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A02361 A combat betwixt man and death: or A discourse against the immoderate apprehension and feare of death. Written in French by I. Guillemard of Champdenier in Poictou. And translated into English by Edw. Grimeston Sargeant at Armes, attending the Commons House in Parliament; Duel de l'homme et de la mort. English Guillemard, Jean.; Grimeston, Edward. 1621 (1621) STC 12495; ESTC S103559 187,926 790

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hath such circumstances as it is very horrible of it selfe Therefore it is not possible but it should terrifie MAny dissembling the feare which they haue of death when they come to thinke and speake of some kinde of sicknesse drawing neere vnto death and especially of the plague they cannot finde blacke enough to set it forth nor horrour sufficient to abhorre it But let vs see what reasons they can pretend It was a great scourge say they of the wrath of God executed vpon the people for Dauids ambition so as there dyed 70. thousand in lesse then one day threatned in the Apocalipse to embrace the fourth part of the earth It is a terrible thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God Moreouer it is an vnspeakeable paine to be burnt with the sore to bee strangled with the plague c. Thirdly it is a sorrow which exceeds all extreames to bee abandoned of wife Father mother children friends and kinsfolkes Finally it is a perpetuall griefe to die and haue no meanes to settle his estate Answer These reasons are but goodly shewes to shaddow the feare they haue of death and the shame which lies lurking in their hearts for seeing they must leaue this life what doth it import them whether it be by water or by land or by any other meanes As for the first reason Dauid wil answere for vs that we must not iudge rashly of the poore man in his torment His son will adde that none can discerne whether he be worthy of loue or hatred by that which happens exteriorly The Apostle will say The iudgements of God beginne by his owne house Iob the Apostles the Martyrs will manifest by their examples that they whom God loues are most chastized in this world Finally Iesus Christ will teach vs That in the blind man so borne neither his sinne nor the sinne of his father and mother was the cause that hee was borne blind that neither the Galileans so cruelly intreated by Pilate nor the Iewes smothered in the ruines of the Tower which was in Silo were more guilty then those which had escaped this disaster A faithfull man is not tempted aboue his strength if affliction abounds consolation will superabound He dies happily which layes downe his soule with a setled spirit feeling in himselfe the peace grace of God through Iesus Christ in the remission of his sinnes And it is a thousand times better to be quickned by the light affliction of the plague and to carry away an inestimable weight of glory then to be smothered in the delights of sinne and in danger of a finall ruine both of body and soule The example produced of Dauid makes for this against the Obiector Who sinned Dauid in ambitiously numbring his people who is punished the people the Grecians are plagued for the foolish resolutions of their Kings sayd the ancient Prouerbe But where is the duty of Iustice will you say God knowes it his will is the rule of equitie it is iust seeing God will haue it so And on the other side it was not the wil of God for that it is not right But we commonly see that the plague layes hold of the poorer sort whereupon Galen calls it Epidemique that is to say popular whereof the baites are famine sluttishnesse and stinkes rather then the chiefe of the Towne infected who notwithstanding will be found much more faulty before God Looke vpon that long plague which vnder the Empire of Gallus and Volusian continued 15. whole yeares and which comming out of Ethiopia vnpeopled all the Romane prouinces reade it and iudge of it As for that pretended paine wee must not apprehend it to be greater then in simple swellings and Impostumes or in Cauteries the poison rather mollifying then increasing the paine But there are two kinds of plagues as Phisitions do obserue the one is simple when as the spirits onely are infected by a venemous and contagious ayre which hath bin suckt in by the mouth or the nose or that hath gotten insensibly into the body by the pores of the skinne so as a man shal be stroken that shal not feele any thing it may be he shall be more faint and heauy then of custome but with very little heate and alteration so as hee shall bee sometimes smothered vp before he feeles any paine The other is a compound when as the Contagion seazing the spirits doth communicate his poyson with the foure humours infects them and alters them but without paine for these humours are incapable yet these humours beeing infected and altered infect and alter the parts of the body in the which they reside as in the head the heart and elsewhere and there growes the paine but no greater then in Feauers and swoundings yea lesse by reason of the putrid vapour which doth dull and mortifie the members so as the paine is no more then a small incision yea lesse then the pricking of a pinne The greatest is a certaine inflammation in the hypocondriake parts in the bowells which enuiron the heart for as poyson is the capitall enemy of life so this enemy of life strikes furiously at the heart The worst is a certaine heate whereof the Patient complaines as Thucidides obserues in the plague which happened at Athens but what paine in this heat that is not greater in the burning of a little finger or in a Tertian Ague But if your opinion will not yeelde to these reasons inquire of them which haue beene toucht with this infection they will answer that feare hath beene their greatest paine and if they had been assured of recouery they had felt no paine I know you will reply that there is a difference betwixt them that recouer and them that die But I will answer you that the paine is equall yea greater in them that recouer then in them that dye they that recouer are more vigorous and the vicious humour stings them and is more sensible then in them that are weaker when the parts lesse able to resist are sooner gotten and lost As a Leper hauing his flesh infected with Leprosie and rottennesse feeles little or no paine in the most sensible pricking euen so a weake woman hath lesse torment in her deliuerie although the throwes bee more dangerous wherein appeares the admirable wisedome of Nature which doth not afflict the afflicted Now followeth the third reason obiected the abandoning of wife kinsfolkes and friends Answer It is an accident which happens seldome or not at all this day hardly can that which life hath vnited by marriage consanguinity and friendship be dissolued in death Moreouer a wise man who should haue learned to bee content with himselfe in life should not be discontented if he die alone It was a constant Doctrinein the resolute Stoicks that he is happy that is content with himselfe and depends not vpon any other man nor vpon any thing in the world but like Iupiter liues and moues of himselfe rests in
All that is depraued and there is nothing but a horrible confusion in his will and actions 7. He was absolute Lord ouer all Creatures which trembled at his looke and brought him fruits according to his desire 8. Now they rebell and assaile him yea the earth instead of good corne brings forth nothing but thornes thistles 9. He had frequent conuersation with God inspired of him and breathing by him 10. Now the Prince of the power of the aire the vncleane spirit workes powerfully in the children of rebellion which are all the sonnes of Adam Ephes. 2. 2. 11. A glorious angelical and diuine Maiesty did shine in his face 12. Now they couer their shame with leaues they hide themselues among the trees and crie out Mountains fall vpon vs and couer vs. To conclude there is no greater contrariety betwixt day and night then of these famous qualities to the infamous blemishes of man as he liued in this world before his regeneration in the which by little and little hee recouers this Iustice holinesse and trueth Ephes. 4. 24. But the fulnesse thereof is reserued to heauen whither death leades vs and therefore to be desired The Fourth Argument taken from the efficient cause All that a good and wise mother giueth vnto her Children cannot be hurtfull Nature our good and wise mother giues vs death Death then cannot be hurtfull THe first proposition of this Argument cannot bee denyed after the experience which wee haue seene after the comparison which God makes of himselfe with a mother who cannot forget her child nor he his people After that Iesus Christ had said No man giues a stone instead of bread nor a Scorpion for fish to him that he loues And how then can nature the liuely spring of so liuely a loue giue any thing that is very hurtfull and fayle at neede and in the principall hauing neuer fayled vs in all the course of our life Now to proue that the second proposition is true and that nature hath ordayned death for her children Seneca doth teach vs saying That death is a Law of nature yea that our whole life is but a way vnto it S. Cyprian also doth affirme that it is a decree intimated vnto the world that whatsoeuer is borne should haue an end and from whom is this decree from God the Authour of nature the executioner of this decree but it is a fauourable decree to such as Heauen fauours It is a generall Law to restore that which is lent vs this life is but a loane wee must restore it at the end of the time it is a tribute wee owe for we entred vpon condition to depart when it shall please the master Moreouer what is this life but a harmony rising from the mixture of the foure elements which are the foure ingredients of our bodie and what is death by the censure of Hippocrates but a diuorce of marriage of these foure Elements This diuorce is as naturall to man as it is naturall that fire should be contrarie to water and ayre to earth for their contrarietie is the cause of this diuorce which is death I know that it is not sufficient for humane life to haue a body well tempered with his Organes and to haue the power of life but he must also haue a fist Effence as a Lute well strung and well tuned is not sufficient to make it sound vnlesse there bee a hand to play vpon it And I also maintayne that as the Musitian ceaseth to play when the Instrument is vnstrung so the soule ceaseth to giue life vnto the body yea flyes out when it is destroyed but this destruction is naturall and by consequence death and to that end Nature hath planted this body vpon pyles which take vent vpon boanes not very solide caulkt ouer with soft flesh glued with a viscous humour which may easily melt with heate or dissolue with rayne full of transparent veines easie to pierce watered with vnholesome water tempered with contrarie qualities which a certaine temperature keepes at quiet for a season but when euery one desires to command his companion and time in the end presenting the occasion the common right being forced the body sodainely falls And this force is of nature who must needes effect the words of the Lord spoken vnto man Thou art dust and shalt returne to dust Sonnes of men returne but whither From whence you came to the earth to death death then is of nature and therefore Thales the Milesian said that there was no difference betwixt life and death for that they are both equally according vnto Nature and as one demanded of him why he was in life and dyed not For the same cause answered he that the one is no more excellēt then the other It is also the reason why the Emperor Antonin the gentle seeing his seruants weepe lying sicke in his bed hee sayed vnto them Why weepe you for me and not rather the naturall and mortall condition of all the world that is to say Why doe you not rather weepe for life which is of a mortall condition The answere of Anaxagoras was more vertuous who being aduertised of the death of his deere and onely Sonne sayd O Messenger thou bringest me no vnexpected newes I know well I had begotten a Sonne that was mortall hee was not insensible like a stone but he considered that nothing had chanced to his sonne but what he had foreseene from his birth his long foresight and his sodaine con sideration of the condition of all men for to die had tēpered all sorow in him and brought him to reason which should alwaies holde the helme of this little world man Like was the answere of Lochades father to Siron vp on the like report of the death of one of his children I knew well sayth he that he should dye VVe shall see others hereafter to the ende they may haue no cause to say that this resolution was monstrous in the world To conclude nature to make vs resolue ioyfully vnto death seemes to direct vs to the sweete song of the Swanne a presaging bird consecrated to Apollo by Antiquitie the which dying nature gathers together about the heart the purest and sweetest bloud which makes him Iouiall and to sing a happie presage to whom Socrates Plato and Tully send them that haue so great feare of death An Obiection Satan Man and Sinne are the causes of death Therefore it is not Nature ANswere When it is said in the holy Scripture that Satan holds the empire of death that by one man sinne entred into the world and by sin death finally that death is the reward of sinne we must not vnderstand it of the naturall death whereof the question growes but of the spirituall and eternall death as many of the ancient fathers doe expound it And how else could the threatning of God against Adam be vnderstood touching the tree of knowledge of good and euil Thou shalt not eate
certentime of the death passiō of our Sauiour Tertullian sayes that it was in the 30. yeare of Iesus Christ and the 15. of Tiberius but Ignatius and Eusebius witnes that it was in the 33. yeare of Christ and the 18. of Tiberius Onuph rius Mercator and other late writers will sweare that it was in the 34 yeare of Iesus Christ and if we yeeld some thing to antiquitie we shall beleeue that Iesus Christ was 50. yeeres old when hee was crucified and that it was not vnder Tiberius but vnder Claudius to this the Iewes discourse tended Thou art not yet 50. yeeres old and yet thou sayest thou hast seen Abraham If in this so holy a thing where there is not any cause of blind passion there appeares such apparent contrarietie what shall wee thinke of History where as the penne puft vp with passion and transported with flatterie or slander hath eyther aymed too high or too low at the white of truth the onely commendation of an historie And admit wee should find writers void of all passion the which seemes impossible if we except the secretaries of God who were guided with the holy Spirit yet their Histories should be vncertaine for the most part for that they haue not beene spectators of the times places and persons necessary circumstances in a History how can they know them seeing that many times that which is done in our owne Towne in the streete yea in our house is concealed from vs Nay the most exquisite and most certaine science is nothing but vanitie trouble of mind saith Salomon And if wee shall rightly obserue it we shall find the most learned most disquieted and the most vnlearned most at rest S. Augustine hath seene it and was amazed crying out with S. Paule The vnlearned rise vp and lay hold of heauen and we are plunged into hell with our learning It is the reason why Nicholas de Cusa hath written bookes of learned Ignorance where hee commends them that make not so great account to know and vnderstand many things as to doe well and liue well Knowledge then being for the most ignorance in this life cannot contayne any subiect to loue life And therfore wee will conclude That seeing in all the degrees of life there appeares no sufficient reason to desire it so vehemently that this desire is not commendable but to be blamed namely in man who being man for that hee hath a reasonable facultie should not will any thing much lesse affect it with passion but by a true iudgement of vnpassionate reason An Obiection All that is ordayned for the seruice of God is grounded vpon good reason Life is ordayned for the seruice of God ANswer That life is good which in all her motions actions and meditations seeks nothing but the humble seruice of her Creator but it it a chiefe point of their seruice that man liuing should doe that honour vnto his Lord to giue certaine credit vnto his oath and to the writings of his testament sealed with his bloud Verily I say vnto you that whosoeuer heares my words and beleeues in him that sent me hath eternal life the which is repeated in many other places Whosoeuer hath this certain assurance of faith in him what can he feare death nay rather desire it seeing that in heauen by this death which serues vs as a bridge to passe thither we shall be like vnto the Angels and shall doe the will of our heauenly Father obtayning the Petition which we should daily make vnto him by the expresse command of his Son in the Lords prayer Thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen Let vs say the will is good which aimes directly at the honor of God so long as it shall please him to keepe it in his fauour but yet death is better which the Eternal sends to giue vs thereby a better life The 11. Argument taken from the description of Death No Cessation from a labour vnprofitably renewed is vnpleasing Death is a Cessation from a labor vnprofitably renewed THere is no neede of Eagles eyes to pierce into the truth of this argument the least attention will comprehend it For what is this life but a daylie weauing of Penelopes Webb it is finished in the euening but the night vndoes it in the morning we beginne againe with as great eagernes as if it had neuer beene The which made Seneca to poure forth these complaints When shal we cease to weaue daily one worke I rise and then goe to bed I hunger then fill my selfe I am a cold and then I warme me There is no ende the head and tayle hold fast together whereas the same things in their courses doe incessantly approch and recoyle againe It is day and night comes sōmer appears and winter doth aduance still they walke one rounde I neither see nor doe any thing that is new I doe but goe about this wheele sayth the same Philosopher If I be layed I say when shall I rise and when will night fill vp her measure to glut me with distemperatures vntill day sayth Iob Chap. 7. It is the true bodie of the infernall shadow of Ixion who tied vnto a wheele turnes about perpetually There is not any one so dul but sees this earthly Labyrinth and yet no man will leaue it Euen so they that are borne in a prison affect not their libertie so they that dwell among the Cimmerians in darknes desire not a cleere skie So the children of Israel would not leaue the house of bondage they quarrelled with Moses who spake vnto them they cursed him and being come forth they would haue returned often what was the cause custome which was become another nature feare to finde worse in their iorney ignorance a cruell beast No man will leaue this miserable earth fearing to fall into greater miserie so much doth the loue of the place custome retaine the inhabitants in their miseries saith Seneca Many floate miserably betwixt the torments of life the horrour of death they will not liue yet know not how to die like to Vlysses in Homer who tooke fast hold of a wild Fig-tree fearing to fall into bottomlesse Charybdis but yet ready to leaue it if the feare were past So Tiberius confest that hee held the Empire as a Wolfe by the eares the which if hee might without danger haue abandoned hee would willingly doe it So Seneca and so experience doth teach that many keepe themselues close in life like vnto them whom a violent torrent hath carryed into some rough and thornie places But let vs learne of a silly woman That death is the calme port for the stormes of this sea to the end that with her wee may take pleasure in it Monica speaking to her sonne S. Augustine vsed these words As for me my sonne I take no more any pleasure in any thing in this impure world what should I doe here longer in
are indifferent is false for it is to teare in pieces the sacred communion of the soule with the body of man with his neighbour to kill himselfe Man is not borne for himselfe but after God for his Country which hee depriueth of a good son such as he ought to bee Aristotle hath seene it and hath written it saying That he that kils himselfe doth wrong vnto the Comonalty but to doe wrong is no indifferent thing Moreouer it is a sinne against nature for euery man loues himselfe naturally 〈◊〉 and desires to preserue his being also wee do not see any other Creature but man to kill himselfe through impaciency of paiue The 2. reason which speakes so much of li berty is friuolous and ridiculous for what liberty is there in a dead man who hath neither the power nor the will to chase away a fly that stings him who is made subiect to all sorts of wormes rottennes and stench what is liberty but a power to do what we list but death neither hath will action nor my power it a ●…s mos●… dry in my opinion to produce this defence As for the third poysons are giuen by the earth rather to preserue life thē to destroy it to make antidotes preseruatiues against malignant and venimous diseases and a thousand vnexpected accidents by the biting of mad or venimous beasts omitting the true cause of diuines that the sinne of man hath infected all powring forth his poyson vpon the Creatures which e●…uiron him therefore as Saint Paul sayth they sigh and long after their future restauration Finally examples binde vs not but rules wee liue not according vnto others but as we ought the Law of God is plaine sealed in the particular nature of euery one Thou shalt not kill by the which we are forbidden the simple homicide of our neighbor for that he is of humaine blood next the parricide of father or mother for we are their blood which doth much augment the hainousnes of the offēce 3. The murthering of our selues which exceeds parricide in a degree of horror To this we must haue regard not vnto what Zeno or Cleanthes haue done And the Stoickes who in all other places so much recommend vnto their Disciples seemelines honesty and duty seeme to me in this point forgetfull blind preuaricators what shal we then do That which a wise Pagan did aduise vs It is for valiant men sayd he rather to contemne death thē to hate life Many times faint hearted mē are driuen to a base cōtempt of thēselues throgh the wearines of labor but vertue will trie al things Seeing thē that death is the end of all things it is sufficiēt to go ioyfully vn to it To his words we adde That our intēt is not to take away life but the terror of death when it comes a wise man wil liue ioyfully so long as it shall please the Lord of life He wil die also more ioyfully when it shall please the same Lord. This is that he ought to do and doubtlesse man may without sin desire yea pray vnto the Lord that hee may liue long for many reasons but especially for 2. The one concernes the glory of God in the administratiō of the charge which hee hath committed vnto vs therefore the Son of God in dying would saue his Disciples by that voice full of vertue which he vsed to the Romaine souldiers and Iewes If you seeke me let them go the which preserued them long especially his well-beloued S. Iohn whom he retained in life vnto ninety yeares The other respects our children parents and friends of whom we may and ought in conscience haue a care seeing that by the censure of the Apostle hee which hath not a care of his family hath denied the faith and is worse then an Infidell But besides these reasons and some others which doe simbolize I say that the desire to liue were not fit if there were no other reason sor there is no ceasing from finne so long as life doth last so as the longer wee liue the more ●…lpable we are before God So as I maintaine that the feare to vndergo death I meane death simply is alwayes vicious foolish and ignorant But to be a Murtherer of himselfe without comparison it is much more execrable the Lawes of euery well gouerned Common-weale haue thundred against it yea the Grecians in the midst of ●…rmes whereas lawes are silent would not in signe of indignitie burne the body of Aiax according to their custome for that hee had slaine himselfe The virgins of Milesia for that they had furiously strāgled themselues were drawne by publike ignominie through the streets of the Citie and in such cases God doth vsually shew visible signes of his reuenging wrath So in Parthenay a towne in Poitou a certaine woman in the absence of her husband was taken with a deuilish despaire she tooke the little children when shee had smothered them and hanged them then she came vnto her selfe went vp on a stoole and hung her selfe and and thrust awaie the stoole with her foote but the rope brake and she falling downe halfe dead found a knife the Diuell is a readie officer to furnish instruments to doe euill which she takes and thrusts into her bosome The next day the matter being knowne all the world ranne thither with the iudges who caused her bodie to be cast out vpon a dunghill neere vnto the towne wall Not far from it there was a corps de gard and neere it a place for a sentinell the gard being set for it was in time of warre the sentinell heard a fearfull noise in the ayre right against this Carcasse and after a long stay was forced to leaue his stand the gard also amazed with this noyse thought to flie awaie Thus the Diuells made sport with this poore desperate woman The 19. Argument taken from the contradiction of man touching Death Not any thing that is sometimes called for by vs with ioy being come should be trouble some Death is sometimes called for by vs with great ioy THe Pagans to describe the pittifull estate of man in this life haue fained that Prometheus mingling the slime of the earth with tears made ●…antherof wherunto a Latine Poet hath alluded saying Teares b●… the our Births 〈◊〉 all inteares we liue And Death in teares Many alarums doth giue But what need of testimony but the continuall feare and feuers which spring from the apprehension of those infirmities wherof we haue made mentiō Thy bowells wroung with the cholicke a thousand gripes and throwes at euerie child bearing if thou beest a woman the pinching cares that trouble the mind make thee by interruption soden exclaming to desire death not without reason seeing that the Prophet Elias serues thee for a patterne who not knowing how to auoyd the ambushes that were layed against him did wish to dye But let vs cast our eyes vpon those miseries that make vs
kind of death was the worst That sayth hee which the Lawes haue ordained inferring thereby that a naturall death is not euill but that which crimes haue deserued the which is not giuen by nature but by a hangman and yet not so much by the execu tioner who is but the instrument as by a villanie perpetrated which is the true cause So sayd S. Peter Let none of you suffer as a murtherer theese malefactor or too curious in other mens affaires But if any one suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed but let him glorifie God in that behalfe The 24. Augument taken from the testimonie of wise men All wise men in the conflict of Death depose that death is not euill But that is true which all wise men depose c. THe troupes of Christian Martirs heathen Philosophers marching so boldly vnto death are so many witnesses without reproch to conuince them of falshood which hold death to be so great an euill Let vs be carefull lest this blasphemie creep into our thoughts that they were in despaire or mad No no their verie enemies dare not speake it ha●…ng knowne that they were for the most part men famous in pietie iustice vertue and wisedome and for such as were recommended by all men The Ecclesiasticall Historie is gored with thousands of such Martires the author of the tables hath set downe some in the end of his first booke of whom I make no mention But behold the manly courage of Blandina who by her ioyfull countenance doth summon vs vnto death whereunto she doth march with such a grace and state as if she had gone to a nuptiall feast Then followes happie Tiburtins conuerted vnto Christ by Vrban in the yeare 227 who marching vpon burning coales seemed to tread vpon Roses These Christians with infinite others as well ancient as moderne had neuer any horror of death but haue desired it yea sought it as a refreshing and refection to their bodies soules but for that no man doubts but the zeale of Christians hathmade them continue constant vnto the death and the diuine power had so fortified their resolutiōs that neither their reason could be swallowed vp nor drowned by the horror of persecution Let vs come to others of a multitude let a few suffise Socrates accused by the Athenians to thinke ill of the Gods for that he reiected pluralitie adored an vnitie was condemned to dye before the which he would first censure his iudges saying To feare death O my Lords Areopagites is to make shew to be wise and not to be for it is to seem to know death to be euil which they vnderstand not He did so little apprehend death as when as eloquent Lisias had giuen him an Oration artificially penned which hee should vse for his Apologie whereby hee should be absolued he read it and found it excellent yet he sayd vnto Lycias If thou hadst brought me Sicionian shoes admit they had beene fit for my foote yet would I not vse them for that they were not decent for me So thy discourse is most eloquent and fluent but not fit for men that are graue and resolute The executioner then presented him poysō in a cup which Socrates tooke with a constant hand and demanded of him as a sicke patient would doe of the Physition to recouer health how he should swallow it then without any stay drunk it vp after which he walked a little then tooke his bed his boy vncouering him felt his parts to grow cold Socrates being wak't directed his speech to Criton who aboue all others wished him a longer life and to make him thinke of it had propounded vnto him his children his deare friends that for their sakes if not for his owne hee would preserue his life which was necessarie for them No no answered hee God who hath giuen me my childrē wil care for them when I shall be gone from ●…ce I shall finde friends either like vnto you or better neither shall I bee long depriued of your company for you must soone come to the same place Then as if he had by this potion recouered his health hee cried ●…ut O Criton we owe a Cock to Aesculapius be not forgetfull to sacrifice vnto him Let vs obserue that in the last passages of life he was in no sort amazed but dying ioyfully comforted his suruiuing friend and let vs not doubt but hee who was the first among the seuen Sages of Greece knew before Demosthenes that which this Orator spake couragiously to Phi●… King of Macedon who threatned him to cause his head to be c●…t off Well saith hee if thou giuest mee death my Countrey will giue mee immortality And doublesse Socrates liues and will liue eternally so the suruiuing hauing seene the assurance of his death held him most happy as going to liue another life and in another place And Aristippus that ioyfull Philosopher beeing demanded in what sort Socrates was dead In that manner said he that I my selfe desire Inferring that death was more to bee wished for then a happy life Let vs heare a second that is Theramenes to whom they presented a great cup of poyson the which he dranke resolutely and returned the cup to Criti●… the most cruell of the 30. Tyrants which had condemned him Theramenes therein alluding to the manner obserued at this day in Germanie which is that hee which drinkes to any one sends him the same glasse full of wine that hee may pledge him These deathes are full of courage but behold a woman dying who exceedes them all and that onely to incourage her husband to dy it is Arria the wife of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This woman being aduertised that Petus was condemned to what death hee would choose went vnto him to perswade him both by word the effect to dislodge out of this life she had a naked dagger vnder her gowne and giuing her husband he●… last ●…well shee thrust her selfe to the hart and drawing it forth againe with the like courage she held it vnto Petus and spake these her last words vnto him P●… non dole●… Pete O my deere Petus it doth not paine mee and then dyed Let vs seale vp these examples with two women who commonly doe passionatly loue the presentation of their children yet a certen Lacedemonian hauing heard that her Son fighting valiantly had beene slaine in battaile O sayd shee this was a braue Sonne not lamenting the death of her Sonne but reioycing at his vertue Another hearing that her Sonne returned safe from battaile and that hee had ●…d shed cryed out vnto him There is a bad report of thee thou must eyther deface it or not liue holding it better to dye then to suruiue an Ignominie Obiection If the greatest fauorites of God haue feared death it is to bee feared But Dauid Ezechias and others fauored by God feared Death and especially Iesus Christ the only and wel-beloued Sonne of God feared
demolition of man but onely the first for as a wise master of a familie when hee sees that his house threatneth ruine that it sinks in many places and the walls open commands it to be pulled downe that with the ruines and materials hee may raise another to cōtinue many yeares euen so nature a most expert Architectrice seeing man ladē with woūds deiected with misery and melancholy cōsumed with age and grown cro●…ked with the gou●…e catar●…es sowe●… him co●…uptible in the graue that after many changes she may raise him incorruptible by the powerful voice of Christ. If the earthly habitation of this mansion bee destroyed saith the Apostle S. Paule we haue a dwelling with God that is to say an eternal house in heauen which is not made with hands and therefore we sigh and desire so much to be cloathed with our mansion which is in heauen and this is for our soule expecting the Resurrection of her body And this body sayth the same Apostle being sown in dishonour shall rise againe in glory sowne in weakenesse shall rise in strength and sowne a sensuall body shall rise a spirituall body What thē can man produce against this but onely some murmuring of his Incredulity that it exceedes the bounds of reason without the which hee will not assure himselfe of any thing I answer that the full perswasion of that which is written in the holy word is well grounded vpon faith a particular gift of heauen to all true Christians touching the returning of our bodies as for the reasonable coniecture of our future life after death I deny that this hath beene altogether vnknowne to men guided onely by the instinct of nature and I will proue my assertion sufficiently in the 39. Argument if God so please To this first consolation we will adde a second that is nature finding the declining and wasting of the substance of man came by a sacred mariage to stay some portion in the matrix of his deare moity and to fashion and bring forth many other reasonable creatures at diuers times creatures which haue the same flesh and bones of father and mother And if it be true that a good friend is a second selfe what shal a good sonne bee but himselfe without any addition whereby is plainly manifested what Macrobius saith that the body recoiues three aduantages of the reasonable soule that is to say he liues he liues well and in succession of time he remaines immortall Ecclesiasticus goeth ●…art her saying That if the father of a childe dyes it is all one as if hee were not dead for hee hath left his like behind him hee hath seene him and hath ioyed hauing left one who shall take reuenge of his enemies and requite his friends And this was it which moued that great Law-giuer Plato to make a law that euery man at a comperent age should marrie a wife else he shuld be called before the Iudge condemned in a fine and declared infamous for that as he afterwards sayth euery man should consider in himself that there is a certen power efficacie of nature which makes men to purchase an Immortalitie he would inferre that whosoeuer leaues children doth reuiue in some sort in them It is an order of nature which we must inviolablie obserue ingendring we perish of the one side but we begin again of the other If our parents by their fading and dying substance had not giuen vs life we could not haue entred into it of our selues what wrong is it if nature doth that of vs for our children which she bath done of our Parents for vs Moreouer death which is a priuation of life is a beginning of life in nature remayning in the first matter by the which she disposeth her selfe to a new forme not to continue still at this deformed spectacle Thirdly wha●… great deformitie see you in death which is not in him that sleeps Fourthly that deformitie which may be is not seene by him whom it concernes it is to the suruiuor●… that it should be hideous but most commonly they find it pleasing reaping by that meanes large successions elboe roome freedome from comptroll and if it were otherwise the world would not be able to containe vs. And thus much for the first part of the obiection As for the 2. which resembleth the demolishing of building to death this similitude hath no proportion yea it is contrary to the state of the question for what makes a ruined building deformed It is the disorder we see in it it is but a heape of stones and timber the stones are not layd in order one vpon another neither is the timber raised as it ought to be It is then the forme that wants when as the materialls remaine but in man or rather a dead carcase the soule which is the forme receiues no blemish she is freed from the surprises of the graue Thou doest not complaine that the egge-shell is broken when a chicken comes forth neither is the body of man to be lamented when as the soule flies away But what great difformitie doest thou see in a dead body thou seest little or no difference at all with one that sleeps this doth not terrifie thee why should the other amaze thee especially if thou doest consider that the body which is dead is truely asleepe the which is a subiect of an other discourse as we shall see if God please But all things haue their period the ladder his last staffe and life her last degree Thou diddest ascend ioyfully so must come downe againe with the like content if in the last steppe or in the midst thou beest not carried away accidentially by some violent death but to returne to the place where thou hast beene taken thy nature doth exhort thee yea it forceth thee If too vniust thou doest not willingly giue thy consent looke into the degrees of life and this contemplation will giue thee cōsolation against death when thou wert borne into the world there was found in thee an appetite to some substāce or meat without thy selfe the which hauing beene supplied thee and sent by the mouth into the stomacke was conuerted into a conco●…ted iuyce and then transformed into bloud by the liuer refined into spirits by the heart and finally fitted to thy decaying body thou didst receiue nourishment force and Ioy these are the first degrees of life then climing higher thou hast extended the fiue faculties of thy senses thine eye to see beautiful things thine eares to heare melodious sounds thy nose to smell pleasing sents thy mouth to tast holesome and delightfull sauours and thy hand to handle smooth and wel polished things these are other degrees of the same life At length the reasonable soule comes to play his part the vnderstanding desires to know whatsoeuer the sences apprehend whatsoeuer his eye sees his eare heareth his hands touch and moreouer what they neither see heare nor touch reason flying to
end insupportable and offensiue to all kind of people yea to himselfe For hauing his nose groueling to the ground like a hogge hee will neuer bee able to lift vp his eies nor his spirit to heauen where all perfect and assured contentment is to bee found If yeelding to all this you will aske me the meanes how to bee freed of this fearefull terror I will tell you that it is to know what Deathis as it is taught in the 13. 14. and 20. Arguments and not to rely vpon doubtfull and false opinions An Obiection Euery roote bringing forth fruits worthy repentance should be carefully preserued The feare of death bringeth forth fruits worthy of repentance Therefore the feare of death should bee carefully preserued WHatsoeuer thou sayest or doest remember thy end and thou shalt neuer sinne sayth the son of Syrach Answ. the continuall meditation of death to him that knowes it rightly helpes wonderfully vnto vertue And Seneca sayeth that man is neuer so diuine as when hee doth acknowledge himselfe to bee mortall Yea it auailes in Christian duties but that the feare of death is profitable to any thing I cannot comprehend I will not deny but that many haue bene wonderfully stirred vp to piety by the feare of death as among others the historie makes mentiō of Peter Vualdo in the yeare 1178. who in the city of Lyons sometime being assembled with many of the chiefe of the Citty to recreate themselues it so happened that one of them fell downe suddenly dead Vualdo a rich man was more mooued then all the rest and seized with feare and apprehension he addicted himselfe more to do penance and to meditate true piety But who doth not see that it is not properly death which causeth this inclination to pietie but the iudgement of God which wee discerne through death as through a glasse that it is the worme of Conscience which doth awaken vs by the contemplation of Death and stirres vp sinners to iustice sanctitie It is the ignorant confusion of the second death with the first which doth so strongly amaze men Finally it is a seruile feare and not commendable yea condemned of the Pagans themselues to forbeare to doe euill for feare of punishment Let vs conclude then That this first death which is naturall and common to all men seeing that her poyson hath beene quenched in the bloud of Christ as Tertullian speaks seeing that the Crosse of Iesus Christ hath pulled away her sting triumphed ouer her and giuen a counter-poyson for the poyson of sinne it is not euill but the greatest good that can arriue to mortall men and to feare to obtayne so great a good is a vice and no vertue before all vpright Iudges The Third Argument drawne from the Impossibility That onely is to bee feared that lyes in the power of man Death lyes not in the power of man Therefore not to be feared VIce onely should hee feared to be auoyded but nothing that is without the power of man is vice as Epictetus saith in his Enchiridion Moreouer that feare is good that can preuent an imminent danger but to that which can neither bee remedied nor foreseene feare serues but to aduance it Man may preuent and auoyd that which hee holds in his owne power and will as the approbation of vice the hatred of goodnesse and of true honour rashnes passions vnlawfull loue vnrestrained heauinesse excessiue ioy vaine hope damned despaire c. But all that which blinde man by his opinion doth affect or feare so much as wealth pouertie the honour or dishonour of the world life and death are not tyed to his will nor subiect to his scepter And therefore the Philosopher will rightly say that neither pouertie nor sicknesse let vs also adde death nor any thing that flowes not from our owne mallice are to bee feared let vs follow the Doctors of wisedome saith Heluidius in Tacitus which hold honest things onely to bee good and dishonest bad power nobilitie and whatsoeuer is without the spirit of man reputation riches friends health life and all things that depend of the free will of man flow necessarily perpetually from the decree of the Eternall and to seeke to hinder their course were to striue to stay the motion of the heauen and starres This prouidence of God dispersed throughout all the members of this Vniuerse hath infused into euery mooueable thing a secret immooueable vertue as Boetius saith by the which shee doth powerfully accomplish all things decreed in its time and place and order To seeke to breake the least linke of these causes chayned together were as much as to runne headlong against a rocke to ouerturne it I will that thou knowest the howre place of thy deceasse that to auoyd it thou flyest to a place opposite vnto it that thou watchest the houre yet shalt thou find thy selfe arriued and guided to the place at the houre appointed there to receiue thy death and that which is admirable thou thy selfe insensibly wouldest haue it so and diddest make choice of it To this force let Iulius Caesar oppose all his Imperiall power let him scoffe at Spurinus his prediction of the 15. of March the day being come hee must vnderstand from his Sooth-sayer who was no lyer that the day was not past he must come to the Capitoll and there receiue 23. wounds and fall downe dead at the foote of Pompeys statue Let Domitian storme for the approching of fiue of the clocke foretold yet must he die at the houre and for the more easier expedition one comes and tells him that it had strooke sixe he beleeues it with great ioy Parthenius his groome tells that there is a pacquet of great importance brought vnto him he enters willingly into the Chamber but it was to bee slaine at that very instant which hee feared most But if these histories seeme ouer worne with age who remembers not that memorable act at the last Assembly of the Estates at Blois of that Duke who receiued aduertisement from all parts both within and without the Realme that the Estates would soone end with the ending of his life euen vpon the Eue one of his confident friends discouered the businesse vnto him going to dinner he found a note written in his napkin with these words They will kill you To which he answered They dare not but they failed not Oh God how difficult is it to finde out thy wayes Let vs then cōclude that the houre of death appoynted by the immoueable order of God is ineuitable so that as one saith We shal sooner moue God then death So the Pagans who erected Altars to all their counterfeit Deities did neuer set vs any to death This firme decree of all things gane occasion to the Pagans to figure the three Destinies whose resolution great Iupiter could not alter no not to draw his Minion Sarpedon out of their bonds Let vs speake more properly God can
hydeous feare The king saw him among the rest and admired him and obseruing his pale colour he inquired of him the cause of his palenes and was informed of his disease the king thinking that by his cure his force and valour would increase caused his Physitions to recouer him but the effect prooued contrarie for the souldiar being cured had no other care but to liue and this care made him to feare euery thing yea the shadow of a leafe his furious humor was gone down to his feet to fly away Where fore we must therfore thinke of death know it and contemne it To this end the ancients did set dead bodies at the doores of their houses to be seene of passengers for the same reason the Egyptians did cause an image of death to be carried about in their bankets and set vpon the table not to strike terror into them but rather a disdaine by the frequent beholding of what it is And so it was at Constantinople in the election creation of a new Emperor they were wont to breathe into his heart vertue valour when as being set in his highest Throne of glorie a mason came neare to him and made a shew of an heape of stones of diuers formes to the ende hee might choose which did best please him to build his tombe It is the same reason why at the Coronation of the Popes when as he that is new called passeth before S. Gregories Chappell the master of the Ceremonies holding an handfull of flaxe at the ende of a drie reed setts fire to it and cries with a loud voyce Pater sancte sic transit gloria mimdi O I would to God that both they and wee did thinke seriously of this that remembring how lightly this life passeth away wee might make haste for feare to be sodainly surprized euery man to doe his dutie according to his vocation euen as they doe which liue at Court being set at the table make what haste they can in feeding least the meat be taken away before they haue dyned VVhy stay wee then Let vs make hast to attaine to that royall dignitie which hee deserues best that is most at libertie and hee is most that least feares death Behold what a tragical Poet sayth Hee is a King that conquers feare And th'ills that dèsperate bosomes beare That in his Towre set safe and free Doth all things vnderneath himsee Encounters willingly his Fate Nor grudges at his mortall state From those golden verses the golden memory of Heluidius an ancient Romain shal for euer shine who seeing the ancient liberty captiuated by Vespasian and being commanded by him that hee should not come into the Senate hee answered That whilest he was a Senator hee would come vnto the Senat Vespasian replyed Bee in the Senate and hold thy peace Heluid Let no man then aske my opinion V●…sp But I must in honour demand it Heluid Then must I in iustice speake what my conscience commands me Vesp. If thou speakest it I will put thee to death Heluid You may do what you please and I what I ought Let this example bee alwayes before our eyes and especially to vs Christians that of the twelue Apostles who neuer yeelded to the cruell assaults of death but alwayes reioyced with an inuincible courage as the text saith to be held worthy to suffer reproach for the Name of Christ. Wherefore aboue all the world they haue purchased a most holy fame yea their twelue names are written in the twelue foundations of the celestiall and eternall City O what a worthy reward for so great valour in the contempt of death The eight Argument taken from the worke of God The reward wherewith the Eternall doth sometimes recompence them he fauors cannot be euill Death is that wherewith hee doth sometimes reward them he fauors Therefore Death cannot bee euill IF that be true which Silenus in Tully and others with reason report that the first degree of happinesse is not to be borne and not to fall into the dangers of the present life That the second is to die in being borne without all doubt the third must bee not to continue long in the miseries of the world but hauing beheld the workes of God the wandring couse of the stars the swift motion of the heauens the inuariable changing of day and night presently to die Say not that thou art taken in thy youthfull age that is a priuiledge which God giues thee to free thee from a thousand Combats of vice which thou shouldest endure or it may be thou shouldest be conquered as Salomon was by voluptuousnsse or as Nero by cruel ty Looke vpon the insolencie and corruption of that time it will appeare that thou hast more cause to feare then to hope in liuing longer sayed Seneca to Marullus epist. ●…00 If this were in those times what shall it be in this age which is as many times impayred as there haue since slowed yeares and daies And admit thou wert assured to continue alwayes vertuous and victorious yet shouldest thoube continually couered with dust altered with thirst full of bitternesse and old with anguish Enoch pleased God and was beloued of him he was rapt vp into heauen that the malice of the world should not change his vnderstanding sayeth the text c. 44. Cleobis and Biton religious and dutifull children for that they tooke the yoake and drew the Charriot of their deceased mother vp the hil for want of Mules and the houre of the interment pressing on they receiued the night following in recompence of their singular piety a happy death Marcellus Nephew to Augustus Caesar adopted by him Marcellus vpon whom the hope of all the Romaine Empire did depend dyed in the 18. yeare of his age a thousand others yea innumeraable haue bene cut off in their vigorous youth the most excellent as the ripest cheries are the first taken it happens to these timely wits as to the ripest fruit they fall first and Homer writes that the Heroes and Demigods neuer extended their dayes euen vnto the threshold of old age Seneca reports that his predecessors had secne an infant of great stature at Rome but they saw him die presently according to the opinion of euery man of iudgement whereupon hee addes that maturity is a signe of imminent ruine that whereas the increasings are consumed they desire the end Moreouer hee abuseth himselfe much which thinkes he hath liued long because hee hath past many yeares if he shew no other signes but his pale face and his gray head Behold what the wise man saith Man is not gray for that hee hath liued many yeares but for that hee hath liued wisely long age must bee measured by the honest conditions and manners not by the number of dayes It depends of another saith Seneca how long wee shall liue but of our selues how good we are the importance is to liue well and not long yet many times liuing well doth not consist
Queene of Nations falsesly held to be eternall where art thou destroied ruined burnt and drowned in vaine do they seeke thee for thou art not where thou were built And you Constantinople Venice and Paris your day will come and why not Seeing that whole Monarchies runne swiftly to their ruine the Assirian Persian Grecian and Romaine are perished You Turkes you florish for ●…lme but behold 〈◊〉 Sc●…thians prepare to wrest the reines of the world out of your hands and what wonder if that riues which by nature is apt to tiue if that which is easie to melt melt if that which is corruptible decayes and if that which is of a mortall condition dies Without doubt if there be any thing to be amazed at it is how we are borne how wee subsist amiddest a thousād deaths which reigne vpon vs we haue but one narrow entry into life but wee haue an infinite number to go out which are very large and slippery And y●…t o strange brutishnesse we wonder how we die and not how we liue Let vs then conclude with the Spirit of God That euery man is dust and shall returne to dust for such is his condition The 13. Argument taken from the benefit which the thought of death brings Whatsoeuer doth multiply life should be precious to them that loue life The Meditation of death multiplies life Therefore the meditation of Death should be precious to them that loue life A Great Philosopher obseruing the vncertenty of the time of death and finding that life must infallibly fall by a bullet by iron by a dart a stone a haire as Fabius the Pretor was choakt in drinking milke with a kernell as the Poet Anacreon with a flie as Pope Adrian 4. with a splinter be he neuer so well armed as Henry 2. the French King whom a splinter of Captaine Lorges lance flying into the beuer of his caske wounded in the head whereof he dyed by the rush of a doore as Iterenius the Sicilian in the Venerian act a ridiculous death as Gallus Pretorius and Titharius a Romane Knight who were smothered in the bed of lust By the holding of their breath without constraint as it happened to Comon by delight as to Chilon who hearing his sonne commended for that hee had wonne the prized the Olimpike games was so moued with affection as he dyed yea in laughing as old Philemon who hauing seene an Asse eate sigges vpon his table he commanded his seruant to giue him drinke whereat hee did so laugh as hee fell into a hicke●… and so dyed Yea life is ruined by the pricke of a needle as in Lucia the daughter of Marcus Aurelius who pricking her selfe dyed By the tooth of a combe like to Rufynius the Consull who combing himselfe hurt his head and ended his life That great Philosopher I say considering that so many accidents and ten thousand others not to bee foreseene might in an instant take away life gaue this wholsome counsell That wee must dispose of euery day in such sort as if it should close vp our life within the compasse of the twelue houres Consider saith hee how goodly a thing it is to consummate life before death and then to attend without care the time that may remayne and the better to induce vs thereunto let vs remember the aduice which Iesus Christ gaue vnto his Disciples of him selfe I must doe saith hee the workes of him that sent me whilst it is day the night comes and then no man can worke Ioh. 9. By the day hee signifies life by night death and his will is that whilst we liue we should doe our duties without any procrastination for that night is neere that is to say death But when a well setled soule saith the same knowes there is no difference betwixt a day and an age shee then beholds as it were from aboue the dayes and successe which shall follow her and laughs at the course and continuance of yeeres The same Seneca doth also make a pleasant discourse of Pacu●…ius the vsurper of Syria who being at night buried in wine as as if he had prepared his owne funerall caused himselfe to bee carryed from the table to his bed in the meane time his friends clapping their hands danced and sung He hath liued hee hath liued and there passed no day but this was done And the Authour addes what he did in an vnseemely manner let vs doe with reason that night approching and ready to lay vs in bed let vs sing with ioy I haue runne the course of my prefixed life and if God doth adde an increase of tomorrow let vs account it for gaine In doing so euery day shall bee a life vnto vs and by the multiplication of dayes our life shall be multiplyed and why not seeing that in what day soeuer we dye we dye in our owne proper day as the fame Seneca saith calling the present day that proper day seeing the dayes that are past are no more ours being so lost for vs as they can bee no more restored As for the future we cannot call them ours being not yet come and may bee wrested from vs in an instant by many accidents Moreouer what is there in an age that wee find not in one day the heauen the earth the inhabitants thereof the day and night by the reuolution of the heauens But you will say This pensiue thoght of death hammering continually in our heads doth hasten our death Answ. You are deceiued a wiseman thinkes quietly of it and in thinking of it aduanceth nothing no more then the marriner in seeing the sayles still and the wind to blow it is by the wind and sayles not by his looking that he is carried into the Port So by the waues of this life not by the meditation of death wee are carried to the graue Let vs then end with the saying of the Philosopher Musonius That he imployes not the day rightly who resolues not as if it were his last The 14. Argument taken from a Simile Euery sweete and sound sleepe is pleasing Death is a sweete and sound sleepe Ergo. A Naxagoras sayed there were two excellent instructions in Death the one in sleepe the other in the time going before our birth Let vs now consider of the first instruction We see that most of the heathen Philosophers haue saluted death with the name of sleepe Plato in the end of his Apologie of Socrates Tully in his booke de Senectute Obsenie fayth hee there is no thing so like vnto death as sleepe Homer faith that sleepe death are brother and sister twinnes Let vs obserue with Plutarque that Homer shewes their similitude terming them twinnes for they that are so doe most commonly resemble And in truth wee cannot denie but there is betwixt them great affinitie It is one of the causes of death the cold vapour vndigested and quenching the naturall heate a vapor which appeares vpon the superficies of the bodie which they also
call the sweat of death Sleepe proceedes from the fume which the meat digesting causeth this fume mounted vp and thickned by the coldnes of the braine descends againe and disperseth it selfe ouer all enters into the nerues by the which both sence and motion is distributed throughout the whole body so as death makes all the actions of the body to cease euen so sleepe doth all the feeling of the sinnewes of the senses and all motion of the exterior members For as wee doe often finde children lying asleepe vpon the ground thinking they were dead so man dying doth oftē deceiue them that stand by being not able to iudge whether he be dead or sleepes Man cannot alwayes watch he must sleepe neither can he liue for euer he must dye and as he growes idle that can take no rest so hee is madd that thinkes not to die As he that stooping to his worke doth stemm with trafficke Boate along the shore the streame and pouring out himselfe in watrie sweate breakes all the bancks in vprore In retreate made to his Cottage from the laboring light strecht on the straw sleepes soundlie all the night As man after that hee hath sweat with tedious labour being broken and growne crooked with age after that he hath tost and turmoyld kept a great stir in the world being layed in the earth rests in death he that goes to bed puts off his clothes he that dyes vnclothes his bodie and his soule departs And as he that hath eaten and drunke freely feels in his stomacke a gnawing and cruditie which hinders his rest so hee that hath busied himself too much with worldly affayers feels vpon the approching of rest a remorse of conscience and an irresolution which will not suffer him to imbrace death quietly sleepe seazeth vpon m●…n lying awake in his bed insensibly so can he not obserue the verie moment of approaching death when sleep comes he feels no paine no more that the verie instant of death If men be froward and cry out when death approcheth so do they especially little children who crie most when sleepe comes vpon them Finally as in our soundest sleepe wee feele no paine we hold it a wrong to be awaked so let vs assure our selues we shall feele lesse paine in death seeing her sound sleepe cannot be troubled nor interrupted in any sort and therefore Diogenes taken with a sound sleepe a little before his death the Physition inquiring if he had felt no paine no answered he the brother comes before his sister So Gorgias Leōtinus being neere his end his bodie without strēgth he had many slumbers so as a friend of his demanding how hee found himselfe Well saith he the brother beginnes to deliuer mee into his sisters hands Moreouer Nature which hath made nothing in vaine seems to assure vs of this proportion by the Dormouse which sleepes all Winter so foundly as it will rather endure all extremities then awake I haue seene a man of good credite put one into water boyling on the fire the which did not awake but only mooue the hinder legs a little yet in the Spring it is nimble leaps from branch to branch a goodly signe of the Refurrection of the dead The fifteenth Argument taken from former experience Not to be yet and to be no more are alike yea the same We ●…ere in peace and rest when we were not yet Therefore when we shall bee 〈◊〉 more●… shall be i●… peace and r●…st IT is an humane Argument which takes matters at the ●…orst and death for the 〈◊〉 priuation of the wh●…le man yet without preiudic●… of his right if there bee any foūd Of necessity saith P●…o death must bee one of these two a with-drawing or extinguishing of al sense and of the soule likewise or a transmigra tion as they hol●… into some other place if death doth extinguish all and be like vnto sleepe the which most commonly when it is not troubled with dreames and fancies bring a ●…uiet rest O God what a gaine is death 〈◊〉 c. But if it be true which some say that death is a ●…ransport ●…o the happy regions that our soules hauing shined in these mortall bodies on this bare earth go to shine elewhere as when the S●…nne aft●… that he hath enlig●…ned ou●… horizon desc●…nds to giue day vnto an other and then returnes to make his course anew what decease is there of the soule mor●… then of the Sun which runnes his course through our horizon all the day and at night seemes extinct and dead to vs Or suppose there were an vtter extinguishing decease of the Soule aswel as of the Body what cause were there of feare in this extinguishing since not to haue bene at all and to cease to be is all one because the effect both of the one and the other is not to be Then why should wee feare that now when by the experience of aboue fiue thousand yeares when we were not that is to say that we were dead we neuer felt any kind of paine Hereunto king A●…asis had re gard obseruing one who lamented much for the losse of his sonne If sayd hee tho●… didst not mourne when thy sonne was not at all neither shouldest thou now grieue that he be no more Let vs conclude with Seneea That according to the opinion of all the world he carries the supreame degree of folly that weepes for that hee liued not a thousand yeares since so hee doth second him which grieues that he shall not bee here the like ●…e o●… o●… it i●… all on●… ●…ou ●…d no●… be and You haue ●…ot ben●… So spak●… the wi●…e man by the mouth of m●… saying We 〈◊〉 as if we 〈◊〉 not b●… Obiection Not to ha●… had ●…llent things and ●…o 〈◊〉 lo●… them ●…fter the enioyng them a time are verie different ●…t he that hath not beene is like to him that hath ●…ot had those ex●…llent things life and the 〈◊〉 thereof and he that is no more like him that hath lost them after the enioying of them Therefore not to haue bin and not to be are verie diff●… things THe verie word ●…o los●… i●… of it sel●…e 〈◊〉 he tha●… after a cl●… fight 〈◊〉 lose his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then he which hath lo●… 〈◊〉 knowledge of his sences o●… reason an●… 〈◊〉 ●…out th●… which we had not bin Wha●… is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not see himselfe swallowed vp in a gu●… of darkenesse ●…ay in eternall horror●… And therfore S. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the name o●… the faithfull ●…aith 2. Cor. 5. That we whic●… in this lodging groane vnder the burthen d●…sire not to ●…e vncloathed bu●… to be clothed againe to the ende tha●… mortal may be swallowed 〈◊〉 by life Which shewes that the desire of man is to be if he enclines to de●…h it is 〈◊〉 assured ●…ōsideration ●…hat by ●…ath he enters into a 〈◊〉 and mor●… perfect being els●… he would alwaies 〈◊〉 not to be that
man is as the world aboue the Moone alwayes cleere and without clouds But what is this ioy it is saith Seneca peace concord greatnesse of spirit ioyned to mildnesse it is to bee content with things present whatsoeuer and to become a friend to his affaiers It is sayth D●…critus to haue his spirit free from feare and the religious Doctor Saint Ambrose will say That tranquillity of conscience and assured innocency make the life happy Finally Salomon will cry out than a ioyful spirit is a delightful banket and contrariewise a troubled minde thinkes alwayes of things which are distastfull mournfull Trust not to these mela●…cholie men to whom adu●… choler makes white things seeme blacke those that are happy vnfortunate and to feare where there is nothing but subiect of assurance Life is as we gouerne it good or bad pleasant or displeasant and therefore Epictetus sayed f●…ly That euery thing had two ends and that by the one it was easie to beare by the other combersome If your brother saith hee hath done you wrong doe not consider of ●…t of that side that he hath done you wrong for then it is vneasie to beare but of the other as he is your brother that you haue beene nourished together and then you wil find it very tolerable Du Vair who like the industrious Be●… hath gathered summarily together the flowers of the Stoicks writes that nature may say vnto vs as the Philosopher did vnto his Disciples What I present vnto you with the right hand you take with the left your choice tends alwayes to the worst you leaue what is good and imbrace the bad Let vs take things by the good end wee shall finde that there is subiect of loue in that which we hate For there is not any thing in the world but is for the good of man As for example you haue a sute with your neighbour when you thinke of him your sute coms to minde and then you curse him and are disquieted the reason is you take it by the bad end but take it by the other and represent vnto your selfe that he is a man like to you that God by a resemblance of nature calls you to a mutuall affection that he is in the same Citie in the same Temple and doth communicate in the same Lawes the same prayers and the same Sacraments with thee that you are bound to succour one another reciprocally Finally the Stoicks hold for a Maxime that a wise man is exempt from iniurie either to giue or receiue he cannot doe any being borne onely to ayde hee receiues none for that being grounded vpon vertue hee valiantly contemnes all reproch wrong so as hee is inuulnerable as Seneca saith not for that hee is not strooke but for that as hee saith hee cannot bee hurt Answer I know that the Stoicks with whose fethers our obiector decks himselfe haue sought to frame their wise man of that fashion that he should not be capable of any ill but continually possest of a sollide ioy but whatsoeuer they haue purtrayed was but a vaine picture without effect or truth like vnto the Chimeres and Centaures Who wil beleeue that a wise man put vpon the racke feeles no paine Who can say that the life of Metellus is not more to be desired then that of Regulus turned vp and downe in a pipe full of nailes and that they are equall fauours That a wise man will ioyfully holde his hand burning in the fire like vnto Mutius Scaeuola Finally that a wise man beeing burnt tormented and put in Phalaris burning bull will notwithstanding say O what a sweete life is this Let them do what they list I care not These and such like are the Paradoxes of these Philosophers who as Cicero saith carry admiration in their foreheads but beeing strip't naked they giue cause of laughter of themselues as Plutarke saith they confesse their absurditie and vanity And in truth who wold not laugh when among other things they say that only a wise man is truely a king rich beautifull yea though he were a slaue a begger or a Zopirus with his nose cut off c. But let vs answere punctually to the reasons obiected The Sarazin Abdala vnderstands that by some excellent relickes of thesoule man is admirable to the world but hee doth not touch his felicitie for hee hath nothing of that remayning since his transgressiō he is continually here below miserable in euery degree He had the gift of free will to haue enioyed his owne happynesse if hee had would but for that hee abused it he lost himselfe and his liberty saith S. Augustine He rules ouer all creatures but a miserable domination in the which the meanest subiect exceeds his Lord in felicitie and twise miserable in the which the Lord suffers more miserie then the most wretched of his subiects Reade Plutarke and then Homer but aboue all the Spirit of God in the holy writ who knowes what wee are and qualifies man with no other titles but of darkenesse and foolishnesse to thinke a good thought of himselfe a brutish man who comprehends not the things which are of the Spirit and cannot vnderstand them for they are spiritually discerned Finally hee shewes him to be weake sicke dead in his sinnes a vipers broode not able to doe any good thing for that he is bad and by consequence cannot take part but with Satan the prince of darkenesse and the father of lyes and all iniquitie Moreouer if Seneca and others to retayne men in life teach them what they ought to doe it is no argument that they diuert them from death when shee shall present herselfe vnto them but contrariwise Seneca doth in a manner generally protest That death hath no discommoditie that it is not onely without ill but without the feare of ill and that it is a foolish thing to feare it c. As for life hee calls it deceitful and vicious for that it is alwayes imperfect But see how vpon this question hee opens his heart to sorrowfull Martia for the death of her sonne O ignorant men saith he of their owne miseries which doe not commend death as the goodlyest inuention of nature For whether that she holds felicitie inclosed or excludes calamitie be it that shee ends the satietie and wearinesse of old age or that shee carries away youth in his flower in the hope of better things be it that shee calls vnto her the most vigorous age before that it hath mounted the roughest steps yet is she to all men their end to some a remedy to some a vow and those are more bound vnto her to whom she coms without calling He goes on but he cuts off his discourse to come to the end of his life which was cut off for being commanded by Nero to dye without any delay hee willed his Surgeon to open a veine in his foote holding it in a bason of warme
to desire Death not as wee propounded them nor as we haue found them but as they make themselues known If we shall indge of the streame by the spring what may we hope for of the life of man conceiued betwixt the vrine and excrements borne naked all in tears but only a perpetuall flux of corruption pouertie and calamities therefore it is not without reason that S. Bernard sayd That man is but a stinking sperme a nourishment for wormes a sacke of excrements and such should wee see him within if the skinne did not stay our sight outwardly Doe we doubt of it seeing of this liuing substāce there are ingendred wormes about an ell long and being dead serpents in the pithe of the backe as Plinie writes and experience teacheth Plutarke reports that the king of Egypt hauing caused the body of Cleomenes to be hanged and the garde hauing discouered a great serpent wound about his head they called the people who running to this spectacle called Cleomenes as a demy-God The like happened to a young man a Germaine who would neuer suffer his picture to be drawn in his life time but onely granted to his kinsfolkes who importuned him that some dayes after his interment they might take him vp and draw him as they found him Being taken out of the graue they saw about the Diaphragma the pith of the backe many little Serpents to verifie what the authour of Ecclesiasticus faith When man dyerh he becoms the inheritance of serpents The life of man is a candle exposed to all winds saith Epictetus His body is a store-house of all sorts of diseases saith another his flower his most excellent point of glory is such as he is alwayes in paine and martyrdome and this point passeth away dazling the eye like a flash greatnesse and worldly riches are no more sssured then the waues of the sea they flowe suddainely and ebbe no l●…sse violently Sesostris King of Egypt causing himselfe to bee drawne in a Chariot of pure gold by foure Kings his prisoners one of them held his eye fixed vpon the wheele which did rolle vp and down by him Sesostris obseruing it demanded of him the cause of his countenance who answered That looking vpon the wheele and obseruing the spoaks to bee sometimes aloft and suddainely downe againe I call to minde the rolling change of my selfe and my companions Sesostris considers hereof abates his pride and giues liberty to his Captiues Such is the estate of the affaires of this world like vnto a marke subiect to infinite darts of aduersity No man knowes what the night brings sayd one in Titus Liuius the pleasures are vncertaine but the displeasures most certaine Nature giues vs a taste at our comming into the world where wee enter weeping And according to this instinct of nature the Thraci ns wept at the birth of their children numbring what miseries they should suffer in the world For the same reason the Getes a religious people held that it was better to die then to liue therefore they lamented at their child-birthes and sung at their burialls And wise Salomon saith that the day of death is better then that of birth Looke into Erasmus vpon the prouerbe Optimum non nasci Sophocles in like manner giues aduice that it is more reasonable to weepe at the birth of their children as beeing entred into great miseries and beeing dead to carry them ioyfully to the graue as freed from the miseries of this life And who will doubt any more of this seeing he that neuer lies calls this life death Ioh. 5. saying Hee that heares my words and beleeues in him that sent me shall passe from death to life The Lycians law ordayned that they which wold mourn should put on womens robes for that it did in no sort befit graue and discreete men to weepe for the dead but for passionate women Vpon this law a Lawyer of Padoua groūded his testament although he be taxed by another First hee charged his heire vpon great comminations to banish all blacke cloth from his Funeralls and that he should prouide singers and players on Iustruments to sing and play going among the Priests both before and behinde the Corpes to the number of fifty to euery one of which he bequeathed halfe a Ducate for his paines Moreouer hee ordained that 12. young virgines attired in greene should carry his body vnto Saint Sophias Temple in which he should be interred suffering them to sing ioyfull songs with a loud voyce and for a reward hee bequeathed them a certaine summe of money to helpe them at their marriage All sorts of Priests and Monkes might assist except such as were barred with blacke lest that colour should darken the beauty and cheerefulnesse of his Funeralls he had seene with Heraclitus that during the dayes of this miserable life there is no subiect but of teares and that at our departure we should reioyce with Demoeritus And therefore Plato doth rightly call death a medicine for all miseries and Seneca esteemes it the end of seruitude Let vs seale vp this discourse with the memorable aduice which Epictetus gaue to the Emperour Adrian enquiring why they set garlāds vpon the dead It is in signe answered he that at the day of their death they haue triumphed ouer the diuers assaults of this life Let vs then dye when it shall please the prince of this life to cease the teares and alarmes of this life and to beginne the life of heauen whereas God will wipe away all teares from our eyes whereas death shall be no more and there shal be no more mourning crying nor labour Obiection If men call for death and being come refuse it so much it is a signe that it is very horrible But the antecedent is true Therfore the consequent is also true IT is reported in Laertius that the Philosopher Antisthenes tyed to his bed by a greeuous disease and the more grieuous the more he loued his life was visited by Diogenes who knowing the man had taken a naked sword vnder his gowne Antisthenes perceiuing him cried out O God who shall deliuer me from hence Diogenes answered presently that shal this shewing him his sword But Antisthenes replied more sodainly I meane from these paines and not from my life It seemes that most of those crier sout for death make that their refuge when she approcheth neere them Esope in the Apologue hath naturally described it by that old man who being laden with a great burthen and falling into a Ditch he grew to despaire and calling for death death came and commands him to follow him O no said he I call thee to helpe me vp with my burthē that I may returne Answer I know well that many feare death much not for any desire to liue nor for the pleasures they haue in life for the two examples obiected shew the contrarie but for that they know not what death is And thereunto tends this
All braue Comedians bend their spirits wholly to act their parts well and reioyce at the Comedy Men liuing in the world are Comedians Therefore braue men should bend their spirits to liue wel and to ioy at the end of life THe Island of the Hermaphrodites begins his discourse with these verses The world 's a stage and man is a Comedy One beares the bable th' other acts the folly So Epictetus spake to the men of this time Imagine that you play a morall Scene vpon this Theater of the world in the which you act what part it pleaseth the master if short short if long lōg If he wil haue thee represent a begger or a lame man a King or a rogue thou must act it as naturally as thou canst and onely feare to faile but in the end clap hands in signe of ioy The good and the end are conuertible tearms saith Plato in Philebus Aristonimus sayd that the life of man was like a Theater on the which the most wicked held the first rankes Aeneas Syluius writes that our life is a comedy whereof the last act is death He is then no good Poet sayth hee that doth not order al the acts wel and discreetly vnto the end he would say that it is not sufficient to liue well but we must die well vntill which no man can be held happie by the saying of Solon yeaeof Saloman for man sayd he shall be knowne by his children Caesar Augustus lying in the bed of death and feeling himselfe at the last periode of life sayd often to his friends Haue I acted my personage well in this place haue I pronounced my part well had I a good grace What thinke you Goe then giue a Plaudite and clappe your hands This life is a verie stage on which some mount vp to be actors others stay below to be spectators and then after the Catastrophe euery one must make his retreat into the last house If the ancients in their simplicitie had reason to vse this comparison wee in this age haue much more for we liue not at this day but by shewes and fictions in most the outward countenance is the maske of the inward man dissembling which hath euer increased since the Kings time who would haue his sonne learne no other Latiue but these words Quinescit dissimulare nescit regnare not to defend himselfe carefully but to practise it seriously during his whole reigne In olde time they detested that speech of Lysanders That when the Lyons skinne will not serue wee must sowe on the Foxes but at this day there are none more esteemed and honoured then such as can cunningly offer their seruice vpon all occasions who can make a shewe of friendship to allure who haue their welcome and at parting many submissions and humble conges But it is to lull him asleepe and to practise some supercherie they wilkisse the hand which they would gladly see burnt Let euery man take heede of his most inward friend ●…aigh Ieremie c. 〈◊〉 Trust not in any brother for euery brother makes a practise to supplant and a bosome friend goes away detracting If then how much more now Let then our courteous Courtiours be suspect vnto vs and see what the fore named treatie of Hermaphrodites sayeth in the Chap. of the Entregent This booke represents to the life the wicked abominations of France if we vnderstand it as it is written the prohibition for the allowāce mean thy antiphrasis Finally at this ●…day the most peopled towne are full of Monsters which counterfet the voice of pastors to draw men vnto them eate them like bread Oh what safety is there among so many wolues disguised like sheepe among so many enemies carrying the face of friends Vppon this occasion Salomon cryes out in his time That he had beheld all the wrongs which were done vnder the Sunne and seeing the teares of them that suffer wrong haue no comfort for that they which doe the wrong are the stronger Ecceles 4. In these times the oppressed not onely finde no support but they meet with deceitfull men who vnder the color of Iustice deuoure the remainder of their substāce Oh whatsafety This peruers age is a very Sodome God attends but our retreat to rainedown fire brimstone and burning flames Let vs beware when the Angell of the Eternall shal take vs by the hand when the voyce of God shall call vs let vs not looke backe againe like vnto Lots wife by a treacherous greefe for this treacherous life but rather let vs sing with ioy the song of the Lambe who hath giuen himselfe for our sinnes to the end he may retyre vs out of this wretched world as S. Paul speaks The 23. Argument taken from the effects of Death Whosoeuer hath a will to bee sacred and inuiolable should affect death Euery liuing man should haue that will THIS Argument is drawne from the Law of nature which speaking by Chilon Solon doth pronounce the dead to bee very happy and forbids to curse the dead and in truth a man cannot wrong his honour more then in speaking iniuriously of him who cannot answere It is the fact of cowards to fight with the tong against them that can make no reply and to pull a dead man out of his graue It is a duty of piety to hold them that are departed out of this world sacred inuiolable If the last words of a dying man be blessings as Iob doth witnesse desiring them to come vpon him as Iacob did practise it vpon the Patriarkes as Saint Ambrose doth expound as experience doth teach what esteeme should wee make o him whose soule being separated from the body doth conuerse with Angells in he●…n And is it not very reasonable not to depraue them which cease to be seeing they are not to bee layd hold on but it is most iust to make an end of hatred by the death of thine enemy Pausanias King of Sparta vnderstood it and did practice it who hauing slaine Mardonius Lieutenant to the King of Persia in battell he was aduised by Lampon a man of great authority to cause him to bee hanged for that he had done the like to King Leonidas No no sayd hee that were to dishonor my selfe and the Country which thou doest so magnifie if I should bee cruell against a dead man it were an act befitting Barbarians and not Grecians who cannot allow of such disorders And in truth it is the act of fearefull confusion to tears in sunder the skin of a dead Lyon It is an act befitting the fain the arted 〈◊〉 before Troy to insult ouer dying Hector But it is the property of a generous Lyon to resist them that make head against him and to passeon and not to strike him that falls flat to the earth like a dead man 〈◊〉 Nature speakes heere It is a villanie and an vnworthy foolery to fight against the dead it is for
it c. ANswere Neither Dauid nor Ezechias nor the other seruants of God feared death as it was death simply alone considered but for that God threatned them in regard of their sins by reason whereof it seemes they had some confused apprehension of hell which is the second death Doubtlesse my fault is great sayd Dauid but I pray thee saue mee by thy great bounty These are the words of God to Ezechias Dispose of thy house for thou shalt die shortly and shall not liue We must note that Ezekias heart was puft vp with glory God would humble him by the consideration of death wherewith he threatned him But these two and all other the seruants of God setting aside these threats being in the fauour of God haue with Saint Paul desired to die and to be freed from this mortal body to be with Christ with God Man here below should not apprehend any thing but the conscience of another life a life which dying without repentance grace leades to death eternall as that of Saul and Iudas who being desperate slue themselues quenching the match of a vicious life to kindle it in the fire of hell where there is a Lake of fire and brimstone As for the death of Christ the great difference it hath both in the cause and the effects from that of the faithful Christians makes it to differ a world The reason is Gods Diuine Iustice to reuenge the iniury which hath beene done him by the diuell in the nature of man the which not able to do in him without his totall ruine hee hath done in his surety in Iesus Christ his Son whom to that end hee sent into the world to take humaine flesh in the Virgins wombe It is he that was wounded for our offences broken for our iniquities censured to bring vs peace and slaine to cure vs as the Prophet speakes and the Apostles testifie The fruites first the glory of God is manifested in his loue in his bounty and in his mercy towards vs to haue so loued the world as to giue his owne Son to death for it to the end that whosoeuer did beleeue in him should not perish but haue life euerlasting as the same eternal Son doth witnes Secondly it is our saluation the redemption of the Church from sinne and death for it is the Lambe of God which taketh away the sinnes of the world And these are the reasons why Iesus Christ was terrified in death feeling the wrath of God vpon him for our sinnes But the death of the faithfull is nothing like for in the greatest torments which Tyrants can inflict vpon them it mortifies the sence and takes away all paine by the abundance of his consolation as Ruffinus writes of Theodorus and as our Annales testifie of the smiling death of Martirs in the middest of burning fiers for God is satisfied the passage is open the venimous teeth of death are pulled out seeing that the Lord wrestling with her hath slaine her as S. Augustine speakes and like a most expert Phisition hath made a wholesome Treacle to purge our bodies of those corrupt burning stincking and deadly humors and to make it sound holy impassible and immortall The second Obiection Euery iust reward is proportionable to the paine The reward of Martyrsis great Therefore their paine is great THe holy Writ and the ancient Fathers vpon it beare witnesse of the honour and great triumph which the Martyrs obtaine in heauen if their conflict against death bee answerable to this triumph as equity requires it must bee exceeding great and therefore it is no easie thing to dye the which S. Augustine seemes to confirme Si nulla esset mortis amaritudo non esset magna Martyrum fortitudo If saith hee there were no bitternesse in death the Martyrs valour should not be great Answer He is truely a Martyr who for the honour of God and for the loue of his neighbour doth constantly seale the contract of the alliance of God with his owne bloud and the true cause of Martyrdome is to suffer death for iustice and for the name of Christ as Christians and in doing well This bloud thus shed is the true seede of the Church the very Commentary of the holy Scripture the Trompet of Gods glory the true Victory of the cruelty and obstinacy of Gods enemies the holy Lampe to lighten and draw to the Kingdome of Christ those which are in the shaddow of death c. In consideration whereof these holy Champions of the faith are honored in heauen with a Crowne of gold clothed with white garments c. Vpon earth in the primi tiue Church vpon the day of their suffring which they called their birth-day the faithfull assembled vpon the place of their Martyrdome did celebrate their happy memory repeated their combates commended their resolution exhorting the assistants to doe the like if they were called to the like combate as well by reading of their bloody history as by the sight of the place where their blood was newly spilt It is that which Cyrillus in the epistle to Smyrne the Paraphrase of Rufynus doth teach vs wherein we may see that it was not the death but the cause of the death which made them to bee so recompenced and recommended And whatsoeuer they haue had in heauen shall bee giuen to all others which shall haue the like will to serue their master though not the effect the like Crowne nor the like garments To mee saith that great Martyr S. Paule the Crowne of Iustice is reserued which the Lord the iust Iudge shall giue mee in that day and not onely to me but vnto all those that shall loue his Comming And what Christian is it that desires not the comming of Christ It is also written that all the Armies which are in heauen wherein all the faithfull are followed the faithfull the true the Word of God vpon white horses clad in white Cypres Finally in this inestimable reward which God giues vnto Martyrs there is not so great a regard had to the merit and grieuousnesse of their death as to the most precious blood of his Sonne Iesus Christ and to his free promise wherefore this Obiection is to no purpose and if it were it doth incite men more to desire then to refuse death if it bee true that the enduring of the first death in the Saints is a freeing frō the second as Saint Augustine teacheth The third Obiection It is impossible but man should be toucht with a great apprehension of euery sharpe combate he is to endure Such is death MAn hath three cruell enemies which present themselues vnto him at his last farewell a sensible paine at the dissolution of the foule from the body sinne represents vnto him heauen gates shut and hell open and Satan tempts him and lets him see his criminall Inditement whereof he is ready to execute the sentence Answer It is
to this death they which haue condemned mee are more vniust then I am Inferring thereby that he died well and honestly seeing they put him to death wrongfully and without cause Plato doth teach vs that Socrates was wont to insult ouer death in these tearmes I haue beene carefull said he to liue well in my youth and to die well in my age I am not tormented within me with any paine I am not vnwilling to dye for seeing my life hath beene honest I attend death ioyfully This is much but it is nothing in regard of Saint Paule who protesting that he felt not himselfe guilty in any thing cried out with a bold spirit that hee was assured that neither death nor life nor Angels nor Principalities nor powers neither things present nor things to come nor height nor depth should separate him from the loue of God Let vs thē be careful to polish our soules and to settle our consciences let vs apply our selues to a well ordered equity let the body subiect it selfe vnto the soule and follow her motions Let the inferiour powers of the soule obey the commandements of reason Let reason guided by the holy Ghost obserue the Law grafted in euery creature by nature especially in man and most of all the Law of Moses To doe this is to be vertuous and to be vertuous is to haue a good conscience We must then direct all our actions to vertue if wee desire to liue in the world without feare without paine in peace and ioy vertue doth first of all make the soule perfect in her intellectuall part disperseth the clouds of error ignorance illuminating reason doth adorne it with prudence Secondly she labours to polish the will of man and hauing reformed it by her orderly course shee giues him the habite of Iustice. Thirdly she doth temper the angry part pulls away the extreame feare and on the other side prunes away the sprouts of rashnes and plants betwixt both valour and ha●… dy feare Finally it doth also bridle the faculty of concupiscence and restraines the motions of voluptuousnesse and makes them obedient to the command of Temperance It is in a few words the true meanes to get a pure and vpright conscience especially if we bee carefull to be as honest in our priuate secret actions as if all the world did behold vs Seneca doth recommend this vnto vt in many places Wee reade of one called Virginius whose History was written by Cluuius who presented it vnto the sayd personage and sayd vnto him If there be any thing written otherwise then thou wouldest pardon mee and reforme it Oh no answered Virginius whatsoeuer I haue done hath bene done in that manner to that end that it might bee free for all to write at their pleasures a worthy speech of a noble spirit and content with his conscience in his actions Iulius Drusus when as one promised a great sum of mony to his Master mason that his house might not be subiect to the view of any man and I sayd he will giue twice so much if thou canst build my house in that sort as all men may see into it what is done there This was to saue his conscience not to do more in secret then before all the world And what a madnesse is it in most men not to feare God nor their conscience and yet to feare men who can do least in the correction of their faults What shall we then feare in this world One only God for his feare will inspire our hearts with an hardy courage against the greatest feares The 27. Argument taken from the frequent thinking of Death He that will receiue Death ioyfully must propound it often to his thoughts Wee all desire to receiue it ioyfully c. SOme sayth Seneca come to their death in choler but no man receiues it when it comes with a cheerefull countenance but he that hath long before prepared himselfe for it Let vs try this remedy it cannot be bad In the night after our first sleepe in bed let vs presuppose that we are dead and by a strong imagination let vs settle our selues in that sort as hauing no sence nor feeling that our soule and reason tells vs that it is euen so in death that there is no other difference but that our soule is yet present in the body and then let vs goe vnto our friends or to any other that die let vs view them talke vnto them and touch them being dead and we shall finde that in all this there is nothing to be feared that all is quiet that there is nothing but opinion that 〈◊〉 abuse man Let vs proceed enter the Church-yards and go down into their graues wee shall finde that 〈◊〉 the dead rest in peace yea●… so profound 〈◊〉 peace as no liuing creature can interrupt them Let vs yet go on farther there is no danger for by the saying of Plato the knowledge of death is the goodliest science that man can attaine vnto Let vs do like vnto Iohn Patriarke of Alexandria build our tombes and not finish them but euery day lay one stone Let vs haue some Anatomy or Mōmie in our houses and let vs not passe a day without beholding it let vs handle it it is death Little children by little and little grow familiar with that which they did strangely fly and in the end they play with it and know that it is but a dead image of copper which so terrified them Wee shall also see in death that it was but a shaddow that so amazed vs. Let vs yet do more waking and not dreaming let vs dispose our selues of purpose as Philippe King of Macedon did by chance who wrestling vpon the sand after the manner of the Country saw and measured the length of his body and admired the littlenes thereof in the shape printed in the sand where he had fallen Finally let vs not forget what the Emperour Maximilian 2. or 3. yeares before his death commanded carefully to be done that they should carry with him a coffin of oake in a chest with an expresse command that being dead they should couer his body with a course sheete hauing put lime in his eares nosestrills and mouth and then to lay him in the ground Let vs follow these great examples both high low and wee shall see that when death shall present her selfe vnto vs it will bee without amazement But if wee flie from euery image of death from al thought therof if the ringing of bells a shew of some mans death doth importune vs finally if euery word of death be troublesome as there haue beene such I doubt not but to them death is wonderfull terrible Obiection If the most reasonable feare Death most it is by reason to be feared But the antecedent is true therefore the Consequent must follow SEneca yea experience doth teach vs that Infants little children and such as haue lost their
orresty sayth one the rider is not in fault The bodie is a ship the spirit the Pilot the ship suffers wracke but the Pilote saues himselfe by swimming or vpon some boarde the body dies the soule saues it selfe vpon the table of faith and repentance The bodie is a Lanterne the soule the Candle if the glasse be cleare and transparent the light is the greater so by the disposition of the body the soule is knowne more or lesse Man is a bird shut vp in the shell of the egge expecting vntill the shell breake of it selfe that he may come forth so doth the soule that the body my be broken to the ende shee may flie to heauen There are three places assigned to man the first is the matrix the second is this world the third is heauen the first is short the second a litle longer and the third is without ende In the first he cries at the comming forth for that he is ignorant of the goodly spectacle of the world which God as a table couered with all sorts of meate in a great Hall hath prepared for him In the second hee apprehends and desperatly feares his departure for that he knowes not this third heauen the seate of Iesus Christ of the Angells and of the blessed which is prepared for him infinitely more excellent then this base earth where he shall remaine euerlastingly and perfectly happy And these are the liuely similitudes with many other likewise which are continually in the mouthes and writings of such as treate profoundly thereof whereby man may see that he hath no subiect to feare death seeing that by it his soule his principall part and by which hee is man receiues so great a benifit And what shall it bee when the holy Ghost shall assure his Spirit that his body being layd in the ground as in a sacred pawne shal be restored to him immortall in the great and last day But attending this incomparable good let vs proue this immortality byreason first of all The soule reuiues and fortifies it selfe in the greatest agonies of death So Testators witnesse that they are sound in minde though very sicke in body so the disposition of a man at the point of death is of more weight for that hee hath a better conscience a more liuely feeling of his soule And Hippocrates giues aduice to obserue if in diseases there appeare nothing that is Diuine meaning that we should obserue the sighes and the gestures of the sicke patient for if they be vnaccustomed of heauen or of God it is a signe that the soule begins to discouer it selfe seeing it thinkes of heauen her proper mansion So Cyrus being in the bed of death caused his children to approach vnto him to whom hee gaue goodly admonitions but among others hee told them that hee could neuer bee perswaded that the soule lying in the body did remaine after the death of the mortall body as if he would say that vntill then he had studied to assure himself but now he did not doubt of it Nay we shall sometimes see ignorant Countrimen discourse exceeding well at the point of death as wee reade of a certaine labourer altogether vnlearned being nee●…e vnto his death had recommended his health his wife and children with as great Rethorike as Cicero could haue vsed discoursing before the Senate This reason was taken as a strong defence against death by the King of Arr●…gon and represented by Seneca to all that are fearefull in death saying This day which thou fearest so much as the last is the birth day of eternity The 2. is taken from religion and from the homage which man doth owe vnto God for the immortality of his soule not in one Country but in all not in one age but for euer not in one person but generally in all by some adoration prayer of sacrifice in what fashion soeuer man will sooner forget his King his father yea himselfe then his God yet hee makes no doubt but there is a King he sees him he knowes him he honours him and that he hath a father of whom hee holds his life and with whom he doth conuerse dayly and whom he is bound to loue finally he tries himselfe growes conceited and many times abuseth himselfe with the great loue of himselfe and yet hee holds himselfe more bound to God then to all these hee will not feare to displease them if he can no otherwise please God and will hold for Maximes That it is beter to obey God then men that he which doth not renounce father or mother for the loue of God is not worthy of him hee that doth not renounce himselfe and take vp the Crosse of affliction for the seruice of God deserues to bee renounced of him The vnciuill wars which haue swallowed vp so many men in Christendome within these 50. yeares had no other pretexts then these sentences and they had no other foundation then the conscience of the soule that immortall seale which God did graue in the soule when he did infuse it into the body of mā as Chrysostome saith Let vs obserue it in some examples but great in euery respect Alexander the Great being incensed for that the Iewes had denied him succors marcht with his Army to ruine them if the high Priest Iaddus with his ornaments and his holy troupe had not gone out to meete with Alexander Who when he saw the high Priest he admired him and fell downe at his feete whereat his people were amazed and troubled and his most confident Parmenio came vnto him How comes it sayth he since that you worship a man you whom althe earth is ready to acknowledge for a God It is not hee answered Alexander but God in him whom I worship who appeared to me in vision in the like habit in Macedon Whence came this suddaine forgetfulnesse of his owne reuenge from whence this acknowledgement to the Immortall but from an immortall soule As Antiochus held Ierusalem besieged the feast of Tabernacles drew neere the Iewes being resolued to celebrate it they sent an Embassage vnto him to demaunde a truce for seuen dayes that they might attend the holy worship of their great God The soule of this great King being toucht with religion not only yeelded to their demand but also hee himselfe turned to this homage caused oxen with gilded hornes to bee conducted to the Cittie gates with great store of Indense and sweet smells to be sacrificed In which action whether should we admire most either the patience of this great King willingly and deuoutly hindering his ready victory Or the forgetfulnesse of himselfe suffering those sacrifices that he knew to be vndertaken against his honor his fortime and his life And what doth not this confused apprehension of God worke in the immortall spirit of man Cybels Priests wil geld themselues thinking to please their goddesse the Athenian Priests will drinke Hemlocke to liue chastly the Virgins will lye vppon
and to satisfaction by works The feare of the Lord is the beginning of wisedom sayth the wise man Man then being raysed a degree higher then woman in contemplation if he doth vse his knowledge rightly submitting himselfe wholy to God hee shall be much more zealous to his seruice as it happened to S. Iohn the Disciple which Iesus Christ loued aboue the rest but for that they are oftē puft vp they abuse it for pride is a spiritual poyson which spoyles all as it happened to Belzebub therefore most of our learned men are not so religious as women ignorant people who being gouerned by a moderat contemplation doe husband with all humilitie their moderate knowledge of God the affection in this feminine sexe is commonly more zealous then in the other Finally by the reuerence which is stronger in him this sexe feares to offend God and to make the holy Ghost heauy by whom he is sealed vntill the day of redemption as S. Paul speakes it is not feare onely then that begets religion for then Deere Conies and other fearefull Creatures should bee more religious Moreouer it is no generall rule that women are more religious if it bee not at this time which is as barren in deuout men as it is fertill in many religions for wee shall finde as many men recorded for Martyrs as women and in the Catalogue of the Apostles the first Architects of the Christian Churches we shall not find the name of any womē they are not suffered to speake in the Church And if the Elephant doth therein seeme to imitate man they are but shewes and gesticulations hauing no deuotion in the heart which is the essence of religion and what hee doth is by the instinct of his owne temper which approcheth neere vnto that of man And what doth Aelian others report so memorable of him but that hee turnes vp his s●…out towards the Sun and Moone as if hee did worship them doth not the flower called Heliotropium more it being weighty turnes round about lightly as the Sunne goeth To the 3. The impostor sayth that the soule is kindled with a desire of immortality to the end it may bee stirred vp to vortue it is well spoken for true vertue in this world is the sole and true good of man which makes him worthy of the heauenly beatitude which layes hold of a vertuous soule but this vertue without this immortality is a poison to man keeping him from running headlong to all carnall and vicious pleasures so as they be delightfull and as many Philosophers and men of God as shall crie out against the riots of the flesh they are so many tormenters but the soule is immortal and vertue is or should be requested and therefore one sayd long ago That a man were better to cast himselfe headlong into the sea then to be tyrannized by vice And on the other side Plaustus wil say that there is no price so excellent as vertue that it marcheth before al things liberty health life goods kinsfolke country children are defended and maintained by it And Claudian sings that from a high Tower she laughes at mortal things for that she is certaine of her immortality Finally she is rightly painted treading death vnder her feete for she alone swims is assured to escape spoile shipwracke as the Philosopher Stilpon did fitly teach King Demetrius who enquiring of him if he had lost nothing in the warres No sayd he for that vertue which I esteeme aboue all thing is not subiect to pillage But beasts replies hee flye death also Answere To speake properly beasts flie not from death for they are wholly ignorant what it is they will see the knife made sharpe to cut their throates and not be moued but being endued with the sense of feeling as with the other senses they will crie struggle when they feele a pricking or cutting or any other paine Some beasts of pleasure some birds for delight are cunningly taken by men to bee nourished daintily the which in their taking will torment themselues more then if they had the stroake of death To the 4. he sayth that the hart let vs adde to helpe him milles clockes and such like are in continuall action which notwithstanding cease in the end of their motion but let vs answere that there is difference betwixt a naturall action or one that is artificially forced and that which flowes freely and voluntarily without intermission or rest such as is the action of the soule in her thoughts and desires which wee maintaine to bee a true signe of her immortality as for that which wee did alledge of her continuall Vigilancy whilest the body sleepeth when as by assured dreames shee falls vpon the time to come hee cannot reply any thing to this but that dogs dreame I deny it Their barking and the other actions they do sleeping as well as waking proceede from a certain temperature into which they fall as in our selues in the brutall part by the gathering together of certaine grosse humors about the heart being prest we are forced to cry out The obiection to the 5. is his confirmation for if man abused by his imagination seeking the good encounters that which is bad he is twise miserable in his dessignes in his euents True it is man is subiect to so many miseries in this life as at euery step hee meetes with a thousand if hee thinkes to haue found any pleasure it is suddainly drowned with a floud of teares this did the Comedian Plautus vnderstand saying that mans age is so composed as it hath pleased the gods that pleasure should haue care for companion yea if any good happeneth presently some discommodity followes in greater abundance And Ouid sayd it was a vertue to abstaine from a smiling pleasure Horace he bids chase away pleasure it cost too deere And this made Lucretius though an Epicure to blame men who were too greedy of this life in these words What is there here O man of such delight Whose want so ruthlesse seemes in her despight Thou fear'st O foole and shak'st at thought of death That through al tempest brings where blowes no breath Our aduersary goes on and presumes that man may liue happily in this world if he will Answere Without doubt he would for no man takes counsell if he shal be happy he neuer troubles himselfe to choose felicity but for the meanes to attaine vnto it as Aristotle sayth hee neuer desires any hurt but vnder a shew of good for that goodnesse is the proper obiect of the will the diuell chooseth our euill for his owne good holding it a great benefit vn to him if many perish Man then by this desires to bee happy if he may by the discourse of the aduersary how is it possible that no man in the world neither hath nor shall bee truely happy by his owne faculties The true felicity of man is to be
Olaus Magnus by certaine Venetian Ambassadors by a Iacopin of Vlmes others but I leaue the interpretation free to the iudgement of the reader Thirdly if it were a worke without the compasse of reasō Plutarque Herodotus nor Plato wold euer haue beene credited in writing that one Thespesius Aristeus and Erus were raised vp againe Plinie who beleeued nothing but what hee saw among many that were raysed vp he reports of a woman which was dead seuen dayes and raised againe and that one Gabienus a valiant souldier of Caesars being put to death by order of iustice and left vpon the publike place was found afterwards speaking and asking for Pompey who came vnto him and had much speech with him Melchior Flauian makes mention of a woman whom hee had seene whose name was Mellula neere vnto Damas in Syria raysed vp againe the 6. day after her death in the yeare 1555. God will bring such tokens to assure the world of a future and vniuersall Resurrection As for the Maxime that there is no returning againe to the habite it is abusiue not only to God who can do all but euen to nature and to the order of the world which hath his forces limited So in a little child whose teeth haue beene pulled out the vegetatiue vertue will bring vp new So we reade of a certaine Abbesse who being an 100. yeares olde grewe young againe had her monethly courses her teeth put forth againe her haire grew black the wrinckles of her face filled vp Finally shee became as fresh and as faire as shee had beene at the age of 20. yeeres And if wee may beleeue histories she was not alone but followed and preceded by many others The naturall vertue at a certaine time as trees in the Spring did renue her worke euen foure times as to that man seene in the yeere 1536 by the Viceroy of the Indies who examined it carefully and found out the truth Fourthly that which shewes an insenfible impression of nature of the future Resurrection is the earnest and generall care to burie the dead honorably yea to keep them from corruption by balmes and Aromaticall sents by images of brasse and nayles fastened in the bodies for that brasse hath a speciall vertue against corruption There are yet other deuices which the Egyptians haue and doe vse and particularly obserued by thē of Arran an insularie region whereas the bodyes hang in the ayre and rot not so as the families without any amazement know their Fathers Grandfathers and great-grandfathers and a long band of their predecessors Peter Martir of Milan writes the same of some West-Indians of Comagra Moreouer I deny that man may alwayes see the tayle of that wherof he sees the head the resurrection of the body seeing the immortality of the soule that he must needes see the consequent if he discouers the Antecedent for the one hiding it selfe the other appeares sometimes to the sight of the vnderstanding And to conclude I deny not but that it is true which mans reason cannot verifie vntill it hath found out why the Adamant doth so powerfully draw iron vnto it and holds it fast by an vnknowne vertue why forked sticks of Elder are proper to discouer veines of gold and siluer Why long aftrr a man is dead the bloud will gush out if the murtherer approcheth Why if some desperate man hang himselfe will there rise suddaine stormes and tempests Why the stone called the Amede drawes iron to it on the one side and reiects it on the other with infinite other secrets of Na ture The third Obiection We onely feare that which wee think should be hurtfull vnto vs. The soule feareth death Therfore the soule thinks death should be hurtfull vnto her SOme make a question how the soule can be immortall seeing she hath so great feare of death Men laugh at the attempt of little children be they neuer so in choler for that they cannot hurt them why should not the soule thē mock at death Doth she not in like manner see the immortality feele it in her selfe without giuing so great apprehension to the poore●… body which of it selfe without her should neuer feare death no more then a bruit beast Why is not the power of death dissolued whereas the authority of immortality intercedes as Tertullian speakes in the first booke of the Trinity Answer This is a most euident signe not of the mortality of the soule but that man is degenerate and corrupt That her Port is no more so free and braue But casts her eye downe like a fearefull slaue He seeles in his Conscience that he is guilty of high treason to God that this voluntary offence must soon or late bring a necessary punishmēt he feels in this life some smal touch he fears not without reason if by faith repentance his pardon bee not inrowled and his absolution sealed that at the departure from this life the executioner of diuine vengeance should stand lurking behind death to take him by the throat and to punish him according to his merits Wherefore if corruption did not generally possesse al men she would suppresse this fear reuerence her Creator and do her duty vnto him and then she should see that by that respectiue feare to offend her God she should be fully deliuered from all other feare shee should see that fearing onely the death of the soule which is onely to be feared shee should not feare that of the body which is to be desired But for that most men as S. Augustine doth teach feare the separation of the soule from the body and not the true death which is the separation from God it happens that fearing that they fall often into this So the soule beeing willing to shake off this feare of the Creator she must needes feare euery creature euen the smallest frogs mice and flies which flying about awake him suddainely and many times trouble him much but in the end death is aboue all extreame feares the most fearefull And why is this if like vnto bruite beasts all dyed in him and if in death there were nothing to bee feared Wherefore Propertius saith The spirit is something death leaues it in store The palest shadowes scapes to the burning shore But to conclude The soule hauing beene too familiar with the flesh shee hath gotten a habite she hath drawne such corruption as being ignorant of the happinesse which attends her in heauen shee cannot leaue this valley of misery this obscure prison but with great griefe being like vnto the man which being carried away an Infant by a she wolfe was nourished by wolues did houle with them and did liue and would liue among them and if hee were taken by other men he would leaue them to returne to his wolues as the History makes mention of one verifying the Prouerbe That nourishment passeth nature The sixt Argument from the efficient cause of Immortalitie The eleuation aboue time and place is the
the refutation in the meane time for witnes of my saying I propound that great Diuine S. Augustin writing that which followeth The present life is doubtfull blind miserable beaten with the flowing and ebbing of humors weakened with paines dried vp with heate swelled with meate vndermined with famine cōfounded with sports consumed with sorrowes distempered with cares d●…lled with pride puf●… vp with riches deiected with pouertie shaken in youth made crooked in age broken by diseases and tuined by 〈◊〉 c. Many great men who ha●… not wanted any thing for the enioying of all pleasures yet would they in their life time haue writtē vpon the Marble which should couer them dead for a conclusion of the Epitaph these last words The life and bi●…h of mortall men is nothing but toyle and death as one waue driues on another so one miserie thrusts on another the one is no sooner flying but the other followes him And as in the eye one teare springs of another so one sorrow riseth out of another as Buchanan hath learnedly written in his Tragedie of Iepthe The 3. Obiection It is not lawful of himselfe and without other some Command to remaine in a place that is bad and troublesome Life is a place bad and troublesome It is not therefore lawfull of himselfe without other command to remayne in life THis long Iliade of calamities of this present life seems to perswade man to the doctrine of the Stoicks which is to depart when it is too troublesome so speaks Seneca A wise man liues as long as he ought not solong as hee could he will see how with whom how he should liue and what he should doe if many things fal out troublesome crosse his tranquillitie he frees himselfe and he doth it not only in the vrgent necessitie but as soone as fortune seemes suspect vnto him he cōsiders that it imports not whether he giue himselfe his ende or that he receiue it Moreouer that it is wretched to liue in necessitie but there is no necessity to liue in necessitie Diogenès meeting one day with Speusippus being sickly causing himselfe to be carried by reason of the Gout he called vnto him in these tearmes God giue thee a good day Diogenes to whom he answered But God giue you no good day that being in this estate hast the patience to liue With the sharpnes of these Cynicall wordes Speusippus was so moued as contrarie to the precepts of his sect he ended his owne life But let vs produce if you please some reasons by the which these men haue debated there follie The 1. Life and death say they are indifferent things and therefore man acoording to his commoditie may vse them indifferently Wherefore saith 〈◊〉 As one that is inuited hauing feasted taken his refection retyres himselfe so being glutted with life why dost thou not depart O foole why doest thou not imbrace a pleàfing rest what interest hast thou that death should come vnto thee or thou goe vnto it Perswade thy selfe that this speech is false and proceeds from an indiscreet man It is a goodly thing to dye his death for it is alwayes thy death and especially that which thou hast procured to thy self The 2. Death is the goodliest port to libertie which is the fruite of wisedome I will not serue said that Laeedemoniā child cast him down a precipice who learned to dye in contempt of seruitude he is free from all power what doth a prison a dungeon or fetters touch him he hath an open port The 3. Wherefore hath nature giuē so streight an entrance vnto life and hath presēted vnto man so many large issues vnto death if it shal not bee lawfull for him to depart when he pleaseth On which side soeuer said Seneca thou shalt cast thy miseries thou shalt finde the end of thy miseries doest thou see this precipice by which they descend to liberty doest thou see this sea this riuer this pit there is liberty in the bottome doest thou see this little tree crooked cursed Liberty hangs at it Doest thou see thy throat thy heart These be the fruits of seruitude Plinie saith that the earth our common parēt hath for pitties sake ordained poysons to this end that beeing able to swallow them easily we may with equall facility dislodge out of this world So in old time Kings and great men did keepe certaine poyson ready for any suddaine vse in the doubtfull euents of fortune as Titus Liuius reports and therefore many haue poysoned themselues being valiant and esteemed great personages Zeno being 98. yeeres old yet strong and lusty returning from the Schoole hee stumbled and fell and being down hee strooke the ground with his hand saying ●…re I am what wilt thou And being come to his house hee layd downe his life of himselfe Cleanthes hauing an Vlcer in his mouth and hauing abstained two dayes from meat by the aduice of the Phisitions was cured Beeing then perswaded by them to eate againe Oh no said he hauing past the greatest part of the way I will not I will not returne againe and so he died of abstinence We could produce many others much cōmended as Lucrece Cato and others if they were not sufficiently knowne Answer I deny that the swarme of miseries of this present life is a sufficient cause to depart when wee please the great God which hath placed vs here must first come and take vs away Pythagoras in Tully forbids to leaue the Corpes de guarde without commandement of the Captaine as a prisoner breaking prison agrauates his crime so the spirit violating his body makes himself guilty of a double torment And he that hath so strictly forbiddē to kil meant it as well of himselfe as of others And therefore Virgil platonizing sings vnto vs that they which haue inhumanly slaine themselues hold the first place in hell As for the vertue which they pretend in it the most quick sighted Philosopher hath seene nothing but feare and foolishnesse thus he speaks It is the part of a coward and not of a valiant man to dye by reason of pouerty of loue or for any other thing that is troublesome it is a faintnesse to flie difficult things and after He suffers not death as a good thing but flying the euill Finally he that murthers himselfe wipes himselfe for euer out of the booke of life for that he dies impenitent in the act of sinne neuer to haue remission after this life nor as Saint Augustine sayth any indulgence of correction But to come neerer to our Stoickes wee will first appeale srom Seneca to Epictetus O men sayth hee haue patience attend God vntill hee giue the signe that hee hath dismist you from this ministery then returne vnto him But for the present support couragiously inhabite this region in the which he hath placed you this habitation is short easie not burthensome c. The 1. reason inferring that life and death
iudgements feare not death Answere Wee deny the antecedent for making comparison of the most reasonable men with other of lesse capacity wee shall finde that the most iudicious feare not death for that by their reason as through a cleere light they see plainely that there is nothing fearefull or painefull in death but all quiet and ioyfull But they whom the Philosopher meanes haue a reason that is blind weake and fantasticall apprehending Centaures Furies and Cerberus to be in death whereas there is no such matter and therein they haue lesse reason then they that haue none at all Miserable is the sight of the Butterflie who thinking through great errour that the light of the candle is the naturall light of her life flies to it and is there burnt Miserable in like sort is mans Reason who imagining through error that the vitall life is the true life which is the death the mortall body to bee her proper lodging which is the graue thinking then to preserue himselfe hee loseth himselfe and to liue he dies so as his reason doth but trouble and deceiue him And to this doth the Sun of Iustice aime saying Hee that will saue his life shall lose it and he that shall lose it for my sake shall saue it The 28. Argument taken from things conioyned Feare alwayes as an inseparable companion marcheth with hope But nothing can giue man an assured hope And therefore not of feare HOpe is a desire astriuing and eleuation of the mind to attaine to some future good that is difficult and yet possible if this good bee vertuous the hope is commendable and hereof a good man shal bee alwayes replenished and it will neuer suffer him to faint in the mid dest of aduersities but will raise him vp to better things as Apolodorus sayd more holily S. Paul that hope confounds not for that the loue is infused into our soules by the holy Ghost Finally hauing our anchor-hold vpon God from whom shee feeles all motions within wee may assure our selues to obtaine all things necessary how difficult soeuer and to repell whatsoeuer shal bee hurtfull vnto vs how painefull soeuer Neither shall hee euer feare but greedily desire death as the end of his carreer whereas they that haue run and combated shall receiue the Crowne of glory kept promised and hoped for But if this good hee but an imaginary good as the glory of the world of the earth and of this present life then shall the hope be doubtfull and deceiuable and ioyned to feare to lose that which wee enioy a feare which doth alwayes inseparably accompany hope she will let go the flouds of troubles and disquietnesse vpon miserable man and will still vexe him with fearefull apparitions of death Wherefore if we will not feare death let vs not hope for the prolongation of life Thou shalt ceasse to feare saith Seneca if thou doest leaue to hope It is so my friend Lucilius although these thing seeme to be contrary yet are they tied one vnto another as one chaine doth the Sergeant to the prisoner So these things which seeme contradictories are alike the greatest cause both of the one and the other is for that we doe not measure ourselues and stay our selues vpon present things but let flye our thoughts farre before vs so as fore sight the goodliest ornament of man is hurtfull vnto vs. Beasts flie apparent dangers and being past they retaine no shaddow of them but liue in all security and rest and wee trouble our selues for that which is to come for that which is past This is true for either the remembrance of some wrong or some phātasticall reproach past doth vexe vs to the heart or the future feare of dangers troubles our soules onely the present time which we hold and which is only ours and shold chiefly concerne vs seemes not to touch vs wherein the stupidity is as wonderfull as the apprehension is witty Let vs then know as Salomon doth admonish vs That ther is nothing better for man then to ioy in that hee doth for that is his portion For who will bring him backe to see what shall bee after him But wee haue spoken enough in generall of the proposition of the Argument Let vs come to the second part Doubtlesse hee that shall cast his eyes vpon that which doth present it selfe euery day and shall lend his eare to heare what hath beene said cannot doubt of the Minor of our Syllogisme wee see dayly if we will not shut our eyes the effect of Senecaes speech saying That it is a great folly in vs to dispose of our age when wee haue not to morrow at our command O how great is their vanity saith hee which enter into long hopes I will buy I will build I will lend and then I will rest mine olde age in peace O poore man who can promise any thing to himselfe that is to come Who doth not seem to hear the Apostle Saint Iames contesting against couetous merchants and saying Now you that say Let vs goe this day and to morrow to such a City continue there a yeere let vs traffique and gaine and yet you know not what shall befall the next day for seeing the thing which wee hold doth often slippe out of our hands and that of the very time we now enioy a part of it is subiect vnto hazard it were to dreame without sleeping to hope in the incertainty of life as Plato saith and after him Aristotle for that such as future hopes do leade promise to themselues many things which in the end proue vaine these hopes figured in the shaddowes of the future wrest out of our hands the present and make vs runne like vnto Esops dog after the shaddow of a thing and like vnto those who hauing dream'd they had found a treasur when they awaked found nothing but straw in their bed they are netts to take the winde I will not buy future hope with the price of present time the reason is giuen by Horace the short line of life forbids vs to beginne a long hope Euen at this instant night the ghosts and Pluto's streight Mansion will hasten thy end We hope saith another for some great matter by affection but it may be to morrow will close vp our destiny and so deceiue our hope mortifie our affection Mans life is like vnto a game at dice if thy chance falls not to thy desire thou must rest contented for thou canst not correct it by art therefore hope not for any thing but what thou doest presently enioy otherwise if thou makest any assured account that this or that shall happen vnto thee I will tell thee nay common chance will thee that it may bee it will not succeed But the diuine Oracle pronounceth a curse vpon him that puts his trust in the strength of man And hereof ages past present do furnish vs with thousands of examples but I will produce but