Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n part_n spirit_n vital_a 3,441 5 10.7507 5 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
A45640 The divine physician, prescribing rules for the prevention, and cure of most diseases, as well of the body, as the soul demonstrating by natural reason, and also divine and humane testimony, that, as vicious and irregular actions and affections prove often occasions of most bodily diseases, and shortness of life, so the contrary do conduce to the preservation of health, and prolongation of life : in two parts / by J.H ... Harris, John, 1667?-1719. 1676 (1676) Wing H848; ESTC R20051 75,699 228

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

disease Caelius Phinehas's Wife when she heard the sorrowful tidings of the taking of the Arck of God the death of her Father in Law and Husband she bowed her self being great with child was delivered and died through sorrow of heart 1 Sam. 4. 19 20. Queen Mary died as some supposed by her much sighing before her death of thought and sorrow of heart for the departure of King Philip or the loss of Calice Act. Mon. 1901. Now in all this Argument we may take notice what fearful effects immoderate sorrow doth produce upon our Bodies what a malign cold and dry Passion it is wasting the radical humour and by degrees quenching the natural heat of the body yea thrusting her poyson even unto the heart whose vigour she causeth to wither and consumes the forces by her bad influence whereof we may see the signs after death when as they come to open those that have been smothered with Melancholy For instead of a heart they find nothing but a dry skin like to the leaves in Autumn So that all things exactly considered we may say that there is not any Passion which doth so much shorten our life or make it so infirm and miserable as this in its excess Hitherto might be referred Despair an evil Conscience such as is neither quiet nor good and such like self tormenting sins which as they are sometimes causes of immoderate and excessive sorrow so by the like influence upon the Body do produce such a flow of diseases as suddenly ebb in death And here lest it should be judged that Godly sorrow which worketh repentance because it is sometimes very intense should produce the same Natural effects in the Body that immoderate and vicious doth you must understand that in true Godly sorrow though it be sometimes very intense vehement and zealous there are such intervals of Spiritual joy by reason of the cherishing hope of pardon that all excess with its Natural effects is diverted mitigated and in due season avoided Nocte pluit tot â redeunt Spectacula mane Which in a Metaphorical sence may be render'd thus Clouds showers of grief may endure a night But glympses of joy return at day-light Or as David thus Heaviness may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning Psal. 30. 5. The acrimony then in Godly sorrow is so corrected by the sweet ingredient of inward Consolation that it never proves offensive or prejudicial to bodily health as wordly and immoderate sorrow hath been fully declared to do SECT VIII Of Sensual Joy and Laughter in excess SOlomon made trial of sensual joy mirth and pleasure thinking therein to find true content and Soul-satisfaction but in the conclusion found nothing but the husks of vanity wherewith he at first like a Prodigal Son would fain have satisfied himself but could not as appeareth by his own words I said in my heart Go to now I will prove thee with mirth therefore enjoy pleasure and behold this also is vanity Eccl 2. 1 2. I said of laughter it is mad and of mirth what doth it There is a woe denounced by Christ of whom St. Augustin noteth that 't is often read that he wept never that he laughed St. Aug. Serm. 35. de Sanctis against all such as rejoyce in riot revelling carousing luxury and other forbidden pleasures of this World in that comprehensive Phrase Wo unto you that laugh now for ye shall mourn and weep Luk 6. 25. All inordinate rejoycing or rejoycing in unlawful pleasures may justly have the Apostle's reprehension applied to it All such rejoycing is evil Jam. 4. 16. Now as it is evil in respect of the Soul so also in repect of the Body for that very oft swounding and sudden death hath befallen to sudden and immoderate joy and that because the Cordial blood and Vital Spirits are thereby so suddenly diffused to the exterior parts that Life goeth out therewith and returneth not as Fernelius noteth Or as Des-Cartes of this Passion in its excess thus observeth Opening extraordinarily the Orisices of the heart the blood of the veines doth so huddle in and in so abundant a quantity that it cannot there be rarified by the heat soon enough to list up the little skins that shut the entries of those veins by which means it smothers the fire which it used to feed when it came into the heart in fit proportion Des-Cartes of the Passions Artic. 122. Hence I suppose it is that the Lord Verulam saith in his History of Life and Death p. 221. Great joyes attenuate and diffuse the Spirits and shorten life Instances hereof are many in History let these few suffice Diagor as Rhodius had his three valiant Sons victors in one Olympiad who putting all their three Crowns upon their Fathers head through too much joy he presently died Gellius lib. 3. cap. 15. Xeuxis the Painter beholding the vive Picture of an old Wife which he so cunningly did paint burst forth so in laughter that he presently died Sophocles that worthy Poet and also Dionisius the Tyrant after a victory in a Tragedy at the whole People's congratulation through exceeding joy yielded up their life Plin. lib. 7. cap. 53. Chrysippus Philemon at the sight of an Ass eating Figs was so overcome with immoderate laughter that he died Valer. Maxim Chilo the famous Lacedaemonian Philosopher soon expired his last breath when as overjoyed he beheld his Son Conquerour in the Olympick games Ravis Philippides the Athenian an aged Comick overcoming the rest in Poesie and crowned for his great pains died for his present pleasure Cael. lib. 3. c. 15. With such like Instances I might further dilate upon this Point but lest an odd Humorist should laugh himself out of breath to think of them as improbable or the significant Caveats deduced from them as unseasonable in sad times I here desist SECT IX Of Servile Slavish and all Unlawful Fear in excess THere is as Divines distinguish a Divine fear a Filial fear a Dutiful fear a Wise fear and these are all lawful But then there is also a Slavish fear a False fear a Distrustful fear or a Natural fear joyned with diffidence and these are unlawful Servile or Slavish fear whereby Men do abstain from sin rather in respect of the punishments ensuing thereupon then out of an unfained hatred thereof or a fear which ariseth upon the apprehension of God's Justice and wrath against sin and the punishments and plagues for sin is to be avoided as irregular For we ought to serve God without this sort of fear Luke 1. 74. It is Carnal and such as doth no wise proceed from the working of the Spirit but is quite contrary to the same For God saith the Apostle hath not given us the Spirit of fear but of power of love c. 2 Tim. 1. 7. The reason hereof may be in that the perfect love of God in us excommunicates it Perfect love saith St. John caseth out fear 1 Ep. John 4.
the Body and is like the Worm that breedeth in timber and consumeth it So true is that of the Son of Sirach Envie c. shorten the life Eccl. 30. 24. Hatred also produceth the like effects for what is said of Envie may as well relate unto Hatred and Malice Envie slayeth the silly one saith Job 5 ch 2 v. and so doth Hatred and Malice by causing ill humours in the body For according to the Modern Philosopher M. Des-Cartes in his Treatise of the Passions The pulse in Hatred is observed to be uneven and weaker and oftentimes faster than usual that a Man feels colds inter-mingled with sharp and pricking heat in the breast that the stomack ceases to do its office is enclined to vomit and reject the Meats it hath eaten or at least to corrupt them and convert them into ill humours All which considered Hatred can be profitable unto none For ill humours are the Springs of most Diseases Again Hatred cannot be so small but it hurts the Body because it is never without Sadness which brings me to the next Section SECT VII Of Worldly Sorrow and Immoderate Grief of mind BY those Epithetes Worldly and Immoderate the Sorrow to be now treated of is distinguished from Godly sorrow which worketh repentance to Salvation which is neither Wordly nor Immoderate and may be thus described Worldly sorrow causing death of Body and Soul is that which is immoderate and humbleth not the heart kindly but disquiets disturbs and distempers it whether it proceed from outward evils and losses or inward evils as most from melancholious humours and worst from an evil Conscience and this sorrow may be termed rather Attrition than Contrition the sorrow for our misery or punishment being called Attrition for our sault Contrition But to the Point in hand Worldly and Immoderate sorrow though it may be look'd upon as a punishment of sin rather then a sin it self yet doubtless it is little less than both being a plain aberration from the Rules of Christianity so long as 't is leavened with Avarice Despondency Distrust Despair Discontent Hence it is that the Apostle Paul interdicts excessive sorrow for the dead because it argues despair and want of hope But I would not have you ignorant Brethren concerning them which are asleep that ye sorrow not even as others which have no hope 1 Thess. 4 13. Excess in sorrow makes it sinful in Christians And here also hath place the Caveat of the same Apostle Lest any be swallowed up with over-much sorrow 2 Cor. 2. 7. Upon which place a Modern Expositor Trapp of our own ventureth to say that sorrow for sin if it so far exceed as that thereby we are disabled for the discharge of our duties it is a sinful sorrow yea though it be for sin With much more confidence then may we term that a sinful sorrow which the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 7. 10. worketh death namely the sorrow of the world which by Expositors is understood to be that sorrow which is proper to Men of the World such as are not regenerated by the Spirit of God whose grief and sorrow is nothing but the bitter smart of their misery without any serious and sincere repentance Or by sorrow of the World is meant a sorrow only for the loss of worldly things or which is caused from the fear of God's Judgments in Unbelievers whereupon there followeth commonly hardness of heart and a reprobate sense and at length if not prevented by repentance despair and damnation which do not only bring a Spiritual and Eternal death but also by wasting the Body hasten a temporal death And this will appear in respect of the Body First by Natural Reason Secondly by Divine and Humane Testimony First By Natural Reason And here we must understand that in sorrow or sadness the heat and spirits retire and by their sudden surrounding and possession of the heart all at once as the Physicians observe do many times cause Suffocation they being likewise by uniting encreased do violently consume the moisture of the Body and so beget drought and leanness and through long continuance Consumptions Or as others thus in sorrow or sadness there is a gathering together of much melancholly blood about the heart which Collection extinguisheth the good Spirits or at least dulleth and dampeth them Besides the heart being possessed by such an humour cannot digest well the Blood and Spirits which ought to be dispersed thorow the whole Body but converteth them into melancholy the which humour being cold dry drieth the whole Body and maketh it wither away for cold extinguisheth heat and drieness moisture which two qualities principally concern Life Secondly By Divine and Humane Testimony it further appeareth For first Solomon saith A merry heart doth good like a medicine but a broken spirit drieth the bones Prov. 17. 22. Also heaviness in the heart of man maketh it stoop Prov. 12. 25. It maketh it stoop because it wasteth the natural vital and animal Spirits Hence also is that prescription of the Son of Sirach Remove sorrow far from thee for sorrow hath killed many Eccl. 30. 23. And that of the same Author Of heaviness cometh death and the heaviness of the heart breaketh strength Eccl. 38. 18. These with the fore cited places out of St. Paul's 2d Epistle to the Corinthians might be thought sufficient to confirm this truth did not some Men require a further Illustration of it by Humane Testimony and this may be considered in the next place as useful to the same end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is Euripides Sorrows to Men diseases bring Hence also and for this cause are those trite and vulgar sayings Sadness and Melancholy the path-way to sickness Too much sorrow maketh a Man to run mad Sorrow is good for nothing but sin Hence also is that Conclusion of Aquinas in his Summs 1. 2. q. 37. 4. o. Tristitiae magis corpori nocet quam aliae passiones cùm vitalem motum cordis impediat i. e. Sadness doth more hurt the Body then other passions of the mind because it hindereth the vital motion of the heart It likewise takes away appetite overheats the heart and lungs corrupts the nutritious juyce causeth Consumptions and other cold Diseases Out of which we may gather that this Affection especially if it be more vehement and inveterate than ordinary doth bring very many and those grievous damages unto the Body some part whereof may be evidenced in these ensuing Instances Plantius the Numidian at the sight of his dead Wife presently died Laertius Diodorus the Logician died for sorrow because he could not answer the question of Stilpo Homer died with sudden sorrow because he was not able to answer a Fishermans question Plut. Aristotle the Prince of Ancient Philosophers when he came to Chalcis and saw the ebbing and flowing of Euripus that narrow Sea near Boeotia seven times in the twenty-four houres because he could not find the cause he fell into an incurable
seeks greatness will stick at lying perjury murder or any thing will down with him if they seem to tend to his advancement And it is the more difficultly cured in regard it is as one calls it the shirt of the Soul viz. the last vice we put off In a word it is condemned by many Texts of Sacred Writ But I shall instance only upon the 9 th of St. Luke v. 46 47 48. where we find it lively reprehended both by the real Type or Example of humility in a young Child set in the midst of the Disciples and by the Doctrine which Christ urged to them upon that occasion Sollicitude and excessive Care is also frequently interdicted For though a provident care for the things of this life when it is moderate seasonable without distrust of God be warrantable and commendable yet if it be otherwise it is evil and forbidden Take saith our Saviour no thought for to morrow Mat. 6. 34. And in St. Luke 10. 41. we find Martha for her immoderate or at least unseasonable care reproved by Christ when even a well-meant courtesie to her Saviour rather then a love to her self was the ground and occasion of that care So Covetousness taken in the largest sense as it consisteth in an immoderate desire of filthy lucre or any thing above ones allotted portion is not undeservedly reproved when by the Apostle it is called Idolatry Col. 3. 5. For it is as he saith in another place the root of all evil 1 Tim. 6. 10. not only of the evil of sin but also of the evil of punishment and that punishment not only Eternal depriving a Man of an Heavenly inheritance 1 Cor. 6. 10. But also Temporal Piercing him thorow with many sorrows as the same Apostle saith in the forecited 1 Tim. 6. The Covetous Man saith one hath three Vultures alwayes feeding upon his heart Care in getting Fear in keeping Grief in spending and parting with that he hath So that he is as it were in the Suburbs of Hell aforehand But this is not all the evil that springs from the root of Covetousness for it pierceth not only the heart with sorrows but also the whole body with Diseases which effect may as well be applicable to Sollicitude excessive Cares Ambition and immoderate Desires So true is that in Schola Salerni Si te vis reddere sanum Curas tolle graves If thou wilt keep thy self in health Then banish carking cares for wealth And no less true are the words of a Modern Physician who largely and learnedly reasoneth upon this Point in Linguâ Latinâ but to avoid prolixity I shall as a Translator give you his sense only in Linguâ vulgari In desire by which the Soul is so out of measure run out and dilated upon a good sometime represented as it were to come as by reason of the delay of it 't is presently as 't were contracted this singular occurreth that it agitates the heart more violently and furnisheth the brain with more Spirits then any other of the Passions For as he noteth further out of a longing for the obtaining that which we ardently desire the Spirits from the brain are most speedily sent into all parts of the Body that may serve any wayes to actions requisite to that purpose but especially into the heart and blood contained in it that being dilated more than ordinarily and moved more swiftly it may send back again a greater plenty of Spirits to the brain as well to maintain and fortifie the Idaea of this Desire as to pass from thence into all the Organs of the Senses and all the Muscles which may be set on work to attain what one desires And from Sollicitude which is excited from the delay of enjoying the thing desired the same spirits are drawn back again to the brain whence it comes to pass that the more subtile blood being withdrawn together from the outward parts the heart is as 't were straightn'd up the circulation of the blood hindred and by consequence the whole Body rendred weak faint and sickly So that it ought not to seem a wonder to any that most of those Persons whom an Amorous Affection or Desire Ambition Avarice or any other more fervent longing hath a long time exercised should be brought through a long continuing Sollicitude into the deepest languishment of Body into a contumatious disposition of ill humours yea further into a Consumption and pining and withering away of the Body also into other cold Diseases Thus He. Immoderate Desire hath no rest 't is endless and a perpetual Rack The Ambitious Si appetitum explere non potest furore corripitur If he cannot satisfie his desire he runs mad with a Phrensie Hereunto may be referred over-much Study or an immoderate desire of humane Knowledge which as it was one sin which that Heluo Librorum unsatiable Reader Miracle of learning Dr. James usher Arch-Bishop of Armagh lamented in himself that he should be as glad of Munday to go to his Book as of the Lord's Day for his Service so it is no less unhealthful than sinful For we find in the History of his Life I mean the Arch-Bishop's that he contracted to himself the Sciatica by sitting up late in the Colledge Library of Dublin Ibidem p. 108. Overmuch Study as Machiavel holds weakens the Body and as Lemnius saith causeth Melancholy in that by reason of the immoderate agitation of the mind the native heat is extinguished and the Spirits both Animal and Vital being attenuated and weakned soon decay and perish by which it cometh to pass that the Natural moisture being exhausted the Body doth decline to a cold and dry habit Yea when Study is extended unto unseasonable hours as is usual with some Students it becomes very injurious to the Body according to that old Sentence in Grammar Nocturnae lucubrationes longe periculosissimae habentur Night studies are accounted exceeding dangerous They cause dryness of the brain Phrensie dotage emaciate the Body ' make the humours adust increase choler inflame the blood and as may be added out of Galen and Avicenna concerning immoderate watching Naturalem calorem dissipat laesà concoctione cruditates facit Overthrow the Natural heat and hurting concoction cause crudities Galen 3. de Sanitate tuenda Avicenna 3. 1. What shall I say more amongst many other Diseases it sometimes produceth Consumptions and sometimes Madness And in respect of this last Festus his proposition which was indiscreetly applied to Paul may truly enough be referred to many a hard Student Qui insanit cum ratione Thou art beside thy self much learning doth make thee mad Acts 26. 24. Immoderate bookishness seeking to fill the curious brain fills it and the whole Body with Crudities Rheums and other Maladies that at last the Scholler had need be bookish again and study how to rid himself of diseases These are the fruits that some Men reap by their immoderate desire after the Tree of
conferring any thing towards bodily health that it rather produceth sickness even by that which amongst some sottish Physicians is pretended as a cause of health namely vomiting which is a symptome of sickness and also sometimes a cause of dangerous distempers when it succeedeth a nauseous over-charging the stomack with drink So that whatever be the effects of an evacuation by other kind of vomits this by drunkenness is often a cause of many distempers seldom or never a cure of any unless it be of the present sickness of stomack which this vice first caused But how many other distempers and diseases doth it cause which it never cures So that you see drunkenness is a certain cause of many diseases and of shortness of life but seldom a cure unless it be by accident of any SECT III. Of Adultery Fornication Uncleanness c. THe works of the flesh saith the Apostle are manifest which are these adultery fornication uncleanness lasciviousness Gal. 5. 19. And they which do such things shall not inherit the Kingdom of God Verse 21. Now as these sins are very injurious to the Soul so also to the body Ezeck 16. 28. For Lust not satisfying such Persons as are tainted with it they soon fall into immoderation and excess which hath these damages attending it A dissolution of strength and spirits decay of sight tainture of the breath diseases of the nerves joynts as Palsies all kinds of Gouts weakness of the back involuntary flux of seed bloody Urine But then as a Modern Physician saith if to immoderation be added the base and sordid accompanying of Harlots and impure Women what follows but a Consumption of Lungs Liver and Brain a putrifaction and discolouration of the blood loss of colour and complexion a purulent and violent Gonorrhea an ulceration and rottenness of the Genitals noysom and malignant Knobs Swellings Ulcers and Fistulaes in the head face feet groin and other glandulous and extream parts of the body These and many more being the effects of that detestable sin when it meets with that detestable disease the Venereal Pox which by God's just judgment hath assailed Mankind not only in France but in most parts of the World as a scourge or punishment to restrain the too wanton and lascivious lusts of impure Persons causing them to receive in themselves that recompence of their errour which was meet as it is in the Apostle's Phrase Rom. 1. 27. though in a different sense To this purpose Mr. John Abrenethy in his pious and ingenious Treatise of Physick for the Soul thus writeth p. 369. This burning lust spendeth the Spirits and Balsom of life as the flame doth wast the Candle whereupon followeth corruption of humours rotting of the marrow the joints ache the nerves are resolved the head is pained the gout increaseth and oft-times as a most just punishment there insueth that miserable scourge of Harlots Lues-Venerea the French Pox. Also Carnal Love or fleshly lust in young Inamoratoes whose affections are stronger than their reason is a branch of wantonness that is fruitful in the production of such diseases and distempers as do extreamly afflict and weaken the Persons captivated as may appear in that Example of Amnon who was sick with love 2 Sam. 13. 1. 2. as the cause with a consumption as the effect being lean from day to day by reason of his fair Sister whom he loved And hence it is that in such Persons the heat abandons the parts and retiring into the brain leaves the whole body in great distemperature which corrupting consuming the blood makes the face grow pale and wan causeth the trembling of the heart breeds strange Convulsions and retires the spirits in such sort that they seem rather Images of death than living Creatures who are possessed with it Now for further illustration of this matter and to revive the mind of the Reader I shall briefly and compendiously recite these two instances The first is of King Perdiccas whom Hippocrates observing and finding him to be in a Chronical sickness which made his body to languish exceedingly after long inquiry perceived his pining away to flow from a Spiritual disease for the love he had to Phila his Fathers Concubine Saran in vita Perdic. The other is of Antiochus Son of King Seleucus who burning with an unspeakeable desire and lust for Stratonice his Stepmother and being mindful what dishonest fires he carried in his breast concealed his inward wound and smothered the flame so long till it reduced his body to the uttermost degree of a Consumption and thus lying in his bed like a dying Man his Father was presently cast down with grief as thinking onely of the death of his only Son and his own miserable condition in being made Childless Plutarch Now how these two Perdiccas and Antiochus were cured of their languishing distempers is inconsistent with my present purpose to declare Also Sodomy Polygamy and self-pollution are sins of uncleanness that by transgressing the rules of Temperance do prove frequently occasions of many distempers Yea likewise the immoderate and unseasonable use of the Marriage bed which is a breach of some Divine Precepts 1 Thes. 4. 4. Lev. 18. 19. is too fruitful in diseases not only in respect of those derived to Posterity but also of those propagated on the Parents themselves For according to the judgment of Laevinus Lemnius and other learned Physicians it can hardly be expressed what Contagîon and mischief comes thereupon when such immodest and impure conjunctions are indulged For where the right ends of Marriage are not observed there Persons of both Sex at last pay dearly for their unruly lust when their bodies are tormented with the Leprosie or Pox Gouts Aches or other distemperatures And therefore one adviseth That in the private acquaintance and use of Marriage there be a seasonable restraint with a moderation that so the pleasure therein be inter-mingled with some regard to the rules of health and long life To both which those fore-named sins of Wantonness and Uncleanness are foul Enemies Moreover these sins do shorten and contract life For those that are defiled and corrupted by them do very much sin against their own Bodies wasting their strength in pleasure as the flame consumeth the Candle and therefore are like Sparrows which Aristotle saith do therefore live but a short time because of their insatiable copulation And I read that the Romans were wont to have their Funerals at the gates of Venus Temple Plut. to signifie that lust was the Harbinger and hastener of death Yea the wisest of meer Men doth in his Proverbs teach us the praedatory and destructive power of all uncleanness in these words And thou mourn at the last when thy flesh and thy body are consumed Prov. 5. 11. It is a fire saith Job that consumeth to destruction Job 31. 12. The Lord Verulam in his History of Life and Death p. 57. makes this observation That the Goat lives to the same age
18. And as touching False fear though it be rather a fruit of weakness and a punishment of sin for so 't is threatned as a punishment by the Lord Lev. 26. 17 36. then a sin in it self yet as it is irregular it is concluded within the scope of this Discourse and as it is frequent or excessive may justly deserve reproof Distrustful fear is straitly prohibited by those Apostles Peter 1 Pet. 3. 14. and John Rev. 2. 10. Yea all Natural fear when it is joined with distrust and diffidence or excess is to be avoided as unwarrantable in Sacred Writ Num. 14. 9. 2 Kings 6. 16. And was therefore by Nehemiah resisted Nehem. c. 6. v. 11. Now as all unlawful and immoderate fear is to be avoided in regard of the Soul so also in regard of the Body For it is often the cause of Diseases as first of that called in Latin Tremor in English Trembling or shaking of the Members Metus dejicit vires ac proinde tremorem inducit saith the learned Galen Com. 1. in lib. 3. Epid. cap. 4. Fear brings down the strength and so causeth trembling His meaning more largely might be thus viz. that the heat which resides in the Blood and Spirits being that which supports and fortifies the members of Man those members being destitute thereof can hardly support themselves but tremble and shake in that manner and whereas the hands and lips shew greater signs of alteration then the rest the reason is for that those parts have a more strict bond with the heart and have less blood then the rest and therefore cold doth more easily make an impression upon them Also it is sometimes the cause of that disease called Cordis Palpitatio Panting of the heart Deut. 28. 65. or at least of the like Symptoms and those as dangerous especially when they precede a Syncope or Swounding which is as proper an effect and Catastrophe of this Passion as of that disease Moreover it is sometimes the extimulating promoting cause of the Lask or Diarrhaea for as the Author of a certain Natural History saith if the Natural heat leave the heart and go downward the fear is not only encreased but it bringeth withal a loosness of the belly Therefore it is written saith he in the Book of Job where it is spoken of the fear that Leviathan bringeth upon Men That the mighty are afraid by reason of breakings they purifie or purge themselves Job 41. 25. i. e. for fear of him Neither is this all but experience teacheth us at a dear rate that in immoderate fear through the strength of fantasie and imagination sundry contagious Diseases as the Small Pox Measles c. are frequently imprinted in the blood when guilt makes Men fearful of deserved punishment according to that of the Wise man The fear of the wicked it shall come upon him Prov. 10. 24. And as it causeth Diseases so consequently shortness of life Oft-times present death hath followed upon it through suffocation of the Vital Spirits It was almost present death unto the Churle Nabal he lived not many dayes after that he had been striken with it It came to pass in the morning when the wine was gone out of Nabal and his wife had told him these things that his heart died within him and he became as a stone 1 Sam. 25. 37 38. And in the next Verse we find that he died about ten dayes after It put the Watch at Christ's Sepulcher into such a shaking fit by an Earth-quake under them Mat. 28. 4. and another within their hearts that but for God's Mercy it had shaked them into their Graves when they became as dead Men. It seemeth to be a notable contraction of life by its sudden introduction of the blossoms of old age viz. gray hairs which by the extremity of this Passion have been strangely effected in the space of a week or two as 't is storied of one Mr. Baynings of London Yea even in one night as appeareth by Record of a memorable example during the Reign of the Emperour Charles the Fifth For one Francis Gonzague having caused a young Man of his house to be comitted to Prison for that he suspected he had conspired against him this miserable young Man was so terrified with his affliction as the same night he was cast into Prison his hair grew all white But more fully to the matter we find the sad and pernicious effect of immoderate fear in this following Narration Anno 1568. there was in Breda one Peter Coulogue a Godly Man who by his Popish Adversaries was cast into Prison and his Maid-servant daily brought him his food confirming and comforting him out of the Word of God as well as she was able for which they imprisoned her also Not long after Peter was put to the torment which he endured patiently After him the Maid was fetched to be tormented Whereupon she said My Masters wherefore will ye put me to this torture seeing I have no way offended you If it be for my Faith-sake ye need not torment me For as I was never ashamed to make a Confession thereof no more will I now be at this present before you But will if you please freely shew you my mind therein Vide Clark's Martyrol p. 305. Yet for all this they would have her to the Rack Whereupon she again said If I must needs suffer this pain pray give me leave to call upon my God first This they assented to And whilst she was fervently pouring out her prayers to God one of the Commissioners was surprised with such fear and terrour that he fell into a swound out of which he could never be recovered Many such like Instances might be heap'd up were it not in vain to evince this Point Per plura quod potest fieri per pauciora By many words which may be done by few And therefore I shall conclude it with the Sentence of that Atlas of Experimental Knowledge Lord Bacon in his translated History of Life and Death pag. 222. Great fears shorten the life for saith he in fear by reason of the cares taken for the remedy and hopes inter-mixed there is a turmoil and vexing of the Spirits And so much shall serve for this Section SECT X. Of Immoderate Desires Ambition excessive Cares Sollicitude Covetousness c. OMne nimium vertitur in vitium All extremes become vicious and those Epithites Immoderate and Excessive signifie as much in relation to Desires Ambition Cares Sollicitude c. and therefore the less shall need to be inferred for the arraignement of them Know then briefly that the above-named are all Diseases of the Soul Ambition which is an immoderate desire or thirst after Honour and Worldly glory is a Spiritual Dropsie that is not easily cured not only a great sin in it self but puts Men upon many others There is nothing saith one the Author of the whole Duty of Man p. 151. so horrid which a Man that eagerly