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A05562 Politeuphuia VVits common wealth. N. L. (Nicholas Ling), fl. 1580-1607.; Bodenham, John, fl. 1600, attributed name. 1598 (1598) STC 15686; ESTC S108557 193,341 576

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increaseth and preserueth it selfe by a naturall facultie NAture in despight of Tyme will frowne at abuse Nature hath a certaine predominant power ouer the minde of man The man that lyueth obedient to nature can neuer hurt himselfe thereby Actions wrought against nature reape despight and thoughts aboue nature disdaine As Art is a helpe to nature so is experience the triall and perfection of Art As nature hath g●uen beautie and vertue giuen courage so nature yeeldeth death and vertue yeeldeth honour It is an old plague in mans nature that many men for the most part leaue the amendement of theyr liues farre behind them to sette theyr honors the more before them Nature is aboue Art in the ignorant and vertue aboue all thinges is esteemed of the vvise It is hard to straighten that by Art which is made crooked by nature Perian Nature is pleased in the eye reason in the minde but vertue in them both Consider what nature requires not howmuch affection desires That which is bredde in the bone vvill neuer out of the flesh and vvhat nature hath made Art cannot cure Nature guideth beastes but reason ruleth the harts of men VVhere in one man doe meete incertaintie of affection and malice of nature there is no other hope in him then distrust periurie words and reuenge Such as lyue according to nature are neuer poore and according to the opinion of men they are neuer rich because nature contenteth herselfe opinion doth infinitly couet Phillip King Alexanders Father falling vpon the sands and seeing there the marke print of his body sayd how little a plot of ground is nature content with and yet we couet the whole world The God vvhich is God of nature dooth neuer teach vnnaturalnesse S. P. S. Nature is higher prised then wealth and the loue of our Parents ought to be more precious then dignitie Fyre cannot be hid in the straw nor the nature of man so concealed but at the last it wil haue his course In nature nothing is superfluous Arist. Cineus the Phylosopher was of thys opinion that when the Gods framed Nature they went beyond theyr skill in that quoth hee the maker was subiect to the thing made VVhere nature is vicious by learning it is amended and where it is vertuous by skyll it is augmented There is no greater bonde then duty nor straighter Lawe then nature and where nature inforceth obedience there to resist is to striue against God Better is seueritie in nature then contempt in nature Liberall Sciences are most meet for liberall men and good Arts for good natures Nature without learning and good bringing vp is a blinde guide learning without nature wanteth much and vse vvithout the two former is vnperfit Nature beeing alwayes in a perpetuall motion desireth to be driuen to the better part or else shee suffereth herselfe to bee wayghed downe as a ballance to the worser Nature is our best guide whom if we folow we shall neuer goe astray Arist. Nature friendly sheweth vs by many signes what shee would what she seeketh and what she desireth but man by some strange mean waxeth deafe and will not heare what shee gently counsaileth Nature is a certaine strength and power put into things created by God who gyueth to each thing that which belongeth vnto it To striue against nature is lyke the monstrous broode of the earth to make warre against the Gods in heauen Quod satiare potest diues natura ministrat Quod docet infraenis gloria fine caret Hoc generi hominum natura datum vt qua infamilia laus aliqua forté floruerit hanc feré qui sunt eius stirpis quod sermo hominum ad memoriam patrum virtute celebretur cupidissimé persequantur Of Lyfe Defi. Life which we commonly call the breath of this worlde is a perpetuall battaile and a sharpe skirmish wherein wee are one while hurt with enuie another while with ambition and by and by with some other vice besides the suddaine onsets giuen vppon our bodies by a thousand sorts of diseases and floods of aduersities vpon our spirits LIfe is a pilgrimage a shadowe of ioy a glasse of infirmitie and the perfect path-way to death All mortall men suffer corruption in theyr soules through vice and in theyr bodyes through wormes Mans life is more brittle then glasse It is a miserable life where friendes are feared and enemies nothing mistrusted VVhose death men doe wish his lyfe they alwayes hate It is better not to lyue then not to knowe how to lyue Salust It is hard for a man to liue vvell but verie easie to die ill In lyfe there is time left to speake of the incombrances of fancie but after death no possible meanes to redresse endlesse calamitie If a good man desire to lyue it is for the great desire he hath to doe good but if the euill desire to lyue it is for that they woulde abuse the world longer The chyldren of vanitie call no time good but that wherein they liue according to their owne desire doe nothing but follow theyr owne filthie lusts Mans lyfe is like lyghtning which is but a flash and the longest date of yeeres is but a bauens blaze Men can neither inlarge their lyues as they desire nor shunne that death which they abhorre Menan A detestable life remoueth all merrit of honourable buriall It is better to lyue in meane degree then in high disdaine By lyfe grovveth continuance and by death all things take end Life and death are in the power of the tong The man that desireth life feareth death ought carefully to gouerne his tongue Life is short yet sweet Euripides Life to a wretched man is long but to him that is happy very short Menander Mans life is a warfare Seneca The mortall life which we inioy is the hope of life immortall Aug. An vndefiled life is the reward of age Aug. No man is so old but thinketh he may yet liue an other yeare Hierom. The breath that maintaineth life endeth it A good lyfe is the readiest vvay to a good name Aurel. Better it is to be carefull to liue vvell then desirous to liue long A long lyfe hath commonly long cares annexed with it Most men in these dayes wil haue precepts to be ruled by theyr lyfe and not theyr lyfe to be gouernd by precepts Mans life ought to be lyke vnto an image that hath euery part persit in it Our lyfe ought not to depend vppon one onely hope no more then a shyppe is to be stayed with one anker Fooles vvhen they hate theyr life will yet desire to liue for the feare vvhich they haue of death Crates Mans life is lent him for a time and he that gaue it may iustly demaund it when he will They liue very ill vvho alwayes thinke to liue To a man in misery lyfe seemeth too long but to a worldly minded man liuing at pleasure life seemeth too short Chilo VVhat a shame is it for men
more worthie to be called vertuous thē noble or reuerend for that the one tytle descends together with dignitie and the other is the rewarde of the worke which wee vse So that it falls out in good experience that thys tytle of Vertue is of many men desired but of very few truly deserued Vertue maketh a stranger grow natural in a strange Country and vice maketh the naturall a stranger in his owne Country Vertue is health vice is sicknes Vertue is a stranger vppon earth but a cittizen in heauen Take away discretion and vertue will become vice Vertue is the beautie of the inward man Vertue laboureth lyke the sunne to lighten the world To forgyue is no lesse vertue in Princes when they bee offended then reuenge a vice in the common sort when they be wronged Vertue goes not by byrth nor discretion by yeres for there are old fooles yong counsellors It proceedeth of a more noble courage and vertue to conquer our owne vnlawfull affections then to gyue an onset vpon the Campe of an enemy Vertue is the Queene of labours Opinion the Mistresse of fooles Vanity the pryde of Nature and Contention the ouerthrowe of Families As by nature the Cedar will be tall the Diamond bright and the Carbuncle glistering so Vertue wil shine though it be neuer so much obscured Vertue maketh men on the earth famous in theyr graues glorious and in the heauens immortall Vertue is not obtayned in seeking strange countries but in amendement of old errors Vertue is more acceptable by howe much the more it is placed in a beautifull body Pythagoras compareth Vertue to the letter Y which is small at the foote broade at the head meaning that to attaine Vertue it is very paynfull but the possession thereof passing pleasant A good man though in appearance he seem needy yet by vertue he is rich Vertue is a thing that prepareth vs to immortality and makes vs equall with the heauens Socrates The first step to vertue is to loue vertue in another man Vertue while it suffereth ouercommeth Vertue cannot perfitly bee discerned without her contraryes nor absolutely perfect without aduersity Vertue is better and more certayne then any Art The actions of Vertue doe so much affect the beholder that he presently admireth thē and desireth to follow them A man endued with vertue merriteth more fauour then a man of much wealth Vertue maketh a man rich though hee be poore in worldly substance It is no lesse vertue to keepe thinges after they be gotten then to get them Vertue in generall is a Castle impregnable a Ryuer that needeth no rowing a Sea that moueth not a treasure endlesse an Army inuinsible a burthen supportable an euer-turning spye a signe deceitlesse a plaine way faile lesse a true guyde without guile a Balme that instantly cureth an eternall honour that neuer dyeth Mar. Aurelius Laudo factam de necessitate virtutem sed plus laudo illam quam elegit libertas non inducit necessitas Virtus medio iacet obruta caeno Nequitiae classes candida vela ferunt Of Peace Defi. Peace is the quiet and tranquility of kingdomes burying all seditions tumults vprores and factions and planting ease quietues and securitie with all other florishing ornaments of happinesse DEere and vnprofitable is the peace that is bought with guiltlesse blood They iustly deserue the sworde of VVarre which wilfully refuse the conditions of peace Peace florisheth where reason ruleth ioy raigneth where modesty directeth Peace is the end of warre honour the ioy of peace and good gouernment the grounde of them both As the lyuing members of the body vnited together maintaine lyfe and deuided hasten death so Cittizens in a Common-weale by their concord maintain the state but by their hatreds destroy it Concord in a Citty is lyke harmony in musicke Concord of many maketh one True peace is to haue peace with vertue and warre with vice Peace asketh no lesse wisedome to conserue it then valiantnes to obtaine it The colour of ●eace maketh the war more secure for who ●uspect least are soonest preuented The French samed for their incredible couetousnes haue often-times s●ld theyr country for brybes but ●ildom ratified their peace with honour Archidamia the Spartan Lady seeing her Countrey supprest by the cou●tousnesse of the Magistrates and Pirrhus tryumphing in theyr myseries entred the Senate house with a naked sword in her hand and in the name of all the Ladyes chyd the hartlesse Lordes for suffering themselues to liue theyr Countrey beeing ouerthrowne and they lyke to loose theyr lybertie Pirrhus entering Sicily possessed with hope of some peace afterward surprised the countrey and inthralled the inhabitants thereof by tyranny Peace from the mouth of a Tyrant is oftener promised then performed The countenaunce declareth mans inclination to peace and the austeritie of Marius countenaunce being an Infant was ominous to Rome in his old age It is a poynt of godly wisedome to bee at peace with men at warre with vices To rule an estate is a heauie burthen but to vnder-goe peace is an easie carriage Concord maketh small thinges mightily to increase but discord maketh great things sodainly to decay To flye from peace which wee should earnestly pursue is to followe discord and our owne destruction That thing is more esteemed which is obtained by peacefull wordes then that which is gotten by forceable violence Nemo vires suas in pace cognoscit si enim bella desunt virtutum experimenta non prosunt Quas homini nouisse datū est pax vna triūphis pax optima rerum Inuneris melior pax custodire salutem Et ciues aequare potens Sil. Ital. Of Truth Defi. Truth is that certaine and vnfallible vertue which bringeth foorth all goodnes reuealeth the creation of the worlde the power of our Creator the eternall crowne of blisse we hope for and the punishment allotted for our misdooings It is a vertue through which wee are inclined to speake no otherwise with our tongue then we thinke with our hart TRuth standes not vppon the tongues of men nor honour vppon the frownes of authoritie There is nothing so secretly hidden but time and truth will reueale it Truth seemeth somtimes at the first to bee very darke harde and displeasant but at the length it appeareth most bright louely and comfortable Plotinus Truth is the guide of all goodnes Truth may bee oft blamed but neuer shamed and vertue suppressed by slaunder will at last appeare without blemish The dissoluing of a doubt is the finding of the truth Truth is the law of all Arts. Truth hath two companions wisedom and constancie Truth is the messenger of God which euerie man ought to reuerence for the loue of her Maister Truth onely among all things is priuiledged in such wise that when the time seemeth to haue broken her wings then as immortall she taketh her force The purest Emerald shyneth brightest whē it hath no foyle and truth delighteth most when it is apparailed
inter euersae vrbis manubias varia sub specie migrauit ad graecos Of Couetousnes Defi. Couetousnes is a vice of the soule wherby a man desireth to haue from all parts with out reason and vniustly with-holdeth that which rightly belongeth vnto another body it is also a sparing and niggardlinesse in giuing but open-handed to receaue whatsoeuer is brought without conscience or any regard whether it be well or ill attained THe property of a couetous man is to liue like a begger all dayes of his life and to be founde rich in money at the houre of his death Archimed Gaynes gotten vvith an ill name is great losse Couetous men little regard to shorten their lyues so they may augment their riches Treasures hoorded vp by the couetous are most commonly wasted by the prodigall person Gold is called the bait of sinne the snare of soules and the hooke of death which being aptly applyed may be compared to a fire whereof a little is good to warme one but too much will burne him altogether The chariot of Couetousnes is carried vppon foure vvheeles of vices Churlishnesse Faint-courage contempt of God forgetfulnes of death Drawn by two horses called Greedy to catch and Holdfast the Carter that dryueth it is Desire to haue hauing a whip called Loth to forgoe A couetous man is good to no man and worst friend to himselfe The couetous man vvanteth as vvell that which he hath as that which he hath not He that coueteth much wanteth much There is greater sorrowe in loosing riches then pleasure in getting them Publius Couetousnes is the roote of all euill from whence doe proceed as from a fountaine of mishap the ruine of Common-weales the subuersion of estates the wrack of societies the staine of conscience the breach of amity the confusion of the mind iniustice bribery slaughters treasons and a million of other mischeeuous enormities Aurel. All vices haue theyr taste saue onely couetousnes The gaine of golde maketh many a man to loose his soule A couetons man passeth great trauailes in gathering riches more danger in keeping them much law in defending them great torment in departing from them The excuse of the couetous man is that he gathereth for his children Apollonius The couetous minded man in seeking after riches purchaseth carefulnes for him-selfe enuy for his neighbours a pray for theeues perrill for his person damnation for his soule curses for his chyldren and lavve for his heyres A couetous rich man in making hys testament hath more trouble to please all then himselfe tooke pleasure to get and possesse all A couetous mans purse is called the deuils mouth Dionisius comming into a Temple vvhere Images were couered in costly coates of siluer and gold These garments quoth hee are too heauie for sommer and too colde for vvinter and so taking them away with him hee cloathed them in Linsey-wolsie saying these are more light for sommer and cooler for the winter VVee feare all things like mortall men but wee desire all thinges as if wee were immortall Seneca Couetousnes in olde men is most monstrous for what can be more foolish then to prouide more money and victuals vvhen he is at his iourneyes end Couetousnes is a disease vvhich spreadeth through all the vaines is rooted in the bowels and being inueterate can not be remooued Tully To fly from couetousnes is to gaine a kingdome Publius Gold guides the globe of the earth and couetousnes runnes round about the world Most couetous is hee vvhich is carefull to get desirous to keepe and vnwilling to forgoe By liberality mens vices are couered by couetousnes layd open to the world Aug. A couetous mans eye is neuer satisfied nor his desire of gaine at any time suffised The gluttons minde is of his belly the leacher of his lust and the couetous man of his gold Bernard The couetous man is alway poore August Ardua res haec est opibus non tradere mores Et cum tot Croesos viceris esse Numam Vsque adeo solus ferrum mortemque timere Aurinescit amor pereunt discrimine nullo Amissae leges sed pars vilissima rerum Certamen mouistis opes Of Vsurie Defi. Vsurie of the Hebrues is called byting it is an vnlawfull gaine gotte by an vnlawfull meane and that cruelty which doth not onelie gnaw the debter to the bones but also sucketh out all the blood and marrow from them ingendering mony of money contrary to nature and to the intent for which money was first made VSurie is compared to fire vvhich is an actiue and insatiable element for it burneth and consumeth all the wood that is laid vpon it so the Vsurer the more hee hath the more he desireth and lyke hell gates hee is neuer satisfied A vsurer is a filching and corrupt Cittizen that both stealeth from his neighbours and defraudeth himselfe The intent of vsury bewraies the crime Vsury is the nurse of idlenes idlenes the mother of euils Vsurie makes the noble man sell his land the lawyer his Iustinian the Phisition his Gallen the souldier his sword the Merchant his wares and the world his peace Vsury is an auntient mischiefe and cause of much ciuill discord A litle lewdly come by is the losse of a great deale well gotten Vsurie is like a vvhirle-poole that swalloweth what soeuer it catcheth Crateus He that with his gold be gets gold becomes a slaue to his gold Inordinate desire of vvealth is the spring of vsurie and vsurie subuerteth credite good name and all other vertues Couetousnes seeketh out vsurie and vsurie nourisheth couetousnes An vsurer can learne no truth because hee loatheth the truth Vsurie taketh away the tytle of gentry because it delighteth in ignobility Vsury oftentimes deceiues the belly altogether liues carelesse of the soules safety As the greedy Rauens seeke after carren for their food so doth the couetous vsurer hunt after coyne to fill his coffers Philo. Plutarch sayth that no kinde of people in the world are so notorious lyuers nor vse so much to falsifie theyr fayth in all practises as vsurers Appian in his first booke of ciuill wars writeth that by an auncient Law at Rome vsurie was forbidden vpon very great paine As he which is stung vvith an Aspe dyeth sleeping so sweetly doth hee consume himselfe which hath borrowed vpon vsury A vsurer is more dangerous then a theefe Cato Vsury is most hated of those whom she doth most pleasure Vsury maketh those that were free-borne bondslaues Publius Vsury is the manifest signe of extreame impudencie Chrysost. To be a vsurer is to be a manslayer Cato Vsurers were not suffered to enter the temple of sparing and well ordered expence Asellius was slayne for making a law against vsurers Appian By vsury money is brought forth before it be gotten Vsurie is the daughter of auarice and ambition turpia lucra faenoris et velox inopes vsura trucidat Nō sunt facienda mala vtinde eueniant bona Of Deceit Defi. Deceit or
aut scientia superbire ô superba praesumptio ô praesumptuosa superbia August Cum non sit nostrum quod sumus quomodo nostrum est quod habemus Stultitiae genus est vt cum alijs debeas vitae beneficium tibi adscribas ornamenta virtutum Of Treason Defi. Treason is that damned vice hated of God and man where-with periured persons being bewitched feare not to betray themselues so they may eyther betray others or theyr Countrey it is the breach of fayth and loyaltie with God theyr Gouernours and Country THey are deceaued that looke for any reward for treason Curtius The conflict with traytours is more dangerous then open enemies Liuius Traytors are like moaths which eate the cloath in which they were bred like Vipers that gnaw the bowels where they were born lyke vvormes which consume the wood in which they were ingendered Agesilaus Trecherie hath alvvayes a more glozing shew then truth and flattery displayes a brauer flag then fayth No place is safe enough for a traytor Amb. Once a traytor and neuer after trusted Liuius VVho will not with Antigonus make much of a traytor going about to plesure him but hauing his purpose who will not hate him to the death Such as are traytors to their Prince periured to God deserue no credit with men Trechery ought not to be concealed and friends haue no priuiledge to be false Such as couet most bitterly to betray first seeke most sweetly to entrap Phillip Traytors leaue no practise vndone because they will not but because they dare not Victory is not so earnestly to be sought as treason is to be shunned Scylla did betray her owne Father vnto Minos but he rewarded her accordingly Ouid. A Schoolmaister among the Falerians hauing the charge and bringing vp of all the youth in the Cittie hoping to recouer the fauour of the Roma●s betrayed all the Cittizens children into the hands of Camillus but Camillus louing iustice caused him to bee stript and his hands to be bound behind him and gaue the children rods whips to beate him home to the Citty A good vvarrior ought to commit the fortune of his vvarre to the trust of his ovvne vertue not to the impiety and treason of his enemies Tarpeias daughter betrayed the Castle of Rome to the Sabines for lucre sake Many men loue the treason though they hate the traytor Many conspire valiantly but ende wretchedly Traytors haue continual feare for their bedfellow care for their cōpanion the sting of conscience for their torment Manlius A light head an ambitious desire a corrupt conscience ill counsaile soone breede a traytor VVhere the peoples affection is assured the traytors purpose is preuented Bias. There are many Traytors in Common-weales whom it is better to forbeare then to prouoke Of rash hopes proceede perrillous ends of execrable treasons damnable successe Traytors about the thrones of Princes are like wolues about the foulds of sheepe One skabd sheepe will infect a whole flock and one traytor subuert a whole Monarchy Caesar rewarded those that betrayed Pompey with death Those that murdered Caesar in the Senate-house neuer prospered Tully sayth that no vvise-man at any time will trust a Traytor Ne colloquiorum de praetextu pacis proditiones vrbium tententur fiantque interlocutores maximé cauendum est Proditores vrbium saepé né ipsi quidem proditionem euadunt sed ab hoste trucidantur Of Desperation Defi. Desperation is a sorrowfulnes without all hope of better fortune a vice which falsely shrowdeth it selfe vnder the tytle of fortit●de and valure and tickling the vaine humors of the vaine-glorious carry them to ignoble and indisereet actions to the vtter losse of so●les and bodies DEsperation is a double sinne and finall impenitency hath no remission It is better to be counted a dastardly coward then a desperate caitife Let no man dispaire of grace although hee repent in his latter age for God iudgeth of a mans end and not of his life past Benard Desperation springeth from the ignorance of God Aug. Idlenes is the root of desperation Theod. Better it is to lyue pinched vvith a few momentary passions then with desperate death to destroy both soule and body It is vaine to be stout and desperate where none of both will preuaile It is better to prolong our lyfe in miserie then to hasten our owne death without hope of mercy Lactan. Loue wanting desire makes the mind desperate and fixed fancie bereft of loue turneth into fury Desperate thoughts are fit for them that feare shame not for such as hope for credit Sighes are the emblazers of thoughts and melancholy the messenger of dispaire There is no offence so great but mercy may pardon neyther is there any thing so desperate which time cannot cure Dispaire is the fruite of disordinate sinne vvhich becomming his owne Iudge proues his owne exexcutioner The feare of ineuitable punishment is the cause of desperation Stobaus Nothing doth more torment a man then forsaken hope Quintilian Desperation preferreth profit before honestie Erasmus Let no man dispaire of that thing to be effected which hath beene done already Extreame feare danger makes cowards desperatly aduenturous and what perswasion could not make constant misery hath made desperate Resolution is grounded on honour desperatenes on danger He is foolishly desperate that engageth his honour for beauty and aduentureth the halter for a lye Diog. Fortune desperatly attained is as desperatlie lost and dispaire suddainly entertayned is a token of a wretched conscience If thou wilt be accounted valiant let neyther chaunce nor griefe make thee desperate Dispaire comes of the feeblenes of courage and the lack of wit To him that is subiect to passion dispayre is euer attendant He that is desperatly inclined to his ovvne will is euer most neere to the wrath of God Despaire leadeth damnation in chaynes and violently layes clayme to the vvrath of God Bernard Despayre and reuenge depriue men of the mercy of God and cleane blotteth out the memory of their former good deeds There can be no greater wonder then to see a wise-man become desperate Of all the perturbations of mans mind dispaire is the most pernicious Liuius If he be a wicked homicide which killeth a man then is he the same vvhich killeth himselfe because he killeth a man Many reading Plato his booke of the immortalitie of the soule haue layde violent hands vpon themselues Hee that through the burthen of his sinnes breakes forth into desperation wilfully refuseth the mercy of the Almighty VVhen hope leaueth a man feare beginneth to conquer him Plato The soules first comfort is to auoyde the fault the next not to dispaire of pardon Desperation is a certaine death Aug. The desperate ambitious build theyr houses vpon others ruins afterwards fall them selues by like practises S. P. S. Brutus and Cassius after the death of Caesar desperatly flew themselues Anthony when he heard that Cleopatra had killed her selfe sayd dye Anthony what lookest thou for
they endure He bears his misery best that hideth it most Aduersities happening to good men may vexe the minde but neuer change their constancie As the most pestilent diseases do gather vnto themselues all the infirmitie where-vvith the body is annoyed so doth the last miserie embrace in the extreamitie of it selfe all his formermer mischieses S. P. S. The iust man is better reformed by the proofe of afflictions then power of pleasure Patience breedes experience experience hope and hope cannot be confounded The paine of death is sin the payne of conscience sin but the paine of hell is eternall The payne of the eye is lust the paine of the tongue libertie and the paine of both repentance Misery is full of wretchednesse fuller of disgrace and fullest of guilines S. P. S. The sight of misery maketh the sence of felicitie more euident Calamities which often fall in a Common-weale are cause of greater comforts He suffers double punishment that hath his paines prolonged Hee findes helps in aduersitie that sought them in prosperitie Quintil. Not to know our misery is to liue without danger The remembrance of pleasures past agrauates the paines that are present A fauning friend in prosperitie will proue a bitter foe in aduersity Hee that lendeth to another in time of prosperity shall neuer want helps himselfe in time of aduersitie It is hard in prosperitie to knovv vvhether our friends doe loue vs for our ovvne sa●es or for our goods but aduersitie prooues the disposition of mens mindes Vt secunda moderaté tulimus sic non solum aduersam sed funditus euersam fortunam for●iter ferre debemus Nullus dolor est quem non longinquitas temporis minuat atque molliat Cicero Of Teares Defi. Teares or sorrow is a griefe or heauines for things which are done and past they are the onely friends to solitarines the enemies to company and the heyres to desperation TEares are no cures for distresse neyther can present plaints ease a passed harme There is no sovver but may bee qualified with sweet potions nor any dolefull maladie but may be allayed with some delightful musicke Teares craue compassion submission deserueth forgiuenes Greg. The violence of sorrow is not at the first to be stryuen withall because it is like a mighty beast sooner tamed with following then ouerthrowne by withstanding VVoe makes the shortest time seeme long S. P. S. VVomen are most prone to teares haue them soonest at commaund Eurip. Sorrowe bringeth foorth teares as a tree bringeth foorth fruite That griefe is best digested that brings not open shame Bury the dead but weepe not aboue one day Homer Teares are the signes of penitence VVe shall sooner want teares then cause of mourning in this life Seneca Sorrowes concealed are more sower and smothered griefes if they burst not out will breake the hart The hart that is greatly grieued takes hys best comfort when hee findes tims to lament his losse Teares are the vnfittest salue that any man can apply for to cure sorrowes Teares and sighes declare the hart to bee greatly grieued A teare in the eye of a strumpet is like heat drops in a bright sunne-shine and as much to be pittied as the weeping of a Crocodile Of sorrow and lamentation commeth watching and bleared eyes It is better to waile at the first then to weep at the last Teares are the badges of sorrow Archim Passion is a most combersome guest to it selfe S. P. S. Deepe conceited sorrowes are like to Sea-Iuie which the older it is the greater roote it hath Passions are like the arrovves of Cupid which if they touch lightly proue but toyes but once piercing the skin they proue deepe wounds As the hotest thunders are not alwaies quēched with raine so the deepest griefes are not alwaies discouered with teares VVhere the smallest show of teares is there is oft-times the greatest effect of sorrow Teares in many ease the grieued hart for griefe is like to ●●re the more it is couered the more it rageth Plutar. Humble teares put the accusor to silence ouer-come the inuinsible pacifie the displeased Great is the vertue and povver of teares vvhich tye the hands of the omnipotent pacifie the rage of an aduersary appease the ire of the Iudge change his minde from vengeance to mercy Teares are the fruits of passion the strength of women the signes of dissimulation the reconcilers of displeasures and the tokens of a broken hart Teares are the foode of the soule Basil. There are in the eyes three sorts of teares the first of ●oy which in old men shew theyr kindnesse the second of sorrow vvhich in wretched men shew theyr misery the thyrd of dissimulation which in women shew their nature Lay thy hand on thy hart when thy vvife hath the teare in her eye for then shee intendeth eyther to found thee or to finck thee VVhen griefe doth approach if it be small let vs abide it because it is easie to be borne but if it be grieuous let vs beare with it because our glory shall be the greater Care not for sorrow it will eyther dissolue or be dissolued How miserable is that griefe vvhich can vtter nothing in the torment Men take a certaine pleasure in weeping when they lament the losse of theyr best beloued friends Solon hauing buried his sonne dyd vveepe very bitterly to whom when one sayde hys teares were all in vaine for that cause quoth he doe I weepe the more because I cannot profit with weeping He hath a hard hart that neuer lamenteth and his hart is effeminate that sorroweth too much for the death of his friends Too much sadnesse in a man is as much to be condemned as ouer-much boldnesse in a woman is to be despised By the Lawe of the twelue tables at Rome all weeping funerall teares are sharply forbidden Lepidus by a long griefe conceiued of the misbehauiour of his wife shortned his owne dayes To lament with tears the follies of our former life is profitable but to grieue too much for worldly losses is a signe of foolishnesse Per lachrymas argumentū desiderij quaerimus et dolorem non sequinum sed ostendinus nemo enim sibi tristis est Curae leues loquitur ingentes stupent Seneca Of Neighbors Defi. Neighbours are those in whom wee find towards vs the greatest bonds of charitie and not as it is vulgarly taken thē that liue neere about vs. THe greatest loue in vs next vnto God ought to be loue towards our neighbors VVhatsoeuer duties wee performe in kindnesse towards our neighbours wee performe vnto God Loue is the first foundation of marriage coniunction of neighbourhood The end of a mans being is the glory of his Creator and the loue of his neighbour Neighbours are our likes or similitudes and our duties to them is charitie and loue equal with our selues The loue of neighbours appertaines mightily vnto saluation The loue of neighbours binds vs from vnlawfull actions The loue of neighbours binds vs
crazed shyp by drinking in of vvater not onely drowneth herselfe but all those that are in ●er so a Ruler by vsing viciousnes destroyeth not himselfe alone but all others besides that are vnder his gouernment As ignorant Gouernours bring their countrey into many inconueniences so such as are deuilishly politique vtterly ouerthrovv the state Themist As truth is the center of religion so contrary opinions founded on euill examples are the corruptions of this vvorld and the bringers in of Atheisme As it becommeth subiects to be obedient to theyr Soueraigne so it behooueth that the King be carefull for the commodity of his Common-weale Sigism As there is no deliberation good that hangeth on delay so no counsai●e is profitable that is followed vnaduisedly As that kingdome is most strongest vvhere obedience is most nourished so the state is most dangerous where the souldiour is most negligently regarded As no Phisition is reputed good that healeth other and cannot heale himselfe so is he no good magistrate that cōmandeth others to auoyde vices and will not shun euill himselfe M. Aurel. As honour consisteth in our knowledge ability to punish not in our power to enioy it with many perrils so pollicy dependeth as much on dissembling things vvee cannot remedy as releeuing them by daungerous leagues As mild aunswers reconcile displeasures so bitter ●ests when they taxe too neerely and too truly leaue a sharpe remembrance behind them As the greene leaues outvvardly sheweth that the tree is not dry inwardly so the good works openly testifie the zeale of the hart inwardly Like as a gouernour of a ship is not chosen for his riches but for his knowledge so shold the chiefe magistrate in euery Citty be chosen rather for his wisedome and godly zeale then for his wealth and great possession●s As liberty maketh friends of enemies so pride maketh enemies of friends As the goodnes of vvise men continually amendeth so the malice of fooles euermore increaseth Pythag. As they vvhich cannot suffer the light of a candle can much vvorse abide the brightnes of the sunne so they that are troubled vvith smal trifles would be more amazed in waighty matters As fire cast into the water is quickly quenched so a false accusation against an honest life is soone extinguished As the canker eateth and destroyeth yron so dooth enuie eate and consume the harts of the enuious As the sauour of stinking carrion is noysom to them that smell it so is the speech of fooles tedious to wise-men that heare it Solon As the wicked malicious person is most hardy to commit greatest crimes so is hee most cruell and ready vvickedly to giue sentence against another for the same offence As men eate diuers thinges by morsells which if they should eate whole would choak them so by diuers dayes we suffer troubles which if they should all come together they would make an end of vs in one day As sinne is naturall the chastisement voluntary so oft the rigour of iustice to be temperate so that the ministers thereof should rather shewe compassion then vengeance whereby the trespassers should take occasion to amend their sinnes passed and not to reuenge the iniury present Hermes As the knowledge of God ought not to be vnperfect or doubtfull so prayer should not be faint or slacke without courage or quicknesse Though the VVood be taken from the fire and the embers quenched yet neuerthelesse the stones oftentimes remaine hote and burning so the flesh though it be chastised with hote and dry maladies or consumed by many yeeres in trauaile yet concupiscence abydeth still in the bones Antist In all naturall thinges nature is with verie little contented but the spirit and vnderstanding is not satisfied with many things As after great stormes the ayre is cleere so after the floods of repentant teares the conscience is at quiet Seruaunts when they sleepe feare not theyr maister and they that be bound forget theyr fetters in sleepe also vlcers and sores leaue smarting but superstition alone vexeth a man when he sleepeth As darnel springeth vp among good wheat and nettles among roses euen so enuy groweth vp among vertues Theopom As the leaues of a booke which is sildom vsed will cleaue fast together euen so the memorie waxeth dull if it be not oft quickned Like as an Adamant draweth by little and little the heauie yron vntill at last it be ioyned with it so vertue and vvisedome dravve mens minds to the practise thereof The man that bringeth an infirmed body to any kinde of voluptuous delight is lyke him which bringeth a broken shippe into the raging seas As a vessell cannot be knowne whether it be whole or broken vntill it haue liquor in it so can no man be knowne what hee is before he be in authoritie Isocrates They which goe to a banquet onely for the meates sake are like them vvhich goe onely to fill an emptie vessell As Phisitions with their bitter drugges doe mingle sweet spices that the sick patient may the more willingly receiue them so ought bitter rebukes to be mingled with gentle admonitions that the offender might be the better brought to amendement As it is great foolishnes to forsake the cleere fountaines and to drinke puddle vvater so it is great folly to leaue the sweete doctrine of the Euangelists and to study the dreames of mens imaginations As the body of man by nature is mortall lumpish heauie delighting in those things which are visible and temporall and alwayes of it selfe sinketh downward so the soule being of a celestiall nature violently enforceth her-selfe to flye vpwarde and with all her might striueth and wrastleth continuallie against the heauie burthen of the earthly body wherin she abideth despising those things which are mortall and onely desiring things permanent and immortall As sight is in the eye so is the minde in the soule Sophocles As desire is glad to embrace the first showe of comfort so is desire desirous of perfit assurance S. P. S. Vt ad cursum Equus ad arandum Bos ad indagandum canis Sic homo ad duas res intelligendum et agendum natus est quasi immortalis Deus Vt ager quamuis fertilis sine cultura fructuosus esse non potest sic sine doctrina animus Of Brauery Defi. Brauerie is a ri●tous excesse eyther in apparrell or other ornament it is also a part of pride and contrarie to decencie and comlinesse EXcesse of brauery brings a man of much wealth quickly to pouerty Pride ioyned with many vertues choakes them all They that rather delight to decke their bodies then theyr soules seeme men rather created for theyr bodyes then theyr soules Excesse in vanity hath neuer end Theft or violent death euer waiteth at the heeles of excesse They neuer can be carefull to keep a meane in husbanding other mens wealth which are carelesse in bestowing theyr owne substance vpon excesse To spend much beyond power and hope much vpon promises make many men beggers which were
to complaine vpon God for the shortnes of their life when as they themselues as short as it is doe through ryot malice murthers care and warres make it much shorter both in them selues and others Theophrastus hoc est Viuere bis vitâ posse priore frui Est nostra vno vita quam s●millima Acescit est quem reliqua parua portio Of the Soule Defi. The soule is a created substance inuisible incorporall immortall resembling the image of her Creator a spirit that giueth life to the body where-vnto it is ioyned a nature alwaies mouing it selfe capable of reason and the knowledge of God to loue him as beeing meet to be vnited to him through loue to eternall felicity THE greatest thing that may be said to be contained in a little roome is the soule in a mans body An holy vndefiled soule is like heauen hauing for her Sunne vnderstanding the zeale of iustice and charity for the Moone fayth and her vertues for the starres Euery soule is eyther the spouse of Christ or the adultresse of the deuill Chris. The minde is the eye of the soule The soule is compounded of vnderstanding knowledge and sence from which all Sciences and Arts proceede and from these she is called reasonable The soule is deuided into two parts the one spirituall or intelligible vvhere the discourse of reason is the other brutish which is the sensuall will of it selfe wandring where all motions contrary to reason rest and delighting onelly to dwell vvhere euill desires do● inhabite The actions of the soule are vvill iudgement sence conceiuing thought spirit imagination memory vnderstanding The incomparable beauty of the soule is prudence temperance fortitude iustice All the felicity of man as well present as to come dependeth on the soule Clement The soule is the organ and instrument of God whereby he worketh in vs and lifteth vs vp to the contēplation of his diuine power and nature The sweetest rest and harbor for the soule is a conscience vncorrupted The Philosophers set downe foure powers to rule in the soule reason will anger and concupiscence in which they lodged foure vertues to euery one one prudence iustice fortitude and temperance The soule payeth well for her hire in the body considering what she there suffereth The soule of the iust man is the seat of wisedome August The body is the sepulcher of a dead soule The soule is the breathing of God Ambr. If thy soule be good the stroke of Death cannot hurt thee for thy spirit shall liue blessedly in heauen Basil. As they that haue healthfull bodies easily endure both cold and heat so they that haue a stayed and setled soule haue the dominion ouer anger greefe ioy and all other their affections Plato It is not death that destroyeth the soule but a bad lyfe A sound soule correcteth the naughtines of the body All mens soules are immortall but the soules of the righteous are immortall and diuine Socrates It is good to haue a regard to the health of the mind that the body thereby may be preserued from danger The power of the minde is two-fold one part is in the appetite the other in reason which teacheth vvhat is to be followed and vvhat to be eschewed By this reason commaundeth and appetite obeyeth The diseases of the body are easie to be cured but for the malady of the minde no medicine can be found The pleasure of the minde excelleth the pleasures of the body By vvhat other name canst thou call the soule then God dwelling in a mans body It is as great charity to edefie the soule as sustaine the body Bernard The nobility of the soule is alwayes to be thought vpon The soule in the flesh is as amongst thorns Bernard The soule is the naturall perfection of the body Aurel. The body considereth nothing but what is present the minde conceaueth vvhat is past and what is to come The soule of man is an incorruptible substance apt to receaue either ioy or pain both heere and else where Solon The soule despiseth all worldly busines and being occupied onely about heauenly matters she reioyceth greatly vvhen she is deliuered from these earthly bands VVhile the soule is in the company of good people it is in ioy but vvhen it is among euill men it is in sorrow and heauines As the body is an instrument of the soule so is the soule an instrument of God The body vvas made for the soule and not the soule for the body Looke hovv much the soule is better then the body so much more greeuous are the diseases of the soule then the greefes of the body Diogenes By the iustice of God the soule must needs be immortall and therfore no man ought to neglect it for though the body dye yet the soule dieth not The delights of the soule are to knovv her Maker to consider the works of heauen and to know her owne state and being Tres vitales spiritus creaui● Omnipotens vnum qui carne non tegitur alium qui carne tegitur sed non cum carne moritur ●●e●tium qui carne tegitur et cum carne moritur Primus Angelorū secundus hominum tertius brutorum est Anima dum viuificat corpus anima est dum vult animus dum scit mens dum recolit memoria dum rectum iudicat ratio dum spirat spiritus dum aliquid sentit sensus est Of the Sences Defi. Sences are the powers of the soule body in number fiue seeing hearing smelling tasting and touching Of Seeing THe eyes vvere giuen to men to be as it were theyr vvatch-towers and sentinels the guiders and leaders of the body Of more validitie is the sight of one eye then the attention of ten eares for in that a man seeth is assurance and that he heareth may be an error The piercing power of the sight is able to reade Homers Iliads though they were written in the compasse of a nut-shell The sight the affection and the hands are instruments to gather bribes Sight increaseth compassion and compassion calleth vp care S. P. S. VVhat can saying make thē beleeue whom seeing cannot perswade S. P. S. Sight is the riches which nature graunteth to the poorest creature S. P. S. A wanton eye is the messenger of an vnchast hart Aug. Marcus Varro was surnamed Strabo for his quicke sight that from Libaeum a prouince in Sicilia he could tell the number of the saile of shippes vvhich came out of the Hauen of Carthage Hee that is borne blinde is wiser then the deafe or dumb Arist. Blindnes it selfe commends the excellency of sight Aug. The eyes are the iudges seat of the mind The eye is the most precious part of the body and therefore it is saide I vvill keepe thee as the apple of mine eye The eyes are the windowes of the body or rather of the soule which is lodged in it The sight is the chiefest sence and the first Mistresse that prouoked men forward to
by reason of their age and weaknesse of theyr strength are subiect to sundry imperfections and molested with many diseases Pacunius Gray hayres oft-times are intangled vvith loue but stailesse youth intrapped with lust Age is more to be honored for his wisdom then youth commended for his beauty The mind of an old man is not mutable his fancies are fixed his affections not fleeting he chooseth without intention to change neuer forsaketh his choyce till death make challenge of his life The olde Cedar tree is lesse shaken with the winde then the young b●amble and age farre more stayed in his affaires then youth Old men are more meet to giue counsaile then fit to follow warres Bias. Though young men excell in strength yet old men exceede in stedfastnes Though all men are subiect to the suddaine stroke of death yet old men in nature seeme neerest to their graue Age is a crowne of glory when it is adorned with righteousnes but the dregs of dishonor when it is mingled with mischiefe Honorable age consisteth not in the terme of yeeres neyther is it measured by the date of mans dayes but by godly wisedome and an vndefiled life Age is forgetfull and gray hayres are declining steps from strength Age is giuen to melan●hollie and manie yeeres acquainted with many dumps Age speaketh by experience and liketh by tryall but youth leaneth vnto vvit vvhich is voyde of wisedome He that will not be aduised by age shall be deceiued by youth Old age is the fore-runner of death Age and time are two thinges which men may fore-thinke of but neuer preuent Men of age ●eare and fore-see that vvhich youth neuer regardeth Olde folkes oft-times are more greedie of coyne then carefull to keepe a good conscience Bias. Age may bee allotted to gaze at beauties blossoms but youth must clime the tree and enioy the fruit Nature lendeth age authority 〈…〉 nes of hart is the glory of all yeeres VVhilst the haires be hidden craftily age bewrayes it selfe Children are compared to the spring-time striplings to sommer-season young-men to autumn and old men to winter An olde man ought to remember his age past and to bethinke himselfe hovv hee hath spent his time if he finde himselfe faulty in neglecting such good deedes as hee might haue done he ought forth-with to be carefull to spend the remainder of his life in liberality towards the poore Old men are commonly couetous because their getting dayes are past It is a great shame for an olde man to be ignorant in the principles of religion An old man ought to be reuerenced for his grauity sooner then for his gray haires If young men had knowledge and old men strength the vvorld vvould become a nevv paradice A man aged and wise is worthy double reuerence Infancie is but a foolish simplicity full of lamentations and harmes as it were laid open to a maine Sea without a sterne Youth is an indiscreete heate outragious blind heady violent and vaine Mans estate is trouble vexation of mind full of repentance and plunged in care Non est senectus vt tu opinaris pater Onus grauissimum sed impatientius Qui fert sibi ipse est author illius mali Patienter at qui sibi quietem comparat Dum dextere eius moribus se accomodat Nec ille solum detrahit molestiam Accersit aliquam sed voluptatem sibi Si nauig andum sit quatuor per dies De comeatu cura nobis maxima At se in senectam quid licet comparcere Non instruemus nos eo viatico Of Death Defi. Death is taken three maner of wayes the first is the seperation of the soule from the bodie with the dissolution of the body vntil the resurrection the second is the death of sinne sith he is sayd to be dead which lyeth sleeping in sin the third is eternall death vnto which the wicked shall bee condemned in the day of generall iudgement DEath is the law of nature the trybute of the flesh the remedy of euills and the path eyther to heauenly felicitie or eternall misery He●●clit Destenie may be deferred but can neuer be preuented An honourable death is to be preferred before an infamous life That man is very simple that dreadeth death because he feareth thereby to be cutte off from the pleasures of this life Death hath his roote from sinne August Death is the end of feare and beginning of felicitie There is nothing more certaine thē death nor any thing more vncertain then the houre of death No man dyeth more willingly then he that hath liued most honestly It is better to die well then to liue wantonlie Socrat. Death it selfe is not so painfull as the feare of death is vnpleasant Death is the end of all miseries but infamy is the beginning of all sorrowes Plut. VVhile men seeke to prolong theyr lyfe they are preuented by some suddaine death VVhile wee thinke to flie death wee most earnestly follow death VVhat is he that being lustie and young in the morning can promise himselfe life vntill the euening Many men desire death in their misery that cannot abide his presence in the time of their prosperitie An euill death putteth great doubt of a good life and a good death partly excuseth an euill life The death of euill men is the safety of good men liuing Cicero Hee that euery hower feareth death can neuer be possessed of a quiet conscience Nothing is more like to death then sleepe who is deaths elder brother Cicero There is nothing more common then suddaine death which beeing considered by the great Phylosopher Demonax hee therefore warned the Emperour Adrian and such other as lyued at theyr pleasure and ease in no wise to forget how in euery short moment they should be no more Nature hath giuen no better thing then death Plinie To men in misery death is most welcome Death deadly woundeth without eyther dread or daliance Sith death is a thing that cannot be auoided it ought of all men the lesse to be feared By the same vvay that life goeth death cōmeth Aurelius The most profitable thing for the worlde is the death of couetous and euill people Death is lyfe to the godly minded man whose meditation is on diuine matters and whose hope is heauen Death is common to all persons though to some one way and to some another If we liue to die then we die to liue All things haue an end by death saue onely death whose end is vnknowne Death is metaphorically called the end of all flesh Aristot. The last curer of diseases is death Death despiseth all riches and glory and ruleth ouer all estates alike Boetius None neede to feare death saue those that haue committed so much iniquitie as after death deserueth damnation Socrat. VVisedome maketh men to despise death it ought therefore of all men to be imbraced as the best remedy against the feare of death Hermes So liue and hope as if thou shouldest dye immediatly Plinie Non