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A03792 The troubled mans medicine verye profitable to be redde of al men wherein they may learne pacyently to suffer all kyndes of aduersitie made [and] wrytten by wyllyam Hughe to a frende of his. Hugh, William, d. 1549. 1546 (1546) STC 13910; ESTC S109482 59,726 236

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other thing is it for vschristians to morne at the death of our frendes than to gyue an occasion to the infideles to reprehende and accuse vs for as moch as we do deny the thing in dede that we do professe with our mouthes For in wordes we saye that the soule of man is immortal and that there is an other lyfe better than this In our mor nynge we seme to shewe our selnes to be of an other opinion What profitte is it I praye you to pronounce vertue in wordes and in deedes to destroye the truthe Saynt Paule dothe improue and blame them whiche be heauy in the departure of their fryndes sayenge I wolde not haue you ignoraunt O brethern as touchynge them that slepe That ye be not sadde as other that haue no hope As who sayth it belongethe to them to wep● and be sory at the deathe of their frendes whyche haue no hope of an other lyfe to come and not to vs whyche beseue that oure soules be immortall and that oure bodyes shall aryse agayne Moorne no more for him therfore but prepare and make redy youre selfes to folowe hym lyuyng vertuousely for that ye knowe no daye nor houre No we to you againe my frend se that you be merye in god and let not thys shorte afflyccion of your bodye disquiet your mynde But sause it rather and make it pleasaūt with the hope of euerlasting blyssednes Reinembryinge that is you shal be quickely delyuered from this sycknes so you shal no more hereafter be subiect to any sorowes paines or pensifenes It that daye be to the faithful whamens bodies made lyke to the body of christ shal inhabite the king dome whiche god hath prepated for those that feare him before the begynnyng of the world 〈◊〉 here they shal haue ioy and euerlastinge merines Where as they being lyke to the aungels of god shall shyne as the sonne in the kyngedome of they father At the laste swere frende for as moche as I haue declared vnto you that all men muste dye and whan it shall please god Further that in dieng we do no other but as all the saintes yea and Chrysle hym selfe hathe doone wyth whom we shal ryse agayne And that deathe is but a due repayenge of thynges that was for a tyme liberallye lente vs to the earth our bodies and oure soules to God ours moost bountifull father That nothynge here is of such excellency that it shoulde allure a wyse man and hym that hopeth of an other lyfe to come longe to tarye with it that good men haue euer de●●red to dye to be with god For as much as death is the ende of all myseries the vanysher of al sorowes and an entraunce into perpetuall blysse Further in that I haue declared vnto you whether you shall go and what you shal haue after this life And that god mooste merryfully hath forgyuen you your synnes for that you be repentaunt and faythfull And the he wyl prouyde for yours yf they feare him as wel or better than he dyd in your dayes Fynally that this bodye of youres shall tise againe from the earth gloriousely in the laste daye throughe his power that gaue him his firsh fashione quiete your mynde and prepare your selfe as dothe the swanne with songe of harte and pleasure to dye and to the accomplyshment of gods wyll and all teare of death excluded Thinke onely of immortalitie beyng willyng and glad to depart heuse to god that calleth you The whiche thynge as the seruauntes of god shulde alwayes he redy to doo so at this tyme moost ready For as moch as this miserable world be sette with the horrible tempestes stormes and troublesome whorle wyndes of all kyndes of euyll be gynneth to decaye Moreouer as greuous thinges haue all redye chaunsed to nations so more greuouse thynges are to be loked for in that synne dayly encreaseth among men more and more prou● kynge the fust ire of god Where sore I cā not but thinke it a great game quickly to departet hense If the postes of the house were pu●trfied and the tremblynge toufe shuld threaten ruyne to be at hād wolde you not being in health de parte with all spede Yf that a troublesome and stormy tempest wdenly risen on the sea shoulde threaten playne shypwrake and vrownynge of you and your company wolde you not make haste to the porte Lo the world decaieth and the ende of thinges threa teneth playne fallynge downe Ind shall not you giue thankes to god and for your owne parte be gladde that you shall be delyuered in tyme from suche ruines plages and tempestes as hange ouer the heades of men Thynke swete freude I beseche you and thynke againe that 2o longe a● we be here we be very straūgers● And that we ought cheifly to embrace that houre whiche shall apoynt euery one of vs to his own house and testore vs delyuere● from all suars of the worl●e to paradise and the heauenly kingdome Who beynge in a straunge country wyl not couyt to returne to his owne coūtry Who sayling to wardes his frendes will no● couyt a quycke and prospcrouse wynde that he may the rather embrace his welbeloued we counte paradiseoure countre the Patci arches to be oure parentes and frindes why than doo we not fee uently desyre spdely to se the patriarches and paradise where a greate companye of our frendes loketh for vs and a wonderfull number of our parentes brethren and systers tarieth for vs beyng suer of their immortalits and wisshynge that we had the same At the syght and metyng of these oh howe greate gladnes shall happen bothe to vs and them Dome great pleasure of the heauenlye kyngdome Withoute feare of deathe and with the eternitie of lyfe Dow hyghe and perpetuall ●elicite there is the gloriouse cōpany of the apostles there is the laudable number of the gladde prophyetes there is thinumerable hoste of martires crowned and triumphynge with the victorie of there sirifes and passiōs There be the virgms whiche haue broken the concupiscencie of theyr flesshe with the s●renght of continencye There be the mercyiul en ioynge theire rewardes whiche by fedynge the pore and helping the nedy haue wrought the wokes of iustice andkeping the co●maundeme●tes of god haue trā●ferred their erthly patrimonte● into heauenly treasures this t● the ioyouse companie to this n● earthly company is to be compated to him whiche hathe bought● you a place in this company with the price of his bloude I do betake you Committee your selfe to hys handes for he shall neuer fayle you Fayre well Preciouse in the syght of the lo●● is the death of his saintes ¶ Prynted at London in Aldergate strete by Ihon Herforde ● The yere of our lord M. D. x●● The. iiii day of Iune
The troubled mans medicine verye profitable to be redde of al men wherein they may learne pacyently to suffer all kyndes of aduersitie made wrytten by Wyllyam Hughe to a frende of his Renuit consolationem accipere anima mea memor fui dei delectatus sum Psal 76. Afflictis spiro ¶ Ihon̄ Faukener vnto the reader NOt longe ago it happened me to reade this boke then not printed which was writ ten and dedicate vnto a frend of myne as a thing whereby he myght be comforted in his aduersities that then chaūced vnto hym By the whiche he was comforted and had receaued no small consolation in his heuines and troubles whyche thing did greatly reioyce vs his frendes and therfore desyred a copye of the same boke for one that neded in lyke case lyke consolation Wherwith also the par tye was wonderfully quieted in his mynde as it had ben with a medicine geuinge a present re●edy and helth vnto the sycke ●●e body Here it was wisshed 〈◊〉 al them that eyther dyd reade 〈◊〉 heare this boke that it might 〈◊〉 prynted and do good vnto ●any as it had done alredy vn●● a fewe whiche thinge I toke 〈◊〉 on me and thus boldly haue used it to be printed Trusting at the autor thereof whom I ●●ow not but by his frendes re●ion and myne wyl not be diseased seinge that it was his ●●ndes desyre And that manye sydes wel learned and godlye ●●nded dyd not only allowe it but also greatly praysed it And ●●ther muche commended the ●●gēce and study of them that honestlye and godlye spende ●ir tyme. As for the Criticall ●●sores whyche do nothynge them selfes that good is b●● carpe and reprehende other mens doinges we passe lytle of doubtynge not but all honest hartes wyl gentely accept it Thus fare well gentle reader and gyue the thankes to god and the auctor hereof MOost gētle frēd Vrbane I do plainly perceiue not so muche by your letters as by the report of ●ther men that ye be not merye ●eyther of a quiet minde but ra●●er vnquieted sadde and pēsife ●n that fortune which in hir in ●●nstancie as you say onelye is ●●stāt doth not according to hir ●●de tenure fauour you in that the ●orld which for the most part is ●ot theirs that be of God good 〈◊〉 vertuous doth not as it hath ●one smile vpon you As al thin●es among thē which be trustye ●●d faythfull frendes are com●une so doutles be the very af●●ctions of the mynde the which ●●yng at the length is well kno●en of me not by hearinge but by profe not by readyng but by experience For as your mery nes and prosperous state dydd● make me mery so your aduer●● fortune and sadnes causeth m● lykewyse to be sadde Wherfore it shal be expedient and my pan● to find some way or meane wh●● by this heuines wherwith bo●● our myndes as yet be egally o●cupied may be set aside or at the leaste restreyned To encrea●● your substance with cattel golde or syluer my mynd is good b●● my power is impotēt To tea●● you howe or by what meane● these thinges may be procure● I haue not lerned But that medicine only which learned m● haue counted to a sycke and s●rowefull hart moost presente 〈◊〉 wil endeuour though peraduenture not witly yet frendly to m●nister The medicine is brotherly counsel frendly communication This sayeth Plutarche writinge to Apollonius is to a sycke mynd the best phisicion Wordes and voyces sayth Horace in his epystels do mytigate grefe and put away the greatest part of sorowe Surelye I do thynke that lykewyse as the diseases of the bodye as agues heade ache goutes such other be healed by confections made of herbes and other thinges procedinge out of the Apothecaties shoppe So the diseases of the mynd be onelye cured with comfortable vnfeined wordes flowyng out of a frendly and faithfull harte Isocrates in his Oration of peace saieth thus I wolde ye shuld chefely knowe that where as many and sundrye remedies be founde of the phisicions agaynste the syckenes and maladies of the bodye againste the disease of the mind there is none vtterly sauyng frendly wordes Wherfore Apollo counted chefe and of the phisicions in maner the god in Ouide complayneth greuously that the disease of his mynde coulde be cured with no herbes and that the artes whiche dyd profytte euery man coulde not refrayne his troublouse affection I wold wysh the muses were so fauourable vnto me that I myght gather suche herbes in their gardens that wolde so wel purge your mynde of this saide heauynes as it is not to be approued in any man that is partaker of reason but specyally in a man of christes religion Howbeit Alas so great is the blindnes of our solisshe nature we thinke those thynges which are not lamentable to be lamented and those whiche be not horrible in deed greatlye to be feared In this point I may compaire vs to vnwyse children whiche vehemently feare them that vse euyll fauoured visours thinking that they be spirites deuels and enemyes of theyr health where as yf they had the mytte boldelye to pulle of the vysoures they shoulde se hydden vnder them gentle countenaunces and faces of their frendes kynsemen or peraduenture moost louynge fathers Or els we may be iustly assembled vnto ragynge Aiax which in his fury and madnes vsed the hogges which god had prepared for his sustenance and wholesom norishmēt as though they had ben his deadly enmies and ordained to his vtter distruction What chyldishnes or worsse than madnes is it to bewayle not take in good worth aduersity mysfortune or pouertie whiche happen to vs not by chaunce but by the prouidence and wyll of our heauenly father Whiche worketh euery thing for the best as saynt Paule sayth to the Romaynes 8. towarde thē that loue him which formeth and fasshioneth vs accordynge to his owne myl which maketh vs riche and pore sycke whole fortunate myserable at his pleasure And all for our welth profytte and vauntage Least thou be deceyued I wolde not haue the to imitate the commune sort ascrybynge worldely myseries to the starres fate and fortune playing therin the part of the dogge whiche byteth the stone that is hurled at him not blamyng the hurler therof but rather imytatynge the example of Dauyd whiche blamed not Semei raylynge at hym outragiously but imputed his dispytes vnto the lorde of whom he was thought to be sent attributed them with thankes to god of whom by the testimony of scripture commeth both death and lyfe riches and pouertie good and euyll Ecclesia 11. This witnesseth the Psalmist sayeng The lorde doth auaunce and suppresse the lorde maketh the ryche and eke the poore But thou wylte saye peraduenture Yf we were certayne that our misfortunes and myseries were sente vnto christen men by God they were muche more tollerable But when we se oure cattell dye by styngynge of serpentes or by contagion frome the whyche they myghte haue
good and the euyll receyue indifferentlyee how great shall those be whiche the good shal receiue being alone Seinge that he perfourmethe so moche for his frindes and his enemies yet beinge to gether what shall he do for his fredes seperately seyng that he comforteth vsso moche in the day of teares howe moche shall he comforte vs in the day of mariage Seinge that the pryson conteyneth such thynges what maner of thinges shall our countrey conteyne The eye as it is saide before hathe not sene the eare hathe not harde nor the harte of man can thynke the excel lencye of those thynges whyche god hath prepared for his fryndes accordynge to the great multitude of his magnificencye 〈◊〉 the multitude of his pleasauntnes whiche he hath layde vp for them that feare him Therfore let vs not doute whether we shal go neyther what we shall haue beynge faythful in the other world For as muche as we may certain dye knowe not by scripture onely but also by the leadynge of naturall reasonne All suche doubt put awaye desyre we mooste hatrelye and feruently accesse to those chynges whyche God hath prepared for his fryndes musynge nowe and than some such godlye meditatione as is this whiche saynte Augustine hathe in his Soliloquiis The harte desyrythe not so moche o lord the welles of swete water as my soule desyrethe to be with ye. My soule hath sore thirsted the o lord the wel of life oh whan shal I come and appere before thy gloriouse face o well of lyfe and vayne of lyuyng waters whan whan shall I come from the earth deferte withoute waye wylde and waterish vnto the waters of thy swetenes that I maye se thy vertue and satisfy my thyrste withe the waters of thy mercy I am a thirst o lorde and thou arte the well of lyfe Fil me with thy waters I besech the. I doo thyrst for the o lorde the lyuynge god whan shal I come and appere before thy face shall I euer se that day that daye I meane of pleasuntnes and myrth that day whiche the lorde hathe made that we myght be glad and mery in it o day most bright fayre caulme voide of all stormes tempestes and troublesome wyndes hauynge no euented nor fallyng downe of the sonne in the whych I shal heare the voice of praise the voice of exultatiō contessiō In the whych day I shall heare enter into the ioy of thy lord thy god where be great inscrutable merueylouse thynges wherof there is no number Enter into ioye without heuines into ioy whiche conteyneth eternall gladnes Where shal be al good thinges and no eyul where a mā shal haue what he wyll and nothynge that he wyl not where lyfe shal be lyuelyke swete amiable where shal be no ennemie impugnynge vs but safe securitie sure tranquyllite quiete iucundite pleasant felicitie happy eternite eternall blessednes and the blessed trinite of the trinite the vnite of the vnytye the dette of the blesse fruitione O ioye aboue all ioyes O ioye passynge all other t● O ioye hesydes the whiche there is no ioye Whan shall I enter that I may se my lorde that dwel leth in the and the greate vistone what is it that lettethe me so longe alasse howe longe shall it be sayde to me where is thy god and where is thyne expectation● arte not thou o lorde God we looke for Iesus christe whiche shall retourme the bodies of our humilitie and conforme them to hys Whan shall he retourne frome the maryage that he maye leade vs to hys mariage come o lorde and tarye not come swere Iesu come and visite vs in peace come and brynge vs frome prison that we may be glad before the with perfyt hartes come whiche arte desyred of all nations she we thy face we shal be saued come my owne lyght my redemer and brynge my soule from prison that it maye confesse thy name howe longe shall I poore mretche be toste in the floudes of my mortalite crypeng to the o lord and thou hearest me not heare my crye I befech the from this troublesome sea and brynge me to the porte of felicite Oh happy be they whyche haue passyd the daungers of thys Ieopatdouse sea and haue attaynyd to the O sureste hauen Dappye thrise happye be they whiche haue passyd from the sea to the bankes from hany sshment to theyr countrey frome prysonne to the heauenlye palace Where they reioyce with cōtinual quietnes that they haue soughte by manye tribulations O happye and happye agayn● whiche are eased of the butden o● theyr euyls and beinge suer of unmarcessible glorie inhabite the kyngdome of comlynes O euerlastynge kyngdome O kyngedom of al worldes where is light that neuer faylethe and the peace of god that passeth all sense In the whiche peace the sowles of saintes do rest where euerlasting merines couerith their heades with ioye and exultation Where sorowe and moorning can haue no place Oh howe gloriouse is thy kyngdome good lorde in the whyche thy sayntes do raygne clothyd with lyght as it were 〈◊〉 a garmente hauynge on their heades crownes of preciouse stones O kyngdome of euerlasting blessednes where as thou o lorde the hope of sayntes and diademe of glorye arte loked vpon of thy holy ones face to face makynge them glad on euerye syde in thy peace that passeth al sense There is toye withoute ende gladnes withoute sadnes health without sycknes myrthe without sorowe ●ay without laboure lyght without darkenes lyfe without deth all good thynges without al euil thynges where youth neuer wax ●th olde where lyfe hathe none ●nde where beautye neuer vaydeth where loue is neuer colde where ioye doth neuer decrease where sorowe is neuer felt where waylynge is neuer harde where no euyll is fearyd for there the hyest felicite is possessed That is to saye euer to se thy face o lorde of powers Therefore happy be they which haue alredy atteyned vnto such iopes Unhappy be we for as moche as we do yet trauell in a straung country as banished men suspyryng vnto the beyng the porte of the sea O country o our swete countrey a farre of we loke towardes the from this vnquiet oceane we do salute the with teares we desyre and sue to come to the. O Christe god of god the hope of man●ynde our refuge vertue whose lyght a farre of amonge the darke clowdes ouer the stormy seas as the beame of a starre of the sea doth irradiate oure eyes that we maye be ditected to the safe hauen Gouerne our shyppe wyth thy ryght hand and wyth the sterne of thy crosse leaste we perisshe in the floudes leaste the tempestes of the sea drowne vs least the depth suppe vs vp wyth the hooke of thy crosse drawe vs vnto the from this tempestuouse sea ours onelye comforte whome we do se a farre of as the mornyng starre and the sonne of iustice with our eyes scante able to wepe anye lenger Unto the standyng vpon the banke and lokynge
wyll begyn to punysshe As for you meanynge the wycked shal be as inuocentes not touched The tyme is that iudgemente muste begynne at the house of god 1. Petri. 4. Christe suffred for vs leauynge vs an example that we shuld folowe his fotesteppes 2. Oh that we might haue sene that kynde harte of Christ whan he was punished hanged crucified not for his owne cause but for ours howe willingly he suffred giuing vs an exāple that we myght folow his fotesteps doutlesse we shuld with much more corage and stomacke for our ownesakes suffre troubles than we do Lo we that liue be mortified for christ that the life of christ may appere in oure carnall bodies 2. Cor. 4. Yf any man saith Christ wyl come after me let him forsake him self take his crosse on his backe folowe me For otherwise he is not mete for me Euery membre doubt ye not of Christes body shall haue the crosse either of pouertie or persecusiō sicknes or imprisonmēt iniuries or sclaunders or of like thynges Happy is he that folowethe christ manfully faileth not for he at the lengthe shall be eased of his heuye burthen he at the length shal fynd perpetual rest eternal quyetnes We must be here not as inhabitours home dwellers but as Paule saith as straungers Not as straungers onely but after the mynd of Iob as paynefull souldiers appoynted of our captayne Christe to fyght agaynste the deuyll the worlde flesshe and synne In the whiche fyght except we behaue our selfes lawfully and strongly by the sentence of scrypture we shal not be crowned Let vs therfore arme our selfes with the weapons prescribed of saint Paule to the Ephesians 6. and of other places of scripture to Christes souldiers and with a bolde corage contemne the dartes of the deuyll and worldly miseries endeuouryng to ouerthrowe oure myndes and weaken our fayth towarde God For ones our captayne with a glorious victorye shal gloriouslye delyuer vs. In worldly warres there be haue ben many of stomacke not vnlyke to Iason Hercules Theseus which couyt to enterprise vpō daūgerous places perlous enemies wherby they may haue by their manful conflyct prayse or a gareland of baye bowes he nour or temporall promocions And shal we whose reward shal be not a gareland made of grene bowes that lyghtly wythereth but with a crowne of glory that euer shall florish not temporall preferremētes which endure not but enheritaunce in heauen that shall be continual be loth stoutly to withstande the worlde It chaunceth ofte that the presence of a mans concubyne shal moue him to contend and fyght fiersly with his aduersarye litle or nothing regarding his life but rather careful leste with shame he take a foile in hir presence which he loueth And shall the presence of our spouse Christ whose eyes continually loke on the hartes myndes nothing moue vs For him to haue taken a foyle before his louer had ben no losse of body nor soule but a lytle shaine that not durable But to take a foyle of pouertye miseryes syckenesse losses lacke or other mysfortunes and not to kepe oure mynde styll aboue them with the contempte of their assaultes besides that the presence of god shal shame vs not the body but the soule except the grace of god after erecte vs shal vtterly perysshe Loke therefore that we fyght meryly and boldely despise all misfortunes that hurte or threaten hurt to our mortall bodyes But eyther I am deceiued or I here you saieng Syr it is quickly spoken but it is not so lightly done It is hard and by the sentence of philosophers againste nature for men to be cōtent with those thinges which hurt make for the damage of their bodies as you require with cōtempt to fight against them doutles it is very harde for our strength power a thing impossible What than shall we playe the parte of Demosthenes caste awaye oure weapens and dispayre No not so but mystrusting oure owne power let vs flye to god as vnto and holye anker and safe refuge desiringe helpe of hym whiche by promyse made shall ayde assist defend vs. Call on me sayth be in the daye of trouble and I shal delyuer the. The lorde is nye to al them that be of a troubled harte and feare him In thyne infirmitie despise not the lorde but praye vnto him he shal heale the. Eccl. 8. There is no dout therfore but we shal haue his helpe yf we faithfully call for it And in him that comforteth yf the wordes of Paule be true we shall be able to do 〈◊〉 thinges and nothynge shall be impossible for vs beinge faythfull Therefore let vs saye with Ezechias 2. Parilipom 32. Play we the men comfort our selues for the lorde is with vs our helper fighteth for vs. The lorde as he sayth in the thyrde of the kinges 22 is our rocke and our strēgth our sauiour and refuge our buckeler our auauncer and the horne of our health Let vs then not feare nor cease constantly to withstand the cruel enforce mētes of aduersitie euer keping our myndes and faith towarde god vnwounded harmed or discoraged by them thinkinge styll that they be sente of god whiche worketh by infirmitie strength by ignominie glow by pouertie perpetuall riches by death lyfe whiche doth wound heale stry keth maketh whole as it is in the Psalme And for none other ende but as they were sente to Iob and Toby to exercyse and proue vs that his glorye maye appeare in vs and that we may auoyde the greater euyls synne thraldome to the deuyl and hel The afflyctions beleue me that we count euils encombring our flesh be nothinge in the respecte of those euyls wherewith the vngodly be combred lyuing in infidelitie and synne vnder the yre of god vnder the Imperie of the deuyll beinge seruauntes to iniquitie to whome sayth the lord is no peace whose mindes and conscience as Isai writeth be euer lyke to a feruent sea that can not reste whose floudes redounde to conculcacyon and mournynge 57. That these greater I saye and more haynous euyls maye be auoyded these lytle or rather not to be estemed euyls at all be inflycted of god also that we maye at the length after all oure stryfe myth oure captayne Christe ryallye tryumphe Yf we wold well considre for what purpose God hath create vs we shuld beare with afflictions and aduerse fortune muche more than we do All thinges in this worlde are made to serue man The sheepe to clothe hym the oxe to feede hym the horse to carye him the herbes and trees some to norish him some to cure him being diseased some to delite him the sōne mone to giue him light so in conclusion all other thinges vnder heauen in one of fice or other serue man and as all these thynges were made to serue man so man to serue God in holynes and purenes of lyfe And to this ende doutles pouertye
toucheth not Charitye apprebendeth not they passe all desyres and wysshes Gotten they may be estemed they can not be Blessed is that man sayth saynt Iames. 1. which suffereth tentation trouble for after his profe he shall receyue the crowne whiche god hath promysed to them which loue hym Euery castigation semeth to haue no pleasure but rather grefe howbeit at the laste it shall gyue a quiet fruyte of iustice to them whiche haue ben troubled by it Hebre. 12. Who I saye hearynge these confortable promises wyll not merily 〈◊〉 with saynt Paule what thing in the worlde shal seperate vs from the loue of god shall trouble or persecution shall nakednesse or daungers shall the sworde or hunger as who saye none of all these neyther death nor lyfe aungels nor princes thinges that be present neyther that be to come Height strength nor depnes shal seperate vs from the loue of god which is in Iesu christ our lord Roma 8. But to conclude seynge that youertie troubles miseries and afflictions be vanquysshers of ●yce maynteyners of vertue seinge that they be appoynted of god our father to them that loue hym and not as tyrannicall tormentes but as fatherly corrections and frendly medicines Also that god hath promised to those which patiently beare them perpetuall quietnes ioye and endeles solace Why shulde we not with thankes gyuynge be verye gladde of them If we be otherwyse affected let vs not thynke the contrary but we be disposen muche lyke vnto them which laboure of feruente agues whose true tayste taken frome theym by the reason of they disease can not awaye with suche meates as be mooste holsome and conducible to theyr healthe but desyre those which make moost against them and for the increase of them sickenes Wherfore if we chaūce so to feale oure selues cease we not to sollicite the Lorde with prayers that he wyll vouchsafe to take this spirituall ague from vs wherby we may with iudgemente reiecte the swete but poy● senfull baytes and daynties of the deuyll and the worlde And taist those meates whiche be most holsome and profitable for our soules IT is to be wōdered fred Vrbane if these thynges cā not moue christen men to suffre aduersities and despise worldly successe as a very vayne vanitie seynge that the vnfatthfull gentils were moued to the same with thinges of muche lesse importaunce Some of thē as Socrates Diogeneg consideryng that worldly welth could nothinge lesse do thā cause a quiet mery mind as a thing of no worthines neglected it and as a thynge of no pryce set it as nought Whese cōsideratiō Plu● tarche as it appereth by this his sumilitude approueth as not vntrue Lykewise saith he as a m● going to the sea and fyrst caried towarde the great shippe in a li●● ele bote there begynnyge to vs wyte desireth muche to be at the greater vessell supposing to find ease therein where he is worse troubled with the same grefe thā he was before Euen so a man be yng in a vile state and pore case and not well content therewith couiteth auauncement to higher condicion his goodes also and his substaunce to be encreased To the which thinges if he chaūce to attaine he shall be more vnquieted then he was before in his former miserie If ye require examples loke to Alexander the great kinge of Macedonie whiche possessyng in a maner all the kyngedoines ryches and welth in the worlde for all that was so ●itle quiet that when he herd 〈◊〉 wocritus disputinge of manye worldes wepre bytterly that he the better but rather ●udrse no ner the quieter but rather more vnquiete I was ones of all emperours and rulers the tychest subduinge valiantly Batbatous nations and people innuinerable Yet these thinges so lytle made me quiet that by the reason of them with all kyndes of vnquietnes my mynde was troubled How ambition and in satiable desyre of mo regiō rule and imperies dydde occuppe my mynde paynefully nowe madde tagynge and yre prouoked by bronkennesse whiche by the reason of aboundaunce of goodes I vsually accustomed punysshed me and with violence somtyine moued me to the murder of my frendes Howe vnlaufull lustes of the bodye nowe Enuye vexed me Other whyle the helly furies flyinge about my conscience 〈◊〉 not sufferynge the memory of my murder or other euyll factes to be obliterate so sore greued me that I wolde nowe than haue pearsed my harte with a sworde or haue pyned my selfe to death if I had not ben letted Dues as a foole I pryferred the state of Alexandre before the condicion of poore Diogenes but then I iudged lyke as dyd vuwise Mtdas than I knew not the the ber tues of the mynde onely caused true quietues worldely successe nothinge profitinge but greatly deminesshinge the same What can be more true than his oration whom shuld it not mone yf it were spoke of the mouth of Alex ander as he wold speake it dout les yf he myght retourne to vs to esteme the worlde accordynge to this worthynes Me●ouer 〈◊〉 maye se by the example of 〈◊〉 memnon howe lytell quietnes worldly welth inferreth He was so much vnquieted whis hyght state that he lamēted his chaūce in that he was kynge and ruler ouer so manye people Laertes whiche to the syght of the world lyued welthely and wenderous quiet yet was not quiet in dede as witnesseth Plutarche On the otherside Mctrocles vile beggetlye in wynter couerynge his body with a tubbe for lacke of house rowmthe in sommer takynge vp his ynnes in the poches of temples farynge not so wel as did the dogges of the cytis yet was of so quyete a mynde vertue beynge the autor therof that his quietnes amonge w●ytrue shall be dadde in perpetuall memorie ●ectus aboute to be burned suche was the vertue of his mynde was sayde nothyng to be vnquieted at all Thus I say some of the wyse gentyles consideryng and se●ng that true quietnes procedeth owe ly of vertue estenied worldely● w●lthe not of a steawe E●t we Christen men suche is our lacke of true wysedome whiche know or oughte to knowe yf we remēbre so much as I haue spoken before that there is no quietnes to them whiche be of God but quyetues of mynde and consryence that is procuted onelye vp vertue purenes of lyfe and hope specyallye Whiche as saynte Paule sayth commeth of profe profe of pacyence pacyence of troubles and so consequentlye that oure quyetnesse must ●ame by troubles what 〈◊〉 we not a● tempte to obtayne worldelye vanytyes ●unnynge by sea and by lande by rockes and fandes by Scylla and Syrtes by fyet and sworde as sayeth the poete fearynge no Ieopardies nor castynge anye pe●●lles lyke menne oute of oute wyttes sekynge fyer in the sea and requy●ynge water of the drye pomysh stone O blindenes what I pray you haue we gotten whan we haue procured riches or worldly presecrementes whose purchasynge commonly is paynfull the kepinge full of besy feare the
thy most louynge brother and aduotate Christ Esa that washed the from thy synnes in his bloude 20. 8. hathe purchased continually prayenge for the. Hast thou not herde how mercyfull I shewed my selfe to Dauid to the Niniuites and Athab Do ●agoalen to the these the publican and other innumetable why doest thou not open the eramples of them as a table or glasse wherin thou mayst well l●athe how exorable I am ho●redy I willyng to forgyue sword● der with thy selfe how heynow fautes I haue pardoned them theft adultery mirrder ●olatry 〈◊〉 what not 〈…〉 B● to therfore be o● good there lyfte vp thyne ●yrs mistrust me no lēger turne to me a thou shalt be saued cōmend thy syyr●● into my hādes Esa ●● the prin●● of this world shal haue nothyng to do w e the for by me the god of truth thou art truely rebemed Whan so euer deadly dispayre shall trouble thy conscience set this oration before thyne eyes Which is nothing els in dede but gods owne word written by his most holy prophetes apostles finally the art so tost troubled that it shuld seme that god had clene forg●t the. ●eade the. 49. of Esal where thou shalt fynde these wordes ●iō said he meaneth gods elect the lord hath lefte me the lord hath also forgot me Can the nother forgete her infante not pitye the chyld she hath hrought forth But whether she can or no. I can not a Sion forget the. A●●as howe shuld he forgette them that beleue in hym with whome as it semeth by his owne wordes he suffereth What soreuer is done to one of these litle ones wh●the belene in me the same is done unto me Math. 25. Be that toutheth you toucheth the very ball of myne eye Zacha. 2. And this shuld be no litle cōsolatiō for the faithfull seinge the they haue god him self as cōpanion partakes of their sorowes for all our afflittiōs grefes of the mind let vs require remedies of gods word which without fayle cā mitigate al●ynsnes that orcupie the har●● of them whiche beleue in hym Wherfore it is not bayne tha● Christ saith in the gospell com●● vnto me all ye that laboure an● be looden and I shall refres●● you Neyther withoute a caust that Dauyd whiche hadde 〈◊〉 experyence of the comfort teceyued of goddes wor●e sayd th●● Do we swete be thy mordes 〈◊〉 Lorde to my Iawes mort del●tynge my tayste than the honcombe What so euer is written it is written for out learnyng 〈◊〉 by patience and comforte of scr●●tures we may haue hope Rom. ● By this you maye gather the ou●● cōforte is to be requyred of scripture beleue me though the mo●● heynous waues and tempeste● of this see the world be raised by thretening drownyng to Peter ●●ippe Yet if it be fastened with ●anchor of gods word well they may moue it but ouerwhelme it they cā not And among all other ●et us haue in mynde those scriptures wherin we be ascerteyned that our bodies after this commune death shal rise agayn won ●erfully glorifed by the same power that formed thē fyrst Chose also wherein the eternall felicitie that shal be gyuen to all thē wh●the after the erample of Christst suffer aduersities and ouercome the deuyl the worlde with theirs ●s promised for they shal aboun●auntly comforte the beleuynge people Lo sayth the lord mentionyng the resurrection and reunynge of oure bodies I wyll put breth into you and you shall be quyckened I will gyue you synnowes and couer you● with flessh and skynne I will put into you a spirite and you shall lyue and know that I am the lord Eze. 37. We loke for Iesu christ our sau●● our whiche shall trans●igurate oure vile bodies cō forme them to his glorious body by the same vertue wherwith he is hable to subdue al thynges Phi● Doutles like as a grane of wheat so men in the gronud is fyrst putrified brought as into a thing of noughtryet after the springeth bpfresshly with a goodlier fourme than he had before So mās body sowen in the groūd after this temporal life is first corrupted 〈◊〉 in maner brought to nothing yet at the last by his power which did create al thinges of nothinge i● shal rise againe with a fourme of much more excellencye then euer was the first Though this things be wonderful yet intredible it is not for he the was able to make all the world with his creaturs of nothing must nedes be able to make our bodies againe of fresh of some thynge for the matter of ●ur bodyes shal euer temayne in grasse wormes duste stones or some other forme euen to the last ●ay And than surely euen as La ●arus christ wherof we be mem●res therfore must nedes at the ●ast rise with him being our heaue ●as resuscitate from their slept so I may cal this corporal deth ●n lyke case shall the bodyes of all men some into the resurrecti● of tudgement some of lyfe But this word slept fr●nd ●r●ane bringeth me in remēbraūce of a quest tō which you moued to ●e at our last beinge together or as much as I coulde not thā for lacke of opportunite connuen●ently gyue you an aunswer by these letters you shall know my mynd howbeit very brefly for I purpose to deferre the reasoning of the matter to our ne●t metting Youre question was whether that the soule of man after this temorall death slepeth as doth the body voyd both of paine an● pleasure vnto the day of iudgement or no I aunswere that it is as muche agaynst the nature of the soule to slepe as it is agaynst the nature of the sonne to be a darke body or of the fyre to be with out heate The soule of man beynge an heauenly spirite is s●lyuelyke and constant so strong● and vigilant a substaunce that naturaly it can not but perpetually perseuer in operatiō for of his owne nature it is a very op●ration and motion it selfe which neuer ceaseth but lyke as the sonne whiche maye so euer he is moued shyneth and inflammeth wherof Phaeton as we reade in the poetes hadde a sufficiente proffe so the soule of man whether so euer it is brought lyueth and moueth continually Yea though the body whiche of nature is grosse and drousy be oppressed with stepe yet the soule is styll occupied in the memorye in the intellection or in other of the more excellent powers as by drcames euery man mayese Muche lesse can it slept whan it is cleane deliuered from the stug gys●he bodye Therfore as the body slepeth so the soule can not for as much as it is a substaunce accommodate to continuall mouyng and can not be wery Truely the error of them is great which perswade them selfes tha● the soule seperate from hte body shall slepe vnto the last day and this errour is olde and was confuted by Drigen other of his tyme. Neyther was it euer synce receaued into the
churche vnto suche tyme as the Anabaptistes a pestilent kynde of men whose madnesse is execrable broughte it of late dayes into the world● againe But as all other of their opinions be peruerse abhorring from the trueth and deuelysshe so is this Declarynge his patroues not to be taught in Christes scoole but in Galens rather whiche affyrmeth the deathe of the soule necessarylye to followe the death of the bodye But leuyng the vayne fantasyes of the boting Anabaptistes let vs gyue eare to gods worde It is wrytten Ecclesia 12. The puste shall returue to his earthe frome whense it came and the spirite to God whiche gaue it Where I hope he shal be so farre frome deathe and slepe that he shall lyue delyted with Ioyes vnspeakeable He that heareth any words sayeth Christe and beleueth in hym whiche sent me hathe lyfe euerlastynge and he shall not comme into condemnation but he shal passe from death to lyfe Iohn 5. Marke that he sayeth not frome death to slepe but from death to lyfe The parable in the. 16. of Luke doth well improue theyr false opinion Where it is written that Lazatus after his deathe vsed Ioye and gladnesse On the other parte that the ryche gluttou was greued and tormented If the soules of men should slepe as the Anabaptystes say● neyther shoulde any Ioye haue ben attributed to Lazarus nor to the glutton punysshement What wyll they saye to these wordes whiche Christe spoke to the these This day thou shalt be with me in paradyse Wyll they make vs beleue that Paradyse is a dormitorte or a place to slept in In cast it be a manne wolde thinke that christ is or was ones a stepe therin for he sayth thou shalt be with me in paradise S● Paule was tapt 2. cor 12. into paradyse there dyd heare wordes which a man may not lawefully speake These wordes he hearde not with the eares of his bodye for it laye prostrate on the groūd Actu 9. But of the soule whiche part of Paule was rauysshed in ●o paradise where he dyd heare and se misteries Therfore I can not beleue that paradyse is a sle●inge place seynge that Paule was so occupied there in heryng of secretes Moreouer where as saynt Paule defired to dye and to be with Christe me thinke he shoulde rather haue wisshed for the prorogatiō of his lyfe it that the soule shuld continually slept to the last daye for in this morld after a sorte we haue the fruition of god as thoughe it were by a glasse as saint Paule him selfe teacheth But after this lyfe yf the opinions of the Anabaptistes be true we shal haue no fruition of god at all ercepte it be through dreames vuto the daye of iudgement Therefore faynt Paules wysshe if we cre●●t these antechristes must nedes seme to be soolyshe The lorde sayth that he is the god of Abrahā the god of Isaac the god of Iacob not the god of the deade but of the 〈◊〉 uynge Betwyrte the deade and the Anabaptistes slepers I s● no difference If saule hadde ben taughte by anys of the old● prophetes that the soules of men shoulde slepe he wolde not haue gone about so busely to haue ca● sedvp Samuel We rede 1. Pet. 1 that Chryste wente in spyrite and preached vnto the spyrites whiche were in pryson and were disobebyente ones whan the lenytis of God was loked for in the dayes of Noe. Agayne in the fourthe of the same epystle that the gospell was preached vnto the deade By the whiche testymonye what is mente but thatthe soules of the dead didde scle the vertue of chrystes death whiche they coulde not haue bone in case they hadde slepte accordynge to the Anabaptistes dreame Therfore I saye beleue not these false deceyuours whiche endeuour not oncly to pcrswade the slepc of soules but also to euacuate the resurrcction of the deade and so to abolysshe an article of our fayth to make oure religion vayne And hereafter whan you shall readde or heare any such scriptures as is a parte of the fourthe chapyter of the fyrste epistle to the Thessoloniās where is mencyned the slepe of the deade asscribe it to the bodies which in dede shall slepe to the daye of iugement and than shal arise agayne the soules toy ned to them and awake frō they● slepe vndoutedly Therfore saith Iob I knowe that my redeme● doth lyue and in the last daye I shall ryse frome the earth and in my flesshe shall se my sauyoure Iob. 19. O that happy and mery laste daye at the lest to the faythfull whan christe by his coucnaunte shall graunt vnto theim whiche shall ouercome and kepe his workes euen to the ende that they may ascende and syt in seat with hym as he hathe ascended and sytteth in throne with his father Apo. 2. 3. where so ro we shall be turned into gladnes that no m●̄ shall take frtome them Then as writeth Esai They whiche be redemed shall returne and comme into Syon praysyng the Lords and eternall merynes shall be ouer theyr heades they shall obseyne myrthe and solace sorowe and waylynge shall be vtterlye vanquished 51. Than the Sonne shall no more gyue them lyghte nor the moone discusse the darke nes for them but the Lorde our god shall be theyr lyghte anb comforte continuall 60. Than dout ye not be we only constant here in the loue and faith of god we shall haue for earthly powertye heauenly ryches for hunger and thurste saturitie of the pleasaunt presene of god for bondage liberte for sickenes health for death lye euerlastynge For this tyme frende Urbane I shall desyre you to take this poore letter how so euer it be in good worthe and hereafter if it shall please god to call me to a more quiet lyuyng as ye knowe I am yet compelled necessarily● to besto we in maner all my tyme and studye in teachynge of yon●● scollets I wyll write to you more largely of this argument and peraduenture God the auctor of all good thinges gyuynge me grace more learnedly Thus fare you wel at Orforde the rd daye of Marche FINIS ¶ Prynted at London in Aldersgate strete by Iohn̄ Herford ANNO. 1546. Gaudete in domino semper Philip. 4. Tristicia seculi mortem operatut● 2 Corinth 7. ¶ A swete consolatiō and the second boke of the troubled mans medicine made and pronounced by Wyllyam Hugh to his frynd lying on his death bedde Watche for ye knowe no day nor houre Math. 25. Certius est ꝙ mors ꝙ mors incertius est nil If ye lyst to lerne wyliyngly to dye And that semeth dredefull death to desire Reade this briefe boke the doctrine therof try But death shal not be dredful to the godly wise ¶ To the ryght Worshypfull and his singular good lad● and may stres lady Deny hyrhumble feruaunte wyllyam hughe wysshethe health YF that happi●● right worshypfull and my s●● gular good ●●-dy may happ●● to the estate a●● condition of seruauntes amo●● the happiest
the escape or euasion of deathe whrefore you oughte the lesse to be greued graunted to no man Regū 14. All we saythe scripture shall dye and as weake water shall slyde into the grounde Dapien 7. lyke as there is one entrance for euery man into this present lyfe so one passage and departure Therfore we be monysshid of the prophette not to feare the iudgement of death Dapien but rather to remember thynges that haue happened before our tyme anv those whyche shall succede That is to ●aye that none of oure progeny●ours coulde euer escape the dent of deathe nether any of oure po●teritie shall We be admonysshed that we be duste and into ●uste we shall returne Genes 3. by the re●on of deathe whiche for the faut and disobedience of ure fyrste ●●rmed parente with his ineuitable darte strykethe and deadly woundeth all men Roman 5. he woundethe deadlye not the wretchyd onelye the nedye and myserable but the fortunate also the welthye and the noble pen kyn●ts rulars and the rycheste emperours which in power and dignite riches renoume and gl●tye doo excell and in theyr tym● rule the worlde accordynge as they liste Not the vnlerned only the rude barbarous but tho●● also whyche in learnyng and ma●ners be most instructe Not th● ourtrummyn and careful captiues but also the puissant conqu●rers them se●fes Alexader a king most victoriouse by whose powe● and furiouse warres Asia with Europe was manfully subdued no man being able to resyst him coulde fynde no weapon to conquere deathe The notable mysedome of Salamon the depe lea● nynge of Aristotle nor of Galen coulde by any meane auoid deth The cuppes of Circe nor the enchauntmentes of Medea coulde repell the violence of death Cullye his eloquence could not moue him The riches of Crass us could not corrupt him He fauoured ●ot the beauty of fayre Absalone ●ether he spared the strenght of ●●ronge Sampson Dne uyghte saith the poete tarieth for euery body and the way of death must ●ns be troden of al men Lyke as all the ●iarres that come from the ●●st thoughe they be neuer so ●oodly and bright yet at the last ●ey go to the west and there ar●●rdynge to the diueri●te of their ●ircles some ●owly some spedely withdrawe them selfs out of our ●yghtieuen so al men which come from the east that is to say their ●atiuite into the world although they glyster and shyne here for a ●easen yet at the last they muste ●edes some rather some later ac●ordyng to the duratione whiche they haue receyued of god fall 〈◊〉 the west of deathe depatte and withdrawe them selfes from the syght of men Therfore the wys● man Simonides at suche ty●● as Pausanias a noble capitain desyryd to learne some good and fruytfull lesson bad hym remember that he was mortall Therfore also Philyp the king of M●cedony wallowynge in worldely wealth and prosperite comma●●ded his chaumberlayne that h● shulde euery day at his vprism● sadly repete these wordes Remiberking Philip forget not that thou art a man to mortalite subiecte Esar 45. All fleshe is grasse and euery man is the flowre of grasse the grasse shal be wythered and the flowre shal be dryed awaye The man sayth Iob that is borne 〈◊〉 a woman lyueth but a short ty●● replenished with many miseries ●adeth as a floure and is worne away vanisshying as a shadowe ●wherfore not withoute a cause the lyfe of man is compared of ●uciane to a buble in the water ●of Pindarus to the shadow of a dreame of Eschilus to the shadowe of vaine smoke Cruely yf that death shulde chaunce but to a fewe and to the vnluckest we shuld seme to haue a iust cause he ●uely as I think you partly do to take deathe But seynge that ●●e dothe as well knocke at the rich mans dore as at the poore at the happye mans doore as at the vnhappy at the strong mās dore as at the weake at the kynges ●owers as at the sheperdescotes whye shulde we not take well in ●orthe a thynge importynge suche necessitic Dowe vnreasonable is it for a man to take heuely his death more than his birthe consideringe that the one is appoynted for man as well as the other the one as commune as the other the one as necessarye as the other and of them bothe death is the better in beynge sory to dye we shall seme to lament in that oure lotte is mortall and that we be not aungels orequall wyth god Whyche is a greate poynte of folysshnes myxte wyth impyetye If we be troubled with suche as be verye calamities in dede to haue ii 02. iii. companions we count in a ma●ner a comfort sufficiente Moche more we shoulde be conforted as touchynge death seynge that we haue not ii 02. iii. but all men of what estate or degre so euer they be of as companyons and partakers of the same yea euen the very sayntes theym selues and those that were highlye fauoured of God Moyses whych was admitted to the secretes and misteryes of God dyed Dauyd whome God pronounced to be a man after his hartes desyre dyed Ihon the euangelyste mooste tenderlye belouyd of his mayster died Ihon baptiste than whom by the sentence of Christe none greatter hath tysen among the chyldern of men died and not sayntes onelye but the dearelye beloued sonne of God Christ beyng both God and man Esai 54. a lambe mooste innocente and wythoute spotte that he myghte paye oure taunsome delyuer vs synfull wretches frome thraldome and pacyfye hys fathers wrothe was contente to dye the mooste ignomiouse deathe of the crosse● And shall we sinners that were begotten in syn borne in synne haue lyued in syn all the dayes of our lyues be agreued to put of these our v●le synful bodies Christ whan he was in the shape of god and thought it no robbetye to be egall with God made him selfe or no reputaciō taking vpon him the shape of a seruaūt and became lyke an other man Phi. 3. and in apparell was founde as a man humbled hym selfe and became obediente vnto death that he might auaunce vs to the kingdome of his father and shall we beynge but wormes duste and clay be loth to dye whereby we maye enioy the same aduauncement Sisigambe the mother of Darius kynge of Persia for the very loue she bare toward Alexander for as much as he vsed hir somwhat gently in hir captiuite was wonderouse wyllyng of hyr owne accorde by death to folowe him after his deceasse ye euen to hell And shall we christians be sow to folowe Christe whiche in raptiuite hath reteynyd vs well nor euyll but brestinge vtterly at his bandes hath clearly delyuered vs Sisigambe vehemently desired to folow Alexāder whiche was hyr enemy in dede more than hyr frynde and shall we be vnwyllyng to folowe Christ which is our frinde most faithfull and assured She desyred to folowe hym whiche made hir poore and shall not we couet to
folowe Chryste that hath empouerysshed hym selfe to make vs riche She was content to folow hym that made hyr of a fre woman a quene a bond hādmayde shal we by our willes refuse to folowe Christ whiche hath made vs of vile slaues beggerly captiues fre men and kynges She wold nedes folow Alexāder although she coulde not tell where to fynd hym ne in his presence how to be intreted shal we be lothe to folowe Christ whom we know certainly to be of the right hande of his father where weshal be sure if we dye faithfull to fynd him for euer to dwell with him with most gentle entertainment She wolde folowe hym that dyd not looke call nor sende for hyr and shall not we wyllyngly folowe Christ whan his pleasure shal be to cal for vs. Christ I sayour lord ●t our god our lyfe as it is written and the length of our dayes calleth vs and for asmoch as the daies of men be determinate as Iob saith of god we maye not asscribe our death to the startes Iob. 14. or destiny but vnto the calling of god in whome we lyue moue and be of whome commeth both death and life Eccle. 7. which hath appointed our termes that we can not passe with whome is the number of our mouthes Math. 10. without whome an heare can not fal on the groūd from our heades moche lesse the hole bodies For he that worketh all thynges for hym selfe Droucr 10 Sapi. ●0 hathe power both of death and lyfe I can moche commende the commune people for as much as they seme to imitate saint Cipriane in vsing this phrase whan it shall please god to cal me to his mercy and suche lyke Wherein they de clare them selfs not to be of theyr opinion which thynke that men be not cared for ne gouerned 〈◊〉 god but that all thynges d●● chaunce euen by verye tortune The whyche opinton yf it were true God shulde either be ignoraunt of many thinges or elles abhorre from his creatures And therfore shulde he seme either not true or not good But this matter lefte I wyl returne to my put pose seynge that it is appointed for all men to dye and whan 〈◊〉 shall please god to call them l●● vs be content merily to depat●e thither and whan as our heuenly and mooste bountifull fathet shall call vs remembringe euer that we ought to worke not oure owne wyll●s but the wyl of god accordynge to the praier that we customable by the commau● dement of Christ Dowe preposte rous and peruerse a thyng is it to desyre that the wyl of god may be fulfylled in heauē and in earth and yet whan he wylleth vs to de ●arte from this worlde we wolde by our wylles resist him and like ●nto warde and stubborne seruauntes are rather drawne with the bande of necessitie than with ●oue or obedience due to the wyll of god There be none of vs but we wyll wysh delyueraunce from this Egypt with hyr captiuite and troubles and to dwell with god in the lande of promission where is al ioy and quietnes pet we be loth after that god hath brought vs euen to the gate of the saide lande for as the course of our lyfe is a raise to death so death is the gate of euerlastinge lyfe Do enter in by it we wolde gladely be honoured with heauenly rewardes but we be vnwilling to go where they be The cau●● wolde eate swete mylke but sh● is loth to wette hir feete wh●● shulde we pray so oft let the kingdome of heauen come yf we besomuch delyted with earthly bondage why do we pray the the day● of the kingdom may he hastenth yf we be more desirous here to serue the deuil thā to reigne in heauen with christ but let vs breake our owne waiward wylles conformyng them to the wyl of god and shewing our selfes wyllinge at al tymes to pay that we ow● What other thing is it to dye thā to paye such thynges as was for a tyme lyberallylent vs what honest hart wyll not that willingly at the leste yf habilite fayle not pay againe xx li. to hym whiche gently dyd lende it at his nedt whan so euer it shal be required And shall we stycke to pay to the ●arthe the mother of vs all oure ●odies of whom we borowed thē ●nd our soules to god our father ●hat bountifully dyd lend them God forhydde No we ought to be much more propēse to pay our soules to god than the better to ●aye his mony For of the payment of the mony fewe or no commodities do ensue but after the payenge of oure soules to God ●nnumerable pleasures and infinite commomodities succede For then at the lenght they be luckely brought from darknes to lyght from feare to securite from trauel to quietnes from a thousand daungerous syrtes his rockes waues into a sure hauen frome the vse of vayne vyle fylthy and transitory thinges to the fruition of the eternall deite of god What thristen man myll not 〈◊〉 glad of suche an exchange w●● louynge chylde wyll not harte●● covyt deliuerauuce from the m●●sery bondage and tyrannye 〈◊〉 this worlde and to dwell with his moost mercyfull father in heauen Oblindues what cause ha●● we I pray you to hate death 〈◊〉 whose meane we be made of b●● men fre of straungers homed ●●lers of beastes lyke vnto aungels If that a great ruler happen to call any of vs to a kynge● or emperours courte promisin●● to do for vs to sette vs our with temporall riches to endue 〈◊〉 with worldly possessiōs we think our selues very fortunate and whan god the rular of all rulars and kynge of all kynges shal 〈◊〉 vs to his courte and gyue vs inheritaūce and possessions not in earthe but in heauen whiche be instant and shall neuer be take ●omvs by storms nor tempests ●y crafte nor subtilte of the law ●y oppression nor tyrannye by ●eath the deuill nor synne Shal be thynke oure selues vnfortu●ate No truely yf we be well in our wyttes But rather coūt that ●me whan so euer it shall come ●fall tymes to be most happy for ●s moche as than the kyngdome of god the reward of lyfe the toy of ●ternall health perpetuall glad●es possessione of paradice that was ons lost be euen at hande Than for earthly thinges heavē●y for iytle thinges great for trā●●tory thinges eternall shall take place Who than I may you wil leare death but he that hath no faith that laketh hope that wold not go to christ and beleueth not that he begynneth than to reign● with christ whan he begynneth to leaue this worlde Oh that we hadde a sparcle of the grace and fayth that Simeon had whiche beinge a iust and faithfull man was assured by a godly responsion that he shulde not dye before he had sene Christ Whome after that he had sene in the temple knowen in spirite knewe certainlye that he shulde shortly be called of
God and dye Therefore he beynge merueilouse glad toke the chylde in his armes and blessynge god cried out and sayde Now dimisse thy seruaunt o lord accordyng to thy worde in peace For myne eyes haue sene thy sauynge healthe Dere dyd Symeon proue and testify that than free tranquillite true peace and sprme securytye do happen to the seruauntes of god whan they be drawen from this troublesome worlde and brought to the porte of the euerlastinge man●ion Peraduenture you wyll say vnto me Syr as tor Simeon I ●an not blame hym thoughe he was well content to dye for as ●moche as he was a man of a greate age and as they saye communelye euen at the pyttes banke I am but a yonge mau I myghte haue lyued yet manye yeares wyth no small comforte of my friudes by the com●nune curse my tyme was not yet come I graunte in dede you be a man of no great age but what ●ay I pray you can we apoynte for any mans deathe Euery day maye be a bodies last daye yf it ●tande wyth the pleasure of god We se that some dye in the●● mothers bellies some in their cr●● delles some in the floure of theyr age some in their olde age some whan they be riche other some whan they be poore so that we may playnlye vuderstande that god doth gyue to euery man his lyfe of that condition that he surrender it againe whan so euer it shall please him to repete it But among all other saith the great poete Menander Most happy be they and best belouid of god that dye whan they be yong The whiche sayeng as it is very wytty so it is very true And that a man may easely perceue yf he haue 〈◊〉 specte to the spirituall euyls and temporall incommodities that occupie this lyfet for they communly departe not yet infected with so muche malyce entangled with so moche vice corrupted with so much wyckednes as theyr elders be Not yet so surre seperate from god by the reson of syn and made members vtterlye and lyms of the dcuyll It chaunseth for the moost that men after they come to a rype and complete age be cleane drawne from god frome vertue from symplicite and integrite of lyfe to syn wychednes vngodly lyuynge The riche by iniuriouse handlynge the poore by oppression ingurgitation and beastly incontinency The poore by pyckinge lyinge desperation and blasphemynge the name of God I speake of many but not of al The wytty by craft deceat and subtilte The learned oft by ●eresy ambition and deuylysshe ●octrines I wyll not speake of ●nuy malice rankor adulterye whiche at the type age encrease in growynge and as Scilla and Charibdis hurle the greateste part of men into the hoxrible sea of perdytion The holye ghoste teacheth by Salamon that they whyche please God best be quickely and rathe taken frome this world lest they shuld be polluted with the wyckednes of the same He was taken awaye sayeth he leste malice shulde chaunge his vnderstandynge for his soule dydde please god and he hath made haste to brynge hym from the myddes of miquitie Enoche dydde please God and he was not founde afterwarde for God hadde taken hym awaye Therefore to please God is to be counted worthye of hym to be delyuered from this worlde and to be broughte thyther as the de noute soule of the prophet couyted to come sayenge Howe derelye belouyd be thy habytations o God of vertues my soule desirethe and makethe hasie to thy hawles Those trees be not beste the be most durable but of whome ●oth spring most profitable fruit Netther be those songes most cōmendable that be longest but the most delite the eares of men Eue ●o the longest lift is not chefest but that which is moosle bertu●us and lest with vice defaced Further let vs ponder these temporal displeasures and incommo ●ities and than iudge whether ●●at death whan or in what age ● euer it chaunsethe be better ●●an lyfe accordynge to the wor●es of Ezechiell or no. Consider sf what calaniyties chaunces ●yseryes and perelles men be in daunger No man lyuynge is happy on euery part No man is vtterly content with his lote who ther that reason or chaunce as saith Horace hath of● ered it vnto hym wherfore no mā according to Solons wordes is happye in dede before he be buried For this cause Socrates with other of his secte desyred euer desirouslye to dye estemynge death not to be miserable but the ende of al miseries Not troublous Ezechi 30. but the ende of all troubles Better saith Ezech● ell is death than lyfe and eternal resie than continuall sorowes For euery part of this lyfe doutles is replenisshed with vnpleasantnes full of sorowe inquiet●● with cares troublescme and v● ed with diseases What trade ● lyfe so euer a man shall folo● sayth Crates he shal be suer ● fynde bytternes therein In the fildes be laboures at home cares In a straunge countre feare of a man haue ought In the sea feare with Ieopardies Inyouth foolyshaes in age feblenes in mariage vnquietues in lacking a myfe solitarines yf a man haue thyldren he hath care yf he haue none he is halfe mamed So that one of these two saith he is to be mysshed Eyther not to be borne or quicklye to dye The wretchednes of this worlde hath compelled euen the holye ●e men beyng weryed therewith to wysh for deathe Ionas in his trauell said that it was better for him to bye than to lyue Helyas in his ●yfe tyme often coueted and not ●naduisedly to yeld by the ghost Neither can I se any cause why ●hat all of vs which haue anye hope of an other lyfe to come shoulde not wysshe for the same thing seing that no man lyueth which laboure●h not of the indigēcy both of spirituall and temporall thinges nothing truelye though a ma haue neuer so much excellencye in honours aboundaunce is riches delite in pleasures can satisfie hym or brynge a flepe●●●s desires appetites and insatiable lu●●es no more than the doughters of Danaus can fyl their bottomles tubbes Is it not better therfore to chaūge this life to leue this straunge countre and god where is all excellencye of honoures aboundance of all good thinges where perpetuall plesures shal euer be in thy right hand euē to the ende Where thy diuinitie shal be sene loued reserued for euer Death of it selfe in dede is somewhat formidable and the way to death as saith the Philosopher paynful Yet if we consider the premisses and the deth is nothing elles but a gate wher by mē do enter into lyfe we shall see it amiable and moch to be embraced I maruayle what euil spi rite hath so blinded and ve witched the myndes of men and made thē madde so shamefullye dotinge Forasmuch as they can persmade them selfes to be best here to lyue still in these rotten tentes open to all sharpe wyndes and bytter stor mes In these ruinous houses in these stinkyng
prisones I meane our bodies and to hate death as it were a venemous poison serpent seynge it is so frendlye a thinge inferring a great sea of cō modities pleasures seing it is only it the finisher of our filthy and painful emprisonment a consummation of our laboures and greuous warres and arriuyng at the safe haue nan ende of oure peregrynacyon a leynge away of an heuy bourdē a terminariō of all sicknes an euasion of all daungers a rerourne into oure countre an entrance into glow If we be wyse let vs be well content to dye and cherefully gyue a fayrewell to this myserable worlde continuallye vnquieted with troubles and troubled with vnquietnes subiecte to sundrye euyls and the false illusiones of vayne fortune For truly it hath moch more gall than hony moch more bytternes than swetenes The which thing is wel signified by this wyttye fable of Homere Iupiter sayth he syttynge in he uen and hauynge before hym ii great tōnes the one of felicytie the other of myserie agaynst a lytle sponefull of happines powrethe out a greate ladlefull of vnhap Meanynge therby that fortune and misfortune amonge men do not egally part the stayke Eschi●us recontyng with him selfe the continuall tossyng and tormoy●ing of mens bodies and myndes ●ryeth out after this sorte Oh howe vniust be those men howe folyshe that hate death seinge it is a temedy moost present for all euyls and the chefest expeller of al anxieties Many of the infidels for this cause thought death of al thynges most to be desyred as it doth appere by the notable history of Cleobis and Bito by the maner of the Chraciās by the Epi grams of Crates and suche lyke thinges How much more ought the same to be embraced of vs whiche be well assured by holye scripture of the immortalitie of the soule of a better lyfe to come ad that death is none other but a very enteraunce into that lyfe whiche is true parmanente and constante Let the wycked Saduceans whyche denye the resurrection of the flesshe take heuely their deathe For they looke for none other lyfe after this Lette vs whyche be sure that oure bodies shall aryse agayne freshlye renewed esteme deathe as a thynge mooste pleasaunte Let those whyche haue hadde no seole maister but Aristotle that affirmeth death of all terrible thinges to be mooste terrible feare death Let vs whiche haue learned of saynte Paule that to dye is a gayne That whether we lyue o● dye we be of the lorde And that Christ hath dyed that he myghte be rular bothe ouer the quycke the deade Hartely say with Dauyd Delyuer o lorde deliuer our soules oute of pryson that they maye confesse thy name Besydes a thousande incomniodities and displeasures of this presente slyperie lyfe This doth also accede that oure synnes dayly renewed augmented and encreased we more and more prouoke the lorde to ire And the innocencye of lyfe yf we haue anye rather than the whyche shoulde decaye saint Paule desyred to dye better sayeth he it is for me to dye then anye man shoulde euacuate my glorye is hoorely indaungered Therefore lette vs not loue the worlde for in deede it wyll not loue vs verye muche yf wee be true chrystians neyther the thinges that be therin or elles the charitie of the father cā not abide in vs. For al thinges in the world whiche is holy sette in malyce be other concupiscency of the flesh concupiscēcy of the eyes or pride of lyfe To conclude vf that deth were onely an abolysher of worldly displeasures it were a thinge not vtterly to be abhorred But for as moche as with worldly miseries it putteth away those that be spirituall and further leadeth vs to eternall blessednes whye shulde we not moche wyssh for it couette and desire it Curtius the two Decii of rome affectinge the vaine glory of the world vowed them selues no man cōmaun dynge willyngly to deathe Ind shall we christians whereby we may attayne to the true and heauenly glory god commaunding and calling vs dye impaciently or shall we rather tolowynge the example of saint Paule wysshe for the dissolution of our bodies and to be with Christ or of Cato which was wont to say Oh that happy and pleasaunt daye whan it shal be my chaunce to leaue the colluuion of this lowsy worlde and come to their companye that inhabite the heauēs What thing in the worlde is of suche excellency that it may iustly so allure you being a wyse and as I take you a faythfull man that you shulde be loth to leaue it Riches Incer tain false and vayn the vse wher of is vanitie whiche shal not pro fyt you in the daye of obduccion and vengeance to be short verye smoke Frindes vntrusty dissem blers fooles inwhom is no helth euery man is is an hiporrite and wycked and euerye mouth hath spoken foolysshenes Parentes you shall haue a father in heauen whyche louethe and tendeteth you more than these earthly parentes doo Wyte brethren and thyldren you shall dwell with youre brother Christe that loueth and careth for you moche more than all those care whiche hathe spente not his moneye or other externe thynges for youre sake but his mooste precyouse bloude So muche hathe he estemed you so vehementelye hath he loued you before the begyunynge of the worlde yea and louethe you styll Pleasures you shall haue the presence of God whyche so farre passethe all other pleasures as the brightnes of the sonne excellethe the lyghte of a talowe candell Honoures Mayne and inconstant For all thyngrs here is vanitie Youre bodye A corruptible ●rysonne whyche aburdenethe ●he soule and depressethe the ense musynge on many thinges Frome the whyche prysonne the oule beynge the verye man it elfe for the bodye is but a case ●esprethe more to be delyuered han the prysonners frome their ●nprysonmente and chaynes And as feruentlye couytethe ar●esse vnto god as the chaufed ●atte boylynge with heate desi●eth the swete flowynge water ●oure countrye A straunge ●ountry for so longe as we lyue ●ere we be straunge freme Christe here we haue no cytye ●ermanente but looke for one that is to come Here we be aliāt● as Dauyd sayd none otherwis● than was all oure forefathers a● biding in the reigne of the tyran● the deuyll that is to saye in the worlde beset with a thousand en● mies Fyrst the foule crokyd serpent hym selfe a fur of and nyghoy foyns and strokes with al● kyndes of weapōs neuer ceasseth endeuouringe to oppugne vs. The worlde disquieteth vs and laboureth styll to subuerte vs The flessh as moch as lyethe in hym couardly betrayeth vs and aideth busyly the foresayd enem● es No we pouerty no we riches and care of thinges gotten mo● lest vs nyght and day with ho● many greuous siknesses be m●● bodies vered what iniuriesscla● ders despites doo vsually greue vs No we we muste prepare out selues to fight with auarice and vuclen lines now with ire ambition and
other carnall vices To be short the mynde of man is besette with so many enemyes that scante he can be able to resyst Yf auarice be prostrate vnlaufull lust offereth vs battaile If lust be subdued ambition draweth his swerde If ambition be caste downe ●ire prouoketh vs pryde settethe in his foote drōkennes approcheth enuy breaketh concorde emulation cutteth amitie away I wyll not speake of desperation of the deaffe beating of consciences of the furies of the mynd wyth such others whiche with horrible enforcementes furiously assayle innumecable For what shulde I fyght with the monster Hidra who can number the sandes in the sea or the starres fyxed in the Hygh heauens whiche I thinke passe not muche the number of mens enemies Seynge therfore that man dayly suffereth so many persecutions and daungers shulde we desyre to stande styll in the myddes of oure ennemies amonge so many sharpe swerdes or shall we couit by death quickly to flye to chrisse our defender and helper Specially seing that Christ him selfe instrurteth vs saith Truely truely I say vnto you that you shall wepe and lament the worlde shall reioyce You shalde sory but this sorow of yours shal be turned into gladnes Who wyl not be desyrouse to want heuines and to enioy perfit gladnes whan this sorowe shal● be tourned into gladnes he decla reth saieng I wyl se you agayne your hartes shal be merye and this mirth shal no man take from you Therefore seynge that to se Christe is to be gladde and that we shall not be gladde in dede to suche tyme as we shall se hym what blindnes or rather madnes is it here to delite in paine teares pēsifenes not rather court to Come vnto the ioy which no mā shal cake from vs Let vs play the wise men and be glad at the vocation of god to leaue this painful pere grination to depart frō this labo ●inth and be transferred to our rountry and to our most louyng fathers house where is no sicknes no sorowes no werines no hunger no colde no laboure no ●nournynge no ieoperdies no enemitie no care to be shorte no aduersytye at all but moche tranquillite pleasure that shall euer endure and depe quietnes where we shall haue for false riches true inheritaunce for dissemblynge fryndes Abraham Isaac the blessed virgin Mary Peter Paule and the aungels of god whiche as the prouerbe is shall euer loue Whose faythfulnes and loue shall neuer be chaunged from vs who consyderinge these thinges wyl not saye with the prophete that the daye of death is better than the daye of byrth who will not confesse that he whyche dyeth in the lorde maketh the permutatiō of Glaucus and Diomedes that is to say receaueth for brasse syluer and for coper pure beaten golde BUt paraduenture you wyll say vnto me syr as for this worlde how so euer it be I know it and of his good thynges I am a partaker but whether I shall go hense yet I knowe not ne what I shall haue after this lyfe Therfore to leaue a certainte for a thinge incertayne howe shulde I be but sory Herkē then I pray ●ou and gyue eare a lytle and I shall declare vnto you by gods ●nfallible worde bothe whether ●ou shall go hense and what you shall haue after this lyfe The bo ●ye saith Ecclesiastes shall returne to the earth Eccle. 12. frome whense ●t came and the soule to god whi●he gaue it The soules of iuste men be in the handes of god and ●he torment of death shall not ●ouche them Sapi. 3. Many mansions ●aith Christ be in the house of my ●ather yf it were otherwise I ●olde haue tolde you I go to ●repare a place for you Iohn 14. and yf I ●o to prepare a place for you I wyl againe come and take you to my selfe that you may be where I am Truste therefore and you shal be sure by this promyse to come thither where christ is Euery man that heareth the worde of Chritie and beleueth in him that sent him ●0 5 hath lyfe euerlastyuge He commeth not into iudgement but passeth from deathe to lyfe We knowe sayth Paule that yf the earthly house of this oure ha bitatiō be dissolued we shal haue a buyldyng of God 〈◊〉 Lord. an house not made with mans handes but euerlastynge in heauen That dwellynge doutles shall happen to all faythfull whyche Christe of his greate mercy promised to the these with these most comfortable wordes This daye thou shalt be with me in paradise Therfore seyng it is so that the soules of iuste and faithfull men be in the hādes of god as you be now assured by scripture where the torment of death shall not touche them seyng christ hath prepared a place for them and that they shal dwel euē there as christ him selfe dwellyth Seynge that we shal haue after the dissolution of these our earthly bodies an euerlastyng mansiō in heauen Dout no more whether you shall go after this lyfe but be redy repente and beleue and you shall enter accompanied of the v. wise virgins into the ioyous mariage mentioned in Matthew What the faithful shal haue after this lyfe saint Paule in the syrst to the Corinthians and second chapiter shal sufficiently declare The eye sayeth 〈◊〉 hathe not seene the eare hathe not harde neyther the harte of man hath thought the excellencye of the good thinges that god hathe prepared of them that loue hym Agayne to the Romaynes The passions troubles and affliccios we suffer here be not worthy of the glory which shal be reueled in vs in the tyme to come Thus saynt Paule whiche was rapt into the thyrde heauen and sawe secretes whiche a man maye not laufullye speake hath taught you what the soules of good men shall enioye after this lyfe That is glorie suche excellencye of pleasures as the senses and wytte of man can not comprehende But yf saint Paul had spoken no thyng of the matter yet a reasonable man myghte partly conceiue the great and inuisible thinges that good men shall possesse in the other lyfe of these present thinges little and visible For as moche as our vile and cortuptible bodies by the be nignitie of god receaue so many commodities benefites and plea sures of the heauens the earthe and the sea of the light darkenes of heat and cold of the raine wyndes and dewe of byrdes beastes and fyshes of herbes plants and trees of the earth to be short of the ministerie of all creatures seruynge vs successiuely in theyr due tymes wherby they may alle uiate our werines What howe great innumerable shall those be whiche he hath prepared for those that loue him in the heauēly countrye where we shal se him face to face Yf he do so moche so greate thinges for vs beinge in prison what shall he do for vs in the palace Seinge that the workes of god be so greate and innumerable wonderouse and delectable whiche the
thy self to fi●● god mercyfull whych punysheth the wyth paynes after this sorte herein he playeth the parte of a gentle phisrcion why wolde he ●hat deathe shulde be so bitter he is the lorde he wylleth nothynge but that which is good And why shuld I a seruaunt vnprofitable ufuse to suffer that which the lord ●fglorie hath suffered It is a miserable thynge to dye Blessyd be the deade that dye in the lorde But the death of synners is most wretched He is no lenger a synner whiche hath acknowledged his faute wyth repentaunce and hope of mercy Thou shalt leaue this worlde I shall go from pain full banyshment into my coūtre Looke what an heape of good thynges thou leauest behynd the yet a greate deale more euyll Thou leaueste thy ryches they be the worldes I doo carye all that is myne awaye wyth me What canst thou carye with the thou hast nothinge that is goode that is truly mine own that christ hath frely forgyuen me Thou muste forsake thy wyfe and thy chyldren They be the lordes I do commende them to hym It is a harde thinge to be drawen from thy derelye beloued They shall shortly folow me thou art pluckt from thy pleasaunt frendes I haste to frendes more pleasaunt Thus thou arte taught not to gyue place to the deuyll endeuourynge to ouerthrow the but boldly to repell euerye darte that he can hurle at the. Neither let the care for thy frendes wyfe and chyldren trouble the mistrusting not but god shall prouyde as wel for them and peraduēture better in thyne absence than he dyd●● in thy lyfe tyme for thou muste consyder that thyne owne power hath not all this while susteyned the or thē and procured thinges necessary but god in whome we lyue moue and be hath done it God whiche fedeth nourishethe and saueth both man and beaste whyche ryally clotheth the grasse in the feylde couerethe the heauens wyth cloudes carethe for the byrdes of the ayer and prepareth meate for the very chycks of the rauens shall moche more regarde thy frendes beynge his people confessynge hys name Call to remembraunce how mercyfully he prouyded for the pore wydowe and hyr children spoken of in the 4 chapter of the 4 booke of the kynges There was a certayne prophet saith he one of thē that feared the lorde he dyed and left his wife with his sons much● indebted The creditours after hys deathe came to fette away● the children as bondmen for that theyr mother was nar able to pay their fathers debtes but yet th● lorde by his prophet Helyse dy● so encreace a pytcher of oyle this she hadde in store that she had y● noughe to sell for the payenge of hir dettes and for the sussentan● of hir and the children besydes Thus by the benignitie of God this poore woman with hir chyldren was muche better prouyded for after the death of hyr husbad thoughe he were an holye man than she was before God is euen the same God is now that he war than and can do as moche for christen men now in these dayes as he coulde that for the I●●●● And he doutles it thou feare him wyll regarde thy wyfe chyldren and fryndes no lesse than he dyd the wyfe and chyldren of this pro phet Na rather more for as much as oure religion and professiō be more perfytte than theyrs was Further call to remembraunce how that they many times which be lefte of their frindes riche in great honors be after brought to pouerty ye to the beggers staffe On thother syde the they whych be left pore beggerly of their frindes at the length come to grcatry ches auctorite honor wherfore I do thynke as I haue said ofte not I but the prophet that both tyches and pouerty come of god And that men shal hauc yet Iw●● not unproue an houest prou●s●on for mens children what as ●●●●al please god to giue the. Therfore romn●yrte them to god for they de hys And let them cast their 〈◊〉 an the lorde and he by hispromise shall nouryshe them ANd to you that be his frendes here to you I speake what meaneth this your heauines Why do you sorowafter this fort to what purpose do youfron ble your selfes with wepynges why do ye as it were in a maner draw into the law the wyl of god with youre vniust complaintes do ye thynke hym to be a mere matter of lamentynge sorowing and waylynge bycause he is dely uered from daungers to safetye frome bondage to lybertye from diseases te immorialite frō earthly thinges to heauenly from men to the companye of goddes aungelles wherein hath he offended you that you s● enuy his lurkynes If ye do not enup what nedes all these teares I am sure if ye knew to what feliritie he is go inge you wolde banket and be merye at the least yf ye loue his welthe Christe sayde to hys disciples whan they were sadde for that he wolde depart yf ye loued me you wolde be gladde for as muche as I go to my father wherein he declared that we ought not to be sadde but mery at the departure of our frendes from hense What I praye you shal ye lose by his death but that he shal be out of your fyght and that but for a tyme neuertheles you may at al times in the mcane space in youre myndes and memoryes se hym talke with him and embrace him Morne nomore for hym for he offerethe you no cause of moornynge But yf ye wylnedes morne morne for your selfs in that ye be not so nyghe the porte of oure swere countrey flowynge with mylke and hony as he is This moorning is more fyt for the Scythyans and such other barbarouse people whiche knowe not the condition of faithfull soules than for you whyche knowe or myghte all this whyle haue learned Let them I praye you wepe and houle like dogges let them cut their cares and noses as they were wonte to do at the death of their frendes Let vs be ioyfull and mery Let Admetus Drpheus and suche other infydeles morne at the deathe of their frendes and require them againe of Proserpina Lette not vs require our fryndes of god again thoughe me myghte haue them with the losse of theyr welth and prosperouse being Were you not to be counted vuteasonable and to youre frende no frendes yf ye shoulde require hym to dyne or dwell with you hauyng nothing in youre house but horsebreade and stynkynge water where he may go to a frende more faythful than you be and haue at altimes all kyndes of deinties and wyll you be counted reasonable which wold by your wyls let this your frynde goynge to the house of his moste faithfull frende Christ where he shall haue heauenlye deynties in comparyson of the whyche youre chere is worse than horsebreade and stynkynge water in dede and meate of the holye aungels Moorne no more for hym I saye but be gladde that he beynge your frende shal attein to such felicite What