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A15775 The passions of the minde in generall. Corrected, enlarged, and with sundry new discourses augmented. By Thomas Wright. With a treatise thereto adioyning of the clymatericall yeare, occasioned by the death of Queene Elizabeth Wright, Thomas, d. 1624.; Wright, Thomas, d. 1624. Succinct philosophicall declaration of the nature of clymactericall yeeres, occasioned by the death of Queene Elizabeth. aut 1604 (1604) STC 26040; ESTC S121118 206,045 400

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brimstone from heaven vpon those infamous citties of Sodome and Gomorrha Sinne many examples more I could bring out of the old Testament as deaths of private men Princes submersions of armies dispersions of Countries mortalitie of thousands famin warres plagues captivities and imprisonments for no other cause inflicted than wickednesse and sinne but let vs only fixe our eies vpon the Sonne of God nayled vpon the Crosse and we shall see how sinne mangled his body and afflicted his soule those nayles teares streames of blood exclamations gall and paines are monuments of sinne and memories of our perverse and wicked life 26 Above all other evils incident to an evill life of great force to restraine our vntoward willes from vice is the extreame iniurie we offer to God by sinne transgressing his lawe perverting his order disposition and providence iniuring his infinite goodnes which ought of all creatures to be beloved despising his Maiestie to which as to their last end all men ought to direct their actions And finally shewing our selves vngratefull to his love the which ought to be affected with all submission obedience and gratitude 27 What can more deterre men from wickednesse then their owne private losse or move them more to vertue then their owne present gaine By vice our soules are spoyled of their riches their most precious robes heavenly attire by vertue they are apparelled by vice they are wounded even to the centre by vertue they are healed by vice they are impoverished by vertue enriched by vice they are defiled by vertue cleansed by vice they become dennes of devils by vertue seates of Angels 28 But some will obiect the soule is spirituall and her losses cannot so well be perceived but if we had some palpable sensible motives to draw vs from vice to vertue then the case would be altered But sensible reasons want not and no day or hower passeth wherein appeareth not some silent sermon or reall perswasion to avoyd sinne and follow goodnes Do we not see dayly men dye is not death of the body caused by the death of the soule is it not an effect of Adams originall disobedience Whence-from proceed so many diseases plagues and pestilences that Phisitians braines are troubled to know their number for the multitude or reduce them to method they are so disordered But say what brought first hunger and thirst sweate and labour toyling and moyling into this world but our forefathers gluttonie What made so many poore men such a number of beggars but Adams originall theft what causeth our dayes to be so short that many drop away in the very prime of their yeeres few come to the time their complexion requireth the strongest scarce arriveth to a hundred yeeres but our progenitours inordinate appetite of Divinitie and consequently of eternitie finally the terror of death ever imminent the dayly crosses in common conversation the distonsorted courses of the heavens with their influences tempests and stormes contrary to the generation and increase of fruites of the earth the disobedience of beasts the cruelty of men the craft and cosinage we dayly prove all descend from sinne and well admonish vs that if one sinne deserved so many so long so great punishments what will a multitude 29 Wicked men do not only by offences iniurie the maiestie of God but also they abuse his gifts and benefits not only like Scorpions they kill their mother before they be hatched but also like vngratefull debtours oppugne their creditours with their own goods for the vngodly vse that will God gave them to love him to hate him that wit he bestowed vpon them to meditate vpon his law commandements they pervert by thinking how to transgresse them that hart he imparted to affect their neighbours in pure love and charitie that they defile with malice and dishonestie that tongue he lent them to vtter his prayses that they blot with othes and blasphemies those hands he framed as flowing conduits to feede the poore those are wholy imployed to avarice and rapine and to be briefe that vniversall body and soule which ought to have bin kept in holines and sanctification they abuse to offend God with sinne and prevarication 30 To conclude all creatures which God created for the vse of man and as servants attended vpon him as their maister all they I say exclaime against a vitious life they are so many trumpets which cease not to sound the abuses we offer them by offending their Maker the Sunne giveth the light to worke works of light not to live in the shadow of darknes the Moone with her fecunditie inviteth thee to bring forth fruites of iustice and not iniquitie the harmonie of the heavens the multitude varietie brightnes of so many Starres and Planets exhort thee to subordinate thy soule to God to adorne thy minde with vertue to give good example and shine vnto men by a godly conversation Isay 24. 23. for otherwise in signe of revenge before the day of Mat. 24. 29. iudgement they will withdraw theyr beames fall from heaven vpon thee shew themselves as disdainefull to behold Mark 13. 24. sinners as sinners were carelesse to enioy the benefite of their influences and operations to the glory Wisd 5 18. Armabit creaturam ad vltionem immicorum of God and the profite of their soules By this it appeareth what abundance of meanes God hath imparted to vs to the intent all difficulties in the way of Vertue might with facility bee over-commed some be internall some externall some of grace some of nature some instructing the vnderstanding some inclining the affection some continuall some by turnes and to be briefe no man can say that God hath beene a niggard with him but that he hath beene vnanswerable to God The Impediments to Vertue MAn in this world standeth in the middest betwixt God and the divell both pretend to win him to their Kingdomes God to eternall pleasure Sathan to eternall payne God by his power could quickely deliver him and breake all the bondes and chaynes wherewith the divell did or doth bind him but his wisedome thought good not to admit any man of wisedome and discretion to his friendship without his own● consent for as Saint Augustine saith Qui creavit te sine te non iustificabit te sine te He that created thee without thee that is thy consent or cooperation will not iustifie thee without thee that is thy consent cooperation Wherefore wee see Christ in Scriptures so often asked them whom he cured in body and healed in soule Vis Iohn 5. 6. Mat. 9. 2. 22. Luke 8. 50. sanus esse confide crede and such like speeches which signifie that hee would not cure any but them who were willing wherefore God would not oppose all his power and might against our ghostly enemies but onely such sweete meanes as might procure our assent and yet able to overthrow all the troupes of our adversaries he beats at
affections No better proofe we neede of this matter then the infinite experiences in every Countrie are tryed The same I may say of Ire Ambition c. All which Passions consisting in prosecution of some thing desired and bringing with them a certaine sence of delight enforce the mind● for fostering and continuing that pleasure to excogitate new meanes and wayes for the performance thereof How Passions seduce the Will CHAP. II. WIthout any great difficultie may be declared how Passions seduce the Will because the witte being the guide the The first reason why passions seduce the will eie the stirrer and directer of the Wil which of it selfe beeing blinde and without knowledge followeth that the wit representeth propoundeth and approveth as good and as the sensitive appetite followeth the direction of imagination so the Will affecteth for the most part that the vnderstanding perswadeth to bee best Wherefore the waves and billowes of apparant reasons so shake the sandye shealfe of a weake Will that they The second reason mingle it with them and make all one Besides the sensitive appetite beeing rooted in the same soule with the Will if it be drawne or flieth from any obiect consequently the other must follow even so the obiect that haleth the sensitive appetite draweth withall the Will and inclining her more to one part than another diminisheth her libertie and freedome Moreover the Will by yeelding to the Passion receyveth some little bribe of pleasure the which moveth her to let the bridle loose vnto inordinate appetites because she hath ingrafted in her two inclinations the one to follow Reason the other to content the Sences and this inclination the other beeing blinded by the corrupt iudgement caused by inordinate Passions here she feeleth satisfied Finally the Will being the governesse The third reason of the Soule and loathing to bee troubled with much dissention among her subiectes as an vncarefull Magistrate neglecteth the good of the Common-weale to avoyde some particular mens displeasure so the Will being afrayde to displease sense neglecteth the care she ought to have over it especially perceyving that the Soule thereby receyveth some interest of pleasure or escheweth some payne By this alteration which Passions worke in the Witte and the Will we may vnderstand the admirable Metamorphosis and change of a man from himselfe when his affectes are pacified and when they are troubled Plutarch sayde they changed them like Circes potions Plutarch in moralib from men into beastes Or we may compare the Soule without Passions to a calme Sea with sweete pleasant and crispling streames but the Passionate to the raging Gulfe swelling with waves surging by tempests minacing the stony rockes and endevouring to overthrowe Mountaines even so Passions make the Soule to swell with pride and pleasure they threaten woundes death and destruction by audacious boldnesse and ire they vndermine the mountaines of Vertue with hope and feare and in summe never let the Soule be in quietnes but ever eyther flowing with Pleasure or ebbing with Payne How Passions alter the Body CHAP. III. ALthough in the ninth Chapter sufficiently was declared how the Passions of the minde alter the humours of the body yet some peculiar discourses concerning that matter were reserved for this place Two sortes of Passions affect all men some as wee sayde before dilate and some compresse and restringe the heart Of the first was sayd Vita carninum est cordis Proverb 14. 3● sanitas the life of flesh is the health of heart for indeed a ioyfull and quiet heart reviveth all the partes of the body Of the other was written Spiritus tristis exsiccat prb 17. ossa a sadde Spirit dryeth the bones And for that all Passions bring with them ioy or payne dilate or coarct the heart therefore I thinke it not amisse to declare the reason why these two Passions worke such alterations in the body to the end that by the knowledge of them we may attayne to the vnderstanding of the rest Pleasure and Delight if it bee moderate bringeth health because the purer spirites retyre vnto the heart and they helpe marvellously the digestion of blood so that thereby the heart engendreth great aboundance and most purified spirites which after being dispersed thorow the body cause a good concoction to be made in all partes helping them to expel the superfluities they also cleare the braine and consequently the vnderstanding For although while the Passion endureth it blindeth a little the indifferent iudgement yet after that it is past it rendereth the brayne better disposed and apter to represent whatsoever occurreth for speculation From good concoction expulsion of supersluities and aboundance of spirites proceedeth a good colour a cleere countenance and an vniversall health of the body But if the Passion of pleasure bee too vehement questionlesse it causeth great infirmitie for the heart being continually invironed with great abundance of spibecommeth too hote and inflamed and consequently engendereth much cholericke and burned blood Besides it dilateth and resolveth the substance of the heart too much in such sort as the vertue and force thereof is greatly weakened Wherefore Socrates was wont to say that those men which live continently and frugally had more pleasure and lesse payne than those who with great care procured inticements to pleasure because intemperate pleasures besides the remorce of minde infamie and povertie which waiteth vpon them for the most part hurt more the body than delight it And some with too vehement laughter have ended their dayes as Philemon did Plutarch recounteth also howe Erasm lib. 6. Apotheg Plutarch in Hannib the Romanes leesing to Hannibal newes was brought to Rome and specially to two women that their sonnes were slaine afterwards a remnant of the souldiers returning these two afflicted ranne with many more to know the manner of their sonnes deaths and amongst the rest found them both alive who for ioy gave vp their ghosts And vniversally after much pleasure and laughter men feele themselves both to languish and to be melancholy Yet the Passions which coarct the heart as feare sadnesse and despayre as they bring more payne to the minde so they are more dangerous to the body and commonly men proove lesse harme in those than in these and many have lost their lives with sadnesse and feare but few with love and hope except they changed themselves into heavinesse and despayre The cause why sadnesse doth so moove the forces of the body I take to be the gathering together of much melancholy blood about the heart which collection extinguisheth the good spirits or at least dulleth them besides the heart being possessed by such an humour cannot digest well the blood and spirites which ought to be dispersed thorow the whole body but converteth them into melancholy the which humour being colde and drie dryeth the whole body and maketh it wither away for colde extinguisheth heate and drynesse moysture which two qualities principally concerne life These
those vigilant virgins which attend with their Matth. 25. lamps lighted the comming of their heavenly spouse these be those carefull housholders which prevent infernall Matth. 24. 43. Luk. 12. 39. theeves lest they should rob their treasures these be those which live ever in peace and tranquillitie of Phil. 3. 20. minde who dwelling in earth converse in heaven The second reason and principall is ill education of the which we have spoken before yet I must say here with holy scripture that as it is impossible for the Ethiopean to change his skin so it is impossible for youth Iere. 13. 23. brought vp licentiously to change their ill maners for vse breedeth facilitie facilitie confirmeth nature nature strongly inclined can hardly be diverted from her common course but followeth her vitious determination It is a wonder to see how custome transporteth and changeth nature both in body and in soule the which may well be proved by the young Maide the Queene of India sent to Alexander the great the which being nourished from her youth with serpents poison had so changed her naturall constitution that if she had bitten any Aristot. ad Alexand. Vide Hieronimum Cagniolum de institutio principis § 7. man he presently died as Aristotle affirmeth that by experience he had proved even so as serpents poyson had changed her body so ill maners alter the soule and as her teeth poysoned that they bit so wicked men those soules with whom they talke Corrumpunt 1. Cor. 15. 33. bonos more 's colloquia prava and acuerunt linguas suas sicut serpentes nature therefore in tract of time Psal 139. 4. over-runne with so many weeds of wickednes abhorreth extreamely to supplant them loathing so long molestfull and continuall labor and therefore contenteth her selfe rather to eate the blacke beries of briers then the sweet cherries of vertue for this cause those children have a double bond to their parents schoolemaisters which distill even with milke into their mouths the sweet liquor of pietie vertue and good manners Qu● semel est imbuta recens serva●it ●dorem testa diu ●lacc●● Of liquor first which earthen pot receives The smell it doth retaine for many dayes Whereunto agreeth that vulgare axiome of Philosophers Omnis habitus est difficilè separabilis à subiecte The third reason is present delectation for that we hope is future that pleasure worldlings perceive is present sensible delectation feedeth the corporall substance of sences and therefore we easily perceive it but vertue affecteth the soule not after so palpable and grosse manner therefore they despise it wherefore mens soules by inveterated customes vsed to sensuall and beastly delights either not beleeving or mistrusting or rather doubting of spirituall ioyes they neglect and for the most part care not for them contenting themselves with their present estate not looking any further and so as beasts they live and as beasts they dye according to that saying Home cum in honore esse● non intellexit Psal 48. 13. 21. comparatus est iumentis insipientibus similis factus est illis and so become sicut equus mulus in quibus non est Psal 31. 19. intellectus Finally the lacke of preservation hindereth our spirituall profite because I conceive our soules without prayer meditation the Sacraments of Christs church exercise of vertue and works of pietie not vnlike a dead body which for lack of a living soule dayly falleth away by putrifaction leeseth colour temperature and all sweetnesse and becommeth ghastly loathsome and stinking even so the soule without those balmes God hath prepared as preservatives it will be infected with vices and stincking with sinnes therefore those which neglect these benefits are not vnlike sicke men which know where medicines lie but will not seeke for them or receive them These foure causes I take to be the principall enimies Math. 11. 3● of our spirituall life howbeit I doubt not that Christs yoke is sweete and his burthen easie if men would consider the meanes and accept those helps God hath bestowed vpon them But all meanes and helps which ordinarily we proove may be reiected by a wicked will Prov. 1. 24. Isa c. 5. 62. 2. Matth. 23. 37. and a hard indurated heart may resist the sweete calling of God Quia vocavi renuistis extendi manum meam non erat qui aspiceret By these Scriptures and many more we may easily Acts 7. 51. Mat. 11. 21. inferre that neither lacke of meanes nor lacke of grace hindereth vs from dooing well but our owne perverse and wicked will let vs but runne over two or three examples and we shall even touch with our fingers the certaintie of this veritie Consider but Adams fall how many meanes he had to do well and yet how basely he fell he first by Gods especiall grace was indued with so many internall gifts of vertues and knowledge that easily he might have observed that commandement the inferiour parts were subordinate by originall iustice to the superior so that passions could not assault him he had all beasts and the whole garden of Paradice with all the hearbs and trees at his pleasure therefore the precept was not so rigorous for what difficultie were it for a man to abstaine from one tree having the vse of thousands He knew most certainely how by eating into what a damnable estate he cast himselfe and all his posteritie wherefore the event might have taught him to prevent the cause but above all the perfit knowledge of the sinne he committed against God the extreme ingratitude disloyaltie and treacherie might have bridled his mouth from that poysoned Apple which brought present death of the soule and after a time a certaine death of the body But all these helps countervailed not his negligence in consideration and his ill will seduced with ambition Let vs take an other familiar example which dayly occurreth more common than commendable a woman married which breaketh her fidelitie promised to her husband marke but what helps she hath to restraine her from this sinne I omit the Sacraments of Christs Church the threatnings of death Gods iudgement and hell the enormious offence she committeth against God the abuse of his benefits the breach of his law the contempt of his grace the remorce of conscience the wounding of her soule and spoyling of the same all these and many more common helps graunted to all sinners I will speake nothing of albeit I thinke them sufficient to with-hold any ingenious heart from prevarication only let vs weigh those particular meanes she hath to abstaine and withdraw herselfe from this offence as the great iniurie she offereth her husband the breach of love betweene them the infamie wherevnto she for all her life shall be subiect the stayne of her kinred and friends for her fault redoundeth to their discredit as her good to their reputation the shamefastnesse wherewith God hath
indued women to retayne them from these shamefull actions the basenesse and brevitie of that pleasure she pretends vnvailable to that cost she bestoweth yet for all this losse she will hazard it she neither regardeth the good she leeseth nor the harmes she incurreth nor the little trifle she winneth transgresseth the law of nature the law of God the law of christianitie the law of friendship onely for lacke of prudent and mature consideration married to a wicked Wili and perverse affection That which I have sayde of this lewd Woman the same might be sayde of all sinners because the meanes to do well are so many and the dommages so great that every sinne consummate carrieth with it that I could make a whole booke of them and perhaps in time I will do it In the meane season gentle Reader whensoever occurreth any occasion apt to induce thy Will to offende God runne not too fast after it ponder a little crave helpe from above consider thy helpes expende thy harmes and presently thou shalt see that all tentations of this worlde will become like to the huge Statue that Nabuchodonozor beheld with the head of golde the breast of silver the belly of brasse the legges of yron Daniel c. 3. the feete of yron and earth for all pleasures are golden in the entraunce but still decrease to terrestriall and earthly substaunces towardes the ende they become lothsome and are accounted vilde the little stone without any humane hands cut from the mountayne will deiect and cast prostrate on the ground this huge masse of mettall I meane the grace of Christ all the multitude of tentations and suggestions of the Divell and then thou mayest raigne over them by grace in this life and glory in the end Amen FINIS A Succinct Philosophicall declaration of the nature of Clymactericall yeeres occasioned by the death of Queene Elizabeth ⸪ Written by T W LONDON Printed for Thomas Thorpe and are to be sold in Paules Church-yard at the signe of the Crane by Walter Burre 1604. A Succinct Philosophicall declaration of the nature of Clymactericall yeeres occasioned by the death of Queene Elizabeth ⸪ AFter the death of Queene ELIZABETH who died in the 70. yeere of her age which was the Clymactericall period of her life diuerse pregnant wits and curious Philosophers were assembled by chance togither among sundry other learned Discourses one demaunded of me what were these Clymactericall yeeres their nature and effects For quoth hee I haue heard many Philosophors and Phisitians talke of them but as yet I neuer throughly could pierce or penitrate them I aunswered him that the Treatise thereof required longer time then that place and present occasions afforded but that afterwards at more ley sure hee should vnderstand them if hee were desirous to learne The Gentleman importuned me so much as at last hee drew me to write this Discourse which followeth for that it seemeth not altogether impertinent to this explanation of Passions I thinke it not vnfit to be inserted in the last Booke of the Passions of the Minde because the same temper of body and propension to death which is the base of Clymactericall yeres the very same conferres much either to mooue Passions or hinder the opperations of the soule as in the progresse of this discourse shal plainly appeare Clymax in Greeke signifieth a Staire or a Ladder and metaphorically is applyed to the yeeres of a man or womans life as if the whole course of our dayes were a certaine Ladder compounded of so many steppes True it is that as the constitutions of mens bodies are for the most parte of two sortes the one is firme and strong the other more weake and feeble so the Phisitians by long experience haue obserued that the fatall ends of them who be of a lustie constitution finish for most part in some score of yeeres and so they number such persons periods by twentie 40. 60. 80. 100. 120. And to Other count them by tens this purpose sayde Moses * whose eyes were neither darkned nor any tooth loosed * Centum viginti Deut. 31. 2. annorum sum hodie non possum vltra egredi ingridi I am now an hundred and twenty yeeres old I can no more goe out and come in that is no longer liue and so it fell out for that * same yeere Deut. 34. 7. he died And GOD himselfe said of man * Erunt Genes 6. 4. dies illius centum viginti anni The dayes of man shall be an hundred and 20. yeeres The next Clymactericall yeere in them of solide and virile constitution is an 100 and so the Scriptures report Numerus dierum vitae hominum vt Eccles 18. 8 multum centum anni The number of the dayes of the life of men at most is an 100 yeeres Another kinde of men whose complexion is weaker haue a lesser kinde of measure as they haue shorter life and yet these also be of two sorts some stronger some weaker the first Clymactericall yeeres are nine eighteene tweentie seauen thirty six forty fiue fifty foure sixty three seauenty two eighty one the seconds are seauen foureteene twenty one twenty eight thirty fiue forty twoo forty nine fifty six sixty three seauenty Of these two ages spake Dauid when hee sayde Dies annorum Psalme 89. 10. nostrorum in ipsis septuaginta anni Si autem in potentatibus octoginta anni amplius corum labor dolor The dayes of our yeeres are seauentie yeeres and if in Potentates they be eightie the labour and griefe is greater The most daungerous of all these passages or steps are the forty nine compounded vpon seuen times seauen and sixty three standing vppon nine times seauen and next to these is seauenty which containeth tenne times seauen they number them also by nine and so make eighty one the most perillous as comprehending nine times nine These obseruations then of Phisitians presupposed as true for men that are wise vertuous and experimented in their faculties ought to be belieued for wisdome and experience protect them from errour and honestie from lying and deceite it were good to examine and search out the cause of these notable alterations and daungers of death in the Clymactericall yeeres for those humors which alter the bodie and dispose it to sicknesse and death the same bend the soule to take inordinate affections and passions I haue heard some Phisitians resolue this doubt into the influence of heauens to wit that so manie courses of the Sunne Moone and Planets from the time of a mans Natiuitie worke such effects so that some men let them liue neuer so orderly after so manie circular motions of the Sunne and Moone haue warbled ouer their heads vppon necessitie they must fall into one sicknesse or another and so die Some others ground this varietie and daungerous diuersitie vppon the singular prouidence of God who hath created all thinges In numero pondere mensura and therefore hath
betwixt gluttonie and scarcitie fortitude betwixt desperat boldnesse and superfluous feare called timiditie Men commonly by nature are more enclined to one of these extreames than another as most men are giuen to couetousnesse few to prodigalitie more to eat too much than to eat too little more to be afraid when they need not than to be too bold when they ought to be afraid If then thou trie thy selfe not vehemently inclined to any of these passions yet sometimes to exceed in one extreame sometime in another commonly the securest way to be practised is to incline thy selfe to that extreame which men by nature most vehemently abhorre as prodigalitie scarceuesle in diet boldnesse in daungers But if thou perceiue a vehement inclination to the one extreame procure to bend thy selfe as farre to the other for so thou shalt with more facilitie come to the middest as commonly the Philosophers declare by the example of a crooked staffe the which to make straight we bend to the other side and make it as crooked contrariwise as it was before The second rule to moderate passions we may learne Solus in illicitis non cadit qui se aliquando a licitis caute restringit Gregor lib. 5. moral hom 35. super Euan. of Socrates who to bridle extraordinarie and vnlawfull pleasures was accustomed to abstaine from lawfull and not prohibited For if one be addicted to drunkennesse he shall with more facilitie ouercome this passion if he abstaine from strong drinkes he most affecteth euen at such times as lawfully he may vse them The third rule to flie occasions which may incense the passion whereunto we are inclined for occasiones factunt latrones a commodious and fit occasion to steale maketh oftentimes theeues which otherwise would haue been honest men wherefore he that committeth himselfe to sea in a boisterous tempest deserueth to suffer shipwrack he that willingly without necessitie dealeth with infected persons may blame himselfe if he fall into their diseases so hee that is giuen to lasciuiousnesse and vseth riotous companie may condemne his owne wilfulnesse if his passions rebell and ouercome him For this cause God commaunded that the Nazarites which were consecrated to him should drinke no Wine not any thing that might cause drunkennesse and least they should by eating grapes or great reisins be allured to the Num 6. drinking of wine he commaunded them they should neither eat grapes nor reisins So hee that will not bee guided by affectiōs must diligently auoid occasions Yet this rule ought not to be vnderstood vniuersally for it is conuenient to find out occasions to exercise some passions as to seeke the poore to practise the passion of pitie to visit the sick to shew compassion to exercise learning to ouercome feare But in such passions as Nature more than willingly would follow best it were to flie occasions as he that will liue chast must eschew much familiaritie with suspected persons and vniuersally with all women not looking vpon them nor touching except necessitie or good manners in some few cases requireth The same may be said of gluttonie pride and such like whereunto our corrupt nature is much inclined yet if some man by experience haue prooued such passions not to be very rebellious and that for most part he hath ouerruled them he may be something the bolder yet let him not be too confident for the Fox often seemes to be dead to seize more assuredly vpon his prey The fourth remedie for noble spirits singular of baser mindes abhorred yet of both worthie to be practised may be drawne out of the very poyson of passions that is when a most vehement and rebellious motion assaulteth thee when the fiercenesse and tyrannie thereof welnigh possesseth thee when thou art almost yeelding consent vnto it then turne the force of thy soule with as much indeauour as thou canst to the contrarie and with one naile driue out another make of tentations 1. Cor. 10. 11. 2. Cor. 8. 9. a benefit let vertue in infirmitie and weakenesse of resistance be more perfit and ennobled For as in warres the valiantest souldiours in greatest incounters are best tried so in most vehement passions the resolutest minds are best prooued For Iosephs chastitie had neuer been so glorious if his vnchast ladie had not so vehemently allured him to defile the bed of his lord Iobs patience had neuer been so conspicuous if the passion of griefe and sadnesse had not so violently seized vpon him Abrahams fortitude had neuer beene so heroicall if the death of his onely sonne had not cut in a manner his heart strings asunder This meane to mortifie passions I take to be one of the most forcible and important remedies that men can vse especially for two causes the first for that by these contrarie acts are bred in the soules certaine habites helpes stayes or inclinations most opposite vnto our passions and therefore the passions being strong they cannot be ouercommed but by the might of excellent vertue for as the deeper a tree is rooted in the ground it requireth greater force to pull it vp euen so the greater possession the passion hath taken of the soule the greater vertue it needeth to supplant it It seemeth that Iob after Iob. 13. 15. so many temptations practised this remedie when he said Etiamsi occideret me in ipso sperabo Although God kill me yet I will hope in him For questionlesse those pains and pangs did incite him to desperation the which with contrarie trust in God he most valiantly suppressed Another cause may be yeelded for that many passions proceed not onely from the inclinations of nature alterations of humours but by the very suggestion of the diuell who watcheth his oportunitie to take men at an aduantage and to induce them to sundry inordinat affections for which cause they are called very often in Scriptures vncleane spirits because they leade men into vncleane passions and actions The diuell therefore seeing his temptations so valiantly resisted his poysoned darts rebounding into his owne breast I meane his illusions redound to his owne shame and confusion dareth not be so bold another time to inuade so strong a sort but with all his troupe will flie from it as a swarme of filthie flies dare not approch neere vnto a boyling pot Resistite diabolo fugiet à vobis resist the diuell and he Iames 4. 7. will flie from you The fift remedie not inferiour to the precedent is to resist passions at the beginning vse the remedie for vertue that Pharaoh practised for tyrannie in killing all the infants of the Iews least they should encrease too much and so ouerrun his countrey While the sore is greene seldome surgeons despaire but festred once they hardly cure it so passions while they knocke at the doore of our mindes whilest they are a little entertained if you expell them not quickly they will allodge longer with you than you would haue them And the most easie
thing to the purpose that wee perceiue better our desires of the soule without any corporall alteration of the body than either loue pleasure or hatred for this comment spoyleth the text because hardly we conceiue any actions of the soule but by these corporall alterations the which induce vs to name them according to Thomas his meaning neither is it true that we prooue by experience without the motions of the body more sensibly concupiscence than ioy or sadnesse and this assumption was admitted of Caietane without any probation Wherefore I thinke we may best say that of all passions wee prooue paine griefe sadnesse pleasure feare and delectation are most notoriously knowne yet because these vehement passions doe not affect vs so commonly but at certaine times and desires of those things we loue continue the longest and fall foorth oftenest therefore men called our sensitiue appetite Concupiscibilis coueting First of all then sadnesse most manifestly is knowne to vs because wee suffer often and feele most sensible paine then pleasure then feare the other are not so open but sometimes they may exceed and so more shew themselues as ire desperation c. Order of Passions in generation or production 2 DIuines and Philosophers commonly affirme that all other passions acknowledge loue to be their fountaine root and mother the reason I take to be for that al passions either prosecut some good or flie some euill those which flie euill as hatred feare sadnesse presuppose the loue of some good the which that euill depriueth as for example who hateth death but he which loueth life who feareth aduersity but he that loueth prosperitie who is pensiue in his sickenesse but hee that loueth health Loue then goeth before all those passions which eschew euil Amongst them which prosecute good loue likewise proceedeth for the passions of our minds are not vnlike the motions of our bodies For as things naturally mooued haue an appetite or naturall inclination to the place whereunto they are mooued mooue and rest therein as the water which runneth so fast downe the mountaines hath an instinct of Nature to be vnited with the Sea for which cause we see brookes and flouds runne with such a maine force to attaine thereunto when they come to the Sea presently they ioyne in friendship and liue in concord ioyning together as louing friends euen so we see in beastes the horse loueth water when hee is thirstie and therefore by desire hee seeketh out some riuer or fountaine when he hath found it he drinketh pleaseth himself therewith and so resteth contented This ordinarie course keepe passions but sometimes this subordination is changed for if a man bee wounded vpon a sodaine the present passion of griefe and ire inuade him and so per accidens in many other cases the foresaid order may be broken Order of Passions in Intention 3 IF we discourse of those Passions which reside in the sensitiue appetite it euer first intendeth pleasure and delight because therewith Nature is most contented from which intention followeth loue hatred ire and such like this passion beasts most desire yea children and sensuall persons wholy seeke after and direct almost their whole actions thereunto for pleasure is the polestare of all inordinat passions and if a man examine himselfe thorowly he shal find that riches glorie health learning and what else most men desire aime commonly at pleasure and delight of the body because these pleasures are easily perceiued and in them the soule seemeth to purchase a quiet rest Neuerthelesse vertuous men whose passiōs are ruled by reason leuel at a higher mark and subordinate pleasure to honestie and delight to vertue because as we say Glorie waiteth on Vertue as the shadow followeth the body euen so vnto good actions followeth a certaine pleasure and sweetnesse howbeit a good man giueth almes yet dooth he not giue it with intention men should commend him as hypocrites do and so be repayd with the pleasure of a good reputation but with the testimonie of a good conscience that hee doth it for the glorie of God Order of Passions in Dignitie 4 IF we compare our passions in dignitie or perfection then those wherewith we prosecute good are more excellent than those wherewith wee esteeme ill and among these loue holdeth the principall place and as a queene in dignitie preceadeth the rest because that loue vniteth the louer in affection with the obiect beloued loue is the root of other affections loue finally maketh vs friends with God and man All we haue said of passions residing in our sensitiue appetite the same we find in the reasonable passion of our will because the will hath such like acts specified of the same obiects directed to the same end for as a Rhetoritian will make an Epistle according to the rules of Grammer as well as a Grammarian euen so what our sensatiue appetite followeth or abhorreth the same our will may prosecute or detest THE FIFT BOOKE of the Passions of the Minde Wherein are deliuered the means to mooue Passions THe water which wee find in euery Citie by three wayes passeth into it either by fountaines or springs by riuers or conduits or by raine snow or halestones that is some water ariseth some passeth some descendeth so in like manner our imaginations or internall sences and consequently our Passions by three wayes are mooued by humours arising in our bodies by externall sences and secret passage of sensuall obiects by the descent or commaundement of reason How passions are stirred vp by humours was aboue deliuered here onely remaineth to declare how they are prouoked by sences and incited by the wit and will And first of all we will begin with the motions of sences as most knowne obuious and ordinarie How sences mooue Passions and specially our sight §. 1. GEnerally they loue and affect vanitie for what is that they loue or can loue in the world and worldly but vanitie that is neither before it is had contenteth nor when it is possessed fully pleaseth nor after it is departed satisfieth For such things are vaine which vanish away and are resolued into nothing They search after lies not onely because all worldly allurements yeeld no felicitie and contentation as they beare vs in hand but also for that in very deed and really they be lies shewing one thing in the rind and externall apparance and an other in the coare and internall essence for cousining arts falsifie and sophisticat nature causing copper seeme gold hypocrisie sanctitie and sences surfeits the soules solaces All sences no doubt are the first gates whereby passe and repasse all messages sent to passions but yet the scriptures in particular wonderfully exhort commaund and admonish vs to attend vnto the custodie and vigilance ouer our eyes Dauid who had once vnwarily glaunced awry and let goe the raines of his eyes at his passions importunity thought himselfe vnable without Gods speciall grace to guide direct and withdraw them from vanitie and therefore
how bitter is the memorie of death to that man which hath peace and great felicitie in his substance and that loveth extremely this transitory life To move this Hatred two things specially are diligently to be observed first the Person beloved and all those reasons which may stir vp his love then the hurt of the evill and all the harmes it bringeth with it for example we ought for the love of our owne soules and the soules of our neighbours detest and abhorre sinne and the offence of God now all those inducements which moove vs to love our soules strike in our hearts a horrour of sinne which is the death and destruction of soules And all those reasons which shew the deformity of sin stirre vp a detestation thereof The generall Motives alledged above applied to this particular will suffice to perswade vs to love our Soules the nature harmes consequent vnto sinne and all other evils we would induce our auditors to detest may be collected out of the common places of Invention reduced above to Ansit quid sit quale sit propter quid sit Meanes to move flight and feare § 6. WE said that flight or detestation was opposite to desier and that desier was the wishing of a thing abstracted from hope or expectation thereof as every beggar would be a King if he might choose albeit he never had nor is like to have any hope of the aspiring thereunto Flight is a detestation of some evill though not imminent nor exspected yet such an evill as we abhorre it and detest it and possibly may befall vs as a king to fall to poverty beggery or servitude he abhorreth yet because he living in such prosperity conceiveth no danger nor perill therefore he standeth in no feare These two passions of desier and detestation are stirred vp with the same motives that love and hatred of abomination for as all the reasons apportable to render the thing amiable the same make it desiderable so all the inducements which perswade the obiect of hatred to be abominable all the same cause it seeme detestable As for example I have a vertuous friend whom I love intierly he converseth with Atheists the more I love him the more I hate Atheisme as evill to him and therefore I abhorre it should any way befall him I am moved to abominate it as an extreme evill for what can be more sottish then to deny a God whom all creatures confesse and say ipse fecit nos non ipsae nos he made vs and not we our selves what can be more beastly then not to acknowledge him nor his benefits who every moment powreth vpon vs sundry favours What horrible disorders should we see in the world if there were not supposed a God that governeth and knoweth all and at last with the ballance of his inflexible iustice will examine iudge and reward all No doubt but if Atheisme once enter into the hearts of men vertue will be despised and vice esteemed might will rule right and the rich oppresse the poore and epicurisme wil take full possession edamus bibamus cras moriemur let vs gull our selves with eating quaffing for after this life no other remaineth and therefore little it importeth vs to live like beasts and dye like dogs all these and many more such like arguments demonstrate the abomination of Atheisme and also perswade evidently the detestation of the same so that by applying the harmes or dammages of the evill considered in generall and absolutely in it selfe to my selfe or my friend whom I love we may easily force flight and detestation Feare is a flight of a probable evill imminent wherefore two things must be proved amplified to enforce feare first that the evill is great secondly that it is very likely to happen the excesse of the evill may be gathered out of the precedent discourses the likelyhood probability or certainty we draw from sundry circumstances as from our adversaries malice hatred against vs their craft deceit their former maner of proceeding wherunto we may annexe the impossibility or extreme difficulties to avoid it as their might and our weakenes their experience and our rawnesse so that where there is obstinate implacable hatred against vs knowledge and foresight how to overcome vs power and meanes to put in execution potent malice and hatred what wicked effect will not then follow The vicinitie also of the evill moveth much for dangers afarre off we little esteeme as subiect to sundry casualities and encounters but when they are neere and at the doore then it is time to be stirring If an Oratour would by the passion of feare move the Italians Almanes and Spanyards to ioyne in league and wa●re vpon the Turke he might vrge them in this manner The Romanes in passed ages who with most carefull eye did foresee prevent the dangers of their Empire thought not themselves secure in Italy except the Carthaginians were vanquished but how much more neere are the Turkish Cities to Spaine Germany and Italy then Carthage was to Rome What a swift Navie of Gailies hath Danger imminent he alwayes prepared by Sea and therefore in one night may enter either the coasts of Italy or Spayne What an infinite Army as well of horsemen as footemen hath he alwayes in a readinesse to invade offend and ruine whom he wyll almost at vnawares at least them that border vpon him ere they can be halfe prepared Of what force is this tyrant The Romanes still lived in feare of the Carthaginians though divers times overcome by them and have not we much more reason to feare the Turkish puissance What fortresses hath he woon from Christians what Cities sackt what Provinces The Turks forces vanquished what Kingdomes subdued what Empires spoyled enioyed possessed Who ruleth now Africk The Turke either all or most Who signorizeth over Asia The Turke Who doth domineere over the greatest part of Europe The Turke his treasures are infinite his victuals abundant his people innumerable and so subiect and obedient that they repute it a favour to be bereaved of their lives at their Emperours pleasure Are all Princes Christian able to leavie and maintaine an army of 300000. fighting men Solyman brought so many before Vienna in Austria what wil such a world of combatents do nay what will they not do Cover the fields like Locusts in expugnation of Cities reare vp mountaines of earth in a moment fill vp ditches with dead corps of their owne men to scale the walles with the very sight of such an invincible multitude strike terrour and amazement in the hearts of all them that shall see them or heare of them His malice is The Turks hatred against Christians no lesse then his might what pretendeth he in Constantinople forsooth to be Emperour over all Europe and successor to Constantine the great this he claymeth as right this he meaneth to win by might this he resolveth to inioy at length Did he
all times apt to receiue iests wherefore friendly iests euer carry with them a certaine respect this fault I find more common among Frenchmen and English than any other Nation Some in conuersation can discourse well for some two or three dayes but after that time their oyle is spent they thrust out all they haue of a suddaine after become very barren These men be not commonly wittie nor humble for wittie men seldome are drawne drie in conceits and humble men destill their knowledge according to their talents Much more might be handled in this point but because it rather concerneth ciuile conuersation than inuestigation of passions I will omit it VIII Discouerie of Passions in Writing WHo of purpose writeth obscurely peruetteth the naturall communication of men because we write to declare our minds and he that affecteth obscurity seemeth not to be willing that men should conceiue his meaning The holy Scriptures I alwayes except which for many causes admit some obscuritie But for men in their writing to follow such a phrase as hardly you can vnderstand what they say cannot but proceed either from confused vnderstanding because a cleere conceit breedeth perspicuous deliuerie or affectation of learning which springeth from pride for I haue knowne most excellent men endeuour to speake and write the greatest mysteries of our faith in such plaine maner that very deepe diuinitie seemed very easie And I truely am of opinion that he is the greatest Diuine and most profitable to the common-weale which can make his learning to be best conceiued To vse many Metaphors Poetical phrases in prose or incke-pot tearmes smelleth of affectation and argueth a proud childish wit To be peremptorie and singular in opinions to censure ill or condemne rashly without rendring some sound and strong reason for the most part proceedeth from singular selfe loue and a defectuous iudgement Some will condemne others for writing because they thinke there bee Bookes written more than sufficient This censure commeth either from a sluggish mind or enuious to see others good endeuours commended or else from grosse ignorance because they neither know the nature of mens wits nor the limits of humane vnderderstanding for if we see the art of sayling with the Compasse the exercise of Artillerie the manner of Printing of late yeeres inuented augmented and perfitted Why may not diuers Sciences already inuented be increased with new conceits amplified with better Demonstrations explaned in a more perspicuous manner deliuered in a more ordinat method Contrary to these be certaine itching spirits who put euery toy in print they prize their owne workes exceedingly and censure others iniuriously these may well be compared to certaine wild vines which bring forth many grapes but neuer mature them some doe it for same and some for gaine and both without discretion and against their owne credit Therefore great wisedome it were to write something discreetly that mens labours may not onely profit themselues but also be deriued to others for what doe we account good in it selfe if it bee not communicatiue of goodnesse to others Bonum est sui diffusinum Yet would I haue men not to blab out their conceits without meditation or good digestion because if in all actions it concerneth greatly a mans demeanour to effectuat them with deliberation and ripenesse so much more in writing which no man hasteth being distilled drop by drop from the pen and of it selfe permanent not as words communicatiue to some few present auditors but blazed to the world and sent to all posteritie Some men in writing flow with phrases but are barren in substance of matter and such are neither wittie nor wise others haue good conceits but deliuered after an affected manner they put a little liquor into too great a vessell Others are so concise that you need a commentarie to vnderstand them the former be not without all follie and the latter lacke not some pride yet those are more commendable than these for those onely are tedious thorow their prolixitie but these are molestfull because they require too great attention and make a man often spend many spirits to win a slender knowledge Many write confusedly without method and order and such comprehend not their matter others are too precise in diuisions in such sort that ere you come to the last part you haue forgotten the first members and this defect I find in many postils of scriptures Good distinctions breed perspicuitie but a multitude engendreth obscuritie and best I hold it so to distinguish that distinctions may rather be noted in matter than in words With this I thinke good to conclude the discouery of Passions in humane actions omitting much more that might bee said in this matter as what passions may bee discouered in laughing in disputing in crossing in negotiating and such like externall operations and especially two discourses I haue omitted or rather not printed though penned the one is a discouerie of passions in censuring bookes a matter not vnnecessarie for this criticall age wherein euery mans labours are araigned at the tribunall seat of euery pedanticall censurious Aristarchs vnderstanding The other is discouerie of passions in taking Tabacco The former treatise was violently kept from me and therefore not in my power to print the latter vpon some good considerations was for a time suspended but lest my labour should be too long and the Discourse too tedious I will leaue these and many more to the Readers wittie obseruation and deliberat iudgement Order or conference of Passions CHAP. III. WEe may conferre passions together in diuers manners First in knowledge secondly in generation thirdly in intention and fourthly in degree of perfection or dignitie What passion is first and best knowne vnto vs. 1 THomas affirmeth that no passion is more sensibly Thom. in 1. 2. q. 26. ● 1. ad primum knowne vnto vs than desire or concupiscence for rendring a reason why our coueting appetite is commonly called concupiscibilis he saith the cause is for that we name things as we conceiue them and therefore because we perceiue our desire most manifestly wee call it our coueting or desiring appetite for as he proueth out of Saint Augustine Loue then most is felt when it is absent from the obiect beloued But I cannot herein consent with Thomas because I thinke there is no man that euer perceiued in himselfe so vehement a desire of any thing he loued as sadnesse and griefe when he was afflicted with that he hated In feare also who perceiueth not most sensibly that passion wherin men doe tremble shake and shiuer yea sweat blood for very feare as Maldonatus relateth hee heard of those which saw a Maldo in 26. ca. 1. Mat. Arist. lib. 7. de histor arumal ca. 16. lib. 3. de part ani ca 5. strong man at Paris condemned to death sweat blood for very feare And he prooueth out of Aristotle that this effect may be naturall Neither Caietanes shift vpon Thomas serueth any
fields as Paradises of pleasure wherein was layd by the author of nature a reward for those who had not abused nature but grace being above nature affordeth vs more motives to vertue more helps to flie vice 11 What adamant heart can be so hardned with vice that the blood of Christ shall not breake why was he drawne vp the Crosse but to draw vs to vertue from vice Why cryed he longe à salute mea verba delictorum but because he crucified indeede our sinnes in his owne body which in vaine before without vertue of this passion had been washed with blood of goats and calves 12 The Sacraments of his Church those fountaines of grace those conduits of his passion those heavenly medicines those linckes and chaynes wherewith the members of Christes church are vnited in religion for what other effect were they instituted than for the watering of our soules to the encrease of vertue and the whole supplanting of vice 13 The internall gifts of God the armour of Faith Hope and Charitie with graces and favors wherewith the holy ghost endueth our soules fortifie vs against vice and habilitate exceedingly to vertue 14 The manifold inspirations of God the illustrations of his holy Angels which stand in battell aray to defend vs tend to no other end than to perswade vs to vertue and disswade vs from vice 15 Why hath God provided so many teachers and preachers but to be so many watchmen over the house of Israel to cry like Trumpets and blaze the sinnes of the house of Iacob lest by wallowing in wickednesse they reclaime no more to goodnesse 16 The holy scriptures were written with the finger of God as Registers of his eternall will letters of love to invite vs to vertue and threatnings of ire to dehort vs from vice therein by more sure authoritie he delivereth vnto vs whatsoever he had written more obscurely in the booke of Nature perswading directing counselling to goodnes pietie and religion disswading diverting threatning and terrifying from vice impietie and vngodlines wherefore one of the chiefest scopes for which the sacred Volume was sent from Heaven was to make vs decline from evill and do good dye to old Adam and live with Christ crucifie sinne and follow vertue 17 God by his infinite wisedome and charitie gave vs not only teachers in words but also actors in deeds not only them who filled our eares with godly perswasions but also them which represented vertue most lively to our eyes with good examples and holy actions so were the lives of Saintes in all ages as so many Orig. libr. 1. in Iob Grego ibid. Starres which gave vs light how to walke in the darkenesse of this life and so many spurres to pricke vs forward that we should not linger in so divine a voyage Their fervent charitie reprehendeth our tepiditie their diligence in Gods service our negligence their watching and praying our sluggishnes and indevotion 18 If there were a Kings sonne of most beautifull countenance and divine aspect resembling his father as much as a sonne could doe who would not iudge this Prince both inhumane and mad if he would cut mangle and disgrace his owne face with grieslie woundes and vgly formes What an iniurie were this against his father what an offence against all his parents Even such crueltie vse sinners to themselves and God because by sinning they deface and mangle that lively Image of the holy Trinitie drawne by God himselfe in the substance of theyr soules and so are iniurious not onely to themselves but also to their God their Father their King the holy and individed Trinitie 19 Who spoyleth Gods Temple is accounted irreligious who prophaneth his Church is thought sacriligious and who but he which hath lost all sparks of pietie dare adventure to attempt so heinous a crime Yet Vitious adventure and performe it they prophane their bodyes and soules they fell them to lust and wickednesse they expell the holy ghost from them they put him forth of his iust possession which he holdeth over them as a Father by vertue and after by wicked deserts enforce him as a iudge like prisoners to iayle them by iustice 20 Those which live in Christs true Catholike Church by communion of Saints enioy an other meane to doe well and that is the common prayers and supplications of the faithfull which beate continually at the gates of Gods mercy and doubtlesse returne not voyde agayne for many petitions God hardly can deny 21 A dioyne hereunto the supernaturall providence of God which feedeth the foule of the ayre and cloatheth the lillies of the field the which being so carefull of vnreasonable creatures what shall we thinke he doth to the faithfull questionlesse he neither will sleepe nor slumber that watcheth the house of Israel he will keepe his servants as the apple of his eye he will give them meate in due season he will finally sustaine their weakenesse erect them if they fall direct them if they erre succour them if they want refresh them in the heates of concupiscences mittigate the tempests of their temptations moderate the waves of wicked occasions 22 The horrible paines of Hell thundred in holy Writ the weeping and gnashing of teeth the woorme which will gnaw perpetually vpon the very heart of the soule with remorce of conscience those inextinguible flames of infernall fornaces that cruell hatred of griesly Divels and vgly hell-hounds those remedilesse paines and torments without hope of recoverie remission or mittigation and above all that privation and losse of the sight of the face of God prepared for all those that would serve him in sanctitie and holinesse of life all these evils certainely to be incurred I thinke might move sufficiently any wise man to looke about him what he doth whether he goeth what reckoning he must make for these be not May-games or Esops fables but sacred truths registred in Scriptures dayly put in execution hourely felt and of every wicked man to be prooved 23 If God had onely terrified vs from sinne with inexplicable paynes every discreete man might have had sufficient cause to abhorre it but besides having invited vs to vertue by promising ineffable ioyes who can now excuse vs what can we pretend With reward he pricks vs forward with torments he drawes vs backward he bridles our wantonnesse with one and spurres on our slouthfulnesse with the other 24 Vertue of it selfe even naked if neither reward had been promised nor punishment threatned might sufficiently have mooved vs to love her and follow her because she carrieth such a shew of honestie such internall beautie such a grace and excellencie that her possession may be thought a sufficient remuneration 25 The horrible punishments mentioned in Scriptures inflicted for sinne even in this life if we had grace might inforce vertue vpon vs for what cast Adam out of Paradise Sinne what wounded him in nature and spoyled him of grace Sinne what drowned the world Sinne what rained fire and