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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
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
world what is there more to bee found but a dayly conflict and combate with the diuell a continuall warre where wee must be dayly at hand blows to receiue and entertain his charges We carrie on our armes in front vpon the flanke and on the back auarice impudicity choler and ambition we must wrastle incessantly with losse of breath against the desire of the flesh the allurements of the world Mans vnderstanding being assaulted battered on al sides by Sathās artillery knowes not whither to retire or how to resist but with great dāger If auarice be vāquished then cōcupiscence marcheth fair large if this be repelled ambitiō giues the onset Ambitiō being discōfited choler is in a mutinie pride mounts on horfebacke drūkennes storms enuy giues th' alarme discord cuts off all hope of recōciliatiō Thou art vrged to do that which the law forbids thou promisest that which is not lawful for thee to perform Seeing the soule is continually subiect to so many euils seeing so many dāgers attend vs without ceasing is it possible that wee can take any great pleasure to be here amongst the diuels glittering trenchāt blades Wee might rather bee desirous by a ready and sudden death to bee quickly conueyed to Iesus Christ as he himself hath sufficiētly summoned vs saying Verely verely Iohn 16. I say vnto you you shall weepe and lament and the worlde shall reioice but your sadnesse shal be conuerted into ioy I know no man but he takes delight to go to a place where mirth is and no body seekes after sadnesse and mourning The same Lord sets downe when our sadnesse shal be turned into ioy saying I will see you once again and your hearts shall reioice when no man shal be able to take your ioy away from you Seeing then that there is nothing but ioy in seeing of Iesus Christ and that wee cannot bee truely ioyfull but in seeing of him what a blindnesse and folly is it to loue anguish the trauels and miseries of the world in stead of chearefully imbracing the life ioyes eternall This fals out my deare brethren for want of faith Men thinke that what God promiseth who is truth it selfe and whose word is eternall and inuiolable towards those that beleeue shuld not be performed If any honorable mā of authority and place should promise thee this or that thou wouldst make account of it beleeuing that he whōthou knowest to be very obseruant of his word would not abuse or deceiue thee Hearkē therfore to God who speaks vnto thee yet like a disloyal wretch as thou art wilt thou stil wauer in inconstancie God promiseth vnto thee perpetuall eternall life at thy departure out of this world doubtest thou thereof This is the true ignorance of God to offend by incredulity Iesus Christ the Doctor of all beleeuers to liue faithlesse in the house of faith which is the Church Christ the Author of our good saluation shewes the profit which redownds vnto vs by death when hee obserued his disciples sadnesse because he had told them of his departure out of this world he said vnto thē If you loued mee Iohn 14. you would be ioyfull for my going to my Father teaching vs by this to bee merrie and not sad when our friends doe but as it were dislodge out of this life Saint Paul being mindfull of such a matter entreateth therof in one of his Epistles and sayeth Christ is gaine vnto me both in life and death he reputing it for a wonderfull gaine to bee no longer detained by the snares of this world Phil. 3. to be no more subiect to the sinnes and vices of the flesh to bee exempted from all afflictions deliuered from the diuels iawes and to goe into the ioyes of eternal saluation whither his Sauiour called him Some wonder to see the heate of this disease lay hold on Christians aswel as on Infidels as if Christians had receiued the promises of the Gospel to bee touched with no discōmodities before the performāce of the same but to enioy at their pleasures the happinesse of this world whereas on the contrary he is tormented with a thousand euils here below that by this means he may conceiue how eternal ioyes are reserued for him But whereas we finde it strange that the plague shuld sweep away Christians aswel as Infidels haue we any priuiledge in this worlde from others so long as we are clad in this mortall body correspondent to the lawe of our first birth While we liue here belowe wee are ioyned with other men by the bonds of this corruptible flesh but so in spirit wee are separated from them While therefore this corruptible puts on incorruption our mortall parts be made immortall and that we ascend to God our Father all the discōmodities of the world are common to vs and we haue our shares therin with other men For example when any Frosts procure the earths sterility euery one hath his part in the famine ensuing If an enemie take into his hands any towne all the inhabitants lose their liberty together when the seasons are cleare and scorching all are constrained to endure this drought and if the rockes split a shippe asunder the passengers perish We are subiect as others be to the infirmity of the eyes to burning agues and to all kinds of diseases that afflict all the members of the body as long as we liue a mortall life in this world aswell as other men Nay and if a Christian man doe but well vnderstand vpon what couenants hee beleeued in God hee will conceiue and be clearly resolued that he ought to bee in conflict more than others by reason hee hath a continuall warre aboue all others against the diuel The holy Scriptures teach admonish vs of this saying My sonne when thou entrest into Gods seruice bee firme in righteousnes feare and prepare thy soule for temptation Also perseuer in sorrowe and feare be patient in humilitie for yron tryes both golde and siluer In this manner Iob hauing lost his goods and children and being all spread ouer with botches and sores yet was hee not vanquished for all this but onely tried considering that in all his paines and griefe hee shewed the patience of a man that feared God when hee sayd Naked came I out of my mothers wombe Iob 1. 2 and naked I must returne to the earth againe GOD gaue and GOD tooke away as God would so hath it happened blessed be the name of the Lord. And his wife importuning him to growe impatient and to belch out some blasphemous cōplaint against God his aunswere was thou speakest like a fool for if wee haue receiued good from Gods hand why should we not also suffer euils from him During al these hard accidents Iob neuer let any thing slip out of his mouth wherein God might be offended For so God himselfe witnesseth saying vnto Sathan Hast thou well considered my seruant Iob how ther
is not his like in the worlde Tobias after so many religious workes and so high commendations of his charitable pitie became blind and yet for all this he feared and blessed God in his afflictiō and he was the more worthy of praise in withstāding his wiues temptation who would haue corrupted him saying Where are thy good deedes Tob. 2. Thou soundly feelest now the euils which thou endurest but hee being settled in the loue of God and armed with the reuerence of his name to support all affliction he yeelded not in furie to such an assault but honoured the Lorde the more by this his second patience so that afterwards this testimoniall was giuen him by Raphael saying It is an excellent thing to vnderstand and magnifie the workes of God for when thou and thy faire daughter Sarra prayed I presented the same before the face of the Lord. And when thou didst bury the dead with out delay rising euē frō the table for this purpose I was sent to proue thee and to heale thee and thy faire daughter Sarra for I am Raphael one of the holy Angels which assisteth and am cōuersant before Gods brightnes The righteous alwaies shewed themselues patient and the Apostles knew well the Lordes meaning herein that his seruaunts should not murmure in aduersitie but couragiously and patiently endure whatsoeuer fell to their share in this world There was no sinne that the Iewish people ran oftener into thā this of murmuring and impatience against God as he himselfe declareth whē he addeth Let them cease from despiting me and they shall not die Dearest brethren wee must not murmure in aduersity but patiently and constantly indure whatsoeuer may happen calling to minde what is writtē that an afflicted spirit is an acceptable sacrifice Psal 51. vnto God and that hee reiects not the humble and contrite hart The holy Ghost also speakes by the mouth of Moyses The Lord thy God shal afflict thee send thee famine to make thee looke into thine owne hart whether thou keepest his commaundements or no. Also Deut. 8.13 the Lord your God tempteth you to knowe whether you loue the Lord your God withall your heart and with all your soule Obserue how Abraham was acceptable vnto God when to obey him he made no account to lead his owne sonne to death and so was ready to be a paricide Thou which canst not loose thy sonne hee being subiect to death as others are what wouldest thou doe if God should sentence thee to put thy selfe to death Faith the feare of God should make thee ready to performe whatsoeuer his pleasure is Though thou losest thy goods though diseases vexe and torment thee on all sides though thy wife thy children thy friends be haled frō thee by death all this should not make thee to shrink although such blowes bee very heauie such trials ought not to quaile and daunt the faith of a Christian but rather stirre vp his force and courage to fight considering that the assurance of a future good should make vs contemne the annoyaunce of all present euils There can bee no Victorie before the battel fought if after the comming to hand-blowes the fielde bee left by either side then the victor obtains a glorious crowne A good Pilot is discouered in the storm and a good souldier in the conflict It is but ridiculous to braue and brag when blowes are far off to set vp the bristles against aduersitie is a certaine brand and marke of vertue The tree deep rooted in the earth is not shakē with the blustring of windes the ship that is well keeled and strongly ribbed may well bee tossed but neuer pearced by the waues when wee winnowe the corne in the open ayre the sounde graine feares not the winde which quickly blowes away the straws and chaffe Euen so the Apostle S. Paul after his shipwracks whippings long and durable afflictiōs of body protested that such trials hurt him not at all but rather did stand him in great stead so that in the full course of all these calamities hee profited the more in good An angel of Sathan 2. Cor. 12. said he the sting of my flesh was sent to buffer mee for feare that I might bee puffed vp for the which I thrice prayed vnto the Lord that it might bee remooued from mee and hee sayd Let my grace suffice thee for my vertue is perfected in infirmitie When as therefore some infirmitie weaknesse or other aduersity doth rage then our vertue is made more perfect If proued faith perseuer at last it is crowned according to that which is sayd that the furnace tries the potters vessels and temptatiōs righteous men For the rest they which knowe not God differ from vs in this point that they murmure and complaine in aduersity and contrariwise afflictions are so farre from distracting vs from pietie and Iustice that wee are rather fortified by them amidst griefes and sorrow it selfe If the bloody fluxe did weaken vs if heate make the infirmities of our mouthes more grieuous if our stomacke be sore with continuall vomiting if our eyes looke red like blood if any one lose his feete or other members when hee is constrained to cut them off because they are ready to fal away in pieces if by diuers lāguors maladies happening to the body the strength of the legs come to diminish the hearing be deafened or the sight dulled all this learnes vs to profit more and more in the grace of God What notable valour is this to enter couragiously into the field against so many plagues and euils Can any man obscure his excellencie that stands firme amidst so sundry resolutions without declining or falling to them that put not their trust in God Hee must vnfainedly reioyce and thinke the time well employed when in making trial of his faith and trauailing couragiously we march vnto heauē by the strait gate to receiue from Christ our Iudge the reward of our faith and of eternall life Let him feare death who hauing neuer beene regenerate with water and the spirit is ordained to hell fire He that hath no part in the crosse and death of Christ hee that enters by the first into the second death he that when he leaues this present life is tormented with perpetuall flames hee that onely stands through Gods patience whose sorrow and griefe is only differred and not forgotten Let such an one I say feare death Many of our brothers are dead of this plague which is to say many of them are deliuered out of the worlde As such a mortalitie is a plague to the Iewes Painimes who are Christs enemies so is it a comfortable departure to the seruants of God Though the iust die aswell as the vniust yet think not that good men die the like death as the wicked The children of God are taken into a place of ease repose but the reprobate are drawen to the punishment of eternal fire the beleeuers are presently taken
of the flesh which is enemie to God Subiect wee our soules onely to Iesus Christ that euery one may truely say My soule Psal 62. is it subiect vnto God then it is not subiect vnto the earth nor this world The couetous rich man cannot say so It is the iust and temperate mans protestation But the couetous man saieth My soule thou hast goods enough for many yeers enioy good dayes eate drinke and make good cheare for the auaricious soule is subiect to the pleasures of the flesh whereas on the contrary the righteous mans soule vseth her bodie onely as an instrument or as the handicrafts-man disposeth of his work as he pleaseth and makes such inuentions as are best liking to himselfe shee setting forth such vertues as are best pleasing singing sometimes an Hymne of chastitie otherwhiles a song of temperance a verse of sobrietie the melody of integrity the harmonie of virginitie and then the solemne musick of widdowhood and cōtinence It is true that the Musician addapts himselfe sometimes to his instrument But howsoeuer sing none but honest religious ditties to the end that the voice and instrument may be truely accorded CHAP. 7. That life is annoied with many euils and discōmodies BVt why make I mētion of the snares that are without vs we had need take heede of those ginnes that are layed within our selues for within our bodies there are too many scattered abroad on euery side which we ought to shunne We must not committe the guard of our selues to this body nor mingle our soules therewith Ioine with thy friend and not with thine enimie thy flesh is thine enemie because it contradicteth the law of vnderstanding and contends after nothing but to sowe enimities seditions quarrels and troubles Mingle not thy soule therewith for fear thou confound and defile it altogether For making this cōmixtion thy flesh which should be subiect comes to contemne the soule which ought to command as Souereign seeing she giues life to the body and the flesh on the contrary effects the death of the soule This would therefore bee an ouerthrowing of the operation and almost a confounding both of the one and other substance Shall wee then affirme that the soule receiueth into it selfe the insensibilitie of a dead bodie and that the body likewise communicates with the vertues of the soule Though the soule be infused into the body yet wee may not thinke that shee is there cōfounded Consider the light for an example though it pearce into euery place yet is it not for all this mixed therewith Wee must not therefore confound the offices and effects of so different substances but let the soule reside in the body to quicken gouerne and enlightē the same To this we agree that it suffers with the body for she is sad and Iesus sayd My soule is sad euen to the death discouering in himselfe humane passion and affection The Prophet sayeth also My soule is troubled And as the Musician is mooued according to the song which he singes or plaieth vpon a Recorder Harpe or Organs and by his countenance wee may discerne his passiō so the soule which toucheth plaieth on this bodie as on an instrument of Musicke if she be sage and wise shee will expresse with the ends of her fingers the most inwarde parts which is to say the affections so that a pleasant harmony of good manners will redound thereof and we shal see her obserue such melody in her thoughts actions as that her deliberations and executions will most sweetely accord It is the soule therfore that needes the body but as an instrument And therfore souereigntie is one thing and seruice another and there is difference betweene that which we are and that which is our owne Whosoeuer loues the beauty of the soule hee mav well affirme that he loues the person also but he that loues onely the bodily beautie therof loues not the whole person but onely an external appearāce which withers and consumes away in a small time We rise vp euery day to eate and drinke and yet there is not any one so replenished as that hee may iustly say I need to eate no more We seeke to gayne day after day and yet there is no ende of our desires The eye saith the wiseman is not satisfied with seeing nor the eare with hearing Hee that loueth siluer cannot bee satisfied therewith Eccles 1.4 7. Wee neuer leaue trauelling and yet neuer can we reape the fruite of abundaunce Wee desire without intermission to vnderstand new things and I pray you what is all humane Science but a new breaking of the braine and an augmentation of dolor and griefe Whatsoeuer is hath heretofore been and vnder the Sunne there is nothing new but All is vanitie I doe hate all the parts of this life sayd Ecclesiastes But he that hated life must needs haue thought well of death yea hee did certainely think better of the condition of the dead than of the liuing iudged him happie that neuer made entrance into the world nor had any part in vanitie My hart said he turned aside to discouer the pleasures annoiance and bragges of the wicked I found them more bitter than death it selfe not that death in it selfe is bitter but because it is so to the wicked And life is also more bitter than death for without all comparison it is a more grieuous thing to liue in sin than to die for as long as a wicked man liues his iniquitie encreaseth if he die his sinne comes to an ende Many are glad when they are absolued of their crimes they doe well herein if they determine to amend but they are very sottish in this if their willes still stand to the propagation of offences and better it had been for them to haue beene condemned betimes for impairing the great heape of their sins and misdeedes The Apostle speakes very wel and grauely to this purpose Rom. 1.2 That not onely those which committe wickednes but they also which approue of it are worthie of death and they which performe that that in others they greatly condemne are inexcusable and condemned by their owne sentence for in condemning of others they iudge thēselues He addeth that such mē should not flatter thēselues although for a time they seeme guiltles exempted frō punishment seeing that euen then they are grieuously tormēted in their own consciences being guilty by their own sentence while euery body else iustifies them in themselues double afflicted whensoeuer and as often as they condemne their neighbors faultes But take good heeds O thou man sayd the Apostle how thou contemnest the treasure of patience and the goodnesse of God who calles thee to repentāce and summons thee to change of life but for thy obstinacie head-strong perseuerance in error augments the seueritie of iudgement to come to the ende thou mayest then receiue the due reward of thine iniquities Out of al this before spoken let
vs conclude that death in it self is not an euill thing for there is no death either for those in this world or those out of it For the liuing it is nothing to them because they liue and for the dead they are out of his clouches And so it is no euill or discommoditie to the liuing who haue nothing to do therwith nor to those which in respect of the bodie are insensible and in their soules freely deliuered from the same CAAP. 8. That it is not Death it selfe of which men are afraid the opinion and apprehensiō therof only terrifies IF death be redoubted of the liuing I say it is not death it selfe but the apprehension thereof as euery one applies the same to his owne affections or in respect of his conscience as it is touched therwith whose wounds we may well accuse and not the sharpnes of death For the rest death is the gate of repose to the righteous as on the contrary it is the shipwracke and ruine of the wicked Out of question it is not the passage of death that offendeth them that feare to die but it is the apprehension and horrible conceit of this passage that thus tormenteth them In briefe as I saide before death greeues vs not but the apprehension thereof Now this terrible apprehension is grounded vpon a precedent opinion of our infirmitie and contrarie to trueth for veritie encourageth opinion daunteth vs. I will further auerre opinion it selfe hath a reference to life and not to death and we shal find that it is life it self which we iudge grieuous wher upon it appeares that the apprehensiō which we haue of death must not be referred to death it selfe but to life for if we haue done nothing in our liues whereof to be afeard wee haue no iust cause to feare death for punishment deserued by reason of offences committed feareth those of true iudgemēt and to commit sinne is an action of the liuing and not of the dead Life therefore hath relation to vs and the vigor and propagatiō of the same is supposed to be in our power but death which is the separation of the soule frō the body doth preiudice vs nothing at all The soule is deliuered and the bodie returnes vnto dust from whence it came The deliuered part reioiceth the body which goes to the earth feeles nothing and consequently hath no apprehension therof But if death bee an euill thing how comes it to passe that young men feare not to growe old and flie not the neighbour age vnto death From whence proceeds it that one which foresees his owne death dieth more willingly than another whom death surpriseth of a sudden So that I suppose they are very well satisfied which tooke death to be an euill thing and it were but for this onely reason amongst many others that by life we passe to death and by death we return to life for none can rise again except he first die It is true that fooles feare death as the worst thing that can befall them but the wise desire it because it is the ease of their labours and the end of their trauels For that which otherwise may bee said there are two reasons why fooles feare death one is that they call it death annihilation which in deed cānot be cōsidering that the soule liues when the body is reduced to ashes besides the bodie it selfe also must rise againe Another is because they fear the torments punishments wherof Poeticall books make often mention that is to say the barkings of Cerberus the terrible profunditie of the riuer Cocytus the Ferri-man Caron the troups of Furies the Infernall depths wherein the monster Hydra remaines that deuoures all where wee may see Titius whose intrailes renew growe again after they haue been eaten by a great huge Vulture which neuer ceases to torment him In like manner Ixion who rowles incessantly the great stone with the huge rock hanging iust ouer their heads that make good cheare beeing ready to fall vpon them These be the Poets fables But so that wee must not denie but there is punishment after death And if wee referre that to death which happens after it let vs also referre vnto life that which fals out after life Punishment therefore must haue no relation vnto death the which as before was deliuered is but a separation of the soule from the bodie And this separation is not euill seeing that to be dissolued Phil. 1. and liue with Iesus Christ is the best thing of all others saith the Apostle It followeth then that death of it selfe is not euill True it is that the death of sinners is euill From whence I collect that therefore all death in generall is not bad but that only of sinners in particular for Psal 14. 116. the death of the righteous is precious the which once more declares that the euil lies not indeath but in sinne The Grecians expressed death by a word which imported to haue end because it is the end of this earthly life The Scripture also calleth death a sleep witnesse hereof that which IESVS CHRIST sayde Iohn 10. Our friende Lazarus sleepeth but I will goe and wake him Sleepe is a good thing for then wee take repose according vnto that which was written Psal 3. I slept tooke my rest awaked againe because the Lord receiued mee into his protection The sleep of death therfore is a sweete repose Furthermore the Lord awakes and raiseth vp them that sleepe for he is the resurrection Ther is also a notable sentēce in the Scripture which sayth Eccle. 2. Praise no man before his death for euery one is knowen at the end of his life and he is iudged in his children if he haue taught and instructed them in his owne knowledge for the childrens misgouernment is euer ascribed to the fathers negligence And because euery liuing man is subiect to offend old age it selfe not being exempted here-from we read that Abraham died in a good old age because hee continued still constant in the good affection which he had to serue God Death therfore serues for a restimonie to a precedent life For if the Pilot be not worthy of his commendation before he hath brought his ship secure into the Porte what reputation can we holde a man in before the houre of his death Hee is his owne Pilot amongst the stormes and waues of this life as long as here hee soiournes he is in danger to perish The Captaine receiueth not his triumphaunt Crowne before the victorie be wonne the Souldier layeth not aside his Armes nor hath his due recompense before the ouerthrowe of the enemie The conclusion is that death is the full and entire payment of the faithfull mans wages it is the summe of his rewarde and his finall Quietus est Let vs also consider what Iob sayth Iob 29. That the blessing of the dead came vpon him for though ISAAC blessed his children dying and