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B14844 Six excellent treatises of life and death collected (and published in French) by Philip Mornay, sieur du Plessis ; and now (first) translated into English. Mornay, Philippe de, seigneur du Plessis-Marly, 1549-1623.; Cyprian, Saint, Bishop of Carthage.; Ambrose, Saint, Bishop of Milan, d. 397.; Cicero, Marcus Tullius.; Seneca, Lucius Annaeus, ca. 4 B.C.-65 A.D. 1607 (1607) STC 18155; ESTC S94239 82,027 544

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who honor thee in this world but to resplendent and most excellent verity her self Axi Thy discourse hath made mee change my mind I am now so far from fearing death that contrariwise I ardently desire the same and to expresse my selfe more magnanimiously I am already in a maner out of the world and begin to enter into these diuine and eternall paths so that being wholly eased of my infirmity I am quite become another man than that I was before CICERO in his dialogue of old age towards the end THere remaines a fourth reason which seems to vexe and torment olde age that is to say the approach of Death which at that time can not bee farre off But I think that old man to be very miserable which in the space of so long time before neuer learned that death simplie was not to bee feared but rather to bee cōtemned if it destroy the soule as some thinke but according to my opinion it ought to bee desired seeing it leades man to a place where he shall liue eternally Wee cannot finde any one betwixt these two opinions What should I then feare if I either feele no misery at all or if I shall bee happie after death Besides this is ther any man so foolish how yong a Gul soeuer he be to suppose that he hath a Patent of his life but til the euening He is so farre from that that euen youth it self is subiect to many more kinds of death than old age yong men sooner fall into diseases they are more grieuously sicke and hardlier healed so that it is rare to see men liue to bee olde If this were not wee should liue more wisely and happily for old men are indued with the vnderstanding of counsel and wisedome and without them Cōmon-wealths could not stand on foote But let vs come to this feare of present death and in that olde age is wrongfully charged to be subiect to this apprehension feeing this is a more common accident with youth For my part I felt in the death of my sonne your brothers of whom great hope of good hereafter was cōceiued that death threatens all ages Some body may reply that a yong man hopes to liue long which one aged cannot expect This hope is truely the hope of a yong man that is to say of a light head For is there a greater sottishnes than to make sure and certain of that which is altogether vncertaine and vnsure But an old man hath no reason in the world to cōceiue any such hope and I affirme that his condition herein is far better thā a yong mans in that he hath obtained what the young man doth but hope for and that is long life which the olde man hath passed I pray you what length doe you find in a mans life fet down vnto me the longest of all others Let vs consider the age of the King of the Tartessians for I find in bookes that one Arganthonius reigned fourescore and liued sixescore yeeres but I see that ther is nothing long but tendeth to some period the which being attained vnto all the rest is gone and past ther remaining nothing but what thou hast obtained by Iustice and pietie The howers passe away so doe the moneths that past neuer returnes againe what will come hereafter we knowe not Euery one must be contented with the time allotted him to liue For as hee that playes a Part vpon a stage needes not to repeat the whole Comedie from one end to the other to make him be accompted a good Actor so that in the Part which he properly plaieth he giue contentmēt to the spectatours no more is it requisite that the wise man should liue as long as the oldest man that euer liued in the worlde because a shorte life is long enough for a man to carrie himselfe therein honestly and vertuously And so if our dayes shoot out at length we must be no more weary of them than labourers that after the beautie of the Spring time see Summer ensue and then Autumne For the Spring time resembles youth and makes some demonstration of the fruits which afterward must be reaped Other ages are proper to gather and lay vp the increase of the earth and the fruit of olde age is the remembraunce of those goods which wee haue formerly purchased whatsoeuer is done according to nature we may place in the rank of good things But what is more naturall than to see old men die The same falles out to youth but somewhat against Nature and as it were in despite of her so that when yong men die me thinkes I see as it were a great fire quenched by an huge quantity of water where as contrariwise old men droppe away of thēselues without any violence offered like to a fire that quencheth of it selfe And euen as apples but greene and vnripe fall not from the trees except we violently pluck them off being ripe they fall off without vsing any great force thereto so also young men seeme to die not without some violence offered to their nature old men quite otherwise The which so cheares mee vp that the neerer I approach vnto death the neerer I discerne my selfe to hale in with that harbor and port where I pretend to anchor after so long dangerous a nauigatiō All the ages of our life are limited but only old age wherein wee liue vertuously as long as the means yet remaines to labour in our vocation and otherwise to hold death in contempt the which may bee the reason also that old age is more ardent and couragious than youth This is that which Solon answered to the Tyrant Lisistratus who interrogated him concerning vertue wherewith he so braued him and was alwaies opposite to his designes because sayd Solon I am old but the ende of this life is then most sweet and excellent when the same Nature which built defaceth also her worke whē a man til the last retains his senses vnderstāding entire For euen as the Carpenter or Architect can easily when he lists plucke the ribs and beames of his ship asunder or the other plucke downe that building which he had erected euen so Nature most properly dissolueth a man whom shee before had sodered together of two so different pieces now al kind of Soder and conglutination lately made is hardly dissolued but in that old and long worn it is otherwise and so the remainder of life is not much desired or sighed after by the aged who haue reason rather to be ready to dislodge expecting minutally the great Captains comandement which is God without whose will and pleasure as Pythagoras sayd wee are prohibited to leaue our Guarison Corps du guard wherin we are constituted in this worlde There is a notable saying ascribed to the wise Solon wherin hee would haue his friends to mourne and lament his death which makes me thinke that his meaning onely was herein that they should shewe to
those which saile by sea were to be esteemed amongst those neither liuing nor dead For man being created to liue vpon the earth hee launches out into the waters minding at one instant to participate of two contrary elements and casts himself desperatly into the armes of Fortune Thou wilt peraduenture say that the labour and tillage of the earth is a pleasant thing I agree thereunto but with how many miseries is this contentment accompanied Doth it not bring foorth euery day some occasion of griefe and sorrow now rain by and by drought to day burning heat to morrow nipping frost and thus by times either vnseasonable scorchings or immoderate cold But not to insist vpon many other vocacations of life to how many perils is the gouernment of States subiect whereof many doe so highly esteeme The ioy and pleasure therein comprehended resembleth fitly an vlcer or violent beating of the pulse the being put beside the saddle in such offices makes the ambitious cold at heart procures them more discontentment than if they were to suffer a thousand deaths Can a man be happie while he liues at the discretion of the vulgar what reputation otherwise soeuer he be in or though euerie one reuerence him neuer so much seeing he is but the peoples puppit who may disgrade him hisse at him condemne him to penalty bring him to miserie and somtimes also puts him to death I demand of thee Axiocus because thou hast swayed this Scepter of Magistracie where died Miltiades Themistocles Ephialtes with other Princes and great Captaines which preceded them For my part I would neuer accept of their suffrages supposing it a thing very vnproper for mee to be an associate or head of so dangerous a beast as the common people but Theramines and Callixines together with their guarde sending Iudges the day after cōstituted vpon purpose condemned to death all those that any waies were their opposites without permitting thē any hearing As for thee Axiocus thou with Triptolemus vpheldest equitie although in the assembly there were thirty thousand of a cōtrary opinion which gaue negatiue voyces Axi You say but truth Socrates and since that time I haue had enough of such conuentions nothing seems vnto me more harsh and vnfauorie than the management of publike affairs They that euer had to do therein can wel auerre so much as for your selfe you speake but afarre off and as one iudging by the blowes which haue light vpon others But wee that haue played our part therein may speake by better proofes In very trueth my friend Socrates the people are verie ingrate cumbersome cruell enuious euill taught compounded of the very dregs of men and of those that are insolent and great mockers I iudge him to be most miserable that wil bee too familiar with such a beast Soc. Why then Axiocus seeing you detest the fairest imployment of all others what may we say of the rest must wee not shun them But for the remainder I haue heard this Prodicus adding to the other discourses this also ensuing that death concerned not either the liuing or the dead Axio What 's this you affirme Socrates Socr. Why because Death is no wayes hurtfull to those that are liuing and for the dead they are out of his iurisdiction And therfore now it does not endammage you because yet you liue and when you shal not be aliue he can haue no power ouer you because then you are past his stroake any more It is therefore but a vaine sorrowe for Axiocus to lament that which neither doth nor shal hereafter concerne him no otherwise than as it would be a notable folly to be afeard of monsters which thou seest not which presently haue no existence and that after thy death haue no beeing That which is redoubtfull therein is hideous onely to those that forge feares to thēselues For is there any thing that can bring terror to the dead Axioc You haue stollen these wise perswasions from the Orators that at this day beare all the sway for they are the men that make these pleasant relations to sooth and humor yong men but I for my part am exceeding loth to leaue these worldly goods whatsoeuer you are able to alleage vnto me in your conference of pleasing apparance my mind findes no perfect contentmēt in this smooth course of words which doe but a little delight and tickle in their vtterance They beare a good shew with them but they are too remote from truth and our cogitations are not fedde with fantasies but with things firme and solide that are able inwardly to pearce settle themselues Soc. But Axiocus you inconsideratlie couple together those things which should not be cōioined in making vs beleeue that to feele euill and be depriued of good are the selfe same things for the suffering of euill brings griefe vnto him that loseth a good Now you forget that being dead you are no more and he that is not cannot perceiue this priuation how can he therefore be greeued at a thing whereof hee shall haue no apprehension If at the first you had resolued with mee that in death our bodies are depriued of sense you would neuer haue been so fond as to feare death Now you contradict your selfe in fearing to bee depriued of your soule ioyning this soule to your imagined losse For in fearing to lose your sense you suppose by the same sense to comprehend an euill which you build vnto your self in the aire and that you are afraid to feele Besides this aboue alleaged there are many excellent arguments to prooue the immortalitie of the soule For a mortall nature would neuer haue vndertaken such great matters as to contemne the violence of cruell beasts to crosse the Seas to build cities to establish publike gouernments to contemplate the heauens to obserue the course of the starres of the Sunne and of the Moone their Eclipses and sudden restitutions the rising and falling of the Pleiades the Equinoctials the Solstice of Winter and Summer the windes violent raines with flashings lightnings and thunder She would not haue comprehended in writing nor consecrated to eternity those things that fal out in the world were she not accompanied with some diuine Spirit to haue the intelligence and knowledge of such high and mysticall matters And therefore Axiocus thou must passe vnto an immortall life and not to death thou shalt not be stripped of all but enioy true goods thou shalt haue pleasures no waie intermingled with this mortall body but absolutely pure and indefectiue and such as most truely deserue to be called pleasures For thou being loosed out of this prison and become truely free thou shalt goe vnto a place where there is no trauel nor lamentation from whence sorrow and old age are banished thy life shall bee exempted from all euill replenished with secure repose and eternal ioyes Thou shalt there behold the nature of al things conferring no more thy mindes trauell to their affections
these corporall bonds The which being granted honor mee then as a thing diuine but if the soule were to perish with the body yet for all this forbeare not to feare the Gods which support and gouerne this principall worke of theirs that is called man the which like to good children performing you shall inuiolably preserue the memoriall of my name This was Cyrus his discourse a little before his death But if I shall not herein bee too burdensom vnto you hearken what I will deliuer vnto you in mine owne behalfe No body shall euer perswade me O Scipio that either your predecessors or other men of great note whō it is not requisite to name would euer haue enterprised such memorable exploits to all posterities but that they cōsidered that their being in the world was to no other ende but to procure the good of their successors Think you to speake plainely and after the manner of old men which loue to set foorth themselues that I would haue so trauelled both day and night in warre peace if my renowne and glory should finish with this present life would it not be better then to liue idle and in repose without any trouble or vexation But my soule I know not in what maner gathering together new forces regardeth happinesse with such a penetrant eye as if departing this world shee should but only then beginne to liue And if it were otherwise that soules were not immortall honest men would not aspire vnto a perpetuall glory What is the meaning of this that euery wise man dies willingly and the wicked with great grief Think you not that the soule which sees farre clearer and further off knowes well that shee is going to a better place and on the contrary hee which hath an heauie and disturbed soule sees not the like Surely I desire nothing more thā to see your Fathers whom I haue honoured and cherished And besides the desire which I haue to drawe neere thē that I haue knowen I would willingly also talke with those of whō I haue heard which shewed thēselues vnto mee by their bookes and whose names I haue set downe amongst mine owne writings Now that I drawe neere vnto them it would displease me much to hang backward or to bee rowled downe againe as wee might doe with a round ball And if some God had permitted me to returne againe into my infancie and to crie in my cradle I would very constantly and flatly refuse such an offer for seeing I haue almost run my race I would not be called backe again from my goale to the first setting forward Is ther any true commoditie in this life Is it not troublesome through al the periods thereof But admit there are some cōmodities therein yet are we far from finding satisfactiō or obtaining of our wished ends and desires I will not raile against the same as diuers learned men haue often-times done neither repent I that I haue liued for I haue so passed my time that I am of opinion I haue done some good in the world I goe out of this life as out of an Inne not as out of mine own house seeing Nature hath sent vs forth hither for a litle time to passe forward in our iourney and not cōtinually here to inhabit Oh happy will that day be when I shall depart to this celestiall assembly of soules and leaue the rascallitie of this world for I shal not only then bee with those good men aboue-named but also with mine owne sonne one of the best men that euer the earth brought foorth whose body I haue seen brought to ashes wheras in reason hee should rather haue seen the like by mine But see his soule neuer leaues mee but continually fixing her lookes vpon me she is flowen vp now into those places whither she knowes that I must follow I bare this losse patiently as it appeares but yet I confesse that I was much trobled therwith euer comforting my selfe with this Meditatiō that ther should bee no long space betweene her departure and mine Out of the Epistles of SENECA Epist. XXIIII RVminate I pray thee in thine owne minde what thou hast often heard and as often spoken but then make triall of it by effect if you haue either heard or seriously vttered the same For it would bee too great a basenes in vs as men vse to cast in our teeth that we should only vse the words and not the workes of Philosophie As I remember I haue heard you sometimes handle this common place that we fall not suddenly vpō death but march towards the same by little and little To say the trueth wee die euery day for euery day a peece of our life slides away whatsoeuer is past and gone of our yeeres Death hath it already in his hands yea and euer when we our selues doe growe our life decreaseth First we lose our Infancie then our Adolescencie and then our youth Euen to the day before this what time soeuer is past is lost and gone the present day which now we passe we share stakes therein with Death So ought we alwayes to be confirmed both in the one and the other that we doe not too much loue nor hate our life we must end it when reason summons vs thereunto but wee must not desperatly nor rashly leaue it like one that takes his runne to fetch the better rise A wise and magnanimious man must neuer flie nor shun this life except when he is departing there-from but auoide like a rock a vicious passion which surprizeth and layes holde of many which is to say the desire and hastening of death Epist. XXVI DOubtlesse I debate with my self I discusse make exact examination as if my triall were at hande and the day already comne that must giue sentence of al my yeeres and dayes past Whatsoeuer wee haue either done or said hitherto is nothing they are but vaine and slight testimonials of our courage intermixed with much deceit cousinage Death only will assure mee what I haue profited in Philosophie I therefore prepare my selfe without all feare for that day wherein without all sophistication I shall bee able to iudge whether I haue been faint hearted or magnanimious both in word and deed when I vsed to bulke forth so many iniurious and reproachfull words against Fortune Concerning the esteem we are in amongst men it is alwaies doubtfull and declining on euery side also concerning thy studies and endeuors examine well al thy whole life Death shal denounce sentence vpon thee I say that disputatiōs learned discourse sentences collected from the precepts of wise men and speach adorned shew not the true force of courage the greatest cowardes haue many times the hardiest talke then it will onely appeare what thou hast profited when thou commest to combate with Death I am well content with humane condition I haue no feare of this iudgement Thou art yonger what cares he Here is no accompt made of yeeres no man
also in our mindes than wee woonder at the same But what greater sottishnesse is there then to woonder that the thing which falles out euery day should happen one day Our limites are expresly set downe where the inexorable necessitie of Destinie hath placed them but no man knowes howe neere the time is Let vs therefore so frame our minds as if it were already come vnto the point Let vs not deferre nor procrastinate Hee that setteth his last hand euery day to his life hath nothing to do with time Therefore my friend Lucilius make haste to liue and thinke that as many dayes as thou leadest so many liues thou liuest Hee that liues in hope the neerest time euer slippes him and he is possessed with such a greedinesse of liuing that the feare of death maketh him most miserable Lame him of an hande of a foote of a thigh breake his back dash out all his teeth so hee liueth it is enough for him all goes well Moreouer is it such a miserie to die He desires the extreamest euils and that which is most hard to endure he wisheth to prolong and vndergoe a great time And at what price for what reward To obtain long life But then what maner of life is this A lingering death Is there any one that would request to linger in torment to perish member after member or that would rather lose his life by little and little than to be suddenly and quickely dispatcht Denie now therfore if you can that it is not a great benefit of Nature this necessitie of death imposed vpon vs. Many are ready to make worser bargaines to betray their friends for to liue longer themselues to prostitute their owne children that they may see the day of testimoniall of so many impieties We must shake off this desire of liuing and say it is no matter when wee suffer seeing that one day suffer it wee must It imports not how long thou liuest but how wel And long life is often a preiudice to liuing well Epist. CIII WE attend another originall and state of things Wherfore without fear expect this diffinitiue houre which shall fetch thee from hence All that thou seest about thee suppose it to bee but moueable the necessaries of thine Inne thou hast further to go Nature satisfieth men at their departure as well as at their entrie Wee carrie away no more than wee brought all that couers thee must be taken away thy skinne shal be thy last couering And this thy skin also thy flesh thy blood dispersed diffused ouer al thy body these bones these veins and sinewes which nourished the fluent parts shall bee snatcht and taken away frō thee The day which thou fearest to bee thy last shall be thy natiuity to an eternall life Thou criest and lamentest so doeth hee that is borne Wherfore art thou sad so ordinarily is hee So the couerings and swathing bands of those that are borne perish come to nothing How louest thou these things as thine owne these are things wherewith thou art but couered But a day wil come wherein thoushalt be laid opē that shall drawe thee frō the habitatiō of this stinking corruptible body From this time forward meditate on higher things The secrets of Nature shall one day be discouered vnto thee There shall be a dissipation of this darkenesse and a most cleere light shall reverberate on all our parts Imagine to thy selfe that it shall be the resplendence of a number of starres ioyning their lights together There shall be no more vapor or shadow to obscure the cleere ayre all quarters of heauen shall be equally relucent the day and the night which come by turnes are but accidents of this inferiour ayre Thou wilt say thou liuedst here in darknesse when being perfect and entire thou beholdest the whole light it selfe which now thou hast but a glimpse of by the narrowe casements of thine eyes and thou admirest it a-far off What wilt thou then thinke of diuine light when thou seest it in the proper place This contemplation will suffer nothing base abiect or vile to creepe into the minde It intimates vnto vs that God is a witnesse to all our actions it cōmands vs to approue our selues before him to prepare our selues hereafter for him to set before our eyes that eternity the which whosoeuer comprehēds in his intellect he is afraid of no armie nor daunted with the sound of the trumpet nor trembleth for any threates that can bee vsed against him For what can he iustly feare which hopes to die Cōceiue how beneficiall good examples are and then thou wilt see that the memorie of worthy men is no lesse profitable than their presence Epist. CVIII WHy it is no such excellent thing to liue Thou art entred into a long and tedious way thou must fall and rise vp againe droop be weary Here thou leauest one companion there thou cariest another to his graue and in another place art put thy self in the same fear Must this rough and vneuen way bee passed amids so many obstacles Must we needs die Let the minde be prepared against all things Let him knowe that hee is come into a goodly place where teares and cares make their residence where pale sicknesse and sad olde age haue chosen their habitation We must necessarily passe our life in such company These things cannot bee auoided Thou mayest well contemne and make litle reckoning of them But you cannot make this slight regard when you often think theron and cast your compt as of things that must come to passe There is no man but he approaches more couragiously to that whereunto of long time he hath been prepared and makes the more forcible resistāce whereas contrariwise a man taken on the sudden not prepared is astonished with the least matters Now seeing all things are cumbersome thogh it were but for their instability and noueltie by ruminating thereon cōtinually thou shalt be not apprentise or vnskilfull of any euil Let vs admire nothing wherunto we are born And none can cōplaine of them because they are equall to all equall I meane in this point in that he which once escaped them is subiect to incurre them another time For the law is not sayd to bee iust and equall because all men equally vse the same but in that it was iustly constituted for all Let our mindes bee reduced to an equity and without complaining of our mortall nature let vs pay our tribute chearfully Doth Winter bring colde why colde is necessary The Summer is it hot why heate also wee must haue Doeth intemperate ayre preiudice our health Sicknesse cannot be auoyded Somtimes a sauage beaste encounters vs and an otherwhile a man more pernicious thā the wild beasts themselues Fire consumes one water another We cannot tel how to change the nature of things The best is to pay that we cannot be released of and to second and follow the will of God without murmuring from whō all
into some straying and by-path Euen so this bodie procures diuers occupatiōs which dull the soules point and slacken our intentions so as the holy man Iob said well to this purpose Iob. 10. Thou hast made mee of clay and slime If this body be of clay we are onely plaistered therewith but it dissolues not nor distempers the soule with the filth of his Intemperāce Thou hast apparelled me saith he with skin and flesh thou hast interlaced me with bones and sinewes So that our soule is confined and extended thorow the sinewes of the bodie many times shee is as it were stiffe and otherwhiles crooked Hee addeth Thou hast not exempted me from iniquitie but if I bee wicked accursed be I yet if I were iust I durst not lift vp my head because I am all confusion for thou hast inuironed me with temptation What is this life but a place ful of ginnes and snares We walke amidst the nets and conuerse in the thickest of many daungers Before Iob had said The life of man is it not a battell vpon earth It is very materiall that hee said vpon earth for there is a life for man in heauen Iob 7. His life addeth he is like a labourers work which is to say spent in toy e and trauel consuming it selfe in vanities ebbing away in words hauing a mansion place in dust a life in slime and clay without resolution or constancie In the day he desires night before he eates he cries and weeps at the time of his repast there is nothing but teares in this life grief feare carefulnes incessant troubles trauell without solace anger and horrible anguish Many wish death cannot obtaine it if they obtaine this good they reioice because it is only death that bringeth a man to repose CAAP. 4. That Death is altogether good aswell because it procures an end to sin as in that the world is thereby redeemed BVt I heare some replie how it is written that God made not Death that life was in the Garden of Eden wherein God had planted the Tree of life and life is the light of men and so consequently the death that entred in is euill I demaund in what sense one may tearme it euill if according to the opinion of the heathen it hath no more feeling or if according to the Apostle Christ is gaine with whom it were better to be How then can death be an euill thing if after the same wee haue no feeling at all For where there is no sense of feeling there can bee no griefe seeing to be grieued is to feele ones selfe euill Or if there be any sense and seeling after death there is then life after death and the soule which vseth sense and hath life suruiueth the body after a separation by death But seeing the life and soule remain after death that which is good continues it not being annihillated by death but contrariwise it is augmented for there is no impediment of death that can detaine the soule but shee labours with the more efficacie being intentiue on those things that properly belong vnto her without being tied to the body which in stead of pleasuring ouerchargeth makes the soule to sinke vnder her burden What euill then receiues the soule if it be maintained in puritie that is to say in the knowledge and feare of God But if she haue done otherwise death notwithstanding is not euill but the life which was not a true life for wee cannot rightly call the course race of mankind a life which is so dayly assaulted and corrupted by sinne Why then doe we accuse death which doeth giue the reward of life or else which finisheth the afflictions miseries of the world I conclude therfore that either death enioyes the happines of his repose or is tormented by reason of the euill of a precedent life Now consider me this point well If life be a burden death is then a discharge and releasement thereof if life bee a punishment death is a deliuerance if there be any iudgement after death there is then a life after death Shall wee then say that such a death is not good Whē as life heere belowe is good how cā the death out of the world be euil seeing there is no apprehension which wee neede to feare during this life What makes this mortall life good but pietie righteousnes Life therfore is not good in respect of the soule bodies vniō but because by the feare of God it putteth to flight this euill and obtaines the happinesse of death more performing that which concerneth the good of the soule than that which pertaines to the society and coniunction of the soule body together If we call life good which is the mirrour of the soule separated from the body and if the soule be good which raiseth and retireth it selfe from the cōpany of the body out of question death is good which frees and deliuers the soule from the society and company of the body In what sense therfore soeuer wee take it death is good both because it separates two aduerse parties for fear lest they should ruine one another and in that it is a Port of refuge to those who hauing roued vp and downe the sea of this world search by faith the hauen of repose as also because it makes not our condition worse but reserues vs to a iudgement to come such as particularly wee are found hereunto may be added that it holds vs at rest it withdrawes vs frō their malice that suruiue in the world and replenisheth vs with the enioyance of those things which before we desired expected To this we may also annexe that it is in vain for men to fear death as if it brought an end to Nature For in calling to minde that God made not Death but man after he fell to sinne receiued the sentence of his disloyaltie and reuolt which was that he should returne to dust out of which hee was framed wee shall finde that death is the ende of sinne for feare least if life had beene prolonged sinne might the more haue augmented The Lord therfore suffered Death to enter into the world to the ende that sinne might cease And to preuent that Nature might not end in death he hath set down a day when all shall rise againe so that Death doeth extinguish sinne and makes our nature perdurable for euer And thus death is the portion of all the liuing And thou must passe it with a good courage for so we go from corruptiō to incorruption from death to immortalitie from labor to repose Let not therefore the very name of death terrifie thee but rather reioice in the commodities of so excellent a passage For what other thing is death but the funerall of our vices and resurrection of our vertues and therfore there was one that said very truely Let my life die the death of the Iust which is to say let it finish for the laying
our saluation Hee sheweth vs vaine and ridiculous things afarre of and perswadeth vs that all is magnificence and happines he terrifies vs with such things as we should not be afraid of and maketh vs flie that which we should embrace He calles summons allures and flatters vs by the interposition of our concupiscences if this bee not enough hee stormeth and rageth endeuouring to terrifie vs both within and without O eternall light and truth Oh heauenly Lord most mercifull Father scatter and dissipate these clowdes of ignorance and errour illuminate our vnderstandings and permit vs not to approach vnto that which thou commādest vs to flie which is pernicious and hurtfull to vs that we may desire nothing but that which is truely to be desired that is to say thy selfe who art the source and spring of all goodnes and of our life and eternal felicitie All flesh is grasse and the glorie of a man is as the flower of the fielde procure then that we may seeke for our stay and cōtentment in the grace which thy Sonne brought vnto vs that our life may bee inclosed in him so that in the day of separation of our soules from their bodies wee may absolutely finde it again in heauen in expecting chearfully and with assured ioy the most happie resurrection of this flesh wherein all corruption infirmitie and reproach being abolished and death it selfe swallowed vp in victory we may liue eternally with thee in an incōprehensible felicitie wherwith thou shalt be glorified Maintain therefore thy childrē good Lord in this faith hope accōplishing in them thy worke till they intirely be with thy self to enioy the inheritāce glory which thy onely Sonne purchased for them by his merits Amen A Prayer O Lord Iesus Christ creator redeemer of mankind who didst say I am the Way the Truth and the Life I beseech thee by that vnspeakeable charitie which thou shewedst in offering thy selfe vp to death for vs that thou wilt not permit me to swarue a whit frō thee that art the Way or to distrust in thy promises seeing thou art Trueth performest whatsoeuer thou doest promise Make me to take delight only in thee who art eternal Life without whō ther is nothing worthy to bee desired either in heauen or earth Thou hast taught vs the true and onely way to saluation that we might not goe wandring vp and downe in the by-paths of this world reuealing vnto vs more clearely than the Sunne at noon dayes what wee ought to beleeue performe and hope after wherin we should rest satisfied and contented It is thou that madest vs to vnderstand how vnhappy we were in Adam that there is no meanes to escape the perdition wherein wee are altogether plunged but by faith in thee Thou art that resplendent light which appearest vnto those that trauell thorow the desert of this life and who hauing deliuered vs out of the darkenesse of spirituall Aegypt● doest disperse the clowdes of our vnderstanding and enlightenest vs that wee may contend after the promised inheritāce which is eternall life into the which the vnfaithfull shall neuer enter but those who assuredly relie on thy holy promises Oh what goodnesse hast thou vouchsafed to send down from the bosome of thy Father and his eternall throne vpon earth in putting on our beggerly nature and of a Master to become a seruant that by thy doctrine thou mightest chace away the darkenesse of our ignorance prepare and addresse our feete vnto the way of peace and make plaine vnto vs the way of saluation such a way being appointed vs in following whereof no man can goe astray or bee wearie seeing thy grace and power doeth accompanie vs therein all the dayes of our life And moreouer by the comfort of thy holy Spirit thou doest strengthen vs and redouble our courage in passing the same Thy worde is the breade wherewith we are nourished and thy promise is the staffe wheron we leane Thou thy selfe by a secret and incomprehensible power doest conduct and maintain vs therein after an admirable maner that we might the more couragiously march towards thee both in foule and faire weather And as thou hindrest and preseruest vs from falling into the snares of the world and Sathan euen so in that thou art the trueth it selfe thou remouest farre from vs all doubtes scruples and distrusts that might anie wayes disturbe arrest or diuert vs during this our course Thou makest vs to discerne the ende and scope of heauenly vocation the worlds miserie and vanitie the fragilitie of this present life the gate of death and the happie and blessed life which is within the same And as thou art this true life euen in this worlde thou doest quicken vs by thy truth that are poore miserable dead wretches in sinne Thou augmentest this life by the ministerie and efficacie of thy holy Gospel and confirmest it by the vse of the Sacraments which thou hast ordained for the fortification of thy childrens faith while our corruption and that which is mortall in vs being defaced by the resurrection wee may exist and liue eternally with thee in bodie and soule then when thou shalt bee all in all Eternall life is to knowe the true God thee his Sonne who was sent vnto vs. Now wee behold thee by faith as in a mirror obscurely but one day we shal see thee face to face to be trāsform'd into thy glory wholly reformed according to thine owne image I beseech thee most mercifull Sauiour that thou wilt increase my faith that I may bee so well grounded in the doctrine of my saluation as nothing may be able to misleade mee augment in mine heart the reuerence which I owe vnto thee that I may neuer swarue from thy obedience strengthen me in such a sort that neither alluremēts nor threatnings either catch or astonish mee but that I may adhere constantly to thee who art my life euen vnto death Procure that in the power of thy promises and holy spirit I may bee heated more and more in thy loue and so leauing behinde the things of this world I may bend my selfe to that which is solide and perfect Encrease thy grace in mee that from day to day I may die in my selfe to bee reuiued and conducted by thy fauour fearing none but thee O most mighty and puissaunt God louing none but thee euen as there is nothing truely amiable but thy glorious selfe boasting in nothing but thy grace and mercie which is that whereof onely thy seruants should glorie they seeking after none other happinesse but thee nor desiring nothing but thy selfe who art the full and perfect felicitie of all the faithfull Amen Another LOrd Iesus that art alwayes mercifull and ceasest not to bee my Sauiour as well in aduersitie as prosperitie graunt mee the grace to rest satisfied with all humble obedience in thy will whēsoeuer it shal please thee to mixe some sower amongst so much sweete as thou hast caused mee