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A00658 A forme of Christian pollicie drawne out of French by Geffray Fenton. A worke very necessary to al sorts of people generally, as wherein is contayned doctrine, both vniuersall, and special touching the institution of al Christian profession: and also conuenient perticularly for all magistrates and gouernours of common weales, for their more happy regiment according to God; Police chrestienne. English Talpin, Jean.; Fenton, Geoffrey, Sir, 1539?-1608. 1574 (1574) STC 10793A; ESTC S101953 277,133 426

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might haue risen to great personages aswell for ornament as to gouerne churches and common weales euen as out of the horse of Troye issued great Lordes in the middest of the Citie to the glorious victorie of the Greekes ¶ What Principall and Regents ought to be called to institute a Colledge it is requisite they be learned of good life instructions who they ought to be by many comparisons Chapter ij HAuing thus prouided for the building and reuenues of a Colledge the next care is to furnishe it with a Principall and Regents of exquisit doctrine and maners irreprehensible to whom young men may and ought to conforme themselues in all things whither it be in spéech iesture life or any conuersation not suffering to be founde in them any vice no more then ought to be any stayne in a cleare looking glasse for they bée mirroures of youth wherein we behold our selues to the end to wipe away such spottes as be vpon our face if it be so as we said before that such as is the gouernour of a Citie such are the Citizens although iudgement reason ioyned with the exercise of humane affaires giues them an vnderstanding to discerne what is good and hurtfull for them what expectation or hope of fashion is there in young children who as apes counterfeting naturally all that they see done expresse as neare as they can the manners resemblance of their Master The same was the cause that that great and excellent Poet Homer in his philosophicall poesie fayned that Achillos so eloquent and excellent in déedes of armes had with him alwayes his Master Phoenix the leader of all good Masters who instructed him in the partes of well speaking and was to him alwayes as an example of noble actes from Pithagoras Archyras Socrates and Plato are deriued great Philosophers and very vertuous Disciples as good followers of their wise and vertuous Masters euen as from pure fountaines flow riuers like to them in cleare fairenesse But of the contrary when schollers shall sée in their Masters both ignorance error and all sortes of vice hauing neither counsell to consider the faults of their teachers nor subiect to correction of any other may it not be sayed by them as in a Greeke prouerbe was layed against a sophister hauing Disciples like to him selfe that of a wicked Crow comes a worse egge meaning that by an euill Master whither it be in doctrine or life is formed a Disciple like to him For that cause Saint John and Jesus Christ called séedes of Vipers suche as were enuenemed with false discipline of a wicked toung suttle ipocrisie and inward mallice of the Pharesies and other Masters corrupted in such vices wee read that the mightie Alexander obseruing his Master Leonides giuen to drunkennes became so intēperat in drinking that he did many infamous acts yea not sparing to kill a deare friend of his and one of his chiefest Philosophers It is a thing most consenting to the nature of a childe to imitate vices expressed before him in demonstracion most easie to corrupt him by wicked example whose nature of it selfe is full of corruption draweth him by kind to vices without the aide of outward doctrine euen as it is easie to one issued of a race infected with leprosie or other corruption of nature to fall eftsones into that disease being naturall and contagious specially if he haue familiar conuersation or gouernement with such as are infected is it not easie to make him to fall that is weake and not able to stand vpright But he that of himselfe seekes nothing but to poore vppon the earth it is hard to make him clyme into high places Euen so the thoughtes and mindes of man being from their infancie inclined to do euill solleine negligent and slow to well doing of themselues will hardly pretend or aspire to clime the high hill of vertue nor the Muses coassembling in their stately Helicon Parnassus mountains signifying the raised hart and industrie we ought to haue to come to the type of true erudicion if they be not led as it were drawne by the hand with often exhortation take corgae by such as follow the right hard and straite waye of vertue science which is scuh as are their vertuous and skilfull Masters of long time exercised in their owne profession The auncients in times past for the many benefites growing to common weales by the industrie of learned and vertuous instructers compared them to good Dyers giuing a good and faire teynt or die to cloth of it selfe vile and vnpolished which afterward in respect of his excellent cooller becomes seruiceable and vsuall to Princes Kynges and Emperours some of them resemble them with learned Painters who vppon their tables draw so faire pictures that ther is not so great a Lorde who takes not pleasure to beholde them And some compare them to excellent caruers of Images who vndertaking to worke purtreytes out of rude and vnpolished stones smooth them first and cut them afterwards by such Art and cunning raysing so liuely and naturall formes that to make them naturall bodies there seames to want nothing but life and spéech and so by their excellent skill in those Images they take away quite the first nature of the stone out of the which they were hewed euen so do wise learned and vertuous Masters with the wittes of their Disciples giuing them doctrines and vertues most excellent pictures liuely coollers and goodly ornaments of the soule Who by those things declares a beautie wonderfull excellencie altogither deuine by the which it hath affinitie with God and is honored of all men aboue all other taking charge to institute youth the Principall ought most to excell who as he is in the first degrée of honour and authoritie ouer the Regents and schoolemasters so it belonges to him to surmount them in wisedome erudicion and good life And being assured of the vertue and doctrine he must also be hable to iudge of the discreation of the Regents and giue thē place honorable and allowance equall to their merits furnishing alwayes the fourmes when it is requisite as if the chiefe Regents faile to supplie their default to auoyde disorder and in any wise not to suffer their youth to loose their deare time which cannot but be to them all a charge of conscience Lastly they must examine the schollers of high fourmes determining fourmes according to their aduauncement otherwise they are negligent in their estate cōtemptible and expresse not the reuerēce and obedience which iustly apertaine to the Principall and therefore let no Colledge be gouerned either by a proud or ignorant man. ¶ A continuance of the discourse of Colledges by other comparisons Chapter iij. SVch good instructours teachers and scholemaistsrs to youth maye also by the doctrine of the auncients bée layed in comparison with Fathers Phisicions labourers gardeners shepheardes potters goldsmithes who according to their actions in the artes wherein they deale
ouer darknesse and death the deuyll and hell vanquished and ouercome For it is the victorie our assuraunce of life and puts vs lastly in the possession of the kingdome of the eternall god And as there is also one commaundement as well to men as women great as small learned as ignoraunt to heare it and make continuall exercise of it as is commaunded in Iosua So for the ignoraunce of this law of God Osee saith that the people of Israel were past into captiuitie and hauocke by the Assyrians and Babylonians to be short by hearing of this worde are knowen such as be of God and belong to Iesus Christ And nowe that Pastours are bounde to preache the Gospell and the people ought to heare it it is without question as well by the commaundement of Iesus Christ as by his Apostles and instruction of his Church not néeding further to alleadge infinite Textes of the olde Testament conteyning the same doctrine The last commaundement which Iesus Christ gaue to his Apostles when he ordayned his Testament and last wyll was that they shoulde go foorth preache throughout all the worlde vsing this speache Go into the worlde whither I sende you teache all sortes of people or preache to all creatures whether Iewes or Paynims instructing them first in Faith and Baptisme which is who beléeueth and wyll be baptized shal be saued baptizing them in the name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost and who doth not beleeue shal be damned Teache them in like sort to obserue and kepe all those thinges which I haue geuen you in charge to do and to saye to others Be not amazed nor gréeued because visibly I go to heauen for I assure you for the great loue I beare you that I am alwayes with you euen to the consummation of the heauens the same meaning as if he had sayde vnto them Feare not that I do abandon you For besides that I wyll sende you the holy ghost as a Comfortour an Aduocate and teacher yet I my selfe wyll be with you euen with that presence and power which replenisheth the heauen and the earth For it is geuen to me euerywhere And I wyll not onely remaine with you as touching the time of your persons for the Apostles and Disciples remayned but a time after him as Saint Iames the elder but two or thrée yeres at the most but also with your successours in that estate meaning the successours in the estate of the Church which is not but one body in him Yea the last and most base members haue as great interest in the promise of the presence of Iesus Christ as the first and highest according to their measure and quantitie proportioned to them as wée see the members of a naturall bodye partake by equall proportion with the presence of the soule by her vegetation sence and mouing And deliueryng to his Apostles and Disciples their charge in these wordes Go and preache c. He spake also to Bishops succéedyng his Apostles and Curates hauyng place and office of his Disciples geuyng them that commaundement euen vntyll the ende of the worlde for they are but of one bodie gouerned by one spirite vnder one heade Iesus Christ And as it is matter true in our common experience that the last speache and Lesson which a wise Father geues to his children and a Lorde to his friends is to recommende vnto them those thinges which they holde most deare and be of greatest importaunce Euen so when he geues them charge to preache the Gospell and teache all sortes of people he meaneth that euerye Pastour instruct diligently all such as are geuen to him in charge by the worlde as hauyng nothing in more deare affection then the care to féede his flocke By the Gospell he vnderstandes all doctrine of health of grace and of promise for remission of sinnes whereof Iesus Christ is the aucthour where he saith Happy are they that heare the worde of God he addeth this text and do kepe it wherein be comprehended the statutes and ordinaunces which the Apostles haue taught which we call traditions as beyng recommended vnto them by the holy spirite of Iesus Christ to his Church By the administration of Baptisme we vnderstande likewise the other Sacramentes seeyng that as he hath instituted them as well as it so they followe it afterwardes accordyng to their institution wherein séeyng he admittes the doctrine and geues it such dignitie it is necessarie that we teache the benefites graces which we receaue by the Sacramentes afore we administer them I knowe not howe such can haue excuse afore God who intruding them selues into the companie of Iesus Christ I meane Prelates and Curates successours to the Apostles and Disciples and beyng commaunded by him to teache and preache either wyll not or can not accomplishe such charge seeing that Christ called none but such as both coulde and woulde I may boldly affirme and mainteyne in trueth that according to the law deuine the office of the Preacher is annexed to the Bishop and benefice as by naturall vnion the soule is conioyned to the body therfore let such as haue charge of Soules consyder better the state and nature of their duetie as beyng not able of them selues let them at least supply it by others that both can and wyll with whom let them impart the profites and reuenues wherein in true iustice and merite they haue nothing because they do nothing Recompence is due to labour the hiered man ought to bée nourished with the benefite of the Vine and eate of the fruite he that fighteth in warre ought to receaue his paye he that féedes the flocke ought to take the Mylke and the Fléese and he that trauayles in the Temple and the Gospell deserues to liue by it Presidentes and Counsellours receiue not their wages if they do not their office then by what collour of right in conscience or common reason can he demaunde any rewarde which bringes foorth nothing but a show yea he is but an impediment to others in whom is more abilitie and better merite But if there be such Maskers in the Church as I feare there are to many let them be payde their right due to their estate according to God and to auoyde slaunder and let them not of their owne priuate aucthoritie do iustice of themselues against all pollitike order for it is not for the Shéepe to rise against his Shephearde but if they continue to bée as vnprofitable Dranes in the Hiue of the Church eating the Honie and Waxe of diligent and painefull Bées Let their processe be exactly pursued by such as beare rule in the Church and so to cut of the example of such disorder confusion and sacriledge more foule then theft reasoning that an estate so excellent shoulde not suffer so foule a staine to the contempt and blasphemie of Christian religion ¶ Suche are refuted as holde that people are not bounde to heare so many Sermons wherfore are they Pastours
Sodom and Gomorre to see if the desolution of the people aunswered the horrible brute that went of them his wordes were I will discend and see if it be so Hée that knoweth whatsoeuer is done euen in the déepest bottomes and from whome no secréete can bée hid declares by this familiar manner and phrase of Speache applyed to our infirmitye that it belonges to Iudges afore they enter into sentence or pronounce against such as are accused to bée assured of the trueth of the fact least by theyr lightnes or soure passion they committe errour in iudgement In the lawe when the affaires stoode vpon any harde or obscure doubte this was the custome to referre it to the iudgement of God as in the punishment of the blasphemour and what right daughters had to the goods of theyr Fathers in whiche cases there was no resolution set downe in the Law the same seruing as matter of aduertisement to examine exactlye such controuersies and harde causes as the lawes haue no habilitye to decide beséeching God according to the aduise of the scripture so to lighten their inward reason that they may bring forth true and perfect Iudgement But when Iudges will not beginne by this aduertisement nor conforme them selues to this iustice of God his iudgements let them looke for that terrible seuerytie which hee hath thundered vpon those Iudges countries where he found negligence in punishment to those sortes of crimes Hely the great gouernour and Iudge of Israel because hée did not iustice vppon his children brake his necke his children were kylled and all the countrey brought to desolacion The sonnes of Samuel were deposed because they tooke presentes Saul was reprooued for geuing grace to such as hée ought to haue punished after whose death famine came ouer all the land of Palestin for that hée gaue wicked iudgementes in the landes of the Gabaonites whom hée afflicted and made certaine of them passe by vniust death to satisfye which iniquity Seuen of the race of Saule were hanged vpon Gibbertes The Captiuitie of the Israelites and ruine of Ierusalem of the Temple and their Townes happened for the transgression of the Priestes and Kinges done in Iustice corrupting it by presents condemning the iust and iustifying the wicked for Bribes Whereof Esay speaketh thy Princes that is thy gouernours as well in Pollecye Ecclesiasticall as Ciuill are vnfaithfull and haue forsworne them selues yea euen they that haue taken othe to doo good Iustice and haue not obserued it but are become companions of Robbers and haue share in their praye They all loue Bribes and folowe recompenses because they haue done pleasure in iudgement to the ritche But euen those as they were the chiefe in honour and superioritye so also were they first taken Captiues murdered their houses and goodes suffered spoile and they more then others defaced with ignominie contempt and all sortes of wretchednes These bée the miseryes whiche happen to wicked Iudges and theyr Children and for theyr abuses to Tounes Countreyes and Kingdomes So that with good cause I maye recommende as a laste aduertisement to al Iudges to remember the saying of Dauid in this sorte God assistes the assembly of the Gods who are the Iudges and gouernours of his people vnder whome they exercise the iudgement which is proper to God the true and eternall Iudge and therefore are they as partakers of a deuine aucthoritye by enterteining ruling his people by that iustice and souerainty So that as God is in the Courtes of his Iudges and in the middest of them so hée iudgeth them whereby is meant that hée condemneth them if they iudge not according to God. Dauid also pursues them crying in this sort How long O ye peruerse Iudges wil you Iudge so wickedly wyll you not acknowledge your selues in your false iudgementes wyll you alwayes haue regarde to the faces of offendours geuing them support and absolution of their wickednes and liberty to sinne with impunity deliuer the poore man Orphane and iustifie the simple and néedye suffer no wrong to bée done to such as haue no maintenance in the world are without fauourers in courtes Take the poore and néedy out of the hand of the transgressor But what much lesse that these worldlie lordings haue cōmunity with this great pitie seeing as Dauid sayeth they neuer knewe nor vnderstoode what they were bound to doo according to God so greatlye were they inuironed with wretched darkenes and whollye possessed with ignorance of God and his lawes whereby it happeneth that the foundation of the earth shal be moued whiche is that by that occasion exceding great euilles and intollerable aduersityes shall fall vppon the nations of the earth Therfore where I sayd you were gods so greatlye honoured of God by the state which hée geues you representing him in case of iudgemēt I forgat not your infidelity meaning that you shal fal into no lesse miserye wretchednes then any of the auncient wicked Iudges to whose iniquitye was apointed a miserable conclusiō of their vnhappy daies Wherin Dauid considering the lamentable infelicities ouerwhelming the world for the false corrupt iudgemēt of Iudges cries out to God saying Raise thy selfe O Lord God and Iudge the Earth condemne the abuses and faultes of suche people as haue corrupted the earth with impietye by their vnrighteous Iudgementes so shalt thou raigne ouer all nations and bée honoured as a true and iust Lorde and Iudge of the earth doing iustice vpon so many iniquities By this psalme Iudges are instructed to iudge well as well for the reuerence of the great Lord sitting in the middest of them in theyr Iudgements to approue them if they bée righteous and reproue them yea dissolue them if they hold of iniquity condemning the persons to horrible misteries yea euen to shake the foundations of the maine earth so gréeuous to God is a false and vnrighteous Iudge as of the con-contrary hee delites in him who according to conscience acquites his charge duty as also for that they haue the honour estate reuerence of Iudges to distribute right to euery one remembring that lord in their iudgement who hath this perpetuall property to iudge without affection they ought also to haue such exquisite knowledge with exact iudgemēt of reason that according to cōmon naturall sence they iudge to estéeme it a horrible sinne to iudge against their conscience séeing that as infinite Pagans with this iudgement of reason haue established their perpetual glory for the true deciding of causes so the errour of our Iudges being layde vp in the memory of God wil bring them to receyue sētence afore his seate of iudgement to their assured confusion And so let all Iudges knowe that if by their sinister sentences any one is depriued of his goodes honour or life by whiche it can not bée chosen but many calamities wyll happen euen so many eternal damnations do they deserue with no lesse horrible paines
his people to dispence with his son To be short there was neuer Nation so barbarous which did not punishe adulterie by death or at least heauie paynes And therefore it is an indulgencie very cryminall afore God that there is no common punishment to this detestable sinne to the which by all reason is no lesse due and merite of gréeuous paynes then to the Théefe whereof this furthereth the proofe that besides the grauitie which we find in fornication there be foure things greatly enforcing the enormitie of the Acte First it is cōmitted against the thrée essentiall partes of mariage as faith linage and Sacrament The faith which was geuen in this Mariage is broken which bringes periurie and by the ordinaunce of the Lawe the periurer ought to die the othe was made solemnly in the Church vnder inuocation of the name of God And the contract of faith and the othe made betwéene the parties aucthorised by the Priest and approoued by all the Churche as a signe of mutuall fidelitie signified by the King geuen vpon the Maryage day Linage is hindered by a commixture of the seede of the Husband and whoremonger or at least it is vncertaine to whom it appertayneth What certaintie hath the adulterous woman of her children whether they be her husbandes or her whoremongers And in this vncertainty and doubt what conscience can she haue to nourishe them at she charges of her Husbande and suffer them to put on the habite of his lawfull heires If she knowe it is not her theft the more And if hanging be a Lawe to Théeues what execution to such people There is also a Sacrament as S. Paul calleth it in Iesus Christe and the Churche which is a signe of the inseparable coniunction of the Lorde with the Church whom he hath maryed in faith and hath geuen him selfe wholly to her and become one fleshe with her in receiuing her into communitie of all his benefites with promise neuer to abandon her the Church hauyng lykewise promised him to cleaue to him and remaine firme in his faith lawe and obedience without taking other Lorde or Religion but his Euen in the like maner man and woman marying together make publike protestation to follow this holy coniunction in the faith and vertue whereof they receiue grace and sanctification in their Maryage and so protesting to liue together in all vnion of holynesse chaste and perpetuall societie according to the inuiolable example of Iesus Christe and the Church What great impietie is commited when they defile this Sacrament Is it not a prophaning of sanctification which is one of the sinnes against the first Table And if it be not a kinde of Heresie to adulterate and corrupt a holy thing at least if they beléeue not the mystery conteyned vnder this Sacrament it can not be but infidelitie so that if a Christian prophaner of a Sacrament an heretique or an Infidel deserue paynes of death what is due to the adulterer by whom it is thus depraued Besides the periurie of faith and hinderaunce which he geues to procreation by the vncertaine commixture of straunge séede there is in this vice a perpetuall grudge and resolucion to do murther either of the Husbandes part to whom the wrong is done or on the wiues behalfe by whom is endured the iniurie of her Husbande or by the rauisher whom gelousie enableth to all bloody actes Many are the slaunders prodigall expenses theftes Rauins and other inconueniences which come by adulterie but more murthers then by fornication I speake not here of Sodomitry with other beastlynesse so abhominable before God and man that the earth ought not to beare so infamous mōstrous actes Bawdes in the auncient church for the vilenesse of their profession notwithstanding their perpetuall penaunce coulde neuer obtayne admission to the holy Communion so great indignitie did the olde fathers impute to those wicked sellers of Christian flesh If he that selleth the seruaunt or handmayde of another meriteth condemnation of death how much more haynous is his desert who entertayneth a lust after the daughter or wife of the Father of a family Here must not be forgot that with the acte it selfe is forbidden all causes moouing or entertayning whoredome as gluttonie dronkennesse idlenesse wordes lookes gestures vnchaste writinges and féelings dissolute and indecent daunces and superfluous riche ornamentes with other such like sturring to wantonnesse which causes most often are no lesse mortall then the effectes that followe them Kepe you from gluttonie dronkennesse and cares of this world saith Christ S. Paul reseruing no porcion of Gods kingdome to drunkardes biddes vs not to bée drunke with Wine where is superfluitie and dissolucion And to the dronkarde guiltie in vicious actes the Philosophers of the auncient time iudged double punishment as S. Paul besides their depriuation from the kingdome of heauen pronounceth them worthy of excommunication ❧ Theft was not punished in the Lawe but by restitucion of double treble and foure folde yea and seruitude but novve for iust causes it is punished vvith death Theft by necessitie in some sort excusable in the prohibition of theft the causes are also contained By this commaundement it is defended to take avvay the honour of another False vvitnesse is more vnlavvfull then theft neither hath it any grace in the Lavve All deceiuers hypocrites and lyars are condemned by these last preceptes ❧ The .10 Chapter THE fourth commaundement of the seconde Table is Thou shalt not steale the transgression whereof in the Law of Moyses was not punished with death but by restitution of double treble and sometime foure folde And in whom was no abilitie of restitution they were condemned to perpetuall seruitude till the wrong was satisfied by iust seruice publike theft as robberie violent theft and murther were condemned to death in the Lawe wherein was no excuse of pouertie as had simple picking whereunto was ioyned no custome but mooued of malicious wyll and affection But because those simple theftes supported with this charitable fauour rose to the state of high and noble robberies they became after by wise aduise subiect to the sentence of the Gybbet Wherein also this was one consyderation that who embeaselleth the goodes of another séemeth by consequence of the euyll that many times happeneth to take away also his life The bread of the needie saith the wise man is the life of the poore and who beguileth them of it is a bloody man He that taketh away the bread that hath béene gayned with the sweate of labour is as the man that kylleth his neighbour whereby may be concluded that the blood spyller and he that deceiueth another are brethren as séeming to haue an affinitie of euyll the same beyng eftsones confirmed by a notable text of the sayde wise man that who offereth vp his sacrifice compounded of the substance of the poore cōmits no lesse offence thē he that afore the eyes of the father killeth his proper sonne So that
he oftentimes passed nightes in watching and prayer By whose example suche as are called to the estate of Ministers in the Church Byshops and Pastors ought to direct their behauiours employing their times in spirituall labours being séene in no place but in excercise eyther to teache the ignoraunt comfort the afflicted exhorte the negligent confirme the weake and reprooue the offendor and expresse withall alwayes some good doctrine and confirme it by example of their good life And so for the rest I send them to the treatise of their institution resorting eftsones to the labor wherof we spake ydlenesse whether in them or any other men of learning is an vncomly staine Let them with all others of knowledge but speciallye gouernors pollitick and spirituall do as the naturall head of man wherein as the spirite meditates debates and deuiseth that which is good and profitable to the body and euery member so by counsell of the same spirite the heade prouides by pollicy beholdes with the eyes hearkeneth with the eares and speaketh with the tongue that which is necessary for the whole studying altogither for the entertainement of the body and al the members whome he commaundes in perticuler to trauell with all their force industry naturall as the eye to looke euery where where neede is the eare to heare that which is good and profitable to the body and all his members the hande to worke in diuers sortes the féete to marche and go c. So that there is no member ouer whome he hath soueraintie and which hath meane to obey his commandement to whom he prescribes not what he ought to doe And euen as the stomacke receyues the meate to decokt and disgest it and afterwards to distribute it thorow the body euen so ought the magistrates of the Churche to doe with the doctrine which they haue learned out of the holy scryptures commending the same imitation also to the magistrats of iustice lawyers imparting the science of the laws which they haue learned in schools to the people some to the instruction health of soules other to direct the pollicy of their commonweals The like also belongs to Phisitions touching the disposing of their science for the cure of bodies Other members haue their propper and outward labour as the hand that worketh and the féete that serue to marche and go So Marchauntes Labourers and Artificers haue the trauayles of the bodye for excercise not onelye to the particuler profite of them selues but also to the behoofe of the whole as others haue the labours of the spirite Here it is not impertinent to the matter to rehearse the Fable of Marcus Agrippa Orator of Rome pronounced to the people which were assembled to do violence against the Lordes of the Senate whom they sayde kept them in too great subiection of labours and contribucions of tributes to entertayne their rest and tranquility This Oratour to apease this popular mutinie and eftsones to reconcile them to the Senat brought in this resemblance the members of the body sayeth he murmured on a time against theyr stomacke and bellye obiecting that they did nothing but toyle in perpetual trauell to norishe it yet it was neuer satisfied and so being weary forbare to labour any more to reléeue it the hand would worke no more the feete laye at rest would go no further the mouth refused to speake the eye to sée and al gaue ouer to prouide for the bellye By which occasion within few dayes all the members became feble weake yea without hability to moue so that the man had no power to set one foote before another And so foreseeing in what danger of death hée stode for not ministring foode to his stomacke and bellye perswaded al his members eftsones to recontinue their trauaile geuing them to vnderstand that they were not fallen into that infirmity by any other meanes then because they disobeyed the stomacke refraining frō trauaile to prouide him sustenance and norriture to the bellie which being thus beaten into theyr knowledge they tooke againe theyr first office labour and diligence and so eftsones recouered theyr agilitye and force neuer afterwards mutined against their stomackes or belly To this stomacke he resembled the Senat in the members were represented the people applying so aptly this cōparison which is as a natural lesson visible doctrine that he brought the people to returne to their citie yéeld theyr accustomed obedience to the Lords of the Senate declaring by this peremtorye reason that it is not possible to the world to bée well gouerned nor lyue without counsel iudgement and prouidence of God and graue gouernors some prouiding for the safetye of soules and others caring for the temporall affayres the better to establishe a happye tranquilitye in a common wealth ¶ In all creatures is seene a perpetual labour whether in Heauen in Earth or in the Sea The profite vvhich riseth in a Citie by the trauaile vvhereunto the idle sort are constrained Exhortacion to the Magistrates to purge their common vveales of vnprofitable people declaring the euill vvhich comes of them and the authoritie vvhich they haue to doo it The .11 Chapter THere is no naturall Common Weale no not amongest the Beastes which is not in continual and common labour without excepting any singular creature frō trauaile In the Monarchie of Bées where the king commaundes wée haue already proued that there is no Idlenes Among the Antes where the most auncient guide the rest euerye one is busye to beare his burden builde his Garner In the flocke of Cranes where al be equal in aucthoritye none is suffered to be idle Nor of Grashoppers when they flye in Troupe There is no winged Birde which flyeth not geues to euery day some acte of trauaile according to his nature No Fishe in the Sea or other water to whome with the vse of life is not ioyned perpetual trauaile No Beast aboue or vpon the earth who after his natural rest doth not employe him selfe according to his natural facultie no natural thing if it haue life and strength is suffered of nature to bee idle The Sea alwaies bringeth forth Fishe beareth great Shippes and hath her other mouinges and as the Riuers fall into the Sea so the fountaines slide into the Riuers The Earth without ceassing engendereth or preserueth Herbes Séedes Plantes and the plantes neuer forbeare in theyr season to expresse their vertue and bring forth fruites and are neuer vnprofitable yea if there bée any vnfruiteful it is committed to the fire as not worthy to bée susteyned with the fatnes of the earth without yéelding good fruite Christ cursed the figge trée because it brought forth leaues yéelded no fruite signifying to vs that it is not inough to trauaile if our labours bring forth no profite to others The fire continuallye burneth The skye hath his perpetual mouing carying about his planets and starres The Sunne geueth light without intermission And the
more often reproches yea being euen as little martyrs so there is no profession wherein are lesse faultes For the Masters séeking but to comunicate their learning with their disciplrs neuer endure their vices if they speake euill they correct them if they do euill they are punished they neuer giue them libertie of idlenes though they allow times of necessary recreation In this estate is nothing but chastitie for which cause they are called Pallas and the Muses being Mayds by which occasion not without cause the Poets fained Pallas the Goddes of wisedome and mayde with hir nine mayden sisters the Muses who also as they signifie the exercise of sciences contayning in it virginitie and perpetuall honestie so they are called sisters as being all of one mutuall societie and indiuidible coniunction There is no thing but vertue and godlines in a schoole and therfore it deserues well to be called a religion if in any bookes of the pagans there be wordes vnciuill bearing to vnchast loue or expressing nombers of Goddes the schollers are aduertised by their tutors that they are spéeches of infidelles which knew not God and therfore in taking the rose they may leaue the thornes and being taught the good they are also warned from that which is euill What resteth now more to be alleadged of these detractors and scoffers of the estate of schoolemasters so noble and happie and almost the generall cause of all the benefites that are done in the worlde where they being men of vaine and light spirites are also a people vnprofitable and a burden and charge to the earth Rattes and deuowring vermin of the garnors of good men bycause they haue not passed by good schooles where with ciuilitie in spéech and life they might haue learned some Art profitable to their countrey and honorable to themselues when they die they cannot leaue any testimonie that they liued vppon the earth for that to them posteritie can prescribe no memorie of god These scoffers by contempt call schoolemasters Magisters and Dominos which turnes as a glory to them for that they haue those names common with Iesus Christ saying to his Disciples you call me Magister and Domine sum etenim so schoolemasters are Magistri by the state of their teaching and Domini for that they commaund their disciples and giue lawes to their affections and lustes where those dispisers of good men for whom according to Salomon the terrible iudgements of God are prepared are thralles and slaues to their passions yea it is to be feared that they are euen the bondmen of Sathan whom they obey and are the executors of his commaundements whereof the greatest and most pernicious is to contemne the good sort and vex with violence and wrong men of learning and vertue being an estate that most batter the kingdome of Sathan bring ruine to his tirannie But notwithstanding their scoffes and vaine impediments they are both Lords and Masters as exercising both authoritie and discipline in their iurisdiction of their small common weale aswell as the greatest Magistrate of the earth and to scoffe with those scoffers we may say they haue their scepture in hand with distribucion of high inferior Iustice for they condemne iustefie and absolue when they condemne there is no appeale yea there is such direct pollecie in their cōmon weale that it suffreth neither disorder nor confusion where it is hard to these inciuill iesters to put order in their small families compounded perhaps but vppon two or thrée persons but crying some times as the blind man whē he hath lost his staffe strike sometimes without measure or reason reaping by their disorder a gréeuous curse to themselues and families whereuppon is no great cause of merueile for that being not hable to gouerne themselues for want of discipline they haue lesse capacitie to rule others For end let them remember the sentence of Seneca that euill doth he merit to commaunde others which hath not himselfe liued long vnder the discipline of good Masters and learned to obey their commaundements So that with Salomon I may aunswere them at full that a wicked man can not but leade his toung in wickednes and who abhorres good men are detested of God. An exhortation to young children to studie Chapter xiiij MOreouer waighing with the comon benefitts comming to comonweals the sweet profitts that growe to singuler men by learning I exhorte all young men to the studie of the same their nature speciallie inclining and their abillitie consenting making cōsciēce to lose one only minute of time according to the examples and counsel of Theophrastus and Plinie Whereof as the on in saying time was a most precius expense signified the no more ought men to consume vainly the least parte of time then to make prodigall expenses or wast of a most delicat meate so the other held all times lost which were not imployed in studie the same being the cause that he would not suffer his reader to repeat to him one word twise alleging that it hindred his time to passe further and learn that which yet he knew not where ●he consented with the moste part of all wise men whose opinions were that in all things ought we to be liberal sauing of our honor time in which two things being so precious we ought to be so sparing as not to be prodigall in eyther of them not to our very frinds But to come to knowledg and vertu they must first demaund them of God who is the only disposer of thē the lord sayeth Salomon giues wisdom and knowleg and discresion comes from his mouth who hath néed of wisdome let him aske it of God sayeth S. James who giues it abundauntly and reprocheth none of that he giues them but enioyneth them to humilitie for on the humble and méek he bestowes his grace secondly it is necesarie to take suche masters as we haue described good learned diligent and discret Thirdly ther must be aplied great labors and seruis trauell which abeit séem heuy and painfull at the beginning yet after the first taste be past they shall féele a most swéet iuyce or likquor in the frute of lerning for which cause Jsocrates resembled learning to a trée whose root is sower and the barke bitter but in the frutes is a most pleasant delightfull tast Plutarch wills men not to stick at the labor that brings any great or excellent benefitt for with the infinitt and glorius recompence afore God and the whole worlde of suche labor the custome of those paines makes the burthen easie which was right aptly aduised of Cato that vertu hath hir exercise in hard trauells which passe away but the frute ther of remaines eternall being a perpetuall inward delight of the mind of man Therfore muche less that labor ought to terifie or with draw young witts from studie but in the consideration of knowledg accompanied with profitt pleasure glorie and immortall name ther is great cause to
poore for want of capacitie and industrie herein the iudgements of the Lacedemonians were righteous against certaine rich Lordes demaunding the daughters of their Kyng Lyander in hope of great credite by that alliance But the king being dead they would haue refused the contractes if they had not bene constrained by publike authoritie of the Court such also deserue like condemnation who by fearefull distrust dare not enter mariadge without great porcions fearing in chusing poore maydes to suffer continuall necessitie which of all other ought least to be feared for that if to their trade or industrie to liue be ioyned a will to trauell calling vppon God fearing him the Lord will so blesse their laboures that in the end they shal be rich aboue their hope At the least if they liue iustly and in the conuersation of honest men they haue promises not to be abandoned in their necessities nor their children to liue by almes for that god wil prouide for their necessary wantes which promises are confirmed by many miracles in the old and new testament as of the Israelites whom he nourished in the desert fortie yeres and of Helias and Eliseus Likewise such as followed Iesus Christ in the mountaines and desertes wée read what prouidence hée raised to féede them Besides in this we are confounded euen by the birdes of the aire in whom being no reason of care God prouides foode for them by his prouidence Much more then is his care ouer vs if we trauell in our vocation with feare prayer seruice and thankesgiuing we read how Iesus Christ approued the societie of such poore when with the virgin Mary and his disciples he assisted the mariadges of such people For as when the wine failed and no more to be had there it is to be concluded that their want was great so if enough had remayned the virgin Mary had not prayed for them and Christ had not done his miracle if it had not bene in time of necessitie if then Iesus Christ beare such fauour to mariadges of the poore that he turnes their water into wine in signe that he will aide them Let those of little faith whose disposition of mariadge is drawne by a desire of wealth and being afrayed to suffer hunger refuse to enter wedlocke Let such be assured that God will defend his poore from famine and want whē they shall fall into actes of infamous life And let not good Christians albeit they haue not such plentie of wealth make difficultie to marry in sort as I haue prescribed and much lesse distrust the increase of goods séeing as labour and time make men ritche so where Iesus Christ is called to the mariadge although the wine fayle at the length he will turne all those malencholly waters into comfortable wines and euen so all their small necessities into great aboundance of wealth Where I spake of the poore sort I meane such as are industrious as for others that wyll not trauell nor learne a trade to liue by ought to be constrayned to labour rather then suffred to marry séeing God assistes not the assembly of such people but from pouertie suffreth them to fall into extréeme miserie wherein is wrought a common burden to common weales ¶ A continuance of the matter of marriage and the dutie of the husband to his wife as also of hir office to her good man Chapter ij A Man hauing determined in himself with the iudgement and good will of his néerest Parentes to ioyne to a wife such one as he hath long knowen to be worthie of him and shée also with the consent of such to whō she appertaines agéeeth with liberall will to such marriage ought afore all other things to obserue the publique Banes for auoyding of slaunder and after to procéede to the rest by the hande of the minister in the word of God and that faith one to another which publikely he shal minister to them addinge the blissing which he shall giue and the prayer whiche he makes with all the assistantes for them to GOD to knit them togither in holy vnitie inuiolable loue and societie and giue them happie dayes in their marriage with plentifull multiplication of children such as they may institute bring vp to his seruice without which obseruations the auncient fathers iudged such societie of man and wife no lawfull marriage but rather a bed of concubines and pagan coniunction This man béeing thus married ought first with the consideration of his perfection of nature and common graces of GOD which he hath more then the woman to employe them all chiefly to the instruction guyde and gouernement of his wyfe and then to the direction of his affaires he is bound to communicate such lawes as he would haue his wyfe to kéepe with louing instruction exhortinge her to the partes of her dutie friendly without anye force protesting also to performe what belonges to his office being both bound thereunto by the expresse statutes of god Touching his parte besides the first consideration of his more perfect creation he ought to consider that as he is the head of his wife so in that he resembleth the purtreite of Iesus Christe so to leade hys wife as our Lord gouerneth his church The head gouernes his body by the vnderstanding mouing sense euen so Iesus Christ inspireth his church and infuseth his graces into her the better to knowe and doe that which concernes God and her owne sauetie The head hath the eye to sée the eare to heare the tong to speake and taste and all to the profit and benefit of the whole bodye taking perpetuall care of it féeling the gréeues of euery member as his own euen the like doth Iesus Christ for his Church spiritually séeing and foreséeing what so euer is necessary for it he heareth her plaintes and necessities and gyues her succour with perpetuall ayde what then ought the man to doe to his wife to what care and prouidence is he bound ouer her yea to what rate of ayde and succour is he tyed if he will worthely expresse the example of his patron if he do it not what greater wrong can he offer to God or manifest iniurie to the holy institution of mariage makes hée not solemne profession to follow that diuine Spouse of the Church by his mariage as also the womā protestes for her parte to follow the church Besides as the head naturally loues the body as vnited with it by nature in indiuisible vnitie he workes for it he takes thought for it and defendes it so Iesus Christ conioyned to his church loueth it dearely watcheth for it kepes and protectes it against the assaultes of all visible and inuisible enemies What belonges then to the husbande the image of this spirituall spouse of Iesus Christ who redéemed his church with his bloud when shée was thrall to sathan washed her with his proper bloud when shée was vncleane dyed to reuiue her being dead iustifieth her and blisseth her afterwardes
hir as his proper fleshe and as Iesus Christ loues his church chastely vnfainedly and perfectlie Thirdly that she be to him as to hir lord and head obedient and yeld to him all honor as the churche doeth to Iesus Christ wher of she is a figure resisting him in nothing but honor him with francke and liberall affection We read Sara exercised the same dutie to hir husband Abraham and called him Lord of whome so honorable a mother in the scripture wiues in all ages ought to be as good daughters and folowers aspiring to hir vertues the wiues of Jacob also yelde to the will of their husband and thought the greatest effect of their dutie consisted to obey him Fourthly with this obedience sayth S. Paule she ought to feare and please him and not greue him at any time as the church sheweth hir an example in hir behauiour to hir deare spouse it is writtten howe Vasthy Quene of Assiria for that she fell from feare to disobey and displease hir husband Assuerus was refused of him and in hir place Hester was receiued for amongst hir other vertues she bare a name to be gratious and of great humilitie Let hir consider that she was giuen to man to be an ayder and a comfort to him so that as often as she findes hir husband perplexed with much busines cares gréefes displesures losses dishonors with other like accidentes and disquietts of the world it belonges to hir office to bring consolation to him in modestie and discresion as Micholl did to hir husband Dauid who suffering passion for the heauie malice that Saule bare to him found comfort in his wife and councell to flée taking vppon hir the remedie of his perill that might come by pursuit Lethir not be as those foolish women which the scripture condemneth I meane the wiues of Job Tobias who in place to recomfort those good Fathers so heauely laden with affliction reproched vnto them that their good works were the cause of their miseries and wickedly sayd that for their good they had recompence of euill not considering that as God vseth to proue his people by tribulation so he can giue them power patience to endure them and at his pleasure deliuereth them to their great praise and happines Let hir neuer giue wicked counsell to hir husband as did Jezabel who séeing hir husband Achab in desier to haue the vine of Naboth counselled him to worke his death by suborned iudges and witnss s and so receiue the vine by confiske for the which wrechednes fell vppon hir vppon him and their whole race what other successe folowed the wicked perswasion of the first woman to hir husband then the coommon ruine of all the world In this men ought to be most circumspect to heare nothing of wiues tending against God or his honor euen no lesse belongs to the office of the wife to administer no wicked aduise for that as she is giuen to hir husband to be to him as a worker and cause of God so if she finde in him any impression of wicked will it belonges to hirto vse diligence to remoue it according to the example of Pilates wife whose perswasions if hir hubsand had beleued he had not ben the morderer of the sonne of God yet the wife is bound to this iustice in hir duetie to restore any default hir husband makes as did Abigail the ritch Nabals wife who vnderstanding that hir foolish husbande had retorned the people of Dauid not only with out the effect of their demaund but had done iniurie to them and taken their master tooke great store of vittells and went to méete Dauid whome shée doubted not to be iustlye displesed comming to commit all to sacke and spoyle she so appeased him with modest gratious and wise spech that he did not only dissolue his enterprise but tooke hir afterwardes to his wife when he vnderstood Nabal was dead Lastlie let the husband remember that if he receiue good counsell from his wife not to reiect it such as was the aduise of Micholl and that which Sara gaue to Abraham to expulse Hagar and his sonne Jsmaell which God ratified by a consequent commaundement to do so ¶ Still touching the dutie of the wife Chapter iij. FIftly if in the husband be vnquiet moodes or mind of anger if he bée an euill liuer yea an infidell the wife is commaūded to be humble modest pacient and also of so good conuersation that by hir vertues she may reclaime the wickednes of hir husband so did Moniqua the Mother of Saint Augustine winne hir husband being a Pagan Saint Paule perswades hir much to that dutie seeing that by those meanes at the least she workes this good that hir children which should haue ben dissolute are by hir institution and example sanctefied This vertue of modestie and pacience is declared to women in the ceremonie of the Doues which wiues offred in their purification signifying that they ought to beare the importunitie and angrie natures of their husbandes by the humilitie and méekenes of the Doues who enduring the continuall pecking and crying of the Cocke doues much lesse that they abandon them séeing they neuer mislike or are angrie nor do any thing to their displeasure Sixtly the wife is bound to the circuite of hir owne house without libertie to iorneyes or voyages no not to go from house to house being also forbidden to wydowes nor to walke the streates as one séeking aduētures yea she is tied to modest humilitie as the vine or latteise is fastned to the walles of the house which is neuer remoued else whether she ought to be a carefull huswife to gouerne hir house wisely to trauell diligētly and to kéepe hir seruants and handmaydes in office not giuing them any occasion of disorder or ill thought Let hir read the last Chapter of the Prouerbes of Salomon wherein she shall finde the lesson of a huswife or Mother of a familie rising early with hir maydes and seruants to enter into trauel and not to take vppon hir the state of a great Lady being a huswife and much lesse hunt after hir pleasure and delites as a worldly and Pagan woman nor decke or make hir selfe glorious bycause of hir beautie which she ought to estéeme as deceitfull vaine and transitory No let hir feare God in whom is reposed hir glory yéeld to no other desires then the care of hir estate requires fashioninge hir attire according to the honour rate of hir calling and yet with such modestie as the mind though there be no oportunitie to the fact be not corrupted with vaine glory and wantonnes Let hir leaue precious embrodery and carquanets to great Princes whose estate tollerates those sumptuous attires and was thought well of in Hester specially ioyning to those braue outward ornaments a heart repleat with inward humilitie To honest matrons seeking reputation by their chast and vertuous liues let it be a shame to be séene in such dissolute habits
péece of breade or other foode which they shot at out of a little cros bowe and if they brought it downe with their arrow it was the rewarde of their paynes so did they learne to forme their mindes in ciuill manners and fashion their bodies to painefull exercise for the warre wherein they became fierce executioners in their age of abilitie The oldest and of most auncient courage and vertue were instituted masters ouer the youth in whom if euery fault and error were not reprehended the maister was condemned to a fyne In this institution all the communaltie of Citizens specially the auncients wer bound to esteme all the youth as their proper children and therefore had authoritie of correction councell and perswasion no lesse then if they had naturall interest in them they had no libertie of conuersation with straungers for feare of corruption by their dissolute manners they had no handling of money nor other pleasure whiche might bring abuse so that they knew not what delites were Touching their reast they slept alwayes in the fieldes vpon straw waddes forbearing fether beddes as not to effeminate their bodies for intemperance or whordome much lesse that it was familiar amongest them but of the contrarie during the tyme of their auncient discipline there was none of their youth knewe what vice it was There was seldome Citizen of Lacedemonie accused for any quarrell and lesse to haue hurte or wrōged any mā by which seuere pollicie they brought such reputacion to their common weale that farre and straunge Regions sought their alliance yea the Jewes thought them selues assured against their enemies as is saied in the Machabees if they had confederation with the Lacedemonians much more then belonges to Christian common weales and specially to Noble houses touching the education and guiding of their youth séeing our law is infinitly more perfect expressing many commaundements with promises of fauour and eternall felicitie if we institute our youth as wee ought where amongest the others was but onely a regarde to ciuill honestie and glorie to haue raised such an institution to their youth great wrong and dishonour doe we to God who sendes vs children to the ende wee frame them méete for his seruice whereby his glorie may shine if we abandon them to the world sathan the prince thereof to the common and eternall destruction aswell of them as of their posteritie ¶ Still touching the education of young children Chapter v. LEt vs eftsones retorne to the institucion ciuile of children suche as fathers and mothers ought to procure more then is conteined in the discourse of the other chapter they must first be entred in the knowledg of God and elementarie groundes of faith the commaundementes sacraments and principall pointes of saluation the same to be ministred in their first age and according to the mesure of their capacities expressing with all good example which as an eye of doctrine cōfirmes the other herein Agiselaus aunswered wisely to a father asking him how he ought to teache his children put into them sayth he at the beginning the best and most necessary doctrines such as may serue thy children for the grounde of their life Which foundation of pietie and religion ought to be first layed remaine in the building which is made of all the other doctrines Let fathers consider with wise masters by whome their children are instructed in these groundes where vnto they are most drawen by nature which if it carie them not to the zeale studie of learninge let them pushe them forward whether God séemes to call them for other wais with the vaine spending of their money they should be guiltie of the losse of time to their children if they should striue to chaunge their vocation naturall or rather deuine and bestowe them else where by their owne opiniō ioyned with some affection to some peculier trade perhappes more to their proper profite but lesse to the commoditie of their children wherein they shoulld séeme to resiste God and nature and attempte euen against the suggestion and ordenance of god who as he hath placed in a body naturall diuers members and apointed them to diuers functions with out chaunging their order and office so hath he bestowed in his church and comonweals sundrie sortes of people all members of both the one and the other body whether misticall or ciuill inspiring to euery one of them a will instinct as well of nature as of speciall grace to defier to followe some one certain profession for the seruice of his bodie as to the eye he hath giuen the facultie of sight to the eare propertie to heare to the nose the qualitie of smelling to the toung habyllitie to speake and taste to the hand power to dispose actions and to the feete agillitie to go and to runne euen so hath he yet done more which turnes to his glorie as hauing endued euery one with a peculiare affection to followe an estate most conducible to his proper sauluation and where in he shal be most seruiceable to his Lord God for the cause S. Paule puts vs often in remembrance that euerie one ought to followe his vocation with perseuerance and constancie wherin Aristotell séemed not to be ignorant saying that ther are some men whoe of nature are frée and as Lords borne to learning and to the welding of great affaiers and some others bond men and slaues and by their seruile and grosse condicion without all facultie either to rule or commaund amongest the Philosophers it was an opinion to doe nothing against nature as not to commaund the hand to go in place of the foote which if it were done by force could haue no continuance as also the foote hath no facilitie to do that belongs to the function of the hand By these we sée that in vaine do Fathers and Mothers put their children to religion if they haue no deuocion but haue rather the inclination of souldiers such becomes euill the habite and profession of Religion whose affections and hartes aspire to the office of valiant Captaines From which if they be restrayned they are not drawne too any other exercise but by force where in they haue neither thankes nor fauour of God but which worse is suffred to commit infinite offences which are like to be layd against them by whose couetousnes or supersticion they are intruded into suche profession great is the euill also in forcing maydes to be religious whose inclination had made them more méete for matrons of housholdes in whom for recompence are found many legerdemaines and pleasaunt partes played in their monasteries on the otherside many are the children now a dayes that professe studie to please their Fathers but they do euen as much as if they beat the water of the riuer aduauncing nothing to the common profite nor their honour Of that sort many in place to studie followe their pastimes to auoyde as they say melancholly And yet it is for such commōly as
benefices Prebendes Prelatesship estates are purchased wherein may bee gessed how well they will behaue themselues séeing they were neuer touched with the thought to become worthy of them and so are raised to priestes afore they deserue to be clerks Abbots not being méete to be Monkes Iudges afore they haue pleaded in causes of right and Masters afore they were disciples No greater disorder or confusion in a common weale When Fathers shall finde their children enclined to learning let thē applie their purse to their disposition so shall they make them most seruiceable to their countreyes honorable to themselues and most happy as touching their proper saluation if they haue no sufficient meane to continue entertaine their studie let them praye to God and rather then to discōtinue their booke bestow thē in colledges to serue some Doctors Regents or learned schollers and so leade them by long and painefull wayes to the estimacion and conquest of learning foreséeing in any wise not to discourage or dispaire the liuely will and spirite of a young child taking pleasure to studie For as it is a signe certaine of the calling of God so ther is no lesse hope and suertie but that to that inclination and vehement affection the almightie Lord being earnestly prayed vnto wil ioyne cōuenient oportunities to come to that whereunto he calleth him by the which wée read of many prouing so excellent in all liberall sciences that by their doctrine they haue bene chosen Bishops Presidents yea and made more great then in their youth they were meane poore and simple some of them hauing no other beginning then trained in the function euen of the meanest seruant wherein is fulfilled the sentence of Salomon that there be poore seruants who in the end by their wisedome will beare rule ouer the riche children in whom is no habilitie to gouerne themselues discréetely There resteth to a young man but a strong desire and feruent mind to studie to make him at last wise and learned and such one sayth Aristotle though he knoweth nothing yet he is more then halfe learned if he begin well Touching the election of Masters to institute children I haue spoken at large in the last booke only I aduertise rich parēts that to entertaine good Masters it is better to bestowe crownes then shillings For by them money time honour knowledge vertue are gained foure fold which all are lost where the instructor is either ignoraunt negligent or corrupt In this the consideration of couetousnes doth much blind vndiscréete parents more fearefull of the wast of their money then fauoring the benefite of their children according to the example of the man in Plutarch who suing to a Philosopher to teach his sonne and he requiring compotent hier what saith this couetous father with so much money can I buy a slaue by whō I can raise yerely great reuenue so saith the Philosopher may you haue two for one if you leaue your childe ignorant and without discipline meaning that by his couetousnes he should haue a sonne a slaue to his desires and affections who liuing alwayes in dishonour and subiection would neuer bring forth any good actions but by force or feare where hauing institution as hée might by doctrine and vertue leade his lyfe in right honorable libertie so if for want of discipline he became prodigall and spent his wealth he should be driuen to serue to supplie the necessitie of hys miserable life Touching the subiection wherein a Father ought to leade his childe he hath prescription in the scripture that he must minister Discipline to his childe that is not wise and by the rod chastise his malice to the end to deliuer his soule from hell The wise man in an other text giues this councell if thou hast childrē teache and discipline them and leade them in humble subiection euen from their youth hold them shorte by sharp correction hyde in thy hart the loue thou bearest them and giue them no indulgence libertie to pleasure since as by thy good correction thou shalt receyue of them great ioye and comfort vppon the ende of thy dayes so how much thou doest enlarge their youth to libertie euen so farre doest thou leade them in the pathe of their owne destruction to thy right worthy displeasure and dishonor The childe sayeth Salomon that is left to liue at his will giues confusion to his mother We haue an example in our great and heauenly Father who the more he loueth the straiter discipline subiection doth he holde ouer those whō he best loueth as we reade by his hard dealing with the Jsraelites and leauing the Pagans without correction saying In thy lyfe time giue not thy children power ouer thee as if he had sayde dispossesse not thy selfe of thy goods to thy children yea make not thy selfe familiar with them put thée not into their mercie but being maister so long as thou liuest retayne thy authoritie ouer them to correct them to disinherite them and punishe them if they offende Who spareth the rod from his child saieth Salomon hateth him and loues not his saluacion therefore ●o long as thy power remaynes ouer them if thou punish not their offences thou standest in the same estate of blame and damnation with them as witnesseth Hely whereof we haue spoken before It happeneth ordinarely by the iust course of Gods iudgement that as the father forgettes in his office and authoritie to minister instruction and discipline to his childe so in hys ryper yeares that negligēce efts●ones turnes his sonne frō the dutie of a child becomming disobedient disordered and dissolute and giues no reuerence eyther to father or mother yea sometimes he robbeth them dooth them wrong outrage and iniurie and setting his feete euen vpon their throate is the cause oftentymes that thei dye afore the ende of their dayes Saule is commended for that finding his sonne Ionathas by chaunce in transgression of the law he condemned him to death as if he had ben another which also he had suffered if the people had not deliuered him Dauid was somewhat to deare ouer his children which in the ende tourned to his rebuke and hurt Iacob depriued his eldest Sonne Ruben of his right of inheritaunce because hée was an inceste Abraham chased Jsmael because he had plaied with Jsaac which some interprete that hee had beaten him and others that he would haue committed Idolatrie and induced Jsaac to that impietie which thoughe it be vnderstand simplie to playe and loose time in importunat and vnlawfull sportes séeking also to seduce his younger brother and that Abraham could not bée ignorant but that Jsmael was corrupte yet hée expulsed him iustly yea euen by the commaundement of God. Noe punished with cursse ouer the familie of Cham the mocking that he made of him wherein is no great cause of maruell for that the father being the Lieuetenant of god here in earth ouer the regiment of his
children ought to execute his authoritie and suffer in them no impunitie of vice such commission was giuen to fathers and mothers by the law that if they vnderstoode their sonne to be disobedient or rebellious they ought to produce him into iudgement prosecute him to sentence to be stoned where the father and mother ought to cast the first stone against him But as the father is bound to seueritie towardes his children that are arrogant disobedient and corrupt so to such as are humble obedient and of most seruice to him Christianitie and natural office bind him to more franke curtesie and cōsideration So did Noe reknowledge Sem and Japhet by blissings because they had bene his good and faithefull children Abraham for the obedience of his sonne Jsaac made him his heire giuing but legacies to his other children And Iacob recompensed Ioseph with porcion double aboue the others Touching Maydes the scripture enioineth parentes to kéepe them short to haue their eye continually vpon them and neuer to accustome them to familiaritie for that sexe without subiection in youth beares a nature easie to slyde and is frayle aboue all other creatures more daungerous to be preserued thē any other brickle vessell Dyna went but to visit the maydes of the Citie of Sichem and was forthwith rauished by the prince of the countrey Thamar Dauids daughter going onely to comfort her brother Ammon whom they sayd was sick fell into violacion of hir bodie many there are of whō nothing is more required then opportunitie to expresse their corrupt willes for which cause it belonges specially to the mother to giue them no libertie out of her companie nor licence to speake to men without testimonie For there néedeth but one woorde to infecte a mayd as one word of the serpent was sufficient to seduce Eue notwithstanding hir wisedome A mayd is as a brickle glasse which as if you touche but with your least finger it is enough to make it fall and breake so the very type of a wicked toung suffiseth to entyce to euill a young maid being not instructed in the feare knowledge of God so daungerous saith the scripture is the virginitie of a maid therfore according to Salomon that father doth a great work when hée marieth his daughter And in the mean let him kepe hir in extreme subiection feed hir in sobrietie kepe hir in expresse exercise of some worke of the hand the better to restraine hir from thought of euill if they be pore let the parents prouid some occupation which with diligence and chastitie is a rich dowrie in mariage And to the riche science and labor are occupations necessarie to draw the mind from foolish and vaine thoughts for end as ther be sixe things to kepe maids from corruption doctrine shame feare subiection sobrietie and perpetual trauell So in the consideration of the charge of parents to their children let fathers remember that séeing they know by faith that they are ordeyned of God to serue him in propagation noriture and aduancement of the children which he giues them for they are as his ministers and lieftenaunts in that behalfe let them raise themselues to him in faith and hope that he will neuer abandone them seing the children do more aperteine to him then to them as hauing endewed them with a soule the figure of his deuinitie forming their bodies of wonderfull composition created infinit sortes of creaturs for their sakes let fathers confesse that they are but as nurses to God norishing his proper children and administring his seruice in those acts so deare to him they haue to receiue of him perpetuall rewardes if ther be honorable recompence in a king or prince of the earth to a comon nourse ministring noriture to the kings childe according to the will and prescript of his father Much more suretie haue fathers by their Faith ioyned with prayer that the heauenly King touching the necessities of common life will neuer for sake them if they norishe and féede his children according to his will and to his honour for that he neuer sendes children without Fatherly prouidence for their aduauncemēt By the same reason let fathers take héede that they suffer no vice or deformety of manners in them séeing that as God is pure holy and vndefiled so hee hath giuen children to fathers to fashion them such one 's for him wherein if they faile he will repute them as principall authors of their faults and with their children hold them guiltie in his terrible iustice Therfore let them not pamper nor corrupt them with wanton libertie let thē not make Idoles of them in the intrales of their hearts nor damne them selues to raise their children to riches and estates which they haue not deserued whereby perhaps for recompence they wyll procure perill to their liues But let them only obserue the will and prescript of God present them to him in the institution which he demaundes at their hands hauing no commaundement of him to make their children great Lords but rather men of honestie then possessers of great wealth which being duly obserued of fathers in the institucion of their children encreaseth the honor of their houses and bringes a recompence of eternall glorye to their whole posteritie ¶ In what dutie children are bound to their Fathers and Mothers Chapter vj. THE Scripture by many commaundements bindes children to honour and obey their fathers and mothers And by all right of nature and lawes humaine Ciuill and barbarous they are enioyned to disobey them in nothing I meane concerning humane honestie naturall dutie and diuine ordenance For if the commaundements of Fathers and mothers stretch to other things they abuse their authoritie séeing as I haue sayd they represent God in earth in the procreation and noriture of their children as the ministers of his prouidence and will and therefore their commaundements ought to agrée with the prescript rule of Gods will. And touching the disobedience of the child to the Father mother it is well expressed in the lawe of GOD giuen to Moyses how grieuous that disobedience was béeing commaunded to stoning euen a like punishment as if the disobedience had ben don against God as in déede the transgression and faulte retorned against the same Lord who being the great soueraigne Father hath ordeined this father fleshly in nature as his Liefetenant and executor of his will he cursed likewise the child that was guiltie in disobedience as in the lawe naturall Noe punished his sonne Cham with curses for that he mocked him which God ratefied Jacob depriued his sonne Ruben of his discent bycause he did outrage against him The Scripture afordes many curses to the child that either in act or word disobeyeth his Father and Mother and the Sonne that scorneth or disdaineth either of them is iudged worthy that the Rauens and crowes picke out his eyes meaning that in no sort such one deserues the vse of common light nor
seruitude and seeing them disposed to their seruice with a franke and liberall will gaue them libertie wherein I wishe and exhort that no man holding of the gospell which is a law of libertie and grace bée surmounted by such as were vnder the lawe of seruitude and Moyses in the which the Jewes enfréeed their poore brethren bond men in the vii yeare of their seruice and in the Jubilei gaue libertie to all the other slaues of straunge nations or at the least such bond mē were as their marcenarie seruauntes hauing yearely hyer for the labours they tooke in hande to the end that with tyme they might redéeme their miserable condicion But now eftsones to the dutie of a Master wherein as we haue spoken of the loue and gentle dealing which he oweth to his seruant so hée must vnderstand that with this loue he must minister to him doctrine and discipline Doctrine in instructing him in the rules of faith according to the example of the Iewes who neuer tooke bondmen whom they caused not to be circumcised and taught in the law so leading them in good examples of faithfull Jsraelites as for whose faultes they shoulde aunswere euen no lesse then for the rest of his familie There be thrée things sayth the wiseman necessary for the good entertaining of a seruant bread discipline and worke as to the Asse men giue prouender beating and his burden by the bread is vnderstoode sufficiēt noriture being too great iniquitie to kéepe seruants at trauell and make small allowance of sustenance if the Oxe reserued for the plough giues ouer his worke when he is faint for want of meate why should the poore seruaunt be shortned of his allowance by whose industrie both the plough goeth the Ox is preserued and the Master liueth discipline is due to him for that if he be not well instructed nor of him self wel giuen he workes with an euill will and encreaseth in vices as hauing not tasted from his infancy of any good instruction For that cause sayth the wiseman it is néedefull to offer him the racke that is a good correctiō specially when he ronnes either from his Master or frō his worke euen as the Asse must féele the cudgell whē he will not go But when he corrects him selfe or commits any light fault let the Master saith S. Paule pardon his offences as hee will haue God to remit such as he hath done so often times in the Scripture and the perpetuall paines which he hath deserued In that sort S. Paule willeth Philemon to pardon Onesyme a bondman who in his running away became a Christian by his doctrine he willeth to rebuke him without rigor and kéepe against him no passion of euill will but receiue him as his deare brother to serue him in all temporall and spirituall things And therfore let the Maister take héede not to be bitter against his seruaunt by hate for in that case S. John saith he should be as a murderer and much lesse do him wrong by malicious choller crueltie and impacience For he must remember that he hath a Master in heauen and that the other is but as a seruant with him of that great Maister wyth whom is regard neither of Lord nor master nor acception of persons but iudgeth equally the one as the other in all things touching well or ill doing Let him not then thinke that either his person shal be more worthy or his workes better accepted bycause he is a master or a Lord of greater estate For there is but the multitude of vertues which stand in place of credit and fauor wherein both the one and the other are indifferently receiued And hath not Iesus Christ employed his life and bloud indifferently for the one and other Then touching estate and greatnes according to the world it is but vanitie and a certaine apparant felicitie and the chaunce of worldly things may be such that this day a Master and to morowe a seruant which we read hath hapned to many Let him consider lastly whilest he is a master to make accompt to God of his authoritie and rule which he hath receiued of him where in he is so much the more subiect to reckoning by how much GOD hath called him aboue the other to that estate Touching trauell let him rather kéepe him in continual worke then ouerlay him with heauy labors measuring his bourden accordinge to the rate of his strength to beare it Let him not followe the example of Pharao in the time of Moyses who of a wicked wyll layd vppon the people of Israel more great and hard laboures then they were able to ouercome beating them if they perfourmed not their compleat taske of worke which hée prescribed to them aboue their forces wherein the oppressed Israelites crying out to God were heard in their complaintes to the ruine of Egypt and drowning of the Kyng and all his proud armie The Master ought neuer to suffer his seruant to be idle but at resting times in the night on the holy day he ought to kéepe him exercised spiritually eyther in prayers or to heare Sermons giuing him no libertie to hunt after gluttonie and vnlawfull playes which two kyndes of most daungerous idlenes aboue all others are causes of infinit euils to many men but specially to seruants and the young sort In which reason the wiseman saith that aswell as the Asse ought to be fed with prouander so hath hée néede also of the bastonado the bridell and the burden so must the Master sometime entertayne the seruaunt with the noriture of the rod and worke not giue libertie to his nature which of it selfe wyll raise him into disorder and disobedience sayth Salomon only his correction must runne in a course of amitie of a Christian Father of housholde who hath commaundement from S Paule to do that which is iust and reason to his seruant whom hee ought to estéeme as his spirituall sonne and companion according to God of the life to come The wise man aduiseth him also if he be faithfull and wise to loue him as his soule and to giue him fréedome and aduauncement as in déede the seruant puts his soule which is his life his bodie his laboures and industrie to continuall paines for the seruice of his master so did Abraham loue his seruant Elizer cōmitting to him all his most waightie affaires and for recompence if hée had had no childe hée had succéeded him in his inheritance In the gospel we sée how the Centenier loued his seruāt trauelling carefully for his health when he was sicke In whose examples may be reprehended now a days many masters who handling hardly their poore seruants sende them in their sicknes and impotencie to hospitals but if they haue but an Ox sicke or a horse lame they fayle not to aplie remedies for their cure as bearing more care to a beast then affection to a man who toucheth them in Christian brotherhoode touching
alwayes gaine For some times aswell in affaires on sea as lande GOD sendes afflictions for proofe and trial but he deliuereth the iust man in the ende to his greater comfort But if in his voyages and trafykes he had no other intent thē to aduaunce his own priuate gayne I sée not howe the common weale hath interest in his restitution séeinge as he traded for him selfe without respect of publique benefite to the countrey so there can be no reason of restitution where is no cause of merit No let such as restraine their wares to a dearth in hope to enhaūce the price and in the meane eyther the season groweth plentifull or their wares corrupt let such I saye sucke the iuyce of their couetousnes with the broth of rigorous punishment togither also with that cankared sorte of marchants who by reason of loane or credit passe their wares to poore chapmen of the countrey eyther for better then they are or at more price then they are worth Such also as making store of their corne and neuer appeare in the market but when the price beginnes to abate by the great supplie that the countrey bringes in and to restraine or forstall it will not stick to send twoo or thrée leagues about in the coūtrey to all the vittellers corne men with threates or false brutes not to bring in their corne as yit What other reward doe such marchants merit of their common weales but publike infamie exemplairye iustice yea they are bound to restore the damage that is sustained by it wherein it belonges to the officers of the towne and other special ministers vnder the Prince not to wink at this great iniustice done by these cormorantes to a whole common weale least by their coniuringe and dissimulation thei stand no lesse guiltie afore God and their countrey thē those that are the special dooers if they alleadge which is ordinarie with them that they made the prouision for the towne and therefore ought not to sustaine losse how false that is appeareth by this argument of their dooing for if their store had ben reserued to the reliefe of their towne they might haue giuen plentifull succours not onely to the towne but to the coūtrey about at the beginning when corne drew to a scarcetie and high price in the market but as by their extréeme couetousnes suffering it to mount to extréeme rate they brought lamentable preiudice to their common weale so much lesse that there is any colour of excuse séeinge by the apparance of their dooings the common people findes good cause to accurse them with infinit outcries which being retained in heauen can not but bréede effectes of their ruyne on earth for God according to the scripture drawing vp the cryes of the poore vseth to reuenge their iniuries with all lamentable miseries thondred vpon the proper dooers and their posteritie to the extreeme rooting out of their houses Let the magistrat also looke to it least God wrappe him in the common paynes with such as doo the wrong Let him not dissemble iustice by any merit or estimation of the person for that the greater they are the quicker Iustice their offence deserueth as being vnthankfull children and bretherne to their common weale which is their mother albeit in them be respect of parentage neighbourhead gossupship or other consideration of friendship yet they ought al to passe vnder equall punishmēt for that as the law is equall so with God whose lieftenantes they are is no acception of persones who whē there is a fault committed in his house euē by his dearest children there beginnes he his correction afore hée procéede to iustice of others So did he to Moyses who spake to him face to face that is priuatly reuealinge him selfe to him more then to any other as soone as hée erred he is first condemned for certayne infidelitie neyther could he at any time retract the sentence but that he dyed in the desert and could not enter into the land of promisse Ananias and Saphira were in the Catalogue of the first Church but as soone as they lyed to the holy Ghost with an vnfaithfull but weake fraile distrust are executed to death by diuine vengeance it is written that Chylon whē he was created soueraigne magistrat in Athens sent for his friends saying that frō the time forward he renounced all frendship meaning that in causes of trespasse he would vse parents frinds kindred in on rate and equitie of iustice with others Ther be that in the traffike of marchandice and corne specia●ly do forestall the time as when they buye corn yet in the blade and frutes not resolued but in their blossome with many other helps in bargeyning where of I leaue the resolution to the lawes for that my profession here is to medle with none but such as concerne concience and Christian dutie And so because the time is not yet ceraine to make by common iudgment a certaine measure of corne and frute no man ought to buye as they saye the pigge in the bagge nor the corne in the blade for that the market is the place apoynted for the trafficke of such thinges Such forerunners of time and forestallers of markets neuer buye in that sort but at too plentifull a peniworth as the seller seldome obserueth those seasons to sell in but by some great necessitie which as a matter of force constraint is also impertinent to the bargaine making it is sayd that feare and force make vnprofitable accordes as in which two passions is neyther full libertie nor perfect iudgment And therfore in common reason the buyer can not but offend in conscience if he enforce the necessitie of the pore seller to his priuate gaine and the vndoing of him selfe and desolat familye speciallye buyinge his corne in the blade and other his goods which are not yet in nature touching rent corne of fermers if their Lordes deale not with them somtimes more in conscience and consideration of the yeare then according to the straight equitie and rigor of their couenaunts they may to their dishonor flea them quicke as the huntsman caseth a fox to haue his skin and leaue their wiues and children to pouertie to their perpetuall confusion afore God the land lord ought to deale with his tenant as the herdsman with his flocke who is contented only with his fléece and feding him still to th end he may estsons encrease he defends him from the woulfe and sucoreth him in time of his pouertie Great also is the gredines of marchants in their other perticuler trades and no lesse damnable their sheftes and subtelties enforced with a custome of lying and swering vices for the most part familiar with inferior bargeinars and retaylers aspiring to be rich by those abominable helpes But to cōdemn this couetousnes the very norsse and feeder of all other vices this were only sufficient if marchants had no other purpose or pretence in their contractes and trades but to
Augustin let me releeue him whose necessitie is first offred to me drawing by my example rich men to reléeue others In this case the rich man refusing to ayde the poore is a tyrant and vniust possessor of the goods of others for that the superfluitie is a due portion of the poore according in the wordes of Saint Basill The money saith he that thou kéepest in thy coffers the apparel not seruing thée to vse and the vittailes that thou hast in aboundance are the goods of the poore ouer whose right thou dost vsurpe In this he séemes to holde conformitie with S. James that the rich men ought to sighe and wéepe for the miseries that will happen to them whereof he alleadgeth thrée causes the first for that they kéepe their gold and siluer till it ruste and haue no néede where many poore bodies perish of hunger and that their garments are gnawne with moathes where infinite poore creatures stand naked subiect to the iniury of the weather The second is that they paye not reasonably suche as serue them whose crye pearceth the very eares of the lord of hostes demaūding vengeance of their iniquitie The third is that they make great cheare and anoynt their throats with the liccorous sirops of swéet meats suffer the téeth of their poore brother to bite no bread nor his stomacke to be refreshed with whole some liccour Many other néedy people remaine in a Citie who notwithstanding their trade and occupation are driuen by some ouercharge of children or casualitie to sel their necessary implements and sometime the very instruments of their occupation not being hable to borowe and hauing shame to aske Of Christian amitie and how many sortes of friendships there be Chapter iij. HAuing not yet spoken of the dutie of a friend but in generall sort nor of Christian charitie wherein consists the perfection of a Christian and of moste deare commendacion in the Scripture it cannot be impertinēt to inferre some discourse therof the necessitie of our purpose so requiring Amitie is of foure kindes as naturall ciuill carnall such as was amongst the Pagans and Christian or spirituall The two first haue their approbation euen by the scripture the third which is carnall hath ben by the iudgemēt of good men reputed corrupt as in déede it is and much reproued according to the doctrine of god Naturall friendship is as the loue of parents towards their children and one kinsman or countrey man to an other Ciuill amitie is got either by conuersation and society of men together or in respect of profites eyther receiued or hoped for this friendship is called of the Philosophers humane and as it were due of common office But better is it expressed whereby it is called a vertue morall when it vnites mutually heartes and willes together sometimes it is but of the one part which is the cause of Tullies opinion that such is the force and propertie of vertue that it constraynes men to loue such on whom there goeth but an opinion and reputatiō of honestie though they neuer saw nor knew the persons But notwithstanding the reasons and iudgements of the Philosophers touching that kind of amitie the Scripture will neuer repute it a vertue if it haue not a purpose and end to the honour and loue of God without which end much lesse that all vertuous actions haue any recompence or glory afore God but with Saint Ambrose that kind of amitie is accompted corrupt as not done to that end which the Scripture cōmaundes by which we are cōmaunded to do al things for the honour of god Fleshly amitie or friendship is contracted vnder a hope or present enioying of goods honours and carnall pleasures And sometimes the naturall and ciuill amitie degenerate into this damnable loue being most often the very loue wée beare to our selues deliting more in our owne glory and pleasures then in GOD or that concernes our saluation Where vppon it is sayd that men vppon the end of the world shal be so worldly and fleshly a signe of reprobation that they shal be more feruēt followers of their proper delites then of God This loue Saint Augustine with good reason sayth is the foundation of the Citie of the Deuil as the loue to God is the ground worke of the holy citie of the soueraigne Lord Christian loue is that charitie which so often God recommends to vs comprehending an entier loue with all our power to him and a sincere amitie without fiction to our neighbour euen by the same measure that naturally we loue our selues with this intēdement alwayes that all be for the loue honor of God as the cause end of al amitie al our actions to the end to receiue for it eternal retribuciō This amitie leads directs makes perfect the natural ciuil moral friendship euen so corrects altogether that the is carnall as being corrupt by wicked affections makes it turne into spiritual by spiritual conuersation as if a man louing his wife onely for that she is faire and riche and for his beastly pleasure a Pagan loue and little differing from the affection of a whoremonger to his concubine and being afterwardes instructed by Christian doctrine with what zeale he ought to embrase his wife in mariage loueth her not for the reasons of the flesh aforesayd but as his companion of grace coenheritrice of the glory of heauen louing hir with that spirituall and true loue wher with Iesus Christ loued his Church And as a Father louing his sonne not simplie nor naturally but with a worldly affection as making him his Idoll falleth to loue him afterwards in God by Christian institution that is according to the prescript of the Scripture kéeping him in discipline and vertuous exercise Thus the whoremonger is conuerted and forbearing his fleshly affection to his troll will hate in him selfe and hir all damnable lightnes and neuer looke on hir but with a displeasure and remorse of his sinne which after their conuersion she is also bound to do And if there bée daunger eftsones to fall they are bound to restraine sight and mutuall company and stand vpon their gard no lesse then such as hauing ben once enuenimed with a swéete poyson by an antidot preserued from death will beware eftsones of charmes or swéete liccours neyther is penaunce of any force if the sinne bée not altogether abandoned and all carnaletie abhorred And if in déede amitie to speake more properlye bée a vertue more then morrall and not affection onely according to the error of some Philosophers it can not be ioyned with vice for so théeues other of vice albeit they vaunt of frendship in susteyning one an other can not truly be called frends but confederats in league conspiring by common consent to do euill Amitie is perpetuall as is all vertue of his liuely and proper nature So that such as loue richmen by reason of the proffites they receiue by them are not
follow All which hapneth by the default of the head in whom was vnderstanding both to kéepe him selfe and the body from euill and also to prouide remedy if it did happen euen so when there is either ill prouidence to preuent an euill or worse negligence to purge and cure it nor seeking out the cause till the effect be expressed it is then we see plagues famine with other rodds of God wherewith yet as he doth not scourge specially a countrey or common weale without great offence as one that will not strike with his staffe but where he finds obstinacie and resistance So let vs then do as children to their father whō they haue offended for he strikes as a father and seeing him stād with rods in his hand ready to discipline fall vpon their knées at his feete and with teares demaund pardō on whom in respect of their hartie submission as he is cōtent to bestow but two or thrée little lashes presently cast the rods in the fier so also if their wéeping humilitie had appeared afore he tooke the rods in his hād they had not at all felt the smart euen so deales GOD with vs correcting vs with easie discipline as his children and if we crie him mercy there is nothing more familiar with him then forgiuenes yea he will burne his roddes and embrase our conuersion withall such is his goodnes towardes vs that afore he enter into correction be inuites vs to submit acknowledge to the end he be not constrayned being a iust iudge to lift vp his hand and make vs feele the rod conuert sayth he by his Prophets to me and I will be conuerted to you I will kéepe no remembrance of your faultes yea I will repent me that I went about to strike you it is grieuous to him to scourge his people and an act which becomes him not properly his nature is to do mercy for the which he is called mercifull long suffring patient and mercy it selfe he would not punish Dauid vppon his person notwithstanding he had deserued extreame Iustice but pardoned his sinnes when hee asked forgiuenes with great contrition griefe Touching the rods which he holdeth in his hand and strikes not but sheweth them as matters of feare to offenders we sée that Josophat being threatned with such roddes which were the Moabites Ammonites Sirians his enemies withdrew himself altogether to god published fastings through all the coūtrey of Juda assēbling all the people to pray to god in the tēple he in the middest of thē made this oration O Lord God which art the god of our fathers the god of heauē and hast dominion ouer the kingdoms of all nations in thy hand is force and power there is none that can resist thée is it not thou O Lorde that hast killed all the inhabitants of this land being idolators and pagans before thy people of Jsraell We haue not force to resist so great a multitude and therfore not knowing what we should do there restes nothing to vs but to turne our eyes to thée O Lord as hoping in thée only for ayde and succours And as he continued thus in prayer wherin there was not so meane a woman and least childe which did not pray with him in the temple behold the prophet spake vnto him feare not this multitude it shall not be thy warre but the warre of God which hapned accordingly for all those armed enemies forsaking their purpose fell vpon the Jdumeans and after slaughtered one an other without any necessitie of him to go to the battell so happened it in the time of Ionas to the towne of Niniuie where the king vnderstanding the hand of God to be ready to destroy them with in xl dayes commaunded a general fast for thrée daies yea euen little children and beastes were restrained to abstinence and ioyning to this penance contrition and supplication for mercy it fell out that the Citie felt not the roddes of God otherwaies then in feare Touching the whippes wherewith hee scourgeth for not hauing thus preuēted and yet in correcting them selues and asking pardon he forgiueth them it is written of the Jsraelites that they cryed to God when they were in tribulaciō he deliuered them from their necessities which is amplie declared in their deliuerance from the captiuitie of Egypt wherein they felt sharppe and smartinge roddes yet crying mercy to God they were heard and deliuered Dauid seeing the furie of the plague vppon his people and lifting vp his eyes to heauen where hée saw an Aungell holding a sword ouer Jerusalem in signe of the punishement which hee made of the people by plague cryed with a lowd voyce O Lord God it is I that haue offended punish me afterwardes he offereth sacrifice to God and the death ceased Ezechias for particular example who féeling in his persone the discipline of God by a disease whereof he must dye after he had acknowledged him selfe and cryed to God for grace had answer to liue yet xv yere with the receipt of the remedie to heale his infirmitie And touching the publike affliction which he and his town of Ierusalem suffered by the Assirians that had besieged the town made breaches to enter the same night by great miracle the Aungell of God slew a hundreth foure score and sixe thousand of his enemies which brought such confusion and feare to their King Senacherib that he fled early in the next morning In these maibe noted as it were by the way that as it is said in the booke of Iudith accordinge to the promises which God made in his lawe when the people of Jsrael serued God well and obserued his law they were not vexed of straungers nor felt common miseries but such as offered to oppresse them were confounded as Pharao and his ofte in the chase of these people were swallowed in the red sea euen so when the Israelites fell frō this course and offended God he stirred by enemies on all sides of whom they were either ouercome slaughtered or at least by other hurtes felt and found the certein tokens of gods wrath whose effects thei proued w extréeme miserie if they did not repent many nations people were not reformed by preachings nor threats of gods iudgements but scorned the prophets that pronounced them calling them fooles mad men and sedicious and deliting in their owne scornes they saied let the day of God come we s●are it not for wée haue the temple Many trusted in Idolles and others hoped for succours of Kings to be strong against their enemies yea there were that persecuted the good Prophetes that foretold their calamities to come and the false Prophetes reassured them againe with promises of all good successe yea when famines diseases or other punishements hapned they laid the occasions to the good Prophetes and catholike people as some of them attributed their plagues to the starres which were the Chaldeis others
any feason reserue of the hollydays from their spirituall duties let it be performed in some playes or exercise of paine and trauell by the which both the mind shall be discontinued from idle thoughtes and the bodye taken out of the care of beastly desiers But seing the intent of mariage is the hope of procreation such as ar colde of nature defectiue and impotent ought not to marrie yea if they be married by faulse perswasion the mariage may be dissolued Such also as be vnclean and diseased ought not to entermedle mariage as well for the respect of their comon weale to the which their children should not only be vnprofitable hurtfull and burdenous but also in consideration of them selues but more for their issue whom they know are by their occasiones to remaine always misserable for they are not ignorant that such as them selues are such shal be the effect of their seede and generation So that what other thing can it be to them but a perpetuall infelicitie to sée their stock and children languish in wretchidnes afore their eyes Yea their whole howse borne to this misserie not to on suffered good day in all their life with out sorowe and sighing and bear as it weare a death vppon their backes euen from their first birth In this the woman disposed to marie ought as well as the man not to make fielthy luste the principall end of hir marriage for that were to enter wedding with infidells and an intention reproued in the scriptures as in Tobyas it is sayd that a deuill caulled Asmodeas killed seuen husbandes of Sara the first night of their marriges who for the only lust of the fleash and desier of hir beautie had maried her one after another So did the children of god marie afore the floud I mean the sonnes of Seth which had learned to serue God who seing the daughters of men that is descended of the race of Cain worldly faier and brauely attired maried with them For which carnall affection for they torned afterwardes from the feare of God the Lord roase in to such ire togteher also for other vices of that world that he sent a generall slud And Iesus Christ giues to vnderstand that that lust disordred pleasure are the causes that maried folkes called to the spirituall banquet of God make no rekconing of of it excusing themselues by the hinderance their mariadges which ought rather to bee aydes and common meanes for the man and woman to animat one an other to search God in whose name they are assembled to pray to prosper them in their mariadge giue them children whom they may instruct in his law acknowledging that they are mortall and if they offend God and liue not in him he can and will punnish them with some miserie I say not but beautie is requisite in mariage as wee read Jacob was more desirous to haue Rachell to wife because she was fairer then Lia And albeit in many places wiues are praysed in the Scripture for their beautie which is a gift of God in nature yet it is with this lesson that men take héede that it be not the only cause associated with lust to entise the minde to mariage For such societies of wedlocke as they are not of the Israelites and Christians who haue commaundements to renounce the affections and lustes and to put on a new man So they can not but stand in daunger to be prophaned by such affection as not diffring much from those fleshly mariages for that which partly the generall flood was sent to drown the creatures of the earth Touching wealth or riches for the which many do marry and in that onely consideration not marying wiues but their wealth many enter wedlocke with their Mistresses and chuse sometimes wiues whom they know to be barreine old and counterfet In whom hauing no hope of procreation what other thing doo such husbands but abuse mariage through couetousnes prophane it no lesse then others by vnbrideled and whorish lustes The poore ought to be maried with the riche according to the custome of the Lacedemonians And in the Scripture we find that men bought their wiues as Jacob redéemed his wherein as it is a great reproch to a man to take charge of a wife if he haue not abilitie and meane to mayntaine hir So in such societies I meane by vnlawful means in persons vnlike in qualitie and contrary in manners and nature it happneth that seldome is found true friendship betwene man and wife but dissembled loue perpetual dissention ielosies and dissolute whoredoms and in the end desperate diuorce But touching the man meaning to marrie séeing he ought to vnderstand that the good wife as Salomon sayth is giuen of God as inheritances are naturally left of parents to their children and according to the text of Iesus Christ God is hee that from heauen conioynes mariages inseperable Let him I say recommend himselfe altogether to God with peticion to bestow vpon him such one for his wife whom he séeth fit to assemble with him in mutuall amitie and to liue happely according to his holy will in raising children and them to teach in his feare in sort that afterwardes they may become instruments to his seruice and honour Wherein it is not to be doubted seing it is aduouched by many textes that importunitie of praier preuailes with God but his demaund shall find grace by this we read the Patriarkes Jsaac and Iacob were happy in their mariadges In this request and peticion to God the woman hath no lesse interest then the man for the obtayning of a good faithfull husband And so let there be no mariadge but in the Lord that is with yokefellowes of one faith and religion obseruing in their choise his inspiration and will and not induced by dishonest affectiōs couetousnes or pleasures which things much lesse that they are of God séeing of the cōtrary where any of them remaine he is not present at the coniunction of persons onely there his presence assisteth where is true amitie in conformetie of will manners and honestie in his feare and holy affectiōs In this sort the tiche shall chuse the poore assone as the wealthy to whom for charitie he ought to do as Booz taking to wife poore Ruth and the straunger as his neighbour so that he know hir for seldome we loue hartely that we know not well and lastly the Orphane before a mayde endowed yea and that rather for the honour of God For so shall they loue vertue better then beautie and the humilitie of the poore handmayd better thē the proud and fierce stomacke of a riche Lady against such mariadges was Themistocles who held it better to marry his daughter to a man néeding money albeit poore in wealth yet ritch in industrie and meanes to wealth then to money hauing néede of a man to vse it meaning that a richman weak in the vse and disposing of his wealth becomes