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B04357 The wonders of the world: or, Choice observations and passages, concerning the beginning, continuation, and endings, of kingdomes and commonwealths. With an exact division of the several ages of the world ... the opinions of divers great emperours and kings ... together with the miserable death that befel Pontius Pilate ... a work very profitable and necessary for all. / Written originally in Spanish, translated into French, and now made English, by that pious and learned gentleman Joshua Baildon.; Silva de varia leción. English Mexía, Pedro, 1496?-1552?; Baildon, Joshua. 1656 (1656) Wing M1957; ESTC R215366 95,994 143

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he appeared alive unto them according as the Prophets inspired by God had foretold and prophesied of him And yet in our time the doctrine and the name of Christians continues all the world over These are the words of Josephus who writ of the destruction of Jerusalem as an eye-witnesse which hapned fourty years after the death of Christ Pilate likewise that gave the sentence of death against him neverthelesse bears witnesse of his great miracles sending word of them by letters to the Emperour Tyberius so that the Senate was put to sit in Councell to advise whether they should receive Jesus Christ for a God and although they did not assent unto it Tyberius forbad any further persecuting the Christians As for the Earth-quake and the darknesse of the Sun during the time that Christ suffered upon the Crosse we have also Ethnicks for witnesses Flegon the Greek Historiographer born in Asia of whom Suydas makes speciall mention That in the fourth year of the two hundred and tenth Olympiade which will meet being well accounted with the eighteenth year of the Emperour Tiberius which was then when our Saviour suffered There was an eclipse of the Sun the greatest that ever was seen or found in any History and that it endured from the sixth to the ninth hour And that during this eclipse the Earth-quake was so great in Asia and Bithinia that there were an infinite number of houses fell to the ground It seems besides Flegon who lived in those times and writ this that Plinie vented and writ the same thing For he saith that in the time of the Emperour Tyberius the Earth-quake was greater than ever was any before it and saith thereby was thrown to the earth and ruined twelve Towns in Asia besides an infinite of other buildings So that the Historiographers who were Gentiles although they knew not the cause forbear not to write of the miracles of Christ The other miracle of the vail of the Temple which rent in sunder Iosephus recites it also Of the cruell death of the innocent children which Herod caused to die mention is made of it by another Jew named Filon a writer of great authority In his abridgement of time where he saith that Herod caused many children to be put to death and among them his own son because that he had heard that Christ a King promised to the Hebrews was born and this Authour was in the times of the other Herod called the Tetrark as he himself saith This History is again more amply recited by Macrob●us an Ethnick Historioagrapher who recites some pleasant and witty speeches of the Emperour Octavian in whose time our Saviour lived saying that the Emperour having heard of the cruelty of Herod towards his son and the other innocents said it was better in Herods house to be his hog than his child because the Jews killed no swine which witty conceit is alledged also by Dion in the life of the same Emperour So that there are many miracles whereof the Jews and the Gentiles not thinking of it be or witness to have been done by Christ besides those that the Christians make mention of What should we say any more of that the ancient Emperours have tasted of our belief and of that which they have done against the Christians The first Vicar of God St. Peter and likewise St. Paul died by the commandment of Nero the Emperour thirty six years after the death of our Saviour and then was the great persecution of the Church of which the Gentiles have not omitted to make mention And particularly Suetonus Tranquillus and Corneli●s Tacitus who lived in those times and of great authority Suetonus in the life of Nero speaking of some of his decrees and ordinances saith that he tormented and afflicted with great punishment a sort of people which called themselves Christians and followed a certain belief and new Religion and Cernelius Tacitus treatingon the acts of the same Nero saith that he persecuted and punished with terrible torments a sort of people which the vulgar called Christians And that the Author of this name was Christ of Jerusalem whom Pilate the Governour of Judea had caused to be crucified and by the means of his death his doctrine began to be extolled But now let us see what some other Gentiles write that are not of lesse authority Plinie in some of his elegant Epistles writes to the Emperour Trajan whose Proconful he was in Asia to know how he would that he should punish the Christians which were accused and brought before him that he might give his Lord a good account of what he found against them Amongst other things he writes that these Christians rose at certain hours in the night and assembled themselves together to sing hymns and praises to Jesus Christ whom they worshipped for God And being assembled into a Congregation they made vows to do no evil or hurt to any but promised not to steal not to be adulterers not to break their promises or vows not to deny what hath been lent or given them to keep And this Plinie saith further that they eat altogether without possessing any thing in proper By this we may know what was then the exercise of Christians and for what the world hated them and persecuted them These things were written by a Heathen and an Idolater sixty years after the Passion of our Saviour To which letters the Emperour made answer that seeing they were not accused for any excesse or other misdeeds that he should not trouble himself to punish them or make any inquisition against them Yet neverthelesse if they were accused and brought before him that he should find out a means to make them forsake their Religion but if they would not leave it yet he should do nothing to them Before this it is true that this Emperour Traian being a Heathen and deceived by accusers had persecuted the Christians To which Empire afterwards succeeded Adrian his Nephew of whom Aelius Lampridius a Heathen Historiagrapher and an Idolater writes that he began to honour the Christians suffering them to live in their belief and he himself worshipped Christ with the others and built Temples but afterwards he changed his copy and became hatefull odious and cruell towards the Christians being deceived and abused by the Masters and their false ceremonies and by the Bishops of those false Gods telling him that if he favoured the Christians all the world would be converted to their belief and they should loose the religion of their Gods This is certified by Peter Criniff It is found in the life of Saturninus that to this Empeaour Adrian there was a letter sent by Severinus the Consul where he writes that there was in Egypt divers Christians amongst which some called themselves Bishops and that none of them were idle but that all of them did work and employed themselves in some action and that there was not amongst them even those that were blind and lame that did not live
is true that Iulius Caesar since named it Scivil and greatly enobled it and made it a Collonie and the Romans dwelt in it nevertheles it was greatly enobled before But to return to our first purpose in succession of time Moses was born under whose conduct the Hebrews came out of Egypt In this time also was Iob the just Then afterwards came the Deluge of Thessalie and many Kingdomes began to encrease in divers Provinces In Ethiopia first reigned Ethiop In Sicily Siculus In Boecia Boecim And so the Countries received their names of their Princes Then flourished the Town of Troy Iaeson made a conquest of the Golden Fleece from whence proceeded the history of Medea The Amazons were then in their force And the beginning of the raign of the Latines in Italy In this very age Paris ravished Helena which was the cause of the war destruction of Troy of the coming of Aeneas into Italy of divers other things which wil not admit of brevity Then failed the third Age which gave way to the fourth And began at the raign of David the 2 K. of the Hebrews which fourth age dured even to the Transmigration and Perigrination of the Jews in Babylon and lasted four hundred four-score five years Beda saith 474 years This age may be called the youth of the world during which happened an infinite many things whereof histories are full in it was the original of the victories of good King David he conquered the Philistines he avenged himself of the Amonites for the injury which they did to his Ambastadours and killed the Captain of the Assyrians After him succeeded in the Kingdom the wise King Solomon who built the rich Temple in Jerusalem he dead the Kingdome was divided Jeroboam succeeded to ten families and Roboam his son to two After the Empire of the Assyrians which had lasted more than twelve hundred years it was ruined by the death of Sardanaepalus who was Lord thereof and the most puissant King in the world who was killed by Arbact And then the Empire fell to the Medes In ths very Age began the reigns of the most puissant Kings of Macedoma And the Greeks began to count their years by Olimpiades which were feasts that they made from five years to five years with certain prizes for them that deserved best Also was that puissant City of Carthage built by Dido And a little while after Rome by Romulus and his brother Remus where the Kings began to reign The great Town of Bizance was also built in this time which is since called Constantinople Again there hapned great wars and mutation of Signiories in many parts of the world whereof histories are full And principally towards the end of this age Nabucadonozor King of the Medes and of Babylon fell upon Jerusalem which he destroyed and the Temple also Then led the people of Judea prisoners along with them and from that it is called the Transmigration in Babylon At which began the fifth Age of the world Age. 5 which lasted even to the birth of Jesus Christ God and Man our Saviour and Redeemer And this shall last five hundred eighty nine years by the computation of all During this time there was puissant Kings and great Republicks in the world such as it is marvellous to read and contemplate of the great things that happened in this Age The Changes The ruine of Estates The ordering of great Armies In brief it is better to be silent than to abreviate them Almost at the beginning of this Age began the Monarchy of the Persians whose Kingdomes were then the greatest by means of the victories of that great Cyrus which reigned thirty years during which time he conquered and discomfited the rich King Cresus of Lydia Then was discomfited himself and put to death by Tomoris Queen of the Scythians Seventy years of this Age being accomplished The Hebrews came out of their Captivity And the Temple that had been destroyed was re-edified by Solomon at Jerusalem In Europe the Romans chased their Kings and were governed by Consuls of which L. I. Brut was the first and the L. Collatine In Greece flourished Arms and letters which brought forth many excellent Philosophers and Captains Xerxes came thither with an innumerable army but he was constrained to retire with great losse and disgrace Then came to flourish in Macedonia King Philip who subdued all Greece the Mother of learning and of arms and which in this time brought forth Demosthenes Thomistocles Epaminondas Agifilaus Teno Plato Aristotle and others the like After the death of Philip his son Alexander went out of Greece and entred Asia which he conquered destroying the Empire of Persia And by the Victories which he gained against King Darius he lived the remainer of his life Monarch of all the world But he dead the Captains divided among themselves the Signiories and Lordships which being so mingled bred a discord which raised wars through all Asia and a great part of Europe In like manner the power of the Romans and Carthagenians encreased beyond measure for all of them strove to command the whole world and to attribute to themselves the Empire These two forces fought divers times against one another so that each of these two Towns brought forth Captains excellent skilfull in arms Carthage put forward Asdrubal Hano Hanibal Rome Fabius Scipio Marcellus Emillus and others Finally after a great quantity of bloudshed Rome became victorious and Carthage desolate destroyed and all Affrica tributary This Victory obteined the Romans proud and envious of the Greeks prosperity found out an occasion of war with them in which Greece was taken and made Tributary Not contented with this Their covetousnesse made them passe into Asia where they overcame Antiochus and then Mithridates making themselves Lords of Asia the lesse as also of Syria and Palestina and Egypt and all the coast on this side of France Spain England and the greatest part of Germany Of all which Conquests the chief Ministers were Sylla Marius Lucullus Pompeius Caesar and many others it happened that their envious ambition swelled their hearts whereof bred civill wars amongst them that every one would be a Commander one over another but at the last the Empire fell to Caesar whom after many fortunes had happened unto him his Nephew or adopted son Octavian succeeded who after having overcome all his enemies he rested peaceably in such sort that seeing himself in peace and concord with all the Kings and Common-wealths in the world he made them lock up the doors of his God Janus which were never shut in time of war Then the accomplishment of time being come the Fifth age of the World ended And our Saviour and Redeemer Jesus Christ was born very God and very Man in the year of the Creation of the World according to the Hebrews Three thousand nine hundred fifty and two years And according to the seventy Interpretours Eusebius and the greatest part of Historians Five
in their Histories that write of it I find written more that in that street upon the ground there is an Image of stone that represents the Birth of a Child and the Death of that impudent and brazen faced woman Whence we must know though that did come to pass as is before recited during the time this woman held the world in abuse the Church was not maimed in Faith because in it could not be wanting the Head Christ from whom proceeds the influence of all Grace and the utmost effects of the Sacraments by means of which Head the Sacraments have not been wanting to them that received them holily and by a lively faith for Christ supplied this want in them by his Grace And put the case that this woman nor no other could be capable to receive or give any one onely Character of Orders nor absolve any person and that therefore they that have been made Ministers by her hands must be ordained a new yet it is so that Christ supplying that default in them by his grace as we have said there is no further need to do it over again the truth is she was for her wisedome to be admired in that she could for so many years cover her estate and live after that close manner But that which made Theodosia Empress of Constanninople is not lesse to be admired because the wit the one used to counterfeit her self a man the other used to make known to all that she was a woman for in the vacancy of the Empire by the death of her brother Zoe and of her husband Constantine then made a Monk she knew so well how to behave her self in the carrying through of affairs she became Empress and for the same was feared and obeyed For without the help either of father or brother or husband she governed the Empire excellently in peace and prosperity for the space of two years and no more because she lived no longer and died to the grief of all her subjects in the time of Pope Leo the ninth in the year of grace one thousand and fifty CHAP. VIII Why man goes upright why he weigheth more fasting than when he hath eaten and the cause why he weighteth more dead than alive with other pretty discourses THe contemplative matters concerning the composition of man are infinite Lactantius Firmian writes a book of them apart And so have other learned men In truth there is one thing amongst many others that deserves particular consideration to be known that is why God hath made all other creatures except man who is born the chief whose eyes for the most part look downwards towards the earth and not onely reasonable creatures but also vegitables as we see of Trees who have their head and foundation in the earth and their boughs and branches above as for man he hath created him onely with his eys towards heaven his face upwards and his body streight up And although by all reason for these things it were sufficient to alledge the will of God yet it seems this was done by a Mystery and therefore worthy of contemplation so in truth our disposing or making manifestly shews us that we were not born for the earth but we were created to contemplate high and heavenly things which are not communicated to other creatures not being capable of them and there is none but man onely that is worthy of them God hath created all beasts with their head downward to shew that man onely reigns over them One of these reasons is eloquently noted by Lactantius saying that God having determined to make man for heaven and other creatures for earth he made man streight and upright and disposed to heavenly contemplation that he might admire the effects and have in reverence the place of his originall and his native Country making all other creatures low and bowing towards the earth because they have no participation in heaven Aristotle that had no light of faith saith That man onely amongst all creatures goes up-right in respect that his substance and his parts are Celestiall and not Terrestial And the Office of the spirits is knowledge and understanding in which man could not well know how to exercise if his body were great and weighty because the charge of his body would make his understanding dull Learned St. Thomas who forgot not to discuss and to examine any thing leaves not this question undetermined for in the exposition of youth and age he saith that for two causes man was formed upright towards heaven The one that he might be the most perfect of all creatures and he which participates and comes nearest to the quality of heaven The other because in the proportion of his body he is more hot then any other creature and that the nature of heat is to advance upward other creatures keep the mean as less participating of the heavenly quality and having lesse of this heat which raiseth up For this cause they are not of the same work and disposition as man It seems in this St. Thomas would follow the opinion of the Platonists maintaining that the heat and the spirit of man in which be abounds more than any other creature considering the proportion of his body is the cause that man goeth upright and streight as he doth because by the force and vigour of the spirits the bloud he lifts himself upright being helped by the composition and harmony of the Elements whereof man is composed with such equality weight that he may lift up himself Now something is in it seeing that by that part of the soul this of the body men are put forward to the love and contemplation of heaven they ought then to consider and think of high spirituall and good things and on the contrary to despise and shun low base and earthly things And yet neverthelesse we leave our selves so to be overcome with the cares of this life and earthly considerations that most of our time we lift up our eys to heaven but our spirits and thoughts are on the earth As for the propriety of the spirit of man whereof we have spoken Plinie alledges one thing more which though it be not of such importance as the rest yet it may give a tast of satisfaction to him that knows it not or would not have thought so much though experience manifests it daily He saith that a man when he is dead weigheth more than when he was alive and that it is so in all kind of creatures and that he that hath eaten his break-fast weighs lesse than when he was fasting Erasmus in one of his Problemes saith as much and other things of note giving the same reasons that Plinie doth which are founded in the essence of thespirits and the air which doth lighten them as we said before So likewise a man that is fasting weighs more than a man that hath eaten something although one would think he should weigh less forasmuch as he that hath eaten
the use of his limbs and cast him to the ground tormenting him as if he were mad And he saith more that the Enchantment which it brings by the eys pierceth or striketh through one person to another by the imagination of him that causeth the charm So S. Thomas speaking after Avicon asks which soonest kills a body the melancholy imagination or the delectable imagination by the violence of the one or the other Joy expels and forceth out the spirits and leaves a man without life the other binds them in so strong that thereby grows a violent suffocation We saw in Sivile James Osorius who was taken by the Catholick King by the strong imagination of the fear which he conceived became old and white haired onely in one night being the day before strong and young Again we see that imagination many times makes men become fools and at such times so ill and crazie that its effects and power is wonderfull CHAP. XVII What Countrey-man Pilate was How he died And of the Lake called the Lake of Pilate and of its property And also of the Den of Dalmatia PIlate the most wicked and unjust Judge that ever was or ever shall be was according to common opinion born at Lyons in France yet some of that Nation will not have any such thing but say this name Pontius comes from a house in Italie and of Pontius Ireneas Captian of the Samnites which vanquished the Romans Be it how it will this Pilate either for respect to his person or to his parentage came to be of great note in Rome and being known to Tiberius successour to Octavius according to Josephus and Eusebius was sent by him in the twelfth year of his Empire to govern Jerusalem and stiled him with the dignity of Proctor of the Empire So then Pilate governed the holy City and all the Province of Judea which is called Palestina And he held this Officeren years in the seventh of which and the eighteenth of the Emperor Tiberius according to Eusebius and Beda he gave sentence of death upon the Saviour and Redeemer of all mankind our Lord Jesus Christ God and Man at which time came to passe those things which are written by the holy Evangelists of his Death and Passion whose Resurrection was so publick in Jerusalem although they sought by all means to hide it that Pilate thought although he were wicked that such Resurrection and Miracles were not of humane power but of God For this cause as Eusebius and Tertullian recites he advertised the Emperour Tyberius for it was the custome of Consuls and Pro-consuls to advertise the Emperour or the Senate what things happened in their Provinces This news marvellously amazed the Emperour which made him refer it to the Senate to sit ill Councel to know if it migh● seem good that this Prophet should be worshipped for a God which he did because they could not without the authority of the Senate worship any new God in Rome without the slighting of their other Gods But as the divinity of Christ hath no need to confirm it self by the approbation of men onely God suffered that the Senators would do nothing in it On the contrary as these Authours say they were displeased that Pilate had not writ to them as well as to Tyberius yet for all this Tyberius forbad the further persecution of Christians After these things Pilate coming to live in Rome and confirmed by the Devil for his loyal servant did never after do any thing in his Office but unjust and unlawfull acts Whereof being accused before Cajus Caligula Successour to Tyberius And also to have profaned the Temple by putting in Statues and Images and to have robbed the common Treasury and other grievous crimes was banished to the town of Lions some say to Vienna in Dauphenie and because this place was assigned for his banishment some say that this was the place of his birth he was so handled that he killed himself with his own hands which was by divine permission that he might die by the hand of the most wickeddest man in the world Eusebius saith that he killed himself eight years after the death of our Saviour of which this accused Pilate made no profit to himself forasmuch as he died in despair For the goodnesse of God is so great that although he had condemned his son to death yet if he had repented him of his sin him whom he had condemned to die would have given him eternall life And now we speak of Pilate I remember of a Lake so called this Lake is in Suisse near a Town called Lucerna in a Plain environed with very high Mountains from the highest of which as some say he casts himself into the water And the common report is that every year he shews himself there in his Judges habit but whosoever it be that by chance happens to see him either man or woman dies within the year Over and beyond this I will bring upon the stage to witnesse it Ioachin Vadian a learned man who expounded Pomponius Mela he writes also an other notable thing of this Lake very true and wonderfull he saith it hath such a property that if any one cast a stone into it or a piece of wood or any other thing this Lake swels and grows into such a boisterous Tempest that it runs beyond its bounds in great fury in such sort that sometimes it drowns a great part of the Country from whence proceeds great losse and damage as well to trees and Plants as to beasts and neverthelesse if these things are not cast in expresly it swels not at all And this Ioachin saith further that there are Edicts that forbids upon pain of life for any one to cast any thing into this Lake and that divers that have transgressed this edict have been executed whether this proceeds of a naturall cause or by a miracle I know not howsoever some waters have great and wonderfull properties part whereof there may be reasons given for and for others none Plinie recites a thing like to this and saith that in Dalmacia there is a very deep Pit or Den into which if one cast a stone or any other heavy thing there arises such a boistrous and furions air out of it that it breeds a dangerous tempest to the neighbours thereabout It may very well be but I am not certain of it that Pilates body was cast into it and that Devil by divine permission because of his ignominie executes such effects in that place CHAP. XVIII Of a strange thing that happened to one of the sons of Cresus King of Lydia and to the child of another King amongst which there in a discourse That is to say whether speech be a thing natural to man and whether man onely hath speech HErodotus writes a wonderfull thing that hapned to a son of Cresus King of Lydia and so it is reported by Aulus Gelius This Cresus was a rich King and he which Cyrus destroyed as
Lampry The Adder if he seeth a man cloathed he will hurt him if he can and hath the boldnesse to venter at him but if he see him naked he flieth from him The Rats and the Snakes or Adders are great enemies and when they cover their eggs in winter and that they go not out the Rats persecute them and make war against them and the Snake which by instinct of nature knowes it makes provision for the Rats to feed on that so they may be busied and leave them The Rat is so afraid of Beech-mast that if you should put never so little into the curds that make cheese the Rat will never eat of it A Sheep doth so naturally hate a Wolf that if one make a drum with the skin of a Wolf the Sheep will flie from the sound of it as if it were from a living Wolf There are some also that say if you should make Lute or Viol-strings of the guts of a Wolf and of a Sheep and string the instruments therewith you should never make them agree nor make good harmony The Monky shuns the Tortise and Craw-fish The Rat by a secret property is so contrary to the Scorpion that the biting of a Scorpion is healed by putting upon it a Rat. The Snake and the viper fears naturally the Crab which hath such force over these kind of creatures that if a Hog be bitten by a Viper he is healed by eating a Crab-fish And which is more strange when the sun is in the sign of Cancer those serpents suffer pain The Scorpion fish and Crocodile are continually at war and kill one another The Panther fears the Once and in such sort that he will let it kill him without resistance and if the skin of a Panther be hung near the skin of an Once that of the Panther will shed all the hair and consume The enmity is so much betwixt the Crow and the Owl that Aristotle saith they will rob one another of their eggs The Wasp makes war ordinarily against the Spider The Kite and the Fox also hate one another There is a sort of birds of prey very little ones which Pl●nte cals Esalous that wish so much mischief to the Crow that they search ou● their nests and break their eggs The Swine hate naturally the Weezle The Wolf and the Lion hate so mortally that the bloud of the one and the other will not mingle together The Mole is so horribly afraid of the Ant tha she shuns the Tree where they are The Spider hath war with the Snake and Plinie saith will kill it when the Spider sees the Snake sleep under the Tree where she is she lets her self down by a thred that she makes and then gets into the head of the Snake where she bites and so fastens her self that she will not forsake him till she hath killed him with her venome There is also amongst other inanimate things a naturall contradiction and enmity For oil is an enemy to glew oil is an enemy to water so is lime but the oil and the lime agree together and join naturally The Olive hath a naturall property against the luxurious and fleshly given so that if an unchast woman plant them they die and take no root Coleworts will not thrive if they be planted near Marjoram Salt water becomes sweet if it be mingled with meal flower so that in two hours after it may be drunk We might bring so many examples of these naturall enmities which are between things animate and inanimate that it might be brought to a great length and likewise of things that love one another As the Pehens love the company of the Pigeons The Turtle the Popengay The Black-bird the Feldisare or the Thrush Aristotle saith that there is so much love betwixt a kind of Sparrow and a Crocodile that this great beast opens his mouth that this little bird may see to cure and cleanse his reeth and his gumms with his beak and that these birds are nourished thereby it is said also that there is great amity between the Fox and the Raven betwixt the Crow and the Turkey-hen and likewise betwixt the Lark and the bird called the Jone The Fox agrees-well enough with the Snake and the Sheep are not in danger among them The Sea-Mole is so beloved of the Whale that Plinie saith it goeth swimming before the Whale to warn him of ditches and holes Thus you see the marvellous works of nature disposed by order and the will of God by the influence of the Stars and Planets The Authors are Plinie Aristotle Albertus Magnus Elian and divers others ancient and Modern Authours that have written of the nature of beasts and other things CHAP. XXVI Of some properties of the Viper and how the flesh of it may be safely eaten THe Viper is a kind of a serpent wel enough known to many and although it be but little yet it is venemous enough for with a little prick it will kill a man But as the Lord hath made nothing in vain without some profit so this beast with all his venome serves man to cure some diseases and for Medicine principally for the pain in the throat it is good by a secret property by carrying about one the head of a Viper so that alive it killeth and dead it healeth The Theriacle is proper against venome and in making that Composition there goeth some of this beast for else it is not perfect that it may have the greater efficacie and therefore it is called Theriacle because Thirion in Greek signifieth a Viper or a venemous beast It is true that some give another Etimologie and reason of that name But before we speak of the profits that come by the Viper let us hear what Plinie Isiodorus and Elian say of it They say that when the beast engendereth the Male puts his head in the mouth of the Female whereby she receiveth such pleasure that with her sharp teeth she wrings and cuts off his head so she remains widdow-like and bagged with young which comes to be eggs which are formed in the body of which egs comes Vipers in a convenient time by casting every day one to twenty and because they are so many those which remain behind cannot stay the time of their delivery but break the belly of their mother so that by her death they are born and live If it be so it is a wonderfull thing for it seemeth the child revengeth the death of the Father With this opinion of Plinie divers others agree yet there are many that contradict it and deny that the Viper dieth in her bringing forth her young ones in which opinion I rest my self because the other doth not seem naturall neither have I ever seen the experience nor know not any one that say they have seen it Philostratus in the life of Apollo Trijan brings in Apollo who recites to have seen a Viper that after she had brought forth her young ones licked them and was well
them have died Jules Capitolin amongst other examples recites that which happened to Faustina daughter to Antoninns and wife to the Emperour Marcus Aurelius who fell in love with a Master of Fence or Gladiator in such sort that for the desire which she had of his company she was in danger of death she did so consume away Which being understood by Marcus Aurelius he presently called together a great companie of Astrologians and Doctours to have counsel and find remedy thereupon At last it was concluded that the Fencer should be killed and that they should unknown to her give Faustina of his bloud to drink and that after she had drank it the Emperour her husband should lie with her This remedie wrought marvellously for it put this affection so far from her that she never afterwards thought of him And the historie saith of this Copulation that the Emperor had then with her was begotten Antoninus Commodus which became so bloudy and cruel that he resembled more the Fencer whose bloud his mother had drank at the conception of him than Marcus Aurelius whose son he was which Commodus was alwaies found amongst the Gladiators as Eutropius witnesses in the life of the same Commodus The Greek and Arabick Physitians place this disease of love amongst the grievous infirmities of the body of man and thereupon prescribe divers remedies Cadmus Milesien as Suydas reports in his collections writes a whole book treating of the particular remedies to hunt out this disease of Love Amongst other remedies which Physitians give for this discase one is That to him that is passionate in Love one should put into his hands great affairs importuning his credit and his profit that his Spirit being occupied in divers matters it may draw away his imagination from that which troubles him and they say further that they should suffer him to be merry and conversant with other women Against this heat Plinie saith it is good to take the dust upon which a mule hath tumbled and cast it upon the Lover and all to be powder him or else of the sweat of a chafed mule as Cardanus affirms in his book of Subtilties The Physitians also teach how to know what person is loved of him that is sick in Love and it is by the same Rule that Eristratus Phyfitian to King Seleucus knew the love that Antiochus bare to the Queen Stratonicus his Step mother for he being extream sick and would rather die than discover the cause of his sickness proceeding from love which he bare to his fathers wife She came into the chamber just then when the Physitian was feeling the Patients pulse which beat so strong when he saw the Queen come into the chamber that Eristratus knew that he was in love with her and that was the cause of his sickness wherefore he found the way to make the King acquainted with it by such a means as would be too tedious to recite Which being experimented by the father and seeing his son in danger if he did not prevent it thought it good though contrary to the intention of the son which chose rather death than to be healed by his fathers Ioss to deprive himself of his Queen and give her to his sick son And so indeed the age and the beauty of the Lady and likewise marriage was more proper for the son than for the father And by this means Antiochus lived well and gallantly many years with his wel-beloved Stratonicus The History is very neatly recited by Plutark in the life of Demetrius And thus you see why Physitians say that you must feel the Pulse of those that are in love and repeat to them divers names of persons and if you name the right the pulse will beat thick and strong and by that you shall know whom they love By divers other signs one may know when any is in love and with whom which I leave to speak of now CHAP. XXIX Of the strange and furious love of a young At henian And of the ridiculous love of King Xerxes And how beasts have many times loved men and women TO see men affectioned to women and women to men is a naturall thing and to be believed But here blindnesse is come to that height that that which I intend to speak of seems impossible and incredible Historiographers write it for truth that in the Town of Achens there was a young man of an honest family competeutly rich and well known who having curiously observed a Statue of Marble excellently wrought and in a publick place in Athens fell so in love with it that he could not keep himself from the place where it stood but be alwaies embracing of it and alwaies when he was not with it he was discontented and blubber'd with tears This passion came to such an extremity that he addressed himself to the Senate at Athens and offering them a good sum of money beseeching them to do him the favour that he might have it home with him The Senate found that they could not by their authority suffer it to be taken away nor to sell any publick Statue so that his request was denied which made him marvellous sorrowfull even at the heart Then he went to the Statue and put a Crown of Gold upon it and enriched it with garments and Jewels of great price then adored it and seriously beheld it musing alwaies upon it and in this folly persevered many daies that at last being forbidden these things by the Senate he killed himself with grief this thing was truly wonderfull But if that be true which is written upon Xerxes and affirmed by so many Authours indeed he excelled in folly all the men in the world They say he fell in love with a Plain tree a tree well known though a stranger in England and that he loved it and cherished it as if it had been a woman Seeing then these things happen to rationall men we may believe that which is written of bruit beasts which have loved certain men and women especially when we find it certified by great and famous writers As Glaucus that was so loved of a sheep that it never forsook him Every one holds that the Dolphin is a lover of men Elian writes in his book of beasts a case worthy to be read He saith that a Dolphin seeing upon the Sea-shore where children were a playing one among the rest which he liked very well he fell so in love with it that every time that the Dolphin see him he came as near as he could to the edge of the water to shew himself At the first the child being afraid did shun it but afterwards by the Dolphins perseverance one day after another and shewing signs of love to the child the child was encouraged and upon the kind usage of the Dolphin the child was emboldened to swim upon the water near unto the fish even to go ride upon the back of it and the fish would carry him for a good space
Popes hath been since Saint Peter and how the Popes came to change their names also by whom they used to have been chosen ONe of the most excellent histories and that Christians ought well to know is the lives of the Soveraign Bishops successours of Saint Peter and Vicars of Jesus Christ These are those which have been Bishops of Rome since the first Vicar of God Saint Peter placed the chair there the Mark for his Successours in which place it hath always been even to this day And put the case that sometimes some of the Soveraign Bishops have been absent from that Chair and the Town yet Rome ceased not to be the Bishoprick and principall seat of the absent Bishop for St. Peter placed it there first of all where it hath been ever since But to return to our purpose there hath been in Rome two hundred twenty and one Bishops or universal Popes as I can gather even to this day in which Iulius the third governed amongst which there hath been many Martyrs most excellent Saints and learned Doctours yet neverthelesse it is not without great admiration and a consicieration of great mysterie that none of them governed so long time as St. Peter did there For it hath pleased God as he excelled all the rest in sanctity so in the possession of that dignity he passed them all for he lived in it five and twenty years after the death of our Saviour Christ the first leven whereof he lived at Antioch and the other eighteen at Rome where he placed the Chair And some are of opinion that none of his successours for the time to come shall attain to that he did no more than those that are past already There is also another thing that I take notice of in reading the lives of the Popes that is that since Saint Peter to this very time I find not one that in changing of his name hath called himself Peter nor that had that name before his change So that it seems that God would put that name Peter for a foundation in the Church and no where else The saying of the Translatour I know not in what place the Authour hath taken out this last opinion for there is to be found seven at the least which before were named Peter As Innocent the fifth John the two and twentieth Celestine the fitfh Clement the fixt Gregory the elevench Boriniface the ninth And Alexander the fifth leaving out one Anti-pope Yet it it is good to know from whence came the first changing their name Know that Pope Gregory the fourth being dead in the year eight hundred forty two they chose for the Soveraign Bishop of Rome a Roman of Noble Bloud illustrious and of good breeding who was called Hoge-face and because this name seemed to him dirty and ill agreeing with such a dignity and remembring that our Saviour changed the name of Saint Peter would also change his and named himself Sergius which was his fathers name From thence came the custome observed to this day that he which is chosen Pope may tak eat his pleasure what name pleaseth him best And although they have changed their names they keep still this custome to take the name of some of their predecessors Of these things are the Authors Platinus Matthew Palmer Eusebins and others now we must understand according to what is found in histories that even to the time of Constantine the great which gave so much Goods and Priviledges to the Church of Rome because the Soveraign Bishops had been all Martyred there was no canvasing or suite who should have it for none desired it but contrary either by force or request they were constrained to accept the charge and so even till that time they were chosen to that dignity onely by the Priests which were in the Roman Church But since the Emperours were Christians and likewise many of the Citizens of Rome they were chosen by the Clergy with the voice and consent of the people That done they sent to the Emperour which then kept at Constantinople to desire a confirmation and it seems this was to please them or because they would have it so Sometimes this confirmation was done by the Governour which they had at Rome called Hyparcus who had the authority of the Emperour now was this confirmation by the Emperour or the Soveraign Bishops sure and firm but whether for the Tyranny and permission of the Church that after the death of Benet the first Pelagius the second was chosen But because at that time Rome was besieged by the Lombards from whence are descended the Lombards and also that there fell such an abundance of rain that the Rivers were all overflown in such sort that as Platinus saith there was an infinite number of persons drowned and perished so that it was thought for certain it was a generall Deluge This Pelagius was the first that governed the Bishoprick without making the Emperour acquainted yet nevertheless he feared that Maurice the Emperour of Constantinople would be angry at it therefore sent his Embassadors to excuse it and gave the reasons we have before recited Afterwards some years having past that this custome was continued without discontinuance and Benet the second coming to be created Soveraign Bishop the Emperour Constantine the fourth of that name being advertized of his singular holinesse and great learning had respect of his authority and sent this Pope a Charter or letter Patent by which he renounced for himself and his successours upon all reasons or pretences whatsoever the confirmation of the Papall election that from thence forward so soon as the Clergy or the people of Rome should have chosen a Soveraign Bishop he should be held for the Vicar of God without other confirmation or amplification This was observed for some time but afterwards the Church of Rome comming to be afflicted and its inheritance to be molested by the Lombards that reigned in that Country and being seconded by Charls Martel in the time of Gregory the third and by Pepin his son in the time of Stephen the second and at some other times having some little help from the Emperours of Constantinople Lastly Pope Leo the third of that name after great discord and controver●ies considering the great succour and help that he had from Charlemain King of France he made and named him Emperour and repassed the seat of the Empire to the Western parts where it hath remained to this day By means whereof we may know that either by special Priviledge or by Usurpation of the Successors of Charlemain to the Empire they began to set up again the confirmation of the Pope confirming him by the Emperours and approving the Election that is made of the Soveraign Bishops who acknowledged them for Emperours having recourse to them in their necessities and affairs Afterwards by succession of time and in the year Eight hundred and seventeen Pasquel the first was chosen by the death of Stephen the fourth and obeyed
without waiting for confirmation of the Emperour Lowes son to Charls the great wherefore he sent his Ambassadours to excuse it and say that he was constrained by the people not to stay for his confirmation the Emperor Lewes accepted this excuse and nevertheless sent them word that he would that the ancient customes should be retained and kept A long time after during which the malice of men increased there were divers scandals and disorders found in the Elections which to remedie Pope Nicholas the second of that name in the year One thousand seventy nine being in publick Councel made a Decree which begins In nomini Domini in the three and twentieth distinction by which he gives the authority of choise onely to Bishops Priests and Cardinals following which Ordinance even to this day is made a worthy and Canonical Election without seeking or waiting for the Imperial confirmation for this Priviledge proceeds not so much from reason as from the grace and permission of the Church and Pope to which all Emperours and Kings submit and humble themselves as their Superiour and Head over all Vicar and Lievtenant of Christ the toleration and permission whereof ceasing the use likewise ceaseth to Kings and Emperours CHAP. XI Of Men that are bred in the Sea and some other things of note IT is one marvelous thing and that which draws men into a deep contemplation of the works of God the great diversity of Fishes in the Sea and likewise of the Beasts of the Earth Plinie Albertus Magnus Aristotle and divers other Philosophers treat much of them I know very well that a reasonable man is found no where but upon the earth and men inhabit not in the water Nevertheless I have read there are fishes in the sea that have the shape of a man amongst which there are male and female and the female hath the very form of a woman and are called Nereides and the male Tritons whereof I will not recite many things in reckoning up a great number of men of light and small authority which I have heard report to this purpose things strange and variable Yet nevertheless I will say that which hath been written by men of authority grave and worthy of credit Amongst the which Plenie saith That in the time of the Emperour Tiberius the inhabitants of Lisbon a Town in Portugal then famous and is yet sent Ambassadors to the Emperour to certifie him that they had seen one of these Tritons retire and hide himself sometimes in a Cave near the Sea and that there he made Musick with the shell of a fish and sayes yet further that Octavius Augustus was certified that they had seen upon the coast of France divers Nereides or Mer-maids but indeed they were dead upon the sea-shote And so hath Nero that amongst many fishes that the sea had cast up upon the sands there were found Nereides and other sorts of sea-beasts of the likeness of many beasts that are upon the earth Elian writes as much and besides what the Ancients write of these things and mony other such like modern writers declare also marvelous things and amongst others Theodore Gaze a man very learned in divers Sciences and lived in our times of whom some have writ and in especial Alexander of Alexandria who sayes that Theodore Gaze being in Greece upon the sea-coast he saw after a great tempest the sea had cast up upon the sands a great number of fishes amongst which was one Nereide or fish with a perfect humane face and a very fair woman even to the girdle and the rest downwards was the shape of a fish ending in the tail sharp like an Eel just like that which we see painted which we call a Mer-maid and that this Syren was upon the sands shewing by her gesture that she was in great pain and sorrow Alexander says further that this Theodore Gaze caught it and as well as he could put it into the water where it was no sooner entred but it began to swim neatly slinking it self out of sight on a sudden and was never after seen Georgius Trapozensus a man of no less learning and authority affirms likewise passing by the sea-shore to have seen a fish raise it self above water and all that was seen from the middle upwards was the shape of a very beautifull woman whereat he stood no lesse affrighted then amazed with wonder and so hid himself to discover the shape till she perceived that she was espied by means whereof she put her self into the water and was never after seen All this is wonderfull and yet who would not believe such men being seconded with what I shall yet say Alexander of Alexandria saies that he was advertized for a certain truth that in Epire there is a fountain near the Sea to which children went often to fetch water and that near to that place came out a Triton and hid himself in a Cave and there kept himself close till he saw a young maid alone whom he would take away and carry with him into the sea which he had done oftentimes whereof the inhabitants being advertised set ambushes for him so that he was taken and brought before the Justice of the place where he was found in all his members agreeable to a man wherefore they assayed to keep him and gave him meat to eat but he would not touch a bit of any thing that was offered him and so he died as well of famine as that he was too many daies in an Element that was strange to him and altogether contrary to his own proper nature This History is also recounted by Peter Gellie a Modern Authour in his book that he hath written of beasts and saies that while he lived at Marsellus heard an old Fisher-man report that his father had told him for truth that he had seen a Tryton or Mer-man such a one as we have spoken of which was presented to King Renus A thing therefore so approved and by so many Authors and that all the world holds for a certain ought not to be reputed a lie but held for a truth CHAP. XII Of the division of the ages of the World and the notable things that hapned in them And also of the beginning of Kingdomes ALthough every one takes pleasure to speak of the ages of the world and of things that have hapned in the one and what hath been seen in the other yet there are many that know not how this division is made nor how many years is given to every of them The Age of the life of the world even unto this day is divided by the greatest part of Authors in six parts or Ages Though some would perswade us there are seven which is the division which the Hebrews make But as for me I will follow the opinion of Eusebius and the common opinion of all the Historians that name but six Afterwards upon the division of these ages there is yet so great confusion and difference amongst