doe speedily make much seed and the veins a little and in long space of time In sort that nature prouided for the same an alimēt so like which with light alteration without making any excremēts might maintain the other seed And this could not be effected if the nourishment therof had bin made of the bloud The selfe prouision saith Galen was made by nature in the engendring of mankind as in the forming of a chick and such other birds as come of egs In which we see there are two substances one of the white and another of the yolke of one of which the chicke is made and by the other maintained all the time whiles the forming endureth For the same reason are two seeds necessarie in the generation of the man one of which the creature may be made and the other by which it may be maintained whilst the forming endureth But Hippocrates mentioneth one thing worthie of great consideration namely that it is not resolued by nature which of the two seeds shalbe the agent and formour which shall serue for aliment For many times the seed of the woman is of greater efficacy than that of the man and when this betideth she maketh the generation and that of the husband serueth for aliment Otherwhiles that of the husband is more mighty and that of the wife doth nought els than nourish This doctrin was not cōsidered by Aristotle who could not vnderstand wherto the womans seed serued and therefore vttered a thousand follies and that the same was but a little water without vertue or force for generation VVhich being granted it would follow impossible that a woman should euer couet the conuersation of man or consent thereunto but would shun the carnall act as being herselfe so honest and the worke so vncleane and filthy wherethrough in short space mankind would decay and the world rest depriued of the fairest creature that euer nature formed To this purpose Aristotle demandeth what the cause is that fleshly copulation should be an action of the greatest pleasure that nature euer ordained for the solace of liuing things To which probleme he answereth that nature hauing so desirously procured the perpetuitie of mankind did therefore place so great a delight in this worke to the end that they being mooued by such interest might gladly apply themselues to the act of generation and if these incitements were wanting no woman or man would condiscend to the bands of marriage inasmuch as the woman should reape none other benefite than to beare a burden in her belly the space of nine months with so great trauaile and sorrowes and at the time of her child-birth to vndergo the hazard of forgoing her life So would it be necessarie that the common-wealth should through feare enforce women to marrie to the end mankind might not come to nothing But because nature doth her things with pleasing she gaue to a woman all the instruments necessarie for making a seed inciting and apt for issue whereby she might desire a man and take pleasure in his conuersation But if it were of that qualitie which Aristotle expresseth she would rather flie and abhorre him than euer loue him This selfe Galen prooueth alleaging an example of the brute beastes wherethrough he saith that if a Sowe be speyed she neuer desireth the Boare nor will consent that he approch vnto her The like we do euidently see in a woman whose temperature partaketh more of coldnesse than is requisite for if we tell her that she must be married there is no word which soundeth worse in her eare And the like befalleth to a cold man for he wanteth the fruitful seed Moreouer if a womans seed were of that maner which Aristotle mentioneth it could be no proper aliment for to attain the last qualities of actual nutriment a totall seed is necessarie whereby it may be nourished Wherthrough if the same come not to be concocted semblable it cannot performe this point for womans seed wanteth the instruments and places as are the stomacke the liuer and the cods where it may be
combers and therefore molested by that passion to driue the same from them doe marrie wiues Of such Galen saith that they haue the instruments of generation very hot and dry and for this cause breed seed verie pricking apt for procreation A man then who goeth seeking a woman not his owne is replenished with this fruitfull digested and well seasoned seed Whence it followeth of force that he make the generation for where both are equall the mans seed carrieth the greatest efficacie and if the son be shaped of the seed of such a father it ensueth of necessitie that he resemble him The contrarie betideth in lawfull children who for that married men haue their wiues euer couched by their sides neuer take regard to ripen the seed or to make it apt for procreation but rather vpon euery light enticement yeeld the same from them vsing great violence and stirring whereas women abiding quiet during the carnall act their seed vessels yeeld not their seed saue when it is well concoct and seasoned Therfore married women do alwaies make the engendring and their husbands seed serueth for aliment But somtimes it comes to passe that both the seeds are matched in equall perfection and cumbat in such sort as both the one and the other take effect in the forming and so is a child shaped who resembleth neither father nor mother Another time it seemeth that they agree vpon the matter part the likenesse between them the seed of the father maketh the nosthrils and the eies and that of the mother the mouth and the forehead And which carrieth most maruell it hath so fallen out that the sonne hath taken one eare of his father and another of his mother and so the like in his eies But if the fathers seed do altogither preuaile the childe retaineth his nature and his conditions and when the seed of the mother swaieth most the like reason taketh effect Therefore the father who coueteth that his child may be made of his owne seed ought to withdraw himselfe for some daies from his wife and stay till all his seed be concocted and ripened and then it will fall out certain that the forming shall proceed from him and the wifes seed shall serue for nourishment The second doubt by meanes of that we haue said already beareth little difficultie for bastard children are ordinarily made of seed hote and dry and from this temperature as we haue oftentimes prooued heretofore spring courage brauerie and a good imagination whereto this wisdome of the world appertaineth And because the seed is digested and well seasoned nature effecteth what she likes best and pourtraieth those children as with a pensill To the third doubt may be answered that the conceiuing of lewd women is most commonly wrought by the mans seed and because the same is drie and verie apt for issue it fasteneth it selfe in the woman with verie strong rootes but the childe breeding of married women being wrought by their own seed occasioneth that the creature easily vnlooseth because the same was moist and watry or as Hippocrates saith full of mustinesse What diligences are to be vsed for preseruing the childrens wit after they are formed §. 5. THe matter wherof man is compounded prooueth a thing so alterable and so subiect to corruption that at the instant when he beginneth to be shaped he like wise beginneth to be vntwined and to alter and therin can find no remedy For it was said so soon as we are born we faile to be Wherthrough nature prouided that in mans body there should be 4 natural faculties attractiue retētiue concoctiue expulsiue The which concocting altering the aliments which we eate returne to repaire the substance that was lost ech succeeding in his place By this we vnderstand that it little auaileth to haue engendred a child of delicat seed if we make no reckoning of the meates which afterwards we feed vpon For the creation being finished there remaineth not for the creature any part of the substance wherof it was first composed True it is that the first seed if the same be well concocted and seasoned possesseth such force that digesting altering the meats it maketh them though they be bad and grosse to turne to his good temperature and substance but we may so far forth vse contrary meats as the creature shall loose those good qualities which it receiued from the seed wherof it was made therefore Plato said that one of the things which most brought mans wit and his manners to ruine was his euill bringing vp in diet For which cause he counselled that we should giue vnto children meats and drinks delicat and of good temperature to the end that when they grow big they may know how to abandon the euil to embrace the good The reason hereof is very cleere For if at the bginning the braine was made of delicat seed and that this member goeth euerie day impairing and consuming and must be repaired with the meats which we eat it is certaine if these being grosse and of euill temperature that vsing them many daies togither the braine will become of the same nature Therefore it sufficeth not that the child be borne of good seed but also it behooueth that the meat which he eateth after he is formed and borne bee endowed with the same qualities What these be it carrieth no great difficultie to manifest if you presuppose that the Greekes were the most discreet men of the world and that enquiring after aliments and food to make their children witty and wise they found the best and most appropriat For if the subtile and delicate wit consist in causing that the braine be compounded of partes subtile and of good temperature that meate which aboue all others partaketh these two qualities shalbe the same which it behooueth vs to vse for obteining our end Galen and all the Greeke Phisitions say that Goats milke boiled with honny is the best meat which any man can eat for besides that it hath a moderate substance therein the heat exceedeth not the cold nor the moist the drie Therefore we said some few leaues past that the parentes whose will earnestly leadeth them to haue a childe wise prompt and of good conditions must eat much Goats milke boiled with honny 7 or 8 daies before the copulationut-Balbeit this aliment is so good as Galen speaketh of yet it falleth out a matter of importance for the wit that the meate consist of moderate substance and of subtile partes For how much the finer the matter becommeth in the nourishment of the braine so much the more is the wit sharpened For which cause the Greekes drew-out of the milke cheese and whey which are the two grosse aliments of his composition and left the butter which in nature resembleth the aire This they gaue in food to their children mingled with honny with intention to make them witty and wise And that this is the trueth is plainly seen by that which Homer recounteth