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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A37031 The art of memory a treatise useful for such as are to speak in publick / by Marius D'Assigny ... D'Assigny, Marius, 1643-1717. 1697 (1697) Wing D280; ESTC R22842 37,788 118

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Esteem and Value that you will thereby obtain from your Congregations by this way of Delivery besides the greater Efficacy and Power that your Words and Preaching will have upon the Minds of your Auditors besides the promoting of the Glory of God and perhaps the perswading a greater Number thereby out of the broad Road of Eternal Perdition I must needs tell you that you will quickly find an unspeakable Benefit in a few Years and your great Pains at first in conquering your natural Weaknesses will be fully recompensed with a greater Ease Pleasure and Delight in the publishing of your Meditations You will find that this way of Delivery will smooth and polish your Conceptions and Fancy You will find that it will unty your Tongues and make you more ready to express your selves you will find that your Labours will be the less your Preaching more acceptable your Improvements greater your Learning more sound and your selves able upon a sudden to answer all Gainsayers for by this means the Body of Divinity will become as familiar to you as your Pater Noster Antisthenes the Athenian Philosopher when a Friend complained that he had lost his Book where he had recorded weighty Matters told him that he ought not to have trusted things of so great Importance to Pen Ink and Paper but to his Memory where he should always have found them ready at hand in time of need There is one Advantage more which we shall receive by the Exercise of our Memories how considerable it may be to us and what Influence it may have to increase and inlarge our Eternal Happiness we may at a distance guess for thereby the Soul will be inabled to increase its Abilities Faculties and Graces which have a natural Dependance upon this of Memory and that also will be inabled to retain more because as there is a strict Union and Communication of all the Perfections between the Soul and Body so that if one receives an Inlargement it conveys the same Benefit to the other and the other becomes more perfect and accomplished in that Ability which its Partner enjoys The Exercise therefore of Memory will not only inable the Organ now to perform more perfect Acts and inlarge the Ability while the Soul is in Conjunction with the Body but at its Separation and at the great Morn of the Resurrection this Perfection with all the rest being as immortal as the Spirit where it is fixt and to which it is conveyed by our constant Endeavours and Correspondence with the Body will then appear more compleat and greater for the better Reception of future Glory and Bliss and to our everlasting Comfort and Satisfaction Therefore as St. Bernard very well expresseth himself Ad aeternitatis Gloriam acquirendam nullus labor durus nullum tempus longum videri debet In Doct. I would not have those Worthy and Learned Gentlemen of my Function be displeased with this Exhortation and Advice that I address to the Students of our Universities as if it were designed to undervalue their wise and profitable Meditations pronounced with the Assistance of Book from the Pulpit Our Nation only is used to this way of Delivery for we are wont ofttimes as we ought to consider and weigh the Things and Expressions more than the manner of the Publication Neither is it possible for them after a Tract of Time and a long Usage to change their Custom of Preaching But for the Young Men coming up to supply our vacant Places in Church and State 't is now in their Power to alter this Custom to exercise their Memories to follow the Practice of the Learned Men of other Nations 'T is now in their Power to use themselves to such a Practice as will be advantagious to the Glory of God the Salvation of Souls the Credit of our Church and infinitely beneficial to themselves I recommend therefore this Treatise principally to you Gentlemen and let nothing hinder you from the Exercise of your Memories and the Practice of the Rules here prescribed which I will assure you from Experience have proved effectual for the overcoming the Weaknesses of Nature and inabling frail Memories to perform the Acts of large and strong If some of them seem common despise them not they will be no less useful if put in Practice I have not only consulted in the delivery of them my own Knowledg and Experience but have also set down the Advices of several Learned Men about this Subject and borrowed from the Skill of the Physicians several approved Experiments for the strengthening and corroborating the Faculty of Memory However I intreat you Gentlemen to accept kindly from my Pen this Endeavour for your Benefit and the Publick and this sincere Expression of my earnest Desire of your Success Promotions and Advantages and of the Prosperity of our Church and Nation I beseech God of his Infinite Bounty to make you all truly useful in your Generation to inlarge your Memories increase your Learning bless all your Abilities and Graces and to preserve you all to his Eternal Kingdom Amen ERRATA PAge 8. line penult dele all P. 10. l. 27. read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P. 23. l. 28. r. suscitat P. 43. l. 26. r. tam. P. 54. l. 3. r. capillis P. 57. l. 24. r. linguam P. 58. l. 3. r. dicta P. 59. l. 13. r. albi l. 24. put a colon after dictas P. 60. l. 26. r. bulliant P. 61. l. 4. r. Stichad●s THE CONTENTS Chap. 1. OF the Soul or Spirit of Man page 1 Chap. 2. Of Memory its Seat and Excellency p. 18 Chap. 3. The Temper or Disposition of the Body best and worst for Memory with the Natural Causes and Reasons of both p. 30 Chap. 4. Some General and Physical Observations and Prescriptions for the remedying strengthning and restoring a Memory injured by the ill Temper of the Body or the Predominancy of one of the four Qualities in the Brain p. 38 Chap. 5. What is very much prejudicial to the Faculty Habit and Practice of Memory p. 42 Chap. 6. Of such Natural Things as may be assisting to and may comfort Memory from the Procurement of Nature and the Contrivance of Art p. 49 Chap. 7. Rules to be observed for the Acts or Practice of Memory p. 62 Chap. 8. Rules to be observed to help our Remembrance of things that we desire to preserve in Mind p. 77 Chap. 9. Of Artificial or Fantastical Memory or Remembrance p. 82 The Art of Memory c. CHAP. I. Of the Soul or Spirit of Man THE Excellent and Wonderful Frame of the Human Body wherein the Wisdom of the Creator shines so beautifully and apparently before our Eyes being but the Cabinet of the Soul or the outward Shell made on purpose to receive and entertain this Immortal Creature gives good reason to imagine that this Jewel is far more excellent and of a greater Worth Certainly our Wise Maker had no mean Esteem of this Master-piece of the Creation