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A48803 The marrow of history, or, The pilgrimmage of kings and princes truly representing the variety of dangers inhaerent to their crowns, and the lamentable deaths which many of them, and some of the best of them, have undergone : collected, not onely out of the best modern histories, but from all those which have been most famous in the Latine, Greek, or in the Hebrew tongue : shewing, not onely the tragedies of princes at their deaths, but their exploits and sayings in their lives, and by what virtues some of them have flourished in the height of honour, and overcome by what affections, others of them have sunk into the depth of all calamities : a work most delightfull for knowledge, and as profitable for example / collected by Lodowick Lloyd ... ; and corrected and revived by R.C. ... Lloyd, Lodowick, fl. 1573-1610.; Codrington, Robert, 1601-1665. 1653 (1653) Wing L2660; ESTC R39067 223,145 321

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Lightning or Thunder but had his head covered with all such things as might resist the violence of Lightning Misa King of the Moabites and Joram King of Iewry being besieged by the enemies and in danger of death they practised devises and invensions to save their lives and sacrificed their children to mitigate the rage of the Gods The love that divers had unto life and the fear they had of death were to be noted worthily considering how much men are vexed with the fear of death Antemon was so desirous to live and so fearfull to die that he hardly would travel out of his house any where and if he were compelled to go abroad he would have two of his servants to bear over his head a great brasen Target to defend him from any thing which might happen to do him hurt Theagenes in like sort would not go out of his house without he had consulted with the Image of Hecate to know what should happen to him that day and to understand whether he might escape death or no. Commodus the Emperour would never trust any Barber to shave his beard lest his throat should be cut Masinissa King of Numidia would rather commit his state and life unto dogs then unto men who was as his guard to kéep and defend him from death I might here speak of Bion of Domitianus of Dionisius of Pisander and of a thousand more who so feared death that their chief care and study was how they might avoid the same The fear of death causeth the son to forsake the father the mother to renounce the daughter one brother to deny another and one friend to forsake another Insomuch that Christ himself was forsaken of his disciples for fear of death Peter denied him and all the rest fled from him and all for fear of death Behold therefore how fearfull some are and how joyfull others are Some desperately have died being weary of life As Sabinus ●uba Cleomenes some have hanged some have burned and some drowned themselves and thus with one desperate end or other perished But since every man must die it were reason that every man should prepare to die for to die well is nothing else but to live again Wherefore certain philosophers of India called the Gymnosophislae being by Alexander the great commanded to answer to cercertain hard questions which if they could absolve they should live otherwise they should die The first question propounded to know whether there were more living or dead to the which the first philosopher said that the living are more in number because the dead have no being no place nor number The second question was whether the land produced more creatures or the sea to this answered the second philosopher and said the land doth ingender more for that the sea is but a portion of the land The third question was to know what beast was most subtil that beast answered the third philosopher whose subtilty man cannot discern Fourthly it was demanded why they being philosophers were so induced to perswade the Sabians to rebellion because said the philosophers it is better to die manfully then to live miserably The fifth question was whether the day was made before the night or the night before the day to the which it was answered the day The sixt was to understand how Alexander the Great himself might get the good wil of the people in shewing said that sixth philosopher thy self not terrible to the people The sevēth question was whether life or death were strōger to which it was āswered life The eight was to know how long a man should live till said the eight philosopher a mā thinks death better thē life The last question proposed by Alexander was how might a mortal man be accounted in the number of the Gods In doing greater things said all the Philosophers then man is able to do For they knew this proud Prince would be a God and that he would learn of the sage Philosophers how he might eschew mortality he was answered roundly because he should know himself to be a man and being a man he should make himself ready to die for death is the reward of sin and death is the beginning again of life unto the good As Aulus Posthumius in an Oration which he made unto his souldiers said it is given to both good and bad to die but to die g●dly and gloriously is onely given unto good men So Hector speaking in Homer said unto his wife Andromache that she should not be sorry for his death for all men must die Some with the Galatians do so contemn death that they fight naked and are perswaded with the Pythagoreans that they shall never die but passe from one body to another Some again die joyfully as the brethren of Policrat● who being taken captive by Diognitus the King of Milesia she was so ill intreated by him that she did send Letters to Naxus to her brethren at what time the people of Milesia were feasting drinking and banquetting at a solemn feast Her brethren embracing the opportunity came and found the Emperor drinking and all his people overcharged with wine and slew the greatest part of them and having taken many of them prisoners they brought their sister home to Naxus where as soon as they came home they died for joy of the victory Even so Phisarchus sometime in his great triumph crying out O happy hours and joyful days was taken with such an extasie of joy that he brake his veins at that very instant with the excesse of gladnesse He is counted most wise that knoweth himself To joy too much in prosperity to be advanced and extolled when fortune favours without all fear of ill haps to come is folly To be vanquished and subdued in adversity without hope of solace to ensue is meer madnesse Therefore the Wisemen knowing that death was the last line of life did endeavour in their lives how they might die well And briefly for the examples of our lives I will here note a few sentences of these wise men which they used as their Posies and think good to shew their answers to divers questions propounded to them Bias dwelling in the City of Prienna after the City was destroyed by the Mutinensians escaped and went to Athens whose Poesie was Maximus improborum numerus He willed all young men in their youth to travel for knowledge and commanded old men to embrace wisedome This Bias being demaunded what was the difficultest thing in the world he said to suffer stoutly the mutability of fortune Being demanded what was the most infamous death that might happen to man to be condemned said he by law Being asked what was the swéetest thing to man he made answer Hope Being again demanded what beast was most hurtfull Amongst wild beasts a Tyrant said Bias and amongst tame beasts a Flatterer And being demanded what thing it was that feared nothing in all the world he answered A good Conscience And again in the second Olympiade he was demanded many other questions as who was most unfortunate in the world the impatient man said Bias. What is most hard to judge Debates betwéen friends What is most hard to measure he answered Time Thus having answered to these and divers other questions Bias was allowed one of the seven Wise men of Gréece Chilo the second of the Sages being asked what was the best thing in the world he answered Every man to consider his own state And again being demanded what beast is most hurtfull he said Of wild beasts a Tyrant of tame beasts a Flatterer Being asked what is most acceptable to man he said Time And being asked of the Gréek Myrsilas what was the greatest wonder that ever he saw he said An old man to be a Tyrant The third was Chilo the Lacedemonian who being demanded what was a difficult thing for a man to do he answered Either to kéep silence or to suffer injuries Being demanded what was most difficult for a man to know he said For a man to know himself And therefore he used this Poesie Nosce teipsum This Chilo being of Aesop demanded what Jupiter did in heaven he said He doth throw down lofty and proud things and he doth exalt humble and méek things S. Ion said that in knowing and considering what we are and how vile we are we shall have lesse occasion ministred to us to think wel of our selvs for there is nothing good nor beautifull in man This Solon being asked by King Cyrus sitting in his chair of state having on his most royal habiliments and Princely robes covered with Pearls and Precious stones Whether ever he saw a more beautifull sight then himself sitting in heighth of his Majesty Solon answered that he saw divers Birds more glorious to behold then Cyrus And being demanded by Cyrus what Birds were they Solon said the little Cock the Peacock and the Pheasant which are decked with natural garments and beautified with natural colours This Solon was wont to say I wax dayly old learning much He noted nothing so happy in man as to Live well that he might Die well applying the Cause to the Effect as first to Live well and then to Die well FINIS LONDON Printed by Elizabeth Alsop dwelling in Grubstreet near the Upper Pump 1653.
man to rule the City of Scadmenna was often moved that he for his age was not méet to govern such a City considering the multitude and number of people that were within that City they thought that a young man should better discharge the office but the wise Emperour perceiving how bent and prone were the youth of that town to have a young man to rule over them answered them after this sort I had rather said he commit the governance of the City to one old man then the governance of so many young men unto the City Better it is that an old man should rule the City then the City should rule the young men meaning no otherwise then that aged men should onely be admitted to be rulers in Cities for that there belongeth unto them experience of things and care of youth Such was the homage and reverence which was amongst the young Romans toward the Senatours or old men of the City as both head and leg did acknowledge the same in doing duty unto age They had this confidence in age that no man might be chosen unto the number of the Senatours before he should be thréescore years of age The like custome had the people of Chalcides that no man before he were fifty years should either ●ear office within their Cities or be sent Embassadour out of their country Amongst the Persians no man could be admitted to be one of the sage rulers which they called Magi unlesse perfect age had brought him thereto perforce Amongst the Indians their wise men which ruled their country which were named Gimnosophistae were ancient for time giveth experience of governance Amongst the Egyptians the like credit was given unto old men that youth meeting them in the way would go out of the way to give place unto age so that their counsellours which were called prophets were counted men of much time and experience even so the Babylonians elected their sage Chaldeans the French men their ancient wise men called Druydes In fine noble Greeks did observe the like order in chusing their rulers and counsellours of aged men as before spoken The Lacedemonian youth were by the law of Licurgus no lesse charged to reverence age then their own parents The Arabians in all places without respect of person preferred their old men before honour dignity or fortune The people called Tartesi had this law so to honour age that the younger might bear no witnesse against the elder The reverence said Chylon that should be shewed unto age by young men ought to be such that they then being young doing obedience unto age they might claim the like when they waxed old of youth Agesilaus King of Sparta being an old man would often go in the cold weather very thin in a torn cloak without a coat or doublet only to shew the way unto young men to be hardy in age by contemning of gay apparell in youth Masinista King of Numidia being more then threescore years of age would lively and valiantly as Cicero saith without cap on head or shoe on foot in the cold or frosty weather in the winter travell and toyl with the souldiers only unto this purpose that young souldiers should be hardned thereby in their youth and practise the same for the use of others when they came to age themselvs Ihero King of Sicilia shewed the like example in his old age being lxxx years to train youth and to bring them up so in young years that they might do the like in their old age For thus judged these wise Princes that all men covet to imitate Princes and Kings in their doings Gorgias the phylosopher and master unto Isocrates the Orator and to divers more nobles of Gréece thought himselfe most happy that he being a hundred years and seven was aswell in his memory as at any time before and made so much of age that being asked why he so delighted in age he made answer because he found nothing in age for which he might accuse it So sayd King Cyrus a little before his death being a very old man that he never felt himselfe weaker than when hee was young The like saying is reported of that learned Sophocles who being so old that he was accused of his own children of folly turned unto the Iudges and said If I be Sophocles I am not a foole if I be a foole I am not Sophocles meaning that in wisemen the senses waxed better by use and exercising the same for we prayse saith Cicero the old man that is somewhat young and we commend again the young man that is somewhat aged The old is commended that hath his wit young and fresh at comandement and the young is praised that is sober sage in his doings When M. Crassus a noble Captain of Rome being a very old man took in hand to war against the Parthians a strong and stout people being by Embassadors warned of his age and admonished to forsake the wars he answered stoutly the Embassadour of the Parthians and said when I come to Seleucia your City I will then answer you Whereupon one of the Embassadors named Ages●●s an aged man stretched forth his hand and shewed the palm of his hand unto Crassus saying Before thou shalt come within the City of Seleucia bristles shall grow out of this hand The stoutness of Marcus Crassus was not so much as the magnanimity of Agesis and yet they both were old men What courage was in Scaevola to withstand that firebrand of Rome Sylla who after he had urged the Senators to pron●unce Marius enemy unto Italy he being an old ag●d man answered Sylla in this sort Though divers be at the commandements of the Senators and that thou art so encompassed with souldiers at thy beck yet neither thou nor all thy souldiers shall ever make Scaevola being an old man for fear of losing some old bloud pronounce Marius by whom Rome was preserved and Italy saved to be enemy unto the City The like history we read that when Julius Caesar had by force of arms aspired unto the office of a Dictator and came to the Senate house where few Senators were together the Emperor Caesar desirous to know the cause of their absence Confidius an aged father of Rome said that they feared Caesar and his souldiers Whereat the Emperor musing a while said Why did not you likewise tarry at home fearing the same Because said he age and time taught me neither to fear Caesar nor yet his souldiers For as Brusonius saith there are young minds in old men for though Milo the great wrestler in the games of Olympias waxed old wept in spight of his decayed limbs bruised bones yet he said his mind flourished and was as young as ever it was before Solon hath immortal praise in Gréece for his stoutness in his age for when Pisistra●us had taken in hand to rule the people of Athens and that it was evident enough that tyranny should procéed thereby Solon in his
latter days having great care to his countrey when that no man durst refuse Pisistratus came before his door in Arms and called the citizens to withstand Pisistratus For age said he moveth me to be so valiant and stout that I had rather lose my life then my country should lose their liberty What vertue then see we to be in age what wisedome in time what courage in old men The examples of these old men stir and provoke many to imitate their steps insomuch that divers wished to be old when they were yet young to have that honor as age then had Wherefore king Alexander the great espying a young man coloring his hairs gray said It behoves thée to put thy wits in color and to alter thy mind The Lacedemonians a people that past all nations in honouring age made laws in their Cities that the aged men should be so honoured and estéemed of the young men even as the parents were of the children so that when a stranger came unto Lacedemonia and saw the obedience of youth towards age he said In this country I wish onely to be old for happy is that man that waxeth old in Lacedemonia and in the great games of Olympia an old man wanting a place went up and down to sit some where but no man received him but amongst the Lacedemonians not onely the young men but also the aged gave place unto his gray hairs and also the Embassadours of Lacedemonia being there present did reverence him and took him unto their seat which when he came in he spake aloud O you Athenians you know what is good and what is bad for that which you people of Athens said he do professe in knowledge the same doth the Lacedemonians put in practice Alexander being in his wars with a great army in Persia and meeting an old man in the way in the cold weather in ragged and rent cloaths lighted from his horse and said unto him mount up into a princes saddle which in Persia is treason for a Persian to do but in Macedonia comendable giving to understand how age is honoured and old men estéemed in Macedonia and how of the contrary wealth and pride is fostred in Persia for where men of experience and aged men are set nought by there it cannot be that wisedome beareth rule How many in the Empire of Rome ruled the City and governed the people of those that were very aged men as Fabius Maximus who was thréescore years and two in his last Consulship Valerius Corvinus who was six times a Consul in Rome a very old man who lived an hundred and odd years Metellus of like age called to the like function and administration in the Common-wealth being an old man What should I speak of Appius Claudius of Marcus Perpenna of divers other noble Romans whose age and time was the onely occasion of their advancement unto honour and dignity What should I recite Arganthonius who was threescore years before he came unto his Kingdome and after ruled his Countrey fourscore years unto his great fame and great commendations of age To what end shall I repeat Pollio who lived in great credit with the people unto his last years a man of worthy praise of renowned fame who lived a hundred and thirty years in great authority and dignity What shall I speak of Epimenides whom Theompus affirmeth that he lived a hundred and almost thréescore years in great rule and estimation Small were it to the purpose to make mention again of Dandon amongst the Illyrians which Valerius writeth that he was five hundred years before he died and yet of great memory and noble fame Or of Nestor who lived thrée hundred years of whom Homer doth make much mention that from his mouth proceeded sentences swéeter then honey yea in his latter days almost his strength was correspondent to the same That renowned Prince Agamemnon General of all Gréece wished no more in Phrygia but five such as Nestor was with whose wisedome and courage he doubted not but in short time he should be able to subdue Troy Swéet are the sayings of old men perfect are their counsels sound and sure their governance How frail and weak is youth How many Cities are perished by young counsel How much hurt from time to time have young men devised practised and brought to pass And again of age how full of experience knowledg and provision painful and studious is it unto the grave As we read of Plato that noble Philosopher who was busie and carefull for his countrey writing and making books the very year that he died being fourscore and two What shall I say of Isocrates who likewise being fourscore and fourtéen compiled a book called Panathenaicus of Gorgias who being studious and carefull to profit his countrey being a hundred and seven years was altogether addicted to his books and to his study So of Zeno Pythagoras and Democritus it might be spoken men of no lesse wit travell and exercise than of time and age For as Cicero saith the government and rule of Comon-wealths consisteth not in strength of body but in the vertue of mind weighty and grave matters are not governed with the lightnesse of the body with swiftnesse of the foot with external qualities but with authority counsel and knowledge for in the one saith he there is rashnesse and wilfulnesse in the other gravity and prudence As Themistocles and Aristides who though not friends at Athens being both rulers yet age taught them when they were sent Embassadours for the state of Athens to become friends to profit their country which youth could never have done That sage Solon was wont often to brag how that he dayly by reading learning and experience waxed old Apelles that approved painter and renowned Greek in his age and last time would have no man to passe the day idle without drawing of one line Socrates being an old man became a scholler to learn musick and to play upon instruments Cicero being old himself became a perfect Greek with study Cato being aged in his last years went to school to Ennius to learn the Greek Terentius Varro was almost forty years old before he took a Greek book in hand and yet proved excellent in the Greek tongue Clitomachus went from Carthage to Athens after forty years of age to hear Carneades the Philosophers lecture Lucius as Philostratus doth write meeting Marcus the old Emperor with a book under his arm going to school demanded of the Emperour whither he went like a h●y with his book in his hand the aged Emperour answered I go to Sextus the Philosopher to learn those things I know not O God said Lucius thou being an old man goest to school now like a boy and Alexander the great died at thirty years of age Alphonsus King of Sicilia was not ashamed at fifty years old to learn and to travel for his knowledge and lest he should lose the use of the Latin tongue he occupied himself in
translating Titus Livius though he was a King I do not hold with age in divers men who for want of discretion and wit was childish again but of perfect men in whom age seemed rather a warrant of their doings For even as he that playeth much upon instruments is not to be commended so well as he that playeth cunningly and artificially so all men that live long are not to be praised so much as he that liveth well For as apples being green are yet sower untill by time they wax sweet so young men without warrant of time and experience of things are oftentimes to be misliked If faults be in old men saith Cicero as many there be it is not in age but in the life and manners of men Some think age miserable because either the body is deprived from pleasure or that it bringeth imbecility or weaknesse or that it is not far from death or calleth from due administration of Common-wealths these four causes saith Cicero make age seem miserable and loathsome What shall we say then of those that in their old age have defended their countries saved their Cities guided the people and valiantly triumphed over their enemies as L. Paulus Scipio and Fabius Maximus men of wonderfull credit in their old years What may be spoken of Fabritius Curius and Cornucanus aged men of great agility of famous memory in their latter days How can Appius Claudius be forgotten who being both old and blind resisted the Senatours to compound with King Pyrrhus for peace though they all and the Consuls of Rome hereunto were much inclined If I should passe from Rome a place where age was much estéemed unto Athens amongst the sage Philosophers if from Athens to Lacedemonia where age altogether bare sway and rule if from thence unto the Ethiopians and Indians where all their lives are ruled and governed by old men If from thence to any part of the world I might be long occupied in reciting the honour and estéemation of age Herodotus doth write that the Aethiopians and Indians do live most commonly a hundred and thirty years The people called Epeii in the Countrey of Aetolia do live two hundred years naturally and as it is by Damiates reported Lictorius a man of that Countrey lived thrée hundred years The Kings of Arcadia were wont to live thrée hundred years the people of Hyperborii lived a thousand years We read in the old Testament that Adam our first father lived nine hundred and thirty years and Eve his wife as many Seth nine hundred and twelve years Seth his son called Enos nine hundred and five Cainan the son of Enos nine hundred and ten Mahalalehel the son of Cainan eight hundred fourscore and fifteen so Enoch the son of Iared lived nine hundred thréescore and five years Enoch his son named Mechuselah lived nine hundred threescore and nine years with divers of the first Age I mean till Noah's time who began the second world after the floud who lived as we read nine hundred and five his son Sem six hundred years and so lineally from father to son as from Sem to Arphaxad from Arphaxad to Sala from Sala to Heber the least lived above thrée hundred years This I thought for better credit and greater proof of old ago to draw out of the Old Testament that other prophane authorities might be beleeved as Tithoni●s whom the Poets fain that he was so old that he desired to become a Grash●pper But because age hath no pleasure in the world frequenteth no banquets abhorreth lust loveth no wantonness which saith Plato is the only bait that deceives young men so much the happier age is that age doth loath that in time which young men neither with knowledg with wisdome nor yet with counsel can avoid What harm hath happened from time to time by young men over whom lust so ruled that there followed eversion of Cōmonwealths treason to Princes Friends betrayed countreys overthrown and Kingdoms vanquished throughout the world Therefore Cicero saith in his book entituled De Senectate at what time he was in the City of Tarentum being a young man with Fabius Maximus that he carried one lesson from Tarentum unto the youth of Rome where Architas the Tarentine said that Nature bestowed nothing upon man so hurtfull to himself nor so dangerous to his Countrey as lust or pleasure For when C. Fabricius was sent as an Embassadour from Rome to Pyrrhus King of Epyre being then the Governour of the City of Tarentum a certain man named Cineas a Thessalian by birth being in disputation with Fabritius about pleasure affirmed that hee heard a Philosopher of Athens affirm that all which we do is to be referred to pleasure which when M. Curius and Titus Coruncanus heard they desired Cineas to perswade King Pyrrhus to yéeld to pleasure and make the Samnites believe that pleasure ought to be esteemed Whereby they knew that if King Pyrrhus or the Samnites being then great enemies to the Romans were addicted to lust or pleasure that then soon they might be subdued and destroyed There is nothing that more hindreth magnanimity or resisteth vertuous enterprises then pleasure as in the Treatise of pleasure it shall more at large appear Why then how happy is old age to despise and contemn that which youth by no means can avoid yea to loath and abhor that which is most hurtfull to it self For Cecellius contemned Caesar with all his force saying to the Emperor that two things made him nothing to estéem the power of the Emperor Age and Wisdome By reason of Age and Wisdome Castritius feared not at al the threatnings of C. Carbo being then Consul at Rome who though he said he had many friends at commandement yet Castri●i●● answered and said That he had likewise many years that could not fear his friends Therefore a wise man sometime wept for that man dieth within few years and having but little experience in his old age he is then deprived thereof For the Crow liveth thrise so long as the man doth the Hart liveth four times so long as the Crow the Raven thrice so long as the Hart and the Phoenix nine times longer then the Raven And thus Birds do live longer time then man doth in whom there is no understanding of their years But man unto whom reason is joyned before he commeth to any ground of experience when he beginneth to have knowledge in things he dieth and thus endeth he his toyling Pilgrimage and travel in fewer years then divers beasts or birds do CHAP. XIX Of the manners of sundry People under sundry Princes and of their strange life THe sundry fashions and variety of manners the strange life of people every where thorow the world dispersed are so charactered and set forth amongst the writers that in shewing the same by naming the Countrey and the people thereof orderly their customes their manners their kind of living being worthy of observation I thought briefly to touch and to note
the people of Carthage delighted in falshood practised perjury and used all kind of crafts as the people of Sarmatha were most false in words most deceitfull in déeds and most cruell one towards the other The Scythians being much molested with wars and driven to leave their wives at home in the custody of the slaves and servants having occasion to be absent four years their wives married their servants and brake their former faith with their husbands until with force and power their servants were slain and so they recovered their countreys and wives again Apollonius the chief Govern●ur of Samos whom the Commons of the countrey from low estate had exalted to dignity to whom they committed the Government and state of Samos was so false of his faith towards his subjects that having their goods lands livings and lives in his own han● he betrayed them to Philip King of Macedonia their most mortal enemy That proud perjurer Cocalus King of Sicily slue King Minos of Créet though under colour of friendship and pretence of communication he had sent for him Cleomines brake promise with the Argives with whom he took truce for certain days and having craftily betrayed them in the night he slue them being sleeping and imprisoned them against his former faith and promise made before Even so did the false Thracians with the Boetians they brake promise violated their faith destroyed their countreys depopulated their cities and having professed friendship and vowed faith became wicked foes and false traytors and all of these received condign punishment But of all false perjurers and unnatural foes Zopyrus amongst the Persians and Lasthen● ● amongst the Olinthians to their perpetual Fame shall be ever mentioned the one in the famous City of Babylon deformed himself in such sort with such dissimulation of forged faith that having the rule and government thereof in his hand he brought King Darius to enjoy it through his deceit and was more faithfull to his King then to his Countrey Lasthenes being the onely trust of the Citizens delivered Olinthus their City into the hands of their long and great enemy Philip King of Macedonia What fraud hath béen found always in friendship what falshood in faith the murthering of Princes the betraying of Kingdoms the oppressing of innocents from time to time in all places can well witnesse the same When Romulus had appointed Spu. Tarpeius to be chief Captain of the Capitol the chamber of Rome where the substance and wealth of Rome did remain Tarpeia Spurius daughter in the night time as she went for water out of the city méeting Tatius King of the Sabines though he was then a mortal enemy to Rome and in continual wars with Romulus yet by her falshood and policy he was brought to be Lord of the Capitol Thus Tarpeia was as false to Rome as King Tatius was to Tarpeia for she looking to have promise kept by Tatius did find him as Rome found her she was buried alive by Tatius close to the Capitol which was then called Saturnus Mount and after her death and burial it was named Tarpeiaes Rock untill Tarquinius Superbus did name it the Capitol by finding a mans head in that place There was never in Rome such falshood shewed by any man as was by Sergius Galba who caused the Magistrates of three famous cities in Lusitania to appear before him promising them great commodities concerning the states and Government of their Cities yéelding his faith and truth for the accomplishment of the same whose professed faith allured to the number of Nine thousand young msn picked and elected for some enterprise for the profit of their countrey But when false Galba had spoiled these thrée cities of the Flower of all their Youth against all promise and faith he slue the most part of them sold and imprisoned the rest whereby he most easily might conquer their Cities Men are never certain nor trusty in doing when they are faulty in Faith For as the Sun lighteneth the Moon so Faith maketh Man in all things perfect For Prudence without Faith is Vain-glory and Pride Temperance without Faith and Truth is Shamefacednesse or sadnesse Iustice without Faith is turned into Injury Fortitude into Slothfulnesse The orders in divers countreys for the observation of Friendship and for maintainance of certain and sure love one towards another were Oaths of Fidelity The noble Romans at what time they sware had this order He or she to take a slint stone in their right hand saying these words If I be guilty or offend any man if I betray my countrey or deceive my friend willingly I wish to be cast away out of Rome by great Jupiter as I cast this stone out of my hand And therewith threw the stone away The ancient Scythians to obserbe amity and love had this Law They poured a great quantity of wine into a great Boul and with their knives opened some vein in their bodies letting their bloud to run out one after another into the boul and then mingling the wine and bloud together they dipped the end of their spears and their arrows in the wine and taking the boul into their hands they drank one to another professing by that draught faith and love The Arabians when they would become faithfull to any to maintain love thereby had this custome One did stand with a sharp stone betwéen two and with it made bloud to issue from the palms of both their hands and taking from either of them a piece of their garment to receive their bloud he dipped seven stones in the bloud and calling Urania and Dionisius their Gods to witnesse their covenant they kept the stones in memory of their friendship and departed one from another The like law was among the Barcians who repairing to a Ditch and standing thereby would say as Herodotus affirmeth As long as that hollow place or ditch were not of it self filled up so long they desired amity and love In reading of Histories we find more certainty to have béen in the Heathen by prophane Oaths then truth often in us by Evangelist and Gospel Oaths lesse perjury in those Gentiles swearing by Jupiter or Apollo then in Christians swearing by the true and iiving God more amity and friendship amongst them with drinking either of others bloud then in us by professing and acknowledging Christs bloud When Marcus Antonius had the government of Rome after Caesar was murthered by Brutus and Cassius and having put to death Lucullus for his consent therein Volummus hearing of his friend Lucullus death came wéeping and sobbing before Antonius requiring one his knées one grant at Antonius hand which was to send his souldiers to kill him upon the grave of his friend Lucullus and being dead to open Lucullus grave and lay him by his friend Which being denied he went and wrote upon a little piece of paper and carried it in his hand untill he came to the place where Lucullus was buried and there holding fast the
passing with his army unto Scithia and India had read this Epitaph and perceiving the slippery estate of Princes the uncertainty of life and mutability of fortune he much doubted the state of his own life howbeit at that voyage he forgot by means of Mars the Epitagh of King Cyrus untill he returned from India from his wars into Babylon where he married Statira King Darius daughter whom before he conquered where such liberality was shewed such magnificency done such gifts given such banquets kept that Alexander upon his own charges married the most part of the Nobles of Macedonia unto the Ladies of Persia the feasts during five days amounted to the sum of thrée and twenty thousand Talents every Talent valued at fourscore pounds he repeating oft the Epitaph of Cyrus would suffer none though divers Princes were present to be at any charges but himself onely saying that which fortune giveth unto Alexander the same will Alexander give unto his friends for Cyrus grave is appointed unto Alexander in this Alexander passed all Princes in taking all and giving all private faults may not deprave open vertues every man hath a fault Alexander was known to be a drunkard Julius Caesar was noted to be ambitious Antiochus the the great King of Syria blamed for lechery Alcibiades of pride P●rrhus of incredulity Hannibal of falshood Dionifius of tyranny I may number up infinite Princes who for one vice may not be forgotten for their divers vertues Vertue must not be hidden for that vice is manifest Phrine a Courtisan sometime of Gréece though for her slanderous life worthy reprehension yet for her liberality she ought well to be remembred for after Alexander the great had subdued that famous City of Thebes and made the walls thereof even with the ground she offered to re-edifie the same upon this condition that upon every gate of the City this sentence shall be set This City Alexander the great threw down and this City Phrine the Courtisan builded up again The like I have read of Queen Rhodope sometime a Courtisan and a lewd woman who made up the brave and sumptuous work called the Pyramides in Egypt where she used such liberalliry such a vast expence of money that for her noblenesse she was well worthy to be commended though for vitious living she was otherwise to be blamed Men and women were desirous then to be liberal Then Princes were as liberal and beneficial with such lenity and humanity unto the poor as they grew afterward to be hard and covetous with severity and cruelnesse Therefore Anaxilaus a liberal Prince was often wont to say that the chiefest commendations and noblest vertues which could be in a Prince were not to be overcome in beneficial doings Attalus King of Assa languishing in sicknesse and ready to dy bequeathed his Kingdome and Scepter of Asia unto the noble Romans by testament fully and freely to bestow it on whom they would for that they were so liberal and beneficial sometime towards him whilest yet fortune favoured him not A liberal Prince cannot be void of love Antigonus was wont to answer Aristodemus one of his Councel who was brought up of a boy in his Kitchin when he spake any thing against princely gifts and found fault with Antigonus liberality that his talk did smel of the Kitchin A fit reprehension for such a saucie servant who hindred Kings from doing good and moved Princes to do evil I would such Sycophants should be so answered by Princes as Aristodemus was of King Antigonus Worthy of perpetual memory was Artaxerxes for his passing liberality towards the poor souldiers that came from the Lacedemonian war with him he made them that came on foot unto him to go home on horseback he that came on horseback he sent him home in a chariot and he that had a village before he came unto him he gave him a city at his going away from him A Prince worthy of Subjects and a Captain most fit for Souldiers What made Julius Caesaa to be beloved of his souldiers What caused Alexander to be honoured of all men Magnificence and liberality The one in the great Wars at Pharsalia at what time he conquered Pompeius the Great having all the treasures and substance of Pompeius brought before him took nothing from the souldiers but Pompeius letters The other after he had vanquished King Darius having a great chest full of treasure where he found in present coyn two hundred thousand pound beside other inestimable treasures and jewels took nothing from his souldiers but a little book named the Illiads of Homer wherein he delighted more to read the noble acts of the Gréeks and the worthy feats of the Troyans then in all the wealth of Persia Thus liberality maintained their fame Thus their magnificent benefits so spread forth their noble names that happy was he that could be a souldier unto Caesar or to Alexander I remember a certain King in Syracusa named Hiero who understanding the liberality of the Romanes and perceiving the penury of victuals which then the Romans sustained in the wars of Tharsimenos did send three hundred thousand bushels of wheat and two hundred thousand of barley with great sums of gold and silver to ease the Roman souldiers and fearing that his gifts would not be taken nor his presents received considering the nature and liberallity of the Romans he willed the Embassadours to say that it was an homage and service of good will sent to honour the Romans from Hiero King of Siracusa an excellent policy to practise beneficence with manifest examples of a liberal heart O Rome how happy hast thou been through thy liberrlity and good will hast won the hearts of all Kingdomes and countries Vntill Ninus time all things were common no division of ground no hoording of mony no covetousnesse known no greedinesse of Kingdomes no desire of wealth in fine for the space of two hundred and fifty years for the simplicity innocency and true dealing of people it was worthily called the golden world and then a man could not find a covetous person and now a man cannot find a liberal friend then no man knew to do evil and now no man knoweth to do good then no man did take and now no man doth give in fine then one for another and now all for themselves What made Cimon a liberal Gentleman of Athens to be so famous in Greece his liberality amongst nigards he onely counted liberal and all Athens besides covetous whereby he deserved renown and glory amongst so many nippers of money he onely shewed himself bountifull and liberall What caused Flaminius to be so much spoken of amongst the Romans his liberal gifts amongst so many greedy takers his open benefits amongst their privat wealth and hidden hatred What moved the Agrigentines to honour so much the manly Gillias to advance his fame to extol his name his liberality Such covetousnesse then was in Athens Rome and Agrigentum that then worthy were these of admiration
Illiads which Homer Alexander the great so esteemed by the reading of the atchievements of Achilles being brought up in school in his fathers days with that learned Phylosopher Aristotle that he never went to bed but he had Homer under his pillow and there fell in love with the prowesse of Achilles honoured his life and magnified his death insomuch that he went unto Illion in Phrygia where that famous City of Troy sometimes stood to sée the grave of Achilles where when he saw the worthy monuments of his martial chivalry his famous feats and renowned life depainted about the Temple which invironed round his sumptuous Tomb he brake out into tears beholding the tomb and said O happy Achilles who had such a Poet as Homer that so well could advance thy fame And thus Alexander being moved by Homer to imitate Achilles minded nothing else but magnanimity and courage of mind as Curtius and Diodorus Siculus can well testifie whose life though it was but short was a mirrour unto all the world that being but twenty years when he began to imitate the acts and feats of Achilles in twelve years more which was his whole time of life he became King over Kings a Conquerour over Conquerours and was named another Hercules for his prosperous successe in his enterprises insomuch that Julius Caesar the first and most valiant Emperor that ever was in Rome after his great conquests entring into the Temple of Hercules in Gades and reading the life of Alexander painted round about the Temple his worthy fame declared his noble déeds set forth his victories and conquests in every place described such monuments and mirrours in memory of his noble life every where expressed he fell into the like tears for Alexander as Alexander did for Achilles Thus was one in love with another for magnanimities sake each one so desirous of others fame that Caesar thought himself happy if he might be counted Alexander Alexander judged himself renowned if he might be named Achilles Achilles sought no greater fame then Theseus Theseus ever desired the name of Hercules Therefore Agesilaus King of the Lacedemonians wondered much at the singular magnanimity and prowesse of Epaminondas sometime Prince of Thebes who with one little City could subdue all Gréece This Epaminondas having wars with the Lacedemonians people no lesse renowned by war then justly feared by Epaminondas after great victories and triumphs was after this sort prevented by Agesilaus in the wars of Mantinia that all the people of Sparta were counselled either to kill Epaminondas or to be killed by Epaminondas whereby the whole force and power of Lacedemonia was fully bent by commandment given by Agesilaus their King to fall upon Epaminondas where that valiant and noble Prince by too much pollicy was wounded to death to the utter destruction of all the people of Thebes and yet being carried unto his tent alive he demanded of his souldiers the state of the field whether Thebes or Sparta was conquered being certified that the Lacedemonians fled and that he had the victory he forthwith charged the end of the spear to be taken out of his wounded side saying Now your Prince Epaminondas beginneth to live for that he dies a Conqueror We read not of Epaminondas his parralel who being compared unto Agamemnon for his magnanimity was angry therewith saying Agamemnon with al Greece with him was ten years about one town the City of Troy Epaminondas with little Thebes in one year conquered all Gréece An order was observed amongst the Lacedemonians before they did go to the wars they were by their Laws charged to make solemn sacrifice unto the Muses And being demanded why they so did sith Mars hath no society with the Muses Eudamidas then their King answered For that we might obtain as well of the Muses how to use victory gently as Mars to become victors manfully These Lacedemonians were so valiant that having banished their King Cleonimus for his extraordinary pride and violence did make Arcus King in his place Who being in Creet aiding the people of Corcyra in wars with the most part of the Citizens of Sparta Cleonimus their exiled King consulted with Pyrrhus King of Epyre and perswaded him then or never to conquer Sparta considering Areus was in Creet and that Sparta was not populous to defend any strength of invasion they both came and pitched their field in the open face of the City of Sparta assuring themselves to sup that evening at Cleonimus house The Citizens perceiving the great Army of Pyrrhus thought good by night to send their women unto Créet to Areus making themselves ready to ●ie manfully in resisting the hoast of the enemie and being thus in the Senate agréeing that the womankind should passe away that night lest their nation at that time should be quiet destroyed by Pyrrhus a great number of women appeared in armor amongst whom Archidamia made an Oration to the men of Sparta wherein she much blamed their intent and quite confounded their purpose saying Think you O Citizens of Sparta that your Wives and Daughters would live if they might after the death of their Husbands and destruction of Sparta Behold how ready we are how willingly the women of Sparta will die and live with their Husbands Pyrrhus shall well feel it and this day be assured of it No marvel it is that the children of these women should be valiant high in their resolution If Demosthenes who was so much esteemed in Athens had said in Sparta that which he wrote in Athens that they who sometime ran away should fight again he should have the like reward that Archilogus had who wrote in his book that it was sometime better to cast the buckler away then to die for which he was banished the confines of Lacedemonia At what time the noble city of Sagun●um was destroyed the Senate of Carthage having promised the contrary the renowned Romans though the league was broken and peace defied yet the Senators did send Fabius Maximus as their Embassador with two tables the one containing peace the other wars which were sent to Carthage either to choose peace or wars the election was theirs though the Romans were injured Hardie then the Romans were when Scaenola went alone armed unto the Tents of Porsenna King of Hetruria either to kill Porsenna or to be killed by Porsenna greater fortitude of mind could be in no man a more valiant heart also was séen in no man then in Cocles who alone resisted the whole army of King Porsenna and when the draw bridge was taken up he leaped in all his harnesse from his enemies into the midst of the river Tybur And though he was in divers places sore wounded yet neither did his fall hurt him nor his Armour press him neither the water drown him neither thousands of his enemies could kill him but he swam through the river Tybur unto Rome to the great admiration of King Porsenna and excéeding joy of Rome so that one
insolency of Princes the desire of Fame the felicity of renown the honour of glory was such as Alexander the great answered King Darius Embassadours who coming from Persia to Macedonia to treat of peace tendering unto Alexander the daughter of Darius in marriage with all the country of Mesopotamia and twelve thousand talents yearly beside and the assurance of the kingdom of Persia after Darius days as there wanted no princely liberallity in Darius offering so there wāted no princely stoutnesse in A●exanders answer saying unto the Embassadors tel your master Darius King of Persia that as two suns may not be in the firmamēt so two Alex●nders may not rule one earth Such high and valiant minds could be subject in no wise neither D●rius unto Alexander nor Alexander unto Darius Such stoutnesse reigned in Princes to maintain states that as Archestratus the Athenian was want to say that in the City of Athens two Alcibiades might not rule so Ethocles the Lacedemonian did likewise speak that two Lisanders could not agree in Sparta So opposite were Princes so high and lofty of courage so valiant of heart so noble of mind that though fortune could not so often fawn and favour their estates yet she could not bereave them of their valiant minds nor spoil them of their magnanimity nor diminish their courage as may appear by that worthy and most ancient souldier Mithridates King of Pontus who after he had plagued the Romans with wars for the space of forty years during which time he shewed himself no lesse hardy and stout in resisting the strong force of Romane then valiant and couragious in attempting the fortitude of Romans and though he were by fortune forsaken in his latter days and spoiled of all health friends children countries kingdomes and all worldly wealth yet to spite fortune his mortal foe he went to Cel●ae thinking with them to passe over into Italy to let the Romans understand that though friends and countries by fortune were spoiled yet neither fortune with her spite nor all the Romans with their force could subdue King Mithridates valiant heart It was then the onely joy of Princes not to be conquered In this onely they triumphed that they could not be vanquished In this gloried they most in that they were free from subjection Cercilidas being one of the wise men named Ephou in Sparta hearing the thundring threatnings of King Pyrrhus Embassadours the slaughter and murther that King Pyrrhus intended upon men women and children the cruel destruction and last confu●ions of the Lacedemonians answered no lesse stoutly then wisely the Embassadours of the King saying If Pyrrhus your master be a God we have not offended him and therefore doubt him not but if Pyrrhus be but a man tell your master that the Lacedemonians be men likewise and therefore we nothing fear him at all The valiant Pyrrhus thought so well of himself and judged all men so inferiour unto him in their atchievements that being at the victory of that noble City Tarentum where he saw such feats attempted such acts done such stoutnesse shewed by the Romans that dismaied at the manhood and boldnesse of them thought that if magnanimity were lost the spirit thereof should be found in a Romans heart insomuch that beholding of them he cried out and said O how soon would Pyrrhus conquer all the world if either he were King of Rome or Roman souldiers subject unto Pyrrhus Of these Romans Hannibal being inforced to forsake Carthage was wont to say unto King Antiochus of Syria that Rome would never suffer equality but be Prince over all Rome was compared unto the Serpent Hidra of Lerna that having so many heads when one was cut off another sprung up insomuch that all the world might not destroy Rome being either injured or overcome by the enemies Licinius having lost divers of his souldiers unto Perseus King of Macedonia who afterwards was subdued by that valiant Roman Pompey the great Perseus did send certain Orators to speak for peace who eloquently perswaded Licinius to consent thereto after a long debate and the learned councel and pithy perswasions of the Orators it was answered as briefly and plainly by Licinius that the best way for King Perseus to obtain peace of the Romans was first to restore the prisoners he had taken and then afterwards to send his Embassadours to the General Licinius otherwise the whole country of Macedonia should féel the force and magnanimity of the Romans To speak of the conquest and victories of Julius Caesar of the resolution of Merellus of the Fortune of Silla of the severity of Marcellus being therefore called the spur of Rome and of Fabius named the Target of Rome of divers more valiant Romans it were infinite but I mean not to molest the Reader to prove the renowned Romans most worthy of this valiāt vertue magnanimity Claudian makes mētion of one Camillus a noble Romā who having a long time laid siege at Philiscus could not prevail the Schoolmaster of the City taking his schollers with him under pretēce of walking out of the town came and offered the schollers unto Camillus saying by this means you may do what you will unto Philifeus for here be their children whom to redéem I know they will yeeld up the town Camillus having regard to the Fame of Rome and loathing much to shew such treachery rewarded the School-master after this sort he did set him naked before his schollers fast bound with his hands behind him and every one of his schollers with a rod in his hand saying unto the boys bring him home to your Parents and tell your friends of his falshood and the poor boys having an opportunity to requite old beatings were as glad as he was sorrowfull laying on load and jerkt him with so many stripes as loitering trevants may best be bold to number untill they came unto the City where they told their Parents the cause thereof who weighing the clemency and humanity of Camillus to be such they gladly and willingly yeelded themselves and their City into the hands of Camillus knowing well that he that would use them so being his enemies could not use them ill by yeelding all into his courtesie who might have had all by tyranny Now because this vertue was often séen in divers Quéens Ladies Gentlewomen and others I may not omit the pilgrimage of their lives We read of two Quéens of the Amazons Penthesilaea the first and Hyppolica the second the one so valiant against the Gréeks at the destruction of the noble City of Troy that she feared not in open field to encounter face to face with that valiant Gréek Achilles the other so hardy that she shrunk not at the force and stoutnesse of that renowned Champion Theseus who being commended by Theseus for her singular stoutnesse and courage was married to him which certainly had hapned unto Penthesilaea had she not béen taken by Achilles Camilla likewise Queen of the Volscians beside her Princely
Sabines Paul Aenilius over the Lygurians Marius over the Numidians Pompeius over Armenia and Pontus Scipio sirnamed Affricanus over Carthage and all Lybia Julius Caesar over all Europe and Affrick Rome was then feared of all the world and now Rome is despised then Rome might say Roma vincit now Rome may say Roma vista then Roma at mata now nermis then Roma now Ruina But time consumeth all things That victory that was not manfully gotten and valiantly won in the field was rather counted tyranny then victory For when Lucius Pius in a banquet that he made had filled the people of Sarmatia full of wine and made them so drunk that all the Nobles and Captains of Sarmatia yéelded themselves as subjects unto the Empire of Rome for which at his return home to Rome he required according to the custome to have a triumph done unto him for the victory of Sarmatia the Senators having understood the manner of the victory and how and after what sort Lucius Pius subdued the Sarmatians he was openly beheaded by decrée of all the Senate and a slanderous Epitaph set upon his grave to manifest the deceit he used in stead of magnanimity that he deceived them by wine whom he ought to have subdued by force The Romans were not in those days contented that any of their Captains should use vicious dealing or shew any fraud or guile in wars unto their enemies but at last as wars grew common in all Countreys so deceit and craft was thereby augmented and triumph exiled Then the Assyrians warred on the Persians the Persians on the Argineans the Argineans on the Athenians the Athenians on the Lacedemonians the Lacedemonians on the Sydonians the Sydonians on the Rhodians and the Rhodians on the Scythians with all kind of policy right or wrong they cared not so that victory were gotten So that the triumph then is now turned into captivity magnanimity then unto craft and deceit now In fine victory then unto tyranny now And so with Caesar I end Ex bonis principtis mala or iuntur Such is the state of life the pilgrimage of man which is daily worse and worse as it waxeth to the end For in the beginning renown and honour was the cause that all men attempted dangers and great perils and now in the end gain and profit moveth wars then was their desire to overcome Lions Bears Elephants Tygers Panthers Rhinocerots and such wild and savage beasts that might renown their atchievements and now for the most part forgotten they descend into the Vale of Death CHAP. VI. Of the first finding out of Laws and Orders and of all invention of things general and of Time THe world growing into its maturity divers men found means to set things in order which at the beginning were rude and barbarous as amongst the Athenians Draco amongst the Egyptians Mercury amongst the Argives Phoroneus In Arcadia Apollo in Tyre Charandes in Italy Pythagoras Other things no lesse necessary for the manners and civility of men then for the life and food of men were found And because Time is the beginning and end of all things terrestrial I think it expedient in this place to declare the cōputation of Times and Ages For with the Egyptians at the first they counted their years by the Moon attributing unto every year thirty days as both Herodotus and Macrobius do agrée The The Arcadians as Putarch in the life of Numa doth write had three moneths in every year appointed The people of Caria finished and ended their year every sixth Moneth The Greeks did number three hundred fifty and four days in their years which want of our years eleven days and six hours The Romans at the beginning in the time of Romulus who was their first King had their year in ten Moneths compted counting their first moneth March and giving that name unto it after his fathers name Mars April was named of Aphros in Greek which is Fome whence Venus was born May was called a Majoribus of the Elders Iune of the youth called Juniores These four were of Romulus named The fifth moneth was then called by Romulus Quintil which Julius Caesar in his time named Iuly and Augustus Caesar named the moneth called Sexulis August and so in order September October November December Numa Pompunus who succeeded Romulus added Ianuary and February and so named them according to the name of Janus who was the first King of the Latines and Februus who was supposed to be the inventer of the Lustration For as the Greeks did count all things by their Olympiades so did the Romans by their Lustra Then was the use of Clocks unknown insomuch that Authors herein do much vary and seem to be ignorant of the inventers of them First some think that Herme in Egypt found them out by a beast sacrificed unto Seraphis some again attribute the invention unto Anaximines in Lacedemonia and that they were found out by a shade some unto Scipio sirnamed Nasica in Rome by a water But uncertain it is by whom and by what means Clocks first were found Some again do count their day which is four and twenty hours from sun rising unto sun rising as the Babylonians use some from sun setting to sun setting as the Athenians some from midnight to midnight as the Egyptians some again from midnight to noon again as the Vmbrians do Thus diversly have hours and days been counted Now after laws were invented and orders made and time divided men as yet rude and raw leading their lives beastly and bruitishly for want of civility having neither houses Towns or Cities to inhabit but some having in Caves of the ground their chief mansions others had their best garments made of green bows and branches of trées some hid themselves in shadows of the woods some in Dens like wild beasts untill nature first by reason opened a way and a means thus unto further civility Then houses were made and Cities builded high towers raised strong walls invented King Cerops erected Athens Phoroneus builded Argos Diospolin in Egypt was by Threson builded Likewise the first tower after the deluge of Noah was made by Nimrod then Temples were builded Pythias in Perenna made a temple unto Minerva Romulus in Rome builded a temple unto Jupiter and thus divers men in sundry countries have béen the builders of monuments By this means came Pallas unto great fame for that she was supposed to be the first that invented sciences amongst the Grecians in Athens for this purpose was Ceres in Sicilia renowned for that she was thought to be the first that sowed corn and taught husbandry for this reason were Typhis and Jason so worthily commended that they among the Gréeks were the first that sailed the seas Then was money found in Mount Pangaeum and coined in Aegineta which as Plini saith had béen better unknown then found money being found wars insued by Ninus who was the first that ever warred after the deluge Then
are the rudest people in the world so that the Athenians call them as Plutarch reporteth bold baiards and blocks for their grosse understanding The Bactrians are most puissant and warlike souldiers detesting much the excesse of the Persians but are of such grosse sense notwithstanding that they give and bestow their old men and also sick men unto dogs to be devoured which dogs for the purpose they nourish and bring up in their country The Agrigentines a people given unto such buildings and banquetting that Plato the Philoso said the Agrigentines builded as though they should live for ever and banquetted as though they should die dayly The manners of the Assyrians were to bring their sick friends abroad unto the high ways to séek to ask and to know remedies for their sicknesse of all kind of men that passe by and if by chance without remedy the sick should die they should bear him home and bury him solemnly anointing over the corps with honey and wax This people did wear for their weapons daggers and targets and clubs they did worship Adad for their God and Adargatin for their Goddesse The people of Creet were most expert sea men and well practised in wars abstaining not onely from flesh but also from sodden meat their thief infamy was in venery masculin otherwise for their manners of living much like unto the noble Lacedemonians which for their modesty in feeding and contempt of wealth for their wisedome and study in warfares passed all nations for a token thereof they printed in their Targets the Gréek letter L. named Lambda they brought up their youth as Lycurgus that ancient law-setter taught them in all kind of study pain and labour with hunger thirst cold and heat whereby they might be able to suffer any chance happened or injury offered then were they again brought up in wrastling leaping running swimming riding and such other qualities as might profit their country in time of service for their nature was either to win and conquer or else to die and yeeld Learning and science they little esteemed insomuch that Athens and Sparta could never agree for that the one was addicted to serve Minerva or rather the muses the other given unto Mars Lycurgus made a law in Sparta that no man might accompany with his own wife but with shamefastnesse of that filthy act The candles might not be lighted in that house where the man was when that he would go unto his wife When the King would go unto wars before he should go unto the field to incounter with the enemies he offered two solemn sacrifices the one unto Minerva otherwise named Bellona to kindle flames of stoutnesse in his souldiers manfully to fight the other to the Muses to moderate their doings in victory as might be commendable and praise worthy therein they passed all men in patience for as before they brought up their children in such hardinesse that their parents would have them whipt scourged and wounded into the flesh to harden them in their young years They suffered theft to be unpunished for that the exercise thereof doth represent a kind of boldnesse in wars The nature of the Lydians was to delight in superstiticus divinations in invention of plaies and in theft As for the art of dicing and playing divers kinds of games upon tables the Lydians first invented the same They also were much enflamed by luxurious life and filthy venery which they neither spared day nor night Pliny writeth of a certain Nation called Esteni which abstained from all kind of pleasure insomuch that they never accompany with women never eat flesh nor drink wine and thus by custome of fasting they became naturally chast For custome and use saith Aristotle is another nature In that countrey no man possesseth any thing of his own all things are indifferent betwéen them and they live as companions one with another for in these their vertues they excel all men in vehement and most ardent love towards God Thus vertue most diligent with great care and study was weighed their Neighbours wonderfully beloved and made of so that by this their precept of life they have great fame and commendations They have few Cities and as few Towns and for that they take the earth as a common Mother they have all one respect unto all kind of men The Getes have no division of lands no limits of ground nor any partitions of their goods they drink bloud mingled with milk they eat no flesh and they rejoyce much when their friends die even as the people called Trauses in Thracia do when any is born into the world they mourn and lament with wéeping eys that the little child then born should know the misery and state of this wretched world and when any of their friends are dead they rejoice and be glad with melody and all kind of mirth for that he hath past this toiling life The Thracians people of great antiquity were famous warriours bragging much that Mars the God of war was born in their country much addicted unto drunkennesse selling their children in the market and their maids and daughters are common to lie with every man they judge and count it most commendation to live onely by spoil theft and wars they brag if any have a wound and think it a fame unto the person And of the contrary if they have no mark in the forehead no wound in the body they will judge those idle men and cowards the common people worship Mars and Diana for their Gods their king onely doth worship Mercury by whom the King useth to swear Psilli are people of so great folly that when the Southern wind bloweth so long and strong that their lands perish their waters dry then they arm themselves with common counsel to fight against the wind even like to the people of C●lta who use to draw their swords shake their spears at the waves of the seas to revenge the injuries and wrongs done by the seas to them The Bithinians were men of like folly for they would ascend and climb up to the top of high mountains either to thank Jupiter for his furtherance towards them or else to curse Jupiter for his cruelnesse towards them So the Pigmies being sore troubled and molested with Cranes did ride on Rams and Goats backs with their bows and arrows a whole band together in the spring time towards the sea-banks to break their eggs to destroy their nests and to fight with the Cranes every third moneth they take this journey in hand else would the Cranes destroy them for that they are little dwarfs of a cubit long their houses are made of dirt and feathers most like unto birds nests but that they say they are somewhat larger and bigger I know not to what purpose I do recite these countries sith the more I write the more I have to write What should I recite the people that eat the flesh of Lions and Panthers called Agriophagi or recite those
that eat lice in Scithia called Budmi or them that eat Serpents called Ophiophagi or those that féed on mens bodies called Anthropophagi yea or those that eat their own parents as the Caspians did Vnto what purpose should I name the Astomians a people in India without mouths who onely live with the air that commeth unto their nosethrils where they receive breath they can neither eat nor drink as Plini saith in his seventh book they live the longer with the sweet smell and odours of flowers Vnto what end likewise should I speak of those blind Andabates that fight without eyes or of those great eared people the Fanesii whose ears shadowed and covered their whole body or of the Monopods which in like manner shadow their whole body with one foot or of the Arimaspians people in Scythia having but one eye in the midst of their forehead like the great Ciclop Poliphemus which Ulisses destroied yea of millions more whose deformity to deprint whose uglinesse to write were too much charge to the writer and too much tediousnesse to the reader I might speak of people in some part of India who live two hundred years and more whose hair upon their heads in their young age is white and in their old age black called Pandorae I might likewi●e recite a people in Lybia whose horses may not be guided nor governed with bridles be the bitts never so strong but with rods most gently are they tamed be the rods never so weak Herodotus a famous Gréek writer is not ashamed to shew how the women Selencridae brought forth egs whence men were born of such heighth length and stature that I am partly abashed to alledg his authority therein Again the people called Sorbotae of Aethiope are said to be eight cubits long Why should I speak of the Troglodites who live in caves of the ground féeding on Serpents being people of wonderfull swiftnesse and out-run any horse in Aethiope and cannot speak but hisse Why should I speak of the Massagetes of the people Nasomones I will according to promise omit the prolixity therof touching all countreys by the way or some of the chief as of Egypt with brags and vaunts of their antiquity Of the Ethiopians and the people of Caria with their simplicity and slavery so the Carthaginians were false and deceitfull the Babylonians wicked and corrupted the Persians drunkards and gluttons the Sycilians wary and trusty so was the cruelnesse of the Caspians the filthinesse of the Lesbians the drunkennesse of the Scythians the fornication of the Corinthians the rudenesse of the Boetians the ignorance of the Cymmerians the beastlinesse of the Sibarites the hardinesse of the Lacedemonians the delicacy of the Athenians and the pride and glory of the Romans Thus we read that the Spaniards be the greatest travellers and the greatest dispisers the Italian proud and desirous to revenge the Frenchman politick and rash the German a warriour the Saxon a dissembler the Swevian a light talkative person the Britain a busie body the Cimbrian seditious and fierce the Bohemian ungentle and desirous of news the Vandal a mutable wrangler the Bavarian a flouter and a scoffer These qualities are incident to the aforesaid nations by nature But because in this place it were somewhat to the purpose to declare the glory and state of Rome which of all the world was estéemed and feared and for that Rome had more enemies then all the whole world beside to shew briefly how they flourished how their fame spread and their glory grew I think it not expedient to meddle with the antiquity thereof in the time of Janus and Cameses but to touch upon their fame by managing of wars in the time of Romulus who being begotten of Mars and Rhea a Vestal virgin was the first builder of the city and also king thereof This King Romulus warred on the Sabins after he had elected a hundred Senatours to discern and judge the causes of the City to defend Iustice and practice the same and to punish vice and wrongs according to the law of Plato who willed every Common-wealth to be governed with reward unto the vertuous and punishment to the vicious Again he appointed certain souldiers unto the number of one M. to be in a readinesse alwaies to defend the City After Romulus succéeded Numa Pompilius the second king a man very religious and pittiful he in his time made laws to observe rites sacrifices and ceremonies to worship their Gods he made Bishops and Priests he appointed the Vestal virgins and all that belong thereto Thirdly came Tulius Hostillius to be king in Rome whose felicity was onely to teach the youth of Rome the discipline of warfare and stirred them wonderfully to exercise and practice the same Then fourthly succeeded An. Martius with the like industry and care of the further and surer state of the City in raising the high walls of Rome and raising a bridge upon the river Tyber in amending and beautifying all the stréets of Rome The fifth King was Tarquinius Pri●cus who though he was a stranger born at Corinth yet he increased the policy of the Romans with the wisedome of Greece he triumphed over the people of Tusk and inlarged the fame of Rome much more then it was to this came next Servius Tul●ius who was the sixth and Tarquinius Superbus the seventh and last King of Rome who for his misgovernment and lust in the City against the chast matrons for the pride and infringement of the liberty having withall ravished Lucrecia Collatinus wife was at length after long rule and government banished Rome The first alteration and change of state was then after these seven Kings governed Rome two hundred years and a half which was the first infancy of Rome Then Collatinus and Brutus after these Kings were exiled in reward of restoring liberty and for honest life were the first Consuls in Rome they I say altered the government of the City from a Monarchy to a kind of government called Aristocratia which continued in Rome from the time of Brutus and Collatinus untill the time of Appius Claudius and Quin●us Fulvius which was two hundred years In this season during this two hundred years was Rome most assailed of all kind of enemies stirred unto wars of all nations for the space of two hundred years and a half Then Appius Claudius forgetting the law which he himself made in Rome against fornication forgetting the ravishment of Lucrecia and the banishment of Tarquinius for breaking of the same against all right and reason willingly and wilfully ravished Virginia the daughter of Virginius and after that her own father slue her in the open fight of Rome the cause being known unto all the City the people were straight in arms to revenge the wrongs and injuries against the laws Even as the Kings before named were exiled and banished Rome for the ravishment of Lucretia so now the ten Commissioners called Decem. viri were likewise excluded and rejected for
him not to throw his carcasse to be devoured of dogs but rather to deliver his body to be buried to his old father Priamus and his mother Hecuba Even so Patroclus appearing in like manner after death to Achilles desired him to bestow upon his body all funeral solemnities Virgil testifieth how Palinurus and Deiphobus appeared to Aeneas the one being his Pylot the other his brother in law Their wandring ghosts never ceased till such exequies were done to them as Aeneas had promised It is thought the Witch Phetonissa of Endor raised the soul of Samuel at the commandment of King Saul to foreshew the end and successe of the battel with the Philistines It is read in Lucan the Poet of a Witch named Erictho dwelling in Thessalia that revived and restored to life a souldier lately dead at the request of Sextus Pompeius to know the end of the wars at Pharsalia One History I must repeat which Plutarch reciteth in the life of Cimon that one Pausanias after he had taken the City of Bizance being in love with a fair damosel named Cleonices a maid of noble parentage he commanded her father who durst not resist him to send his daughter to use her at his pleasure When the maid came he being fast asléep in his bed the Virgin being shamefaced and fearfull did put out the candle and comming in the dark towards Pa●sanius she stumbled at the stool which with the fall suddenly awaked Pausanias from sléep thinking some enemy or mortal foe of his to be there and having his sword hard by slew the virgin But she being so slain would never after suffer Pausanias to take any quiet rest but appeared to him always saying Recompence the injury and wrong thou didst to me by equity and justice Following him as he fled from Bizance to Thrace from Thrace again to Heraclea from Heraclea to Sparta where he famished for hunger Saint Matthew in his seventéenth chapter beareth record that Moses and Elias after they were dead many hundred years before Christs incarnation yet appeared bodily and ghostly on mount Tabor to Christ where they spake and communed with our Lord and Saviour The soul of Lazarus did not onely appear as John saith in his eleventh chapter but came again both body and soul in a true token of our sure resurrection But as the appearing of those sights at Gods appointment were most true so it is most absurd to give credit that the souls of men after death do either by visions or by bodily apparance shew themselves But the Devil is well beaten in experience of things and knoweth best how he may deceive the wisest for he is subtile and crafty If the Mariner doth know when storms and tempests arise if the Physitian judgeth by the Vrine the state and danger of the patient ●f the skilfull Astronomer can many years before exactly foretel the Eclipse of the Sun and Moon in fine if the practised souldier knoweth where the victory will happen no marvel it is that the Devil an old souldier can foreshew things to come and make things apparent of nothing What made Theodoricus to observe the terrible and threatning countenance of Symmachus whom he slew before in a fishes head as in a mirror being brought before him to the table at supper at the which sight he fell for fear into a grievous sicknesse and so dyed the divel What caused one Bessus of whom Plutarch maketh mention in his book de sera numinis vindicta after that he had killed his own father and a long while hidden himself as a murtherer at last being by the devil moved to throw down a swallows nest with his spear and killing the young swallows he was by the company about him misliked for his cruelty to poor birds and taunted of his companions for his tyranny therein But he answered and excused himself saying Why should I not kill those that accu●ed me of my fathers death and cryed out upon me a long time that I should kill my father They which were present being amazed at his talk told the King thereof who caused him to be apprehended and examined by that evidence he confessed the murther These are the suggestions of Devils the shifts of Sathan at all times and in all countreys Paulina the chast wife of Satu●●us a Romane was of such excellent beauty of such noble parentage and of such Godly life that when Decius Mundus a young Knight of Rome who being enamored with her beauty sought sundry means a long time to none effect for neither gold nor treasure could allure this sover and chast Paulina to consent to sin he perceiving how she was bent to temperancy and to renounce all filthy lust gave himself willingly to dye In the mean time the Devil practised a feat with Ida a maid who dwelt in the house with Mundus his father to bring this purpose to passe this maid knowing well the constancy and honest life of Paulina and how religions she was to serve the Goddesse Isis invented this fraud She went and conferred with some of Isis Priests opening the whole matter in secret to them promising a great reward to fain that their God Anubis had sent for Paulina to accomplish love with him This being done by the elder Priests her husband Saturnius was very joyfull that the great God Anubis had vouchsafed to send for his wife she being as glad boasted and bragged of the same amongst her neighbours and went to the temple of Isis where Anubis was worshipped being sent by her husband very brave and gorgeous where the young and lusty Knight Mundus by the advice of the Priests hid himself till Paulina came who embracing her in the dark did accompany with her till he had satisfied his lust all that night Then in the morning the matter being known she rent her hair an cloathes and told her husband Saturnius how she was dealt withal Her husband then declared the whole matter to the Emperor Tiberius who having perfect knowledge by diligent examination did hang the Priests Ida the cause of the mischief commanded the image of Isis to be thrown into the river of Tyber banished Mundus out of Rome So that under the colour and pretence of holinesse divers Matrons and maids have been defloured mens wives daughters abused As Ruffinus testifieth of a certain Priest in Alexandria in Egypt named Tyrannus who used such shifts and practised such ways to have his desire accomplished and his lust satisfied with such women and maidens as he thought good saying that the great God Saturn whose Priest he was sent for them to come to him and there until his wickednesse was known he used under pretence of the great Saturn which was honoured in that City his filthy lust and horrible life We read the like almost of Numa Pompilius that he bare the people of Rome in hand that he had familiar company with the Goddesse Aegeria because he might purchase the more credit and
whose water if any man taste thereof he forgetteth any thing done or past before In this were the Thracians so dull of memory that they could not count above the number of four Now that memory is praised in some and obliviousnesse is dispraised in others there vvant no testimonies therein vvhat may be spoken of those that vvere counted famous clerks and the renovvnedst Oratours in all the vvorld vvhich did not onely stay in their Orations but also were quite beside their matters as Demosthenes Cicero two noble Oratours upon whom depended the City of Athens and Rome such imperfection was in them that Demosthenes was so dismaied at the presence of Philip King of Macedonia and Cicero so astonied at the presence of some bold Senators that both tongue and countenance failed these noble Orators Likewise Theophrastus that grave Philosopher who succéeded Aristotle many times was put to silence in the middest of his Oration before the people of Athens So was Heraclitus Severus dumb before the Emperour Herodus Atticus was before M. Antonius so that the presence of Princes the dignity of places the majesty of states abate and change the worthinesse of the person Some again challenge to themselves that which altogether they are in no capacity to apprehend as Hyparchion who when he would have contended with Ruffinus had not a word to speak in somuch that a proverb grew thereon applied unto him that is more talkative then wise Hiparchion is dumb Some again with Cassius Severus who though all his books were burned by Senatours said that he carried all his learning in mind and memory which could not be taken away For my learning said he is in my mind and not printed in books The greatest excellency that can be in man is memory and the next thing that approacheth immortality is memory and so nigh that if a man could but remember the end of the things he should never taste death but he should live for ever CHAP. XXXII Of Dissimulation and Craft of Subtiltie and Deceit THat Cynick Philosopher Diogenes making himself ignorant sometime in that which he knew best was wont in banquets and feasts to say if any man had demanded what kind of meat there was I cannot name it but I can eat it and so would passe to answer any thing with dissimulations So likewise Sigismund the Emperour would say that he that could not dissemble could not rule At what time Galba a Citizen of Rome had bidden a Gentleman named Mecaenas unto supper perceiving the Gentleman to be in love with his wife he feigned himself asléep for that Mecaenas might shew some part of his will and love in the mean season In the mean time while his wife and he were in talk came one of his servants to take some things away from the table supposing his master had béen asléep unto whom his master said Sirrah forbear though I sée not Mecaenas yet I sée you I sléep to him and not to you The like dissimulation was betwéen Demosthenes and Archia at what time he fled from Athens for fear of Antipaters displeasure and went to the Isle of Calabria where in the Temple of Neptune he hid himself till Archias came and promised him what honour and dignity he could enjoy if he would come unto Antipater Demosthenes perceiving his dissimulations and crafty ways answered plainly to move him to anger and said Thou of all men couldest never play upon the stage playing thy part then where truth is oftentimes opened and now at this time thou canst not be an Orator to perswade me whereat Archias waxed angry and threatned to hale him out of the Temple to whom Demosthenes answered Now perforce thy dissimulation is broke forth into truth I might hereon stay to note the great dissimulation betwéen Metellus and Scipio which was so great that Metellus feigned that Rome was happy that Scipio was born therein and yet was his mortal enemy all the days of his life In like case Frederick an Emperor sometime of Rome at what time the Senators would sit about the state of the City he would say Before you go into the Senate house cast away from you two things that you carry with you And being demanded of the Senate what two things were they he said Simulations and Dissmulations In this Philip of Macedon differed much from his son Alexander insomuch that Alexander would exercise nothing but magnanimity and truth and his father used all kind of falshood as was séen by subduing of the Sarunsians and the Cities of Thrace for under colour of peace he commanded his souldiers to bring under their Clokes every one a cord that at what time King Philip made silence to speak the enemies being attentive to hear he stretched forth his right hand for a Watch-word to his souldiers suddenly to bind the enemies with their cords and to bring them captive to Macedonia The like craft used Alcibiades amongst the Agrigentines feigning that he had something to speak for the common profit as well of Athens as of Agrigentum calling them into place as though he would open something necessary for them and had the Gréeks ready in the mean time to take the City and to possesse their substance by this craft Such craft used Thrasillus to take the City of Byzantium such deceit used Zopyrus to overcome Babylon such did Sextus the son of Tarquinius practise against the Gabians who when he perceived that his father might by no means subdue them he imitated Zopyrus craft making the enemies to believe that he was ill handled and cruelly used by his father and that he knew well how to deceive his father and to betray him unto them they being ready to beleeve Sextus made him chief of their company He straight sent messengers to his father to signifie unto him that he might do his pleasure with his enemies Tarquinius understanding the craft and subtilty of his son did bring the messenger into a fair garden mistrusting like a wise Prince the matter and gave this subtil warning to his son Walking up and down the Garden with divers noble man he with his staff did strike off the chief flowers in the Garden saying to the messenger Farewel tell my son what I do and bid him do accordingly Young Sextus Tarquinius perceiving his fathers mind flew the most eminent of his enemies and having thus oppressed the chief men he betrayed the City to his Father By this means and like craft Conon the Athenian deceived the Persians in Cyprus The subtilty that Pysistratus used to beguile the people of Megaera what Hannibal used in Italy when he subdued Tarentum are to like effect insomuch that Hannibal was wont to say when the Romans had again won Tarentum Eadem arte qua prius cepimus Tarentum amisimus For by craft Hannibal vanquished the Tarentines and by craft did the Romans win the same again Antigonus deceived the Citizens of Corinth under the colour of a marriage betwixt his son
much given to soft clothing gay apparel and delicate fare as Aristotle the Prince of Philosophers delighted to go brave in gorgeous apparel with rich Chains and Kings and had herein great felicity Demosthenes and Hortensius two famous and noble Oratours the one of Athens and the other of Rome went so fine in their cloths with such neat and wanton gesture that L. Torquatus would often call Hortensius the son of Dionisia for that she had great pleasure in dancing and light gesture of bodie But I will omit such examples and speak of dissembling persons who thinking to hurt others destroyed themselves as that strong Golias who contemning all Israel for force and strength David a weak man overcame him Hammon was hanged upon that gallows that he prepared for Mardocheus even so Absalon going about to destroy his father King David was hanged by the hairs of his head by Gods appointment CHAP. XXXIII Of Famine CIcero in his first book of Tusculans questions doth note the saying of Socrates that hunger was the best sauce to meat and thirst the best occasion to drinke Wherefore King Dioniusis the tyrant hearing much report of the Lacedemonians hard fare and specially of their pottage which was called Jus nig●um the black pottage he took a Cook of that Countrey to be his servant to dresse his diet in the ordinary way of the Lacedemonians the Cook having taken much pains in making the foresaid pottage he brought a messe thereof unto the King who much longed for it but assoon as he tasted of it he spit it again out of his mouth and was v●ry angry with the Cook saying is this the pottage that the Lacedemonians so much brag of my dog said D●onisius should not eat it the Cook perceiving the gluttony of the King said O Dionisius whensoever thou art to eat of this pottage thou must bring fit sauce for it which is a Lacedemonians stomack for the Princes of Sparta have more pleasure in this kind of fare then ever King Mydas had in his golden banquets What maketh any meat swéet hunger What causeth man to féed pleasantly hunger Or what makes any drink pleasant thirst For at what time Darius was enforced of méer thirst to drink of a lake all defiled with stinking carcases of dead souldiers being then in the field and compelled to take his flight he said after his draught that he never drank swéeter drink in his life Though this King was a proud Prince over the Persians and had all kind of wines at commandement yet his want and penury now and his thirsty stomack was the onely cause of this noble drink which he so much commended and preferred before all the wine that ever he drank before Even so affirmed King Artaxerxes in his wars when his victuals and all were spoiled by the enemies of a few dry figs and of a piece of a barley loaf upon which he fel so hungerly that he spake after this sort O good Lord of how great a pleasure have I béen all this while ignorant Lisimachus likewise being in wars in Thracia against Domitianus the Emperour where he and all his souldiers were kept so long without drink untill he was so thirsty that he was inforced with all his host to yeeld as captives to the Emperour Domitianus and now being in captivity having a draught of drink of the Emperour he said O God that I should make my self from a King to be a captive from a noble Prince of Greece to be a bondslave unto the Romans for one draught of drink See what hunger and thirst is how it hath made Kings to yeeld and Princes to be vanquished Yea it hath made King Ptolomy in his own Kingdome of Egypt to commend a piece of bread which was given him in a poor Cottage and to say that he never eat better meat nor more comfortable chear in all his life then that piece of bread was It was the custome of that noble Emperor Julius Caesar in all his wars more with famine then with sword to vanquish his enemies For this famous warriour would often say that even as the physitian would use his patients so would he his enemies the rule of the physitian is to make his patient fast to recover his health The order of Caesar was to kéep the enemy from victual to make them yéeld Great is the force of Famine And by Histories we read that when King Cambyses marched towards the Ethiopians he endured great scarcity of victuals and such penury and want of food was among the souldiers that they agréed with themselves to kill the tenth throughout all the host to asswage hunger and the Famine continued so long that Cambyses the King was in great fear lest the Lot should at length happen upon him and so to be eaten of his own souldiers Sagunthus a City in Spain as Eutropius doth witnesse in great amity with the Romans was besieged by the Carthaginians so long that all the City was brought unto such famine that the Lords and the Captains of the City made a great fire in the Market place and there brought all their wealth and substance and threw it into the fire and after made their Wives and their Children to enter into the fire and last of all the chief Lords and Captains ended their own lives in it lest they should come into the enemies hand So great was that Famine that it was before prognosticated by a Woman in the time of her delivery whose child his head being out entred into his Mothers womb again The like calamity happened in Caligurium a City where Quintilian was born which being likewise long besieged by Cneius Pompey to bring them in subjection and to kéep promise with Sertorius they lacked victuals and waxed so hungry that all kind of beasts whatsoever being slain they were constrained to eat their own Wives and Children It was séen in Ierusalem when that it was destroyed by Vespasian the Emperor of Rome that the mothers were compelled to eat their own children for very hunger whose small and tender bones were left as a shew and token of their calamity Pliny in his eighth book of Natural Histories saith that when Hannibal laid siege to the city Casilinum the Roman souldiers were in such hunger that one Mouse was sold for two hundred pieces of silver and he that sold the Mouse died himself for hunger The Athenians likewise were brought unto such hunger by Sylla who afterward was Dictator of Rome that one bushel of Wheat was sold amongst the souldiers for a thousand Drachmes the common souldiers being poor for want of money on the one side and sore plagued with hunger on the other were compelled to eat the gréen grasse of the fields about the City of Athens and to gather the mosse off the walls of the City and did eat it This City of Athens was oftentimes brought to that misery as by King Demetrius by King Philip and by his son Alexander the great So
should be cut off offered to Jupiter in the Capitol of Rome his family to the temple of Ceres his children should be sold as bondmen to the Tribunes and Censors The Lacedemonians were most studiou● to expel idlenesse and brought their children up always in hardnesse to practise them in the Arts of Industry and hated Idlenesse so much that if any in the City of Sparta waxed grosse or fat they straight suspected him of idlenesse and if any young man waxed fat they had appointed laws that he should fast and live poor untill he were again changed into his first estate The Egyptians an ancient people when the country of Egypt began to be populous to avoid idlenesse as Pliny reporteth made the great building called the Pyramides which for the mightinesse and strange working thereof was named one of the seven wonders of the World in which there were kept at work thréescore thousand young men who continued a long time in the making thereof and onely to avoid and banish idlenesse The Athenians so abhorrid and detested idlenesse that when a certain man was condemned to die for that he was found idle in Athens a citizen thereof named Herondas as Plutarch testifieth was as desirous to see him as though he had been a prodigious Monster so strange and so marvellous was it to hear or to see any idle man in Athens The people called the Massilians would suffer no travellers neither Pilgrim nor Sacrificer nor any other stranger to come within their City lest under colour of religion or of pilgrimage they might corrupt the youth of the City with the sight thereof to be idle The Indians had a law made by their Wise-men called Gymnosophists that after meat was set on the table the youth should be examined what they had done for their meat and what pain and labour they had used all the morning before if they could make account of their travel they should goe to dinner but if they had béen idle they should have no meat except they had deserved the same The like did the young men of Argis who made an account to their Magistrates of their occupations and works The Areopagites as Valerius affirmeth did imitate the Athenians in commanding their youth to avoid idlenesse and to exercise travel the one as necessary to any Commonwealth as the other is most dangerous So that some countreys are naturally given to travel as the Lydians Phrygians French men with others Some again are given to idlenesse as the Persians Corinthians and others Some by law were forced to slie idlenesse some by punishment were feared from it some by death were enforced to labour for their living Thus this Monster Idlenesse is beaten every where and yet embraced in most places every man speaks against idlenesse yet a number are in love with it Magistrates and Officers are appointed to punish it and yet they often favour it CHAP. XL. Of Wrath and Anger and the hurts thereof THe famous and noble Philosopher Aristotle did charge his schollers always being in Anger or Wrath to behold themselves in a glasse where they might see such alteration of countenance such a palenesse in color that being before reasonable men they appear now like brutish beasts Wherefore that great Philosopher perceiving the furious and hastie nature of Alexander wrote from Athens unto India where this noble conqueror was at wars with King Porus to take heed of Wrath and Anger saying Anger ought not to be in any Prince toward his inferiour for he was to be mended with correction nor toward his equal for he might be redressed with power so that Anger ought not to be but against superiours but Alexander had no coequals Yet in vain was Aristotles doctrine to Alexander in this point for being in a bāquet when Clitus his dear friend cōmended his father King Philip in the former age to be the worthiest most renowned Prince Alexander wexed upon a sudden so angry that any man should be preferred before him though Philip was his own father which was comended and Cli●us his especial friend that did commend him that he thrust Clitus into the heart with a spear So hastie was this Prince that Calisthenes and Lysi●achus the one his Historian and counsellour the other his companion and friend for a few words spoken were either of them slain Silence therefore saith Aristotle is the surest reward to a Prince We read that King Tigranes of Armenia whom Pompey the great did conquer waxed so angry by a fall from his horse because his son was present and could not prevent his fathers fall that he thrust him with his dagger into the heart and was so sorry afterward and angry withal that he had likewise killed himself had not Anaxarchus the Phllosopher perswaded him Anger in a Prince saith Solomon is death terrible is the countenance of a King when he is oppressed with Wrath hurtfull to many and dangerous to all is the anger thereof Nero was so furious in anger that he never heard any thing if it were not to his liking but he would requite it one way or other with death insomuch that in his rage and anger he would often throw down tables being at dinner and dash cups of gold wrought with pearls against the walls and fling all away more like to a furious Gorgon of hell then a sober Emperor in Rome Such fury reigneth in anger that Orestes the son of Agamemnon slue his own mother Clytemnestra suddenly in his Wrath. Such madnesse reigneth in Anger that Ajax Telamon that famous and valiant Gréek after that Achilles was slain in the temple of Pallas by Paris at the destruction of Troy waxed so Angry because he might not have Achilles Armor which was given before to Ulisses that he beat stones and blocks fought with dead trées killed beasts thinking to méet with Ulisses amongst them If Anger make men murtherers if Wrath make men mad without wit or reason to know themselves or others let them imitate Plato in his anger who being angry with any of his scholers or servants would give the rod to Zenocrates to correct them Because he was angry the learned Philosopher misdoubted himself that he could not use moderate correction Even so Archicas would always speak unto his servant that had offended him Happy art thou that Architas is not angry Thereby giving his man to understand how dangerous Wrath is Aristotle saith the angry man séeth not the thing which lieth under his féet Augustus Caesar Emperour of Rome destred Athenedorus a Philosopher of Gréece which a long time accompanied Augustus in Rome and now was ready to depart to Athens that he would write som sentence that the Emperour might think of him in his absence The Philosopher took a pen and wrote in a little Table this sentence Caesar when thou art moved to anger speak nothing till thou hast recited the Greekes Alphabet a worthy lesson and a famous sentence well worthy to be learned of all
son to Theseus being falsly accused by his mother in law Quéen Phedra and flying to avoid the fury and rage of his father at the request of the Queen was torn in pieces by wild horses But let us passe further and we shall read that as some were devoured by horses so others were by Serpents stung to death as Laocoon that worthy Troyan was by two Serpents destroyed yea that famous and warlike woman Cleopatra Quéen of Egypt after her lover and friend Marcus Antonius was overcome by Augustus Caesar the Emperour did chuse rather to be overcome with Serpents then subdued by Caesar With this death was Opheltes the son of Licurgus King of Menea vanquished Again some have perished by wild Bores and raging Lions as Anceus King of Samos and Paphages King of Ambracia the one by a Bore the other by a Lion Some have béen devoured by dogs as Linus the son of Apollo Pliny in his seventh book metions a Quéen in Bithinia named Cosinges K. N●comedes wife whom her own dogs flew tare in pieces Euripides that learned Gréek coming in the night time from Archelaus King of Macedonia with whom he had been at supper was incountered by his enemy Promerus who set his dogs on him and did tear him to pieces Even so were Herachtus and Diogenes both Philosophers by dogs likewise killed I may not forget so great a prince as Basilius the Emperour of Macedon who in hunting amongst his Lords and Nobles yea amongst thousands of his Commons he onely meeting a Hart in the chase was hurt by him in the leg whereof he died As for Seleucus King of Syria son to Antiochus surnamed the Great and B●la King of Panonia they were both thrown by their horses and died If these mischance happen unto princes in the midst of their state what is their glory but misery since nothing expelleth fate nor can avoid death Some have been so weary of life some so fearfull of death that they have thrown themselves into the water to be drowned others for all their diligent fear and watching for death have most shamefully notwithstanding been by death prevented Frederick the Emperour marching towards Ierusalem after that he had taken several Cities and Townes in Armenia in passing through a little river was drowned Decius that noble King being enforced to take his flight from the Goths with whom he then was in wars was drowned in the Marish ground Marcus Marcellus after that he had béen a Consul in Rome thrée times before the third wars betwixt the Romans and the Carthaginians was likewise by shipwrack cast away How many noble Princes have béen drowned as Pharaoh King of Egypt in the red sea of whom we read in the sacred scriptures How many have the seas despoyled of life and with their own names christened the names of seas and waters in which they were drowned As by the death of Aegeus King of Athens the sea Aegeum was so called by the death of Tyrrhenus King of Lydia the sea was called The Tyrrhen Sea And so King Tyberinus altered the river called Aelbula by his death to be the river of Tyber Again the sea Hellespont was so called by a woman named Helle drowned in it So by I●arus and Myrtilus the sea of Icarus and the sea Myrton were so called Divers Princes have also perished by famine and have been compelled to eat their own flesh as Erisicthon and Neocles a Tyrant of Scicioma It is written in Curtius that Sysigambis King Darius mother died of hunger Ulysles the Gréek lest any off-spring of Hector should rise in Phrygia to revenge the fall of Troy and his countrey did cast Astianax the son of Hector over the walls alive Lycurgus King of Thrace was by his own subjects thrown headlong into the sea for that he first mingled water with wine How many famous and noble Princes have been stoned to death as valiant Pyrrhus King of the Epyrotes being in wars with Antigonus was slain by an old woman with a a tile-stone at Argos Pyrander at what time the Athenians warred against Eumolpus for that he feared famine hiding the wheat from his souldiers was therefore by them stoned to death Even so was Cinna the Roman in the wars betwixt the Gauls and the Romans for the like offence stoned to death Stout Cebrior King Pria●'s son was slain by a stone hurled at him by Patroclus at the siege of Troy so died Cygnus the son of Achilles at the same time O unstedfast fortune that stones should end the many lives of famous princes O imprudent princes that know not how nigh ye are always to death How many hath God punished with sudden death for their offences as Mithridates King of Pontus and Nicanor the son of Parmenio of Macedonia died suddenly Sertorius was slain suddenly at a banquet by Upenna The Emperour Heli●gabalus was killed upon his stool at his easement and thrown into Tyber That renowned and famous Conquerour Julius Caesar was in the middest of the City of Rome where he was Emperor yea in the Senate-house murthered and mangled by Brutus and Cassius Divers Consuls in Rome died this death as Fabius Max●mus Gurges the Senator And Manlius Torquatus even at his supper died presently Some with Thunder-bolts did God likewise punish thus Capaneus was slain at the wars of Thebes Tullus Hostilius King of Rome was with a Thunderbolt for his insolency and pride slain Zoroastres King of the Bactrians the first inventer of Magick was likewise by that kind of death encountred Pride in princes was the onely cause of their falls insomuch that the poets feign that the great and monstrous Giant E●c●ladus for his proud enterprise against Jupiter was thrown by a Thunderbolt into the bottome of Aetna a fiery and flaming mountain The uncertain state of princes is séen and tried by their death Who liveth so short a time as a prince who dieth so strange a death as a prince Who liveth in care who dieth living but a prince Was not Sergius Galba and Commodus the son of Marcus sirnamed Anbilius two Emperors of Rome the one by Otho strangled in the Market place of Rome the other imprisoned by Martia his own concubine Minos King of Creet travelling after Dedalus into Sicily was by his great friend King Cocalus slain by deceit So was Alebas chief governour of Larissa murthered by his own souldiers The desire that men bear unto honour and dignity is commonly accompanied with death as Spurius Cassius and Spurius Melius for their greedinesse of the Empire of Rome were both worthily beheaded God hath shewed just vengeance upon Princes for their iniquity with plagues and pestilences which spoiled the Emperor Constantine and the Empresse Zoae his wife And by this were Marcus Antonius Alphonsus and Domitius justly and worthily punished God hath wonderfully punished the pride of Princes even with shamefull and horrible deaths insomuch that Lice and vermine have consumed their bodies alive As Maximilian the Emperour Arnulphus