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A51726 The pourtract of the politicke Christian-favourite originally drawn from some of the actions of the Lord Duke of St. Lucar : written to the Catholick Majesty of Philip the Great, and the fourth of that name : a piece worthy to be read by all gentlemen, who desire to know the secrets of state, and mysteries of government / by Marquesse Virgilio Malvezzi ; to this translation is annexed, the chiefe state maxims, political and historical observations, in a brief and sententious way, upon the same story of Count Olivares, Duke of St. Lucar.; Ritratto del privata politico christiano. English Malvezzi, Virgilio, marchese, 1595-1653.; Powell, Thomas, 1608-1660. 1647 (1647) Wing M360; ESTC R9198 61,007 163

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to the Counsells of your Nobility that that serves for Authority to your person which is its felicity in as much as fame the messenger of truth conceales not the praises of the Lord Duke Olivarez but by publishing your vertues fills all Europe and comforts the Church of Rome Wee truly who long before this have had notice of your Noblenesse are hardly to expresse with what comfort of heart wee have now heard by our beloved Sonne Father Zachary a Capuchin how much more you esteem a good report then riches believing that an affection for the propagation of the Faith is the fortification of the power of Spaine and the greatest honour of the Catholike King And hee affirmes that the Counsells of your zeale are such that they assure the patronage of Heaven to your family and perpetuall felicity to the Kingdomes of Spaine in as much as it is published that you have given such instructions of Christian piety in the businesse of the mariage with England that forraine Princes may learne from you with what great vertues the Chatholike Religion adornes her sonnes withall in whom the glory of the Name of God hath a greater sway then the encrease of any humane power These praises thus confirm'd by the testimonie of so good a Priest did give so much consolation to the cares of our dignity that We have been pleased to notifie it by our Apostolike Letters Proceed on worthy Lord take such paines that the inseparable Nations of the Spanish Empire may know the publike welfare the Ecclesiastick Iurisdiction and the Authority of the Noblenesse upon which We bestowe Our Apostolicall Benediction From St Peters in Rome under the Seale of the Piscator the 27th of Ap. in the yeare of our Pontificate the first and of the Lord 1624. Iohan. Champele The Prince of Wales being but ill satisfied and returned into England joyn'd himself with other of the Emulours and enemies of the King in the League of Avignion the Articles whereof were that the Hollanders should set upon Brasile that the Army of France with the assistance of the Duke of Savoy should fall upon the State of Genoa and that the King of England should goe with a Fleet for a designe upon Cales that the King of Denmark with Protestant Associats should infest the Empire that the Venetians should furnish the Duke of Savoy with money and the Grizons with money and munition to make an inrode upon the Valteline that a peace should be procured between the Turks and the Persian that the Turke might enter by the way of Hungary and Bethlem Gabor by Transilvania that the Hollanders should send Cannons and Cannoniers to the Moores of Affricke that they might beseige Mamora and Larachy All these stormes were dispers'd first by the breath of God then by the prudence of the Catholike King and by the counsell and providence of the Lord Duke there was a Fleet supplied in Brasile which recovered the Sconce whereof the Hollanders were Masters in the Bay of All Saints two Armies relieved Genoa and the Valteline the one set at large that which was at the last gaspe the other did maintaine in the Valteline the Catholike Religion The Englishmen were expected with so furnished a preparation that after they of Cales had killed some five thousand of them the rest returned home wearie and afflicted The Hollanders did loose Breda The King of Denmarke was beaten in a battle and betook himself to his trenches The Affricans were repulsed from Mamora and Carachy with a great losse After which successes there was a peace made whereby the Church obtain'd great authority the Catholike King great applause and the Lord Duke no small reputation When Leagues thrive Iealousie breakes them when they doe not thrive feare breakes them but they seldome overcome if they doe it not in an instant they have large forces but not long in regard that they are for the most part composed of ordinary powers and Warrs do quickly consume their treasures but it is not so with Monarchs A League is a body of a facile corruption it often resolves into the first matter and that abandoned it remaines but an empty power Many Sciences and Arts have one and the same object but never considered after one and the same manner and howsoever they accord to move toward it yet they agree not in the operation The Tailor goes to the same body that the Philosopher doth but when hee hath cloth'd it he leaves it because it is not ever to be cloath'd The Physitian goes likewise to the same body and when he hath healed it he goes his way because it is not alwaies to be cured The Philosopher alwaies stands fast there because it is alwaies moveable So in Leagues all have power for the object but by a diverse manner some because they receive hurt by it some because they feare it some because they envie it The first being quit from hurt they goe away because it is not alwaies hurtfull the second secured from feare they goe away because it is not alwaies fearefull so that at the last there remaines none but the last which doe alwaies envie it because it is alwaies to be envied The King would have given the Lord Duke a great Donative and would likewise have authoriz'd him to have transported from new Spaine into China a ship laden with marchandize an advantage which would have been of great commodity to him but of an answerable damage to the inhabitants of Spaine The Duke did accept of neither because he would not transgresse his established rule I conceive this so necessary an action and so concerning his reputation that I should not commend it if the ignorance of many that have not so known it did not proclaime it admirable The act is so profitatable that he who is not perswaded to it by prudence is to suffer himself to be brought to it by prevision To accept of what accepted incurres blame and what refused merits glory is a testimony either of basenesse or foolishnesse Worldly men that are not of this Alloy walke to the Temple of glory but the passage is so steep that they have need of a Waggon Some have recourse the Chariot of worth and some to the Cart of riches whereupon it comes to passe that as they are to be borne withall who seek them to make themselves glorious so are they to be reprehended who hunt after them to make themselves be blamed The Lord Duke forbeares not to take the stipends belonging to his Offices which he personally performes not applauding that drynesse of the conceites of those morrall men that blame riches Vertue I speak now of morall vertue doth not consist in being poor but in making ones self poor He doth not adore but despiseth money that spends it he that would not be rich is an un profitable poor man and a cruell fool He that casts riches into the sea is a poor vaine man and an envious fool He that possesseth wealth
to the Prince when the King was like to die The first Counsell bee gave the King was to call home from exile many worthy men He bestowed upon his Vncle the charge of State businesse reserving to himselfe the care of the Kings person and charge of his house He left the Duke of Ossuna his kinsman in the hands of justice and Don Roderigo He placed none of his kindred in the Kings service but such as were worthy Hee bestowed the Lievetenantship of Castile upon an excellent man He put away his servant for recommending a businesse to one of his Officers He quickned the Law against Riots in Spaine He procured the King to joyne three men of excellent abilities with him as assistants Hee perswaded the King to forbeare taxing the people and to remember well deserving men with offices honours and titles His advise to the King when the Prince of Wales went into Spaine Pope Urbans Letter to Count Olivares The Prince of Wales returne to England discontented and the effects thereof By Guzmans care the Spaniards had good successe in Brasil and else where He refuseth the Kings donative and to transport a ship with merchandise to China He accepts of the stipends belonging to his Offices He provides a remedy against the delay in the promotions of Counsells He intercedes to the King for old officers to be dismissed and rewarded He had but one onely Daughter The Kings answer to him about the marriage of his Daughter He marries his Daughter to the Marquesse of Torall she was brought to bed of a dead child and dyed her selfe His care of the King in his sicknesse He spent 16. houres every day in the Kings service reserving onely eight for himselfe He advanceth the Cardinall of Tresco to be President of Castile against the opinion of his friends He counsels the King to cry downe the brasse-money of Spain to halfe the worth He prudently manages the businesse of the Kings Revenues He caused some rivers to be made navigable and some veines of gold to be found in Spaine Hee counselled the King to assist the French with a Fleet against Rochell He reserved the rewards of warre bestowed upon him to helpe deserving men in their necessities He was very easie to pardon injuries against himselfe as he shewed in pardoning the man that would have pistolled him When offices and dignities were to be distributed he came seldome to the counsell He caused a little window to be made in all places of Counsells to make Counsellours the more wary He intreated the King to read the stories of his predecessours and told him that one of them did ill in depending too much upon his Favourite He punished Libellers and Satyrists against the King but not against himselfe He gave no audience to women and assures maids and widdowes that few lines under their hand should prevaile more with him then the sight of their persons He was no obstinate maintainer of his ●wne opinions His Speech to Don Francisco of Con●reras His carriage towards the Duke of Ascot who was sent by the Infanta in the ●roubles of Flanders into Spaine He convinced the Duke of Ascot by shewing him the Infanta's Letter He humbly desires the King to excuse the errour of the Duke of Ascot THE POVRTRAIT OF THE Politick Christian Favourite Originally Drawn from some of the actions of the Lord Duke of St. Lucar Written to the Catholick Majestie of PHILIP the Great and the 4th of that name I Write unto your Majesty rather of your Majesty I write of your Favourite it is said that Moses spake with God in the Mount and yet there are that believe that he spake with an Angel sometimes Angels are the figures of God with us Favourites the figures of Angels with Princes Princes of God with men that magnanimous Heroe whose stupendious victories did not violently take away did give when he saw the prostrate prisoner Queen at the foot of his chariot did value himself able to make Alexanders an errour in it self glorious which his greatnesse mounted already to so sublime a degree did manifest If amongst Authors of an admired Classis there hath been any one found that reputed a Prince praise-worthy because he had a minister worthy of praise how much more is your Majesties due who hath a servant of great condition one that you have elected and made What glorious action shall I recount wherein thy great Favourite may not acknowledge you the actour either because you have concurred with your assistance or because you have given an influence with your grace or have dictated nay animated it by your wisedome and greatnesse In this subject great Potentate I will figure out your image not the true one but the likest God did not disdain to see himself shaped under the semblance of a man and worshipped not because man can be his Image but because he made him after his Image Laborious it is but it is profitable to Register the egregious performances of men in being They wound and they heale and where they heale they also wound Their resounding doth awaken reprove stirre up and leaves no place for sloathfulnesse to passe the time idly away in the laments of the time If one man of vallue be borne the fame of that one produceth a thousand for if she being fruitfull should not bring forth the world would be now one only mans because he being sterill would not have produced so much as one The glory of those that are past like the King of Bees hath Majestie and greatnesse but hath no sting It wounds not it inanimats not disanimats if it be examined because it hath no soule it makes humane condition lamentable that glory dispicable which being neither enjoyed by the soule nor perceived by the carcase doth first remaine vaine with the body and then without it vainest of all It is an accident will accost a substance and where the substance dies if it be it works not The Actions of Predecessours that they may be praised require no more then to bee flourishingly related it is with them as with pictures for it is sufficient if they be but master-like painted no consideration is had whether the Actions be true or the Pictures bee like in as much as the Acts of the Ancients are not knowne nor the Originalls of the draughts are not seen but he that writes the deeds or drawes the picture of one that is alive let him look for censure and that from the weakest since papers have no soules and cloathes no tongues Men are sometimes without eyes nay though they have them they see not colour because they have them not without colour Every one judgeth of every one that writes according to his owne affection one shewes himself a flatterer and another malicious I doe professe it is true to be infinitely oblig'd to this exalted Heroe but it shall never be discovered that I rather sordidly defile then faithfully satisfie that obligation which as it is
enable my Relation and make the infinite worth of the Duke more famous are not by me recounted in this present worke because that I having written it I call God to witnesse without his consent I reputed it not convenient to publish them to view without authority from him that performed them but it doth me good neverthelesse to believe that he will one day be pleased that some more eminent pen then mine shall divulge them to the world not to defraud him of the glory of being the first to informe Favourites how to serve their Prince and Princes how to governe their people He that shall write as the Duke did will discover a knowledge of the great good inclination in his Master and declare himself to be a faithfull Favourite To with hold Princes from businesse may be a laudable effect but alwaies of a blame-worthy occasion if prudence produce it it is an ill signe for the Prince if sagaeity it it is worse for the Favourite because it alwaies intimates the one wicked the other unable There have been some that have deem'd it an irrevocable maxime for Favourites to estrange Princes from all manner of businesse but it may be that they peradventure have thought it ought to be so because they have found it done so they would have one draught serve to one species in a world wherein nature hath not made any thing originall that is not different to give excellent precepts to one that never was excellent and hath too too much strayed from the right is a sure destroying of him Hee is not at the first capable of more then of an indifferent good he must be first healed and then perfected there is no doubt but that a Favourite who feares not his Prince as he ought doth utterly ruine himself if he suffer his manner of proceeding to be corrected or if he let his Prince come into action The good old man of Chio said that when a Physitian met with a contagious distemper he was not on the sudden to reduce it to what it should be but to what it was at the first because to that then it ought to come Nature which does help to expell a worse distemper then its owne doth resist to bring in a better It might peradventure be credible that that Master would have inferred this who did desire a Tyrant indifferently good not that he should stay there but because he imagined that he could not at the first be reduced to a superlative without his ruine The examples of this most wise Favourite would bee of no use to the vigilant Sound mens food is most dangerous for the sicke Necessity of state importuning Taxes and the Duke knowing how much it grieved the people to see their contributions given away he writ a Discourse to his Majestie wherein he discovered the great errour that Princes ran into that proceeding and that there was not wanting to his Majestie Habits Orders Honours Offices Degrees and Greatnesse to satisfie the merits of the Worthy without either distasting the subject or impoverishing the Exchequer This counsell was the occasion that the King began ro remunerate his deserving subjects or the deservings of his subjects with honours and dignities Riches are not the pay of worth they are the wages of labour he that buyes it vilifies himself he that sells it is vile already The operation of worth produceth its reward for it produceth honours and he that hath it can pretend nothing more then some markes that he hath it Of this condition are Greatnesse Titles Orders Habits and of this nature were the City Crownes the Collars and the Triumphs of the Ancients Such rewards if they grow common give no honours nay rather they loose that they have when they are bestowed on such as have it not There was a time when rewarding did not emptie the Kings Coffers and it was a time fertile in worthy men they were most rewarded who were least rewarded Honour was then a very great price and the price of vertue only But when that which was a price began to be at a price it lost value and made men loose their courages so that honour and worth became both mercenary and men lusted rather after the wealths that bought them then after the qualities that got them The originall of so much errour and confusion was derived from such Princes that were needy and poore and thereupon gave more honour to the wealthy then the worthy but these would not have had need of riches if they had not made them necessary with taking away the reputatiou● of worth The Spartans were a while without gold and the first Romanes if they had it did not adore it States have many times encreased with money but never without valour It may be it did not concerne Kings to keep it in credit such are not the most valarous but the richest they have given reputation to what they alwaies have to assure them of that which sometimes they have not The Prince of Wales went into Spaine to get the Infanta Maria to wife and for some other respects of the Palatine his Brother in law When the Lord Duke stood firme upon this resolution that when the King of England should in his Kingdome grant all that in favour of the Catholike Religion without which there was no probability of a match that then the Catholike Nation should accord to all that that the conveniency of State required nor would he ●ver depart from this Catholike vow although he well enough understood that if the King of England would not consent to this proposition as he did manifestly declare he would not the issue that he insisted upon with a potent King to the enemies of the house of Austria and that he did foresee Warrs which would more load the Favourite then any man else because they take from him the commodity of enjoying the degree that he doth possesse and oppresse him with turmoyles cares and necessities that attend them This Counsell was the counsell of the Duke and the counsell and the Duke are worthy of the highest praise hath no need of my pen I doe here lye downe with all reverence and humility at the feet of Pope Vrban our Lord and as I have been confident to be able securely to goe on in the way of commendations of the Duke enlightned by his great splendour which in many things cannot erre and in those he can he will not So likewise have I been willing to participate the Ray of it to others to strengthen their sight that see and to illuminate them that see not and confound them that will not see Then did his holinesse write a Letter to the Lord Duke the contents whereof translated into Italian sounds as you here may heare To the beloved Sonne and Noble Lord the Earle of OLIVAREZ Vrban the Pope 8. NOBLE Lord and beloved Sonne health and Apostolicall benediction The Common report of the Monarchie of Spaine drives such an applause
enrich but few but they empty the store that must be restored by the impoverishnesse of all The most Christian King of France had besieged Rochell and suspecting that it would have been relieved by the King of England he did by the means of the Marquesse Ramboulle his Ambassadour Extraordinary demand a Navy from Phillip the fourth whereto the Councell of the Duke advising it was consented him and was an Act of great honour by delivering France from so long an oppression with so much commodity to the Catholike Faith It was thought that the Duke erred in reason of state in preferring the service of God to that of the King but he cannot erre in the service of the Catholike King that erres not in the service of God if any impious man hath in his Instructions seperated the reason of State from that of God yet are they so conjoyn'd in the concernings of this King that no distinction of any understanding can disjoyn them God who hath manifested unto us his Election of this Family for the defence of his Religion hath not left a place that it may be taken away by the quicknesse of spirit so that if some Officer of small or no Religion should by chance spring up he could do no hurt but to himself with his wicked intention finding himselfe thrust on by a nimblenesse of spirit to those actions which cloathed with the zeale of God would be laudable parts of prudence but in the examination of reason of State I conclude it to be necessarily that of the Devill when it is seperated from that of the Lord I believe that Lucifer had no intention to raise himself to such a height as to be above God for then he would not have had an intention to dissolve the Vnity but to betterit which he by the naturall gift only of science did know to be impossible He then had a thought to exalt himself by withdrawing himself aside and so going from one to make the number of two upon which afterward as upon a Center he did designe his Circumference diverse from that of God nor could he go from the one but that he must be bad because all that is good is One God drawing a line from his Circumference did to make the number of three create man the Devill likewise thrust out a line from his circumference to make the number of foure and did seduce him God who would not leave man in the hands of the Devill came to redeem him and made the number of five and although he did not take away from him the excitement that seduceth him towards the number of two yet he gave him the grace that reduced him towards the One whereupon man remained free not being able to designe a Circumference upon himselfe because there is no other Circumference to be given then of the One and of the Two nothing els being found but good or evil to determine it Operating well upon the Centre of the one and operating ill upon the Centre of the Two As there are two Circumferences so are there two reasons of State the one of God the other of the Devill that of God is to come neare to God to be great that of the Devill is to go far from God to make himselfe great what discourse then of a religious understanding shall ever deterre us from the spoiling the nest of the Heretiques if we be able to do it He that can do it and doth it not doth sin and doth inlarge as much as in him lies the Circumference of the Devill He that can do it and doth it doth enlarge by what is in his power the circumference of God Have sins power to defend States and merrits power to destroy them Oh King oh Grandee oh Catholique what thing think you can defend your Kingdomes not your treasures not the Armies it is God defends them because you have defended him because you do defend him and that you may defend him Don Emanuell of Merveses Generall of the Fleet of Lisbone wanting sufficient means to maintain him at Court to defend him from some oppositions advertis'd about the discharge of his trust was resolv'd to be gone leave a Deputy which the Duke perceiving by him when he went to get leave of him did not consent that he should depart with dammage to his reputation and yet being unwilling to hinder the course of justice did offer himselfe to his assistance as he did in effect to his purse so did this magnanimous Fauourite reserve the rewards that were bestowed upon him to helpe deserving men upon their occasions It is a more blessed thing to give then to receive and peradventure the reason is because he that hath the commodity of giving is more happy then he that hath the necessity of receiving most happy then is he that gives and not receives He that receives and gives is not the man that gives but he that gave it him such as are inflexible in receiving are so likewise in giving the selfe-same severity that they use against themselves makes them little charitable towards others the Lord Duke was able to have relieved an Officer of so great merit with that which was his of whom he had well deserved but he desired to do it with his own because he was a well deserver of the King A Favourite is to esteem the service done to his Prince as done to him and to repute himselfe obliged to whom the King is if he gives to him that hath served well he merits for those works that he hath not done but rewarded he should prize his goods more then his life more then his understanding more then himselfe that would wast himselfe and not his Estate in the Kings service the part of giving is as hard as part of receiving he that receives every thing is too covetous he that takes nothing is too severe he that gives alwaies is too prodigall and he that never gives is too miserable The Rhetorician that thought it a difficult thing to perswade a Judge to give what was his own and to be no hard matter to winne him to give what was another mans would have been upon a false ground with the Duke Oh the gallant and true magnanimity of a Favourite who helpes by liberality where he cannot by justice and will rather be a looser himselfe that he may winne who is to loose then that justice should lose who is alwaies to overcome the Subjects that have worth in them may contend with certainty of reward when they serve a Monarch whose Favourite is such an one that if he do not intercede to the King for them he gives like a King to them who will believe that a man will not be liberall of another mans purse when he is franke of his own when he is to be so I was about to say when he needs not be so I will say when he cannot be Never was there a Favourite so courteous in Audiences so
Sanctuary of the unjustly persecu●ted Tutor of of the Common-wealths and Princes the alwaies magnanimous and eve● glorious Oppressour of Hereticks How much treasure hath he spent how many Ar●mies consum'd in the service of God and o● men How many Forts hath hee take● and most liberally restored them all again from whom they were most unlawfull● compell'd or from whom he himself ha● justly taken them What warre hath he en●terpriz'd that hath not been either to defend Religion from such as wounded it o● to relieve justice when it was opprest or t● maintain his credit against such as despise● him But that which is lost in Flanders is not lost by the Kings fault or the Favourites i● as much as ther wanted no provision of men or money But it was lost by other sufficiently known accidents And in this is the Government of the most glorious Phillip the fourth more worthy of praise then that of his Grand-Father whereas the one has made Warr in other Provinces without calling his Armies out of Flanders and the other could not succour the Catholike Faith ●n France without abandoning Flanders As little likewise is the Duke to be blamed for the Warrs that have in these times ●eld the Austrian Monarchy in a tottering co●dition but rather such as having been se●itious have moued them It is not very ●ikely that a Favourite of a quiet braine the ●irth of the favourable beames of Iupiter ●nd Venus doth meditate the topsy-turvy ●urning of the world If he be as wise as a ●ove he brings an olive branch and not a de●●ance of Warr For he cannot order it with●ut leaving his privacy and he can hardly ●ake that be ordered without loosing it Victories make a too much rumour to be con●ealed they are in the view of all the world ●o hinder them is ●ith the danger of the Prince to let them runne on is peradventure with the danger of the Favourite he is an ●ble man who in the time of Warr looseth not is privacy or makes not the Kingdome be ●●st I say not but that Favourites may be found desirous of Warrs who like Crowes ●re alwaies flocking to dead bodies but those ●re ordinarily the troublesome parts of the Rayes of Mars and Saturne they wriggle ●hemselves into favour by pernicious but specious Counsells whence it is that they afterwards send forth those sooty humors tha● they have within them and they do puddl● the waters that they may not be a prey t● such as fish for the truth Woe to the worl● when such a Favourite is borne and let u● thank God that we are none of them in ou● times for he confounds it layes it along overturnes it ruines it and is ruin'd troublesome Whithersoeuer they goe it seems tha● they encrease the waters but diminish the Channell because they encrease the mud no● goe they much thither for they goe not thither These Phaetons when they come to touch that fire of Heaven are for the most part thunder strook by Jove It is very considerable that howsoever Prudence be that which is necessary to the maintenance of privacy yet is not alwaies the true practised but for the most part the false There is a Prudence that hath reall good for its end another that which seems so the one is pure the other puddle both cry men up and both greatly exult the one with the greater security because it is much more benigne the other with much more mirrour because it hath more eagernesse The braines of a witty man is as a waving sea alwaies unquiet it neither hath rest nor gives rest it destroies or will build or will maintain The foundations of its height are the ruines of others it procures a feare in the Prince to make it self necessary it will make him a Tyrant and sometimes makes it self so it is an Art which imitates Prudence like the Artist that imitates Nature it takes no pleasure if it doe not deceive and is most pleased when it deceives most leaving to be when it leaves to cozen it stands upon the very brink of a precipice and because it cannot alwaies deceive there is one time when it headlong falls The braine of the Prudent man is placide and and loving breathing nothing but sweetnesse nothing but quiet it builds up what others ruine and if it sometimes doth destroy it destroyes not to raise its owne house but to uphold it It makes the King good by shewing him what is profitable it makes him love to make him be beloved A prudent man falls not from favour if the Prince falls not into tyranny and if some casuall accident doth thrust him from the Mountain of Grace hee goes but downe hee tumbles not Greatnesse of the Prudent are influences from benevolent Starrs and because they are encreased by little and little like high Towers they are continued high upon their owne foundations Witty men goe high but they grow not high they are like balls of earth which violently compel'd by some compulsion doe swiftly passe through all buildings and when they are at the highest heights they fall and fall not but they break If Tacitus had ascribed the fall from privacy as well to sagacity as he did to satiety I would have borne with his other part of speech where he shewes it rarely sempiternall because it is rare for men to have prudence and such men are most rare which placed on high maintain it and he that did attribute so much to the power of domination and inchantment of obsequiousnesse might well think all constancy fraile all prudence fleeting He hath made some Rivers in Spaine to be made Navigable he made some veines of gold to be found not for covetousnesse of gaine but to be able to diminish the griveances of the subject without being wanting to the businesse of the Monarchy Gold is profitable to conserve and necessary to encrease States Some Politicians have made it inferiour to reputation when indeed reputation hath no other price but the reward which gold gives it they are deceiv'd in this because they sometimes see men forsake a rich Prince to goe serve a Prince of reputation this experience hath been true but it came not so to passe because reputation enticeth more then gold but because the worth of one in reputation gives more hope of gold then the Exchequer of a rich man gives gold those Souldiers are ill apaid that are alwaies paid and they are well pleas'd that are ill paid the ordinary price of their lives hardly keepes them alive Sackings Inroades Rapines Victories are the advantages that enrich the Souldiers and they expect them most frequent from such as they know most reputed The Favourite that encreaseth the Revenues of his master doth likewise encrease the Estates of the people one of whose great felicities is to have the Prince rich for when he takes not away he gives and when he gives he takes away a holding Prince is more desiderable then a bountifull Donatives