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

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iustice that men vse against malefactors be grounded Shall there be more iustice in men who are altogether iniustice themselues then in God who is the fountaine of all iustice yea iustice it selfe All this must be so or else we must confesse that all these things testifie vnto vs that God hath care ouer vs and that there is an other place and time of rewarding euery man according to his workes then in this worlde and heere in this life For this cause Saint Peter calleth the day of the last iudgement in which all shall appeare before God the time of the restauration of all things foretolde of God by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the worlde beganne For considering that al things are so confused and troubled in the worlde that it seemeth there is no difference betwixt the blessings and curses of God pronounced in his lawe and that all things are turned topsie turuy by the malice of men the Lord hath ordained a place and time in which hee will put an end to this disorder and wil restore al things to their right estate and good order Now if the Lord hath appointed that euery one shal be rewarded at that time and place it followeth that then and there also wee must search for the end for which man was created and that his soule shall liue there And if the soule then liueth and in that place it followeth well also that there is the end of it For we take the ende for that which is the last and most perfect in euery thing So that if the question be of the authoritie of men and multitude of witnesses for the confirmation of that which hath beene hitherto saide of the immortalitie of the soules of men wee shall haue for this purpose all those who from the beginning of the worlde amongest all people and nations haue beleeued and thought that there is a God that there is a Diuine nature and prouidence and consequently any religion yea euen those barbarous and sauage nations which were found out of late dayes in those new Ilands commonly called the new found world And if the qualitie of the witnesses is to be considered we shall still haue almost all on our side For if wee looke vnto the most barbarous and strangest nations that are the testimonie of nature which all of them carry in their hearts compelleth them to range themselues on this side And if we come to others that haue bin more ciuil better instructed we shall haue a greater aduantage Or if the question be of the greatest and of such as by the consent and testimonie of all were accompted and were indeede best learned and most vertuous we shal not only finde them to haue beene on our side but also that they haue condemned as ignorant men and vnworthy to liue them that haue beene of a contrary opinion betwixt which men and the other there is great difference For those among the Philosophers that denied the immortalitie of the soule were such as did abolish also all diuine nature and prouidence and all religion and such as placed the soueraigne good of men in pleasure which kinde of men were alwayes woorthily taken to be the vilest and most abiect and as it were the skumme and dregges of the professours of Philosophie For to the ende wee may the better vnderstand this by mine aduise we will consider of the best arguments that are alleadged by Philosophers to prooue the immortalitie of soules that they who will not credite the testimony of the holy Scriptures may feele themselues vrged in their conscience with the sayings of Ethnickes and heathen men who shall rise vp in iudgement against them to aggrauate their condemnation Now it belongeth to thee AMANA to followe this matter Of an other argument for the immortalitie of the soule taken from that naturall desire which men haue of knowledge of Aristoteles opinion touching the nature and immortalitie of the soule of other reasons of Philosophers to prooue that the spirite can not be of a corruptible and mortall nature and how iust men should be more miserable and should haue more occasion to feare and to eschew death then the vniust and wicked if the soule were mortall Chap. 94. AMANA There is in all men a naturall desire of knowledge and wisedome yea a man may perceiue that most barbarous men desire naturally to knowe vnto what Art soeuer they apply their spirite iudging the same to be commendable honest as contrariwise they accompt it vnbeseeming a man and dishonest to be ignorant to erre and to be deceiued From this desire the wisest and most famous among the Philosophers tooke a very good argument to prooue the immortalitie of the soule For seeing this desire is naturall and that in this worlde all the knowledge and wisedome that men can haue is very small and as it were nothing in respect of that which they want they conclude necessarily that there must needes be some other place and time then in this life wherein that which is heere begunne but slenderly is to be accomplished and made perfect The reason from whence they deriue their argument is that common saying that God and Nature the minister of God doe nothing without cause Wherefore seeing this desire of knowledge and wisedome is naturall in man it can not be in vaine neither is it giuen vnto him but that it should attaine to some end and perfection For to what purpose serued the corporal eies of liuing creatures and for what cause should they be giuen them if they could neuer see or were to liue alwaies in darknes So likewise why should the eies of the soule mind be giuen to men thereby to behold celestiall and diuine things which cannot be seene with bodily eies if they could neuer view them but in such darknes as they do heere behold them To what end also should man be naturally pricked forward with a desire to know the truth and to haue skill if he could neuer soundly enioy his desire but should remaine always in ignorance for the greatest part of those things which he desireth to know which are of so great waight that whatsoeuer he is able to vnderstand and know in this world is nothing or very little in regarde of that which yet remaineth behinde for him to knowe For not to speake of those things in which all humane philosophie must acknowledge her ignorance let vs come to that vnderstanding which wee may haue by the holie Scriptures reuealed vnto vs of God For although the knowledge wee haue by them surpasseth without al comparison all humane philosophie and science yet Saint Paul compareth it to a knowledge that is very obscure to a light that is seene through thicke and darke cloudes and to an image represented vnto vs in a glasse in comparison of that most high and perfect knowledge and vnderstanding which is reserued for vs in another life and whereof
French Academy as it is diuided into seuerall dayes workes and distinguished by Chapters The first dayes worke Pag. 15 OF the creation of the first man and of the matter whereof the body of man is made Chap. 1. 22 Of the creation of woman Chap. 2. 28 Of the simple or similarie parts of the body namely the bones ligaments gristles sinowes pannicles cords or filaments vaines arteries and flesh Chap. 3. 34 Of the compound parts of the body and first of the feete and legges and of the armes and hands Chap. 4. 41 Of the backbone of the marrow thereof of the ribs and of other bones of mans body Chap. 5. 47 Of the share bone and marrow of the bones of the bones in the head and of the flesh of the muscles and of their office Chap. 6. 52 Of the kernels in the body and of their sundry vses especially of the breasts of women of their beauty and profite in the nourishing of children and of the generation of milke Chap. 7. 57 Of the fatte and skins of mans body and of their vse of the haires thereof Chap. 8. The second dayes worke 62 Of the bodily and external sences especially of touching of their members instruments and offices Chap. 9. 67 Of the eyes and of their excellency profite and vse of the matter and humors whereof they are made Chap. 10. 73 Of the tunicles and skinnes of the eyes of their forme motions of their sundry coulors of the sinewes whereby they receiue sight and of other parts about the eyes Chap. 11. 79 Of the eares and of their composition office and vse Chap. 12. 85 Of the diuers vses of the tongue of the instrumēts necessary both for voyce and speach howe there is a double speach of the forme thereof how the spirite of man is represented thereby Chap. 13. 91 Of the agreement which the instruments of the voyce and speach haue with a payre of Organs what things are to be considered in placing of the lungs next the heart of the pipes and instruments of the voyce Chap. 14. 96 Of the tongue and of the nature and office thereof of the excellency profite of speach which is the art of the tongue what is to bee considered touching the situation thereof in the head and neare the braine Chap. 15. 103 Of the office of the tongue in tasting and in preparing meat for the nourishment of the body of the teeth and of their nature and office of the conduite or pipe that receiueth and swalloweth downe meates Chap. 16. The third dayes worke 108 OF the sence of tast giuen to the palal what tastes are good to nourish the body of the diuersitie of them of hunger and thirst and of their causes Chap. 17. 113 Of helps and creatures meete for the preseruation and nourishment of the body how God prepareth them to serue for that purpose of their vse Chap. 18. 119 Of the nose and of the sence of smelling and of their profit and vse of the composition matter and forme of the nose Chap. 19. 124 Of the vse briefly of all the outward sences of mans body namely in purging the superfluities and ordures of his nose of the diuersity that is in mens faces and of the image of the minde and heart in them Chap. 20. 130 Of the nature faculties and powers of mans soule of the knowledge which we may haue in this life and how excellent necessary it is into what kinds the life and soule are diuided Chap. 21. 136 Of the two natures of which man is compounded how the body is the lodge and instrument of the soule how the soule may be letted from doing her proper actions by the body and be separated from it and yet remaine in her perfection Chap. 22. 142 Of the braine and of the nature therof of the sundry kinds of knowledge that are in man of the similitude that is betweene the actions and workes of the naturall vertues of the soule and of the internall senses Chap. 23. 147 Of the composition of the braine with the members and parts thereof of their offices and that knowledge which ought to content vs touching the principall cause of the vertues and wonderfull powers of the soule Chap. 24. The fourth dayes worke 148 OF the seate of voluntary motion and sense of the office and nature of the common sense of imagination and of fantasie how light and dangerous fantasie is of the power which both good and bad spirits haue to mooue it Chap. 25. 158 Of reason and memorie and of their seate nature office of the agreement which all the senses both external and internall haue one with another and of their vertues Chap. 26. 164 That the internall senses are so distinguished that some of them may bee troubled and hindered and the rest bee safe and whole according as their places and instruments assigned vnto them in the body are sound or perished and of those that are possessed with deuils Chap. 27. 170 Of the reasonable soule and life and of vertue of the vnderstanding and will that are in the soule and of their dignity and excellency Chap. 28. 176 Of the variety and contrarietie that is found in the opinions deliberations counsayles discourses and iugdements of men with the cause thereof and of the good order and ende of all discourses Chap. 29. 182 Of iudgement and of his office after the discourse of reason and how beliefe opinion or doubting followe it of the difference that is betweene them Chap. 30. 187 Of the meanes whereby a man may haue certaine knowledge of those things which hee ought to beleeue and to take for true of the naturall and supernatural light that is in man and how they beare witnesse of the image of God in him Chap. 31. 192 How the vertues and powers of the soule shew themselues by litle and litle and by degrees of contemplation and of the good that is in it of that true and diuine contemplation which wee looke for after this life Chap. 32. The fift dayes worke 198 OF the appetites that are in all liuing creatures and namely in man and of their kinds and particularly of the naturall and sensitiue appetite Chap. 33. 203 Of will and of the diuers significations and vses of these words Reason and Will of the actions freedome and nature thereof of the power which reason may haue ouer her Chap. 34. 208 Of those good things which both men only guided by the light of nature are able to propound to themselues and to follow and they also that are guided by the spirit of God of the power and liberty of the will in her actions both externall and internall Chap. 35. 214 Of the distinction that ought to bee betweene the vnderstanding knowledge and the will and affections in the soule and betweene the scates and instruments which they haue in the body of the agreement that is betweene the heart and the braine Chap. 36. 219 Of the
nature and composition of the heart and of the midriffe of the tunicles or skinnie couerings of the breast and of the Pericardion or Cawle about the heart of the motion office and vse of the lungs of the heart and of the arteryes Chap. 37. 224 Of the substance situation and counterpoize of the heart of the nature and vse of the vitall spirite and of the forge vessels and instruments thereof of the sundry doores and pipes of the heart and of their vses Chap. 38. 229 Of the second motion of the heart which belongeth to the affections of the soule and of those that goe before or follow after iudgement of the agreement that is betweene the temperature of the body and the affections of the soule Chap. 39. 233 Of the health and diseases of the soule of the agreement betweene corporall and spiritual physicke how necessarie the knowledge of the nature of the body and of the soule is for euery one Chap. 40. The sixt dayes worke 237 OF foure things to bee considered in the will and in the power of desiring in the soule and first of natural inclinations of selfe loue and the vnrulinesse thereof Chap. 41. 241 Of the habite of the soule in the matter of the affections and of what force it is of the causes why the affections are giuen to the soule with the vse of them of the fountaine of vertues and vices Chap. 42 246 That according to the disposition of the iudgement the affections are more or lesse moderate or immoderate of the cause of all the motions of the soule and heart of the variety of affections of the generation nature and kindes of them Chap. 43. 250 That ioy or griefe are alwayes ioyned to the affections and what ioy and griefe are properly Chap. 44. 255 Of the causes why God hath placed these affections of ioy and sorrow in the heart of true and false ioy and of good and bad hope Chap. 45. 260 Of feare and of the nature and effects thereof toward the body the mind and the soule and how it troubleth them of the true harnesse and armour against feare Chap. 46. 265 Of the delight and pleasure that followeth euery ioy and of the moderation that is required therein of diuers degrees of pleasures and how men abuse them especially those pleasures which are receiued by the corporal senses Chap. 47. 270 Of the comparison of pleasures receiued by the internall senses and how men descend by degrees from the best to the basest pleasures of the difference betweene the vse of spirituall delights and corporall and how the one chase the other Chap. 48. The seuenth dayes worke 276 OF the affections of loue of the nature kinds and obiect of it of the beginning of friendship of the vertue and force of alluring that is in likenesse and in beauty of the agreement that is betweene beauty and goodnesse Chap. 49. 281 Of other causes why beauty procureth loue and of diuers degrees and kinds of beauty how it is the nature of loue alwayes to vnite an what other effects it hath how loue descendeth and ascendeth not what power it hath to allure and breed loue Chap. 50. 286 Of desire and coueting and of the kinds of it of the infinitenesse of mens desires and what Good is able to satisfie and content it of the difference betweene desire and loue and of the vtmost limit and end of loue Chap. 51. 291 Of the good things that are in true loue of the diuers valuations of loue and of the benefits which it procureth what knowledge is requisite to allure loue and how one loue groweth by another of the friendshippe that may bee both betweene the good and the badde Chap. 52. 297 Of fauour reuerence and of honour of their nature and effects of those outward signes whereby they shewe themselues of pity and compassion and howe agreeable it is to the nature of man Chap. 53. 302 Of offence in the heart and soule of the degrees of offence and of the good and euill that may be in this affection of contempt that is bredde of it and of mockery which followeth contempt Chap. 54. 307 Of anger and of the vehemency and violency thereof of the difference that is betweene anger and rancor of the affection of reuenge that accompanieth them of the motions of the heart in anger with the effectes thereof wherefore this affection is giuen to man and to what vse it may serue him Chap. 55. 313 Of hatred and of the nature and effects thereof of a good kind of hatred and of the remedy to cure the euill hatred of enuie and of the kindes and effects thereof of the difference betweene good and euill enuy Chap. 56. The eight dayes worke 319 OF iealousie and of the kindes thereof how it may bee eyther a vice or a vertue howe true zeale true iealousie and indignation proceede of loue of their natures and why these affections are giuen to man Chap. 57. 324 Of reuenge cruelty and rage and what agreement there is among them what shame and blushing is and why God hath placed these affections in man and of the good and euill that is in them Chap. 58. 330 Of pride with the consideration thereof aswell in nature intire as corrupted of the orginall thereof and of such as are most inclined thereunto what vices accompany it how great a poison it is and what remedy there is for it Chap. 59. 335 Of the naturall powers of the soule and what sundry vertues they haue in the nourishment of the body of their order and offices of their agreement and necessary vse where the vegetatiue soule is placed in the body and what vertue it hath to augment the same Chap. 60. 341 What instruments the soule vseth in the body about the naturall works of nourishing and augmenting of the ventricle of stomacke and of the figure orifices and filamentes it hath of the stomacke and of what substance and nature it is of the causes of hunger and of appetite of the inferior orifice Chap. 61. 347 Of the intalles and bowels and of their names and offices of the nature of the three smaller guttes and of the other three that are greater of the instructions which wee may learne by these things Chap. 62. 353 Of the Mesentery and Mesareon of the Meseraicall veines of the Pancreas or sweete bread and of their nature and office of the liuer and of his nature and office of the rootes bodies branches of the veines of their names and vses and of the similitude betweene them and the arteries Chap. 63. 358 Of the blood and of other humours in the body of their diuersity and nature and of the agreement they haue with the elementes of the similitude that is betwixt the great garden of this great worlde and that of the little worlde touching the nourishment of things contayned and preserued in them Chap. 64. The ninth dayes worke 363 OF the vapours that ascend vp to the braine
all natures contayned therein if it shall please God to giue vs grace as he hath giuen vs wils to performe it True it is that we haue now taken in hand a very long piece of worke and not greatly necessary in respect of the principall cause of our meeting together if we meant here to make an entire and perfect Anatomy of mans body This duetie belongeth to Physicions which we will not take vpon vs but it shall suffice vs to open a gappe to the consideration first of the matter whereof the body is made and of the diuersitie thereof then of the fourme which God hath giuen vnto it and lastly of the profit and vse of them both For through a litle vnderstanding and knowledge which wee may haue of these things if we consider them as we ought we shal haue great occasion to maruayle at the worke of God in the frame of the body yea wee shall see therein store of testimonies of his almighty power knowledge wisdome goodnesse and prouidence But as for the soule we will labour to make her to behold herselfe in the glasse of her wonderfull actions so farre forth as she is able to contemplate herselfe and to measure her greatnesse by her owne compasse Wherefore we will here make as it were an Anatomy of the soule and of all her partes powers vertues and faculties instructing our selues at large in the consideration of her nature creation and immortalitie and eschewing in all our discourses as much as we may obscure words and phrases subtill curious and vnprofitable disputations which the ancient Philosophers haue vsed in the searching out of such matters we wil apply our selues to the greatest number of such as haue not haunted the schooles of philosophy that we may profit many and instruct our selues in the truth by familiar speaches so farre forth as our weake iudgement is able to comprehend being directed by the gift and grace of God and made cōformable to his word which is the true touchstone whereby all doctrine is to be examined Moreouer we wil obserue in our discourses the same order which we kept in our Academical treatises but only that I thinke it meetest for our present purpose that euery one of vs after he hath discoursed of some point should offer matter subiect to his companion to prosecute and speake of as if he gaue him instructions concerning that thing which he propoundeth vnto him And thus we will deale all foure of vs euery one in his course making one discourse round in the morning and another the afternoone continuing vntill we haue finished as it were a naturall history of man and of his parts the body and soule First therefore thou shalt instruct vs ASER in the creation of first man and in the matter whereof mans body is made Par la prieres Dieu m'ayde ¶ THE FIRST DAYES worke of the second part of the French Acadamy Of the creation of the first man and of the matter whereof the body of manis made Chap. 1. ASER God only hath his being of himselfe therefore he is eternal without beginning without end But because hee would not be alone he created the creatures and by their creation gaue being to that which was nothing before Therefore all natures tooke their beeing and essence and do hold it of that first euerlasting essence Thus also he answered to Moses who asked of him what his name was I will be that I will be or I am that I am Moreouer he said Thus shalt thou say to the children of Israel I am hath sent me vnto you We see heere what name hee giueth himselfe whereby hee sheweth that he onely is and hath an immutable essence and existence which onely to speake properly a man may call a Being Wherefore seeing God is the first essence and that onely that hath being of it selfe and from which all others proceede as riuers from their spring and fountaine we shall easily come vnto the Eternitie of God if we know how to ascend thither by the degrees of the essences of all those creatures which descended from his eternall and vnchangeable essence by reason whereof he is called Iehouah by the Hebrews If then we consider our selues euery one of vs shal know that he had a beginning that he made not himselfe neither came into the worlde but by the help of another This consideration wil leade euery one to his father and mother that begat him being come so far he wil passe on and ascend step by step to his ancestors making the like iudgement of al his predecessors as of himselfe For he wil by and by think that they came into the world after the same maner that he did and not otherwise and that they were not the first men Thus if a man ascend vp stil from father to father he must needes in the ende come to some one father that was the first father of all of whome all others tooke their beginning as hee that was the stocke of all mankinde This first father must either haue his being of one or be eternall or come of some eternall matter like to God or bee God himselfe Which because he● coulde not be ●hee must needes haue some beginning and bee borne after another fashion then they were that descended of him Now what 〈◊〉 can we say he had but the Creator of the whole world Being come to his first beginning wee can mount no higher but must stay there and conclude that this first builder of nature was without beginning that he is infinite and eternall otherwise we shall neuer find place to stay at Thus we see how the creature leadeth vs from essence to essence proceeding from one to another vntill it come to the first essence which is infinite and eternall the spring and fountaine of all others which we call God But let vs speake of this creation of the first man After the almighty power of 〈◊〉 Eternal had within nothing and of nothing made the onely matter of the world had seucred out of this Chaos the ayre the fire the earth and the water inriched the whole with celestiall lights herbes plants earthy ayery and watry liuing creatures Let vs sayd he make man in our owne image according to our likenesse and let them rule ouer the 〈◊〉 of the sea and o●er the foule of the heauen and ouer the beasts and ouer all the earth and ouer euery thing that creepeth and moouethon the earth Nowe we will note here in the first place three things well worthy of consideration First that God did not barely command that man should be made and created as he commanded for the other creatures but he speaketh as though some great king or prince should ideliberate with his Councill about the making of some great worke declaring afterward himselfe why he tooke this way in the cruation of man onely and not in the creation of the other creatures like wise
ribbes For seeing the members of mans breathing are closed within needefull it is that they should not onely bee defended and armed with bones for their garde and preseruation but also that these bones should bee so placed that they might inlarge and restraine themselues open and close againe in such wise that the breathing and members thereof be not hindered in their motions Therefore they are all by nature lesse harde then the other besides they are many to the end there might be spaces betwixt them not only for the inlarging restraining of the breast but also that the muscles might bee placed betweene the ribbes And this is one cause why it was needfull that the backebone should be framed as it is namely that it might bee moe commodious for respiration And because the stomacke also standeth in neede of inlargement and restraint according to the quantity of the meate which it receaueth and according as it is lift vp and pressed downe thereby therefore it was requisite that it should haue the like helpe But forasmuch as it might soone bee hurt by reason of the hardnesse of the ribbes if they were driuen and forced against it God hath so disposed those ribbes wherewith he hath defended the stomacke that they are neyther so long nor so hard as the rest For they are of a softer kind of bone drawing neerer to the nature of gristles then the other and the more they descend downward the shorter they are Therefore the lower part of the ribs are commonly called the false ribbes or bastard ribbes which on eche side are fiue in number the other seuen ending at the breast-bone to the end they may defend and garde the heart lungs which are vitall parts Hereupon when any hath bene wounded to death it is often said in the holy scriptures that he was stricken vnder the fift ribbe because no blow pierceth those partes but it hurteth some one of the vitall members which cannot be wounded but that death followeth therevpon We see then how the prouidence of God did well forcsee whatsoeuer was requisite in this worke of mans body and hath prouided thereafter as need required as we may easily iudge by that which wee haue heard of the bones onely which parts are most earthie and massy and are voyde of all sence Wherefore we may well conceaue how excellently this wisedome hath wrought in the other partes and members that are more noble But we may iudge a great deale better of all this if we consider that our treatise of the bones onely is but very litle in comparison of that which might be spoken if a man would vtter it as Phisicions doe and distinguish properly of all the kindes of bones and of their vses Nowe to ende the outwarde composition of the body touching the bones we must consider of the share bone and of the bones of the head of the marow that is within the bones and of the vse of the necke Last of all wee will clothe with flesh this dry Anatomy that afterward we may come to those parts of our building that are most noble and excellent Therfore it belongeth to thee AMANA to intreat of this subiect Of the share bone and marrow of the bones of the bones in the head and of the flesh of the muscles and of their office Chap. 6. AMANA Nothing maketh the worke of God in the composition of mans bodie more woonderfull then the beautie of his shape and the exquisite arte vsed in the worke wherin a man cannot change so much as a naile or an eyelidde which is but haire but that some imperfection must be acknowledged therein and some discommoditie following thereupon will cause it to be perceiued For this cause the kingly Prophet considering his creation speaketh as one rauished with admiration I will sayeth hee prayse thee for I am fearefully and wonderfully mad marueilous are thy woorkes and my soule knoweth it well Hee could not in all that Psalme maruaile sufficiently at so excellent a woorke of God Therefore he vsed a word which signifieth as much in the Hebrewe tongue as if in stead of our speech thou hast framed or fashioned me hee should haue saide I haue benewouen or wrought in tissue and interlaced and fashioned artificially as it were in broadery woorke And truely no image or picture howe well soeuer it bee painted and purtrayted is to be compared with the forme and figure of mans bodie neyther is there any woorke of tapistrie so well wrought and imbrodered or that hath such varietie of exquisite arte and such diuersitie of figures as that hath And from what paterns doe Painters and Ingrauers take the fashion and forme of those Images and pictures which they would drawe foorth but from this What is a piece of tapistry or imbrodered woorke in comparison of a mans bodie which is as it were an image of the whole world and wherein a man may finde almost the varietie and draughts of all things contained in the whole frame of the world This will euidently appeare vnto vs in the sequele of our speeches touching the compounded parts of the body Therefore to finish the externall composition of this humane building concerning the bones we will first note that God in creating the bellie hath not compassed it about with bones as he hath done the other parts of the body and that chiefly for two causes First it is most meet it should be so by reason of the meat it receiueth Secondly for the benefite of women that beare children But to the end it might be vpholden together with that burden it beareth God hath giuen vnto it the Share bone for a foundation which also standeth insteed of a bulwarke for the bowels And because a man cannot alwayes stande vpright but must oftentimes sitte downe not onely to rest himselfe but also to dispatch many works which he hath to doe therefore he hath the buttocke bones and the flesh wherewith they are couered which are vnto him in stead of a stoole and a cushion to sitte at his ease And forasmuch as the bones are to be nourished they haue for their familiar foode the marrow which by nature is moist soft fat and sweete Therefore it hath neyther sinew nor sence but is within the bones as the sappe of trees is in the middest of their stockes and braunches For this cause Iob speaking of the prosperitie of the wicked saieth His breasts are full of milke and his bones runne full of marrowe But this is strange that seeing it is made of the thickest of the blood as it were a superfluitie of the meate how it can be ingendred within the bones and draw nourishment from the veines as other parts of the body do But God knew well howe to prouide for that and to make way for nourishment through the hardnes of the bones which are not all alike full of marrowe For as some of them are more drie or
the prouidence of God herein that amongst them members giue by him to the body he hath created some of that nature that a man can in no wise liue without them and others so that albeit they be not necessary for life yet he can not liue at his ease and not receiue great hurt if he want them The members of the first sort are the braine the heart the lungs the liuer the splene the stomacke and such like that are the seates of the animal vital and natural vertues without which there could bee no stay of life For after these members are hurt or perished farewell life The other sort are the eies the eares the nose the tongue the feete the hands and such like For although a man loose some one or many of these members yet he doeth not therefore loose his life but hee shall surely feele the detriment which such a losse bringeth vpon him And as wee commonly say that the Oxe knoweth not the valow of his ●orne vntill the haue lost it so wee may with greater reason say that no man knoweth of what valew the partes of his body are vntill he want them or vntill they be so hindered that they cannot fulfill their office Wherefore we ought to pray to God to preserue them for vs whilest wee haue them and giue him thankes because he hath not created vs lame or maimed of any member And when we see any that were borne without them or that haue lost them since wee ought to be so much the more stirred vp to glorifie him acknowledging it to come from his grace in that he hath dealt better with rathe●r with them although we haue deserued no more then they Now because we do not so neither haue this consideration as we ought to giue him thankes and to vse them to his honour and glory therefore he depriueth vs of them many times to punish this ingratitude and to cause vs to know better the valew of these gifts after they are taken from vs and that wee haue lost them seeing we could not knowe it whilest wee had them nor yet him that gaue them vnto vs. And by the same meanes also he would admonish and put vs in minde of the dammage we receiue by the defects of our soule by those which wee feele by experience in our bodies Whereupon wee haue an other goodly point of the prouidence of God to note in that hee hath giuen vs almost all double members without which we could not liue but with great paine and trouble to the end that if we lost one wee might yet vse the other and in some sort supplie the losse of that which is wanting For this cause hee did not create onely one eye or one nosethrill one eare one arme one hand one legge or one foote but twaine This ought to bee well considered that wee might haue the better knowledge of the care that God hath ouer vs seeing hee hath so well prouided for all things that hee will not onely haue vs liue but also furnish vs with all necessary things whereby wee might liue more commodiously more easily and with lesse paine and trouble And when it falleth out that some one of these members or both are wanting God supplieth this defect by maruailous meanes For sometimes wee see that maymed folkes haue done many thinges with their feete or with their necke and head that others could hardly doe with their hands at least wise they haue done things without handes that would seeme altogether incredible to such as haue not seene them And many times wee see dumbe men whose handes stand them in steade both of tongue and eares For by the signes and gestures of their handes they signifie their meaning to others as if they themselues did speake and vnderstand the minde of others that make the like signes Yea there are some that conceiue what others say vnto them onely by seeing them open and mooue their lippes so that we must needs acknowledge it as a miracle of God Now hauing spoken generally of the senses of the body and specially of touching as also of their members and instruments wee must come to their particulars Therefore AMANA thou shalt discourse vnto vs first of the eyes which are as it were the principall windowes of this building which we haue vndertaken to pourtraite and set foorth Of the eyes and of their excellencie profite and vse of the matter and h●nors whereof they are made Chap. 10. AMANA It hath alwayes bin the opinion of the Stoics and Academics that the bodily senses did rather hinder then help to obtaine wisedome that no man could know or vnderstand anything that the senses were feeble and slowe that sensible things were so small that they could not be perceiued or els so subiect to motion that no certainetie coulde be found in them that our life is short and full of opinions and customes that all was compassed about with darkenes and hid and therefore that nothing could be perceiued or vnderstoode so that men were to professe that they woulde affirme or approoue of nothing Plato writeth in many places that wee must beleeue nothing but the vnderstanding which beholdeth that that is simple and vniforme and as it is indeede and that there is no science but only in those reasons discourses which the soule maketh whē it is not troubled with bodily lets as with sight and hearing or with griefe plesure Eusebius disputing against this sheweth that the senses help much towards the obtaining of wisedome that when they are rightly affected and in their naturall habite they neuer deceiue the mind that it ●tentiue But wee shall knowe more at large what their profit is by continuing our discourses of the instruments of the senses Let vs knowe therefore that the eies were giuen of God to men to cause them to see and to be as it were their watch towers fentinels the guides leaders of the whole body as also they are as it were the chiefe windowes of the body or rather of the soule which is lodged within it For it is a most excellent worke of God whether we cōsider the matter wherof they are made how diuerse or agreeable it is to the office that is assigned them or the beauty that is in their forme in the diuersity of their colours or the commodity vse of their motions and howe they are set in their places as it were goodly pretious stones laide in some curious piece of worke how they are inuironed and armed both aboue and beneath on the right hand and on the left with the eye-lids and the eye-browes not onely for their protection and defense but also to adorne and to make them shew more beautifully And surely it is not without cause that God hath put such great excellencie in them and hath created and framed them so artificially For first they are the chiefest members of all the
the mouth for respiration and for the breath of the voyce as hath beene declared vnto vs so there is another from the stomacke vnto the same place properly calle the Gullet which the Physicions commonly call by the Greeke name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whose office is to cary the meates and drinkes into the stomacke And as the other pipe is in the former part of the necke that it may goe right to the mouth to drawe in the aire so this second is behinde in the necke that it may keepe more heate in it and it is longer then the first Neuerthelesse many thinke that there is but one pipe for bruath and for meate and drinke as there are some also who albeit they know well there are twayne yet they suppose that the one is for meate and the other for drinkes that the lightes also might bee moystened thereby Yea there haue bneene skilfull and great Philosophers who seeme to haue beene in this errour or at leastwise haue disputed thereof But because GOD hath so distinguished these passages and that the first is the breathing pipe for the reason vttered before this excellent Woorkemaster hath made another litle instrument called Epiglot by the Physicions made of a grictly matter reasonable harde and fashioned like to a little tongue that is of a triangle forme or like an 〈◊〉 leafe This instrument serueth to couer the pipe for breath at the very toppe of Larinx as it were a couer of a potte It serueth the pipe to this vse not to keepe euery thing out of it but to suffer no meate or drinke or any other thing to enter in in any such quantitie as might hinder breathing and respitation For a litle thing will stoppe a mans breath and strangle him as appeareth in those whome Histories affirme to haue beene strangled some by a litle haire others by a stone of a grape some in supping vp milke and others by such like tirfles Yea many times wee haue experience of this pevill when wee eate and drinke if neuer so litle ineate or drinke enter into this passage Therefore God teacheth vs two things thereby the first is vpon what assenderthreed our life dependeth seeing so litle a matter is sufficient to depriue vs of it The other is to admonish vs how quier and sober we ought to be in eating and drinking not glutton like and alsoin speaking when we take our refection For then is the danger greatest if wee speake whilest wee eate because wee cannot speake without voyce not haue voyce without breathing nor breath without opening this litle couer And because the breathing pipe is formost the meate drinke must needs passe ouer this litle tongue as it were ouer a litle drawe bridge So that if this small couer were lift vp and opened in stead of going beyong the pipe of breathing it would enter into it But it most not bee so fast shut vp but that breath may alwayes issue out and that some thinne humour and liquor may enter in to moysten and supple both the arterie and the lungs otherwise potions appointed for that purpose by the Physicions were vaine and vnprofitable Hauing nowe spoken sufficiently of those instruments which are seruiceable to voyce and speech and of all the proper offices of the tongue it wil be thy part ASER to morrow to take in hande againe and to pursue our matter of the senses and of their instruments and first to instruct vs what the sense of taste is and what the palat is that serueth it The ende of the second dayes worke THE THIRD DAYES worke Of the sense of taste giuen to the palat what tastes are good to nourish the bodie of the diuersitie of them of hunger and thirst and of their causes Chap. 17. ASER It is wonderfull that God causeth all things whatsoeuer they be to serue his worke in such sort that nothin is in vain idel or vnprofitable wherof we haue alreadie seene many testimonies in our former discourses of the least partes of the bodie But which is yet more woonderfull in his prouidence hee hath created made and disposed nothing throughout all nature without great order excellent measure and modration in all things which gaue occasion to the first Philosophers to call the whole frame of the world Mundus which is as much to say as an Ornament or a well disposed order of all things Whereby God would haue vs especially learne to knowe how greatly order pleaseth him and how he abhorreth all disorder and confusion and how greatly he desireth that men after his example should obserue measure and moderation in all their workes Hereof wee may haue a goodly instruction in this place if we consider how all the senses and namely the taste with those sauoury relishes that agree with it receiue their strength vertue and nature from all the elements according to that agreement which their nature and offices have with them as also what pleasure wee take in the relish of all things when it agreeth with our taste and contrariwise how it troubleth vs when it is vnpleasant and not agreeable to our taste Yesterday we discoursed of the corporall senses and of their members and instruments whereupon we spake of the tongue both because of the agreement it hath with the eares by reason of speech as also because it is the instrument of taste together with the palat which is the vpper part of the mouth made like to a pretie vaute and to a little heauen Therefore Iob said Doeth not the eares discerne the wordes and the palat tastemeate for it selfe And again The eare trieth the words as the mouth tasteth meate The sense of taste then is that sense whereby the mouth iudgeth of all kindes of tastes which are many in number And this is a notable gift of God in that he hath giuen such relishes to meates and drinkes whereby not onely men but also all liuing creatures can presently know by their taste what things are good to eate and drinke and what are otherwise For if God had not giuen the sense of taste to all liuing creatures that they might iudge thereby of all meates and drinkes what would their life bee But wee are to know this thing further that men iudge by their taste not onely of such things as may serue to nourish them but also of medicines For Physicions knowe the qualities of herbes and simples more by their taste then by any other sense afterward by this knowledge they iudge easily of their natures and proprieties and for what remedies and vses of physicke they wil serue Therefore this iudgement of the taste is very necessary for the life of man especially for the nourishment of all litting creatures because all things which the earth bringeth foorth are not good to feede them For some things are diuers from nourishment as earth clay wood and stones other things are altogether vnsauery and haue no taste and some haue
wayes First because wee may in some sort take a viewe of nature by searching out therein those thinges of which shee doeth heere set before vs very euident testimonies euen those thinges which may bee demonstrated although grossely according to the capacitie of our dull vnderstandings The second way which is the chiefest and most sure is by that testimonie which himselfe affoordeth vs in his worde For let vs not thinke that the minde can pronounce any thing for certayne but as it is directed by the testimonie of GOD seeing the senses which hee hath giuen vs come short herein and are not able to ascende vp so high For the excellencie of this creature and of the nature thereof is such and so great that it cannot perfectly knowe and comprehend itselfe especially where it is of greatest dignitie So that if wee desire to haue certaine knowledge whither should we haue recourse in this defect of our senses but vnto him that is able to certifie vs truely in this poynt And who can testifie the trueth of the worke but the Workemaster that made it and therefore knoweth it better then any other and all the perfection that is in it Why then doe wee not yeelde to GOD that honour in a thing not to bee comprehended by vs which wee doe to men of whome wee are well perswaded in thinges which wee cannot knowe but by their testimonie For howe manie thinges doe wee beleeue of which wee knowe not the causes and for which wee haue no other reason shewed vs but onely the testimonie and authoritie of men whome wee iudge woorthie of credite who notwithstanding may themselues bee deceiued and deceiue others But GOD cannot bee deceiued nor deceiue those that giue credite to his testimonie which hee hath not so hidden from men but that it is manifested vnto them yea hee hath chosen some amongst them to testifie the same from him to others And if it hath pleased him to haue such witnesses amongest them a man may soone see that hee hath chosen them in whome hee hath caused his image to shine most excellently and whome hee hath made more like to himselfe aswell by the reuelation of his holy spirite in all those excellent graces and vertues wherewith hee hath indued them as also by those holy and heauenly woorkes which he effecteth by them whereby hee hath as it were marked them with his seale to giue them authoritie and to cause them to bee acknowledged of all for his faithfull witnesses and seruants If then wee desire to haue certaine and true witnesses in any such matter where can we finde them sooner then amongest the Patriarkes Prophets and Apostles with all those Martyres and other holy personages whose doctrine and life testifie vnto vs howe farre they differ from other men But aboue all howe highly ought wee to esteeme the testimonie of the very Sonne of GOD who is to bee preferred before all others Seeing therefore wee haue so many faithfull witnesses let vs keepe vs to their testimonie wayting for that perfect light and more cleare and ample knowledge which shall bee reuealed vnto vs in that heauenly glorie In the meane time let vs consider howe wee are able to comprehende the infinite nature of the Creator of our soule seeing wee cannot conceiue the nature of the soule which he hath created and let vs reiect those dogges and hogges those Atheists and Epicures who iudge of God and of the soule of man so farre foorth onely as they are able to knowe and comprehend by their naturall sense whereby they see no further into the soule of man then they doe into the soules of beasts whome themselues resemble But suppose they had no other testimony of the celestiall and diuine nature of the soule but that which it affoordeth vs daily by those faculties and vertues where with God hath endued it and the effectes it sheweth vs yet ought they to learne to iudge otherwise Now to morrowe it will be thy part ASER to beginne the particular handling of these goodly internall senses whose vesselles and instruments wee haue considered of in this speach as also thou art to teach vs who be the chiefe ministers of the soule for all her actions The end of the third dayes worke THE FOVRTH dayes worke Of the seate of voluntary motion and sense of the office and nature of the common sense of imagination and of fantasie and howe light and dangerous fantasie is of the power which both good and bad spirites haue to mooue it Chap. 25. ASER The knowledge of many things is so natural to men that being borne with them it is like to a light attending vpon the minde as the sight doeth vpon the eyes For the knowledge of numbers and of order the Principles and beginning of Artes the knowledge and distinction of things honest and dishonest proceede from such a light And when Saint Paul sayeth that the Gentiles and all that haue not receiued of God the Lawe of the two Tables as the people of Israel did haue notwithstanding a Law written in their hearts that doeth accuse or excuse them no doubt but by this Lawe hee vnderstandeth that naturall knowledge which men haue both of God and of good and euil which issueth from a higher spring then from the outward sences and which euery one hath for a schoolemistress within himselfe euen they also that would extinguish wholly this light if they could For although God hath imprinted many similitudes and testimonies of himselfe in all creatures whereby hee manifesteth himselfe vnto vs yet should we know nothing more then the brute beasts do if there were not a light in our mindes that causeth vs to see and knowe them and to conclude that which wee doe which light is not in beasts albeit they haue outward senses as wel as wee But it is commonly said that there is nothing in the vnderstanding which hath not first beene in the outward senses that is to say that it can know nothing which is not first discouered and manifested vnto it by them But wee must vnderstand that saying of such things as fall vnder their powers and faculties which being knowen and noted by the senses doe awaken and stirre vp the vnderstanding which after by that vertue it hath in it selfe proceedeth forward namely from signes and effects vnto causes from accidents to substances and from particular things to vniuersalities But let vs consider how We must first remember the diuision which before wee made of the animal facultie and power and thereupon wee note that the sensitiue and motiue powers whereby the soule vsing the meanes of the sinewes and muscles giueth voluntary sense and motion to all the body haue no speciall place or seate in the braine as the other internall senses haue but are dispersed throughout the whole substance thereof Concerning the chiefe power and facultie we were told before how some distinguish betweene Imagination fantasie and the Common sense
imagination and fantasie being neerer to the corporall senses draw the soule to those things that are bodily but reason and the spirite pricke it forwarde and cause it to lift vp it selfe to more excellent things For the spirite which the Philosophers expresse by Vnderstanding mounteth vp vnto those things that cannot be knowen nor comprehended of imagination and fantasie nor of any other sense Moreouer it keepeth fantasie brideled and bringeth it into the right way which otherwise wandreth farre wide and entereth into many turnings and windings Neither doeth the spirite wholly yeeld vnto euery present profite or decline the contrary but calleth things past to remembrance coniectureth and foreseeth things to come and searcheth out what is true and what false to giue iudgement thereafter and then to followe after or to eschew that which ought to bee followed or fledde from Thus you see what the reasonable soule bringeth to men which is not in beastes nor in their soule Besides from this vigour and nature of the spirite speech proceedeth which being his messenger is wanting vnto beastes because they are voyde of reason and vnderstanding in regard whereof speech is giuen as wee haue already hearde Therefore we vnderstand by the reasonable soule and life such a soule and life as hath counsaile iudgement and reason and which was created to this end that knowing God her Creator and louing him in respect thereof she might honour and serue him and finally by degrees attaine to immortall life and happinesse which is appointed for her ende For as nothing is more excellent then reason whereof God hath made man partaker so there is nothing more beseeming reason then to know loue and honour God seeing there is nothing greater more excellent or that may be compared vnto him Therefore as man differeth from brute beasts in respect of reason wherewith God hath indued him so he differeth from them in that he is capable of religion created and borne thereto which consisteth in the things alreadie touched But beasts are not capable of any kind of religion being altogether voyde thereof as on the other side there is no man but he hath some sense of it Whereby wee may gather a good argument that beasts are not onely voyde of reason but also that their soules are mortall and the soules of men immortall For the fountaine and fruit of the religion and seruice of God consisteth not in this mortall life and therefore it must needes bee in some other that followeth And for this cause Reason which is so great and excellent a gift of God in man is not bestowed vpon vs for things of so smal price and so transitorie as these are which we vse and enioy in this life and in which it is wholly busied much lesse for those whereby the life of beastes is preserued but in regarde of these thinges which I haue nowe declared Therefore as God hath not giuen such a life to stones as he hath giuen to trees and plants nor yet sense imagination and fantasie to trees and plants as he hath done to beasts so hee hath not graunted reason to beasts as he hath to men and that not without iust cause For as it is enough for stones in regarde of the perfection of their nature to bee heauie and such as they are and sufficient likewise for trees and plants to haue a Vegetatiue soule seeing they want not that which beastes haue more then they so beastes stand not in neede of that which men haue aboue them For it sufficeth for the preseruation and defence of their life and beeing that they haue some kinde of cogitation ioyned with imagination and fantasie although they want reason which is not necessary for them as it is for men for the causes already specified and chiefly because they were not created by meanes of the knowledge of God and of true religion to come to a better life then their brutish life is Therefore as man is created to the end that the light of the knowledge of God might shine in him and that God might communicate with him his wisedome and goodnesse so he would that the soule of man shoulde bee an euident testimonie of himselfe For this cause it was said in his creation that God made man after his owne image and likenesse as wee haue already heard Seeing then there are in the reasonable soule so cleere and excellent testimonies of God and that by it especially the difference appeareth betweene man beasts as also in the diuers gouernments of their liues it behoueth vs to con●ider thereof very diligently And albeit this glasse of God cannot be so euidently seen as those that are made of steele or of glasse and lead by the hand of man to represent the image of our bodies neuertheles the actions and works of the soule doe plainly shew that there is such a power and vertue in vs which God hath giuen vs more to vse for our benefite then to know it and that for the causes already touched by vs. For the true and perfect knowledge thereof belongeth to God onely who being aboue it hath created and giuen it and will cause vs to know it better when we shal be in that eternall light in which wee shal know those things that are nowe hidden from vs. In the meane time let vs in this life consider of and distinguish the actions and workes of the soule whereby we are seuered from beasts and which being very euident testimonies of God in vs gouerne the life of man and bring foorth all honest sciences and artes We haue spoken alreadie of the powers and vertues of the soule which by the vse of corporall instruments labour and manifest themselues but it appeareth euidently that there is in man another higher power because we haue many actions and doe many woorkes which beastes cannot performe nor imitate For man hath the knowledge of numbers and can reckon hee vnderstandeth not onely particular things but also generall and vniuersall things he discourseth that is gathereth and concludeth one thing of another and that very farre he inuenteth artes and disposeth them he iudgeth of his owne reasons and discourses and marking his owne faults he correcteth them he changeth his intents and purposes he discerneth vertues from vices honest things from those that are dishonest finally hee deliberateth by a long discourse of reason As for beastes they haue not these thinges common with vs as they haue the vse of the senses as of seeing hearing smelling tasting and other such like things wherein they oftentimes excell vs in many respectes For many of them haue these senses more sharpe then wee haue And although they haue some imagination fantasie and apprehension of thinges offered to their bodily senses yet that holdeth but for the present and in the place or fielde where the thinges are offered vnto them The like may bee sayde of those discourses of reason which many thinke are in
he knoweth not But before we enter into a deeper and more particular consideration of the affections of the soule and of the heart wee must note this that all knowledge is giuen of God to this end to desire that Good which it knoweth and in desiring to followe the same vntill it hath ioyned and knit it vnto it selfe as neere as is possible For in this manner Good will be good vnto it and not otherwise To this ende sensuall knowledge is giuen for sensuall goods and spirituall knowledge for those goods that are spirituall And as the knowledge both of the one and the other is giuen to desire it so also is it giuen that it might turne aside and flee from euill which is contrarie to good to the ende that the Will might not ioyne it selfe thereunto by which meanes euill woulde indeede become euill vnto it and coulde not otherwise bee auoyded For as good coulde not bee good vnto vs but onely so farre foorth as wee did apply it and ioyne our selues therevnto so fareth it also with euill And because GOD hath not created beastes to enioy any other good then corporall goods and such as belong to their brutish life which goeth not beyonde this temporall life therefore he hath not giuen them the knowledge or appetite of any other good So that as they haue no other knowledge but that which is sensuall so they haue no other appetite but sensuall which is guyded onely by naturall inclination wherein they haue nature onely for their Mistresse which pricketh forwarde both their outwarde and inwarde senses without any direction at all of Vnderstanding and of Reason Therefore this sensuall appetite common to all liuing creatures cannot properly bee called Will. For as wee cannot call by the name of Vnderstanding and Reason that naturall inclination which is giuen to beastes for their direction seeing men onely are endued with Vnderstanding and Reason so is it with Will the name whereof agreeth not to that sensuall appetite except wee woulde call it sensuall Will in respect of the resemblance of Will which it hath wherein it differeth much from the Will in man as the sequele of our speech requireth that wee shoulde now learne to the ende wee may knowe the thirde kinde of appetite which wee set downe in the beginning of this discourse namely the voluntarie appetite which is proper and peculiar to man and the subiect of his Will Thou shalt tell vs therefore AMANA what Will is properly what her actions are what libertie and freedome she hath and what power Reason may haue ouer her Of Will and of the diuers significations and vses of these wordes Reason and Will of the actions freedome and nature thereof of the power which Reason may haue ouer her Chap. 34. AMANA The loue of GOD towardes men hath alwayes beene and is such that albeeit hee hath iust occasion to hate vs as sinners yet that hindereth him not from louing vs alwayes as men For hee considereth man otherwise in the nature and substance with which hee created him and as hee is his woorke then in that disorder and confusion which after entered vpon his nature by the woorke of Satan in him For this cause wee see that hee causeth his sunne to shine aswell vpon the euill as vpon the good sendeth raine to the one as well as to the other and powreth many benefites vpon all in generall But besides this loue whereof euery one receiueth fruite there is another more speciall towardes his elect whom hee loueth not onely as he loued vs all in Adam the stocke of mankinde and as his creatures created after his image but loueth them also as regenerated and newe creatures in Iesus Christ his Sonne the latter and iust Adam GOD and man and the stocke of spirituall men framed againe by him to the image and similitude of God Therefore we must vnnderstand that God hath and doeth loue men in regarde of the good hee hath put into them which is wrought chiefly through the benefite of spirituall regeneration the remnant of which Good he still loueth And in louing that he loueth himselfe because he is the soueraigne and onely good which is worthy to be loued in respect of it selfe Whereby we may see what is the true fountaine of all loue and of all the desires appetites and willes of all creatures For they must all bee drawen out of one and the same spring and fountaine namely the loue and will of God and that good which he loueth and willeth And the greater the Good is the more it ought to bee loued so that euery Will should desire to ioyne it selfe therevnto to follow after it and to haue the fruition thereof And because there can be no Good greater then God therefore no other can be loued but that So that whilest he loueth himselfe he loueth all the good that may bee because there is none but in him and from him Therefore this followeth necessarily that as all good things proceede from him so they must bee all referred to him and returne thither as to the Wel-head euen as all waters returne into the Sea from whence they came first of al. Hauing then learned of our former discourse that God hath giuen to man vnderstanding to know good and will to desire and follow it it is his duetie alwayes to referre all the good things he hath vnto him that is soueraigne and eternall Good and to account nothing good as in trueth it cannot be but him that ought to bee so accounted and to looke at him as the last and most blessed end We vnderstand then properly by Will that facultie and vertue of the soule whereby we desire that which is good and eschew euill by the direction and guyding of reason Therefore there are two actions of Will wherof the first is that inclination to good by which it imbraceth the same and the second is the turning aside from euill And when it is idle and inclineth to neither side it is depriued of both these actions Nowe although we saide before that reason helde the soueraignty amongst the powers vertues and offices of the soule yet wee must know that reason raigneth not ouer Will as Lady and Princesse but onely as Mistresse to teach and shew it what it ought to followe and what to flie from For the will hath no light of it selfe but is lightned by the minde that is to say by reason and iudgement which are ioyned with it not to gouerne and turne it from one side to another by commandement and authoritie either by force or violence as a Prince or Magistrate but as a counsailer or directer to admonish and to conduct it And so the will desireth or refuseth nothing which reason hath not first shewed that it is to be desired or disdayned Therefore the act of Will proceedeth indeede from Will but it is iudged of and counselled by reason so that a man may say that
and to diminish and as it were to retire backe and to restrayne it selfe And as for the vertue of engendering it differeth from both the other first in that it is not giuen so generally to all liuing creatures as they are and then in that it beginneth not so soone For it commeth then when the liuing creature through nourishment and growth hath attayned to those vertues that are necessary for generation Besides it hath this common with the vertue of augmentation that it hath certaine limites and bounds vnto which after it is once come it weakeneth and in the ende decayeth vtterly Wherein it differeth from the nourishing vertue Nowe the vertue of growing greater hath as many other particular vertues vnder it for the execution of it owne office as the vertue of nourishing hath according as was touched before Whereby wee learne that bodies growe not greater neither augment by the heaping vp of much matter outwardely applied as when a house is set vp wee see timber ioyned to timber and stone to stone in the building of it but this is done by the same hidden and secrete arte and cunning in nature whereby wee are nourished For in this poynt there is no difference betweene the vertue of nourishing and that of augmenting but onelie heerein that in nourishment the meate is turned into the substance of the bodie and in augmenting the foode beeing thus turned doeth from within stretch foorth the quantitie of the bodie outwardly And so this vertue of augmenting dependeth of the nourishing vertue For meate nourisheth as it is a substance with qualities meete for nourishment and augmenteth by reason of the quantitie it hath For this cause hath God created the bodies of liuing creatures with such a substance that as they haue sundrie passages and holes in them like to sponges to the ende to purge by them so he would that the substance they receiue by their foode might passe by the same holes that they might augment and grow greater So that all of them haue their pores and litle holes albeit they appeare not to the eye whereby nourishment entreth and extendeth it selfe in greatnesse length and thicknesse The consideration hereof hath caused some skilfull men to place mettals and stones in the ranke of liuing creatures because they growe in the earth as the bodies of plants and liuing creatures doe Neither is their opinion without some shewe of reason For wee knowe that they grow and increase and that inwardly which seemeth not to bee done without drawing vnto themselues some inward nourishment as liuing creatures vse to doe Besides they haue also their pores and passages to stretch foor●h and augment themselues by Notwithstanding all this there is greater reason to place them in the ranke of those natures and creatures which augment and grow greater by adding and ioyning of matter vnto them as wee see fountaines and riuers to increase and so likewise fire Which albeit it seemeth to be nourished and augmented with that matter which is put vnto it yet is it not nourished as liuing creatures are by meanes of that foode which they receiue For they haue their boundes of growing set them which they cannot passe as wee see the like also in plantes but fire hath no limites as that which alwayes increaseth as long as it findeth any matter to burne Whereby we may conclude that naturall heate in man or in other liuing creatures is not the cause of their nourishing and growth but onely the instrument and that the true cause in regarde of second causes is in the soule next after God who is the first cause of all things yea the cause of causes Therefore it is hee that hath alotted out to euerie man the terme first of his life and growth and then of his declining and death so that according as hee will eyther prolong or shorten our life and cause vs to encrease or diminish so hee disposeth the seconde causes and those meanes whereby hee will bring it to passe Nowe wee must consider what instrumentes the soule vseth to execute in the bodie of man her naturall woorkes of nourishing and augmenting it of which wee haue nowe spoken and after what manner shee vseth them First then wee will looke into the ventricle and stomacke and see what figure what Orifices and filaments it hath This matter then ASER belongeth to thee to intreate of What instrumentes the Soule vseth in the bodie about the naturall woorke of nourishing and augmenting of the Ventricle or stomacke and of the figure Orifices and Filaments it hath of the coates of the stomacke and of what substance and nature it is of the causes of hunger and of appetite of the inferiour Orifice Chap. 61. ASER. Wee shoulde bee very happie if wee knewe howe to followe that order in all our doings which God hath set downe in all his woorkes and whereof he giueth nature vnto vs for a Mistresse But if the simplicitie of our vnderstanding bee not able to attaine to so high wisedome at the least we may knowe howe farre short euery one of vs commeth of our duetie and from whence proceedeth all the confusion that is in the life of man and all those miseries which wee commonly beholde On the other side nothing coulde hinder vs were it not a voluntarie and malicious ignorance in that wee consider not what a marueilous and excellent Woorkemaster God the Creator sheweth himselfe to bee in this part of the soule whereof our present discourses are and in that order which hee hath set therein and in those vertues which hee hath bestowed vpon it For his woorke is so excellent and woorthie of so great admiration that no wisedome or power whatsoeuer is able so much as to imitate it Wherefore wee are to account it a very great and noble blessing to haue onely some knowledge of it and to bee able to comprehende some thing thereof by our vnderstanding For there will be alwayes enough whereat to marueile greatly and namely in the consideration of those instruments which the soule vseth in the nourishment and growth of bodies as we shall know in the sequele of our discourses Therefore as heeretofore wee haue handled and spoken of the diuers powers of the soule and of those instruments it hath in regarde of the Animal and Vital partes as of the braine heart head and other externall members of the bodie so nowe wee are to consider of the internall instruments which serue the naturall powers of the soule And first it hath the liquors and humours of the bodie tempered together by a certaine Lawe and reason of the Creator that created them Secondly the other instruments of the soule are those members both externall and internall which are framed and haue their seuerall proportion euery one as neede requireth for the office assigned vnto them by God their Creator For before the soule bee clothed with the bodie these instrumentes are fashioned and made fitte for it by nature
belonging to the sight are of which bring the facultie and vertue of seeing vnto the eyes as likewise it is of the same temperament with the coats and humors of which the eyes are compounded being diuided and distributed to eche sundrie part by a naturall propertie inherent in them The like is done in the eares and in other members and instruments of the corporal senses and in all the other partes of the body euen to the very nailes and haires thereof Wherein truely wee see wonderfull alterations and a most admirable woorke of Gods prouidence whether it bee considered in the whole earth and in this great world or in man who is the litle world Now for the sequele of our speech before wee come to speake of the speciall offices and effectes of the three humours ioyned with the blood of which wee haue heere spoken wee are to consider besides this distribution made of the nourishment by meanes of the veynes as it hath beene tolde vs of another meane by which these humours and especially the flegmatike ascend vp vnto the braine whereby it commeth to passe that in man as well as in the great world there are waters aboue and belowe which are the cause that mans life swimmeth in the middest of a great danger Also wee are to knowe why the soule and the blood are often taken eche for other and to be instructed in the temperature of the humors necessarily belonging to the bodie for the health and life thereof as likewise to consider of the causes of health and sicknesse and of life and death But this shall bee for to morowe when thou ASER shalt vndertake the discourse of these things so farre foorth as is requisite for vs to know The end of the eight dayes worke THE NINTH dayes worke Of the vapours that ascend vp to the braine and of the waters and cloudes conteined therein and in what perils men are thereby why the soule and blood are put one for another of the temperature of the humors necessary for the health and life of the body of the causes of health and of diseases and of life and death Chap. 65. ASER It is the saying of an ancient Philosopher that they which saile vpon the water are not aboue two or three fingers breadth distant from death namely so farre off as the thicknes of the plankes and timber of the ship is in which they are caried into the Sea For if that timber were taken from vnder them they cannot auoyd drowning vnlesse they can swimme like fishes But not to saile on the sea or vpon a lake or riuer to approch neere to death we haue it a great deale neerer vs when we cary about vs infinite causes and meanes whereby we are euery houre in danger of stifling and as it were of drowning and that both waking sleeping eating and drinking within doores and without at all times and in al places whersoeuer we become Insomuch that of what estate and disposition soeuer men are we are oftentimes astonished to heare tydings of a mans death sooner then of his sickenesse whom wee saw not long before mery cheerefull and in good health Now we may learne some chiefe causes hereof by this dayes handling of that matter Subiect which was yesterday propounded to bee discoursed vpon And first we must know that besides the distribution of all the humours together with the blood into all parts of the bodie by the veines and that for the causes before learned there is yet another meane whereby these humors especially the flegmatike humour which is of the nature of the water ascend vp vnto the braine by reason of vapours arising vpward out of the stomacke like to the vapour of a potte seething on the fire with liquor in it and like to vapours that ascend vp from the earth into the ayre of which raine is engendred Now when these vapours are come vp to the braine they returne to their naturall place and into the nature of those humours of which they were bred as the vapours that are held in the aire turne againe into the same nature of water of which they came Therefore as the waters are contained within the cloudes in the region of the aire allotted vnto them so is it with our braine which is of a colde nature and of a spongie substance fitte for that purpose So that we alwayes carie within it as it were cloudes full of water and of other humours that distil and runne downe continually by the members and passages which God hath appointed to that ende as wee haue alreadie hearde And these places albeit they serue especially to purge seuerall humors as hath beene tolde vs yet oftentimes they voide them altogether both by reason of their mingling and coniunction as of their ouer great abundance Yea many times they are so plentifull namely the flegmatike humour that because the braine cannot sufficiently discharge it selfe of them by the ordinary way these humors ouerflowe on all sides wheresoeuer they can finde any vent and issue euen as when a thundering cloude bursteth asunder So that the water runneth not downe as it were a milde and gentle raine but as a mighty flood that bringeth great ruines with it or as a riuer passing his ordinary course breaketh downe both banke and wall and ouerfloweth euery where Therefore we may well say that many times we haue floods of water enclosed within our heads and braines when wee neuer thinke of it nor yet consider in what danger we are Which the more secrete and vnknowen it is vnto vs the more perillous it is and greatlier to be feared especially considering it is so neere vs and that wee haue fewer meanes to auoyde it as wee haue daily examples in many who being in health and mery are sodainely choked by catarrhes which like to floods of waters runne downewards as the very name deriued from the Grecians doeth import as much or by some sodaine Apoplexie how healthy soeuer before they seemed to bee Others also there are who if they be not presently choked with such floods from the brain yet they are taken with palsies lamenesse and impotencie in all their members or at leastwise in some of them as if some waterflood had caried them away so that nothing had beene saued but the bare life and that more fraile and miserable then death it selfe I speake not of gowtie persons who although they be not assaulted with such great and vehement floods of waters and with euill and superfluous humours so that some few droppes onely of which they are so called fall vpon some partes of them yet are they greatly tormented constrained to crie out and that oftentimes in extreme distresse Which consideration ought to stirre vs vp to know wherein our life and preseruation thereof consisteth and of whom we holde it And on the other side although we had no examples of floods and inundations of waters of earthquakes and such other
first creatures which he created of nothing in the beginning For he created vs all in Adam and Eue and shut vs vp as it were in a store-house or in a spring or fountaine or as in one stocke of mankinde out of which hee produceth men continually Wherefore wee ought diligently to consider of this woorke of GOD and of this vertue which hee hath giuen to Nature by his worde and blessing to ingender like and to encrease the whole race and kinde thereof For this cause as it is the office of Nature in the beginning to nourish bodies and then to cause them to encrease and augment so in the ende it is her duetie to preserue the seuerall kindes of things as long as shee may by Generation of the like Whereby it appeareth that Generation is a worke of liuing creatures after they are come to their growth and vigour as wee see the like also in plants themselues For in the beginning of the Spring al their vertue is in the root from thence it commeth after into the boughes leaues next into the floure fruit and lastly into the seed which being sowen another plant is brought forth like vnto the first Wherfore wee may say that the Generatiue vertue is a power in liuing creatures that engendreth his like being ordained for the preseruatiō of the same kind So that wee must diligently meditate and often set before our eyes this goodly order of nature according whereunto the nourishing facultie is first giuen to the soule for the preseruation of euery particular Next the power to cause it to grow and to augment to a iust sufficient greatnesse and lastly the generatiue vertue whereby the kind is preserued For albeit the order that is throughout the whole course of nature bee an euident testimony that neither the worlde nor any thing therein standeth vpon chance or fortune yet among others this is most singular and excellent in that the same kinds of al things abide continually that euerie one begetteth multiplieth his like without any maner of confusion amongst them which could not be eschewed if so be that creatures were bredde and borne at aduenture without the counsel and prouidence of their Creator of him that wrought such a worke Nowe wee are to vnderstand that the seede is a body that hath in it selfe a vegetatiue soule which body in Generation is turned into an other like to that from which it is taken and because nourishing growing and engendering are the effectes of foode and sustenance they are contained vnder the name of a vegetatiue soule which is a facultie and power that not onely conuerteth foode into the substaunce of the liuing bodie for the good thereof and by that conuersion augmenteth that it may attaine to a conuenient bignesse but also engendereth an other body of the same forme and kinde And therefore after that this vegetatiue power hath doone that duetie which it ought to perfourme about the growth of the liuing body then hath it time and meanes enough to gather together into a small roome many of those qualities that keepe the soule in the administration of the bodie out of which it can soone drawe and engender a like kinde so farre foorth as the qualities of the matter will be able to beare For when they are repugnant to the qualities meete for that kinde whatsoeuer commeth thereof degenerateth as we see it in the earth when in steade of wheate whereof it receiued the seede it bringeth foorth darnell or some other hearbs of an other nature and as wee see it also in monsters that are borne both of women and of other liuing creatures For there are in many countries namely in Sicilia and in the kingdome of Naples and in Flaunders as many Authours worthy of credite haue testified women in whom haue beene bredde oftentimes sundry kindes of beastes in steade of children and sometimes together with the childe either liuing or dead Which thing commeth to passe in such women as abound with euill humours that are putrified and corrupted either by reason of the ayre or of badde meate or of excesse in eating as in such bodies wherein wormes and such other filthinesse breedeth The Astrologians referre this vnto constellations as they doe all other things I leaue the secret iudgements and punishments of GOD whereby such things may come to passe neuerthelesse these things ought to admonish women to pray vnto God to recommend themselues to him and to be sober The moone calfes in the womb which fall out often proceed also of the like causes In like maner it falleth out oftentimes that the kinde degenerateth through corruption of the seede But to go on forward with our matter of the Generation of liuing creatures and namely of man wee must knowe that forasmuch as the male hath naturally more heate in him then the female hee is also by nature the chiefest in Generation For this cause when the holie Scriptures speake of mankinde it is ordinarilie comprehended vnder the name of man And when mention is made of his generation they speake as though all proceeded onely from man as when Malachie speaking of his creation sayeth Did not hee make one and wherefore one because hee sought a godly seede And Saint Paul He hath made saith hee of one blood all mankind Neuerthelesse GOD hath put in nature such a temperature betweene the male and the female that if both their natures were altogether alike there could be no Generation For it consisteth in force and in infirmity But the wisdome of God hath so wel prouided as that it knoweth how to draw strength out of weaknes so that the one can do nothing without the other in generation because he hath so willed and ordained it Nowe I leaue to thee AMANA to discourse vnto vs more particularly of such things as are most worthy to be noted in this maruailous worke of God and of the principall cause why he hath giuen to man the Generatiue power Of the powers of the Generatiue vertue and of their offices of the principall cause why God gaue to man the power of Generation in what sense the reines are taken for the seate of Generation how we ought rightly to consider of the generation of man Chap. 70. AMANA As noueltie causeth a man through the errour of iudgement to thinke that rare things are greater and more woorthie of admiration so most men imagine those matters to bee small and not worthy to be wondered at which fall out daily before their eyes But ignorance is the cause of both these effectes For as a man admireth that which hee neuer knewe coulde be perfourmed so hee maketh no reckoning of that thing which he vsually beholdeth because hee hath alwayes beene ignorant of the secrets of nature or rather of his Author and Creator who appeareth woonderfull in the least of his woorkes euen in the very Ant or Pismire This selfe same ignorance is
and turned mee to cruddes like cheese he addeth presently Thou hast clothed mee with skinne and flesh and ioyned mee together with bones and sinewes This is that couering whereof the Psalmist spake which was giuen him of God in his mothers wombe after her conception Whereupon wee haue to note that these holy men speaking in this manner teach vs sufficiently what is the chiefe part of man which they accompt to be the true man For they declare vnto vs euidently that the soule which dwelleth in the body is truely man and that the body in comparison thereof is but his couering and the lodging wherein hee dwelleth Therefore the Heathens themselues compared mans soule to one placed in a garrison in which hee is to abide vntill hee be called from thence by the Prince and Captaine that placed him therein meaning thereby to teach vs that wee must abide in this life and discharge our duetie therein so long as it shall please God who hath brought vs into it to haue vs to continue therein Truely if wee consider well of those maruailous woorkes which GOD effecteth daily in the Generation of men wee may well say that it is a great miracle of God in Nature and ought to be diligently considered of as Dauid testifieth that hee did so in his owne person Therefore he saieth Thou holdest mee straight behinde and before and layest thine hand vpon me shewing throughout the whole psalme that there is nothing in man so hidden and couered which is not discouered before GOD and which hee knoweth not and searcheth not vnto the bottome to the ende that men deceiue not themselues through their hipocrisie thinking to hide themselues before him For this cause hee sayeth in the beginning that he is so knowen to GOD on all sides both within and without that there is not so much as one motion in him nor one thought or affection which is not wholly manifested vnto him And to prooue and confirme his saying hee taketh his argument from the creation of man giuing vs to vnderstand thereby that forasmuch as GOD is his Creatour and Maker it can not bee but that he shoulde throughly know his worke Whereby wee haue a certaine testimonie of that which wee spake in our former discourse of the creation of all those men that are dailie created by Generation according to the order of Nature appointed by GOD. For the Prophet doeth no lesse acknowledge that GOD hath made him then Adam the first man did So that looke what the Prophet speaketh of his owne person it is also to bee vnderstoode of euerie one both in regarde of his creation as also of that knowledge which GOD hath of all things in man be they neuer so hidde and couered Afterward hee addeth that this knowledge is too woonderfull for him and so high that hee cannot attaine vnto it Nowe wee may iudge well both of the composition of mans body and also of the nature of the soule by those discourses which wee haue already made And if wee did consider but of the body by it selfe yet had wee iust cause to say as much as Dauid sayeth heere What then might be spoken if wee ioyned the soule with the body and considered onely of that which might generally be knowen by such meanes as are already set downe For by that which we doe knowe wee shall iudge well enough howe farre this knowledge exceedeth our capacitie and what remaineth yet behinde which we cannot comprehend Forasmuch then as the Prophet woondereth so much at this great and high skill whereof God giueth vs so excellent testimonie in the creation and generation of men wee ought not to thinke it superfluous and vnprofitable but well beseeming a Christian man to enquire after that which God would haue vs know and which we may know and to consider well of his woorkes wherein he manifesteth his prouidence and wisedome especially in man who is as wee haue heard the chiefest of all his workes amongst the visible creatures and as it were an other worlde created within this Nowe as Dauid from the creation of man inferreth the knowledge which God hath of him so Iob in the same place that I alleadged euen now concludeth that forasmuch as God is the Creator and Artificer that made man he delighteth not in destroying his woorke Thy hands saieth hee haue made mee and fashioned me wholly round about and wilt thou destroy mee Which is as much as if he had saide is it possible that I who am the woorke of thy hands shoulde be brought to nothing by thee For besides that this were against nature the Scripture testifieth vnto vs in many places that he is not onely a preseruer of that which he hath made but also that hee leaueth not his woorkes vnperfect and that hee is so farre from defacing them that contrariwise it is his manner to leade them to perfection Whereby wee ought to learne that the onely consideration of the worke of our creation ought greatly to solace comfort and confirme vs in all afflictions and aduersities how rigorous soeuer the hand of God should be vpon vs. For first we ought to be throughly resolued of this that no affliction can come vnto vs but by his good will and from his hand whatsoeuer the means and instruments are of which hee maketh his roddes and scourges and by which he striketh and beateth vs. Nowe then seeing the hand that toucheth vs is the same that hath made and fashioned vs wee knowe well that he setteth not himselfe against a strange woorke vnknowen vnto him but against his owne wherewith he is very wel acquainted Whereupon we may certainly conclude that it proceedeth not of crueltie and furie that he striketh vs nor yet without good cause as hee that is neither cruell nor furious nor voyde of reason So that it followeth necessarily eyther that we haue giuen him great occasion or that it is very requisite for vs. But howsoeuer it be he euer knoweth well howe to turne all the afflictions of his children to his glorie and to their great honour and profite as we haue many notable examples hereof in all the seruaunts of God and namely in those two personages Dauid and Iob of whome wee haue spoken in this our discourse Which we continuing so farre forth as it respecteth the work of mans generation are to consider more narrowely of the admirable secrete of nature therein so much as daily experience and diligent searche hath learned men to knowe Tell vs then ARAM of the fashion of a childe in the wombe Of the fashion of a childe in the wombe and how the members are framed one after another in the mothers bellie of the time and dayes within which a childe is perfectly fashioned ARAM. I cannot marueile enough at the pride and presumption of many who thinke themselues to bee such great Philosophers and so skilfull in the knowledge of natural things that they perswade themselues
that obscure place it receiueth the goodliest and most perfect forme that can be imagined And who will not bee abashed to consider that out of that slymie seede of man there shoulde come bones sinewes flesh skinne and such like things so diuers one from another But yet it is a farre greater marueile to see all this great diuersitie of matter to bee framed in so many sundrie members and of so many sundry formes and that with such excellent beautie so profitable and so fitte for those offices that are assigned vnto them as wee haue learned in our former discourses Nowe as God did not create all creatures in one day although he coulde well haue done it if it had so pleased him so doeth he in the generation of men For albeeit that the members are fashioned all at once so that not one of them is framed before another neuerthelesse because there is great varietie betwixt them both in respect of their dignitie and of their strength nature their mother doeth not set them forwarde all alike For in displaying her power generally towards all the partes of the bodie it commeth to passe that her worke and the figure giuen vnto it appeareth sooner or later in some members more then in others Hereof it is that the greatest and chiefest members appeare naturally before the rest albeit they are not the first that are fashioned So likewise all the members are not beautified and made perfect at the same time but some after others according as they haue heate and nourishment Nature therefore obserueth this order that the worthiest partes and such as haue in them the beginning of motion shew themselues first and then those members that are profitable and seruiceable to the former and are created for their cause And according to this order the highest partes are seene sooner then the lowest and those within before them without and they that receiue their substance from the seed before those that haue it from blood These also amongest them that are most excellent are first notwithstanding many times they haue their accomplishment and perfection after the other as it appeareth in the Nauill For although the heart liuer and braine beeing the chiefest partes of the bodie haue their beginning before that yet is it the first amongest them all that appeareth perfect Nowe then after the Nauil with his pipe or passage is formed and fashioned within the first sixe dayes the blood and spirite are next drawen by those veines and arteries whereof we spake euen now to be sent to the seede and mingled therewith that the principall members might be figured as the liuer the heart and the braine which begin first like to little bladders and so consequently the rest which are fashioned by litle and litle according as they receiue nourishment For the veines whereby the burthen is nourished may well be likened to small rootes whereby plants are cherished as also the burden it selfe may bee compared vnto plants in this point as we haue alreadie learned So that the seed receiuing this forme alreadie spoken of in the first sixe dayes during which time it is called by no other name then seede nine dayes after that the blood is drawne thither of which the liuer and the heart receiue their forme so that after twelue dayes added to the former a man may discerne the lineaments and proportion of these two members and also of the braine albeit they are not then altogether fashioned At this time the burthen is called Faetus of the Latines and Embryon of the Greekes which is as much in our language as Sprouting or Budding Next after this within the space of other eighteene daies all the other members are fashioned and distinguished So that about fiue and fourty dayes after the conception the members receiue their perfect fashion and then doeth the burthen beginne to liue not onely as plants liue but also as other liuing creatures For it hath sense feeling about the sixe and thirtieth day and from that time forward it is called an infant But as yet it is voyde of motion For by and by after it is formed it is very tender vntill that by vertue of the heate it waxeth more dry and firme which is by reason that the moysture wherby it is made so soft and tender consumeth away by litle and litle so that the nayles beginne to take roote at the fingers endes and the haires in the head Now after the childe is come to the thirde moneth if it bee a male or to the fourth if it bee a female it beginneth to stirre it selfe according to the testimonie of Hippocrates because then his bones are more firme and somewhat harder But this is not alwaies alike in all women with childe For there are some that alwayes feele it stirre about the two and fourtieth day others neuer feele the same vntill the middest of the time from the conception to the birth Yea in the same woman the same time and order is not alwayes obserued For according to the strength and good complexion of the child and the nature and disposition of the mother these things change and not onely because of the sexe Neuerthelesse it is most ordinary and vsuall for male children to moue within three moneths or thereabouts as likewise to bee borne at the ninth moneth whereas females are commonly somewhat slower both in stirring and also at their birth the reason whereof is this because male children are naturally a great deale more hote then females Galen attributeth the cause of the generation of sonnes to the strength and heate of the seede and saieth that they are caried on the right side of the wombe as the daughters on the left which is the colder side as being farthest remooued from the liuer He yeldeth also this reason why some children are more like the father and some the mother because of the greater strength of seede which they haue either from the one or from the other And when it commeth to passe that the wombe receiueth seede at two sundry passages which it hath then are twinnes engendred either at one conception or at twaine so that the later bee not long after the former according to the opinion of the Philosophers and namely of Aristotle who rehearseth many examples thereof in his seuenth booke of the historie of liuing creatures saying that a whore was deliuered of two children whereof the one was like the father and the other like the adulterer But nowe wee are to consider of the childe-birth which is as wonderfull a woorke of God in nature as any other It belongeth then to thee ACHITOB to ende this dayes worke by a discourse tending to this purpose Of Child-birth and the naturall causes thereof of the great prouidence of God appearing therein of the image of our eternall natiuitie represented vnto vs in our mortall birth Chap. 72. ACHITOB. Men are of that nature that they cannot acknowledge what they
deny nothing of all this but they say onely that God did then establish this order nowe spoken of which hee daily continueth in the generation of man I omit heere many other opinions touching this matter which come not so neere vnto the trueth namely a great controuersie betweene the Doctors in Diuinitie and in Physicke touching the vegetatiue and sensitiue soule and the time when the burthen beginneth to bee nourished and to haue sence thereby considering that it is a great deale better to inquire of these things to sobrietie and to leaue the resolution to GOD who knoweth that which is hidde from vs then by vaine questions and curious disputations to thinke to determine of the matter according to trueth and to the contentation of euery one For as we haue before touched we can knowe nothing either of the generation or original or of the substance and nature of our soule or of the immortalitie thereof but onely by those testimonies which by the effects it aftoordeth vnto vs and which God setteth downe in his word Wherefore according to that which hath beene already handled wee must distinguish those things vnto which our mindes may in some sort reach and of which wee may haue some knowledge from them that are so hidden from vs that wee can not knowe or iudge of any thing but like blinde men by groping and gessing This is a matter then of which wee must speake very soberly and with great reuerence of God contenting our selues with that which it pleaseth him to make knowne vnto vs by the meanes aforesaid and goe no further by desiring to knowe that which wee can not conceiue or comprehend vntill such time as God himselfe shall giue vs more ample and cleere knowledge thereof And I suppose wee shall not erre if wee say the like touching the question propounded by vs in the beginning of our speech about this matter namely of the meanes by which the reasonable soule shoulde bee infected with originall sinne seeing it is not engendered of that corrupt seede of which the bodie is bredde Let it then suffice vs to knowe that albeit the soule can not be defiled with sinne as it is created of God yet as God created all mankinde in Adam so when he fell all the rest of the worlde fell with him and in him was bereaued both of originall iustice and of other gifts which he lost by his fall So that albeit mens soules are created and produced of God pure and entire yet they keepe not that puritie stil neither can they be the soules of men and ioyned vnto their bodies and so become members of mankinde in them with any other condition then with that into which the first Father brought all his children by his sinne as we haue before touched Wherefore we must not search for the cause of that original sinne wherewith they are infected either in their creation because they are created by God of a diuine and immortall essence or in the generation of the body and in that seede of which it is engendred as if the soule took her originall infection together with the body frō the seede Moreouer we must not as the Pythagoreans do search for the corruption of soules in their entrance and coniunction with their bodies as if they receiued it from them but we must seeke it in that blot of sinne vnto which the whole race of mākind was made subiect through the fall corruption of the first stocke and in that decree of God whereby hee hath condemned all mankinde by his iust iudgement without any further enquirie after the meanes and manner how it came to passe For this cause Saint Paul doth bring vs backe to this consideration when in propounding vnto vs the first stock of mankind he saith that by one man sinne entred into the world and by sinne death And then hee propounded vnto vs this stocke of sinne so on the contrary side he propoudeth to vs the stock of iustice and righteousnesse namely Christ Iesus the new man who is an other stocke of mankinde regenerated renewed and reformed after the image of GOD. Therefore hee saieth that as by the disobedience of one man many were made sinners so by the obedience of one many are made righteous Now as humane Philosopie knoweth not either the corruption of all mankinde such as it is or the fountaine thereof so it is ignorant of the meanes whereby it must bee restored neither knoweth it that the wound is so great and mortall as that it cannot be cured but onely by the hand of God For which cause hee was to giue vs his owne sonne to be the Surgion and Physicion The ignorance heereof is the cause why humane Philosophie so greatly magnifieth the nobilitie and excellencie of the soule as it is well worthy being considered in the first nature in which it was created But the sequele of this matter wee will heare of thee ARAM. Of those powers and properties which the soule of man hath common with the soule of beastes of those powers and vertues which are proper and peculiar to it selfe according to the Philosophers of the difference and agreement that is betweene humane philosophie and Christian doctrine touching these things Chap. 87. ARAM Amongst the heathen they that were most ancient and neerest to the true Church of God and conuersed most with his seruants had greater knowledge and better vnderstanding of the nature of God of Angelles and of mens soules and of other matters belonging to true religion then they that were farthest off and succeeded latest after the other For the farther off that the doctrine of heauenly things was drawne from the fountaine of it the more hath it beene altered and corrupted both by ignorance ouerwhelming it and by false vnderstanding of it as also because euery one hath added to and taken away what seemed him best and that either to boast themselues that they may seeme some body or to couer their thefts that none might knowe from whence that thing was first taken and borrowed that so they might bee thought to bee the first members thereof or lastly to please and satisfie the curiositie and vanitie of the minde of man No maruell therefore if there were heathen Philosophers among the ancients who beleeued and taught many things agreeable to the worde of God and if there be now some amongst vs who boast of their study in philosophie and yet haue no part of that first innocencie and puritie but haue their mindes filled with strange opinions contrary to all reason and trueth We see wel enough by experience what impietie raigneth in this our age For there are an infinite number to be founde of whose religion no man can iudge except it be heerein that they thinke there is none at all and therefore mocke at all religion what shewe soeuer they make to the contrary But I knowe not why they shoulde not blush for shame when they
recouery neither was any knowen that hath returned from the graue For we were borne at all aduenture and wee shall be heereafter as though wee had neuer beene for the breath is a smoke in the nosethrilles and the woordes as a sparke raised out of our hearts Which being extinguished the body is turned into ashes and the spirite vanisheth as the soft ayre Our life shall passe away as the trace of a cloude and come to naught as the mist that is driuen away with the beames of the Sunne and cast downe with the heate thereof Our name also shall be forgotten in time and no man shall haue our woorkes in remembrance For our time is as a shadowe that passeth away and after our ende there is no returning for it is fast sealed so that no man commeth againe Come therefore let vs enioy the pleasures that are present and let vs cheerfully vse the creatures as in youth Let vs fill our selues with costly wine ointments and let not the floure of life passe by vs. I omit other speeches of a voluptuous wicked vniust life which they purpose to lead exercising al iniustice violence cruelty without al regard had to any right or iustice either to poore or rich yong or old but chiefly against the seruants of God who approue not their kind of life but reproue condemne it Therefore it is said after al the discourse that they imagined such things and went astray For their owne wickednes blinded them They do not vnderstand the mysteries of God neither hope for the reward of righteousnes nor can discerne the honor of the soules that are faultlesse For God created man without corruption and made him after the image of his owne likenesse Neuerthelesse through enuy of the deuill came death into the world and they that hold of his side proue it But the soules of the righteous are in the hands of God and no torment shall touch them In the sight of the vnwise they appeared to die and their end was thought grieuous and their departing from vs destruction but they are in peace Wee see then that these men go no farther then they can see with their bodily senses and because they see that man liueth by breathing and cannot liue without and that hee dyeth when his breath faileth they thinke that the soule of man is but a litle winde and breath and so is scattered and vanisheth away as it were winde and breath or as a cloude in the ayre The same iudgement they are of in regard of the blood because life leaueth the body with the blood as if it had no other soule but the blood or breath And forasmuch as the eye discerneth no difference betweene men and beasts in death they iudge also that there is no difference betweene their soules But if they be resolued to giue credit to nothing but to their corporall senses and in death consider only what difference there is betweene men and beasts they wil not beleeue that either beasts or men haue any soule at all that giueth them life because they see nothing but the body onely And then by the like reason we must conclude that not onely the whole man is no other thing but this body which we see but also that there is nothing in all the world but that which may bee seene by the eyes and perceiued by the other senses and so all that which we haue not seene and knowen by them shal be nothing Which being so men shal differ nothing from beasts as indeed we can say no better of these men For beastes thinke of nothing but that which they beholde and perceiue by their senses and goe no further which is so farre from all science and discipline and from all iudgement of man as nothing can be more Therefore they that beleeue nothing but their corporall senses deserue to be compared not onely to little children or to fooles who when they see pictures or their face in a glasse suppose they are liuing men because they goe no farther then they see but euen to the brute beastes who haue lesse sense and vnderstanding then children It is woonderfull to consider howe men take such great pleasure paines to become brutish For if they doe but see a smoke come out of a place they will iudge that there is some fire within although they behold it not and if they smell any ill sauour their nose will tell them that there is some place infected or some carion lying not farre off albeit they see it not What is the cause then that when by their senses they perceiue somewhat more in men then in beastes they are not induced thereby to thinke that of necessitie there must be some what within them which causeth them to differ much from beasts Which is not by reason of the bodie but of the soule that is not seene but onely by her actions workes and effects Whereupon it followeth that if their actions differ from the actions of that soule whereby beastes liue the cause also from which they proceed must needes differ and so consequently that there is great difference betwixt the soule of men and the soule of beastes For let them consider onely the diuersitie of artes which man exerciseth with his hands and the varietie of so many wittie and woonderfull workes as are wrought by him which cannot proceede but from a great spirite and from a passing excellent nature the like whereof is not to bee seene in beastes or in anie thing they can doe Besides doe they not see how the spirite of man discourseth throughout all nature what reason is in him and howe his speech followeth reason which are such things as haue a certaine vertue and the image of a diuine spirite shining in them Wherefore albeeit wee shoulde make man wholly like to a beast by reason of his bodie both in regarde of his birth and death yet wee must needes confesse that hee is of a farre more excellent nature in respect of that great and manifest difference which wee see is in his soule If then the soule of man bee mortall as well as that of beastes to what purpose serue those graces which it hath aboue the other and from what fountaine shall wee say they flowe in it and to what ende were they giuen vnto it But for this time I will leaue these Atheists hoping that to morowe wee will not leaue any one naturall reason able to vrge them in their demnable opinion which shal not bee laide out at large And I demaund of them that haue anie taste of the holy Scriptures and yet seeme to doubt of the immortalitie of the soule or at leastwise are not fully resolued therein howe man is said to be created after the image of God if he shall be altogether dissolued and brought to nothing and where shall we then seeke for this image in him It is certaine that this is not in
but of some other thing before and aboue that or else farther off vnto which it tendeth We see this in all the senses both externall and internall which are common to vs with beastes For they know nothing else beside that which is of this nature which we see neither doe they ascend higher but our spirite not content with the sight and knowledge of the heauens starres and Angels themselues mounteth vp to God and being come thither can go no further What other thing els doeth this signifie and declare vnto vs but that the soules of beasts are engendered of this corruptible and mortall nature beyonde which they cannot lift vp themselues but that ours are produced of God aboue the power of this nature And so that may bee saide of our soule which is spoken of a spring water namely that it ascendeth as much vpwarde as it descendeth downeward but can goe no higher For when a man woulde carie the water of a spring any whither and would haue it mount vpwarde it will be an easie matter to bring it as high as the spring-head from whence it floweth but no higher except it bee forced by some other meane then by it owne course and naturall vertue Notwithstanding it will easily descend lower And so fareth it with our spirite For as it came from God so it is able to mount againe to the knowledge of him and no higher but it descendeth a great deale lower And as for our senses they remaine lower then the woorkes of nature and pearce not to the depth of them but are alwayes busied about the externall face of them Neither is it to bee doubted but that Moses meant to teach vs these things by that which hee rehearseth of the meanes vsed by God in the creation of man which differed from that hee kept in the creation of all other creatures either liuing or without life For we haue heard what deliberation and counsaile he vsed before he put hand to the worke how he fashioned the body and how he placed the soule therein by and by after Therefore in that the Prophet describeth the creation of the bodie apart and then that of the soule he giueth vs to vnderstand that wee must seeke for something more high and excellent in that of man then in that of beastes whose soules were created with their bodies and of the selfe-same matter with them Moreouer he teacheth vs this very plainly when he saith that God created man after his owne image and similitude which hee did not say of beasts as we haue alreadie heard Therefore there must needes be in the soule of man some other power and vertue then that by which it giueth life to the bodie and which is common to it with those of brute beastes So that as God gaue to this dead bodie taken out of the earth a soule that endued it with life motion and sense so hee imprinted and ingraued his image into this soule vnto which immortalitie is annexed Therefore when Moses sayeth that man was made a liuing soule no doubt but by the name of soule he meaneth another nature and substance then that of the bodie And in that he calleth it liuing hee declareth plainly that the bodie hath not of it self and of it owne nature that life wherewith it is endued but from the power of this soule And although hee there maketh not any speciall mention of the other vertues thereof it is because hee considered the capacitie of the people with whome he liued vnto whom he would frame himselfe being content to speake openly of that power of the soule which appeared best without and which the externall senses might most easily know perceiue by the effects thereof But I thinke it will not be vnfit for this matter if wee returne to that question which before we touched concerning the creation of the soule namely whether since it was created by God in the first creation of man it be still created after the same sort as it were by a new miracle in them that are daily borne in the worlde or whether it bee naturally created but yet of God by a certaine order appointed for that ende by him Nowe albeeit it bee very requisite that we should bee sober and not rash in this matter for the causes alreadie set downe notwithstanding we will here propound the opinion of some learned men grounded vpon that order which God hath accustomed to obserue in his workes and in his creatures For seeing he hath set a law in nature for all other creatures according to which he createth produceth them not by any new miracle it is more likely that he createth soules naturally and that he hath ordained a stedfast law for mankind but differing from that of beasts so much as his creation differed from theirs For hauing once established an order he vseth not to change it into a diuers or contrarie order but keepeth still the same except it bee that sometimes he vseth extraordinarie meanes by way of a miracle For although all his woorkes bee great miracles and chiefely man neuerthelesse wee call none by that name but onely those which he woorketh by supernaturall meanes not against but beside the common order of nature But that which I say derogateth nothing from the nature immortalitie of mans soule For although it be placed in that matter which is alreadie prepared and appropriated for the fashioning of the body yet he doeth this aboue the vertue of the matter and of the worke of nature by a lawe which he hath established to that effect For this cause he doeth not onely giue a soule to them that are begotten by lawfull marriage but to those also who are brought foorth in whoredome whether it be adultery incest or any other such like For although that honestie which is enioyned mankind by God be not kept in such a birth and generation but contrarieth the same yet it is not contrary to the lawe of generation ordayned by God as that generation is which is by buggerie wherein not only the Law of honesty is violated but also the law of nature We will conclude then that it is not only true that our soule is not brought forth by the power of nature but by the benefit of God only but also that it is expedient and very behoofefull yea necessary for mankind that it should be true and because it is behoofefull and necessary it is true also without all question For God hath omitted nothing that is agreeable to his glory and profitable and expedient for mankinde For seeing the soule is placed within the bodie not by the vertue of nature but properly and peculiarly by a speciall benefite of God man oweth the chiefest and best part of himselfe not to nature but to God Which is the cause why he should acknowledge him as the onely father of his spirite consecrate the same wholly to him alone not yeelding
of Gods Spirite which illuminateth the eies of the minde a great deale more cleerely then any naturall light can doe as being grounded vpon the testimonie of God himselfe Some also there are who persuade themselues that Salomon putteth no difference betwene the soule of men and of beasts and that he doeth not affirme that one of them is more or lesse mortall or immortall then the other I considered in mine heart saith the Wiseman the state of the children of men that God had purged them yet to see to they are in themselues as beasts For the condition of the children of men and the condition of beasts are euen as one condition vnto them As the one dieth so dieth the other for they haue all one breath and there is no excellencie of man aboue the beast for all is vanitie All goe to one place all was of the dust and all shall returne to the dust Who knoweth whether the spirite of man ascend vpward and the spirite of the beast descend downeward to the earth But they are greatly deceiued that thinke to defend their impietie by this saying of Salomon For it is most certaine that his meaning is not to conclude that it is so indeede as hee speaketh in that place as it appeareth manifestly by his finall resolution in the same Booke made of the matter hee hath in hand wherein he concludeth touching the body of man that dust returneth to the earth as it was and that the spirite returneth to God that gaue it Nowe wee may well thinke that this excellent man or rather the Spirite of God which spake by him woulde not contradict himselfe especially in the very same Booke Wherefore wee must rest in the conclusion he maketh therein in which hee giueth vs the meaning of al his former speech And as for the place alleadged by vs which as Epicures and Atheists thinke maketh for them he would giue vs to vnderstand thereby what a man may iudge of the life and soule both of men and beasts and of the difference between them according to that wee see and perceiue by our corporall sences and that may bee comprehended by the minde and reason of man if wee haue no other testimonie that looketh beyond this life in which these dogges and hogges and all carnall and brutish men stay themselues For if there remained no more of man after his death then there doeth of a beast both the one and the other woulde come to one passe Nay the life of man shoulde bee so farre from happinesse that it woulde bee a great deale more miserable then that of beastes So that it shoulde seeme to bee better for men to passe away the time merrily and to liue like beasts according to the Philosophie of Epicures And although they shoulde take this course yet in the ende all woulde be but vanitie according to Salomons theame which hee handleth in his Booke of the Preacher Therefore being to set downe the conclusion of his Booke hee saieth Remember nowe thy Creatour in the dayes of thy youth whiles the euill dayes come not nor the yeeres approch wherein thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them Nowe if there were no difference betweene the soule of men and the soule of beastes both which the Prophet calleth by the name of Spirite taking spirite for soule what profit should men reape by this instruction and exhortation For what greater benefite coulde hee looke for who from his youth had giuen ouer himselfe to the seruice of God and had alwayes remembred him then he that forgat him and turned himselfe away from him Thus ye see how Epicures and Atheists feare not to prophane the holy Scriptures by snatching at some places of them very maliciously to the ende to set some colour vpon their damnable opinion against the immortalitie of the soule But wee see what a goodly bulwarke they are able to make euen all one with the rest of the arguments which wee haue already heard of the same matter And although they alleadge heere in defence of their cause Lucian and Lucretius two other Patriarkes and Patrons beside Pliny whome they accompt as principall pillers of their impietie yet wee can heare from them no other arguments woorthie to be so much as once thought vpon besides those which wee haue already handled But wee may obserue the like iudgement of GOD vpon them that was vpon Pliny the great searcher of Nature For Lucian according as Suidas testifieth was torne in peeces and eaten of dogs and Lucretius being madde and franticke slew himselfe For hauing abused so vilely that good wit and skill which God had giuen him did he not worthily deserue to loose it vtterly and to haue lesse of it then brute beasts Hee became so brutish that hee woulde not acknowledge that any either GOD or man had brought so great a benefite to the whole race of mankinde or that was for this cause more woorthie of greater prayse then Epicurus was because by his Philosophie and Doctrine hee abolished all diuine prouidence and so consequently all Diuinitie and immortalitie of the soule all hope of an other life all religion and conscience all difference betweene vertue and vice betweene honest and dishonest thinges and reduced all nature both Diuine and Humane into meere brutishnesse This beastly fellowe thus admiring Epicurus concludeth that men can not but be wretched and miserable all their life time so long as they haue anie opinion of all these thinges because they will holde them in continuall feare and so consequently in perpetuall torment but being dispossessed of all such thoughtes and so of all feare of GOD it will followe thereupon that they shall haue no more conscience to resist or gaine-say them whatsoeuer they thinke speake or doe And so their conscience shall not torment them with any feare and terrour especially of any iudgement of GOD but will suffer them to bee in quiet and not hinder in any respect their carnall pleasures and brutish affections Nowe when they are come to this point they accompt themselues happie For then they are all of them not onely as Kings and Princes but euen as it were gods fearing no other power aboue themselues and hauing no bodie to hinder their pleasure but that they may freely followe their owne heartes lustes So that the last and best conclusion of all this Philosophie will bee this that men can not bee happy except they become very beasts and being spoiled of all things wherein they excell them waxe altogether brutish and retaine nothing at all of mans nature but onely the outward shape of a man Therefore wee may iudge by the examples of these personages of so great skill and so highly esteemed among men what man can doe by his naturall light if it bee not guided by GOD but vtterly forsaken of him seeing those selfe same men who haue beene such great inquisitours and admirers of nature haue
fallen into such execrable beastlinesse and such horrible blasphemies as in a manner to say that God or Nature had brought men into the worlde onely to make them more miserable and more wretched then all other creatures so that they can finde no better happinesse and felicitie for themselues then during their life to become like to beastes or plants or some other insensible creatures or else after their death to bee brought to nothing as they were before their conception and birth Is it possible for a man to thinke of a straunger thing more against GOD more vnwoorthie mankinde or more iniurious to all nature For the Atheists themselues that reiect God doe yet confesse if they be Philosophers that nature doeth nothing without cause or if they confesse it not they haue testimonies enow in nature to conuince them of it And yet if their doctrine were true God and Nature haue done woorse in the creation and production of men then to doe some thing without cause For this were a cause most vnwoorthie of God and of Nature to create and bring foorth men into the worde onely for this cause and to this ende that they shoulde bee more miserable and more wretched then all other creatures and to make mankinde onelie to beholde in him the perfection of all miserie and vnhappinesse as though God and Nature tooke pleasure in beholding such cruell pastime as is the viewe of mans miseries in such a cursed estate Wherefore seeing all the doctrine and Philosophie of these dogges bringeth with it so many so strange so beastlike and so horrible absurdities euen once to thinke of them being so vnbeseeming God all mankinde and whole nature and so contrary to al the testimonies which the whole world affordeth vnto vs in the behalfe of Gods eternal prouidence ouer al his creatures I thinke there is no body except hee be as brutish as the Authours and Teachers of such kinde of Philosophie and doctrine but hee can easily iudge that it is altogether impossible to bee true or to haue any foundation ground in reason seeing it confoundeth and ouerthroweth al reason al nature Which causeth me to be so much the more abashed that there are men found euen among Christians yea a great number who rather followe the false opinion of these masties and giue greater credite to these sottish and vain arguments which they propound both against God and all diuinitie and against all nature and trueth then to the true sentence of so many vertuous learned holy men as haue bin in the world from the beginning and to the common and publike testimony of all mankind and of al people and nations But if God hath not spared the very heathen who so shamefully abused that knowledge which he gaue them of his works in nature and of the testimonies of his diuine nature prouidence manifested vnto them therein but punished them with such a horrible iudgement as to deliuer them vp into are probate sense into a woorse estate then is that of brute beasts we are not to maruell if he deale so and more hardly at this day with them that deserue a great deale more then they did because he hath manifested him self more cleerly without all comparison to these men if they would see and know him yea we ought to thinke it more strange if he dealt otherwise For the moe means he affordeth vnto men to know him the greater iudgement they deserue when they abuse the same and labour to blind themselues by their own ingratitude peruerse malice As for vs we cannot God be thāked doubt in any sort of the immortalitie of the soule seeing wee see on our side the aduantage euery way in defence therof namely multitude authoritie nature reason and which is most of all the testimonie of God who alone is sufficient I doubt not but that some to whome God hath giuen more knowledge and greater graces then to vs are able to alleage other arguments and reasons for the confirmation of this matter which we haue omitted For truth is not vnprouided but hath great abundance of all sorts But wee haue alleaged the chiefest taken out of the writings of learned men that haue written best of this matter especially of them that in our time haue written most Christianly And although there are other reasons then those which wee haue set downe yet I thinke there are enow in our discourses to stoppe the mouthes of all Epicures and Atheists at leastwise to conuince them if we cannot confound them For what can they alleage against them that is of any great shew or strength It may easily bee iudged by their best arguments discoursed vpon by vs. What will they haue more Do they expect or desire of vs that we should point with the finger at soules when they depart out of bodies that dye Then they shoulde bee no soules and inuisible spirits but bodies that may be seene And yet vnles they may behold them comming forth as they do smoke from the fire they will not beleeue that they depart at all from the bodies or that they haue any beeing at all Surely I think that these men who would so faine haue soules to bee mortall and to bee extinguished by death with their bodies would not beleeue that they were departed and that they once liued their bodies being dead no not although they had seen them come foorth visibly but woulde perswade themselues that they were some illusions and that their eyes had some mist before them so strong is a lying perswasion in a man when he wil iudge of a thing not according to reason but according to his affection Now seeing we are come to the end of our purpose namely to lay before our eies as it were a naturall history of man by the consideration of the matter of his body of the diuersitie of that matter and of the forme that God hath giuen it together with the profite and vse both of the one and the other and also by a description of the partes powers vertues and faculties of his soule therby to be instructed at large in the nature and immortality thereof by causing the soule to behold her selfe in the glasse of her marueilous actions and all to this ende that wee should know our selues as it becommeth vs there remaineth nothing now but that wee shoulde draw out a generall instruction from these aduertisements and lessons which God giueth vs in the admirable composition of our nature to the end that hereafter we should become more fitte for the contemplation of this diuinitie by the consideration of the wonderfull works thereof in the heauens and in the earth of which we desire if God giue vs grace hereafter to discourse Therfore doe thou ACHITOB put an ende to the cause of our present assembly meeting by some goodly discourse vpon all these matters of which we haue intreated Of the image of God in the soule
Shame Impudencie a very dangerous disease Ierem. 3. 3. Ezech. 2. 4. and 3. 7. The cause of rednesse in the face in blushing A cause of feare in men The rule of all true iudgement Shame of well doing The cause why men deceiue themselues What pride is Two kindes of pride Three causes why God created man so excellent Of a good kind of pride Ecclus. 10. 14 19. Of the euil pride Ecclus. 10. 7. Who are most giuen to pride Causes of pride What vices follow pride Pride lifteth men against God Prou. 13. 10. Pride bred of vertue A similitude A remedy against pride Three kindes of the Vegetatiue facultie in the soule A profitable meditation Of the third and last belly of the body The office of heate in man The power order and office of the Vegetatiue soule A similitude taken from 〈…〉 A good lesson for euery one Of the seates of the naturall vertues How excrements are voyded Of the growing of bodies Wherein the natural vertues differ ech from other How meate nourisheth the body How mettals and stones growe The true cause or nourishing in creatures The instruments of the naturall powers of the soule How the soule vseth the instruments of the body Of the Ventricle and stomack● Of the figure of the stomacke Of the mouths of the stomacke How the name of the heart is abused The originall of appetite The doore of the vpper Orifice Of the lower Orifice Of the small strings of the Orifices The stomake compared to a pot on the fire Howe the stomacke is placed Of the substance of it How it is warmed by other neighbour partes Of 〈◊〉 Kell or Kall The causes of appetite in the stomach The originall of hunger The stomach compared to a wombe The office of the lower Orifice The poorer sort are not to be contemned The necessitie of the bowelles The number and names of the guttes The bowelles haue two couerings Of the Peritone or inner ●ine of the belly ioyned to the kall The vses of it The substance of the bowels The bowels are made of two coates Of the three 〈◊〉 gut● Of their names The Duodene or stomacke gut The hungry gut The Ileon or folded Gut Of the three great Guts The blinde Gut The fift gut called Colon or the great gut The colike and Ileacke passions The straight gut The vse of it Of the muscle Sphincter A lesson against pride Against the contempt of inferiour persons Of the Mesentery Of the Mesareon The chiefe vse of it Other vses of the Mesentery Of the Meseraicall veines Their vse Of the Pancreas or sweet bread The vses of it Of the liuer and excellencie thereof The seconde coction is made in the liuer Foure degrees of concoction in the liuer The fountaines of the blood and veines spirites and arteries Our life compared to a lamp Two great veines in the body The Port-veine The hollow veine Eccles. 12. 6. A place of Salomon expounded Of the arterie Aorta A similitude What a humour is Of the nature of blood Of the cholericke humour Of the flegmaticke humour Of the melancholicke humor The agreement betwixt the humours and the elements How the humours and elements agree in places Agreement betwixt the great garden of the world and that of the litle world A goodly contēplation in nature Of the heart of plants The body of man compared to a garden Mans life in the midst of two waters Vapours ascending vp to the braine Watry clouds in the braine Inconueniences that come from the braine Instruction for euery one Testimonie of the prouidence of God Gen. 9. 4 5. The mixture of the humors necessary The causes of health and of sicknesse Sinne the cause of all the discord in the world The causes of death A politike instruction Of the cholericke humor Of the Gall and of his bladder The vses of the cholericke humour Of the melancholicke humor Of the spleene What effects follow the oppilation of the liuer The commodities of the melancholike humour Of the flegmatike humour and profite of it Of the kidneyes Emulgent vcines How the vrine is made yellow Of the Vreteres and of the bladder Of the necke of the bladder What it is to be a naturall diuine What communion ought to be among men Why the humors are taken in the euill part The cause of mens ingratitude The agreement betweene the maners and humors of the body By what meanes the naturall humors corrupt The originall of Feuers and other diseases The corruption of the flegmatike humour Of the cholerike humour From whence all sortes of agues proceede The corruption of the melancholie humor From whence madnesse commeth Three chiefe workers of mens actions He speaketh of such goodnes and vertues as were ●o esteemed of by the heathen that knew not their naturall corruption God ruleth in all and ouer all Ierem. 1. Galat. 1. Actes 9. 15. The nature of flegmatike persons The nature of a cholericke complexion The nature of the melancholicke body What natures are most abused by euill spirites Matth. 17. 15. mar 9. 20. luke 9. 39. How vigilant the Deuil is to hurt vs. What profit we reape by the knowledge of our complexions What natures we are to eschew The true meanes to cure our vices Matth. 7. 11. Luke 11. 13. Psal 127. 1. Verse 3. Genes 1. 28. The vertue of the blessing of God for generation Of the Radicall humour Of the defect of mans life with the causes therof What is meant by nature Genes 1. What Generation is What the generatiue power is What seede is What is meant by a vegetatiue soule Of the cause of monsters Malach. 2. 15. Two effectes of ignorance Of the similitude that is in generation From whence the seede commeth The seuerall vertues of the generatiue power The chiefe cause why the generatiue power was giuen to man Of the seate of Generation Hebr. 7. 10. Genes 35. 11. Psal 139. 13. Iob 10. 10 11 What is man properly Psalm 139. 5. Verse 6. Iob 10. 8. Psalm 36. and 138. A good lesson to be learned from our creation The afflictions of Gods children turne to their good No mans knowledge perfect Gen. 2. 4. The creation of the world and of man compared together An argumont of the prouidence of God Of the forme of an infant Of the After-burthen The first sixe dayes work from the conception Psal 139. 16. All the members receiue their forme together The nauill first made perfect When the seed is called Embryon When the burthen is called a child or infant When the childe f●●st moueth Galens opinion of the birth of sonnes The word profitable for all Mans birth a woonderfull worke of God How the childe is nourished in the wombe The cause of child-birth Which is the easiest kinde of child-birth Why children cry when they are borne A testimonie of Gods prouidence in the wombe Gal. de vs● 〈◊〉 lib. 15. An argument against Atheists Psal 139. 17 18. 22. 9. Two things to be considered of in
the soule attained to the vnderstanding of the diuine essence Aristotle also taking the same way in his 8. booke of naturall Philosophy sheweth that he knew God vnder the name of the first moouer who was perpetual and vnmoueable But we may attaine to the knowledge of God of our selues a great deale better then al the Philosophers could who were ignorant of the true beginning and end of things if we be guided by the word which is the light of the trueth and whereof al the humane philosophy of the wisest that were is but a li●●e shadow Now then if vnder this heauenly guide wee feede our spirites with a doctrine that teacheth man to know himselfe well wee beginne at that science which of all other is most necessary profitable and pleasant I say necessary as that which guideth and leadeth vs as it were by the hand to find out God profitable because it bringeth a maruailous commoditie to this present life both in regarde of bodily health as also of ruling all our actions according to vertue and pleasant because a man may see therein as it were in a sacred temple all the images of the wonderfull workes of the world ACHITOB. I cannot but greatly commend those Philosophers that reprehended and condemned them who spent all their time only in the contemplation of heauen and earth and of the nature of other creatures and in the meane while descended not into themselues to know themselues and their nature but especially their soule For what will it profite a man to take so great paines as to measure the whole world and to compasse on euery side all the elementarie region to knowe the things that are contained in them and their nature and yet in the meane time hee can not measure or knowe himselfe being but alittle handfull of earth For although the knowledge of the rest of the creatures that are in this great visible worlde will greatly helpe to leade him to the knowledge of God the Creatour neuertheless● he shall neuer be able to know him well if withall he know not himselfe Yea these two knowledges are so ioyned togither that it is very hard matter to seuer them For as a man can not know himselfe if he know not God so he cannot know God wel if in like sort he know not himselfe So that I take this for most certain that neither Astronomy Geometry Geography or Cosmography nor any other Mathematical science is so necessary for man as that whereby he may learne to know himselfe wel to measure himselfe wel by the measure of his owne nature that he may thereby know how to contayne himselfe within the limits thereof As for Mathematicians natural Philosophers Phisicions who bestow their trauaile in the knowledge of nature and natural things and in the meane time forget God and themselues whereas they ought to learne both the one and the other by that knowledge that God hath giuen them of his works I say they are not worthy to be taken for naturall Philosophers Phisicions or Mathematicians but rather for blockheaded beasts In my opinion they behaue themselues as if a man should be alwayes occupied in looking vpon his house and handling of his mooueables and houshold stuffe and in the meane time did not put them to those principall and speciall vses for which they ought to serue but were altogether forget full of himselfe of his wife and of his children Moreouer concerning Phisicions if their care to know their own soule with the nature and parts therof be not more to minister that food and phisicke which is necessary for it to liue wel and happily and that for euer then to know the nature of mens bodies that they may cure others it may worthly be said vnto them Phisicion heale thy selfe For if he be worthily derided that taketh in hand the cure of other men and cannot heale himselfe or at the least hath no care to doe it surely that man is well worthy to be had in greater derision that is more carefull not only of his owne but also of other mens bodies then he is of his owne soule whereby he differeth from brute beasts and is made partaker of an immortall nature Wherefore it is very requisite that all students in naturall philosophy should profit so well in the study thereof as to be able to turne it into true naturall diuinity whereby they may learne to know God their creator in that nature which he hath created to this end to make himselfe seene and knowen therein to all men We haue therefore good cause my companions to bestow al possible paines trauaile that we may proceede on in so necessary profitable a knowledge Wherfore we must lay before our eyes two bookes which God hath giuen vnto vs to instruct vs by and to lead vs to the knowledge of himselfe namely the booke of nature and the booke of his word which we must ioyne both together as also that doctrine which is set forth vnto vs in them concerning the knowledge of our selues especially of the soule which is the true man For the first booke would stand vs in small stead without the second as we see it dayly by experience yea euery one of vs hath trial thereof in himselfe Therefore God of his great mercy hath added the second booke vnto the first to supply the want that is in our nature through sinne For if man had not sinned this booke of nature would haue sufficed to haue kept him alwayes in the knowledge contemplation and obedience of God his creator For then he should himselfe haue caried the booke whole and perfect imprinted in his heart and mind neyther should his soule haue needed any teacher to know to selfe but in it selfe it should haue cleerely beheld and contemplated it selfe so long as she preserued ●er first light and aboad in that harmony wherein God had created her But now that she is in the body as it were some excellent picture of Apelles fallen into a sinke of mire couered and compassed about with thicke mists and obscure darknesse it is very needfull that we should haue another new light brought vnto vs from heauen which is not naturall as the first but supernaturall For this cause God hath farther giuen vs this second booke of which I spake euen now by means wherof and by the vertue of his holy spirit hee communicateth vnto vs as much celestiall and heauenly light as is needfull for the knowledge of our selues and of his high Maiestie Being therefore guided by the spirit of God whereby our spirit doth see and contemplate let vs read in these two bookes diligently note in them the parts and powers force and vertue aswell of the body as of the soule of man especially the immortality thereof whereby we shall make the way easie for vs to walke and sport our minds hereafter in the large and goodly fields of the whole world by discoursing of
Such are the fruits of an vnbridled tong that is misled ill gouerned as cōtrariwise it is an excellent treasure in man when it is moderated vsed wisely and soberly and in time and place conuenient as need requireth For al these things God giueth vs good instructions in the matter and composition of this member For first he doth not content himselfe in giuing to man but one only tong for so many offices as are assigned vnto it whereas many other members are double and yet serue chiefly but for one thing but also hath made it tender soft and pleasant tied it fast with many bands as it were so many small cords and threeds to restraine and bridle it to the end it should not runne ouer or be too forward and that it should not bring forth bitternes in steade of sweetenes nor pricke hurt any body Therefore it is made blunt on euery side not sharpe or forked like to the stings of scorpions other venimous beasts Moreoure it hath the gummes and teeth with which it is enuironed and closed in on euery side as it were with a quick-set with a strong rampire to keep it fast shut within the bounds limits therof as it were within a caue Besides it hath lips as it were gates to open vnto it or to shut it vp and muzzel it lest it should take too much licence Therefore seeing God doth gard the tong so on euery side he giueth men to vnderstand that they ought not to abuse it and teacheth them what care they ought to haue of this litle member seeing that of al the outward mēbers none is so hid couered cōpassed about locked vp with such a naturall couering inclosure as that is And to end our speach we know that whē the heart mind which ought to be the guides gouernors of the tongue shal be reformed in puritie and true knowledge of God by his grace there wil be nothing but good speach all truth in the tongue to the setting forth of the glory of his diuine Maiesty and to the profit of euery one according to the duetie of true charitie But if the mind and heart be euill and blinded with errour and ignorance they will bring forth like fruits and speeches Nowe hauing discorused at large of the first office of the tongue which consisteth in framing of the speach we must consider of the other two vses thereof which are in tasting in preparing meat that is chewed in the mouth for the nurishment of the body Therefore thou shalt begin Achitob to discourse of these two offices of those instrumēts which serue the tongue to this purpose Of the office of the tongue intasting and in preparing meate for the nourishment of the body of teeth and of their nature and office of the conduite or pipe that receiueth and swalloweth downe m●●tes Chap. 16. ACHITOB. The more we consider the worke and prouidence of God in the composition of mans body the more wee shall maruaile at it and daily finde therein new matter and occasion to glorifie his name Before we considered therof as of the frame of a house now we shal see it as it were a towne or city that hath Milles Ouens and Artificers of all arts occupations And which is more wonderful we shall perceiue such industry in many of the members that oftentimes one alone will serue for many offices for the due performance whereof mans reason woulde require many members and yet God hath so well prouided therefore that one alone doeth better discharge them and with lesse trouble then many together could doe Which may euidently be knowen by those vses and offices of the tongue whereof we are yet to intreate One and that the chiefest reason why the tongue is fitly placed in the head neere the braine was declared vnto vs in the former speach now we must note others especially why it is necessary that it shoulde be in the mouth as likewise in the head For the tongue could not haue satisfied any one office committed vnto it if it had bene placed barely and openly in the face as the eyes nose or eares are And seeing it was requisite to haue it couered it could haue no better couering then the mouth as may be prooued by many reasons The first is that seeing it is the instrument of speach which must be holpen by many other partes to haue it well framed as we heard before it was to be lodged in a place where it might haue neare at hand all instruments needefull for that seruice Nowe this vse of speach is proper to the tongue of man onely and not to that of brute beasts but to the other twaine following are common to man with beasts namely the sense of taste for which God hath appointed both that and the palat for which cause it was requisit also that it shoulde be neare the braine and in the head as the other instruments and members of the senses are as also in the place appointed for this preparation of bodily foode For it must first iudge of tastes discerne between good bad meat and betweene good and bad drinkes to the end that whatsoeuer is good for the nourishment of the body may be kept and that which is bad reiected and that afterward which is the last office it may help the teeth mouth to chew the meat and so to swallow it down For the iawes and teeth are as it were the stones of the mill which serue to prepare the meate for all the body Wherefore as there are two stones in euery mill namely one beneath which abideth alwaies stedfast and turneth no way and another aboue which alwayes turneth about to bruze and grind the graines of wheat that are between them so in the mil of mans body there are two iawes like to two milstones of which the one is alwayes firme and the other mooueth But there is this difference betweene these and milstones that the neather iawe onely mooueth which is true not onely in man but also in all other liuing creatures except in the Crocodile who in this poynt quite differeth from all other liuing creatures that haue iawes and teeth Nowe God hath so appointed this motion of the milstones of mans body not without good reason For seeing the braine is so neare and that there are so many goodly members in the head aboue the vpper most iawe-bone it were to be feared that the continuall and great moouing thereof would shake them and bring them into some inconuenience And that the iawes might bruze and breake whatsoeuer is put betweene them as the stones of the mill grinde the graines of corne the teeth are planted in them to serue them in this worke And in steade of winde or water which driue artificiall milles about this naturall mill of which we speake hath his muscles and sinewes to mooue it and to set it
aworking when neede requireth For this cause Salomon meaning to shewe the defect of teeth in olde age and what small strength olde men haue to chew their meate saieth that the grinders shall cease because they are fewe and the doores shall be shutte without by the base sound of the grinding These doores are the lippes because they serue the mouth and the mill which is within them For we vnderstand by the mouth all that is from the lippes vnto the throat and winde-pipe wherein not onely the mill of mans body is contained but also as it were a part of the bake-house in which the meale that is grinded is to be kneaded and so made ready for the ouen that afterward it may be baked in the stomacke which is as it were the ouen and kitchin of the whole body to dresse meate for it wherewith all the members thereof are to bee fedde and nourished For foode can not nourish the body if it still continue such as it is put into the mouth vnlesse it bee better prepared and dressed in such sorte that it may easily bee turned into the substaunce of the body that receiueth it As then iawes and teeth are the mill and milstones which bruze and turne to meale the wheate that is put betweene them that is to say all kindes of meates both hard and tender for the nourishing of the bodie so we may say that the tongue in this respect playeth the miller and serueth in stead of a hopper into which those graines that otherwise would skatter from betweene the milstones are put that they may be ground For when the meate falleth on any side from betweene the teeth the tongue serueth to send it backe againe that it may be well chewed and not auoyde the grinding of the iawes and teeth Thus wee dayly come to greater knowledge of strange instruments in the body of man For we heard before what Organs and what kinde of musicall instrument God hath made in him for the voyce and for speech now wee may see how there are within him a mill and a miller a bakehouse and a kitchin Hereupon we ought to thinke that the Master and Maker of these hath not created them that they should be idle as though he had giuen them nothing to grinde or to bake For he is no such workmaster as to make any woorke and not to set it a woorking or to leaue it vnfurnished of things necessary neither any such master or Lord but that he can casily doe it Wherfore although there are as many of these milles and ouens as there are not onely reasonable creatures but also beastes and although he hath vndertaken to maintaine them alwayes euen from the creation of the world vntil the consummation thereof yet hee neuer wanted matter to set them on worke when it pleased him Hereby we may know whether we haue a rich father or no and what cause we haue to feare that he will leaue our milles and ouens emptie although we had many houses full of them as in deed we haue in our selues our wiues and children so long as we acknowledge him to be such a one and that we yeeld obedience vnto him as becommeth his children But we haue further to note that as our mill is not without a Miller and such tooles as are necessary for him so the Ouen and Kitchen haue their Baker and Cooke For first the teeth doe not onely serue for a mill but they discharge some part of a Cookes office because the more they chop the meate and chew it well it is the better prepared for the stomack to bake it so much the sooner Therefore we say commonly that the first preparation and digestion of meate is made in the teeth For this cause God hath giuen a great number of them to man and hath made them of bone and distinguished them into sundry sorts according to that office whereunto he hath assigned euery one of them For right afore there are foure aboue and as many beneath that are broade sharpe and cutting which are called Incisorie teeth because they are apt to diuide and to cut the meate as a knife doeth and these haue but one roote Then there are other twaine on each side commonly called Dogge-teeth because they resemble the teeth of dogges which are broade towardes their roote but sharpe and poynted aboue and these also haue but one roote of a reasonable length Their office is to breake the meates and other things which by reasō of their ouer great hardnes could not be cut by the first Next the other teeth are appoynted to bruze very small those meats which haue alreadie passed through the former euen as milstones bruze wheate Therefore they are sharpe broade hard and great and haue more rootes then the other And because of the similitude which they haue with milstones they are called by the same name both of the Grecians and Latines as also iaw-teeth and grinders All teeth are planted in the iawe-bones by meanes of the gummes beeing fastened within them as it were nailes so that they cannot easily bee moued shaken or plucked out And although bones naturally haue no feeling yet teeth are very sensible by reason of certaine braunches of small soft sinewes which enter into their substance For this feeling is necessary for them both because they are bare and not couered with flesh as other boones are as also for the meates sake and for i●ste● as they that in some part are seruiceable to the taste aswell as all the other partes of the mouth Thus you see how the teeth serue at one time both for a mill and a cooke together with the tongue and the rest of the mouth Againe the tongue serueth for a baker hauing this office layde vpon it to gather the meate together after it is well grounde and chewed and to fashion it round like to pilles or small loaues that are yet but dough to this ende that it may with more ●ase be swallowed downe Wherein it dealeth like a baker who first fashioneth his bread into loaues Next it playeth the part of a baker and of a peele both together as that which setteth in the meate and causeth it to descend into the stomacke which is the ouen wherein it must bee baked that afterwarde it may nourish the whole bodie For this cause it was necessarie that the tongue both in breadth and length should bee answerable to the whole mouth in such sort that it might touch all partes of it to discharge so many offices Wee see then that mans bodie is not onely like to such a frame of a house as wee considered of before but also like to a great Citie wherein there are milles and Ouens and Artificers of all occupations Now vpon this that hath beene discoursed touching this last vse of the tongue in preparing and swallowing downe meate wee must further note that as there is a pipe that reacheth from the lungs vnto