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A51181 Essays of Michael, seigneur de Montaigne in three books, with marginal notes and quotations of the cited authors, and an account of the author's life / new rendered into English by Charles Cotton, Esq.; Essais. English Montaigne, Michel de, 1533-1592.; Cotton, Charles, 1630-1687. 1685 (1685) Wing M2479; ESTC R2740 998,422 2,006

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become a Parricide an Incendiary a Waterman a Fidler a Player and a Coachman I hate thee as thou dost deserve and the other Why he should attempt to kill him Because said he I could think of no other Remedy against thy perpetual Mischiefs But the publick and universal Testimonies that were given of him after his Death and will be to all Posterity both of him and all other wicked Princes like him his Tyrannies and abominable Deportment considered who of a sound Judgment can reprove them I am scandaliz'd I confess that in so sacred a Government as that of the Lacedemonians there should be mix'd so hypocritical a Ceremony at the Enterrment of their Kings where all their Confederates and Neighbours and all sorts and Degrees of Men and Women as well as their Slaves cut and slash'd their Fore-heads in Token of Sorrow repeating in their Cries and Lamentations That that King let him have been as wicked as the Devil was the best that ever they had by this means attributing to his Quality the Praises that only belong to Merit and that of Right is properly due to the most supream Desert though lodg'd in the lowest and most inferiour Subject Aristotle who will still have a hand in every thing makes a Quaere upon the Saying of Solon That none can be said to be happy untill he be dead Whether then any one of those who have liv'd and died according to their Hearts Desire if he have left an ill Repute behind him and that his Posterity be miserable can be said to be happy Whilst we have Life and Motion we convey our selves by Fancy and Preoccupation whither and to what we please but once out of Being we have no more any manner of Communication with what is yet in Being and it had therefore been better said of Solon That Man is never happy because never so till after he is no more Quisquam Vix radicitus è vita se tollit ejicit Sed facit esse sui quiddam super inscius ipse Nec removet satis à projecto corpore sese Vindicat. No dying Man can truss his Baggage so But something of him he must leave below Nor from his Carcass that doth prostrate lye Himself can clear or far enough can fly Bertrand de Glesquin dying before the Castle of Rancon near unto Puy in Auvergne the Besieg'd were afterwards upon Surrender enjoyn'd to lay down the Keys of the Place upon the Corps of the dead General Bartolomew d' Alviano the Venetian General hapning to dye in the Service of the Republick in Brascia and his Corps being to be carried thorough the Territory of Verona an Enemy's Country most of the Army were of Opinion to demand safe Conduct from the Veronese supposing that upon such an Occasion it would not be denied but Theodoro Trivulsio highly oppos'd the Motion rather choosing to make his way by force of Arms and to run the hazard of a Battel saying it was by no means decent and very unfit that he who in his Life was never afraid of his Enemies should seem to apprehend them when he was dead And in truth in Affairs of almost the same Nature by the Greek Laws he who made Suit to an Enemy for a Body to give it Burial did by that Act renounce his Victory and had no more Right to erect a Trophy and he to whom such Suit was made was ever whatever otherwise the Success had been reputed Victor By this means it was that Nicias lost the Advantage he had visibly obtain'd over the Corinthians and that Agesilaus on the contrary assur'd that he had before very doubtfully gain'd of the Baeotians These Proceedings might appear very odd had it not been a general Practice in all Ages not only to extend the Concern of our Persons beyond the Limits of Life but moreover to fancy that the Favour of Heaven does not only very often accompany us to the Grave but has also even after Life a Concern for our Ashes of which there are so many ancient Examples waving those of our own Observation of later date that it is not very necessary I should longer insist upon it Edward King of England and the first of that Name having in the long Wars betwixt him and Robert King of Scotland had sufficient Experience of how great Importance his own immediate Presence was to the Success of his Affairs having ever been victorious in whatever he undertook in his own Person when he came to dye bound his Son in a solemn Oath that so soon as he should be dead he should boyl his Body till the Flesh parted from the Bones and reserve them to carry continually with him in his Army so often as he should be oblig'd to go against the Scots as if Destiny had inevitably grapled Victory even to those miserable Remains Jean Zisca the same who so often in Vindication of Wicliffe's Heresies infested the Bohemian State left order that they should flea him after his Death and of his Skin to make a Drum to carry in the War against his Enemies fancying it would much contribute to the Continuation of the Successes he had always obtain'd in the War against them In like manner certain of the Indians in a Day of Battel with the Spaniards carried with them the Bones of one of their Captains in consideration of the Victories they had formerly obtain'd under his Conduct And other People of the same new World do yet carry about with them in their Wars the Relicks of valiant Men who have died in Battel to incite their Courage and advance their Fortune of which Examples the first reserve nothing for the Tomb but the Reputation they have acquir'd by their former Atchievements but these proceed yet further and attribute a certain Power of Operation The last Act of Captain Bayard is of a much better Composition who finding himself wounded to Death with a Harquebuze Shot and being by his Friends importun'd to retire out of the Fight made Answer That he would not begin at the last Gasp to turn his Back to the Enemy and accordingly still fought on till feeling himself too faint and no longer able to sit his Horse he commanded his Steward to set him down against the Root of a Tree but so that he might dye with his Face towards the Enemy which he also did I must yet add another Example equally remarkable for the present Consideration with any of the former The Emperour Maximilian great Grand-father to Philip the Second King of Spain was a Prince endowed throughout with great and extraordinary Qualities and amongst the rest with a singular Beauty of Person but had withall a Humour very contrary to that of other Princes who for the dispatch of their most Important Affairs convert their Close-stool into a Chair of State which was that he would never permit any of his Bed-Chamber in what familiar degree of Favour soever to see him in that Posture and
his Preservation who so much neglects that of his People Whoever will take upon him to maintain that 't is better for a Prince to carry on his Wars by others than in his own Person Fortune will furnish him with Examples enough of those whose Lieutenants have brought great Enterprizes to a happy Issue and of those also whose Presence has done more hurt than good But no virtuous and valiant Prince can with Patience endure so dishonourable Councils under colour of saving his Head like the Statue of a Saint for the Happiness of his Kingdom they degrade him from and declare him incapable of his Office which is Military throughout I know one who had much rather be beaten than to sleep whilst another fights for him and who never without jealousie heard of any brave thing done even by his own Officers in his Absence And Selimus said with very good Reason in my Opinion That Victories obtain'd without the Master were never compleat Much more would he have said that that Master ought to blush for shame to pretend to any share in the Honour having contributed nothing to the work but his Voice and thought nor even so much as those considering that in such work as that the Direction and Command that deserve Honour are only such as are given upon the place and in the heat of the Business No Pilot performs his Office by standing still The Princes of the Ottoman Family the chiefest in the World in Military Fortune have warmly embrac'd this Opinion and Bajazet the second with his Son that swerv'd from it spending their time in Sciences and other retir'd Employments gave great blows to their Empire and Amurath the third now reigning following their Example begins to find the same Was it not Edward the Third King of England who said this of our Charles the Fifth There never was King who so seldom put on his Arms and yet never King who cut me out so much Work He had reason to think it strange as an effect of Chance more than of Reason And let those seek out some other to joyn with them than me who will reckon the Kings of Castile and Portugal amongst the warlike and magnanimous Conquerors because at the distance of twelve hundred Leagues from their lasie abode by the Conduct of their Captains they made themselves Masters of both Indies of whom it would be known if they have but the Courage to go and in Person enjoy them The Emperour Julian said yet further that a Philosopher and a brave man ought not so much as to breathe that is to say not to allow any more to bodily Necessities than what we cannot refuse keeping the Soul and Body still intent and busie about honourable great and virtuous things he was asham'd if any one in publick saw him spit or sweat which is said by some also of the Lacedemonian young men and that Xenophon says of the Persian forasmuch as he conceiv'd that Exercise continual Labour and Sobriety ought to have dried up all those Superfluities What Seneca says will not be unfit for this Place which is that the antient Romans kept their Youth always standing and taught them nothing that they were to learn sitting 'T is a generous desire to wish to dye usefully and like a Man but the Effect lies not so much in our Resolution as good Fortune A thousand have propos'd to themselves in Battel either to overcome or dye who have fail'd both in the one and the other Wounds and Imprisonment crossing their Design and compelling them to live against their Wills There are Diseases that overthrow so much as our Desires and our Knowledge Fortune ought not to second the Vanity of the Roman Legions who bound themselves by Oath either to overcome or dye Victor Marce Fabi revertar ex acie si fallo Jovem patrem Gradivumque Martem aliosque iratos invoco Deos. I will return Marcus Fabius a Conquerour from the Army and if I fail I wish the Indignation of Jove Mars and the other offended Gods may light upon me The Portuguese say that in a certain Place of their Conquest of the Indies they met with Souldiers who had damn'd themselves with horrible Execrations to enter into no other Composition but either to cause themselves to be slain or to remain Victorious and had their Heads and Beards shav'd in token of this Vow 'T is to much purpose for us to hazard our selves and to be obstinate It seems as if blows avoided those that present themselves too briskly to Danger and do not willingly fall upon those who too willingly seek them and so defeat them of their Design Such there have been after having try'd all ways not having been able with all their Endeavour to obtain the Favour of dying by the hand of the Enemy have been constrain'd to make good their Resolution of bringing home the Honour of Victory or of losing their Lives to kill themselves even in the heat of Battel Of which there are other Examples but this is one Philistus General of the naval Army of Dionysius the younger against those of Syracusa presented them Battel which was sharply disputed their Forces being equal In which Engagement he had the better at the first through his own Valour but the Syracusans drawing about his Admiral Gally to environ him after having done great things in his own Person to disengage himself hoping for no relief with his own hand took away that Life he had so liberally and in vain expos'd to the Fury of the Enemy Muley Moluck King of Fez who won the Battel against Sebastian King of Portugal so famous for the Death of three Kings and by the transmission of that great Kingdom to the Crown of Castile was extreamly sick when the Portuguese enter'd in an hostile manner into his Dominions and from that day forward grew worse and worse still drawing nearer to and foreseeing his end Yet never did man better employ his own sufficiency more vigorously and bravely than he did upon this Occasion He found himself too weak to undergo the Pomp and Ceremony of entring into his Camp which after their manner is very Magnificent and therefore resign'd that Honour to his Brother but that was also all of the Office of a General that he resign'd all the rest of greatest Utility and Necessity he most exactly and gloriously performed in his own Person his body lying upon a Couch but his Judgment and Courage upright and firm to his last gasp and in some sort beyond it He might have defeated his Enemy indiscreetly advanc'd into his Dominions without striking a Blow and it was a very unhappy Occurrence that for want of a little Life or some body to substitute in the Conduct of this War and the Affairs of a troubled State he was compell'd to seek a doubtful and bloody Victory having another by a better and surer way already in his hands Notwithstanding he wonderfully manag'd the continuance of his Sickness in
they might have more room and there is scarce two or three little corners of the World that have not felt the effect of such Removals The Romans by this means erected their Colonies for perceiving their City to grow immeasurably populous they eas'd it of the most unnecessary People and sent them to inhabit and cultivate the Lands by them conquer'd sometimes also they purposely maintain'd Wars with some of their Enemies not only to keep their men in action for fear lest Idleness the Mother of Corruption should bring upon them some worse inconvenience Et patimur longae pacis mala saevior armis Luxuria incumbit We suffer th' ills of a long Peace by far Greater and more pernicious than War but also to serve for a Blood-letting to their Republick and a little to evaporate the too vehement heat of their Youth to prune and cleanse the Branches from the Stock too luxuriant in Wood and to this end it was that they formerly maintain'd so long a War with Carthage In the Treaty of Bretigny Edward the third King of England would not in the general Peace he then made with our King comprehend the Controversie about the Dutchy of Brittany that he might have a Place wherein to discharge himself of his Souldiers and that the vast number of English he had brought over to serve him in that Expedition might not return back into England And this also was one reason why our King Philip consented to send his Son John that Foreign Expedition that he might take along with him a great number of hot Young-men that were then in his Pay There are many in our Times who talk at this rate wishing that this hot Emotion that is now amongst us might discharge it self in some neighbouring War for fear lest all the peccant Humours that now reign in this politick Body of ours may not diffuse themselves farther keep the Fever still in the height and at last cause our total Ruin and in truth a Foreign is much more supportable than a Civil War but I do not believe that God will favour so unjust a design as to offend and quarrel others for our own advantage Nil mihi tam valde placeat Rhamnusia virgo Quod temere invitis suscipiatur heris In War that does invade another's right Whose end is plunder I take no delight And yet the weakness of our condition does often push us upon the necessity of making use of ill means to a good end Lycurgus the most vertuous and perfect Legislator that ever was invented this unjust practice of making the Helotes who were there Slaves drunk by force by so doing to teach his People Temperance to the end that the Spartiates seeing them so overwhelmed and buried in Wine might abhor the excess of this beastly Vice And yet they were more too blame who of old gave leave that Criminals to what sort of death soever condemn'd should be cut up alive by the Physicians that they might make a true discovery of our inward parts and build their Art upon greater certainty for if we must run into excesses 't is more excusable to do it for the health of the Soul than that of the Body as the Romans train'd up the People to Valour and the contempt of Dangers and Death by those furious Spectacles of Gladiators and Fencers who being to fight it out to the last cut mangled and killed one another in their Presence Quid vesani aliud sibi vult ars impia ludi Quid mortes juvenum quid sanguine pasta voluptas Of such inhumane sports what further use What Pleasure can slaughters of men produce and this custom continued till the Emperour Theodosius his time Arripe dilatam tua dux in tempora famam Quodque patris superest successor laudis habeto Nullus in Vrbe cadat cujus sit poena Voluptas Jam solis contenta feris infamis arena Nulla cruentatis homicidia ludat in armis Prince take the Honours destin'd for thy Reign Inherit of thy Father those remain Henceforth let none at Rome for sport be slain Let beast's Blood stain th' infamous Theater And no more Homicides be acted there It was in truth a wonderful Example and of great advantage for the training up the People to see every day before their Eyes a hundred two hundred nay a thousand couples of Men arm'd against one another cut one another to pieces with so great a constancy of Courage that they were never heard to utter so much as one syllable of Weakness or Commiseration never seen to turn their back nor so much as to make one cowardly step to evade a Blow but rather expose their Necks to the Adversaries Sword and present themselves to receive the stroke And many of them when wounded to Death have sent to ask the Spectators if they were satisfied with their behaviour before they lay down to dye upon the Place It was not enough for them to Fight and to Dye bravely but cheerfully too insomuch that they were hiss'd and curs'd if they made any Dispute about receiving their Death The very Maids themselves set them on consurgit ad ictus Et quoties victor ferrum jugulo inserit illa Delicias ait esse suas pectusque jacentis Virgo modesta jubet converso pollice rumpi The modest Virgin is delighted so With the fell sport that she applauds the blow And when the Victor baths his bloody brand In 's fellow's Throat and lays him on the sand Then she 's most pleas'd and shews by signs she 'd fain Have him rip up the bosom of the slain The first Romans only condemn'd Criminals to this Example but they have since employ'd innocent Slaves in the work and even Freemen too who sold themselves to this effect nay moreover Senators and Knights of Rome and also Women Nunc caput in mortem vendunt funus arenae Atque hostem sibi quisque parat cum bella quiescunt They sell themselves to death and since the Wars Are ceas'd each for himself a Foe prepares Hos inter fremitus novosque lusus Stat sexus rudis insciusque ferri Et pugnat capit improbus viriles Amidst these Tumults and Alarms The tender Sex unskill'd in Arms Immodestly will try their mights And now engag'd in manly Fights which I should think strange and incredible if we were not accustom'd every day to see in our own Wars many thousands of men of other Nations for Money to stake their Blood and their Lives in Quarrels wherein they have no manner of concern CHAP. XXIV Of the Roman Grandeur I will only say a word or two of this infinite Argument to shew the simplicity of those who compare the pittiful Grandeurs of these Times to that of Rome In the seventh Book of Cicero's Familiar Epistles and let the Grammarians put out that sirname of Familiar if they please for in truth it is not very proper and they who in stead of
Friends to the People of Rome and to enter the Town as into a Confederate City without any manner of Hostility of which he also gave them all possible Assurance but having for the greater Pomp brought his whole Army in with him it was no more in his Power with all the Endeavour he could use to command his People so that Avarice and Revenge despising and trampling under foot both his Authority and all Military Discipline he there at once saw his own Faith violated and a considerable part of the City sack'd and ruin'd before his Face Cleomenes was wont to say That what Mischief soever a Man could do his Enemy in time of War was above Justice and nothing accountable to it in the Sight of Gods and Men. And according to this Principle having concluded a Cessation with those of Argos for seven days the third Night after he fell upon them when they were all buried in Security and Sleep and put them to the Sword alledging for his Excuse That there had no Nights been mention'd in the Truce but the Gods punish'd his Perfidy In a time of Parle also and that the Citizens were intent upon their Capitulation the City of Cassilinum was taken by Surprize and that even in the Age of the justest Captains and the best Discipline of the Roman Militia for it is not said that it is not lawful for us in Time and Place to make Advantage of our Enemies want of Understanding as well as their want of Courage and doubtless War has a great many Priviledges that appear reasonable even to the Prejudice of Reason And therefore here the Rule fails Neminem id agere ut ex alterius praedetur inscitia That no one should prey upon anothers Folly But I am astonish'd at the great Liberty allow'd by Xenophon in such Cases and that both by Precept and the Example of several Exploits of his compleat General An Author of very great Authority I confess in those Affairs as being in his own Person both a great Captain and a Philosopher of the first Form of Socrates his Disciples and yet I cannot consent to such a measure of License as he dispenses in all Things and Places Monsieur d' Aubigny having besieged Capua and play'd a furious Battery against it Signior Fabricio Colonne Governour of the Town having from a Bastion begun to parle and his Souldiers in the mean time being a little more remiss in their Guard our People took advantage of their Security enter'd the Place at unawares and put them all to the Sword And of later Memory at Yvoy Signior Juliano Romero having play'd that part of a Novice to go out to Capitulate with the Constable at his Return found his Place taken But that we might not scape Scot-free the Marquess of Pescara having laid Siege to Genoa where Duke Octavio Fregosa commanded under our Protection and the Articles betwixt them being so far advanc'd that it was look'd upon as a done thing and upon the Point to be concluded several Spaniards in the mean time being slip'd in under the Priviledge of the Treaty seiz'd on the Gates and made use of this Treachery as an absolute and fair Victory and since at Ligny in Barrois where the Count de Brienne commanded the Emperour having in his own Person beleaguer'd that Place and Bartheville the said Count's Lieutenant going out to parle whilst he was Capitulating the Town was taken Fu il vincer sempre maj laudabil cosae Vinca si o per fortuna o per ingegno Fame ever does the Victor's Praises ring And Conquest ever was a glorious thing Which way soe're the Conqu'rour purchas'd it Whether by Valour Fortune or by Wit say they But the Philosopher Chrysippus was of another Opinion wherein I also concur for he was us'd to say That those who run a Race ought to imploy all the Force they have in what they are about and to run as fast as they can but that it is by no means fair in them to lay any hand upon their Adversary to stop him nor to set a Leg before him to throw him down And yet more generous was the Answer of that great Alexander to Polypercon who persuaded him to take the Advantage of the Nights Obscurity to fall upon Darius By no means said he it is not for such a Man as I am to steal a Victory Malo me fortunae poeniteat quam victoriae pudeat I had rather repent me of my Fortune than be asham'd of my Victory Atque idem fugientem haud est dignatus Orodem Sternere nec jacta coecum dare Cuspide vulnus Obvius adversoque occurrit seque viro vir Contulit haud furto melior sed fortibus armis His Heart disdain'd to strike Orodes dead Or unseen basely wound him as he fled But gaining first his Front wheels round and there Bravely oppos'd himself to his Career And fighting Man to Man would let him see His Valour scorn'd both Odds and Policy CHAP. VII That the Intention is Judge of our Actions 'T IS a Saying That Death discharges us of all our Obligations However I know some who have taken it in another Sense Henry the Seventh King of England articled with Don Philip Son to Maximilian the Emperour and Father to the Emperour Charles the Fifth when he had him upon English Ground that the said Philip should deliver up the Duke of Suffolk of the White Rose his mortal Enemy who was fled into the Low Countries into his Hands which Philip not knowing how to evade it accordingly promis'd to do but upon condition nevertheless that Henry should attempt nothing against the Life of the said Duke which during his own Life he perform'd but coming to dye in his last Will commanded his Son to put him to Death immediately after his Decease And lately in the Tragedy that the Duke of Alva presented to us in the Persons of two Counts Egmont and Horne at Brussels there were very remarkable Passages and one amongst the rest that the said Count Egmont upon the security of whose Word and Faith Count Horne had come and surrendred himself to the Duke of Alva earnestly entreated that he might first mount the Scaffold to the end that Death might disingage him from the Obligation he had past to the other In which Case methinks Death did not acquit the former of his Promise and the second was satisfied in the good Intention of the other even though he bad not died with him for we cannot be oblig'd beyond what we are able to perform by reason that the Effects and Intentions of what we promise are not at all in our Power and that indeed we are Masters of nothing but the Will in which by necessity all the Rules and whole Duty of Mankind is founded and establish'd And therefore Count Egmont conceiving his Soul and Will bound and indebted to his Promise although he had not the Power to make it good had doubtless been
his Prisoner to her as he accordingly did the Gentlemen of France never denying any thing to Ladies Does she not seem to be an Artist here Constantine the Son of Hellen founded the Empire of Constantinople and so many Ages after Constantine the Son of Hellen put an end to it Sometimes she is pleas'd to Emulate our Miracles We are told that King Clouis Besieging Angoulesme the Walls fell down of themselves by Divine Favour And Bouchet has it from some Author that King Robert having sat down before a City and being stole away from the Seige to go keep the Feast of St. Aignan at Orleans as he was in Devotion at a certain place of the Mass the Walls of the beleaguered City without any manner of Violence fell down with a sudden Ruine But she did quite contrary in our Milan War for Captain Rense laying Seige to the City Verona and having carried a Mine under a great part of the Wall the Mine being sprung the Wall was lifted from its base but dropt down again nevertheless whole and entire and so exactly upon its foundation that the Besieged suffer'd no Inconvenience by that Attempt Sometimes she plays the Physician Jason Phereus being given over by the Physicians by reason of a desperate Imposthumation in his Breast having a mind to rid himself of his Pain by Death at least in a Battel threw himself desperately into the thickest of the Enemy where he was so fortunately wounded quite through the Body that the Imposthume brake and he was perfectly cur'd Did she not also excel the Painter Protogenes in his Art Who having finish'd the Picture of a Dog quite tir'd and out of breath in all the other parts excellently well to his own liking but not being able to express as he would the slaver and foam that should come out of his Mouth vext and angry at his work he took his Spunge which by cleaning his Pencils had imbib'd several sorts of Colours and threw it in a rage against the Picture with an intent utterly to deface it when Fortune guiding the Spunge to hit just upon the Mouth of the Dog it there perform'd what all his Art was not able to do Does she not sometimes direct our Counsels and correct them Isabel Queen of England being to Sail from Zeland into her own Kingdom with an Army in favour of her Son against her Husband had been lost had she come into the Port she intended being there laid wait for by the Enemy but Fortune against her will threw her into another Haven where she Landed in safety And he who throwing a Stone at a Dog hit and kill'd his Mother in Law had he not reason to pronounce this Verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By this I see Fortune does better aim than we Fortune has more Judgment than we Icetes had contracted with two Souldiers to Kill Timoleon at Adranon in Sicily These Villains took their time to do it when he was assisting at a Sacrifice who thrusting into the Crowd as they were making signs to one another that now was a fit time to do their business in steps a third who with a Sword takes one of them full drive over the Pate lays him dead upon the place and away he runs Which the other seeing and concluding himself discover'd and lost he runs to the Altar and begs for Mercy promising to discover the whole truth which as he was doing and laying open the whole Conspiracy behold the third Man who being Apprehended was as a Murtherer thrust and hal'd by the People through the Prease towards Timoleon and other the most Eminent Persons of the Assembly before whom being brought he Crys out for Pardon pleading that he had justly Slain his Fathers Murtherer which he also proving upon the place by sufficient Witnesses which his good Fortune very opportunely supply'd him withal that his Father was really Kill'd in the City of the Leontins by that very Man on whom he had taken his Revenge he was presently Awarded Ten Attick Mine for having had the good Fortune by designing to revenge the the Death of his Father to preserve the Life of the common Father of Sicily This Fortune in her Conduct surpasses all the Rules of Humane Prudence But to conclude is there not a direct Application of her Favour Bounty and Piety manifestly discover'd in this Action Ignatius the Father and Ignatius the Son being proscrib'd by the Triumviry of Rome resolv'd upon this generous Act of mutual kindness to fall by the hands of one another and by that means to frustrate and defeat the Cruelty of the Tyrants and accordingly with their Swords drawn ran full drive upon one another where Fortune so guided the points that they made two equally Mortal Wounds affording withal so much Honour to so brave a Friendship as to leave them just strength enough to draw out their Bloody Swords that they might have liberty to embrace one another in this Dying Condition with so close and hearty an Embrace that the Executioners cut off both their Heads at once leaving the Bodies still fast link'd together in this Noble Knot and their Wounds join'd Mouth to Mouth affectionately sucking in the last Blood and remainder of the Lives of one another CHAP. XXXIV Of one Defect in one Government MY Father who for a Man that had no other advantages than Experience only and his own Natural Parts was nevertheless of a very clear Judgment has formerly told me that he once had thoughts of endeavouring to introduce this Practice that there might be in every City a certain place assign'd to which such as stood in need of any thing might repair and have their Business enter'd by an Officer appointed for that purpose as for Example I enquire for a Chapman to Buy my Pearls I enquire for one that has Pearls to Sell Such a one wants Company to go to Paris such a one enquires for a Servant of such a Quality such a one for a Master such a one enquires for such an Artificer some for one thing some for another every one according to what he wants And doubtless these mutual Advertisements would be of no contemptible Advantage to the Publick Correspondency and Intelligence For there are evermore Conditions that hunt after one another and for want of knowing one anothers occasion leave Men in very great necessity I have heard to the great shame of the Age we Live in that in our very sight two most excellent Men for Learning Died so Poor that they had scarce Bread to put in their Mouths Lilius Gregorius Giraldus in Italy and Sebastianus Castalio in Germany And do believe there are a Thousand Men would have invited them into their Families with very advantageous Conditions or have Reliev'd them where they were had they known their wants The World is not so generally Corrupted but that I know a Man that would heartily wish the Estate his Ancestors have left him might be employ'd so