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A03207 The hierarchie of the blessed angells Their names, orders and offices the fall of Lucifer with his angells written by Tho: Heywood Heywood, Thomas, d. 1641.; Cecil, Thomas, fl. 1630, engraver. 1635 (1635) STC 13327; ESTC S122314 484,225 642

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time this Being not to be at all Nay thus he will not leaue it but proceeds For Ignorance an Insolence still breeds If to this God saith he no body's lent He then can haue no soule by consequent Hauing no soule all action hee 's depriv'd Or if he haue a body that 's deriv'd From substance therefore subiect vnto change Appeares not this as friuolous as strange To any Vnderstander Who but knowes That euery action of the body growes From the Intelligent Soule whose facultie Allowes it motion and dexteritie Therefore ô miserable Worme I can In this afford thee scarce the name of Man Ope but the eyes of Nature and looke out Meerely with them none else and thou no doubt Wilt find thy selfe's obfuscate and obscur'd So void of sens'ble light and so immur'd With palped darknesse to be blind at least And nothing diffring from th' irrational Beast And therefore that of Zenophantes may Be well confer'd on thee Heare him thus say Had Brutes the art of Painting they of force Must draw themselues a Horse figure a Horse An Asse or Mule their Like the reason why They 're capable of no sublimitie Beyond themselues nor haue further extension Than meerely their owne brutish apprehension Such childish and vnmomentary grounds These Atheists build vpon which whoso sounds But with the line of Reason shall descry Their irreligious fond impiety He that shall with himselfe exactly way Those grosse and absurd lies may soone display That they are arrogant full of vain-glory Irregular from truth and refractorie Vnlearn'd replenisht with all lust and vice Seducers Mockers full of Riotise Time-soothers Flat'rers perfidious all In word deed thought meere diabolicall Now these because themselues haue left the best And against Nature heinously transgrest Of the Creator hauing no respect And casting on their owne soules a neglect By ill example others would persuade That Diuine Lawes for policie were made That Hell 's a Bug-beare to keepe men in feare That Scriptures to that end deuised were Persuading others to eat drinke and play Since after death there is no further day To be Accountant in Their lusts to cherish Since that the Soule must with the body perish That Man was made vnto no other end Than please his appetite be his owne friend And That all euills euen with good things runne If politiquely and in priuat done Such are their actions and their liues but when They 're brought vnto the Test behold them then At the last gaspe most ready to catch hold Vpon the least hope durst they make so bold Looke on your father Aristotle the best And Ipse that Philosophy profest When vnto him who all strange Nouels sought 'Mongst others Moses his first booke was brought Cal'd Genesis Those few words hauing read God in the first beginning created The Heav'ns and Earth c. Away with this saith he 'T is full of fables and new fantasy That speakes of many things but nothing proues And that a true Philosopher not loues But drawing neere his end when he began More truly to consider What was man He into strange anxieties doth grow Whether the Soule immortall were or no His body trembles euery ioynt doth shake And these 't is said were the last words he spake Pollutedly into the world I came Sad and perplext I liv'd and from the same Much troubled I depart O pitty me Thou of all Beings onely knowne to Be. If from the wisest of you all this came Learne to know Him who onely writes I am He is Heav'ns King and Lord of Earth alone In Person three but yet in Godhead one Truly Omnipotent All-knowing and In Heav'n and Earth of soueraigne sole command His Nature simple bodilesse vnseene Vncirconscribed t' whom nothing hath beene Is or shall be superior vnderstood Great without quantitie without quality good Most perfect without blemish without Time Eternall in his potencie sublime Strength without Weaknesse Life without Decay Present each where and yet doth no where stay All things at once without aduice directing All things at once without least paine protecting He is without beginning and yet giues A First to each thing that subsists and liues Who hath made all things changeable yet He Stable and free from mutabilitie Himselfe without place all things else instating Without materials all his works creating In greatnesse infinite goodnesse incomparable In vertue strong wisedome inestimable So secret no man can deceiue his trust In Counsels terrible in Iudgements iust Copious in Mercy glorious in his Name Holy in all his Works alwaies The same Eternall Sempiternall Liuing-God Inchangeable in Essence or Aboad Whom Space cannot enlarge nor Place confine Constant in Purpose and in Act Diuine Him Need compells not nor can Chances sad Disturbe neither can Ioyfull things make glad Obliuion takes not nor can Memory add To him Vnborne to whom old Time can lend No ' ncrease at all nor casuall Chance giue end He before Worlds Those are and These must be Was Is and shall liue to Eternity Aboue all Apprehension Thought Opinion Therefore to Him be all Praise Power Dominion All singular Honour Glory with Congruity Of Saints Angels and Men to perpetuity Be ascrib'd with all the Attributes extending Through all vnwearied Worlds and without ending QVod Deus est scimus sed quid si scire velimus Vltra nos imus sed quod sit sumus imus Vltimus primus scimus plus scire nequimus ¶ The English That there 's a God we know But what he is to show Beyond our selues we go His Height and Depth below Him First and Last we know But more we cannot show THEOLOGICALL PHILOsophicall Morall Poeticall Historicall Emblematicall Obseruations to the further illustration of the former Tractate THat nothing in these short Tractates may appeare difficult to the Ignorant I hold it necessarie vnto my present purpose as willing to be vnderstood by all to illustrate whatsoeuer may seem obscure as well by Precept as Historie Which though the Learned may passe ouer as things to them familiar and well knowne yet vnto others neither frequent in reading nor well trauelled in language no doubt but some of our marginal Annotations with other particular Obseruations may in their carefull perusall benefit such as reade not onely for fashion but vse and make it not their pastime but their profit For that was the end to which industrious Authors first aimed their Indeauors and spent so much Inke and Oile in their daies labours and nights watchings Nor do I this without president and therefore am the more willing to pattern my selfe by example Atheisme and Impietie saith Cardanus Paschal is a meere contempt of Religion and therefore by consequence the Fountaine of Impietie and Breeder of all Calamitie The contempt of Diuine Worship is injustice against God our Parents and Countrey as aduerse to Reason as Goodnesse and all that are thereunto obnoxious either beleeue not
voluptuousnesse and pleasure yet was neuer knowne to be either diseased in body or disquieted in minde by any temporall affliction whatsoeuer Which being related vnto the Emperour he made this answer Euen hence we may ground that the Soules of men be immortal for if there be a God who first created and since gouerneth the World as both the Philosophers and Theologists confesse and that there is none so stupid as to deny him to be iust in all his proceedings there must then of necessitie be other places prouided to which the Soules of men must remoue after death since in this life we neither see rewards conferred vpon those that be good and honest nor punishments condigne inflicted vpon the impious and wicked Cicero in Caton Maior reporteth That Cyrus lying vpon his death bed said vnto his sonnes I neuer persuaded my selfe ô my Children that the Soule did liue whilest it was comprehended within this mortall body neither that it shall die when it is deliuered from this fleshly prison Anaxarchus being surprised by Nicocreon the Tirant of Cyprus he commanded him to be contruded into a stone made hollow of purpose and there to be beaten to death with iron hammers In which torments he called vnto the Tyrant and said Beat batter and bruise the flesh and bones of Anaxarchus but Anaxarchus himselfe thou canst not harme or damnifie at all The excellent Philosopher intimating thereby That though the Tyrant had power to exercise his barbarous and inhumane crueltie vpon his body yet his Soule was immortal and that no tyrannie had power ouer either to suppresse or destroy it Brusonius Lib. 2. Cap. 3. ex Plutarc Of lesse constancie was Iohannes de Canis a Florentine Physition of great fame for his practise who when out of the Principles of Mataesophia he had grounded the Soule to be mortal with the Body and in his frequent discourses affirmed as much yet when his last houre drew on he began to doubt within himselfe and his last words were these So now I shall suddenly be resolued whether it be so or no. Iohan. Bapt. Gell. Dialog de Chimaerico As ill if not worse Bubracius lib. 28. reporteth of Barbara wife to the Emperour Sigismund who with Epicurus placed her Summum Bonum in voluptuousnesse and pleasure and with the Sadduces beleeued no resurrection or immortalitie of the Soule but God and the Diuell heauen and hell equally diuided From the Philosophers I come now to the Poets Ovid lib. Metam 15. saith Morte carent Animae semperque priore relicta Sede novis domibus vivunt c. The Soules can neuer dye when they forsake These houses then they other Mansions take Phocilides the Greeke Poet Anima autem immortalis insenesibilis vivit per omne tempus i. For the Soule is immortall not subject vnto age but surviveth beyond the date of Time And Menander Melius est corpus quam Animam aegrotare i. Better it is for thee to be sicke in body than in Soule and howsoeuer thy Body fare be sure to physicke thy Soule with all diligence Propert. 4.7 Sunt aliquid manes let hum non omnia fiunt Luridaque evictos effugit vmbra rogas Sp'rites something are Death doth not all expire And the thin Shadow scapes the conquer'd fire The ingenious Poet Tibullus either inclining to the opinion of Pythagoras or else playing with it who taught That the soule after death did transmigrate and shift into the bodies of other persons and creatures we reade thus Quin etiam meatunc tumulus cui texerit ossa Seu matura dies fato proper at mihi mortem Longa manet seu vita c. When these my bones a Sepulchre shall hide Whether ripe Fate a speedy day prouide Or that my time be lengthned when I change This figure and hereafter shall proue strange Vnto my selfe in some shape yet vnknowne Whether a Horse of seruice I be growne Taught how to tread the earth or Beast more dull Of speed the glory of the herd a Bull Whether a Fowle the liquid aire to cut Or into what Mans shape this Spirit be put These Papers that haue now begun thy praise I will continue in those after-dayes Manl. lib. 4. de Astronom is thus quoted An dubium est habitare Deum sub pectore nostr● In coelumque redire Animas coeloque venire Who doubts but God dwells in this earthly Frame And Soules returne to Haev'n from whence they came And Lucretius we reade thus Cedit enim retro de terra quid fuit ante In terra sed quod missum est ex Etheris oris Id rursum Coeli fulgentia templa receptus c. That which before was made of earth the same Returnes backe vnto earth from whence it came But that which from th' aethereall parts was lent Is vp vnto those shining Temples sent I haue hitherto spoke of the two distinct parts of Man the Soule and the Body A word or two of Man in generall Homo Man is Anima Rationalis or Mortalis A Creature reasonable and mortall Not so denominated ab Humo as Varro would haue it for that is common with all other Creatures but rather of the Greeke word Omonoia that is Concordia or Consensus Concord or Con-societie because that Man is of all other the most sociable The Nobilitie of Man in regard of the sublimitie of his Soule is expressed in Genes 1. Let vs make Man after our owne Image and similitude c. The humility which ought to be in him concerning the substance whereof he was made Genes 2. The Lord made Man of the slime of the earth The shortnesse of his life Psal. 102. My dayes are declined like a shadow and I am as the Grasse of the field The multiplicitie of his miseries Gen. 3. In the sweat of thy browes shalt thou eat thy bread c. Gregory Nazianzen in Oration 10. vseth these words What is Man that thou art so mindefull of him What new miserie is this I am little and great humble and high mortall and immortal earthly and heauenly the first from this world the later from God the one from the Flesh the other from the Spirit Tertullian Apollogetic advers Gentil cap. 48. hath this Meditation Dost thou aske me how this dissolued Matter shall be again supplied Consider with thy selfe ô Man and bethinke thy selfe what thou wast before thou hadst Being Certainely nothing at all for if any thing thou shouldst remember what thou hadst beene Thou therefore that wast nothing before thou wert shalt againe be made nothing when thou shalt cease to be And why canst thou not againe from Nothing haue Being by the wil of the same Workeman whose will was That at the first thou shouldst haue existence from nothing What new thing shall betide thee Thou which wast not wert made when thou againe art not thou shalt be made Giue me if thou canst a reason how thou wert created at first and then thou
they Should so agree being 'mongst themselues at strife To giue to others what they haue not Life Haue they then from the Sun their generation Resolue me then what Countrey or what Nation Can shew his issue Haue they power innate As in themselues themselues to procreate If any of them tell me mongst them all Of what extension are they great or small In new discov'ries if after somewhile We touch vpon an vnfrequented Isle If there we sheds or cottages espy Though thatcht with Reed or Straw we by and by Say Sure men here inhabit 't doth appeare The props and rafters plac'd not themselues there Nor of their owne accord the reed or straw Themselues into that close integument draw Nor could the sauage beasts themselues inure Vnto a worke so formal and secure And you ô Fooles or rather Mad-men when You view these glorious Works which Beasts and Men So far from framing are that their dull sence Can neuer apprehend their eminence And do not with bent knees hearts strook with terror And eyes bedew'd with teares lament their error Submissiuely acknowledge their impiety And blasphemies 'gainst that inuisible Diety If but to what you see you would be loth To giue faith to In Plants a daily growth You all confesse but of you I would know When any of your eyes perceiv'd them grow In Animals we may obserue increase And euery member waxing without cease But when did euer your acutest eye Distinguish this augmenting qualitie Force vegetiue and sensatiue in Man There is with Intellect by which he can Discerne himselfe and others to this houre Tell me Who euer hath beheld that Power We with our outward sences cannot measure The depth of Truth nor rifle her rich treasure Let that Truths spirit then be our Director To bow vnto the worlds great Architector Or will you better with your selues aduise And beleeue those the antient Times held wise And not the least 'mongst these Th' AEgyptian Mages The Indian Brachmans and the Grecian Sages Ev'n these approv'd a God before Time liuing Maker Preseruer and all good things giuing The Poets and Philosophers no lesse In all their works ingeniously professe Theoginis Homer Hesiod Orpheus All Vpon this great Power inuocate and call To their Assistants In the selfe same line Rank't Plato and Pythagoras both Diuine Held for their reuerence done it Let these passe To speake of your great man Diagoras The Prince of Fooles of Atheisme the chiefe Master As was of Magicke the learn'd Zoroaster Peruse his Booke you in the Front shall reade These very words From a sole soueraigne Head All things receiue their Being and Dispose What more could he confesse Which the most knowes He on whose shrinking columes you erect The whole frame of your irreligious sect Holding the statue of Alcides then Numb'red amongst the deified men It being of wood To take away the glory From Idols in a frequent auditorie Of his owne Scholers cast it in the fire Thus speaking Now god Hercules expire In this thy thirteenth Labour 't is one more Than by thy stepdame was enioyn'd before To her being man thou all thy seruice gaue Thou now being god I make thee thus my slaue The Atheist Lucian held Gods Sonne in scorne And walking late by dogs was piece-meale torne Yet for the loue I to his learning owe This funerall Farewell I on him bestow Vnhappy Lucian what sad passionate Verse Shall I bestow vpon the marble stone That couers thee How shall I deck thy Herse With Bayes or Cypresse I do not bemone Thy death but that thou dy'dst thus Had thy Creed As firme been as thy wit fluent and high All that haue read thy Works would haue agreed To haue transfer'd thy Soule aboue the sky And Sainted thee But ô 't is to be doubted The God thou didst despise will thee expell From his blest place since thou Heav'n hast flouted Confine thy Soule into thine owne made Hell But if thou euer knew'st so great a Dietie A Sauiour who created Heauen and thee And against him durst barke thy rude impietie He iudge thy cause for it concernes not me But for thy Body 't is most iust say I If all that so dare barke by Dogs should dy Thus saith the Atheist Lo our time is short Therefore our few dayes let vs spend in sport From Death which threatneth vs no Power can saue And there is no returning from the graue Borne are we by meere chance a small time seen And we shall be as we had neuer been Our breath is short our words a sparke of fire Rais'd from the heart which quickly doth expire And then our bodies must to dust repaire Whilest life and spirit vanish into aire We shall be like the moving Cloud that 's past And we must come to nothing at the last Like Dew exhal'd our names to ruine runne And none shall call to mind what we haue done Our Time is as a shadow which doth fade And after death which no man can euade The graue is seal'd so fast that we in vaine Shall hope thence euer to returne againe Come then the present pleasures let vs tast And vse the Creatures as in time forepast Now let vs glut our selues with costly wine And let sweet ointments in our faces shine Let not the floure of life passe stealing by But crowne our selues with Roses e're they dy Our wantonnesse be counted as a treasure And in each place leaue tokens of our pleasure For that 's our portion we desire no more Let vs next study to oppresse the Poore If they be righteous nor the Widow spare Deride the Ag'd and mocke his reuerend haire Our strength make Law to do what is iniust For in things feeble't is in vaine to trust Therefore the good man let 's defraud for he We know can neuer for our profit be Our actions in his eies gets no applause He checks vs for offending 'gainst the Lawes Blames vs and saith We Discipline oppose Further he makes his boasts That God he knowes And calls himselfe his Sonne Hee 's one that 's made To contradict our thoughts quite retrograde From all our courses and withall so crosse We cannot looke vpon him without losse He reckons vs as Bastards and withdrawes Himselfe from vs nor will he like our Lawes But counts of them as filthinesse The ends Of the iust men he mightily commends And boasts God is his father Let 's then see If any truth in these his words can be And what end he shall haue For if th' Vpright Be Sonnes of God hee 'l aid them by his might With harsh rebukes and torments let vs then Sift and examine this strange kinde of Men To know what meeknesse we in them can spy And by this means their vtmost patience try Put them to shamefull death bee 't any way For they shall be preserv'd as themselues say Thus do they go
Alexander the Great Who sending to the Oracle of Delphos to know what should futurely betide him Answer was returned that his life should continue for a long season if it were not endangered by a Chariot Whereupon the King gaue strict and expresse commandement That all the Chariots within his kingdome should be pluckt in pieces and no further vse to be made of them and that no new ones should be after made neither would hee come neere vnto places that had any reference or relation to such a name Notwithstanding all his preuention hee was soone after slaine by Pausonias who wore at that time a sword which had a Chariot grauen vpon the pommell Dioclesian a man of a base and obscure parentage in Dalmatia serued as a common soldier in France and elsewhere vnder diuers and sundry Emperors Vpon a time reckoning with his Hostesse of the house wherein he was billited who was one of the sooth-saying Druides she told him that he was too penurious and did not beare the noble minde of a Souldier To whom he made answer That hee then reckoned with her according to his poore meanes and allowance and merrily added That if euer hee came to be made Emperor of Rome he would then shew himself much more bountifull To whom first looking stedfastly in his face she replied Souldier thou hast spoken truer than thou art aware of for after thou hast killed one Aper which signifieth a Boare thou shalt be made Caesar semper Augustus and weare the Imperiall Purple Dioclesian smiled and receiued it from her as a deli●ement or scoffe because hee had before bated her of her reckoning Yet after that time hee tooke great delight in the hunting and killing of Boares But diuers Emperors succeeding one another and he finding little alteration in his fortune hee was frequently wont to say I still kill the Boares but there be others that eat the flesh Yet in processe of time it happened that a potent man called Aper hauing married the sister of the Emperour Numerianus layd violent hands vpon his brother in law and most traiterously slew him For which facinerous act being apprehended by the souldiers and brought into that part of the Army where Dioclesian was who by reason of his long seruice was had in reputation with the prime Commanders the souldiers now demanding what should be done with the Traitor it was concluded amongst them that he should be at Dioclesians dispose who presently demanding of him his name and he answering Aper without further pause he drew his sword vttering these words And this Aper or Boare shall be added to the rest presently ranne him through the body and slew him Which done the soldiers commending it for an act of justice without further deliberation saluted him by the name of Emperor I haue read in the Chronicle of France concerning one of the French Henries That Gonvarus an Italian Astrologer hauing calculated his Natiuitie wrote vnto him about fiue yeares before the strange disaster of his death happened That the Starres and Planets threatned him in the one and fortieth yeare of his age with a dangerous wound in the head by which he should be strooke either blinde or dead and therefore aduised him to beware of tilts tourneys or any the like violent exercises for the space of that yeare Notwithstanding which in the predicted yeare at the solemne and pompous celebration of his Sisters mariage with the young King of Spaine after hee had three dayes together with great successe and generall applause demeaned himselfe in those Chiualrous exercises of Tilt and Barriers though hee was much persuaded by the Queene and entreated by the Lords after the breaking of many staues to giue ouer yet nothing could preuaile with him insomuch that in the very later end of the day when most of the Spectators were risen and departed out of the Tilt-yard he called to the Count Montgomerie Captain of his Guard earnestly importuning that he would runne one course more with him Which when hee sought by all meanes possible to excuse pretending many vnwilling delayes he tooke a speare and thrust it into his hand compelling him to another encounter in which he was most vnfortunately slaine by a splinter of the staffe that entring at the sight of his beauer pierced his braine and so concluded the great solemnitie with his owne lamentable Tragedie Before this accident happened in the beginning of the triumph one Nostrodanus told vnto diuers of the Kings seruants in secret that the King would be in great danger of death before the Tournament was fully finished And which is most remarkable a Merchants sonne of Paris a childe of about six yeares old not fully seuen being brought thither that day by his father and mother to see the Tilting at euery course the King ranne hee was heard to cry out aloud They will kill the King ô they will kill the King Plato was of opinion That children are no sooner born but they haue one of those Spirits to attend them which doth first copulate and conioyne the soule vnto the body and after being grown vnto some maturitie teach instruct and gouerne them The Academiques held That Spirits behold all mens actions and assist them that they know all our apprehensions and cogitations and when the Soule is deliuered from the Body they bring it before the high Iudge That they are questioned about our good or bad actions their testimonie being much preualent either to excuse or aggrauate That also they are vigilant ouer vs either sicke or in health waking or sleeping and especially in the very article and point of death oftentimes inspiring the parting Soule with a diuination surpassing all humane knowledge For instance Pheceredes Cyrus being vpon his death bed predicted victorie against the Magnesians which fell out accordingly And Possidonius telleth vs That a Rhodian dying nominated six men and told who should die first who second who third and so in order till he came to the last Neither did he any way faile in his prediction Porphirius was of opinion That not one onely but many Spirits or Genij had the charge of one and euery man one hauing care ouer his health another indulgent ouer his beauty and feature another to infuse into him courage and constancie c. But Iamblicus was of a contrarie assertion affirming That many needed not when one being of so pure and refined a nature was sufficient Some haue affirmed Spirits to be of diuers qualities therefore to worke in men according to their owne dispositions diuers effects Affirming That those AEthereall or Fierie stirre vp men to contemplation the Airy to the businesse and common affaires of this life the Waterie to pleasure the Earthy to base and gripple auarice So likewise the Martiall Spirits incite vs to fortitude the Ioviall to prudence the Venereall to lust the Mercuriall to policie and wisedome the Lunarie to fertilitie and plenty
doth deuise Touching the Angels First saith he the Deuill Was made of Fire pestiferous and euill The glorious Spirits Attendants on the Throne And faithfull Ministers to God alone For euer seated in that blessed Bowre Haue Wings some two some three and others foure Making of this as confident relation As had he present been at the Creation And of these Two attending on the Throne Of the great God Almighty Maroth one Haroth another were from Heav'n downe sent With full Commission to haue gouernment Or'e all Mankinde not onely to conduct them In their affaires but tutor and instruct them With these prouiso's neuer to incline Either to Kill Iudge rashly or Drinke Wine All which of long time hauing strictly kept In the plainerode and to no by-path stept It chanc'd in processe an offending Wife Did with her peruerse husband fall at strife A day of hearing bee'ng appointed she Inuites vnto a banquet cunningly These two impartiall Iudges ' sore them plac'd Right costly Cates made both for shew and taste But sauc'd with wine which was vnknowne to them And by this close and crafty stratagem Spurring them on with courteous welcome still Their pallats being pleas'd they bad her fill In plenteous cups to them till both in fine Were much distemper'd and or'come with Wine And in this heate lust breaking into fire They then to'adulterate her bed desire To which she yeelds vpon condition they Will teach her Characters by which she may Be lifted to those heav'ns aboue the Sun And without let behold what 's therein done And after that she may haue free transmission Downe to the earth and that with expedition They grant to her and she to them applies The words no sooner spoke but vp she flies Where seene and question'd how she thither came She opens the whole matter just the same As was before related but for feare She should disclose on earth the Glories there Shee soone was chang'd into a fulgent Star In light excelling others ev'n as far As when in life below she did remaine Her lustre did inferior Beauties staine Now after this the Angels were conuented Who waking from their drowsinesse repented Of their vaine folly and with terror great Were brought to answer at the Iudgement Seat The fault confest the processe and the ground With euery circumstance this grace they found To haue after discussion in the close What punishment they would themselues impose Betwixt this World and th' other to endure Who made choice in iron chaines to be bound sure And haue both heads and bodies drown'd in mud● In a most putrid Lake call'd Bebel floud One grosse thing more to these I 'le adde and than To his perdition leaue this brain-sicke Man Further he saith● In the last dreadfull day Th'Angell of Death that 's Adriel call'd shall slay All Soules then liuing And that slaughter past Fall on his owne sword and so die the last And when all liuing creatures are destroy'd The world shall forty yeares● stand after void Infinite are his most blasphemous Fictions And eachwhere interlac't with contradictions As in feign'd Miracles the generall Doome The dissolution that is yet to come Concerning these a question may arise Whether these sottish and most fabulous Lies More fondly by this Iugler were conceated Or by Mad-folke beleev'd and thereby cheated Now something touching the arch-Heresies Of the Priscillians and the Manechies Of whom thus briefely They nor blush nor feare To write and teach That two Beginnings were Of vniuersall Nature Good and Bad The one of cherefull Light the other sad Darkenesse the Author Of which they retaine Th' essence within themselues and from these fa●gne A God and Diuell And that all things made From these Materials their condition had Of Good and Euill Both the Sects agreeing That from the better Good the World had Being Yet they say further That the mixture knit Of Good and Bad insep'rable in it From these two opposit Natures doth arise And therefore in their fancies they deuise Fiue Elements to either There 's assign'd Smoke Darkenesse Fire the Water and the Winde To the Bad Nature out of Smoke they bring All two leg'd Creatures and thence Man to spring They further fable and from Darkenesse breed Dragons and Serpents with all Reptile seed Foure-footed Beasts from Fire they procreate From Water Fish Fowles from Winde generate The number of the Elements are fiue Which from the Better Nature they deriue Oppos'd to these Aire from the Smoke they draw Light out of Darknesse by the selfe same law Fire needfull from Fire hurtfull Water thus Vsefull from what 's Disaduantagious From Windes contagious Windes of healthfull vse And betwixt these there can be made no Truce They likewise trifle That all difficultie To'attaine vnto the true Felicitie Consists in separating th' Ills contagion From the Goods purer nature Which persuasion Yet leads them further That since these two first Pow'rfull Beginnings term'd the Best and Worst Are at perpetuall discord hence should breed Of War that natiue and intestine seed Betwixt the Flesh and Spirit in which Strife None 's capable of euerlasting life But such as the Good Nature can diuide From that contagion which the Bad doth guide They say That to the Light pur'd and refin'd Two shapes from Gods pure nature are assign'd Namely the Sun and Moone and these conuey That perfect splendor which enlights for aye The heav'nly Kingdome and most glorious Seat Of High Iehovah who 's the onely Great And Pow'rfull hauing the sole domination His Mansion being their blest habitation They feigne Our Grandfire and great-Grandame Eve Which none of common Reading can beleeue Of Sacla Prince of Smoke were form'd and made That by the Serpent he who first betrayd Those our first Parents Christ himselfe was meant Who bad them taste the Apple to th' intent That they the Good from what was Ill might know And that his body meerely was in show Phantasticall not Reall That the Trine Sent him to saue the Soule that was Diuine But not the Flesh and Body because they Were made of impure stuffe Dust Earth and Clay Of which Absurds I 'le make no more narration Vnworthy mention much more confutation ¶ Tribus modis in veritate peccatur 1. Veritatem prae timore tacendo 2. Veritatem in mendatium comutando 3. Veritatem non defendendo Chrisost. Explicit Metrum Tractatus quinti. Theologicall Philosphicall Poeticall Historicall Apothegmaticall Hierogliphicall and Emblematicall Obseruations touching the further illustration of the former Tractat. TThe Consimilitudes and Concordances betweene the seuerall degrees of Angels and the Heauens and Planets I doubt not but is sufficiently manifested Whosoeuer desireth to be further more fully instructed in the Motions and courses of the Spheres I refer him to peruse Iun. Higinus Libertus his Poëticon Astronomicon where hee discourseth learnedly of the World the Spheres the Centre the Axis the Zodiacke Circle Earth Sea c. of Ar●tos Maior
shooes could water tred And neuer hasard drowning The like fame Another that Othimius had to name Behinde him left Hadingus King of Danes Mounted vpon a good Steed by the raines Th' Inchanter tooke and crosse the main sea brought him Safe whilest in vaine the hot pursuer sought him Oddo the Danish Pyrat by the aid Of the like Sp'rits whole Nauies durst inuade And with his Magicke Charmes could when he please Raise mighty stormes and drowne th●m in the seas At length by one of greater practise found Aiming at others Wracke himselfe was drown'd Some Authors vnto this accursed Tribe Of watry Daemons Deluges ascribe And flux of waters Such we reade were knowne Whilest Damasus was Pope when ouerthrowne Were many cities in Sicilia And By Historiographers we vnderstand The like chanc'd in Pope Alexanders dayes In Italy afflicting diuers wayes Both losse of beasts and great depopulation In Charles the fifts time by an Inundation Happend in Holland Zeeland Friseland these Had their maritime shores drown'd by the seas In Poland neere Cracovia chanc'd the same And in one yeare if we may credit Fame In Europ besides Townes and Cities then Perisht aboue fiue hundred thousand men To these belong what we call Hydromantia Gastromantia Lacomantia Pagomantia Touching the Spirits of the Earth there bee Of diuers sorts each knowne in his degree As Genij the Domesticke gods and those They Lares call Spectars Alastores Larvae Noone-Diuels Syluanes Satyrs Fawnes And they frequ●nt the Forrests Groues and Lawnes Others th' Italians F'oletti call Paredrij there are too yet these not all Now what these Genij are Philostratus Eunapius Athenaeus Maximus With all the other Platonicks profest Them to be Sp'rits of men before deceast Who had they liv'd a good life and vnstain'd By licence of th' Infernall Pow'rs obtain'd In their owne houses to inhabit still And their posteritie to guard from ill Such they call'd Lares But all those that lead Liues wicked and debosht they being dead Wandred about the earth as Ghosts exil'd Doing all mischiefe such they Larvae stil'd And of this kinde that Spirit we may guesse Remembred in the booke of Socrates Who in the shape o● Moses did appeare The space togethe● of one compleat yeare I' th Isle of Creet persuading with the Iewes There liuing That he such a meanes would vse That if they met at a fixt day with ease He would traject them dry-foot through the seas To which they trusting by appointment meet All who that time were resident in Creet And follow their false Captaine lesse and more Ev'n to the very margent of the shore Then turning tow'rds them in a short oration Bespeakes them thus O you the chosen nation Behold as great a wonder from my hand As your fore-fathers did from Moses Wand Then with his finger points vnto a place 'Twixt them and which a Creeke ran no great space And seeming shallow All of you now fling Your selues saith he and follow me your King Into this sea swim but to yonder strand And you shall then arriue vpon a land From whence I will conduct you ev'ry man Dry-foot into a second Canaan He plungeth first they follow with one minde In hope a second Palestine to finde But hauing past their depths the rough windes blew When this Seducer straight himselfe withdrew Leaues them to ruin most of them bee'ng drown'd Some few by fish-boats sav'd he no wher● found With these the Spectars in some points assent Bee'ng tow'rds Mankinde alike maleuolent Whose in-nate malice nothing can asswage Authors of death depopulation strage By Origen they are Alastares nam'd By Zoroaster bloudy and vntam'd Concerning which the learned mens opinion Is That Abaddon hath of them dominion What time Iustinian did the Empire sway Many of these did shew themselues by day To sundry men both of good braine and sence After which follow'd a great Pestilence For to all such those Spectars did appeare It was a certaine signe their death drew neare King Alexander of that name the third That reign'd in Scotland if Boethius word May be beleev'd by match himselfe ally'de With England tooke Ioanna to his Bride Sister to the third Henry She bee'ng dead And issuelesse he after married Marg'ret his daughter Did on her beget Prince Alexander David Margaret These dying in their nonage and she too With sorrow as most thinke the King doth woo Iolanta the faire daughter as some say Vnto the great Earle of Campania Being as 't seemes most ardently inclin'd After his death to leaue some heire behind In the mid Reuels the first ominous night Of their espousals when the roome shone bright With lighted tapers the King and the Queene leading The curious Measures Lords and Ladies treading The selfe same straines the King looks backe by chance And spies a strange intruder fill the dance Namely a meere Anatomy quite bare His naked limbes both without flesh and haire As we decipher Death who stalks about Keeping true measure till the dance was out The King with all the rest afrighted stand The Spectar vanisht and then strict command Was giv'n to breake vp reuels each 'gan feare This Omen and presage disaster neere If any aske What did of this succeed The King soone ●fter falling from his Steed Vnhappily dy'de After whose death ensuing Was to the land sedition wracke and ruin The Syluanes Fawnes and Satyrs are the same The Greekes Paredrij call the Latines name Familiar Spirits who though in outward shew They threat no harme but seeme all good to owe Poore ambusht mankinde though their crafty Mines And snares do not appeare by ev'dent signes Yet with malicious hate they are infected And all their deeds and counsels are directed To make a faire and flatt'ring preparation Vnto the bodies death and soules damnation And of these Spirits as Macrobius saith The mount Pernassus in aboundance hath Neere to mount Hecta And Olaus writes The like appeare most frequently by nights And verbally deliuer kinde commends To men from their deceast and shipwrackt friends Vsing their helpe one Iohn Teutonicus By Acromaticke Magicke sported thus This Iohn was knowne a bastard and yet had Great fame for learning who in Halberstad Had for his worth admittance to a place Where none but the Nobilitie had grace To be in Commons yet it seemes so great Was his repute with them he sate and eat But yet with small content the yong men proud Of their high noble births much disallow'd His company and tooke it in great scorne To sit with one though learn'd yet basely borne And whether they were serv'd with flesh or fish His bastardy was sauce still in his dish But skil'd in hidden Arts I will thought he Some sudden means deuice henceforth to free My selfe from all their scoffes and taunts Hee then Inuites vnto his chamber those yong men Who most seem'd to oppose him feasts
her sonne Itis begot by her husband Tereus The Daiedes or Danaes daughters of Danaus for cutting the throats of their husbands and kinsmen the sonnes of AEgiptus The Lemniades or women of Lemnos who in the same Island most cruelly slew their sonnes and fathers Harpalice the daughter of Climenus who killed the childe which her incestuous father begot on her owne body Tullia the daughter of Servius King of the Romans who caused her chariot to be drawne ouer the body of her dead father for the horridnesse of which fact the street in the citie Rome where this was done was called Vicus sceleratus Of those abhorred for Incestuous congresse the most remarkable were Iocasta who had issue by her sonne Oëdipus and Pelopaea by her father Thiestes Harpalice with her Sire Climenus c. Some are to this day made infamous for killing their husbands As Clitemnestra the daughter of Thestius for conspiring with Egistus in the murder of her Lord Agamemnon the son of Atreus Iliona the daughter of Priam for killing her husband Polymnestor K. of Thrace Semyramis Queen of Babylon for the death of Ninus King of Assyria Helena after the death of Paris Deiphebus the sonne of Priam. Agave her husband Lycothersis in Illyria and Deianeira for sending the poysonous Shirt to her Lord Hercules of Lybia c. Others for killing their wiues As the same Hercules his wife Megara the daughter of Creon King of Thebes Theseus Antiopa the Amazon and daughter of Mars Cephalus the son of Deionis or of Mercury Procris the daughter of Pandion by his vaine jelousie c. Fathers for killing their daughters As Agamemnon the great General of the Grecian Army in their famous expedition against Troy who sacrificed his daughter Iphigenia to the goddesse Diana Climenus the sonne of Oeneus slew his daughter Harpalice because she killed her child and serued it in vnto him at a banquet Hyacinthus his daughter Spariantides vpon an answer returned from the Athenians Erichthaeus the sonne of Pandion his daughter Colophonia vpon the like occasion Cercyon the sonne of Vulcan his daughter Alopes for committing incest with Neptune AEolus his daughter Canace for the like done with her brother Mallaraeus c. Of mothers that most cruelly and vnnaturally haue murthered their owne children we reade That Medea the daughter of O●tes King of Colchos slew her two sonnes Machareus Pherelus begot by Iason Progne the daughter of Pandion killed her son It is which she had by Tereus Ino the daughter of Cadmus yong Melicertes begat by Athamas the sonne of AEolus Althaea the daughter of Thestius Meleager by Oeneus the sonne of Partha●n Themisto the daughter of Hypseus Plinthius and Orchomenes her two sonnes by Athamas Tyros the daughter of Salmoneus two sonnes begot by Sisiphus the sonne of Eolus Agave the daughter of Cadmus Penthaus the sonne of Echion at the imposition of Liber Pater c. So likewise of Selfe-murtherers Egeus the sonne of Neptune and father of Theseus cast himselfe headlong into the sea from whose death it still retaines the name of Mare Egeum i. the Egean sea Euhemus the sonne of Hercules precipitated himselfe into the riuer Lycorma which is now called Chrysorroas Aiax the sonne of Telamon slew himselfe for the losse of Achilles his armor Lycurgus the sonne of Briantus being strooke with madnesse by Liber Pater laid violent hands vpon himselfe Agrius the son of Parthaon being expulsed from his kingdome by Diomedes King of AEtolia slew himselfe So Ceneus the sonne of Elatus Menicus the father of Iocasta or as some call him Menaetis precipitated himselfe from the walls of Athens Nisus the son of Mars hauing lost his purple locke cast himselfe vpon his sword and so died As likewise Climenus the sonne of Coeneus King of Arcadia after he had committed incest with his daughter Cyniras the sonne of Paphus King of Assyria after hee had committed the like with his owne naturall childe Hercules cast himselfe into the fire and so perished Adrastus with his sonne Hipponous did the like Pyramus the Babylonian slew himselfe for the loue of Thisbe And Oedipus the sonne of Laius destroyed his owne life for hauing incestuous Issue by his mother whose name was Iocasta c. Of Women that so dispairingly died these Hecuba the wife of Priam cast her selfe into the sea as Ino the daughter of Cadmus did the like with her sonne Melicertus Anticlia the mother of Vlysses and daughter of Antolychus strangled her selfe because she heard a false rumour of her sonnes death The like did Stoenobaea the daughter of Iobates and wife of King Praetus for the loue of Bellerephon Evadne the daughter of Philacus because her husband Capaneus was slaine at Thebes cast her selfe into the same funeral fire in which his body was burned AEthra the daughter of Pythaus for the death of her children Iliona for the death of her parents Themisto for her children Erigone for her father Phedra for the incestuous loue borne to her step-sonne Hyppolitus Phyllis for Demophoon Calypso daughter to Atlas for the loue of Vlysses Dido the daughter of Belus for AEneas c. Time would sooner faile me than Historie yet these I haue introduced to this purpose to shew That Atheisme and want of the true knowledge of God hath bin the cause of so many Murthers and Incests hath made so many Parracides and Fratricides and indeed hath beene the ground of all prodigious acts and inhumanities whatsoeuer Something is requisit to be spoken of Idolatry The word is deriued from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Cultus and Colo The definition thereof is Cultus Deo debitus Creaturae exhibitus i. The worship that is due onely to God conferre vpon the Creature An Idol is when any Statue or Image in which either some Deitie or any other thing shall stand for a Power a Patron Protector or Sauiour is represented and worshipped Of which kind was the golden Calfe Basil saith vpon the third of Esay What thing can appeare more vain and ridiculous than for a man to professe himselfe to be the workeman of his God and Maker To shew how abhominable Idolatry was in the eyes of the Almighty I will only quote you one place out of many in the holy Text Take therefore good heed vnto your selues for you saw no Image in the day that the Lord spake to you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire that you corrupt not your selues nor make you a grauen Image or representation of any figure whether it be likenesse of male or female the likenesse of any beast that is on the earth or of any feathered fowle that flieth in the aire or of any thing that creepeth on the earth or of any fish that is in the waters beneath the earth And lest thou lift vp thine eyes to heauen and when thou seest the Sunne the
of the Swanne aboue whose wings the Horse extenderh his hoofe and aboue the Horse Aquarius is listed and neere vnto him Capricornus Vnder the feet of Aquarius lieth the great Austriue Fish Before Cephaeus Cassiopeia and Perseus extendeth his foot vnto the backe of the Charioter Ouer the head of Perseus Cassiopeia is seene to walke Betwixt the Swanne and him that resteth vpon his knee the Harpe is placed in middest of whom aboue from the East the Dolphine is seene vnder whose taile is discouered the AEgle and the next vnto her is the Serpentarie Hauing spoke of the Boreal Circle wee come now vnto the Austral Vnder the sting of the Scorpion is the Altar placed and vnder his body the fore-parts of the Sagittarie are seene so farre as he is Beast his hinder foot is eminent in another part of the Australl Circle Neere to the Centaures priuy parts the taile of Hydra and the Crow At the knees of the Virgin is placed the Vrne vpon the left hand of Orion which is also called Incola Fluvius which some stile Padus others Eridamus lieth vnder the feet of Orion The Hare is next seene to shine with great refulgence and iust at his heeles Laelaps or the Dog with extraordinarie brightnesse behinde whose taile Argoë or the Ship hath station Orion stretcheth his hand towards the foot of the Bull and with his feet comes very neere to the Gemini The backe part of the Dog is aboue the head of the Ramme and the Deltoton or Triangle not far from the feet of Andromeda The Whale is beneath Aries and Pisces and the connexion of the two Fishes haue one common star c. Of the twelue Coelestiall Signes I haue spoken sufficiently already but of the other Stars in which I haue been very briefe it shall not be amisse to giue some of them a more large expression Of Draco or the Dragon we reade Caesar Germanicus thus Immanis Serpens sinuosa volumina torquet Hinc atque hinc superatque illas mirabile monstrum c. This Dragon of immense magnitude was appointed by Iuno to be the sleeplesse keeper of the Orchard wherin the Hesperian Apples grew whom Hercules in his aduenture to fetch thence the golden Apples as Pannaces Heracleus relateth slew and bore them thence To the perpetuall memorie of which facinerous act Iupiter translated both him and the Dragon into the Stars both in the same postures according to the successe of the fight the Dragon with his head cut off and he leaning vpon one knee his arms extended vpwards and his right foot stretched towards the Monster And therefore he is said to hold the skinne of the Nemaean Lion in his left hand for a perpetuall memory that naked and vnarmed he slew him singly in the forrest Inde Helicen sequitur senior baculoque minatur Se velle Artophilax c. Bo●tes called also Auriga and Artophilax is said to be the Keeper or driuer of the Chariot which is the Septentriones Some report him to be Archas the sonne of Iupiter from whom the Prouince of Arcadia had after it's denomination Him Lycaon the sonne of Pelasgus entertaining Iupiter at a banquet caused to be cut in pieces and his limbs being cook'd after sundry fashions to be serued in to the table of purpose to proue whether he were a god or no. At which barbarous inhumanitie Iupiter iustly incensed burnt vp his pallace with lightning from heauen and after built there a city which was called Trapezos Lycaon he transhaped into a Wolfe and caused the dismembred limbes of Archas to be gathered together which hauing re-vnited he breathed in them new life and after committed him to a certain Goat-heard to be educated and brought vp Who after meeting his mother in the Forrest not knowing her would haue rauished for which the inhabitants of the Lycaean mount would haue slain him But Iupiter to free them both transfer'd them to the Stars where they are knowne by the name of the great and lesser Beare Him Homer calls Bootes Clara Ariadneae propius stant signa Coronae Hunc illi Bacchus thalami memor addit honorem It is said to be Ariadnes Crowne which Liber Pater or Bacchus caused to haue place amongst the stars which he presented vnto her at their espousals in the Isle of Creet But he who writes the Cretan historie saith That when Bacchus came to King Minor to demand his daughter in marriage hee presented vnto her that Crowne made by Vulcan in Lemnos the materials whereof were onely gold and pretious fulgent gems of such maruellous splendor that it lighted and guided Theseus through the intricate and darke Labyrinth Which was not translated into the Heauens til after their being in Naxos Isle It is still seene to shine with many splendant stars vnder the taile of the Lion Tempora laeva premit parti subiecta Draconis Summa genu subversa tenet qua se Lyra volvit The Harpe is said to haue place amongst the Stars for the honour of Mercury who made the first after the figure of a Tortois with seuen strings according to the number of the Pleiades daughters to Atlas which after he presented to Apollo Some attribute the inuention thereof to Orpheus by reason that hee was son to Calliope one of the Muses and composed it of nine strings suting with their number The musicke thereof was said to be of such sweetnesse that it attracted the eares of beasts and birds nay of trees and stones Moreouer it so preuailed ouer the Infernall Powers that by it he recouered his wife Euridice from hell Hee adoring Apollo more than any other of the gods and neglecting Liber Pater who honoured him the god being grieuously incenst against him whilest he was one day sitting on the mountain Pangoeus waiting for the Sun-rising Bacchus stirred vp the Bacchanalian women against him who with barbarous violence falling vpon him plucked him asunder limbe from limbe for so Eschilus writes the pieces of his body being after collected were buried in the Lesbian mountains and his Harpe after his death bestowed vpon Musaeus at whose entreatie Iupiter placed it amongst the Stars Cygnus de thalamis candeus qui lapsus adulter Furta Iovis falsa volucer sub imagine texit The Swanne was therefore said to haue place in the Firmament because Iupiter transfiguring himselfe into that shape flew into a part of the Atticke region and there comprest Nemesis who was also called Laeda for so saith Crates the Tragicke Poet. She was deliuered of an egge which being hatched brought forth Helena but because Iupiter after the act was done flew backe againe into heauen in the same shape he left the figure thereof amongst the Stars c. Cepheus extremam tangit Cynosurida Caudam Cepheus according to Euripides and others was King of AEthiopia who exposed his
of issue the Saturnine to dissuade from all things that be euill Such was that Socraticum Daemonium or Genius of Socrates which still continued and encouraged him in the studie an practise of Vertue whose condition was to dissuade him from many things but to persuade him to nothing Of this Daemonium strange things are reported in Historie as that it was euer at his elbow to diuert him from doing euill and to aduise him to shun and auoid danger to remember him of things past to explaine vnto him things present and reueale vnto him things future Socrates himselfe confessed that hee saw it sometimes but seldome yet heard it often He dissuaded Charmiades the sonne of Glaucus from going to the Groues of Nemaea and to excuse himselfe from that journey who despising his counsell perished in the aduenture Vpon a time sitting at the table of Timarchus where a great banquet was serued in Timarchus offered twice to rise from the boord but was held by Socrates Yet watching his opportunitie while the other was in serious discourse hee stole away priuately and met with Nyceus whom he slew For which fact being condemned and led to death he confessed vnto his brother Clitimachus That if he had been swayed by the double aduertisement of Socrates hee had not vndergone so sad a disaster The same Socrates in a great defeate which the Athenians had flying from the victorious Enemie with Lachetes the Praetor and comming to a place where three wayes met he chose one path to himselfe contrarie to the aduice and counsell of all the rest And being demanded the reason wherefore he did so he made answer That his Genius so persuaded him Which they deriding tooke a contrarie course and left him abandoned to himselfe Now when the Horsemen of the Enemie made hot pursuit after them they tooke that path which Lachetes and all his people had taken who were all put to the sword and onely those few which followed Socrates escaped He presaged the great strage and messacre which after hapned in Sicilia As also of the deaths of Neon and Thrasillus in their Expedition against those of Ionia and Ephesus Saint Augustine in his booke De Cognitione verae vitae is persuaded That Spirits by Gods permission can raise stormes and tempests and command raine haile snow thunder and lightning at their pleasures As also That by the instigation of Spirits wild Beasts become either rebellious or seruiceable to mans vse In another place hee ascribeth the operation of all things seasonable or vnseasonable vnto them but not as Authors and Makers but Ministers and Seruants to the Diuine Will and command According with that in Ecclesiasticus Cap. 39. vers 28. There be Spirits that are created for vengeance which in their rigour lay on sure strokes in the time of destruction they shew forth their power and accomplish the wrath of him that made them Fire Haile Famine and Death all these are created for vengeance the teeth of the wilde Beasts and the Scorpions and the Serpents and the Sword execute vengeance for the destruction of the Wicked They shall be glad to do his commandements and when need is they shall be ready vpon earth and when their houre is come they shall not ouerpasse the commandements c. To this strict rule of Gods commandement both the good and bad Spirits are limited and beyond that they haue power or abilitie to do nothing Otherwise those that are malignant euill would in their rabies and fury destroy all Gods creatures in a moment Moreouer as the same Author affirmeth the Diuell hath power to tempt and entice man to sinne and wickednesse but he cannot compell him These be his words Serm. de Temp. Potest Diabolus ad malum invitare non potest trahere Delectationem infert non potestatem c. Rabbi Avot Nathan a learned Iew affirmeth That Spirits haue three things common with men namely Procreation Food and Death Porphirius as Proclus witnesseth of him held all Spirits to be mortall and that he amongst them who was the longest liued did not exceed the number of a thousand yeares Plutarch in his booke De Oraculorum defectu reciteth a story That about the Islands called Echinades newes was brought to one Thamus being then a ship boord that god Pan was dead and this happened iust at the birth of our Sauiour Christ. But because I haue made vse of this Historie heretofore in a booke commonly entituled The History of Women to insert the same here likewise might be tasted as Cibus bis coctus But to answer that learned Rabbi and Porphyrius like him opinionated Not possible it is That Spirits created by God immortall and incorporeall should be any way obnoxious to extinction or death More credible it is that these were meere phantasies and illusions of the Diuell by such prestigious sorceries persuading vs that Spirits are mortall to make man distrust the immorralitie of the Soule and so possesse him with an heresie grosse impious and damnable Here likewise a most necessarie consideration may be inserted to giue answer to the Sadduces and others who obstinately affirme That Moses in his Booke of the Creation made no mention at all of Spirits or Angels When as Saint Augustine contrarie to them in beleefe saith That vnder the words of Heauen aud Light though not by their proper and peculiar names they were specified and intended And that Moses writing to a People whose obstinacie and stupidity was such that they were not capable of their incorporeall Essence he was the more chary to giue them plaine and manifest expression Moreouer it may be supposed That if the discreet Law-giuer had told them of their Diuine nature it might haue opened a wide gap to their idolatry to which he knew they were too prone of themselues For if they were so easily induced to worship a golden Calfe and a brasen Serpent both of them molten and made with hands how could so excellent and diuine a Nature haue escaped their adoration Yet doe the words of Moses allow of Spirits though couertly where it is said Genes 3.1 Now the Serpent was more subtill than any Beast of the field which the Lord God had made c. By whom was meant the Diuell as appears Wisd. 2.24 As Satan can change himselfe into an Angell of light so did he vse the wisedome of the Serpent to abuse Man c. I had occasion to speake in my discourse of Dreames of the one brother Sleepe something shall not be amisse to be discoursed of the other Death and to amplifie that in the Prose which in the Verse was onely mentioned Cicero calleth Death the yonger brother of Sleepe which being a thing that cannot be auoided it ought therefore the lesse to be feated One demanding of a noble Sea Captaine Why hauing meanes sufficient to liue on land hee would endanger his person to the perills and frequent casualties of the Ocean
three Presents bring Myrrhe to a Man and Gold vnto a King Incense to'a God To proue himselfe Diuine In Cana he turn'd Water into Wine Fiue Loaues two Fishes haue fiue thousand fed When surplusage remain'd of meat and bread To the borne-Blinde he shew'd the Suns bright rayes Who on th' vnknowne light did with wonder gaze He caus'd the light on Lazarus to shine After he foure dayes in the graue had ly'ne With his right hand he fainting Peter stay'd But with his word his faith more constant made She that the bloudy Issue had endur'd For many Winters by her Faith was cur'd The palsied man who had been bedrid long Took vp his bed and walkt thence whole and strong He cast out Diuels by his Word sincere He made the Dumbe to speake and Deafe to heare He it was of whom some thinke Virgil prophecied Eclog 4. in these words Vltima Cumaei venit iam Carminis atas The last day 's come of the Cumaean Ryme A great One's now borne from the first of Time The Virgin is return'd with Saturnes Crowne And now a new Birth is from Heav'n let downe He was miraculous in his death Of whom elegant S. Bernard thus speakes How sweetly Lord Iesus didst thou conuerse with men how aboundantly didst thou bestow many blessings vpon man how valiantly didst thou suffer many bitter hard and intollerable things for man hard words hard strokes more hard afflictions O hard hardned and obdure Sonnes of Adam whom so great sufferings so great benignitie so immense an ardour of loue cannot mollifie Againe God loued vs sweetly wisely valiantly sweetly in assuming our Flesh wisely in auoyding sin valiantly in suffering death but aboue all in that Cup which he vouchsafed to taste which was the great worke of our Redemption for that more than all challenges our loue it gently insinuateth our deuotion more iustly exacts it more strictly binds it more vehemently commands it And in another place In the Passion of our Sauiour it behoueth vs three things more especially to consider the Worke the Manner the Cause In the Worke his Patience in the Manner his Humilitie in the Cause his Charitie Patience singular Humilitie admirable and Charitie vnspeakeable And now me-thinks I heare the Redeemer and Sauiour of the World thus speake from the Crosse. Huc me sidereo discendere fecit Olympo His me crudeli vulnere fixit Amor c. Loue drew me hither from the starry Round And here hath pierc'd me with a cruell wound I mourne yet none hath of my griefe remorse Whom Deaths dire Lawes in vaine intend to force Loue brought me to insufferable scorne And platted on my head a crowne of Thorne It was meere loue thy wounded Soule to cure Made me these wounds vpon my flesh t' endure It was my Loue which triumphs ouer all That quencht my thirst with Vineger and Call The loue which I to Mankinde could not hide With a sharpe Speare launcht bloud out of my side Or'e me Loue onely me of Kings the King Doth now insult who hither did me bring For others gaine to suffer this great losse To haue my hands and feet nayl'd to the Crosse. Now what do I for all this loue implore Loue me againe and I desire no more Thinke saith Thomas de Kempis of the dignitie of the Person and greatly lament because God in the Flesh was so contumeliously handled Ecce Altissimus supra omnes infra omnes deprimitur Nobilissmus dehonestatur Speciocissimus sputo inquinatur c. Behold how the most-High aboue all is depressed below all The most Noble is vilified The most Faire spit vpon The most Wise derided The most Mighty bound The most Innocent scourged The most Holy crowned with Thornes The most Gentle buffetted The most Rich impouerished The most Bountifull despoyled The most Worthy blasphemed The most Good despised The most Louing hated The most Knowing reputed foolish The most True not beleeued The most Innocent condemned The most skilfull Physitian wounded The Sonne of God crucified The Immortall subiect to death and slaine The Lord of heauen and earth dying for the redemption of wretched and ingratefull seruants Sic de Cruce suo Christus loquitur Vide Homo qua pro te patior Vide Cla●es quibus conf●di●r Vide poenas quibus afficior Cum sit tantu● dolor exterior Interior planctus est gravior Dum ingratum te sic experior See what I for thee endure Nail'd to the Crosse by hands impure Behold the paines I suffer here Since outward griefe doth such appeare How great then is my griefe within Whilest thou ingrate abid'st in sin Briefely The whole Passion of Christ according to the sentence of Dionysius was for imitation compassion admiration contemplation inflammation and thanksgiuing According to that of Thomas à Kempis It is of diuine Loue the Incendiarie of Patience the Doctrine in tribulation the Comfort It is the solace of dissolution the substance of holy compunction the exercise of internall deuotion the exclusion of desperation the certaine hope of remission the support of sharpe reprehension the expulsion of peruerse cogitation the repression of carnall temptation the consolation of corporall imperfections the contempt of temporall aboundance the abdication of our proper affections the restraint of superfluous necessitie the exercise of honest conuersation the inflammation to amendment of life the induction to coelestial consolation the approbation of brotherly compassion the reparation of diuine contemplation the argumentation of future blessednesse the mitigation of paines present the purgation from the fire future and the great satisfaction for all our sinnes and offences whatsoeuer Briefely the Passion of Christ is of a godly and religious Soule the Mirrhor of our life the Director of the way to heauen the Load-starre of all tempests the shadow and protector and of all Soules in the houre of death the comfort and supporter The Passion of Christ saith Rabanus de laude Crucis sustaines heauen gouerneth the world pierceth hell in the first the Angels are confirmed in the second the people redeemed in the third the Enemie subdued Saint Augustine in his Sermon De Natali Domini saith That the Maker of man was made Man that he which gouerned the Stars should sucke the breast that the Bread should be hungry the Fountaine thirsty the Light should be darkned the Way should be weary the Truth should suffer by false witnesse the Iudge of the liuing and dead should by a mortall man be iudged that Iustice by injust men should be condemned that Discipline it selfe should be scourged the prime Branch crowned with thornes he that made the Tree be hanged on the Tree Strength weakned Health wounded and Life made subiect vnto death Saint Bernard in his first sermon De Nativit Christi vseth these words Vt in Paradiso terrestri quatuor fuere fontes c. As in the earthly Paradise there were foure Riuers which watered the whole earth so in Christ who is our Paradise wee may finde
confidently beleeued his wife soon after died leauing him her vniuersall heire of great possessions and mighty summes of money which both emboldened and strengthened him in his diabolicall proceedings so that by the assistance of Sergius the Monke hee now openly proclaimed himselfe a Prophet and sent of God to prescribe new lawes vnto the Nations And hauing before made himselfe skilfull in all their Lawes the better to countenance and corroborate this his Innouation he thought to accord with the Iewes in some points to continue them his friends and in some things with the Christians lest he should make them his enemies He likewise complied with diuers Heretiques with the Macedonians he denied the Holy-Ghost to be God with the Nicolaitans he approued the multiplicitie of Wiues c. On the other side he confessed our Sauiour Christ to be an holy man and a Prophet and that the Virgin Mary was an holy and blessed woman whom in his Alcaron he much extolled With the Iews he held circumcision with many other of their ceremonies Besides his Religion gaue all the abhominable vices of the flesh free scope and libertie which drew vnto his new Sect much confluence of people from many Nations and Languages to be his abettors and followers His booke he called the Alchoran and lest his diuellish impieties and absurd impostures should be examined and by that meanes discouered hee made it a penaltie of death for any man To argue or make difficultie of any Tenent contained therein making protestation That they ought to be supported maintained by Armes and not by Arguments His first attempt was To set vpon the confines of Arabia Heraclius being then Emperor who held his seat at Constantinople at the same time Boniface the first was Pope and Honorius his successor The newes of this great insurrection comming to the Emperors eare he prepared to suppresse it with all speed possible and to that end he entertained into his Pay the Scenites a warre-like people of Arabia who before had in their hearts much fauoured Mahomet by whose aid in the first bloudy Conflict he was victorious and dispersed this new Sect and had hee followed his present fortune he had quite abandoned it from the face of the earth But supposing them by this first defeat sufficiently disabled and himselfe secured hee failed to keepe promise with the Scenites and detained their pay who in meere despight that they had bin deluded and so injuriously dealt with ioyned themselues with Mahomets dis-banded Forces and by reason of his former r●putation elected him their Captaine and Generall growing in time to that strength and boldnesse that they attempted diuers places in the Roman Empire entring Syria and surprising the great city Damas inuading Egypt Iudaea with the bordering prouinces persuading the Saracins and people of Arabia That the Land of Promise solely appertained vnto them as the legitimate successors vnto their father Abraham and Sarah from whom they deriued their Name Thus animated by the successe in these wars he was suddenly puft vp with a vain glorious ambition to conquer and subdue the whole world His next expedition therefore he aimed against the Persians a Nation at that time very potent and held to be inuincible His first aduenture succeeded ill for his army was defeated but after hauing re-allyed his forces in his second attempt fortune so fauoured him that hee compelled them to embrace his Religion Briefly and to auoid circumstance after he had run through many hazards and prosperously ouercome them he was poysoned and dyed according to Sabellicus in the fourtieth yere of his age And because he had told his complices and adherents That his body after his death should ascend into heauen they kept it for some dayes vnburied expecting the wonderment so long till by reason of the infectious stench thereof none was able to come neere it At length they put it into a chest of iron and carried it to Mecha a City of Persia where it is stil adored not onely of the people of the East but the greatest part of the world euen to this day And so much concerning the Impostor Mahomet With which relation the most approued Authors agree as Platina in the liues of the Popes Blond●● in his booke of the declining of the Roman Empire Baptista Ignatius in the Abridgement of the Emperours the Annals of Constantinople Nauclerus Antoninus and others And now when I truly consider the stubborne Atheist the misbeleeuing Mahumetan and stiffe-necked Iew it putteth mee in minde of that of the Psalmist Is it true ô Congregation Speake ye iustly ô sonnes of men iudge ye vprightly yea rather ye imagin mischiefe in your hearts your hands execute crueltie vpon the earth The Wicked are strangers from the wombe euen from the belly haue they erred and speak lies Their poyson is euen like the poyson of a Serpent like the deafe Adder that stoppeth his eares which heareth not the voice of the Inchanter though he be most expert in charming Breake their teeth ô God in their mouthes breake the jawes of the yong Lions ô Lord let them melt like the waters let them passe away when he shooteth his arrows let them be broken let them consume like a Snaile that melteth and like the vntimel● fruit of a woman that hath not seene the Sunne c. Amongst Theodore Beza's Epigrams those which by a more peculiar name he inscribeth Icona's I reade one of Religion in the manner of a Dialogue Quae nam age tam lacero vestita incedis amictu Religio summiver a patris sorholes c. What art thou in that poore and base attyre Religion The chiefe Father is my Sire Why in a robe so thread-bare course and thin Fraile Riches I despise which tempt to sin Vpon what Booke do'st thou so fix thine eyes My Fathers reue'rend Law which I much prise Why do'st thou go thus with thy breasts all bare It fits those best that Truths professors are Why leaning on a Crosse Because indeed It is my welcome rest none else I need But wherefore wing'd Because I looke on high And would teach men aboue the starres to fly And wherefore shining It becomes me well Who all grosse darknesse from the minde expell What doth that Bridle teach vs To restraine All the wilde fancies of the brest and braine But wherefore Death do'st thou beneath thee tread Because by me ev'n Death it selfe lies dead This shewes the qualitie and estate of true Religion and the Professors thereof which is builded on the Messi●● whom the peruerse and obstinate Iewes will not euen to this day acknowledge Concerning which I obserue an excellent saying from Gregorie Pap. The Iewes saith hee would neither acknowledge Iesus Christ to be the Sonne of God by the words and testimonie of his Heralds and fore-runners the Prophets not by his infinite Miracles and yet the Heauens knew him who leant him a bright star to light him into the world The Sea knew him who against
a sufficient answer namely That the Substances of things were created together but not formed and fashioned together in their seuerall distinct kindes They were disgested together by substance of matter but appeared not together in substantiall forme for that was the worke of six dayes Moreouer when Moses in his first Chapter of Genesis saith That things were created in euery one of the six dayes seuerally in the second chapter of the same Booke he speaketh but of one day only by way of Catastrophe or Epilogue All which hee had before distinctly described saying These are the generations of the Heauen and the Earth when they were created in the day that the Lord God made the Earth and the Heauens Neither is this any contradiction for we must not take the dayes according to the distinction of Times for God had no need of Time as being first made by him but by reason of the works of Perfection which is signified and compleated by the number of Six which is a most perfect number Moreouer as the Psalmist saith A thousand yeares are vnto him but as one day Avenzor the Babylonian saith That he which knoweth to number well knoweth directly all things Neither was it spoken in vaine but to the great praise of Almighty God Omnia in mensura Numero Pondere disposuisti i. Thou hast disposed all things in Number in Measure and in Weight It is moreouer said in Eccles. 1 2. Who can number the sands of the Sea and the drops of the raine and the dayes of the world Who can measure the height of the Heauen the bredth of the Earth and the depth Who can finde the Wisedome of God which hath beene before all things c. It is worthy remarke which one ingeniously obserues Two wayes saith he we come to the apprehension and knowledge of God by his Workes and by his Word by his Works we know that there is a God and by his Word we come to know what that God is his Workes teach vs to spell his Word to reade The first are his backe-parts by which we behold him afarre off the later represent him vnto vs more visibly and as it were face to face For the Word is as a booke consisting of three leaues and euery leafe printed with many letters and euery letter containeth in it selfe a Lecture The Leaues are Heauen the Aire and the Earth with the Water the Letters ingrauen are euery Angell Starre and Planet the Letters in the Aire euery Meteor and Fowle those in the Earth and Waters euery Man Beast Plant Floure Minerall and Fish c. All these set together spell vnto vs That there is a God Moses in the very first verse of Genesis refuteth three Ethnycke opinions first Those that were of opinion the World was from eternitie and should continue for euer in these words when hee saith In the Beginning Secondly he stoppeth the mouth of stupid and prophane Atheists in this phrase Elohim created Thirdly and lastly hee opposeth all Idolaters such as held with many gods for the saith in the conclusion of the same Verse Elohim He created Heauen and Earth vsing the singular number It is the opinion of some antient Diuines That the Creation of the Angels was concealed by Moses lest any man should apprehend like those Heretiques spoken of by Epiphanius that they aided and assisted God in the Creation For if the day of their Creation which as the best approued Theologists confesse was the first day had beene named by Moses wicked and vngodly men might haue taken them to haue been Agents in that great and inscrutable Worke which indeed were no other than Spectators Therefore as God hid and concealed the Body of Moses after his death lest the Israelites so much addicted to Idolatry should adore and worship it so Moses hid and concealed the Creation of the Angels in the beginning lest by them they should be deified and the honour due to the Creator be by that meanes attributed and conferred on the Creature Rabbi Salom affirmeth them to be created the first day and some of our later Diuines the fourth day but their opinions are not held altogether authenticall It is likewise obserued That God in the creation of the world beginneth aboue and worketh downwards For in the first three dayes he layd the foundation of the world and in the other three dayes he furnished and adorned those parts The first day he made all the Heauens the matter of the earth and commeth downe so low as the Light The second day he descendeth lower and maketh the Firmament or Aire The third lowest of all making a distinction betwixt the Earth and Water Thus in three dayes the three parts or body of the World is laid and in three dayes more and in the same order they were furnished For on the fourth day the Heauens which were made the first day were decked and stucke with starres and lights The fift day the Firmament which was made the second day was filled with Birds and Fowles The sixt day the Earth which was before made fit and ready the third day was replenished with Beasts and lastly with Man And thus God Almighty in his great Power and Wisedome accomplished and finished the miraculous worke of the Creation Rabbi Iarchi vpon the second of Genesis obserueth That God made superior things one day and inferiour another His words being to this purpose In the first day God created Heauen aboue and Earth beneath on the second day the Firmament aboue on the third Let the dry land appeare beneath on the fourth Lights aboue and the fift Let the waters bring forth beneath c. On the sixt day he made things both superior and inferior lest there should be confusion without order in his Work Therefore he made Man consisting of both a Soule from aboue and a Body from beneath c. An Allegorie drawne from these is That God hath taught vs by the course he took in the framing and fashioning of the world how we must proceed to become a new Creation or a new Heauen and Earth renewed both in soule and body In the first day he made the Light therefore the first thing of the new man ought to be light of Knowledge for Saint Paul saith He that commeth to God must know that He Is. On the second day he made the Firmament so called because of it's stedfastnesse so the second step in Mans new Creation must be Firmamentum Fidei i. the sure foundation of Faith On the third day the Seas and Trees bearing Fruit so the third step in the New man is That he become Waters of relenting teares and that he bring forth fruit worthy of Repentance On the fourth day God created the Sunne that whereas on the first day there was light without heate now on the fourth day there is Light and Heate ioyned together So the fourth step in the new creation of the New man is That
and Purple shine And scorning others thinkst thy selfe Diuine Tomorrow of thy pompe art dis-array'd And in the Graue aside for wormes meat layd Why doth thy tumerous heart swell thus in vaine Things both beyond thee and deny'd t' attaine Why in Mansolean Structures aime to sleepe Thinking thereby thy rottennesse to keepe From the lesse putrid earth O foolish man Be not deceiv'd for know Before thou can Aspire a glorious place aboue to haue Thou must as all lie rotten in thy Graue Adages concerning man and their good or bad affections one towards another are these Homo Homini Deus Homo Homini Lupus One Man to Man a god we see Another a meere Wolfe to be Amongst many other ingenious and accurate Emblems written by Anton. F. Castrodunensis I haue onely selected one to this purpose Ornamenta gerens Cornix aliena superbit c. The Crow trickt vp in borrow'd plumes growes prowd And thinkes her selfe with what 's her owne endow'd But when each Bird doth for her feather call Dis-rob'd she growes a publique scorne to all Man whilst he liues to be that Crow is knowne Who nothing that he weares can call his owne Death summoning and you stript naked then Alas what haue you to be proud of Men The Hierogliphycke of Man is the Palme tree and that for a twofold reason first Because it bringeth forth no fruit vnles the male be planted neere and in sight of the female By which it is imagined they haue a kinde of Coitus or copulation the boughes being full of masculine gemmes like seed And next because in the vpper part thereof there is a kinde of braine which the Hebrewes call Halulab and the Arabs Chedar or Gemmar which being bruised or tainted the tree instantly withereth as man dieth presently when his braine is perished which is onely to be found in this Plant. Besides in the top or head thereof there is that which resembleth haire The branches grow after the manner of the armes and hands extended and stretched forth and the fruit thereof is like fingers and therefore are called Dactili or Digiti Erudit quid lib. 2. Hierogl Collect. Concerning Hell and the torments thereof wee reade the Fathers thus Gregory Moral lib. 9. saith In horrible manner it hapneth to those wretched Soules who haue Death without death End without end Defect without defect because Death euer liueth the End alwayes beginneth and Defect knoweth not how to be deficient Death slayeth but killeth not sorrow excruciateth but easeth not the flame burneth but consumeth not And the same Father Lib. 4. Dialog The Soule confined thither hath lost the happinesse to be well but not to Be for which reason it is compelled to suffer death without death defect without defect end without end because vnto it Death is made immortall Defect indeficient and End infinite And Saint Augustine lib. de Agenda cura pro Mortuis speaking of the Rich man tormented in Hell saith That his care of the Liuing whose actions hee knew not was like ours of the Dead or whose estate wee are ignorant Isiod lib. 1. de Summo Bono saith That the fire of Hell giues light vnto the Damned so farre as they may see whereat to grieue but not to behold from what they may draw comfort And the same Author in his Meditation Gehennalis supplicij Consider all the paines and afflictions of this World all the griefe of torments the bitternesse of sorrowes and grieuousnesse of afflictions and compare them with the least torment of Hell and it is easie which thou sufferest for the punishment of the Damned is in that place doubled for sorrow burneth the heart and the flame the body And Hugo lib. 4. de Anima The infernall Lake is without measure it is deepe without bottome full of incomparable heate full of intollerable stench full of innumerable sorrowes there is miserie there is darkenesse there is no order but all confusion there is horror eternall no hope of any good nor termination of euill Saint Chrisostome Hom. 48. de Ira vseth this similitude I would not haue thee to thinke saith he that as it is in this life so it is in the other That to haue partners and companions in grief can be any comfort or abatement to thy sorrow but rather of the contrarie For tell me If a father condemned to the fire shal behold his sonne in the same torment will not the very sight thereof bee as another death vnto him For if those who be in perfect health at the sight of others torments faint and are ready to depart with life how much more shal they be afflicted and excruciated when they are fellow-sufferers of the same tortures Mankind is prone to compassion and wee are easily moued to commiserate other mens grieuances Therefore how can the Father take comfort to behold his sonne in the same condemnation the husband the wife or the brother the brother c. rather it doth adde vnto their miseries and make their griefe the greater Saint Origen in Matth. cap. 16. vseth this comparison As euery gate of a city hath it's proper denomination so may wee say of euery port or dore that opens into Hell one may be called Scortatio or Whoring by which Whore-monghrs enter another Swearing by which Blasphemers haue accesse And so of Enuy Gluttony and the rest euery one bearing name according to the nature of the offence Bion was wont to say That the passage vnto Hell was easie because men might finde the way thither blinde-fold or with shut eyes For so it fareth with all dead men from whence wee reade that in Virgil facilis discensus Averni Noctes atque dies patet atri janua ditis The same Bion was wont to jest at the punishment of the daughters of Danaus in Hell who are forced to carry water in bottomlesse pales to fill a leaking Vessell saying The torment had beene greater if their pales had been whole and sound for so their burdens had been the heauier Laërtius lib. 4. cap. 7. And Demonax being demanded of one What he thought the estate and condition of the Soules departed was in the other World made answer That he could not as then resolue him but if hee had the patience to stay till hee had beene there hee would write him newes thereof in a letter Intimating thereby That hee beleeued there was no Hell at all Erasmus Lib. Apotheg Sophocles in Oëdip calleth Hell a blacke Darknesse And Euripides in Aristid An obscure House or Pallace shadowed from the bright beames of the Sunne Theogius giues it the name of the Blacke Gates And Eustathius in 1. Isliad saith it is a dark place vnder the earth Saint Basil sup Psal. 33. calleth it a darke Fire that hath lost it's brightnesse but keepes it's burning And Saint Gregory Moral lib. 9. cap. 46. It burneth but giueth no light at all The antient Poets in regard of the tenebrositie thereof compare Hell to a
Thy Maiestie and Might With Thy great Glory shining bright Are still to be adored solely V. The Heart that 's obstinate shall be With sorrowes laden heauily He that is wicked in his wayes What doth he but heape sinne on sin Which where it endeth doth begin Whom nothing being downe can raise VI. To the persuasion of the Prowd No remedie there is allow'd His steps shall faile that steddy seem'd Sinnes Root in him is planted deepe And there doth strong possession keepe He therefore shall not be esteem'd VII We know the Sinne from whence it grew We know the Torment thereto due And the sad place for it assign'd And yet the more we seeme to know The more we dull and stupid grow As if we sencelesse were and blind VIII Ope then our hearts our eyes vnmaske And grant vs what we humbly aske So much of Thy Diuinest Grace That we may neither erre nor stray But finding out the perfect way We may evade both Paine and Place IX Though Atheists seeme to jest at Hell There is a Tophet we know well O Atheismes pestilent infection There 's a Gehinnon a sad Graue Prepar'd at first for such as haue No hope in the blest resurrection X. Three times our Sauior wept we read When he heard Lazarus was dead Bewailing Humane frailty then When to Ierusalem he rid And a poore Asses Colt bestrid At the grosse folly blinding men XI He wept vpon the Crosse againe 'Gainst Humane Malice to complaine Seeing their insolence and pride When in such bitter grosse despight They crucify'd the Lord of Light Him who for Mans redemption dy'de XII How necessarie then are Teares To free vs from all future feares Of Death of Torment of Damnation Teares that can wash our Soules so white To bring vs to Eternall light Instating vs in our saluation XIII A contrite Spirit a broken Heart Moist eyes whence many dew drops start O grant vs then thou heav'nly King So we with Hearts and Tongues vnited May with the Psalmist be accited And Praise and Glory to Thee sing XIV Ye Sonnes of Men with one accord All Strength and Glory giue the Lord You that are Sonnes to men of Fame Giue them the Lord they are his due For know that it belongs to you To magnifie his holy Name XV. Within his glorious Temple Hee Deserueth Worship on the knee O kneele then at His sacred Shrine His Voice is on the Waters great His Glory thunders from his Seat His Pow'r doth on the Waters shine XVI His Voice is mighty glorious too For all things the Lords Voice can doo The strongest Cedars He doth breake When the Lords Voice from him is gon The Cedars ev'n of Lebanon Torne as they stand his Pow'r can speake XVII His Voice them of their leaues can strip He makes them like yong Calues to skip Nor doth the stedfast Mountaine scorne Or Hermon for his Dew so prais'd But when his voice aloft is rais'd To skip like a yong Vnicorne XVIII When the Lords Voice is lifted higher It doth diuide the flames of fire It makes the Wildernesse to quake Ev'n the great Wildernesse of all The Desart which we Kadesh call It doth compell to moue and shake XIX His Voice doth make the Hinde to beare And all those Forrests that cloath'd were Stand at his pleasure nak'd and bare And therefore in his Temple now All meet and to his Glory bow With Sacrifice of Praise and Prayer XX. The Lord the raging Seas doth sway The mighty Flouds to Him obay And neuer shall his Kingdome cease The Lord shall giue his People strength And will deliuer them at length And blesse them with his ioyfull Peace Non Delinquenti sed peccata relinquenti condonat Deus Ambros. THE PRINCIPAT Ex muner g glouer sculpt THE ARGVMENT of the seuenth Tractat. OF Gods great Works a serious view For which all praise to him is due The seuerall Classes that are held Amongst the Angels that rebel'd Of Lucifer the principall And his strange figure since his Fall Of Such as most in Power excell And of their Gouernment in Hell Their Orders Offices and Names And what Prioritie each claimes The List of Those that fell from Blisse The Knowledge that in Daemons is And how far stretcht Next of their Wrath Tow'rds Mankinde and what Bounds it hath Discouery of those Ginnes and Snares They lay t' entrap Men vnawares Of Compacts common in these Ages And of the Astrologomages The second Argument IN Heav'n in Earth in Hell some sway Others againe are taught t' obay The Principats GOds wondrous Works that haue before me beene I will record and speake what I haue seene Saith Wisedome No Worke present or decay'd But by his pow'rfull Word at first was made The Sun that shines and doth on all things looke What is it else but an illustrious booke In which th' Almighties Glory may be read Hath not the Lord who hath accomplished All things in season made each thing so rare That all his Saints his Glory shall declare These wondrous Workes surpassing humane sence T' expresse his Maiestie and Excellence The Heart he searcheth and the depth of man In his pre-Science knowing all he can Or thinke or act the wonders of the Skies And each obscure thing 's plaine before his eies Things past nor future can escape his brest All secret paths to Him are manifest No thought can Him escape of that be'assur'd Nor can the least word be from him obscur'd His Wisedomes exc'lent Works He doth extend From Euerlasting Neuer to haue end He needs no Counsellor his Will to act To Him can none adde no man can detract O how delectable Thou Lord of All Are thy stupendious Workes in generall By vs to be consider'd from things higher Ev'n to the very common sparks of Fire They liue by Thee created firme and sure And they to euerlasting shall endure And when he calls them to a reck'ning still As His they are obseruant to his Will Doubled they are one set against another And there is nothing his rare Works can smother The one the others workmanship commends How far then ô thou Mighty God extends Thy wondrous Pow'r or Who to Earth ally'd With thy great Glory can be satisfy'd Behold this high and sublime Ornament The beauty of the Heav'ns the Firmament So glorious to the eye in it the Sunne A maruellous Worke by the Creator done Which in it's dayly progresse through the Skie Points vnto vs the hand of the Most-Hye He burnes the Soile from his meridian seat And who is he that can abide his heat Three times more hot the mountaine tops he makes Than he that with his great care vndertakes To keepe a furnace in continuall ●lame His fiery vapors He casts out the same In their owne kinde so luminous and bright As that they dazle the beholders sight Great is the Lord that made the Sunne indeed And by his Word commands it run with speed The
without mentall reseruation and to practise any thing without crafty imagination To reuenge no injuries that are offered vs and to pray for such as speake euill against vs To desire pouerty and despise riches Not to resist him that taketh violently from thee and when thou art strooke on the one cheeke that the other should be offered by thee Greg. 10. Cap. 27. Moral Saint Bernard in one of his Epistles hath these words O vtinam saperes intelligeres ac novissima provideres c. i. O that thou wouldst be wise and vnderstand and prouide for the last things thou shouldest be wise in those things which concerne God thou shouldest vnderstand such things as belong to the World and foresee all the dangers of Hell By this means thou shouldst abhorre what is infernall desire what is supernall contemne what is terrestriall Ricard De Contempl. Cap. 1. saith Nothing than Wisedome is more ardently beloued nothing more sweetly and delightfully possessed From hence it growes that many would but few can be wise All just men may be just that truly desire to be so Thou mayst loue Wisedome and yet want it but the more thou dost loue justice the more just thou shalt be Hugo de Claus. Anim. lib. 1. teacheth vs That Idlenesse breedeth Folly and Industrie begetteth Knowledge The Labour to attaine vnto Knowledge is diuided into three namely Discipline Exercise and Doctrine In our Childehood is the labour of Discipline in our Youth of Exercise in our Age of Doctrine that what wee knew not in our Childehood we may learne what we learned in our Childehood we may exercise in our Youth what wee exercised in our Youth we may teach vnto others in our Age. The Poets concerning Wisedome we may reade thus Wisedome and Vertue are the two wings by which we aspire attaine vnto the knowledge of God According to that of Boëth lib. 4. Met. 1. Sunt etenim pennae Volucris mihi Quae Celsa conscendant Poli. Quas sibi cum velox mens induit Terras perosas despicit The Feathers of a Bird I wore By which aboue the Poles I soare Which when my swift Minde doth embrace All earthly things I count as base A Wise man by others is held to be little lesse than Iupiter himselfe As Hor. lib. 1. Epist. ad Mecen Sapiens vno minor est Iove Dives Liber Honoratus pulcher Rex denique Regum The Wise man somewhat is to Iove inferior Rich free faire honor'd King o're Kings superior And in another Epistle of his ad Mecen Virtus est vitium fugere sapientia prima Stultitia caruisse Hee 's onely vertuous that doth Vice despise And who hates Folly shall be counted wise We reade diuers of the Greeke Poets to the like purpose Amongst the rest Hesiod thus interpreted Hic quidam optimus qui per se omnia cognoscit Intelligens sequentia Hee 's the best who can challenge as his owne To conceiue all things needfull to be knowne Things due to vnderstanding and can call To minde before-hand what may after fall Hee 's likewise a good man who doth not heed Warning by others mischiefs to take ●eed But giues it of himselfe But he whose pride Thinkes that his owne breast doth all Wisedome hide And others iudgements to be vaine and weake Who saue himselfe will list to none that speake I hold that man is ev'ry way vnable To others and himselfe vnprofitable Phocilides also we finde thus quoted Sapientiam sapiens dirigit Artes Coartifex c. The Wise man knowes his wisedome how to vse Th' Artificer what Art is best to chuse 'T is a true saying and approued long The Wise man is more worthy than the Strong The fields he tills the City he can guide And for the Ships in tempests well prouide And ingenuous Menander thus Non est Sapientia possessio pretiosior c. Than Wisedome no more rich possession 'T is of thy selfe to make expression And in by thoughts descend so low To learne those things thou dost not know Our speech which we so highly prise Was first inuented by the Wi●e Nor can we truly call him such● Who little doth and speaketh much Wisedome doth Riches far excell For that doth teach vs to liue well By hearing Wise men Wisedome 's caught And none 's so wise but may be taught His proper losses he will hide And make Discretion still his Guide Yet I ●ha● Wise man needs must hate Who shall neglect his owne estate All Ages haue afforded men to this day famous for their Vertues Knowledge and wise and witty sayings I will giue you only a taste of some few and those the least vulgar One Smithicus complaining of Nicanor That hee incessantly spake euill of the King and therefore desired to haue him seuerely punished Philip of Macedon would no way assent thereto but after hearing the same Nicanor to be in great indigence and want he sent him a great summe of mony Soone after Smithicus brought him word That in all companies Nicanor spake well and nobly of him To whom the King answered Thou seest how much better a Physition I am than thou Two fellowes of notorious bad life accusing one another before the Kin● hee gaue sentence That the one with all speed sho●ld depart● the kingdome of Macedonia and the other with the like celeriti● follow him The ●ame Philip hauing taken a full and when he ●ose againe spying the print of his whole body in the dust signing said O the great folly of Princes whom many kingdomes ca●not content in their life yet so small a piece of 〈…〉 suffice them in their deaths c. When a faire yong woman was brought to Alexander late in the night and the King demanding Why she stayd so long She 〈◊〉 a●swer That she but tarried vntill she had got her husband to bed He called to his seruants and with an angry countenance●●ommanded them to conuey her backe to her house For said he by your defaul● I was but a little from being made an 〈…〉 One Parillus numbered amongst Alexanders friends demanded a dowry of him towards the mariage of his daughters To whom the King bad fifty talents should be presently deliuered But he replying That ten were sufficient True saith Alexander for thee to receiue but not for me to giue When he sate in judgement he euer vsed to stop one ●are whilest the Accuser told his tale And being asked the reason Because saith he I reserue still one eare for the Defendant Hauing made a journey to Delphos and at that time the Prophetesse being a day prohibited would by no intreatie solicit the god for any answer Aristotle haled her into the Temple perforce and by his violence being drawne thither whether she would or no she vttered these words Thou art inuincible my sonne At which word hee dismissed her saying It is enough for Alexander I receiue these words as an answer from the Oracle c.
thither and entertained into his wonted lodging Philemium his Beloued came into the chamber spake with him supt with him and after much amorous discourse she receiued of him as a gift a Ring of iron and a Cup guilt and she in interchange gaue him a Ring of gold and an hand-kerchiefe which done they went to bed together The Nurse being very diligent to see that her new ghest wanted nothing came vp with a candle and saw them both in bed together She ouer-joyed runneth in hast to bring the Parents newes that their daughter was aliue They amased rise from their bed and finde them both fast-sleeping when in great rapture of ioy they called and pulled them to awake At which shee rising vpon her pillow with a seuere looke cast vpon them thus said O you most cruell and obdurat Parents and are you so enuious of your daughters pleasure that you will not suffer her for the space of one three dayes to enioy her deere Machates but this curiositie shall be little for your ease for you shall againe renew your former sorrowes which hauing spoke she changed countenance sunke downe into the bed and died at which sight the father and mother were both intranced The rumor of this came into the city the Magistrats caused the graue to be opened but found not the body there only the iron Ring and the Cup giuen her by Machates For the same Coarse was then in the chamber and bed which by the counsell of one Hillus a Soothsayer was cast into the fields and the yong man finding himself to be deluded by a Specter to auoid the ignominie hee with his owne hands slew himselfe Possible it is that the inferiour Diuels at the command of the superiour should possesse the bodies of the Dead for a time and moue in them as by examples may appeare Eunapius reports That an AEgyptian Necromancer presented the person of Apollineus before the people But Iamblicus a greater Magition standing by told them It was not he but the body of a Fencer who had before been slaine When whispering a stronger charme to himselfe the Spirit forsooke the body which falling down dead appeared to them all to be the stinking carkasse of the Fencer before spoken of and well knowne to them all The like is reported of one Donica who after she was dead the Diuell had walked in her body for the space of two yeares so that none suspected but that she was still aliue for she did both speak and eat though very sparingly onely shee had a deepe palenesse in her countenance which was the only signe of death At length a Magition comming by where she was then in the companie of many other Virgins as soone as hee beheld her hee said Faire Maids why keep you company with this dead Virgin whom you suppose to be aliue When taking away the Magicke charme which was tied vnder her arme the body fell downe liuelesse and without motion Cornelius Agrippa liuing in Louvaine had a yong man who tabled with him One day hauing occasion to be abroad hee left the keyes of his study with his wife but gaue her great charge to keepe them safe and trust them to no man The Youth ouer-curious of noueltie neuer ceased to importune the woman till shee had lent him the key to take view of his Librarie Which entring he hapned vpon a booke of Conjuration hee reads when straight hee heares a great bouncing at the doore which hee not minding readeth on the knocking groweth greater the noise louder But hee making no answer the Diuell breakes open the doore and enters and askes what he commands him to haue done or why he was called The Youth amased and through feare not able to answer the Diuell seiseth vpon him and wrythes his neck asunder Agrippa returneth findeth the yong man dead and the Diuels insulting ouer him Hee retyres to his Art and calls the Diuels to account for what they had done they tell all that had passed Then he commanded the homicide to enter into the body and walke with him into the market place where the Students were frequent and after two or three turnes to forsake the bodie Hee did so the body falls downe dead before the Schollers all iudge it to be of some sudden Apoplexy but the markes about his necke and jawes make it somewhat suspitious And what the Archi-Mage concealed in Louvaine being banished thence hee afterward feared not to publish in Lotharinge Don Sebastian de Cobarruvias Orozco in his treasurie of the Castilian Tongue speaking how highly the Spaniards prise their beards and that there is no greater disgrace can be done vnto him than to be plucked by it and baffled reporteth That a noble Gentleman of that Nation being dead a Iew who much hated him in his life stole priuatly into the roome where his body was newly layd out and thinking to do that in death which hee neuer durst doe liuing stooped downe to plucke him by the beard at which the body started vp and drawing his sword that then lay by him halfe way out put the Iew into such a fright that he ran out of the Roome as if a thousand Diuels had been behind him This done the body lay downe as before vnto rest and the Iew after that turned Christian. Let these suffice out of infinites Hauing discoursed in the former Tractat of the Astrologomagi it shall not be impertinent to speake something concerning Astrologie which is defined to be Scientia Astris a knowledge in the Starres of which as Pliny witnesseth in the 57 booke of his Naturall Historie Atlanta King of the Mauritanians was the first Inuentor Of this Art the sacred Scriptures in diuers places make mention As in Deutron 4.19 And lest thou shouldst lift vp thine eyes to heauen and when thou seest the Sun and the Moone and the Stars with all the Host of Heauen shouldst be driuen to worship them and serue them which the Lord thy God hath distributed to all people vnder the whole heauen Againe Esay 47.13 Thou art wearied in the multitude of thy counsels let now the Astrologers the Star-gasers and Prognosticators stand vp and saue thee from those things that shall come vpon thee c. Now wherefore God created those blessed Lights of heauen is manifest Gen. 1.14 And God said Let there be Lights in the Firmament of the heauen to separate the day from the night and let them be for signes and for seasons and for dayes and yeares Againe Cap. 8. vers 22. Hereafter seed time and haruest and cold and heat and summer and winter and day and night shall not cease so long as the earth endure Esay 44.24 Thus saith the Lord thy Redeemer and hee that formed thee from the wombe I am the Lord that made all things that spread out the heauens aboue and stretcheth out the earth by my selfe I destroy the tokens of Sooth-sayers and make them that
Arce venit c. If to thy Friend least credit thou dar'st giue Fly swelling titles to thine owne selfe liue Liue to thy selfe pursue not after Fame Thunders at the sublimest buildings aime No folded Saile the Winters storme need feare But such as braue their gusts they rend and teare Light Vessels swim aboue and dread no ground When those surcharg'd with their own weight are drownd And Horace 3. Carmin 4. vseth these words Vim temperatam dij quoque provehunt In majus ijdem odere vires Omne nefas animi moventes c. Which I giue you thus interpreted A temp'rat course the gods protect And will produce it to effect But when it growes to spleene and hate The pow'r thereof th'anticipate The hundr'd handed Gyant he Can of my sentence witnesse be So sterne Orion who did proue Diana in illicit loue Who being shot by her chaste arrow Was pierc'd into the bones and marrow And now the earth laments at last Her monstrous brood vpon her cast Who because they with pride did swell Were with swift thunder strooke to hell Claudian writing de Sepulchro specioso vseth these words Magna repente ruunt summa cadunt subito Great things ev'n in an instant quaile And high things in a moment faile To this that sentence of Seneca in Thieste may seeme to giue a correspondent answer Laus vera humili saepe coutingit viro The merited praise deny 't who can Oft falls vnto the humbled man I take leaue of this common place with that of Iacob Bill Antholog sacr de vi humilitatis whom we reade thus ô Deus ô quantis vita est humanae periclis Subdita quis tali vitet ab hostenecem c. To what great dangers in the life of man Subject ô thou my God who is he can Evade sad Death by such a foe in chace Which way soeuer I shall turne my face I spy a thousand perils guirt me round As many snares my poore soule to confound Whether I drinke or eat or laugh or mourne Or lie to sleepe which way soe're I turne Or in what course soeuer I persist I am pursu'd by my Antagonist O thou my God who can these ne●s efchew He and he only that Pride neuer knew True humilitie cannot subsist without Gratitude for it is an vndeniable consequence That if the refractorie and disobedient Angels that fell had not been proud they could neuer haue been ingratefull Gratitude is a most commendable vertue saith Sabellicus acceptable both to God and man It is to confesse both by heart and voice that neither by accident no● by second causes onely as well externall as internall good things are conferred vpon vs much lesse that Summum Bonum which is chiefe the Sauiour of the World But because God the Father by and for his onely Sonne Iesus sake is the Author of all those blessings and benefits we do enioy we ought not only to confesse it our selues but to inuite others also to the acknowledgement thereof and to the invocation of the name of the true God that they likewise may be confident that God hath a care of the Godly not onely to heare them when they pray but to keepe them that they may be preferued to all eternitie c. What is it saith Saint Augustine vpon the Psalme Tota die os meum repletum laude c. all the day that is without intermission to praise thee in prosperitie because thou comfortest vs in aduersitie because thou correctest vs before I was because thou createdst me after I was because thou preseruedst mee when I offended because thou didst pardon mee when I was conuerted because thou didst assist me when I did continue because thou didst crowne me And in his Epistle to Marcellinus What better thing can we beare in minde or pronounce with tongue or expresse with pen than thanks vnto God than which nothing can be spoke more succinctly or heard more ioyfully or vnderstood more gracefully or practised more fruitfully Ambrose in his fift Sermon vpon Luc. hath these words There is nothing which wee can returne him worthy for taking flesh in the Virgin In what then shall we repay him for his buffets what for his Crosse what for his buriall Shall wee giue him Crosse for Crosse and a Graue for a Sepulchre Can we giue him any thing when of him by him and in him we haue all things Let vs therefore repay him Loue for Debt Charitie for Gift Thanks for Bloud and Almes for Reward Chrisostome in Tract de Symbol I admonish you that you alwayes blesse the Lord if Aduersitie come blesse him that your miseries may be taken from you if prosperitie happen vnto you blesse him likewise that his benefits may be continued We reade sundry Apothegmes to this purpose Erasm. Apoth Lib. 6. ex Plutar. telleth vs That Python hauing done many notable seruices for the Athenians amongst others he slew the king Cotyn in battell and they willing to publish his merits not only by the common Crier but in stately Shewes and Triumphes he refused all those Honors saying All praise and thankes are to be rendred vnto the gods by whose helpe and fauor these things are done For myne owne part I only lent my will and hand but the euent of all excellent actions are in the higher Powers to whom if any thing hath suceeded happily belongeth all thanksgiuing I only in these things was their minister and seruant Nicephorus Calistratus telleth vs That Platilla the wife to the Emperour Theodosius when she perceiued he loued to deviat something from justice Religion more than became one of his high place and calling she said vnto him Sweet and deare Lord consider with your selfe what you before were and whose Deputy you now are If you remember him who hath placed you in this eminent Throne how can you proue ingratefull vnto him for so great a benefit receiued Most requisite therefore it is that you giue a thankefull account vnto him who preferred you before all others vnto so great a charge Chilon was wont to say That it is commendable in men to forget bad turnes done but to bee mindefull of courtesies receiued yet the Vulgar practise the contrarie for where they confer a benefit they neuer cease not onely to remember it but to proclaime and publish it but when any benefit is bestowed vpon them they either forget dissemble or vnder-value it AElianus telleth vs That Diogenes hauing receiued some pieces of mony from one Diotimus Carisius to supply his necessary wants knowing himselfe altogether vnable to requite his present curtesie he looking vpon him with a loud acclamation cried out The gods requite thee ô Diotimus euen so much as thou canst thinke in thy minde or desire in thy heart Numerous are the histories extolling this most imitable Vertue amongst which I remember you of some few Cirus Major hauing read in the booke of the Prophet Esay his name inserted there two
next day the infant who was then in health and slept soundly died suddenly in the Nurses arms and that was the successe of the Vision In the yeare 1567 in Trautonauia a towne in Bohemia one of the city died named Stephanus Hubnerus who in his life time had heaped together innumerable riches builded sumptuous houses and pallaces euery man wondring how hee should attaine to that great masse of wealth Presently after his decease which was obserued with the celebration of a most costly funerall his Spectar or shadow in the same habit which he was knowne to weare being aliue was seene to walke in the streets of the city and so many of his acquaintance or others as he met and offered in the way of salutation to embrace so many either died or fell into some grieuous and dangerous disease immediatly after Niderius telleth this story In the borders of the kingdome of Bohemia lieth a valley in which diuers nights together was heard clattering of armour and clamors of men as if two Armies had met in pitcht battell Two Knights that inhabited neere vnto this prodigious place agreed to arme themselues and discouer the secrets of this inuisible Army The night was appointed and accommodated at all assayes they rode to the place where they might descry two battels ready ordered for present skirmish they could easily distinguish the Colours and prauant Liueries of euerie Company but drawing neere the one whose courage began to relent told the other that he had seene sufficient for his part and thought it good not to dally with such prodegies wherefore further than he was he would not go The other called him Coward and prickt on towards the Armies from one of which an horseman came forth fought with him and cut off his head At which sight the other fled and told the newes the next morning A great confluence of people searching for the body found it in one place the head in another but neither could discern the footing of horse or man onely the print of birds feet and those in myrie places c. The Emblem A Visard shewed by an hand extended from the clouds those children which stand directly before it and view the ouglinesse thereof runne away as affrighted with the vaine shadow but such as stand behinde looking onely vpon the hollownesse and perceiuing the error make it onely their sport deriding those that are so simply terrified Which agreeth with that of Cassiodor in Psalm Quis mortem temporalem metuat cui aeterna vita promittitur quis labores carnis timeat cum se in perpetua requie nouerit collocandum What is he that can feare a temporal death to whom eternall life is promised Or who would be afraid of the paines belonging to the flesh that knowes they bring him to euerlasting rest And we reade Phil. 1.24 For I am distressed betwixt both desiring to be loosed and to be with Christ which is best of all c. It is held to be a maxim That no man dieth more willingly than hee that hath liued most religiously which the more fearefully wee fly the more earnestly we follow and by liuing to die men dye to liue Saint Augustine telleth vs there be three sorts of death The first the death of Sinne for euery Soule that sinneth shall die The second a mysticall death that is when we die to sinne and liue to God The third is that death by which we fulfill the course of nature Non deterret sapientem mors quae propter incertos casus quotidie imminet propter brevitatem vitae nunquam longe potest abesse i. Death cannot terrifie a wise man which by reason of so many vncertaine chances is alwayes imminent and in regard of the shortnesse of his life can neuer be long absent The Motto giuen by Catsius to this Emblem is Mors Larvae similis tremor hinc nihil inde maligni And his Conceit hereupon as followeth Id mors est homini trepidis quod Larva puellis Excitat ingentes frons vtriusque metus Larva fugat pueros frontem non terga videntes Ast alijs risum posteriora movent Sensibus incurrit cum lurida mortis imag● Hei mihi quam multis spes animusque cadit At cui terga necis melior doctrina revelat Clamat ades vitae mors melioris iter ¶ Thus paraphrased Death is to Man as Visards to Girles show Who frighted run from what they do not know Behold the forehead and th' aspect affrights View it behinde and the mistake delights So when Deaths pallid image is presented How many men grow strangely discontented Who better counsel'd on his backe parts looke And cry out welcome Death we haue mis-tooke A morall interpretation the Motto being Pessimus interpres rerum metus may be gathered from Plutarch in Moral where hee saith Terror absentium rerum ipsa novitate falso angetur consuetudo tamen ratio efficit vt ea etiam quae horrenda sunt natura terrendi vim amittant i. The terror of things absent is encreased falsly by the nouelty thereof but Custome and Reason so bring to passe that euen those things which are naturally horrid come to lose the power of their terror Feare is said to be the companion of a guilty conscience neither can there be any greater folly than for a man to feare that which he cannot shun Dayly experience hath brought it within the compasse of a prouerbe That he that feareth euery tempest can neuer make a good traueller Viget saith It becommeth a man to be carefull but not fearefull because it often hapneth That seruile feare bringeth sudden danger Ovid tells vs Epist. Her 13. Nos sumus incerta nos anxius omnia cogit Quae possunt fieri facta putare Timor i. We are incertaine of our selues and there is nothing possible to be done but Feare persuades vs to be already done Feare is defined to be two-fold good commendable Feare grounded vpon Reason and Iudgement which is awed more by reproch and dishonour than by death or disaster And euil Feare which is destitute of Reason and may be called Pusillanimitie or Cowardise alwayes attended on by two perturbations of the Soule Doubt and Sadnesse Which may be also called the defect of Fortitude Vpon which the Emblematist writeth in these words Horrendo pavidas hinc territat ore puellas Inde cavo risum cortice larva movet Deterior vero rerum succurrit imago Et falsa miseros anxietate premit Auget homo proprios animo plerumque dolores Inque fuam meus est ingeniofa necem Eia age terribilem rebus miser arripe larvam Ludicr●s error crit quod modo terror erat ¶ Thus paraphrased Looke forward to faint Girles it terror breeds View it behinde and laughter thence proceeds When Fortune looks vpon vs with a frowne We in our owne feares wretched are cast downe Man for the most part doth his owne
them Fairies In solitarie roomes These vprores keepe And beat at dores to wake men from their sleepe● Seeming to force locks be they ne're so strong And keeping Christmasse gambols all night long Pots glasses trenchers dishes pannes and kettles They will make dance about the shelues and settles As if about the Kitchen tost and cast Yet in the moruing nothing found misplac't Others such houses to their vse haue fitted In which base murthers haue been once committed Some haue their fearefull habitations taken In desolat houses ruin'd and forsaken Examples faile not to make these more plaine The house wherein Caligula was slaine To enter which none euer durst aspire After his death till 't was consum'd by fire The like in Athens of which Pliny writes In his Epistles As Facetius cites In Halberstad saith he there is a Dwelling Of great remarke the neighbour roofes excelling For architecture in which made aboad A mighty rich man and a belly-god After whose death his soule gon Heav'n knowes whither Not one night fail'd for many moneths together But all the roomes with lighted tapers shone As if the darknesse had beene chac't and gone And Day there onely for his pleasure stay'd In the great chamber where before were made His riotous feasts the casements standing wide Clearely through that transparance is espy'de This Glutton whom they by his habit knew At the boords end feasting a frolicke crew Of lusty stomacks that about him sate Serv'd in with many a costly delicate Course after Course and ev'ry Charger full Neat Seruitors attended not one dull But ready to shift trenchers● and fill wine In guilded bowles for all with plate doth shine And amongst them you could not spy a guest But seem'd some one he in his life did feast At this high rate they seem'd to spend the night But all were vanisht still before day light Of Bishop Datius a learn'd Clerke thus saith He for the true profession of his Faith Sent into exile in his difficult way Opprest with penurie was forc'd to stay In Corinth nor there lodging could he haue In any Inne or place conuenient saue A corner house suppos'd to be inchanted And at that time with sundry Diuels haunted There taking vp his lodging and alone He soundly slept till betwixt twelue and one When suddenly he knew not by what cranny The dores bee'ng fast shut to him came a many Of Diuels thronging deckt in sundry shapes Like Badgers Foxes Hedge-hogs Hares and Apes Others more terrible like Lions rore Some grunt like hogs the like ne're heard before Like Bulls these bellow those like Asses bray Some barke like ban-dogs some like horses ney Some howle like Wolues others like Furies yell Scarse that blacke Santus could be match'd in hell At which vp starts the noble Priest and saith O you accursed Fiends Vassals of wrath That first had in the East your habitation Till you by pride did forfeit your saluation With the blest Angels you had then your seat But by aspiring to be god-like great Behold your rashnesse punisht in your features Being transhap'd into base abject creatures This hauing spoke the Spirits disappeard The house of them for euer after clear'd One thing though out of course it may appeare Yet I thought fit to be inserted here The rather too the Reader I prepare Because it may seeme wonderfull and rare Receiue 't as you thinke good or if you please To beleeue Plutarch then his words are these One call'd Enapius a yong man well bred By the Physitions was giv'n out for dead And left to his last sheet After some howers He seem'd to recollect his vitall powers To liue againe and speake The reason why Demanded of his strange recouerie His answer was That he was dead 't was true And brought before th' infernall Bar. They view Him o're and o're then call to them who'haue charge The spirit from the body to inlarge Whom Pluto with the other Stygian Pow'rs Thus threat Base Vassals can we thinke you ours Or worthy our imployment to mistake In such a serious errand Do we make You Officers and Lictors to arrest Such as are call'd to their eternall rest And when we send for one whose dismall fate Proclaimes him dead you bring vs one whose date Is not yet summ'd but of a vertue stronger As limited by vs to liue much longer We sent that with Nicander you should meet A Currier that dwells in such a street And how haue you mistooke This Soule dismisse And fetch his hither to our darke Abisse With that saith he I waken'd His friends sent Vnto the Curriers house incontinent And found him at the very instant dead When he his former life recouered And though meere fabulous this seeme to be Yet is it no impossibilitie Fiends should delude the Ethnicks and on them Confer this as a cunning stratagem To make them thinke that he dispos'd mans breath And had the sole pow'r ouer life and death At nothing more these auerse Spirits aime Than what is Gods vnto themselues to claime Others there are as if destin'd by lot To haue no pow'r but ouer goods ill got For instance One long with the world at strife Who had profest a strict religious life And taken holy Orders at his booke Spending his spare houres to a crafty Cooke Was neere ally'de and at his best vacation Findes out a time to giue him visitation And greets him with a blessing The fat Host Is glad to see his Vncle Sod and Rost He sets before him there is nothing fit To bid him welcome wanting downe they sit The good old man after some small repast More apt to talke than eat demands at last Of his Lay Nephew since he toiles and striues In this vaine world to prosper how he thriues The Cooke first fetcheth a deepe sigh then sayes O Vncle I haue sought my state to raise By ev'ry indirect and law lesse meane Yet still my couetous aimes are frustrat cleane I buy stale meat and at the cheapest rate Then if my Guests complaine I cog and prate Out-facing it for good Sometimes I buy Beeues haue been told me of the murrain dye What course haue I not tooke to compasse riches Ventur'd on some haue been found dead in ditches Bak'd dogs for Venison put them in good paste And then with salt and pepper helpt their taste Meat rosted twice and twice boyl'd I oft sell Make pies of fly-blowne joints and vent them well I froth my cannes in ev'ry jug I cheat And nicke my Ghests in what they drinke or eat And yet with these and more sleights all I can Doth not declare me for a thriuing man I pinch myne owne guts and from others gleane And yet though I shew fat my stocke is leane The good old man though at his tale offended No interruption vs'd till he had ended First hauing shooke his head then crost his brest Cousin said he this lewd life I detest Let me aduise
trans-shape himself into the likenesse of a Mouse But when the Diuine Iustice thought fit to giue a period to his insolencies being watched by some of his enemies they espied him in the Sunne sitting in a window that belonged to a stoue or hot house sporting himselfe in that shape when comming behind him when he least suspected they thrust their swords through the window and so slew him In like manner that great Magition of Newburg who sould a bottle of hay in stead of an horse being twice apprehended and hauing twice by the Diuels help escaped out of prison the third time hee was forsaken of his great Patron and deliuered vp vnto death I will conclude with the great Archi-Mage of these our later times Cornelius Agrippa who when he had spent the greatest part of his houres and age in the search and acquisition of this blacke and mystical Science yet doubted not to write after this maner The Magitions by the instigation of the Diuell onely in hope of gaine and a little vain-glory haue set their mindes against God not performing any thing that is either good or profitable vnto men but leading them to destruction and errour In whom whosoeuer shall place any confidence they plucke Gods heauy judgments vpon themselues True it is that I being a yong man writ of the Magical Art three bookes in one volume sufficiently large which I entituled Of Hidden Philosophie in which wheresoeuer I haue erred through the vaine curiositie of youth now in my better and more ripe vnderstanding I recant in this Palinode I confesse I haue spent much time in these vanities in which I haue onely profited thus much that I am able to dehort other men from entring into the like danger For whosoeuer by the illusion of the Diuell or by the operation of euill Spirits shall presume to diuine or prophesie by Magicke vanities Exorcismes Incantations Amatories inchanted Ditches and other demoniacall actions exercising blasphemous charmes spels witchcrafts and sorceries or any thing belonging to superstition and Idolatrie all these are fore-doomed to be tormented in eternall fire with Iamnes Mambre and Simon Magus These things this wretched man writ who saw the best and followed the worst For he continued in that execrable studie to his end and hauing receiued a promise from the Diuell that so oft as age came vpon him so oft his youth should be renewed and so liue euer he commanded his owne head to be cut off in hope instantly to reuiue againe But miserable that he was he was cheated in his confidence by that great Deceiuer in whom hee most trusted by which he made both soule and body a sudden though long expected prey to the Diuell There can scarce a sin be imagined more hatefull to God than Magicke by which the Couenant made with him being violated the Sorcerer entreth a new with the Diuell in which open war is proclaimed against God and a treaty of Peace first debated and after concluded with Sathan God himselfe saith by the mouth of his seruant Moses If any turne after such as worke with euill Spirits and after Soothsayers to go a whoring after them I will set my face against that person and will cut him off from amongst his people And againe If a man or woman haue a Spirit of Diuination or Soothsaying in them they shall die the death they shall stone them to death their bloud shall be vpon them Reade Deutronomie cap. 18. vers 10. Let none be found amongst you that maketh his sonne or his daughter to goe through the fire or that vseth witchcraft or a regarder of times or a marker of the flying of Fowles or a Sorcerer or a Charmer or that counselleth with Spirits or a Sooth-sayer or that asketh counsell of the Dead for all that do such things are abhomination vnto the Lord and because of these abhominations the Lord thy God doth cast them out before thee Thus we see as well by the Scriptures themselues as by the Ciuill Lawes of Kingdomes all such as shall separate themselues from God and enter into conuerse and fellowship with Sathan are cursed in the act and ought to be extermined from all Christian Churches and Commonweales The Emblem A Moth or Silk-worme creeping from an old stocke or trunke of a tree and turned vnto a Butter-fly The Motto Ecce nova omnia Behold all things are made new Complying with that which wee reade in Saint Pauls second Epistle to the Corinthians cap. 5. vers 17. Therefore if any man be in Christ let him be a new Creature old things are passed away behold all things become new And Ephes. 4.22 That you cast off concerning the conuersation in times past that Old Man which is corrupt through the deceiuable lusts and be renewed in the spirit of your minde and put on the New Man which after God is created vnto righteousnesse and true holinesse The Emblem is thus exprest Truncus iners eruca fuit nunc alba voluctis Ambrosium Coeli corpore gaudet iter Antea vermis erat mutatio quanta videtis Corporis antiqui portio nulla manet Vestis opes habitus convivia foedera mores Lingua sodalitium gaudia luctus amor Omnia sunt mutanda viris quibus entheus ardor Terrhenae decet hos faecis habere nihil ¶ Thus Paraphrased A meere trunke was the Silke-worme now it flies A white Bird sporting in th' Ambrosiall Skies Before a Worme What a great change is here Of the first shape no semblance doth appeare Garments Wealth Banquets Contracts Mannors Ioy Loue Language Fellowship Change must destroy Such men whom Diuine ardor doth inspire Must of this terrhene drosse quench all desire After which change followeth eternity And of the Saints and Elect it may be said Parva patiuntur vt magna potiantur Smal are the things they suffer in this world compared with the great things they shall receiue in the world to come We reade Dan. cap. 12. vers 2. thus And many of them that sleepe in the dust of the earth shall awake to euerlasting life and some to shame and perpetual contempt and they that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the Firmament and they that turne many vnto righteousnesse shall shine as the Starres for euer and euer Moreouer Iob 19. For I am sure that my Redeemer liueth and he shall stand the last on the earth And though after my skinne wormes shall destroy this body yet shall I see God in my flesh whom I my selfe shall see with mine eyes and none other for mee c. AEternus non erit sopor Death shall be no euerlasting sleep Iohn 5.28 Maruell not at this for the houre shall come in which all that are in the graues shall heare his voice and they shall come forth that haue done good vnto the resurrection of life but they that haue done euill vnto the resurrection of condemnation Saint Augustine in one of his books saith Resurgent Sanctorum