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A68463 Palladis tamia Wits treasury being the second part of Wits common wealth. By Francis Meres Maister of Artes of both vniuersities. Meres, Francis, 1565-1647.; N. L. (Nicholas Ling), fl. 1580-1607.; N. L. (Nicholas Ling), fl. 1580-1607. Politeuphuia. 1598 (1598) STC 17834; ESTC S110013 253,316 688

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this worlde ibidem As Ismael the sonne of Nathaniah did weepe with the friends of Godoliah whom hee had slaine so heretikes so do hypocrites weepe for that which they wish most harme vnto F. Ioannes a S. Geminiano libro 5. de animalibus terrestribus capite 72. A panther by the beauty of his skinne and sweete smell of his breath doth allure other beastes vnto him but by the fearefulnesse of his head he feareth them away whereupon he hideth his head till he hath laide hold on them that come to see him so heretikes and hypocrites outwardly pretending great sanctity and by the fame of their doctrine which they colour with deuotion and simplicity hiding the malicious heade of their corrupte intent they draw many simple and ignorant auditours vnto them and do destroy them with their poysonous doctrine ibidem As young Lyons doe teare and rent the wombe of their dammes in bringing them foorth so heretikes doe rende and teare in peeces the vnity of the church their mother who spiritually doeth bring them forth Idem libro 5. de animal terrest capite 108. When the time approacheth of the Vipers bringing foorth her young ones doe not stay the operation of nature but gnaw her sides in sunder and so come foorth with the destruction of their damme so heretikes being bredde in the wombe of the Church their mother not staying for nor sustaining her correction by rebellion doe depart from her and whilst they gnawe in sunder her vnity as much as lies in them they labour to bring her vnto destruction Ibidem Yong Panthers hating their dās do beat in peeces with their hooues the wombs of their dams because they resist their egresse and deliuerance wherupon a panther bringeth not forth but once so heretikes with their nailes that is with their malignāt doctrine do teare in peeces the vnitie of the church their mother because shee doeth resist their perfidy ibidem A Wolfe infecteth the wooll of that sheep he woorieth so that a garment made of it prooueth lousie as saith Isidore so an hereticke by his biting doth corrupt the simplicity of mans conuersation and maketh it to abounde with lice that is with corrupt workes ibidem Death AS he is to bee called a skilfull Phisitian that can so temper his medicine that it bringeth health which is the ende of his phisicke so is he to be termed truly wise who hath so learned to lead his life that a good death may follow As the hearbe colloquintida is most bitter so is the memory of death to a rich couetous man F. Ioannes a S. Geminiano lib. 3. de vegetabilib plant cap. 40. As Colloquintida doth stretch out her braches a far off so death doth stretch out himselfe so far that none can escape him ibid. As that Colloquintida is most poisonous and deadly which growes alone so is that death most feareful vpō which a pure consciēce true repētāce doth not attēd ibid. As that Colloquintida is good according to Macrus which is white so is that death which is religious ibidem As by a serpent the death of man came so by the death of man a serpent is ingendered that is of the marrowe of his backe bone as saith Hippocrates The beast Hyena hath the necke of a Viper the backe of an Elephant the greedines of a Wolfe the mane of a horse the voice of a man and is sometimes male and sometimes female so death is likened to a Viper for his swiftnesse to an Elephant for his force and violence to a Wolfe for his voracity to a horse for his vnbridlednesse to a man for his deceiptfulnesse and to male and female because it takes awaie both kindes As the ashes of a Scorpion drunk in wine is a remedy against the stinging of a Scorpion so the meditation of death is a remedy against sinne which is the cause of death Gemin lib. 5. de animal Terrest c. 80. As in sleepe there is no remembraunce of labours so the saintes by the sleepe of death do rest from their labors idem lib. 6. de homine Memb. eius cap. 45. As a man whilst he sleepeth feareth the power of no aduersary so the saints by the sleeep of death are taken out of the hands of al aduersaries and do enioy the security of eternal safety ibidem As a Waspe stinging a stone doth not hurt the stone but her selfe by loosing her sting so death lost his sting by running vpon life which is Iesus Christ Athanasius de passione domini As water falling vpon the earth is swallowed vp of it so that it is no more seen so a man by death falling into the earth is so consumed and destroyed that he is neuer founde againe in the condition of his mortall state Idiota de contemplatione mortis cap. 10. As all riuers runne into the sea so all they that come into this fluctuous life must enter into the sea of death For death is the punishmente of all the tribute of all the prison of all the conquerour of all and the receptacle of all Ibidem cap. 13. As he that woulde conquer a castle at the first doth make way to the ruine with his greater shot after hee doeth assault inuade and possesse it so dealeth death who first sendeth his battering shotte of greate sicknesse and infirmity which doth so vanquish and breake the naturall strength of the body that the soule can no longer defend her castle and then death seiseth vpon it Ludo. Granat l. 1. ducis peccat As for the biting of an aspe there is no remedy vnlesse the parts infected be cut away so certaine vices are healed onely by death Aristot. As pilgrims are cheerfully welcommed into Innes or lodginges yet ere their departing some account of expenses is made vnto them so though we haue a litle shew of pleasāt entertainment in this world yet at our deaths we must render a seuere and strict account for the same Stella de contemptu mundi As no man doth maruel that that is molten which might be melted or burnt which is combustile so to be dead is not to be maruelled at because we are mortall Plut. As borrowed money is willingly to be paide againe so our life which God hath lent vs is without repining to be rendered to him againe when he cals for it idem No man taketh it in ill part to haue a candle lighted but euery one misliketh to haue it put out so we reioice at a birth but sorrow at death Idem He that beyond measure is giuen to wine doeth also sucke vp the dregs so there are many that loue their liues so wel that they would not die no not in old age Sen. As he is more prosperous whom a speedy wind bringeth into the hauen then hee that in a calm is wearied vpon the sea so hee is more fortunate whom speedy death taketh out of the miseries of his life Seneca As fire burneth fiercely when it hath store of fewel but
dieth of his own accord when it lacketh matter so great is the difference betweene the death of young men and old men Seneca A sword-player fearfull in all the fight smiteth home growes valiant or rather desperate whē he seeth no way but death so death is feareful beeing far off but lesse dreaded being at hand Seneca As Swans seeing what good is in death do end their liues with singing so ought all good and honest men to do Cicero lib. 1. Tusc quaest Vnripe apples are hardly pulled from the Tree but being ripe they fall of their owne accord so force doth take life from young men but maturity ripenes from old men Idem de senectute They that speake euill of the deade are like vnto dogges that bite at stones cast at them but doe not touch them that hurte them Aristoteles in Rhetoricis ait Platonem huius similitudinis authorem esse As Croesus with al his wealth so Aristotle with all his wit and al men with al their wisedome haue and shall perish and turne to dust As Aristippus searched how to prolong his life so Socrates sought howe hee might yeeld to death As life is the gift of God so death is the due of nature and as we receiue the one as a benefite so must we abide the other of necssity As the bud is blasted as soone as the blowen rose and as the wind shaketh off the blossome as well as the fruite so death neither spareth the golden lockes nor the hoarie heade As a Bee stinging a dead body takes no hurt but stinging a liue body oft times looseth both sting and life together so death so long as it stung mortal men only which were deade in sinne was neuer a whit the worse but when it stung Christ once who is life it selfe by and by it lost both sting and strength As the brasen serpent was so farre from hurting the Israelites that contrariwise it healed them so death is now so farre from hurting any true Israelite that on the other side if affliction as a fierce serpent sting vs or if any thing else hurte vs presently it is helped and redressed by death Those which will needes play the hobgoblins or the night walking spirits as we call them all the while they speake vnder a hollow vault or leape forth with an vgly vizard vpō their faces they are so terrible that he which thinkes himselfe no small man may perhaps be afrighted with thē But if some lustie fellow chance to step into one of these and cudgel him well fauouredly and pull the vizard from his face then euery boy laughes him to scorne so death was a terrible bulbegger and made euery man afraid of him a great while but Christ dying buckled with this bulbegger and coniured him as I may say out of his hollow vault when as the dead comming out of the graues were seene in Ierusalem and puld the vizard from his face when as he himselfe rising left the linnen cloathes which were the vizard of death behinde him Doctor Playfer As that asse called Cumanus Asinus ietting vp and downe in a Lions skin did for a time terrifie his maister but afterwardes being descried did benefit him very much so death stands now like a silly asse hauing his Lions skin pulde ouer his eares and is so far from terrifying any that it benefites all true Christians because by it they rest from their labours and if they be oppressed with troubles or cares whē they come to death they are discharged All the while Adam did eat any other fruite which God gaue him leaue to eate he was nourished by it but when hee had tasted of the forbidden tree he perished so death had free leaue to deuoure any other man Christ onely excepted but when it wente about to destroy Christ then it was destroyed it selfe Those barbarous people called Canibals which feed onely vpon raw flesh especially of men if they happen to eate a peece of rosted meate commonly they surfeit of it and die so the right Caniball the onely deuourer of all mankind death I meane tasting of Christes flesh and finding it not to be rawe such as it was vsed to eat but holsome and heauenly meat indeed presently tooke a surfet of it and within 3. daies died As when Iudas had receiued a soppe at Christs hand anon after his bowels gushed out so death being so sawcie as to snatch a sop as it were of Christs flesh and a litle bit of his bodie was by and by like Iudas choaked and strangled with it and faine to yeeld it vp again when Christ on Easter day reuiued Sharpe frosts bite forward springs Easterly winds blasteth towardly blossomes so cruel death spareth not those whom we our selues liuing cannot spare as it spared not king Edward the sixt nor sir Philip Sidney who could neuer haue liued too long As madnes and anger differ nothing but in continuance and length of time so neither doe death and sleepe The Deuill AS the Lion that killed the disobedient Prophet returning from Bethel did neither teare his deade body nor hurt his Asse after the same maner is the power of the Diuel being a roaring Lion restrained and kept within limits so that he can extend his furie no further then God giueth him leaue As they that would haue dogs come vnto thē allure thē with bread or flesh so the diuel allureth soules vnto him with pleasures and riches Clemens Alexand. lib. 2. strom As a fish snatching at the bait not seeing the hooke is taken so the Diuell hauing the power of death greedily carrying Iesus vnto death and not seeing the hooke of his diuinitie included in him was caught and ouerthrowne himselfe Idem in Symb. Apost As one night is sufficient to bring darknesse ouer the whole world so the Prince of darkenes is sufficient to disturbe al mortall creatures Macarius hom 5. As Endiue is like vnto Lettice yet the one is sweete the other bitter so the diuel somtimes sheweth himselfe like an Angell of light yet the one is glorious the other vgly and deformed Idem hom 7 As a man and a woman commits corporall fornication so the diuell and the soule commits spirituall fornication Idem hom 15. As Sericants wait for the arest of men indebted so diuels waite to arest sinfull soules Idem hom 43. As a strong stone wall resisteth a dart so faith resisteth the diuel Greg. Nazian oratione in sanctum Cyprianum As a dog stayeth still vnder the Table if hee finde any fallings but departeth if hee find none so the diuell doth continually gape vpon vs if hee get any blasphemous worde he stayeth still but if thou lettest no sins passe from thee hee will leaue thee Chrysost concione 3. de Lazaro As Pirats set vpon rich loaden ships but passe by them that be emptie so the diuell assaileth them that be stuffed with vertues but he lets wicked worldlings and mammonists liue in quiet Idem hom 4. de
and clasping him fast about the middle asked one Capistranus standing beneath whether it would bee any daunger of damnation to his soule if he should cast himselfe downe headlong with the Dog so hee tearmed the Turke to bee slaine with him Capistranus aunswering that it was no daunger at all to his soule the Bohemian forthwith tumbled himselfe downe with the Turke in his armes and so by his owne death onelie saued the life of al the Citie so the deuil like the great Turke besieging not onely one Citie but euen all mankinde Christ alone like this noble Bohemian encountred with him And seeing the case was so that this Dog the Diuell coulde not bee killed starke dead except Christ dyed also therefore he made no reckoning nor account of his life but gaue himselfe to death for vs that he only dying for all the people by his death our deadly enemie might for euer be destroyed As it was bootlesse for Golias to brandish his speare against Dauid so it little auailed the Diuel to shake his speare likewise in the hand of the soldior against the heart of Christ As Dauid hauing heard Golias prate talke his pleasure when they came to the point at the first stroke ouerthrewe him so Christ with that very selfe same speare which gaue him a little venny in comparison or if it be lawful for me so to speake but a phillip on the side which was soone after recured gaue the Diuell a deadlie wound in the forehead which with al his pawes he shal neuer be able to claw off As Dauid only with his sling slew Golias so Christ only by his death and by the power of his crosse which is the sling of Dauid did conquer and subdue the diuel The Palme tree though it haue manie waights at the top and many snakes at the roote yet still it sayes I am neither oppressed with the waights nor distressed with the snakes Penny royall being hung vp in the larder house yet buds his yellow flowers and Noahs Oliue tree being drowned vnder the water yet keepes hir greene branch and Aarons rod being clung and drie yet brings forth ripe Almonds and Moses bramble bush being set on fire yet shines and is not consumed so Christ the true Palme tree though all the iudgments of God and all the sinnes of the world like vnsupportable waights were laide vppon him yea though the cursed Iewes stoode beneath like venemous snakes hissing and biting at him yet hee was neither so oppressed with them nor so distressed with these but that euen vpon his crosse he did most flourish when he was most afflicted The Phenix though sitting in his neaste among the hote spices of Arabia hee bee burnt to ashes yet still hee saies I die not but olde age dyeth in mee so Christ the true Phenix though lying in his graue among the hot spices wherewith Nichodemus embalmed him hee was neuer like to rise from death to life againe yet hee dyed not but mortalitie died in him and immortality so liued in him that euen in his sepulchre hee did most liue when he seemed most to be dead Epaminondas beeing sore wounded in fight demaunded of his souldiours standing by whether his enemies were ouerthrowne or no. They aunswered yea Then whether his buckler were hole or no. They aunswerered also I. Nay then sayes hee all is well This is not the ende of my life but the beginning of my glorie For nowe your deere Epaminondas dying thus gloriouslie shall rather bee borne againe then buried so Christ was sore wounded but his enemyes death and the Diuell were ouerthrowne and spoyled His Buckler which was his Godheade was whole and vntouched Therefore there was no harme doone His death was no death but an exaltation vnto greater glory As snowe couereth the grounde when it is ragged and deformed so Christ with his coat without seame couereth our sins and though they were as crimson yet hee maketh them white as snow As Gedeons fleece when it was moist the earth was drie but when it was drie the earth was moist so when Christes fleece was moist as a greene Tree then were all we drie like rotten stickes but when his fleece was drie all the bloud and water being wrounge out of his precious side then were wee moistned with his grace As Iacob trauailing towardes Haram when hee had laide an heape of stones vnder his heade and taken a nap by the way was much reuiued with it after his tedious iourney so Christ trauailing towardes heauen when hee had slept a little in that stony sepulchre which was hewen out of a Rocke liued then most Princelie after his paynefull passion As Ionas was in the Whales belly three dayes and three nights so and so long was the Sonne of man in the bowels of the earth yet he had no more hurt then Ionas had As Daniell was not hurt of the hungrie Lions so Christ was not hurt either of the terrours of death or of the horrours of Hell As Adam and Eue both in one daie were expelled out of Paradice about noon when the winde blewe so Christ and the theefe both in one day were receiued into Paradice yea both in one houre of the day about the sixt houre that is about twelue a clocke in the day time As Peters shadow gaue health to the sicke so Christs shadow giueth life to the dead As Elizeus being dead raised vp one frō the dead so Christ being dead was a Phisition to the dead Pliny reporteth that there was a dyall set in Campus Martius to note the shadowes of the sunne which agreeing verie wel at the first afterwards for thirty yeares together did not agree with the sun so all the time of those thirty yea three and thirtie yeares that Christ liued in his hmiliation heere vpon earth you might haue seen such a dyall in which time the shadow of the diall did not agree with the shining of the sunne but thankes bee to God all the better for vs. As the sunne went backward tenne degrees in the dyall when Ezechias went forward fifteene degrees in his life hee liued fifteene yeares longer so the going of this sunne Iesus Christ tenne degrees backewarde hath healed all our sicknesse and set vs a thousand degrees forward and infinitly aduanced vs by his death to euersting life As Rachel died her selfe in childbirth to bring forth her sonne Beniamin aliue so Christ dyed to bring vs vnto euerlasting life As when many byrdes are caught in a net if a Pellican or any other great bird that is among them gette out all therest that are little ones follow after so Christ as a great byrde hauing broken through the net of death all we escape with him As far as the Tree of life excelleth the tree of knowledge of good and euill so far the crosse of Christ excelleth the tree of life As hony being found in a dead Lion the death of the Lion was the sustenance of Samson so Christes gall
bodie thou loosest the precious vestiment of thy soule Idem Homil. 12. operis imperfecti As arrowes shot forciblie against anie hard substance do rebound backe againe but being sent with a milder flight enter and sticke fast so wee more exasperate euill speakers by repugning them when as by patienlie yeelding wee easilie appease them and mitigate their fury Idem hom 14. in Ioan. If a rich man be called poore he laugheth at it because hee knoweth it to bee false so if we with patience would smile at iniuries doone vnto vs it woulde bee a great argument that wee are falsely reprehended Idem hom 48. As merchants sustain the dangers of the sea for earthlie lucre so let vs with patience vndergo all extremities and all harde measure that the world offers vnto vs for the kingdome of heauen and the presence of God Idem hom 76. As water quencheth fire so patience extinguisheth anger Idē hom 22. ad Hebraeos A dog biteth the stone that is cast at him neuer respecting him that cast it so they that are impatient looke alwaies to the second meanes and neuer to God that sendeth tribulations Dorotheus de accusatione sui ipsius doctrina 7. As phisicke repaireth health in bodies so tribulation begetteth patience in soules Laurentius Iustinianus in ligno vitae de patientia cap. 3. As it is a cruell thing to deny water to him that is thirsty so it is an euill thing to passe ouer in silence the praises of the excellent vertue patience Idem cap. 2. As Dauid is commended for his holie zeale and Cornelius for his almes deeds so is Iob for his patience As golde is not diminished in the fire but made brighter so a patient man in aduersitie is not daunted but made more glorious F. Ioannes a S. Geminiano libro 2. de metallis lapidibus cap. 24. As the stone Chrysopassus hideth his brightnesse in the date but sheweth it in the night so patience appeareth not in prosperitie but in aduersitie ibidem Obedience AS Clay doth followe the hande of the fashioner so should man be obedient to the will of God Chrysostom lib. 1. de prouidentia Iustinus de recta confess siue de S. coessentia Trinitatis As it is meet that beasts should obey vs so it is requisite that our reason shoulde obey God Procopius in Leuitic As Adam by disobedience became subiect to death so our Sauiour by obedience subdued death Thalassius ad Paulinum presbyt As the sun moon stars and the sea obey God so much more should mā Theodoret. serm 3. de graecarum affect curat As victory is not expected without a captaine and as there is no hope of arriuing at the hauen without a Pylot so without obedience it is vnpossible not to bee hazarded in the sea of this life Laurentius Iustinianus de ligno vitae cap. 3. de obedientia As the Iewes declared their obedience in the shadowe so ought Christians much more to performe theirs in the substance seeing that the bright Sonne of righteousnesse hath appeared vnto them Chrysost hom 60. in Genesin Hee that bestoweth his studie vpon Ischomachus shall proue a husband man if vpon Lampides a Pylot if vpon Charidemus a Captaine if vpon Simon a skilfull rider if vpon Perdices a tauerner if vpon Crobylus a cunning cooke if vpon Archilaus a dauncer he that studieth Homer shall proue a Poet if Pyrrho a contentious wrangler if Demosthenes an oratour if Chrysippus a Logitian and he that is conuersant in Plato and Aristotle shall become a learned Philosopher so hee that obeyeth the Lord and dooth his will and meditateth vpon his word shall bee made according to the image of his maister and shall resemble his sanctitie and integritie Clemens Alexandrinus lib. 7. Strom. As seruants obey their maisters and wiues their husbands and the Church her Lord and the disciples their pastors so all men ought to bee subiect to the higher powers not onely for feare but for conscience Greg. Nazian oratione ad subditos tis more perculsos As we all are worthily angry with Adam because hee rather obeyed his wife then God so we shuld be angry with our selues because we rather studie to obey please our flesh and other creatures then God Bernardus ser 1. de omnibus sanctis As the legs do swiftly and willingly obey the motions of the soule in running hither and thither so man should be readie to obey the will of God in performing whatsoeuer he cōmandeth F. Ioannes a S. Geminiano li. 6 de homine membris eius ca. 46. Repentance AS hee is counted a madde foole that hauing many weightie burthens to be caried and many sufficient horses to carry them yet layeth all the burthens vpon one of the weakest and woorst horses the other being sent emptie away so is hee to bee counted a foole much more mad that imposeth the burthen of repentance to bee carryed of olde age sparing youth and manlie age and letting them goe emptie which are much stronger and farre more fitte to carrie then olde age olde age beeing scarce able to support her owne infirmities Lodouicus Granat lib. 1. Ducis peccatorum The repentance of wicked men fearing death is like that which sailers make when they are in daunger of shipwracke they promise to chaunge their liues and to embrace vertue in their extremitie but when the storme is ouerpast they returne to their former vomit and become worser then they were before making no account of their vowes and protestations yea reputing them as dreames and toyes Idem lib. 2. Ducis peccat As a thunderbolt lighting on a venemous serpent extinguisheth al the poison because it extinguisheth all the naturall moysture so the vertue of repentance extinguisheth wickednes in sinners and the poyson of sin F. Ioannes a S. Geminiano lib. 1. de coelo elementis cap. 60. As snow maketh the earth fat by shutting the pores of the same so repentance albeit it maketh the bodie leane yet it fatneth the soule by restraining the appetites of the flesh ibidem As snow couereth manie foule places so repentance couereth much infamie ibidem As the sea prouoketh vomit so repentance procureth abhomination of sinne ibidem As the sea bringeth headach so repentance bringeth remorse of conscience ibidem As the sand doth stay the violent rage of the sea that it cannot passe the bounds so repentance doth restraine the violence of sinne least man should transgresse the commandements of God ibidem As Aloes is bitter so is repentance Idem lib. 3. de vegetabilibus Plant. cap. 56. As Wormewood driueth Mise and Wormes from bookes and clothes so repentance driueth temptations from the soule and bitings from the conscience ibidem As Centorie is an herbe both bitter and sweere so is repentance bitter in meditation of Gods iudgements and sweete in embracing his mercies ibidem Truth AS a glasse doth make no representation of any picture except it be steeled or else vnderlaid with tinne brasse gold or
matter whereof thou wast made As the first Adam lost honor by pursuing and following it so the second Adam got honor by auoiding and eschewing it As the Iron must first be well heated in the fire ere it can be wrought by the hammer and driuen out on the anuile so cannot thy fame and name be honorably enlarged til they haue first suffred the strokes of many temptations and past through the fire of piercing trials The purest wine gets soonest into the heade which makes a wise Lorde or ruler of seruantes when hee sees any of his followers seeke to disorder themselues with drinking of the best wine that they shall abate the strength therof with water euen so is the will of God when fauour of men and worldly regarde doe trouble the sences and ouermaister our wittes that they shoulde be qualified with the water of more prouident respect namely those blames defects which depend vpon them When Antiochus entred the Temple he tooke away the lights the candlestickes euen so worldly fauor no sooner enter into our thoughts but it extinguisheth al light of knowledge of our selues As things caried aloft by the winde the wind no sooner ceaseth but they fall to the ground so it fares with them who without desert and by the fauor of men are highlie promoted when fauor slacketh down fals their dignity in a miserable case is he that hath no better assurance As the snowe in summer and as raine in haruest are not meet so is honor vnseemly for a foole As euery crown doth not become euery conqueror so euery honour doth not become euery man Plut. As a great Colossus and a huge statue ill poised are easily subuerted so too much honor through enuy doth ouerthrow many Plut. They that heape honours and glory vpon an euill man do giue wine to one sicke of a feuer hony to one oppressed with choler and meat to one troubled with morbus coeliacus which encrease the disease of his mind that is his foolishnes Plut. Nobilitie AS faith is very rich but without works quite deade so nobility is good but if not accompanied with vertue most base and infamous Stella de contemptu mundi As of one roote springeth both the Rose and the brier so of one mother may descend both a bad sonne and a good for a man may bee borne of a noble byrth and yet himselfe become vile and dishonorable ibidem As in fertill earth growes the Hemlock which is a venemous and deadly hearbe and in the barren growes the pure gold so oftentimes out of honorable houses issues degenerate minds out of base Stockes proceeds valorous thoughts ibidem As hee is a foole who hauing at all no beauty in him will neuerthelesse extoll his own beauty and perfection euen so as foolish is hee that beleeues himselfe to bee noble not hauing any part of nobility in him As of a bitter roote many times comes sweete and pleasant fruite so from a poore race may issue some to bee famous and noble by the vertuous behauiour which afterward shall renowme them ibidem As grosse clowdes couer the sun Moon and Starres and robs men of their celestiall splendour so the vices of them that are vertuously descended obscure the worthie actions of their famous forgoers Ibidem As brickes take their beginning from clay so nobility tooke her beginning from obscure parentage Gregorius Nyssenus apud Antonium monachum in Melissa As it nothing profiteth a muddy riuer to haue sprung from a pure fountaine so it nothing helpeth vicious children to haue descended from noble houses Hector Pin● tus in cap. 16. Ezechiel As he that is born a foole is born a slaue so hee that is borne a wise man is noblie borne And therefore Antisthenes saide very well that nobilitye did foly and onelie consist in vertue and wisdome whereupon the Stoikes concluded that only wise men were noble men As estimation many times springs from the foolish opinion of the people and not from desert so doth nobility Lodo. Viues in introductione ad Sapientiam cap. 3. As little Crab fishes do hide themselues in great empty shels that they may bee the more safe so some distrusting their own strength and vertue do protect themselues vnder the noble titles of their auncestors Erasmus As no bird can looke against the sunne but those that be bred of the Eagle neither any Hawke soare so high as the broode of the Hobby so for the most part none haue true sparks of heroicke maiestie but those that are descended from noble races As the wine that runneth on the lees is not therefore to be accompted neate because it was drawne of the same peece or as the water that springeth from the fountaynes heade and floweth into the filthie channell is not to bee called cleare because it came of the same streame so neyther is hee that descendeth of noble parentage if he desist from noble deedes to be esteemed a Gentleman in that he issued from the loynes of a noble Syre for that he obscureth the parents hee came of and discrediteth his owne estate The pure Corall is chosen as well by his vertue as his colour a king is knowne better by his courage then his crowne so a right Gentleman is sooner seene by the tryall of his vertue then blasing of his armes The Rose that is eaten with the Canker is not gathered because it groweth on that stalke that the sweet doth neither was Helen made a starre because shee came of that Egge with Castor so neither is he a true Gentleman that hath nothing to commend him but the nobilitie of his ancestours As it is a signe of true honour and nobilitie to reproue sinne so to renounce it is the part of honestie As no Thersites could bee transformed into Vlysses so no Alexander coulde bee couched in Damocles A good name FIre once kindled is easily kept but being extinct it is hardlie rekindled so it is an easie thing to maintaine a good name but being once lost it is not so easilie recouered Plutarchus in Moralibus Shippes well repayed doe endure manie yeares so wee must continuallye adde something to the propagation of our good names least time and age eate them out ibidem As a shadow sometimes goeth before and sometimes commeth after so some forthwith doe get good report and some haue it not till after death but he later that it commeth it is wont to be the greater Seneca As the famous monuments called Obelisci were long time in making and reared with much adoe by reason of their hugenesse c exceeding weight but being once finished they continued manie ages so it is a hard thing to get a name of vertue and wisedome but being once gotten it is neuer extinguished As in verie great Obeliskes almost as much is builded vnder the earth as is aboue that they may stand vnmoueable so a firme and sound foundation is to bee laid for the continuance of a perpetuall name As
in Oratorie so Orpheus Amphion and Linus surpassed in Musicke As Greece had these excellent Musitians Arion Dorceus Timotheus Milesius Chrysogonus Terpander Lesbius Simon Magnesius Philamon Linus Stratonicus Aristonus Chiron Achilles Clinias Eumonius Demodochus and Ruffinus so Englande hath these Maister Cooper Maister Fairfax Maister Tallis Master Tauerner Maister Blithman Maister Bird Doctor Tie Doctor Dallis Doctor Bull M. Thomas Mud sometimes fellow of Pembrook hal in Cambridge M. Edward Iohnson Maister Blankes Maister Randall Maister Philips Maister Dowland and M. Morley Sinne. AS he runneth far that neuer returneth so he sinneth deadly that neuer repenteth Porters and cariers when they are called to carry a burdē on their shoulders first they looke diligently vpon it then they peise and lift it vp trie whether they are able to vndergo it whether they cā cary it so before we sin we should cōsider whether we be able to cary the burthen of it that is the punishment which is hel fire Lodouic Granat lib. 1. Ducis peccat As the palate that is corrupted and distempered by ill humours cannot taste the sweetnesse of meate for that which is sweete seemeth bitter and that which is bitter sweete so a soule corrupted with the humours of vices and inordinate affections and accustomed to the flesh pots of Aegypt cannot tast Manna nor the bread of Angels Ibidem Euen as in a countrey where all are borne Aethiopians it is not an vgly thing to be blacke and as where all are drunke it is no ignominy nor slander to be drunke so the monstrous seruitude and slauerie of sinne because it is so familiar and common to the worlde scarsly is knowen or noted in any man Ibidem As swine are a certaine heard of beasts that delighte in myre and durte and are nourished with the basest and most vncleane meates so the filthy soules of sinners are delighted with no other thing except with the most filthy durte of carnall pleasures Ibidem As wine is marred by vineger and fruites are spoiled of wormes and euery contrary is corrupted of his contrarie so also all the powers of our soule are disturbed and infected through sinne which is an especiall enimie and most contrarie to our soules Ibidem Euen as adultery is the most contrary thing to mariage so that which is most contrary to a godly and vertuous life is sin ibidem Euen as the rootes of trees beeing cut vp the boughes and braunches which receiue life from the rootes doe forthwith wither and perish so those seauen capitall sinnes which are wonte to be termed the seauen deadly sinnes which are the generall and vniuersall rootes of all other vices being hewen in sunder and vtterly eradicated out of our soules sodainly al the vices will die which are deriued from them Idem lib. 2. ducis peccat As the comedies of Plautus and Terence are at this day the very same Comedies which they were a thousand yeares agoe albeit the persons that then acted them be chaunged so the same vices which in times past were in the men of this and that condition are now also although perhaps the names be somewhat changed Ibidem As deadly poyson speedily pearceth the hearte killeth the spirites and bringeth death so sinne killeth the soule and speedily bringeth it to destruction Ibidem It is saide that thunder bruseth the tree but breaketh not the barke and pearceth the blade and neuer hurteth the scabberd euen so doth sin wound the heart but neuer hurte the eies and infect the soule though outwardlie it nothing afflict the body As the deuill is the father of sinne so sin is the mother of death As a man comes into a house by the gate so death came into the world by sinne As a fire goeth out when all the fewell is spente but burneth as long as that lasteth so death dieth when sin ceaseth but where sin aboundeth there death rageth As cursed Cham laughed to see Noahs nakednesse so the deuil loues it alife to see vs sinne As pride is far off from him that repenteth so humility is farre off from him that sinneth Marcus Heremita de his qui putant ex operibus iustificari A young man in a tauerne seeing Diogenes fled through shame further into it nay sayes Diogenes the further thou flyest into it the more thou art in the tauerne so sinfull men the more they hide themselues within themselues the more they are that they are but they must come out of themselues if they desire to auoid them selues Plutarchus in Moralibus The fish Ephimera is bred without engendering of the putrifaction of the earth and within three houres after it is bredde it dieth so sinne is bred beyond the course and order of nature of the corruption of the appetite and is extinguished by the three parts of repentance contrition confession and satisfaction F. Ioannes a S. Geminiano lib. 4. de natalibus et volatil c. 62. Drinke doeth kill a mouse as Aristotle saith so doth sinne kill the soule Idem lib. 5. de animalibus terrestribus cap. 35. As a mule is engendered against the course of nature so is sin engendered not of nature but it is a vice and an enormitie of nature desiring that which is not of the same order Ibidem cap. 93. Olde age is full of misery which bringeth a corporall death so sinne is full of misery which bringeth eternall death Idem lib. 6. de homine et membris eius c. 52. As there bee seuen kindes of leprosie so there are 7. capitall sinnes Ibidem 53. The best way to kill a meteriall serpent is to kil him in the head so the best way to kill the spirituall serpente is to kill him in the head that is to kill sinne in the beginning Venerabilis Beda Kill a cockatrice when he is an egge and he will not bite thee so kill sinne in the beginning and it will not hurt thee As foxes are to be killed when they are cubs so sin is to be beaten downe when it is growing As the Babylonians children were to be dashed against the stones so sinne is to be nipped in the bud Psal 137. Pride AS violent waters are prone to often eruptions becomming shalowest within their ordinary channels so proude persons are euermore capable of higher dignities though not well able to exercise their present meane offices As windes blow most fiercely when they are about to cease so men when they are most proude as Pope Iulius and Cardinall Woolsey then they are nearest to destruction As God is angry at them that imitate the thunder and lightening and doeth cast them into hell as hee cast Salmoneus so hee doeth disdaine the proude and loftie minded who emulate his greatnesse but doe not expresse his goodnesse Plutarchus in Moralibus If thou wilt put any good thing into bladders thou must first remoue the winde and aire out of them so thou must take all pride and swelling out of his minde whome thou meanest to teach Ibidem