Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n henry_n king_n queen_n 22,548 5 7.7438 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A96914 A word in season: or, an essay to promote good-husbandry in hard and difficult times: being, in part, advice from a gentleman, to his son a tradesman in London. Lately communicated by way of letter 1697 (1697) Wing W3547C; ESTC R232225 9,118 16

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

compleat and crowned with the Grace of God which he will deny to none that shall ask it of him Mar. 15.11 Mar. 7.11 As St. Augustine saith Deus dat spiritum sanctum petentibus eum i.e. God giveth his Spirit to such as heartily ask it of him And another telleth us Man is a strange kind of noxious Animal very mischievous without Religion and Honesty for of all the goods that are in Man Vertue and Honesty is the first and principal and which doth excel Knowledge and Dexterity and we cannot but confess that the Will where Vertue and Goodness lodgeth is of all others the most excellent for in truth Honesty is a lightning Ray of the Divinity a stream and dependant on the Eternal Law which is God himself and his Will As nothing can be just which proceedeth not from Reason so true Honesty is free manly generous pleasant chearful equal uniform and constant not altering its pace or gate for the wind the time the occasion True Honesty is a right firm disposition of the Will to follow the counsel of Reason It is an active valiant manly and effectual Goodness that is required in us which is an easie and constant affection towards that which is good right just according to Reason and Nature Every Man therefore should be or desire to be an Honest Man because he is a Man and he that takes no care to be such is a Monster and renounceth himselt I would have my honest Man saith a Heathen never to consent to any thing that is evil these are things inseparable that is to say to be and to be willing to be an Honest Man And also that honest Heathen Socrates tells us That an honest Man may suffer evil but will never do any for it is not permitted at any time for a Man to leave Vertue and Honesty and therefore away with all Injustice and Wrong all Treachery Disloyalty Rebellion and Treason Indeed all Passion of Choler Envy Hatred Avarice Concupiscence and Self-love saith one is the deadly poyson of the Judgment and of all good Understanding and every Man 's particular Profit and Interest is the worst poyson of true Judgment and Affection It is a happy thing saith Plato for a Man to go through his private Affairs without Injustice Perjury and Treachery is in a certain sence more base and execrable than Atheism for it is a less sin to contemn God ' than to mock him As an honest Man never wrongeth any one so I would have an honest Man saith he never to consent to any Evil for you sin twice when you do but humour him that doth evil which an honest Man never doth And that to do good where there is danger and pain is the part of an Honest Man and of Vertue and Goodness But there must saith Monsieur Charron be to make my Honest Man compleat the Grace of God whereby his Honesty Goodness and Vertue hath life and is brought forth in his due time and receiveth its last and perfect portraiture And as there is nothing doubtless to be preferr'd before bodily Health but Honesty which is the Health of the Soul so also it is the best Policy and Good-Husbandry to sow good and honest Actions for then a Man may expect an harvest answerable For as Socrates said the Just Man and the Happy Man are all one And indeed the said excellent Author aforesaid Monsieur Charron further discourseth to us Honesty is far more worthy firm stable and amiable than Profit which in a moment vanisheth And he further saith That Justice in general is the giving to every Man what of right belongeth to him And that great Philosopher Heraclitus adviseth us above all things to combat Injustice and Wrong and to suppress it with all our might as we would do the most devouring Fire And it hath been observed above all for a Man to wrong and injure the Innocent is to wrong God himself And herein especially it is the part of a generous Mind to take part with the weaker Side and to succour the Afflicted A late worthy Author tells us He that will mark it well shall find not only more honest People but also those more excellent in all kind of Vertue among those that know little than among those who know most and therefore it hath been complained of in the world that simple and open Vertue was turned into obscure and crafty Knowledge and that in truth Atheism Error Sects and all the troubles of the world have risen from the Men of Art and Knowledge as the wise Seneca long since observed and complain'd of viz. That when Men came to be learned many times they ceased then to be morally honest and vertuous But this certainly is from the abuse of Learning and Knowledge which are in themselves a great benefit and advantage to Humane Nature It was an excellent and noble Character that was given of that great Lawyer and Judge Sir John Fineux in King Henry VIIIth's Reign That he hated nothing but what was Dishonest he feared nothing but was Ignoble and loved nothing but what was Just And it is related also of that Excellent Learned and Valiant Knight Sir Philip Sidney in Queen Elizabeth's Reign That he taught England the Majesty of Honest Dealing and the Interest of being Religious and that he found no Wisdom without Religion and Honesty And it was further said of him That none was more fearful of doing Evil and none more resolved to suffer in a just Cause For as it hath been well observed a good Conscience breeds great Resolution and an innocent Soul is impregnable Accordingly is that Saying of Horace of a Vertuous and Honest Man Justum tenacem propositi virum i. e. He is such whom neither the Madness of the People the He at of the Rabble calling for an evil thing nor the Face of a Tyrant menacing and commanding it can shake his vertuous stedfastess who is I may add semper idem always the same honest Man and Hands fixed as a Rock in a tempestuous Sea And in truth Honesty Integrity and Fidelity was accounted by the wise Heathens to be the great Pillars which supported the Universe and without which no Kingdom or Government could possibly subsist and they always looked upon such Persons who once had abandoned their Honesty and Fidelity to be no other but as noxious Animals as Wolves and Tygers fit to be hunted out of the World by all Mankind As also it is very wisely observed That Fidelity and Honesty was like Life which when it is once gone and parted from the Body never returns again It hath been observed also That the first commitment of a Wrong usually puts a Man upon a thousand Injuries to support that one And it is further truly observed That Simplicity and Truth is a great and wise thing but Cunning and Deceit is mean and foolish As also that proverbial Saying truly instructs us viz. That Frost and Fraud may hold for