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A05099 The second part of the French academie VVherein, as it were by a naturall historie of the bodie and soule of man, the creation, matter, composition, forme, nature, profite and vse of all the partes of the frame of man are handled, with the naturall causes of all affections, vertues and vices, and chiefly the nature, powers, workes and immortalitie of the soule. By Peter de la Primaudaye Esquier, Lord of the same place and of Barre. And translated out of the second edition, which was reuiewed and augmented by the author.; Academie françoise. Part 2. English La Primaudaye, Pierre de, b. ca. 1545.; Bowes, Thomas, fl. 1586. 1594 (1594) STC 15238; ESTC S108297 614,127 592

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branches of the veines of their names and vses and of the similitude betweene them and the arteries Chap. 63. ARAM. When we consider how the prouidence of God reacheth so far vnto those things that are profitable necessary in our bodies that it forgetteth not neither omitteth the least thing that is in them we should be very blinde of vnderstanding if we doubted that our God prouided not aswell for all things that are profitable and necessary for our soules for the spirituall foode and growth of them and for their perfect purging and saluation For albeit there is no superfluity or excrement in that spiritual food wherewith the soule is nourished yet is it requisit and needful that the soule be purged from those excrements and filthines of sin wherwith the deuil hath infected filled it And so indeed is it purged in Iesus Christ who hath washed clensed vs from our sins by his blood doth daily purge vs by his holy spirit and by those means which he hath ordained in his church Therefore I am out of doubt that God meant to put men in minde of these things by the order necessitie which he hath appointed in the nature of their bodies both in regard of their food and of their nourishment and that we shal alwaies find good and holy instructions for the soule by considering the nature and office of euery part of the body Let vs then consider of other instruments of the naturall powers of the soule then hitherto we haue spoken of After the entrals guts the Mesentery foloweth which is placed in the midst of them whereupon it is so called of the Graecians as if you would say dwelling in the midst of the guts And because it is carried and lift vp into the middle of all these vessels it is also called by some Mesareon which name signifieth the selfe same thing in Greeke Others take Mesareon to be the highest part of the Mesentery which is also called Calicreas by the Graecians because the flesh of it is very pleasant to eate according as the name giueth vs to vnderstand So that it is no entrall or gut but a coat and folded couering in the midst of them or rather a thicke white flesh of a sinowy and kernelly substance that beareth fat distinguishing the entralles and knitting them vnto the backe But it was chiefely created to beare vp and sustaine the Meseraicall veines and arteries with the sinewes that are in that member which because they are in danger of breaking through the vehement motions of the body such other accidents therefore the prouidence of God would not haue them without a foundation prop and defence to countergard them For this cause he hath fortified and fastened the branches and diuisions of the veins by such a member and instrument which serueth in steade of a band and stay both to the great and little ones Besides his action and vse also is to fasten and keepe the entralles euery one in his place and to conuey vnto the liuer by the meseraicall veines that are called the handes thereof that liquor which the Graecians call Chylus of which wee haue already spoken For as the bodies of trees haue their rootes which spread abroad in the earth to drawe nourishment from thence euen so there are branches dispersed throughout the Mesentery and deriued from the liuer veine which are ioyned to the bowelles as it were small rootes to drawe foode being much like to haires or cob-webs These braunches or small rootes are the Meseraicall veines so called because they are placed in the vpper part of that member and instrument that is called Mesareon whereof I spake euen nowe Their office and nature is to draw and sucke out nourishment from the guts and to carry it to the liuer from whence they haue all their beginning as appeareth by Anatomie howsoeuer there are that thinke that some of them come not from thence The flesh of the Mesentery is kernelly and fatty not only seruing in steade of a munition and defence as hath beene said but also to moisten the entralles and guts and to preserue the heate both of the bowelles and veines So likewise the arteries are ioyned to the veines to giue them heate and to the guts also to concoct the liquor and nourishment Besides the nerues and sinewes there serue to giue sense to the guts There is moreouer a kernelly flesh which the Physicions call Pancreas because it doeth wholly resemble flesh as the Greeke name importeth It is placed in the hollow part of the liuer that it might be as it were a cushion vnto it and a preseruer of the diuided partes thereof by filling the void places that are betwene the stomach the liuer and the spleene to the ende it may vphold and protect the meseraicall veines and keepe euery thing from breaking either by falles or by violent motions Nowe touching the liuer it is a very noble member For it is the principallest member of all the naturall partes and the chiefest instrument belonging to the vegetatiue and nourishing power of the soule It is the first of the nobler partes that is made perfect when the childe is framed in the mothers womb it is the author shop and forge of the blood the originall and fountaine of the veines Therefore the substance of it is a soft and red flesh like to blood newly pressed out clodded Neuertheles in it own nature it is perfect flesh hauing sundry different veins dispersed throughout as it were threeds arteries also ioyned vnto thē for their refreshing Now after the stomach hath finished the first concoction of meat and turned it into liquor as it hath bin declared vnto vs the second is made in the liuer after it hath receiued this liquor so prepared by the stomach and guts as we said and turned it into blood This concoction is perfected in the small veines that are dispersed throughout the body of the liuer And because God hath inioyned this office to this member he hath compounded it of such a flesh matter as hath giuen vnto it this proper and peculiar vertue to conuert into blood that foode and nourishment that is brought vnto it to the end it may bee the instrument of the generation of that thing wherewith the body is nourished Hauing thus transformed the liquor receiued it maketh it redde like vnto it selfe as contrariwise blood is made white in the breasts of a woman both by reason of their nature and substance as also for other causes touched by vs. The temperature of the liuer is hot and moist such as becommeth the blood and concoction it hath to performe which is like to boiled meat Now forasmuch as this instrument and member is the chiefest in the kitchin of mans body GOD hath giuen vnto it such a nature and property as if there were in it a harth a table a knife and a wagoner
that ye henceforth walke not as other Gentiles walke in vanitie of their minde hauing their cogitation darkened and beeing strangers from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the hardnes of their heart We see here that in the first place he putteth the mind by which he meaneth vnderstanding and reason which is the principal faculty and power of the soule that which is so much magnified by the Philosophers that it is called of thē the Queene Damé Mistres Neuertheles S. Paul testifieth clearely that all of it is vanity without Christ so that a man may well iudge what wee are to esteeme of the rest that is in man Therefore also wee see howe from the minde hee commeth to the thought whereby hee comprehendeth both imagination and memory and all the faculties and powers of the internall senses which he testifieth to be shadowed with darkenesse so that there is no heauenly light at all therein without Iesus Christ who is the light of the world For which cause also he affirmeth that they are estranged from the life of God that is to say from that life by which he liueth in his and which he commaundeth and approoueth Afterward hee referreth the cause thereof to their ignorance which he ioyneth with darknesse and with the thought obscured thereby Finally hee commeth to the will and affections which he comprehendeth vnder the name of heart to whose hardnesse hee referreth their ignorance as to the fountaine thereof For by reason that through their malice and contumacie they reiect the light of God that is offered to their hearts and mindes they blinde themselues by the iust iudgement of God by which also they are made blinde as they iustly deserue seeing they loue darkenesse more then light and lying more then the trueth Now when al these faculties of the soule are reformed with the body according as we haue already declared then is man come to that entire sanctification of which Saint Paul speaketh in the place before alleadged which is requisite for the true children and seruantes of God But it seemeth that in all these diuisions and distinctions of the faculties and powers of the soule rehersed out of the Scriptures there is not one of them wherein any mention is made of the naturall powers by which the soule giueth life and nourishment to the body notwithstanding that this office also is assigned vnto it as well as the rest Heereof three reasons may be rendered The first is that the word of GOD maketh expresse mention of the chiefe faculties and powers which most properly belong to the nature of the soule and are giuen vnto it more specially to knowe and honour God by and which appertaine not onely to this life but also to the other The second is because these naturall powers may bee comprehended vnder the vitall and vnder the seate of the affections by reason of that communication which they haue both with the spirites and with the humours vsed by the soule in the body not onely to nourish it and preserue life in it but also to serue for all other things spoken of before The third reason is that forasmuch as these naturall powers are more terrestriall then celestiall and more corporall then spirituall and the vse and profite of them endeth with this humane life we may comprehend them vnder the name of body as things more neerely ioyned to it for the vse of this life and of which it shall haue no neede after this life when it shall bee made incorruptible and immortall And because this power of the soule appeareth more in this life then any of the rest therefore it is better knowen For this cause the name of soule is oftentimes taken not onely for this naturall power which wee call Vegetatiue and Nutritiue but also for the life it selfe and for all the commodities and desires thereof yea for the whole estate of life We may call to minde what wee heard before of the soule which is in the blood And when Reuben sayde to his brethren that woulde haue slaine Ioseph Let vs not strike his soule it is as much as if hee had saide Let vs not kill the soule Nowe it is certaine that the soule can neither bee slaine nor striken therefore by the soule hee meaneth the life And so his speech was all one as if hee had sayde Let vs not take his life from him as himselfe declareth it by and by after in the verse following where hee sayeth Shead not blood Also when Moses speaketh of the Lawe that requireth punishment like to the euill committed as hee sayeth Eye for eye tooth for tooth hand for hand and foote for foote so hee sayeth Soule for soule that is life for life And to seeke the soule of one in many places of Scripture signifieth to lye in waite for the life and to pursue it vnto death as it is written of the enemies of Ieremy and of Herod against Christ Iesus There are infinit such like places both in the olde and newe Testament in which the soule is taken for this corporall and naturall life Nowe because the soule giueth life by meanes of the stomach belly and other members and instruments of nourishment of which wee haue spoken before therefore it is often taken for them also as when Esay sayeth Therefore Hell that is to say the graue hath enlarged his soule and hath opened his mouth without measure and their glorie and their multitude and their pompe and hee that reioyceth among them shall descend into it The Prophet propoundeth heere the graue as a great and horrible monster that hath a throate with a stomach and belly as it were a deepe gulfe and bottomlesse pit to swallowe vp and to consume all And therefore as hee sayeth that hee hath opened his throate or mouth so hee sayeth that hee hath enlarged his soule that is to say his stomach and belly that it may bee more capable to receiue greater store of meate The same Prophet in an other place meaning to set downe the vaine hope that shall deceiue them that band themselues and enterprise any thing against the people of GOD and that looke for aide and deliueraunce from any other besides him sayeth that They are like to an hungry man who dreameth that hee eateth but when hee awaketh his soule is emptie or to a thirstie man who dreameth that hee is drinking but when hee awaketh beholde hee is faint and his soule longeth Which is as much as if hee had sayde that such a one supposing hee hath well eaten and well drunke findeth his stomach and his belly emptie and is still as hungrie and thirstie as hee was before Also when Ieremy saieth I haue satiate the weary soule and haue replenished euery languishing soule it is certaine that by the soule he meaneth the members and instruments of nourishment with the bodie that receiueth it and the life
nature and composition of the heart and of the midriffe of the tunicles or skinnie couerings of the breast and of the Pericardion or Cawle about the heart of the motion office and vse of the lungs of the heart and of the arteryes Chap. 37. 224 Of the substance situation and counterpoize of the heart of the nature and vse of the vitall spirite and of the forge vessels and instruments thereof of the sundry doores and pipes of the heart and of their vses Chap. 38. 229 Of the second motion of the heart which belongeth to the affections of the soule and of those that goe before or follow after iudgement of the agreement that is betweene the temperature of the body and the affections of the soule Chap. 39. 233 Of the health and diseases of the soule of the agreement betweene corporall and spiritual physicke how necessarie the knowledge of the nature of the body and of the soule is for euery one Chap. 40. The sixt dayes worke 237 OF foure things to bee considered in the will and in the power of desiring in the soule and first of natural inclinations of selfe loue and the vnrulinesse thereof Chap. 41. 241 Of the habite of the soule in the matter of the affections and of what force it is of the causes why the affections are giuen to the soule with the vse of them of the fountaine of vertues and vices Chap. 42 246 That according to the disposition of the iudgement the affections are more or lesse moderate or immoderate of the cause of all the motions of the soule and heart of the variety of affections of the generation nature and kindes of them Chap. 43. 250 That ioy or griefe are alwayes ioyned to the affections and what ioy and griefe are properly Chap. 44. 255 Of the causes why God hath placed these affections of ioy and sorrow in the heart of true and false ioy and of good and bad hope Chap. 45. 260 Of feare and of the nature and effects thereof toward the body the mind and the soule and how it troubleth them of the true harnesse and armour against feare Chap. 46. 265 Of the delight and pleasure that followeth euery ioy and of the moderation that is required therein of diuers degrees of pleasures and how men abuse them especially those pleasures which are receiued by the corporal senses Chap. 47. 270 Of the comparison of pleasures receiued by the internall senses and how men descend by degrees from the best to the basest pleasures of the difference betweene the vse of spirituall delights and corporall and how the one chase the other Chap. 48. The seuenth dayes worke 276 OF the affections of loue of the nature kinds and obiect of it of the beginning of friendship of the vertue and force of alluring that is in likenesse and in beauty of the agreement that is betweene beauty and goodnesse Chap. 49. 281 Of other causes why beauty procureth loue and of diuers degrees and kinds of beauty how it is the nature of loue alwayes to vnite an what other effects it hath how loue descendeth and ascendeth not what power it hath to allure and breed loue Chap. 50. 286 Of desire and coueting and of the kinds of it of the infinitenesse of mens desires and what Good is able to satisfie and content it of the difference betweene desire and loue and of the vtmost limit and end of loue Chap. 51. 291 Of the good things that are in true loue of the diuers valuations of loue and of the benefits which it procureth what knowledge is requisite to allure loue and how one loue groweth by another of the friendshippe that may bee both betweene the good and the badde Chap. 52. 297 Of fauour reuerence and of honour of their nature and effects of those outward signes whereby they shewe themselues of pity and compassion and howe agreeable it is to the nature of man Chap. 53. 302 Of offence in the heart and soule of the degrees of offence and of the good and euill that may be in this affection of contempt that is bredde of it and of mockery which followeth contempt Chap. 54. 307 Of anger and of the vehemency and violency thereof of the difference that is betweene anger and rancor of the affection of reuenge that accompanieth them of the motions of the heart in anger with the effectes thereof wherefore this affection is giuen to man and to what vse it may serue him Chap. 55. 313 Of hatred and of the nature and effects thereof of a good kind of hatred and of the remedy to cure the euill hatred of enuie and of the kindes and effects thereof of the difference betweene good and euill enuy Chap. 56. The eight dayes worke 319 OF iealousie and of the kindes thereof how it may bee eyther a vice or a vertue howe true zeale true iealousie and indignation proceede of loue of their natures and why these affections are giuen to man Chap. 57. 324 Of reuenge cruelty and rage and what agreement there is among them what shame and blushing is and why God hath placed these affections in man and of the good and euill that is in them Chap. 58. 330 Of pride with the consideration thereof aswell in nature intire as corrupted of the orginall thereof and of such as are most inclined thereunto what vices accompany it how great a poison it is and what remedy there is for it Chap. 59. 335 Of the naturall powers of the soule and what sundry vertues they haue in the nourishment of the body of their order and offices of their agreement and necessary vse where the vegetatiue soule is placed in the body and what vertue it hath to augment the same Chap. 60. 341 What instruments the soule vseth in the body about the naturall works of nourishing and augmenting of the ventricle of stomacke and of the figure orifices and filamentes it hath of the stomacke and of what substance and nature it is of the causes of hunger and of appetite of the inferior orifice Chap. 61. 347 Of the intalles and bowels and of their names and offices of the nature of the three smaller guttes and of the other three that are greater of the instructions which wee may learne by these things Chap. 62. 353 Of the Mesentery and Mesareon of the Meseraicall veines of the Pancreas or sweete bread and of their nature and office of the liuer and of his nature and office of the rootes bodies branches of the veines of their names and vses and of the similitude betweene them and the arteries Chap. 63. 358 Of the blood and of other humours in the body of their diuersity and nature and of the agreement they haue with the elementes of the similitude that is betwixt the great garden of this great worlde and that of the little worlde touching the nourishment of things contayned and preserued in them Chap. 64. The ninth dayes worke 363 OF the vapours that ascend vp to the braine
but a very litle But God hath prouided a remedy for this by the meanes of salt and of sundry fortes of sawces and spices whereby they may be made to haue a pleasaunt taste There are some things also which are cleane contrary either by reason of their euill taste as gall and wormewood or els because of the hurt which they may bring with them as those things that are venimous and very poyson But God hath very well met with this inconuenience both by this gift of the sense of tasting and also by putting into such things as might hurt either mā or any other liuing creature a certaine qualitie which we call relish or taste that is contrary and very vnpleasant to the sense of tasting as likewise hee hath giuen to those things that are healthful and good to nourish a relish that is agreeable and pleasant vnto our taste This is to be vnderstoode if our taste bee not corrupted either by sickenesse or by some vnbrideled appetite the like is to be said of the spittle which beside the vse before named hath this also that it helpeth the taste Wherefore if it bee already infected with some euill taste it will not well receiue others but will cause euerything to be of the same taste wherewith it is infected and corrupted Now those things are most sauoury and haue the best relish that haue in them the best mixture of heate and moisture which two qualities make the relish of things and without which we see that all extreme colde and dry things haue no smacke or taste as flaxe or towe and drye wood or water that is very pure In other thinges those that haue more moisture then heate haue their taste lesse sharp so that according as heat and humidity are tempered together the diuersitie of tastes is framed For if humidity doth not exceede and surmount earthy drynesse or both of them be consumed by heate there is no taste So that as all bodily thinges are compounded of all the elements and differ one from another according as they haue more or lesse of the elements so is it in tastes For this cause this sense of taste answereth to the element of water and holdeth most of the nature thereof as the sense of touching hath more affinitie with the earth to the ende it might agree better with those thinges that are to bee felt thereby For the vigor and sense thereof ought to be close together and throughout and such as taketh faster holde then any of the rest So likewise the sense of sight agreeth with the fire and that of hearing with the aire as wee haue alreadie touched it And as for the sense of smelling it agreeth both with the fire and with the thicke ayre because smelles are stirred vp by heate as smoke is by fire which afterwardes are by the meanes of the ayre caried to the sense of smelling whereof wee will speake heereafter But let vs goe on with our discourse of tasting and of such things as are apt to nourish the body For wee cannot liue without the helpe of many things amongst which meates and drinks are chiefest because that as hunger requireth meate so thirst desireth drinke Wee must therefore vnderstand that this soule and life which is called Vegetatiue or nourishing and which is common to man with all other liuing creatures hath two principall instruments in the body namely heate and humiditie of which heate is first and chiefe belonging properly to the vertue of nourishing next humiditie is ioyned to heate that it may feede and preserue it For life is preserued in the body by heate which is the chiefe instrument thereof so that as soone as heate is gone it becommeth starke dead And because this heate would easily and quickly consume it selfe if it were not nourished and mainteined moysture is ioyned vnto it in liuing bodies as it were a bridle to keepe it back to the end that life might be prolonged which otherwise woulde faile presently after it were forsaken of heate as heate also would decay if it were not nourished and preserued by humiditie which it necessarily requireth For heate draweth humour vnto it selfe and sucketh and drinketh it vp likewise humour refresheth heate and slaketh the vehemencie thereof all which wee may plainely see in a lampe For let vs compare the light of a lampe with life and then let vs consider whether this light can bee preserued without fire and whether this fire can continue any long time and not bee extinguished vnlesse it haue two thinges The first is matter as namely the wieke of the lampe which matter cannot bee firme if it haue no drynesse in it whereof fire may take holde For fire beeing hote and drie cannot haue any fellowship with coldenesse and humiditie without some middle qualitie agreeable to his nature On the other side it will soone consume the drie matter on which it lighteth if the vehement heate thereof bee not abated and tempered by some humiditie which both resisteth the drynesse and also by the coldenesse it hath moderateth the heate of the fire Therefore wee see that the matter of the wicke of a lampe cannot continue long beeing once lighted if it be not greased with some tallowe or some humide matter to preserue both that and the fire of which it receiueth light For when it is burnt out the fire also dieth with it through want of nourishment that might mainteine it But it is not ynough although the fire haue meet matter to nourish it For they must be so well wrought and mingled one with another that there bee neyther too much nor too litle of eyther but as much as neede requireth For if there bee a great deale of wieke and but a litle oyle and tallowe it will endure so much the lesse while and if there bee too much oyle or tallowe in respect of the wieke it will slake the fire ouermuch yea it may be in such great quantitie that it will put it quite out But if due proportion bee kept betweene the cotton and the oyle or tallowe the fire will preserue it selfe verie well and giue a goodly cleare light The like is done in our bodies For if they were without naturall heate there woulde bee no life in them and if this heate had not meete matter to preserue it selfe within them it woulde quickely bee extinguished Nowe seeing it must bee nourished and mainteined this cannot bee done vnlesse it haue some solide and firme matter which cannot be consumed so quickly but that it may preserue it selfe sometime Againe forasmuch as there is no matter so solide and firme which is able any long time to resist the fire that consumeth all if the violence thereof be not moderated this matter must of necessitie be moistened Here then the meate which is most solide standeth in stead of match or weeke to this naturall fire from whence proceedeth life to the body and drinks are as it were oyle in
fiue They which make fiue sortes distinguish betweene the common sense the imagination and the fantasie making them three and for the fourth they adde Reason or the iudging facultie and for the fift Memorie They that make but three kinds differ not from the other but onely in that they comprehend all the former three vnder the common sense or vnder one of the other twaine whether it be the imagination or the fantasie As for the Sensitiue facultie it comprehendeth the vertues of the fiue corporall senses of which wee haue spoken before As for the Motiue vertue it comprehendeth the moouing of all the outward parts of the body from one place to an other especially of the feete and legges which is to walke and of the handes which is to apprehend and to gripe This moouing is done by the sinewes muscles and filaments as we haue already declared but not without knowledge and will as the other that are more properly called naturall motions of which we may speake in their order And this motion is led by the imagination in regard of beastes but in regard of men by reason But because we haue already handled at large these two last powers of the soule namely the Sensitiue and Motiue when we spake of the externall members of the body we wil now speake especially of the first which comprehendeth the internall senses spoken of by me euen now which answere to the externall senses according to the bond agreement and communication which the body and soule haue together And because wee cannot know the faculties vertues of the soule but only by means of those instruments whereby it worketh as we haue shewed in our former discourses the nature and vse of the externall members and howe the soule is serued by them so now we will do the like by the internall parts to the ende that we may the better knowe the nature of the soule by her operations and instruments as the labourer that worketh by his instruments and frameth those woorkes that are before our eyes For the soule being of a spirituall nature and not bodily we cannot see it in it owne substance and nature nor haue any knowledge thereof but by the effectes by which wee may iudge and conclude of their cause as also by those testimonies of the soule which the Lorde affordeth vs in his worde And although the vnderstanding of man can not attaine to an entire and perfect knowledge of the soule yet that smal knowledge which wee may haue doeth exceedingly profite end delight vs. For seeing it is the most excellent creature that is created vnder the cope of heauen yea more excellent then the heauens themselues or any of the celestiall bodies because the soule only is endued with reason and vnderstanding there is no doubt but the knowledge thereof is more excellent profitable pleasant and necessary yea more worthy admiration then of any other thing whatsoeuer as that which alwaies yeeldeth profit to the greatest things that can be Therfore we ought not to set light by that knowledge of it which wee may attaine vnto For there is in it so great varietie beauty and harmony yea it is so wel adorned and set forth that no heauen nor earth is so wel painted or bedecked with such beautifull liuely and excellent images and pictures as that is On the other side she is the Mistresse and Authour from whence proceedeth the inuention of all Artes and Sciences and of all those wonderfull woorkes that are made throughout the whole course of mans life Therefore no man can beholde her or thinke vpon her without great pleasure and admiration And seeing the fountaine and well-spring of all the good and euill that befalleth vs is in the soule there is nothing more profitable for men then to know it well to the ende they may labour more carefully to keepe this fountaine pure and well purged that all the riuers of their actions and workes may issue and flowe pure and cleane from thence For that man can neuer gouerne his soule wel nor be master of himselfe that doeth not knowe himselfe If wee desire to knowe what workes wee are to looke for of a workeman what hee can doe or what may befall him what hee is good for and for what hee is vnmeete hee must first of all bee knowen what hee is Therefore that sentence of which we haue already spoken that saith Know thy selfe ought heere especially to take place and to bee practised For it is a harder matter to knowe the nature and qualitie of our soule and of our minde the vertues and affections thereof to enquire and consider of it well and to knowe what may be knowen thereof as also the diuerse and holow lurking holes the turnings and windings therein then to know the bones flesh sinews and blood of our bodies with all the matter whereof it is made and all the partes and members thereof Seeing then wee are to make enquirie of the nature and powers of the soule by the effects thereof according as I haue already spoken and seeing the principall effect is the life which it giueth to all liuing creatures let vs first consider of the difference that is betweene the creatures void of life and those that haue life in them Afterward let vs looke into the sundrie sortes of liues that are in liuing creatures as that which will helpe vs well to the vnderstanding of that wee seeke for First then wee must note that all creatures are either spirituall or bodily All they are spirituall creatures that are without bodies and which cannot be perceiued by any bodily sense and such are the Angelles both good and bad and the soules and spirites of men The bodily creatures are all those that are visible and that may bee felt and perceiued by corporall senses amongst which some haue no life and some haue life Againe those creatures that haue no life differ in two respects for some of them haue no naturall motion as stones metalles mineralles and such like creatures Others haue their naturall motion among which some are mutable corruptible and subiect to change others are immutable incorruptible continuing alwaies firme in their estate during the course of this world The water the aire the windes and the fire are creatures hauing motion albeit they haue no life but they are subiect to corruption and so are all the creatures that are compounded of the elements whether they haue life or no. For being made of contrary matters and qualities they corrupt and change not in respect of their first matter and substance which can neuer perish according to the testimony of Philosophers notwithstanding it alter in forme but alwayes returneth to the first nature Stones and metalles albeit they be very hard yet are they not freed from corruption and consuming through vse But the celestiall bodies are of that matter and nature that they mooue continually and yet abide
any in him that is true and sounde but onely that which is counterfeite and fayned towardes them that submit themselues vnto him through flatterie But that which is most dangerous in pride is when it is bredde of humilitie of modestie and of vertue For there are manie who considering their owne modestie and other vertues and condemning pride and other vices are delighted therewith after an insolent manner and are puffed vp with pride thereby Whereby wee see what windings and slipperie turnings are in that olde serpent the Father of pride into howe manie fashions hee changeth himselfe and in what manner hee hath infected and poysoned our heart For hee hath brought it to this passe that as venimous beastes turne all they eate howe good soeuer it bee into venime so the proude man turneth all his thoughtes wordes and deedes into pride For hee draweth and referreth euery thing to his owne honour and glorie and therefore Saint Chrysostome verie aptly compareth Vaine-glorie to a Mothe For as the mothe marreth and consumeth that cloth in which it is bredde so vaineglorie sometime springeth of vertue and afterwarde corrupteth it For there is no vertue so excellent which is not turned into vice and made abominable before GOD so soone as it is mingled therewith Seeing then pride is such an horrible monster as that which breedeth and bringeth foorth so manie other monsters wee ought to seeke diligently after all remedies for it that may possibly bee had whereby it may bee tamed and kept vnder and so our soules cured of such a dangerous disease and plague Nowe forasmuch as it proceedeth of ignoraunce and of inconsideratenesse and through the want of the due knowledge of God and of our selues wee must redresse this euill by the vertues contrarie to these vices namely by the true knowledge of God of his worde and of our selues Which wee shall obtaine if hee deale so gratiously with vs as to fill vs with his holie spirite and to giue vs an humble heart that renouncing all pride and all arrogancie wee may learne to walke in his feare and in all obedience to his holie will so that wee wholly consecrate our selues vnto him both in bodie soule and spirite in will heart and all our affections Nowe hauing spoken sufficiently of that matter into which wee fell whilest wee handeled the second bellie which God hath placed in man for the lodging of the vital partes and namely of the heart which is the seate of the affections it remaineth that we consider of the third beilie which is the seate of the naturall powers and vertues of the soule of which thou shalt beginne nowe to discourse ACHITOB. Of the naturall powers of the soule and what sundrie vertues they haue in the nourishment of the bodie of their order and offices of their agreement and necessarie vse where the Vegetatiue soule is placed in the bodie and what Vertue it hath to augment the same Chap. 60. ACHIT The dispositiō placing of the principal parts of our body of that noblest mēbers therof is a goodly schole wherin we may learne how much more carefull wee ought to be of heauen then of the earth and of the spirite then of the bodie We haue already heard how the internall partes of man were deuided into three bellies and lodgings of which the two former namely the braine and the heart together with the vertues offices and works of the soule in them haue beene declared vnto vs. It remaineth that we consider of the last lodging of the bodie which properly beareth the name of belly which is the seate of these naturall powers and vertues of the soule which we call Vegetatiue and nourishing and is diuided into three kinds namely into the vertue of nourishing of augmenting or growing and of engendring Nowe when we see this order and disposition in our nature we ought seriously to thinke that seeing God hath placed the heart betweene the head and the belly the Vitall vertue of the soule betweene the Animal and Nutritiue and the will betweene the vnderstanding and the most sensuall part in vs therefore the heart affections and will ought to looke alwayes on high and not downward to the ende they should ioyne to the most noble celestiall and diuine part and not to that which is most base sensual and earthly Whereunto that also ought to induce and leade vs which we learned before of the agreement between the highest and middlemost of these principal and more noble parts of the body vnto which this last is inferiour in all kinde of excellencie beautie and dignitie This belly of which wee are nowe to discourse containeth all the members and instruments that serue for nourishment and generation whereupon it is termed the Kitchin and Nurserie of the body and the seminary and welspring of mankinde But before we enter into a particular consideration of these members and instrumentes wee are to looke into the naturall powers of the Vegetatiue soule that is in them And first we will note that which we spake of elsewhere of the office of heate and moysture in the nature of the bodie that as moysture keepeth heate within it so heate drinketh and soaketh vp moysture as much as it may digesting and dispelling it by the vertue and action of it owne nature Now whilest this moysture is thus digested by the heate there is a separation made of that which is profitable in the bodie from that which is superfluous and consequently hurtfull to the bodie That which is profitable for it is the iuyce and humour that agreeth with it in regarde of the similitude and likenesse that is betweene them Whereupon it followeth that all moysture that is greatly diuerse or contrary to the body is hurtfull for it as also all drye matter which likewise hurteth the health and life thereof So that this vertue of the soule which we call naturall or otherwise Vegetatiue and which comprehendeth vnder it the vertue of nourishing of augmenting and of engendring euery of which hauing sixe others tending all to one ende as we heard alreadie this vertue I say causeth that which is profitable for the nourishment of the bodie first to bee distributed vnto the members and then to bee turned into the bodily substance of the liuing creature because that vertue and power of the soule doeth imbrace and receiue it acknowledging it alreadie to bee a part of the bodie Therefore the vertue of drawing nourishment that is in the soule hath for an helper the vertue of retaining and keeping vntill there bee a conuenient change thereof made by the facultie and power of digesting and as it were dressing of it For otherwise the attractiue and retentiue power were to small purpose Now when the meate is digested so much of it as is pure must bee separated from that which is impure by the vertue of purging and that which is impure must bee deliuered ouer to the
expulsiue vertue to bee cast out and the rest which is pure to the vertue of distributing after which the vertue of incorporating executeth his office and duetie Thus you see howe all these particular vertues seruing to the generall vertue of nourishing doe their dueties one after another according to that order which nature hath assigned them For except this agreement and order were kept there woulde bee great confusion and the bodie coulde not receiue his due nourishment Therefore doeth one of them attende vpon and helpe another yea all of them tende to one and the same ende by diuers meanes For after the meate is receiued attracted and retained it must bee digested before it bee separated so that the expulsiue vertue is to attende vpon this separation and distinction Neither can the attractiue or drawing vertue doe his office well vnlesse the bodie bee first emptie neither the vertue of concocting or preparing if the bodie bee not purged of the meate receiued before And if any of these vertues doeth not his duetie the residue are made more dull slowe and languishing For there is such agreement betwixt them and they are by such equal proportion tempered throughout the whole bodie that nothing can befall any one of them but the residue will feele it Neither can that which is wanting in one bee supplied by an other For GOD hauing assigned to euerie one his proper office they deale not one in anothers affaires but euery one abideth in his owne office and goeth not beyonde his appoynted boundes and limites as the like is to bee seene in the printing house and amongest them that stampe money For if the Compositor faile in the 〈◊〉 of his letters the Printer that putteth ynke vpon the fourmes doeth not correct the faultes of the Compositor And if the Printer doeth not distribute his ynke well hee that draweth the sheetes from the presse correcteth not his fault For euery one hath his office apart with which onely hee medleth So likewise in Coyne if hee that cutteth prepareth and fineth the mettall faile in his duetie hee that cutteth it in pieces will correct nothing but diuideth it as it is deliuered to him Then hee that maketh it flatte that it may bee fitte for him that stampeth it doeth nothing but that which is committed to his charge and if hee that stampeth it findeth it not so flat or so round as it ought to be yet doeth hee nothing but marke it and so leaueth it as he found it Moreouer wee are to note well howe God giueth vs euen in our nature a goodlie instruction concerning that order and concord that ought to bee amongest vs all by doing euery one his duetie and helping eche other so farre as wee may For wee may learne three principall poyntes in that order which God hath set betweene the vertues of the Vegetatiue soule for the nourishing of the bodie which serue greatly for the preseruation of humane societie First howe euerie one ought to behaue himselfe in his office and not leaue others to performe that woorke which is enioyned him Secondly howe euerie one of vs ought to keepe his ranke and order not making ouer much haste nor beeing too slacke and without anie confusion of offices or vsurping any thing of that which belongeth to others Thirdly the consideration of those inconueniences which may befall euery common-wealth and societie of men if this order bee not well kept and obserued For the like will happen vnto it that doeth to a bodie which is not nourished as it ought to bee and in which the naturall vertues doe not their duetie as I haue declared For from thence proceedeth all the confusion that is in the life of man and all those miseries which wee dayly see therein Concerning the seates of these vertues of the nourishing soule mentioned by vs wee are to knowe that although they bee greater and more apparant in some partes then in others yet they are spredde throughout the whole bodie but after a diuerse manner For in perfect liuing creatures the concoction of the meate is first made in the stomacke that so it may bee prepared for the liuer the seconde is made in the liuer that it may bee turned into blood the thirde is in all the members that it may bee changed into their substance So that there is no ende or stay in the bodie of concocting and consequently of purging the meate and of casting out that which is superfluous For the heate doeth continually warme and as it were seethe the moisture neither is there any meate so pure which hath not alwayes some excrements and superfluities that are to be seperate and eiected Heereof it is that the whole body of liuing creatures is as it were bored through and hath diuers pipes to the ende there might be more open passages for the auoyding of these excrements according to that purging which is done day and night by the partes appointed therevnto as wee haue alreadie touched it speaking of those members whereby such purging is performed after a diuers manner especially when wee spake of the braine Nowe besides that purging which is vnder the armepittes and in the groyne we see howe the thinnest excrements voyde at euery part of the bodie as wee may iudge by that filth which daily is seene in the head handes feete and in all the rest of the body For wee cannot busie our selues so much in washing and cleansing all the partes and members of the bodie but still wee may finde somewhat to wash and to make cleane Therefore wee stande in neede of daily nourishment that whatsoeuer diminisheth continually from vs may from time to time bee restored and made good againe But this vertue of nourishing is the first and simplest of all the naturall vertues of the Vegetatiue soule For there are two others necessary for the life and preseruation of liuing creatures of which we haue already spoken namely the power of augmenting and that other of engendring So that liuing creatures are not onely nourished by that foode which they receiue but they growe bigger and begette their like For there is no liuing creature that hath a bodie but it groweth vp vntill it come to a certaine greatnesse and measure For this cause the vertue of augmenting and growing was added to the nourishing vertue and the vertue of engendering to them both but so as they differ in manie poyntes For first although the vertues of nourishing and of augmenting agree in this that they are both giuen to euerie liuing creature yet they differ heerein that the vertue of nourishing continueth alwayes so long as the creature liueth euen from the beginning of it vnto the end But the vertue of growing greater although it beginne with the other yet hath it a set time limited wherein it staieth and as before the creature waxed bigger and increased in greatnesse and vigour so after it commeth to the appoynted time it beginneth to fall
and to diminish and as it were to retire backe and to restrayne it selfe And as for the vertue of engendering it differeth from both the other first in that it is not giuen so generally to all liuing creatures as they are and then in that it beginneth not so soone For it commeth then when the liuing creature through nourishment and growth hath attayned to those vertues that are necessary for generation Besides it hath this common with the vertue of augmentation that it hath certaine limites and bounds vnto which after it is once come it weakeneth and in the ende decayeth vtterly Wherein it differeth from the nourishing vertue Nowe the vertue of growing greater hath as many other particular vertues vnder it for the execution of it owne office as the vertue of nourishing hath according as was touched before Whereby wee learne that bodies growe not greater neither augment by the heaping vp of much matter outwardely applied as when a house is set vp wee see timber ioyned to timber and stone to stone in the building of it but this is done by the same hidden and secrete arte and cunning in nature whereby wee are nourished For in this poynt there is no difference betweene the vertue of nourishing and that of augmenting but onelie heerein that in nourishment the meate is turned into the substance of the bodie and in augmenting the foode beeing thus turned doeth from within stretch foorth the quantitie of the bodie outwardly And so this vertue of augmenting dependeth of the nourishing vertue For meate nourisheth as it is a substance with qualities meete for nourishment and augmenteth by reason of the quantitie it hath For this cause hath God created the bodies of liuing creatures with such a substance that as they haue sundrie passages and holes in them like to sponges to the ende to purge by them so he would that the substance they receiue by their foode might passe by the same holes that they might augment and grow greater So that all of them haue their pores and litle holes albeit they appeare not to the eye whereby nourishment entreth and extendeth it selfe in greatnesse length and thicknesse The consideration hereof hath caused some skilfull men to place mettals and stones in the ranke of liuing creatures because they growe in the earth as the bodies of plants and liuing creatures doe Neither is their opinion without some shewe of reason For wee knowe that they grow and increase and that inwardly which seemeth not to bee done without drawing vnto themselues some inward nourishment as liuing creatures vse to doe Besides they haue also their pores and passages to stretch foor●h and augment themselues by Notwithstanding all this there is greater reason to place them in the ranke of those natures and creatures which augment and grow greater by adding and ioyning of matter vnto them as wee see fountaines and riuers to increase and so likewise fire Which albeit it seemeth to be nourished and augmented with that matter which is put vnto it yet is it not nourished as liuing creatures are by meanes of that foode which they receiue For they haue their boundes of growing set them which they cannot passe as wee see the like also in plantes but fire hath no limites as that which alwayes increaseth as long as it findeth any matter to burne Whereby we may conclude that naturall heate in man or in other liuing creatures is not the cause of their nourishing and growth but onely the instrument and that the true cause in regarde of second causes is in the soule next after God who is the first cause of all things yea the cause of causes Therefore it is hee that hath alotted out to euerie man the terme first of his life and growth and then of his declining and death so that according as hee will eyther prolong or shorten our life and cause vs to encrease or diminish so hee disposeth the seconde causes and those meanes whereby hee will bring it to passe Nowe wee must consider what instrumentes the soule vseth to execute in the bodie of man her naturall woorkes of nourishing and augmenting it of which wee haue nowe spoken and after what manner shee vseth them First then wee will looke into the ventricle and stomacke and see what figure what Orifices and filaments it hath This matter then ASER belongeth to thee to intreate of What instrumentes the Soule vseth in the bodie about the naturall woorke of nourishing and augmenting of the Ventricle or stomacke and of the figure Orifices and Filaments it hath of the coates of the stomacke and of what substance and nature it is of the causes of hunger and of appetite of the inferiour Orifice Chap. 61. ASER. Wee shoulde bee very happie if wee knewe howe to followe that order in all our doings which God hath set downe in all his woorkes and whereof he giueth nature vnto vs for a Mistresse But if the simplicitie of our vnderstanding bee not able to attaine to so high wisedome at the least we may knowe howe farre short euery one of vs commeth of our duetie and from whence proceedeth all the confusion that is in the life of man and all those miseries which wee commonly beholde On the other side nothing coulde hinder vs were it not a voluntarie and malicious ignorance in that wee consider not what a marueilous and excellent Woorkemaster God the Creator sheweth himselfe to bee in this part of the soule whereof our present discourses are and in that order which hee hath set therein and in those vertues which hee hath bestowed vpon it For his woorke is so excellent and woorthie of so great admiration that no wisedome or power whatsoeuer is able so much as to imitate it Wherefore wee are to account it a very great and noble blessing to haue onely some knowledge of it and to bee able to comprehende some thing thereof by our vnderstanding For there will be alwayes enough whereat to marueile greatly and namely in the consideration of those instruments which the soule vseth in the nourishment and growth of bodies as we shall know in the sequele of our discourses Therefore as heeretofore wee haue handled and spoken of the diuers powers of the soule and of those instruments it hath in regarde of the Animal and Vital partes as of the braine heart head and other externall members of the bodie so nowe wee are to consider of the internall instruments which serue the naturall powers of the soule And first it hath the liquors and humours of the bodie tempered together by a certaine Lawe and reason of the Creator that created them Secondly the other instruments of the soule are those members both externall and internall which are framed and haue their seuerall proportion euery one as neede requireth for the office assigned vnto them by God their Creator For before the soule bee clothed with the bodie these instrumentes are fashioned and made fitte for it by nature
in those things wherein it coulde doe nothing of it selfe For the soule cannot create her bodie But after that God hath created the bodie for it and that by his appoyntment nature hath disposed and fitted the same for the soule so farre foorth as is requisite before it can shewe what vertue it hath and settle it selfe to worke in the bodie then is shee left to doe that which shee is able to performe by the powers of her presence and to exercise her selfe therein beginning alwayes at the least and basest of her offices before shee apply her selfe to the chiefest by displaying her principall powers For whilest the childe is in his mothers bellie the soule practiseth vpon it her Vegetatiue and nourishing vertue by which it is nourished and groweth in greatnesse as wee see the like in plantes And when it is borne it receiueth besides from the soule the power of moouing and of sence as we see beastes haue and last of all by litle and litle the soule displayeth her other principall vertues But to speake of our matter subiect and to handle particularly those instrumentes of the soule which shee vseth in the nourishing and augmenting of the bodie wee will beginne at the Ventricle commonly called the stomacke Nowe because this name is vsed diuersly wee are to note that the Physicions who distinguish the partes of the bodie more exactly and properly apply this name of stomacke more specially to the vpper mouth of it and call the whole by the name of Ventricle whereof wee will speake anon Oftentimes also they take the stomacke for the whole passage and pype called Oesophage or the throate but commonly the whole Ventricle is called by that name Therefore I will vse it indifferently thereby to apply my selfe the better to the vsuall manner of speaking Wee are to knowe then first of all that amongest all the members seruing to nourishment GOD hath appoynted this to bee the first as that which receiueth the meate and drinke sent vnto it by the throate And to the ende wee may the better knowe the prouidence of God in the offices and commodities of this member I will first speake somewhat of the figure and forme thereof then of the situation of it and last of all of the substaunce of it The figure of it is rounde and long much like to a bagge-pipe as that which is beeing somewhat larger at the bottome and arising vpwarde towardes the left side groweth narrower by litle and litle For seeing it was to occupie the whole pace that is betwixt the liuer and the spleene it was requisite that it shoulde bee long to the ende it might not trouble that place which is assigned vnto them but giue them place Likewise it was requisite that it shoulde bee rounde both because the rounde forme is most capable and also because it will not so easily be broken and marred as other formes will be Vnto the stomacke is ioyned this narrow pipe called Oesophage to the end it might receiue into it thereby all kinds of meate and drink as wee declared when we spake of the pipes in the throate and of meates and drinkes For this cause there are two mouthes or doores in the stomacke called Orifices of which the one is called the higher Orifice or mouth because it is vppermost and the other for the same reason is called the lower Orifice The first is to receiue the meate that is sent to the stomacke by the Oesophage And this is that which the Physicions call by the proper name of stomacke as wee hearde before although commonly it is called the heart For when wee feele any weakenesse there or anie desire to vomite wee commonly say that wee are ill at the heart or that something lyeth vpon our heart But this sense of griefe is not at the heart but in that part of the Ventricle which is called the vppermost Orifice or stomacke whose seate and place is on the left side neere to the backe-bone And this Orifice or mouth of the stomacke is a great deale more large then the nethermost because the meate is oftentimes not well chewed besides many great and hard morsels that are swallowed nowe and then Againe this part is verie sensible because there is the originall and place of appetite by reason of those nerues of which it is chiefely made that growe together like vnto nettes Heereof wee may note this that the prouidence of God hath so well prouided for all the members and instruments of nourishment that there is not one of them but it hath some small sinewe to giue it sense whereby it may feele and perceiue what humours are hurtfull vnto it that by the griefe which it receiueth men may be moued to haue recourse to such remedies as are able to releeue it But to returne to our matter wee are to knowe that the vpper Orifice hath the Midriffe ioyned vnto it which is in steede of a doore to close and shutte it vp that when it is full of meates and drinkes they shoulde not ascende vp againe by the throate Concerning the nethermost Orifice it is both by the Greeke and Latine Writers called by a name that signifieth a Doore-keeper being made to let out the meate concocted in the Ventricle together with the superfluities and excrementes Therefore also it is narrower then the vpper Orifice and compassed about with a certaine kernelley fleshe to the ende that nothing shoulde passe by which were not well digested before and that by meanes of the mouth of it made in the manner of a ring It is situated on the right side vnder the hollownesse of the liuer a little lower then the other Orifice But it is not at the very bottome of the Ventricle but a little higher to the ende the foode beeing retayned and kept at the bottome might bee heated and digested there So that after the stomacke hath receiued into it the meate and drinke both these doores as well aboue as beneath are shut that the heate within might be retained and kept close For this cause there are certaine filaments or small stringes of which some are direct and straight hauing in them a marueilous secret vertue of nature to drawe vnto them others are ouerth wart and passe cleane crosse the former through certaine little corners that lie long-wise Their office is to close vp the vpper part from the body of the stomach Besides there are other crooked filaments which through oblique corners passe alongst the sides of both the other and these because they close the whole body of the stomacke haue power of retaining and serue to shut vp the mouth of the stomacke So that these filaments or threedes in regarde of their office may be compared to the strings of a purse whereby it is shut And because the stomacke being closed and shut vp digesteth the meate a great deale better then if it were gaping and wide open therefore nature
vitall and naturall together with all the instruments which they haue in the bodie and in the members thereof For first beholde the braine signified by the golden ewer then the pith of the chine bone and the chine bone it selfe by the siluer coard uext the liuer by the well which hath also his pitcher and lastly the heart which is signified by the cisterne As for that particularly spoken of the pitcher and wheele broken which drawe water out of the well and cisterne it is all one as if he had saide that when the fountaine of blood in the liuer waxeth drie and decayeth the wheele aboue namely the head is broken because all the senses both exteriour and interiour and the animal vertues faile in the body For the soule wanteth sound instruments to giue life motion and sense vnto it they being worne consumed by those meanes and causes which we shal vnderstand heereafter But to follow our purpose and not to depart from the matter we must intreate of the nature of blood and of other humors in the body of their diuersity and nature This then ACHITOB shal be the matter subiect of thy discourse Of the blood and of other humours in the body of their diuersitie and nature of the agreement they haue with the elements of the similitude that is betweene the great garden of this great world and that of the little world touching the nourishment of things contained and preserued in them Chap. 64. ACHITOB. If in many of our discourses wee sawe great testimonies of the image of the great worlde in man the matter we haue now to handle will set before our eies such as are most cleere and euident For looke howe the sea is as it were the great fountaine and womb of all waters and of the floods riuers that issue out of them to water the whole earth so likewise the liuer is as it were the fountaine of the blood and veines which are like to brooks and riuers to carry distribute the blood throughout the whole body to the ende that all the partes of it might be moistned soaked and nourished according to their seuerall natures So that the liuer in mans body in man who is the litle world is as the sea in the great world and the veines are like to the floods riuers Neither are the parts of the body by this means moistned watred and nourished with blood only but also with all the other humors wherewith it is tempered and without which the body cānot liue For the blood carieth al the rest with it But that we may the better vnderstand this matter and what is the proper nature of blood we must first know what a humor is how many kinds of it there are We vnderstand by a Humor a liquide running body into which the foode is conuerted in the liuer to this ende that bodies might bee nourished and preserued by them And as there are foure elements of which our bodies are compounded so there are foure sorts of humors answerable to their natures being al mingled together with the blood as we may see by experience in blood let out of ones body For vppermost wee see as it were a litle skimme like to the floure or working of new wine or of other wine when it is powred foorth Next we may see as it were small streams of water mingled with the blood And in the bottome is seene a blacker and thicker humour like to the lees of wine in a wine vessell So that if we knowe how to consider wisely of these things it will bee easie for vs to vnderstand the distinction of these sundry humours and their nature Now concerning the first of them wee are to knowe that the proper nature of blood is to bee hote and moist wherein it answereth to the nature of the aire It is temperate sweete and fatty as also the best and chiefest part of nourishment For albeit all the other humours doe nourish likewise and are carried of the blood neuerthelesse that humour which is properly called blood is the chiefest part of nourishment For it is requisit that nourishment should be sweete or at leastwise tempred with sweet liquor Next that thinne skimme which is seene on the top of it resembling the floure of wine is that humour that is called yellow choller or the cholericke humor which is hot and drie of a bitter taste and answering to the nature of fire which is of the same nature For it is bred of the hottest and driest parts of that liquor in which the nourishment of the body consisteth when through their great heate they boile together Moreouer those smal streams of water which we see mingled in the blood proceede of the flegmaticke humour that is colde and moist like to water of whose nature it holdeth For this humour is in part concocted for the turning of it into blood but not wholly perfected Hereof it commeth that the colour of it remaineth white much like to water and without taste or as some affirme it is some what brackish but not fatty Lastly the blacke humour and most earthie which looketh like the very bottome of a deepe redde and thicke wine or like the lees in a vessell full of wine or oyle is the melancholike humour or as some terme it blacke choller being colde and drie like to the earth with which it hath some agreement and of taste somewhat sharpe Nowe in this diuersitie of these humours mingled altogether with the blood two things are worthy to be well marked First the agreement and conformity which they haue with al the elements of which the body of man is compounded so that each of them hath his proper element agreeable to his nature to the end they may nourish and preserue all the parts of the body according to the nature of the elements of which they hold The other point is not only the disagreement but euen the manifest contrariety that is between al these humors as there is betwixt the elements again the vniō that appeares to be betwene thē in the midst of this contrarietie as the like is among the elements whose nature they followe Moreouer wee see that betweene light and darkenesse day and night colde and heate drienesse and moysture betweene the diuerse and contrarie seasons of the yeere besides sundry other such contrarieties that are in nature in al other things I say betweene these so contrary God frameth notwithstanding such a wonderfull concord tempering and knitting them in such sort one with an other that they are so farre from defacing and destroying each other as contrariwise they coulde not possibly bee preserued except they were tied together with such a knot and coniunction Nowe beside that which wee haue heere spoken of the nature of these humours wee haue further to note that they doe not onely agree with the elements in qualities but also in regarde
iudgementes of God whereby he punisheth men neuertheles these water-floods which we alwaies carie about vs ought to admonish and induce vs to feare him to call vpon him by prayer and day and night yea hourely to recommend our life vnto him seeing he can take it from vs by stopping our breath yea by a very small matter or at least depriue vs of all motion and sense as though our bodies had neither soule nor life in them but were like to poore dead carkases For the doing hereof hee needeth not to thunder or lighten from heauen against vs but onely to cause a small showre of water to powre downe from our head which is the highest the goodliest and most noble part of all the bodie and as it were the heauen of the litle world or if it please him to cause a fewe droppes onely to distill downe vpon the sinewes and ioyntes it will torment men more grieuously then if they were in some continuall torture as the daily songs of such gowtie persons doe testifie who are impatient and voyde of the feare of God Now besides this profitable aduertisement which euery one may take by that which hath bin here vttered wee ought on the other side to consider the prouidence and goodnesse of God towardes men in that as he holdeth vp in the aire and cloudes the water that hangeth ouer vs not suffering them to breake downe vpon vs all at once to ouerwhelme all the earth by them with all the beastes and other creatures conteined in it but distributeth them by good and iust measure so dealeth he with the humours that ascend vp continually and are kept in our braine where they haue their vessels to retaine them in as it were in sponges which yeeld foorth water according as they are either loosened or restrayned and closed together And as for that which is said of the testimony which we haue of the frailtie of our life appearing in the principal and most noble part of our bodie as the like was shewed vs before in that instruction which we learned by the office that God assigned to our lungs and to the passages allotted by him for the taking in end letting out of the aire so wee haue a very notable lesson in the consideration of the liuer and of the blood of which that is the forge and fountaine and of the distribution thereof into all the partes and members of the bodie by meanes of the veynes as wee hearde yesterday For as a man may iudge by outward appearance that the life of man consisteth in his breath and that he giueth vp both soule and life when hee dyeth as it were in giuing vp the last gaspe so it seemeth also that it is placed in the blood as that which goeth as it were with the blood so that when the blood is drawen out of a mans bodie the life also may seeme to bee drawne out therewithall Herevpon as the soule is oftentimes in holy Scripture put for the life because it giueth life to the bodie so it is also put for the blood and the blood likewise called soule because it is the instrument and meanes whereby the soule giueth life and when the Lorde forbiddeth his people to case the flesh with his soule that is the blood thereof Whereby his meaning is to teach men to abhorre the effusion of mans blood and therefore hee sayeth further I will require your blood euen the blood of your soules Wherefore hee that sheadeth blood doeth as much as if hee drewe the soule out of the bodie Nowe forasmuch as the blood is so necessarie vnto life wee are likewise to vnderstande that as it is either pure and sounde or vnpure and corrupted so is it disposed either to health or sicknesse and to life or death For as the naturall life of man consisteth especially in heate and moysture so a man may easily iudge that as euery thing is bred by meanes of them chiefely liuing and sensible creatures so nothing can bee preserued in this bodily life without these two qualities that are proper to the ayre and to blood as wee haue alreadie hearde But these qualities must bee so tempered that there bee no excesse on either side And for this cause GOD woulde haue all the humours to bee mingled together with the blood that so it might bee tempered as is requisite for the life of man For if it bee too hote and drie or too moyst and colde it cannot doe that office for the performance whereof it is ordayned but in steede of bringing health and life it will breede diseases and in the ende cause death For naturall death commeth onely of diseases amongest which olde age is to bee reckoned which is an incurable sicknesse that lasteth vntill death Neither doe diseases proceede but onely of the distemperature that is in mens bodies and in the humours of which they are compounded For as long as they are in a good moderate and proportionable temper and are distributed to all the partes of the bodie according as neede requireth so that none of them exceedeth then is there an equalitie in all the bodie which doeth not onely preserue it in life but in health and good disposition For there is the like concorde and harmonie betweene these humours that is betweene the partes of a good consort of musicke agreeing well together or of an instrument of musicke well tuned from which you shall heare nothing but pleasaunt melodie Whereas if all the partes thereof agree not well together there will bee no musicall harmonie but onely a very vnpleasant discorde The like may bee saide of all the concordes and discordes that may fall out in the humours of our bodies And therefore GOD had so tempered them in the first creation of man as was requisite so that hee woulde haue preserued him in a perpetuall life if by true obedience hee had alwayes beene knit and vnited vnto God his Creatour But since man fell at variance with God through sinne all this goodly concorde which God had placed not onely in mans bodie but also betweene the rest of his creatures hath been troubled and turned into discord by meanes of sinne So that all this goodly temperature and harmonie of the humours in which mans bodie was created was dissolued and broken asunder and that in such sort that it was neuer since sounde and perfect in any man of howe good constitution soeuer hee hath beene For euen in the best complexions there is alwayes some defect or excesse in some of the humours so that if there were no other cause yet no body coulde naturally bee immortall For alwayes in the ende the excesse or defect that is in it woulde cause it to decay and finally bring it to corruption But besides this there are so many other wantes and superfluities throughout the whole life of man whereby this euill alreadie become naturall is so much augmented that there die moe without
first creatures which he created of nothing in the beginning For he created vs all in Adam and Eue and shut vs vp as it were in a store-house or in a spring or fountaine or as in one stocke of mankinde out of which hee produceth men continually Wherefore wee ought diligently to consider of this woorke of GOD and of this vertue which hee hath giuen to Nature by his worde and blessing to ingender like and to encrease the whole race and kinde thereof For this cause as it is the office of Nature in the beginning to nourish bodies and then to cause them to encrease and augment so in the ende it is her duetie to preserue the seuerall kindes of things as long as shee may by Generation of the like Whereby it appeareth that Generation is a worke of liuing creatures after they are come to their growth and vigour as wee see the like also in plants themselues For in the beginning of the Spring al their vertue is in the root from thence it commeth after into the boughes leaues next into the floure fruit and lastly into the seed which being sowen another plant is brought forth like vnto the first Wherfore wee may say that the Generatiue vertue is a power in liuing creatures that engendreth his like being ordained for the preseruatiō of the same kind So that wee must diligently meditate and often set before our eyes this goodly order of nature according whereunto the nourishing facultie is first giuen to the soule for the preseruation of euery particular Next the power to cause it to grow and to augment to a iust sufficient greatnesse and lastly the generatiue vertue whereby the kind is preserued For albeit the order that is throughout the whole course of nature bee an euident testimony that neither the worlde nor any thing therein standeth vpon chance or fortune yet among others this is most singular and excellent in that the same kinds of al things abide continually that euerie one begetteth multiplieth his like without any maner of confusion amongst them which could not be eschewed if so be that creatures were bredde and borne at aduenture without the counsel and prouidence of their Creator of him that wrought such a worke Nowe wee are to vnderstand that the seede is a body that hath in it selfe a vegetatiue soule which body in Generation is turned into an other like to that from which it is taken and because nourishing growing and engendering are the effectes of foode and sustenance they are contained vnder the name of a vegetatiue soule which is a facultie and power that not onely conuerteth foode into the substaunce of the liuing bodie for the good thereof and by that conuersion augmenteth that it may attaine to a conuenient bignesse but also engendereth an other body of the same forme and kinde And therefore after that this vegetatiue power hath doone that duetie which it ought to perfourme about the growth of the liuing body then hath it time and meanes enough to gather together into a small roome many of those qualities that keepe the soule in the administration of the bodie out of which it can soone drawe and engender a like kinde so farre foorth as the qualities of the matter will be able to beare For when they are repugnant to the qualities meete for that kinde whatsoeuer commeth thereof degenerateth as we see it in the earth when in steade of wheate whereof it receiued the seede it bringeth foorth darnell or some other hearbs of an other nature and as wee see it also in monsters that are borne both of women and of other liuing creatures For there are in many countries namely in Sicilia and in the kingdome of Naples and in Flaunders as many Authours worthy of credite haue testified women in whom haue beene bredde oftentimes sundry kindes of beastes in steade of children and sometimes together with the childe either liuing or dead Which thing commeth to passe in such women as abound with euill humours that are putrified and corrupted either by reason of the ayre or of badde meate or of excesse in eating as in such bodies wherein wormes and such other filthinesse breedeth The Astrologians referre this vnto constellations as they doe all other things I leaue the secret iudgements and punishments of GOD whereby such things may come to passe neuerthelesse these things ought to admonish women to pray vnto God to recommend themselues to him and to be sober The moone calfes in the womb which fall out often proceed also of the like causes In like maner it falleth out oftentimes that the kinde degenerateth through corruption of the seede But to go on forward with our matter of the Generation of liuing creatures and namely of man wee must knowe that forasmuch as the male hath naturally more heate in him then the female hee is also by nature the chiefest in Generation For this cause when the holie Scriptures speake of mankinde it is ordinarilie comprehended vnder the name of man And when mention is made of his generation they speake as though all proceeded onely from man as when Malachie speaking of his creation sayeth Did not hee make one and wherefore one because hee sought a godly seede And Saint Paul He hath made saith hee of one blood all mankind Neuerthelesse GOD hath put in nature such a temperature betweene the male and the female that if both their natures were altogether alike there could be no Generation For it consisteth in force and in infirmity But the wisdome of God hath so wel prouided as that it knoweth how to draw strength out of weaknes so that the one can do nothing without the other in generation because he hath so willed and ordained it Nowe I leaue to thee AMANA to discourse vnto vs more particularly of such things as are most worthy to be noted in this maruailous worke of God and of the principall cause why he hath giuen to man the Generatiue power Of the powers of the Generatiue vertue and of their offices of the principall cause why God gaue to man the power of Generation in what sense the reines are taken for the seate of Generation how we ought rightly to consider of the generation of man Chap. 70. AMANA As noueltie causeth a man through the errour of iudgement to thinke that rare things are greater and more woorthie of admiration so most men imagine those matters to bee small and not worthy to be wondered at which fall out daily before their eyes But ignorance is the cause of both these effectes For as a man admireth that which hee neuer knewe coulde be perfourmed so hee maketh no reckoning of that thing which he vsually beholdeth because hee hath alwayes beene ignorant of the secrets of nature or rather of his Author and Creator who appeareth woonderfull in the least of his woorkes euen in the very Ant or Pismire This selfe same ignorance is
appeare vnto vs and contrariwise the more pure and thinne it is the brighter and more shining it will shew it selfe vnto vs. Nowe for this matter wee must call to minde what wee heard concerning the generation of spirites both Vitall and Animall in those discourses of the nature and office of the heart And as they are thinne vapours engendered of blood concocted and sette on fire through the vertue of the heart that they might bee as it were little flames hauing diuers actions in diuers members so according to the puritie and impuritie of the blood in the composition of the bodie wee are to iudge of the spirites that proceede from them And albeeit they haue all one and the same fountaine namely the heart in which they are bredde neuerthelesse they change according to those places and members wherein they woorke and being so changed they haue diuers and seuerall actions Wee vnderstand then by the Vitall spirite a little flame bredde and borne in the heart of the purest blood whose office is to carie naturall heate to the other members and to giue them vertue and strength to put in practise those actions and offices which they exercise by the same heat It hath beene tolde vs also before that the arteries serue to carie this vitall spirite to all the members But wee are farther to learne that when the vitall spirites bredde in the heart are in part transported to the braine others are engendered of them which are called Animall spirites in that sence in which wee called those Animall faculties and powers from whence the Soule deriueth her vessels and instrumentes in the brayne For after the spirites sent by the heart are come thither they are made more cleane and bright through the vertue of the braine and agreeable to the temperament thereof and then beeing infused into the brayne by meanes of the sinewes they are insteade of a light whereby the actions of the sences are incited and stirred vp as also those motions which are from place to place And as wee haue hearde that a good temperature of the blood and of other humours doeth much helpe forwarde and profite the manners and conditions of men the same may bee saide of the heart and of the spirites proceeding from the same For when the heart is in good temper so that it is not troubled either with anger or sadnesse or any other euill affection it is manifest that the spirites are a great deale the better in the braine Nowe let vs consider the woonderfull woorke of God wrought in man by meanes of the Vitall and Animall spirites For what are the chiefe actions effected in him Are they not the preseruation of life nourishment and generation and then sense and motion with cogitation and the affections of the heart And what were all these thinges without spirites Hence it commeth that in the holy Scriptures the heart is taken for the fountaine not onely of life but also of all the actions of men as it hath beene alreadie declared vnto vs. And for this cause also some haue sayde that these spirites and little Vitall and Animall flames were the soule it selfe or the immediate instrument thereof that is to say the verie next whereby it woorketh immediately so that there is none betwixt them twayne But the latter is more certaine and more agreeable to trueth then the former For if the soule were nothing else but the Vitall and Animall spirites it shoulde fayle and perish with them as the bodily life doeth and so it shoulde not bee immortall But seeing they are but the instruments thereof as the humours of the bodie are and namely the blood from which they proceede the soule can well bee without them albeeit they cannot bee without it and although it cannot without them perfourme the woorkes it doeth with and by them And forasmuch as God hath giuen them to bee as it were a light it is certaine that the light of these surmounteth the light of the Sunne Moone or starres and that all these lights haue great agreement one with another But it is yet a farre more woonderfull woorke of GOD when not onelie the soule vseth these instrumentes for the life of man but also when the celestiall spirite ioyneth it selfe vnto them vsing them in the elect and making them more cleere by his heauenly light that the knowledge of God might bee more euident that their assuraunce and trust in him might bee more firme and that all the motions of his children might bee kindeled the more towardes him So likewise the euill spirite knoweth well howe to take occasion by the badde temperature of the humors to abuse men as wee haue alreadie declared thereby to set forwarde their ruine when hee possesseth the heart troubleth and poysoneth the spirites in that and in the brayne Whereupon hee attempteth to hinder reason and iudgement to bring men to furie and madnesse and to thrust forwarde their heart and their other members to committe foule and execrable factes Whereof wee haue examples in the furie of Saul and in his death in the death of Achitophel of Iudas and of manie others whome hee hath brought to slaye themselues as likewise in manie other horrible factes dayly committed by men Therefore it is very requisite that wee shoulde diligently consider our nature and bee carefull to gouerne and guide it well Wee are to knowe that our spirites are the habitations of the holy spirite and therefore wee are to pray to God through his sonne Christ Iesus to repell and keepe backe euill spirites farre from vs and to inspire his diuine and celestiall spirite into our spirites heartes and mindes that it may guide and gouerne them And this agreeth verie fitly with that prayer which wee hearde alreadie vttered by Saint Paul touching the entire sanctification of the whole man whome hee diuided into spirite soule and bodie So that if wee haue throughly tasted of the former discourses as well concerning the nature of the bodie as of the soule wee may perceiue wherefore the Apostle hath thus diuided the whole man For first wee cannot doubt but that the soule beeing the principall Woorker is such a substaunce and nature as dwelleth in a bodie apt and meete to receiue life in I speake this purposely because all sortes of bodies are not capable of soule and life and they that are capable are not yet capable of euerie kinde of soule and life but onelie of such as are agreeable to their nature hauing those instrumentes in themselues which may bee vsed by them according to their nature Wherefore the soule of man must of necessitie haue another bodie with other instruments and of another nature then the soule of beastesmay haue and the soule of beastes another then the soule of plantes according as euerie one of them differeth from other both in nature and offices But of what nature soeuer eyther the soule or the bodie is the soule hath this
the graue hee sheweth after very euidently what he vnderstandeth by his soule when he saieth Thou hast reuiued me from them that goe downe into the pit Hee taketh this worde Soule in the same sense when he saieth that God deliuered his soule from death and from the midst of lions and when he prayeth him to deliuer his soule from the sword his desolate soule from the power of the dogge For it is easie to iudge by these wordes that he taketh not the soule in these places for the essence of the soule and proper substance thereof because the soule can not be smitten with the sword nor deuoured of lions nor carried away by dogges Therefore seeing the soule is so often put in the Scripture for corporall life which endeth with the body and which the soule giueth vnto it by meanes of those instruments which it hath in the body the name of Spirite is many times vsed therein to signifie more specially this essence and spirituall substance which wee call the soule and which may be separated both from the body and blood as that which liueth after the death of the body Therefore Dauid did so vse the word Spirite when he recommended his soule to God by the same wordes which Iesus Christ vsed vpon the crosse Afterward Saint Steuen tooke it in the same sense when he saide Lorde Iesus receiue my spirite For this is that spirite of which Salomon saieth that it returneth to God that gaue it after that the body is returned to the earth and to dust of which it consisteth And yet this difference is not alwayes obserued in the Scriptures For as wee haue already heard both the heart and soule and spirite are oftentimes generally and indifferently put for all the partes and powers of the soule and not onely for those of men but also of beastes as when the Wise man attributeth spirit vnto them hauing regard to this corporall life For when Salomon speaketh so it is in consideration of this life that consisteth in breath which is also called Spirit in the holy Scriptures which vse one the same word to signifie both wind and breathing and whatsoeuer we call spirit taking it both for the soule of man for the Angelicall natures and for the Diuine nature Therefore Iob speaking of this present life sayth So long as my breath is in me and the spirit of God in my nosethrilles my lippes surely shall speake no wickednesse and my tongue shall vtter no deceit But when Saint Paul saieth The same spirite beareth witnesse with our spirite that wee are the children of God hee taketh the worde Spirite in an other sence then Iob did in the place nowe alleadged For in the first place hee taketh the name of Spirite for the Spirite of GOD and in the second place for the Spirite of man which signifieth the humane soule It is true that in this place hee taketh it for the soule and for the spirit such as it is in regenerate men but when hee saieth elsewhere that the spirite of man knoweth the things of man hee taketh the spirite simply for a humane Spirite and for the vnderstanding part thereof Likewise the name of soule is put not onely for this naturall life and for the will and affections but also for the selfe same thing that is comprehended by this worde Spirite when one woulde signifie thereby the greatest excellencie of the soule As when Dauid sayeth Our soule waiteth for the Lord for hee is our helpe and our shield Surely our heart shall reioyce in him because wee trusted in his holie name And againe My soule reioyceth in the Lorde and is glad in his saluation And when Saint Peter sayeth Abstaine from fleshly lustes which fight against the soule and haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles hee taketh the name of Soule for the spirituall man who hath his minde and all his affections well ruled according to the will of GOD. As then wee haue heard in what sort the soule may die in regarde of this corporall life according to the phrase of the Scriptures and of the Hebrewes so by this which Saint Peter saieth that fleshly lustes fight against the soule wee may learne after what manner the soule may be said to die and to be slaine For nothing can bring death vnto it but sinne Wherefore it is not said without good reason in the Booke of Wisedome that the mouth that telleth lies slayeth the soule Albeit then the soule is immortall in that it can neuer be without life no more then the Angelles who are spirites like to it neuerthelesse it is after a sort mortall so farre forth as being farre off separated from God through sinne it liueth no more that blessed life wherewith it shoulde liue if it were vnited and ioyned vnto him by true faith and sincere obedience For it shoulde enioy the selfe same life which the heauenly Angelles with the soules and spirites of the blessed doe enioy As contrariwise the soules of the wicked liue with the same life that the Diuelles doe which is called dead because it is a more accursed life then death it selfe and therefore called the second and eternall death Nowe wee may thinke our selues sufficiently taught touching the diuerse significations in which the name of Soule is taken It seemeth to mee that wee haue spoken enough of the Anatomy of the bodie and soule of which the most of our discourses hitherto were made which may suffice for the contentation of euery one that will keepe himselfe within the bounds and limits set downe vnto vs by the wisedome of GOD in his word But to finish this whole matter concerning the soule which we haue chiefly considered in her parts powers and effects we are further yet to be instructed in the creation generation nature and immortalitie thereof And because they are marueilous difficult matters and such as are not without great contrarieties of opinions euen amongest the learned I am of opinion that these things are to be discoursed of according to that manner of teaching of the ancient Academickes which wee followed in our first meeting namely vpon the theame propounded vnto vs to ballance the arguments on the one part with the reasons of the other side that so we may diligently search out the trueth Notwithstanding it shal be lawfull for vs to deliuer our opinion so long as wee ground it vpon the infallible testimonie of the worde of God leauing to euery one his libertie to iudge which is best and to embrace and follow the same For our entrance therefore into so goodly a matter thou shalt beginne ASER to morrowe to declare vnto vs what thou shalt thinke good concerning this proposition namely whether the soule is begotten with the body and of the seede thereof or whether it be created apart and of another substance and what is requisit for vs to know therein The end of the
and what agreement is betweene them touching the soule of brute beasts and the nature and substance of it of their opinion that deriue the soule of man and the soule of beasts from one fountaine of them that ascend higher and of their reasons Chap. 82. AMANA That which wee read of Iesus Christ his saying to Nicodemus in these woordes If when I tell you earthly things yee beleeue not howe shoulde yee beleeue if I shall tell you of heauenly things may giue vs occasion to say in like maner that if wee can not knowe the earth neither the body and soule of man nor the nature and vertue thereof howe shoulde wee attaine to the knowledge of Heauen and of those spirituall natures of God and of his workes And if wee can not comprehend in our selues the woorkes of our soule howe shall wee vnderstand the woorkes of GOD in the whole world And if wee be not able to conceiue them doeth it followe therefore that hee doeth them not and yet there are many that conclude after that manner For they beleeue no more then they are able to knowe and comprehend by their naturall reason according as they deale also with their soule For because they vnderstand not what is the proper essence of it neither can see it after it is entred into the body and ioyned therewith nor yet when it departeth away therefore they conclude that it is no other thing but as it were a fire that lasteth so long as there is matter agreeable to the nature of it and is quenched when that faileth But for that which you deliuered to vs ASER of the sayings of certaine touching the diuerse kindes of soules and the powers of euery one of them it seemeth to mee that vnderstanding them as you say these men doe one of these three things will followe of their opinion For they must of necessitie yeelde to this either that the soule of man is partly immortall and partly mortall or that a man hath three soules one immortall and two mortall or lastly that the powers of the reasonable soule which wee call Sensitiue and Vegetatiue are not of the proper essence and substance thereof but onely of the body and that they are instruments of the reasonable soule as members thereof For I doubt not but they will readily confesse this that the soule is immortall and if that part of the soule which they call Vegetatiue and Sensitiue be of the selfe same essence and substance in that respect it shall be mortall Nowe if wee so distinguish all these three sortes of soules in man that wee make three kindes of them the first and principall shall be immortall and the other two mortall And if they will say that they take not the vegetatiue and sensitiue soule in man for two diuerse kindes of soules but onely for two sundry powers of the reasonable soule I demaund of them whether these two powers are so ioyned vnto it that it may be a soule as it is both without them and with them euen as before we said that it might be with the body and without the body I doubt not but euery one will answere mee to this question according to that opinion hee hath conceiued of the nature of mans soule If the question be made touching the soule of beastes the Philosophers agree well amongst themselues heerein that it is of the same matter of which their bodies are compounded whether it bee deriued and taken from the same or whether it bee the proprietie of the matter Therefore they meane that it is the Vitall spirite onely therein that giueth life vnto them which is of a corporall matter and substaunce or else that it is the temperature or temperament of the whole bodie generally which is the proprietie of that matter And so the soule in beastes shal be the life it selfe of which the Vitall spirites or the temperament are the instrumentes Which seemeth to agree well with that which Moses saieth That the soule of the flesh in the blood thereof that is to say the life according as we shewed when we spake of the nature of blood and of those meanes by which it giueth life to the creatures For when Moses speaketh so a man might say that it is as much in effect as if he saide that the blood is as it were the pipe and instrument that conueyeth life to the bodie and that the Vitall spirites are the thing that giueth motion sense to the bodie which is the same that we call Soule neither is there any inconuenience to yeelde to this in regard of the soule of beastes And albeeit wee see not with the eye howe these Vitall spirites or the temperament of all the partes of the bodie doe giue vnto it that life which it hath yet a man may iudge and haue some knowledge heereof by the things wee see in nature which haue some agreement and resemblance with this For we conceiue well howe the flame is nourished by the oyle and match that is in a lampe or by the waxe and weeke that is in a candle In which we see two sortes of matter differing one from another ioyned both together Besides we see how that by meanes of this coniunction and of the temperature and agreement that these two matters haue eache with other the flame being kindled in them is nourished and preserued So likewise we propound the Vitall spirite in the bodies of liuing creatures as a thinne flame engendered of the blood by vertue of the heart and this flyeth as it were throughout all the partes of the bodie distributing vnto it Vitall heate which quickeneth it and endueth it with that vertue by which it hath motion and sense and exerciseth all her actions so that euery member doeth his office Nowe we see well in this comparison the matter that is in the lampe or in the candle and the temperature and agreement that is betweene the partes of it and howe the flame is fedde and mainteyned after it is lighted Wee may see also from whence this flame is brought to the lampe and how this matter is lighted and that neither the matter nor the agreement and temperature thereof breede this flame of themselues but that it is brought from elsewhere In like manner we may easily conceiue that which hath beene told vs of the vitall spirite and of the blood whereof it is bredde and of the vertue and power of the heart in the generation of it But one may say vnto mee that there is great difference betweene the comparison we made of a lampe or candle and of his flame and betweene that which we haue spoken of the generation of the vitall spirite because this flame which we cal the vitall spirit springeth of the self-same matter by which it is nourished preserued is kindled there And therfore it were requisite that we should further knowe what is the cause of this as also why the life
recouery neither was any knowen that hath returned from the graue For we were borne at all aduenture and wee shall be heereafter as though wee had neuer beene for the breath is a smoke in the nosethrilles and the woordes as a sparke raised out of our hearts Which being extinguished the body is turned into ashes and the spirite vanisheth as the soft ayre Our life shall passe away as the trace of a cloude and come to naught as the mist that is driuen away with the beames of the Sunne and cast downe with the heate thereof Our name also shall be forgotten in time and no man shall haue our woorkes in remembrance For our time is as a shadowe that passeth away and after our ende there is no returning for it is fast sealed so that no man commeth againe Come therefore let vs enioy the pleasures that are present and let vs cheerfully vse the creatures as in youth Let vs fill our selues with costly wine ointments and let not the floure of life passe by vs. I omit other speeches of a voluptuous wicked vniust life which they purpose to lead exercising al iniustice violence cruelty without al regard had to any right or iustice either to poore or rich yong or old but chiefly against the seruants of God who approue not their kind of life but reproue condemne it Therefore it is said after al the discourse that they imagined such things and went astray For their owne wickednes blinded them They do not vnderstand the mysteries of God neither hope for the reward of righteousnes nor can discerne the honor of the soules that are faultlesse For God created man without corruption and made him after the image of his owne likenesse Neuerthelesse through enuy of the deuill came death into the world and they that hold of his side proue it But the soules of the righteous are in the hands of God and no torment shall touch them In the sight of the vnwise they appeared to die and their end was thought grieuous and their departing from vs destruction but they are in peace Wee see then that these men go no farther then they can see with their bodily senses and because they see that man liueth by breathing and cannot liue without and that hee dyeth when his breath faileth they thinke that the soule of man is but a litle winde and breath and so is scattered and vanisheth away as it were winde and breath or as a cloude in the ayre The same iudgement they are of in regard of the blood because life leaueth the body with the blood as if it had no other soule but the blood or breath And forasmuch as the eye discerneth no difference betweene men and beasts in death they iudge also that there is no difference betweene their soules But if they be resolued to giue credit to nothing but to their corporall senses and in death consider only what difference there is betweene men and beasts they wil not beleeue that either beasts or men haue any soule at all that giueth them life because they see nothing but the body onely And then by the like reason we must conclude that not onely the whole man is no other thing but this body which we see but also that there is nothing in all the world but that which may bee seene by the eyes and perceiued by the other senses and so all that which we haue not seene and knowen by them shal be nothing Which being so men shal differ nothing from beasts as indeed we can say no better of these men For beastes thinke of nothing but that which they beholde and perceiue by their senses and goe no further which is so farre from all science and discipline and from all iudgement of man as nothing can be more Therefore they that beleeue nothing but their corporall senses deserue to be compared not onely to little children or to fooles who when they see pictures or their face in a glasse suppose they are liuing men because they goe no farther then they see but euen to the brute beastes who haue lesse sense and vnderstanding then children It is woonderfull to consider howe men take such great pleasure paines to become brutish For if they doe but see a smoke come out of a place they will iudge that there is some fire within although they behold it not and if they smell any ill sauour their nose will tell them that there is some place infected or some carion lying not farre off albeit they see it not What is the cause then that when by their senses they perceiue somewhat more in men then in beastes they are not induced thereby to thinke that of necessitie there must be some what within them which causeth them to differ much from beasts Which is not by reason of the bodie but of the soule that is not seene but onely by her actions workes and effects Whereupon it followeth that if their actions differ from the actions of that soule whereby beastes liue the cause also from which they proceed must needes differ and so consequently that there is great difference betwixt the soule of men and the soule of beastes For let them consider onely the diuersitie of artes which man exerciseth with his hands and the varietie of so many wittie and woonderfull workes as are wrought by him which cannot proceede but from a great spirite and from a passing excellent nature the like whereof is not to bee seene in beastes or in anie thing they can doe Besides doe they not see how the spirite of man discourseth throughout all nature what reason is in him and howe his speech followeth reason which are such things as haue a certaine vertue and the image of a diuine spirite shining in them Wherefore albeeit wee shoulde make man wholly like to a beast by reason of his bodie both in regarde of his birth and death yet wee must needes confesse that hee is of a farre more excellent nature in respect of that great and manifest difference which wee see is in his soule If then the soule of man bee mortall as well as that of beastes to what purpose serue those graces which it hath aboue the other and from what fountaine shall wee say they flowe in it and to what ende were they giuen vnto it But for this time I will leaue these Atheists hoping that to morowe wee will not leaue any one naturall reason able to vrge them in their demnable opinion which shal not bee laide out at large And I demaund of them that haue anie taste of the holy Scriptures and yet seeme to doubt of the immortalitie of the soule or at leastwise are not fully resolued therein howe man is said to be created after the image of God if he shall be altogether dissolued and brought to nothing and where shall we then seeke for this image in him It is certaine that this is not in
Shame Impudencie a very dangerous disease Ierem. 3. 3. Ezech. 2. 4. and 3. 7. The cause of rednesse in the face in blushing A cause of feare in men The rule of all true iudgement Shame of well doing The cause why men deceiue themselues What pride is Two kindes of pride Three causes why God created man so excellent Of a good kind of pride Ecclus. 10. 14 19. Of the euil pride Ecclus. 10. 7. Who are most giuen to pride Causes of pride What vices follow pride Pride lifteth men against God Prou. 13. 10. Pride bred of vertue A similitude A remedy against pride Three kindes of the Vegetatiue facultie in the soule A profitable meditation Of the third and last belly of the body The office of heate in man The power order and office of the Vegetatiue soule A similitude taken from 〈…〉 A good lesson for euery one Of the seates of the naturall vertues How excrements are voyded Of the growing of bodies Wherein the natural vertues differ ech from other How meate nourisheth the body How mettals and stones growe The true cause or nourishing in creatures The instruments of the naturall powers of the soule How the soule vseth the instruments of the body Of the Ventricle and stomack● Of the figure of the stomacke Of the mouths of the stomacke How the name of the heart is abused The originall of appetite The doore of the vpper Orifice Of the lower Orifice Of the small strings of the Orifices The stomake compared to a pot on the fire Howe the stomacke is placed Of the substance of it How it is warmed by other neighbour partes Of 〈◊〉 Kell or Kall The causes of appetite in the stomach The originall of hunger The stomach compared to a wombe The office of the lower Orifice The poorer sort are not to be contemned The necessitie of the bowelles The number and names of the guttes The bowelles haue two couerings Of the Peritone or inner ●ine of the belly ioyned to the kall The vses of it The substance of the bowels The bowels are made of two coates Of the three 〈◊〉 gut● Of their names The Duodene or stomacke gut The hungry gut The Ileon or folded Gut Of the three great Guts The blinde Gut The fift gut called Colon or the great gut The colike and Ileacke passions The straight gut The vse of it Of the muscle Sphincter A lesson against pride Against the contempt of inferiour persons Of the Mesentery Of the Mesareon The chiefe vse of it Other vses of the Mesentery Of the Meseraicall veines Their vse Of the Pancreas or sweet bread The vses of it Of the liuer and excellencie thereof The seconde coction is made in the liuer Foure degrees of concoction in the liuer The fountaines of the blood and veines spirites and arteries Our life compared to a lamp Two great veines in the body The Port-veine The hollow veine Eccles. 12. 6. A place of Salomon expounded Of the arterie Aorta A similitude What a humour is Of the nature of blood Of the cholericke humour Of the flegmaticke humour Of the melancholicke humor The agreement betwixt the humours and the elements How the humours and elements agree in places Agreement betwixt the great garden of the world and that of the litle world A goodly contēplation in nature Of the heart of plants The body of man compared to a garden Mans life in the midst of two waters Vapours ascending vp to the braine Watry clouds in the braine Inconueniences that come from the braine Instruction for euery one Testimonie of the prouidence of God Gen. 9. 4 5. The mixture of the humors necessary The causes of health and of sicknesse Sinne the cause of all the discord in the world The causes of death A politike instruction Of the cholericke humor Of the Gall and of his bladder The vses of the cholericke humour Of the melancholicke humor Of the spleene What effects follow the oppilation of the liuer The commodities of the melancholike humour Of the flegmatike humour and profite of it Of the kidneyes Emulgent vcines How the vrine is made yellow Of the Vreteres and of the bladder Of the necke of the bladder What it is to be a naturall diuine What communion ought to be among men Why the humors are taken in the euill part The cause of mens ingratitude The agreement betweene the maners and humors of the body By what meanes the naturall humors corrupt The originall of Feuers and other diseases The corruption of the flegmatike humour Of the cholerike humour From whence all sortes of agues proceede The corruption of the melancholie humor From whence madnesse commeth Three chiefe workers of mens actions He speaketh of such goodnes and vertues as were ●o esteemed of by the heathen that knew not their naturall corruption God ruleth in all and ouer all Ierem. 1. Galat. 1. Actes 9. 15. The nature of flegmatike persons The nature of a cholericke complexion The nature of the melancholicke body What natures are most abused by euill spirites Matth. 17. 15. mar 9. 20. luke 9. 39. How vigilant the Deuil is to hurt vs. What profit we reape by the knowledge of our complexions What natures we are to eschew The true meanes to cure our vices Matth. 7. 11. Luke 11. 13. Psal 127. 1. Verse 3. Genes 1. 28. The vertue of the blessing of God for generation Of the Radicall humour Of the defect of mans life with the causes therof What is meant by nature Genes 1. What Generation is What the generatiue power is What seede is What is meant by a vegetatiue soule Of the cause of monsters Malach. 2. 15. Two effectes of ignorance Of the similitude that is in generation From whence the seede commeth The seuerall vertues of the generatiue power The chiefe cause why the generatiue power was giuen to man Of the seate of Generation Hebr. 7. 10. Genes 35. 11. Psal 139. 13. Iob 10. 10 11 What is man properly Psalm 139. 5. Verse 6. Iob 10. 8. Psalm 36. and 138. A good lesson to be learned from our creation The afflictions of Gods children turne to their good No mans knowledge perfect Gen. 2. 4. The creation of the world and of man compared together An argumont of the prouidence of God Of the forme of an infant Of the After-burthen The first sixe dayes work from the conception Psal 139. 16. All the members receiue their forme together The nauill first made perfect When the seed is called Embryon When the burthen is called a child or infant When the childe f●●st moueth Galens opinion of the birth of sonnes The word profitable for all Mans birth a woonderfull worke of God How the childe is nourished in the wombe The cause of child-birth Which is the easiest kinde of child-birth Why children cry when they are borne A testimonie of Gods prouidence in the wombe Gal. de vs● 〈◊〉 lib. 15. An argument against Atheists Psal 139. 17 18. 22. 9. Two things to be considered of in
a lampe to moysten the meate to the end that this fire should not consume it so quickly And because it must alwayes be kept burning otherwise the light thereof which is the life will die together with it it must haue new matter continually ministred vnto it as it were to a fire that cannot alwayes continue kindled in the chimney and not goe out if it be not preserued by wood or coale or in a candle or lampe if it haue not alwayes cotton or weeke and oyle or some other tallowy and moyst matter Therefore wee see that when either of them beginneth to fayle another is put in to supplie the place of it And thus as fire and the light thereof are mainteined in a lampe or candle by meanes of that nourishment they haue both in the weeke and in the tallow thereof so life and that naturall fire which giueth life to the bodie are mainteyned by that food which they receiue ordinarily in eating and drinking The meate then in mans bodie is to nourish and preserue the naturall heate thereof as the weeke is in a candle or lampe and the moysture which it receiueth by drinke is vnto it as the ●oyle and tallowe For this cause if heate bee stronger in a man he shall feele thirst which is an appetite and desire of that which is moyst and colde that is of such qualities as are contrary to the fire which is hote and dry For the moysture must be confirmed strengthened to moderate the burning heate as it is when oyle is powred into a lampe And if both heate and moysture consuming eche other beginne to waxe faint and to fayle they must both bee holpen that they may gather more strength as when we put not onely oyle but weeke also into a lampe And this is the cause of hunger which is a desire of that which is hote and moyst But there is difference betweene the humiditie required in hunger and that which is required in thirst because the moysture desired in thirst is more thinne and lesse earthie then that which is required in hunger And if the moisture be increased ouer much so that the heate decreaseth and languisheth and consequently the appetite to meate and drinke and to receiue nourishment decayeth it must be restored againe by physicke For although all nourishment be as it were physick to the body neuerthelesse there is this difference in that foode repaireth the whole person and all the body whereas physicke repaireth onely the instruments of the body which are to serue for nourishment For this cause food is alwayes necessary for all at all times and in all places but besides that all stande not in neede of physicke they that want it vse it but at certaine times as necessitie requireth For if those members that serue to nourish the body be well disposed and discharge their office so well that all the partes of the bodie receiue due nourishment and the whole body bee healthie and sound there needeth nothing but ordinary foode to preserue the body and to keepe it in good health But if any member be weakened and doeth not his duetie well especially any of those that ought to serue to nourish the whole bodie it must be restored again to strength by the meanes of physicke Now albeit the sense of taste whereof we haue presently discoursed be not so apt to teach especially the knowledge of spirituall and diuine things as the senses of sceing and hearing of which we haue spoken heretofore yet we may receiue much good doctrine thereby For as the body cannot liue except it haue such corporall foode as agreeth to the nature thereof so the soule cannot liue if it haue not that knowledge which God hath appointed for it And as life is kept in the body by heate which is the chiefe instrument thereof to the life of our soules consisteth and is preserued and increased by heate namely by the loue charity of God without which it cannot liue that life that is agreeable to it owne nature For the soule that is separated from the loue of God is dead in respect of the true and blessed life seeing God liueth not in it nor it in God For this cause this loue must be alwayes nourished and mainteyned therein by the celestiall and diuine moysture agreeable to the nature thereof Wherefore as it is of a heauenly and celestiall nature so the foode thereof must be answerable thereunto This foode therfore cannot be had but of God who is the life of the soule as the soule is the life of the body and the meanes which he hath appointed to minister this food vnto it is his heauenly eternall word and those spirituall graces which he communicateth vnto vs thereby But let vs follow our matter subiect of corporall senses And seeing we haue intreated of the meanes wherby the body is nourished we ought to consider more particularly of those things that are meet and conuenient to mainteine and preserue the body of man and see how God prepareth them to this end in which thou shalt instruct vs AMANA Of helpes and creatures meete for the preseruation and nourishment of the bodie how God prepareth them to serue for that purpose of their vse Chap. 18. AMANA God being carefull ouer the welfare of his creatures that haue life hath put in them a desire to preserue themselues to the ende they shoulde followe after such things as are profitable for their health and shunne that which is hurtfull and contrarie vnto it Nowe this preseruation consisteth eyther in the equalitie of heate and moisture nourishers of life or els in an inequalitie that may easily be reduced and brought to an equalitie by that which we eate and drinke For if there bee so great excesse of heate or moysture that the one consumeth the other death followeth necessarily if there be no excesse of either but a good equalitie the body is very well affected But it is very hard to finde a bodie so tempered And although such a one might be found yet it could not long continue in that estate but that it would quickly change as we may iudge by that which we haue learned in the former discourse But when this change doeth not bring with it so great excesse and inequalitie but that it may be kept vpright by nourishment the body is neuerthelesse well disposed vntiil such time as the excesse is greater then can bee repaired by foode For then if foode will not serue the turne wee must haue recourse to physicke and if the inequalitie be so great that by the helpe of physicke no remedie can be found there is no other naturall ayde to be had Nowe this inequalitie that approcheth so neere to equalitie is very pleasaunt as that which is the pricke and procurer of naturall pleasures necessarie for the life of man to incite him to desire them and as it were the sawse to make them toothsome For if
alwaies intire and in their first forme not being subiect to any change in respect of their bodies neither do they weare or consume away as other creatures do that are vnderneath them Insomuch that none of the celestiall spheres are either wearied worne or spent more with all the labour they haue vndergone by the space of so many yeeres then they were the first day of their creation For we must not take it for a change of their natures and qualities that according to their diuerse course the sunne moone and other planets starres are sometimes further off sometimes neerer each to other that they haue their oppositions coniunctions diuerse and different aspects according to the diuersity and difference of their course and motion We may say as much of the Eclipses both of the sunne and moone For the change that is amongst them is not in their owne bodies substance qualities but onely in regarde of vs and of our sight Concerning the creatures that haue life they are for the most part diuided into three kindes but they that distinguish more subtilly make foure kindes And because life is giuen by the soule the Philosophers make as many sortes of soules as they doe of liues and call them by the same names They call the first the nourishing or vegetatiue soule or life the second the sensitine the third the cogitatiue the fourth the reasonable soule or the soule partaker of reason Touching the first there is a kinde of life that hath no other vertue in the creature to which it is giuen of God then to nourish and cause it to encrease and to keepe it in being vntil this life faile it The soule that giueth life with these effects is called nourishing or vegetatiue this is proper to al herbs trees plants that are maintained kept in their kinds by the seeds or by planting setting such like propagations The second kind of life named sensitiue is so called because it giueth not only nourishment and growth as the first but sense also and feeling They that will haue but three kinds make but one of this and of that which is called cogitatiue by them that make foure who attribute the sensitiue soule to the sea spunges to oysters cockles and to those creatures which the Graecians and Latins call by a name which in our language signifieth as much as plant-liuing creatures because they are of a middle nature betweene plants and liuing creatures hauing life and sense as if they were compounded of both these natures together so that they are more then simple plants and yet are not perfect liuing creatures as those are to whom is attributed the cogitatiue or knowing soule And this is a soule and life which not only giueth whatsoCuer the two former imparteth to the creatures in whome they are but also a certaine vertue and vigour as of cogitation of knowledge and of memorie that they may haue skil to preserue their life and know how to guide and gouerne themselues according to their naturall inclination This soule is proper to brute beastes whome some thinke to be partakers after a sorte of reason so farre foorth as it concerneth things belonging to their nature But wee will proceede no further at this time in this disputation onely let vs note that they which make but three kindes of soule or life doe giue to brute beastes that which wee called Sensitiue comprehending them vnder that kinde of life vnto which they attribute the same vertue and vigour whereof wee nowe spake and which is distinguished by others from that kinde of soule that giueth onely simple sense vnto the creature The fourth kinde of soule and life is that of men which hath all whatsoeuer is in the former kindes and ouer and besides that which is most excellent it is partaker of reason and vnderstanding wherein it agreeth with the life of Angelles as wee will declare more at large in place conuenient and shew also the difference that is betweene them For this cause the soule of man giuen vnto him is commonly called a reasonable soule as all the former are called by mans agreeing to their nature as wee haue declared Therefore seeing this kinde of soule and life comprehendeth all the vertues and properties of the rest it may bee called Uegetatiue Sensitiue Cogitatiue and reasonable altogether But wee must note here that there is great difference betweene the soules of men and those other of which wee spake before For beside that the soule of man is partaker of reason and vnderstanding with all properties that are in the rest it hath that common with the Angelles who are spirites created of GOD to liue a spirituall life without bodies that it is immortall also as well as they But of this immortalitie wee hope GOD willing to intreate at large heereafter as also of the creation and proper nature of the soule In these two pointes then of vnderstanding and of immortalitie the soule of man doeth much differre from that of beastes For although they haue a soule that gyueth vnto them life motion and sense with all other things touched by mee yet it is not partaker of vnderstanding nor of an immortall nature as the Angelles and soules of men are but it is of a mortall nature which endeth and dieth with the body Therefore albeit the soule of man hath in it whatsoeuer is in the rest beside that which is proper vnto it aboue the rest and that which it hath common with the Angelles neuerthelesse it is called onely by the name of that thing which is the principall chiefest and most excellent in it as also the like is done with all the other kindes of soule and life But mee thinkes we ought to consider more fully of that which man hath either common or diuers in his nature from the soule of beasts and what are the proper actions of the soule ioyned with the body and how it is hindered by the body without any change of nature For the consideration hereof will greatly further our knowledge of the internall and spirituall senses of which we are to discourse that wee may step by step ascend vp to the highest vnderstanding and knowledge which the minde of man can attaine vnto concerning the soule Let vs therefore heare AMANA of this matter Of the two natures of which man is compounded how the body is the lodge and instrument of the soule how the soule may be letted from doing her proper actions by the body and be separated from it and yet remaine in her perfection Chap. 22. AMANA Albeit the greatest excellencie of man which farre passeth that of all other liuing creatures ought to be valued according to the soule that God hath giuen him differing from the soule of all other liuing creatures his body being mortall corruptible as that of beasts is yet there are other points of excellencie in the matter forme and vse of all
word of God But forasmuch as the darkenesse which sinne hath brought with it keepeth man from hauing any sound and perfect knowledge of God or of heauenly things as he had in his first estate it is necessary therefore that hee should restore and kindle againe in him this diuine and perfect life which hee hath lost by the benefite of regeneration and spirituall renouation as if hee created him anew giuing him a minde to vnderstand his worde and a will to followe and to embrace it This is that which I thought we were to note and learne concerning the meanes that bring vs certaine knowledge of such things as we ought to iudge and accompt for true Let vs nowe consider howe the spirit of man being enriched in measure with heauenly gifts and graces doeth finally attaine to the ende of all inquisition and searching out of trueth which is contemplation that followeth iudgement as iudgement followeth reason and the discourse thereof Therefore doe thou ACHITOB take vpon thee to discourse of this matter subiect and so ende all speaches of this dayes worke concerning vnderstanding that afterward wee may looke particularly into the will which is the second part and vertue of the highest and most soueraigne power of the soule How the vertues and powers of the soule shew themselues by litle and litle and by degrees of contemplation and of the good that is in it of that true and diuine contemplation which we looke for after this life Chap. 32. ACHITOB. I was much troubled oftentimes about the vnderstanding of these two words Soule and Spirite in seeking to find what difference or agreement they haue one with another seeing that many times I sawe one of them taken for the other and also opposed as repugnant one to another In the ende I learned of skilful men that wee might vse the worde Soule to signifie man as hee is borne hauing onely the giftes of a humane soule namely the humane senses and those other powers and vertues both animall and naturall of which wee haue already spoken And as for the Spirite that wee must vnderstand thereby whatsoeuer heauenly grace and knowledge of the trueth is giuen to man by the spirite of God dwelling in him which guideth and leadeth him to the contemplation of the diuine nature wherein consisteth his good and felicitie Moreouer wee may see in sundrie places of the Scriptures according to the Hebrew phrase the worde Soule taken not onely for the life of man and for all things belonging thereto but also for the whole nature of man and thus also is the worde Flesh taken Therefore when the flesh is opposed and set against the spirite in man wee vnderstand thereby not the body only but also the soule of man I meane such a one as it was at the beginning when being left vnto it selfe it followed the corruption of it owne nature And likewise by the spirite wee meane that which is regenerated in euery part of man whereby hee being withdrawen from the peruerse desires and corrupt affections of his nature is lift vp to the contemplation of celestiall and eternall things But our God vseth in such sort to apply himselfe to the nature and abilitie of his creatures that by little and little and by degrees he dispenseth vnto them those things which hee will bestowe vpon them alwayes keeping that order which hee hath vsed and followed in the creation of the worde For as Moses testifieth hee first created it of nothing Then hauing created the matter of all natures hee brought it into a woorke and gaue vnto it a forme and so polishing it by degrees and day by day at length hee set it in that perfection which hee minded to bestowe vpon it Wee see likewise that in the continuation of his woorkes hee beginneth alwayes at the basest and least thing and so goeth on encreasing augmenting and ascending vp vntill hee hath placed them in their perfection whereof we haue daily experience principally in plants and liuing creatures For the generation of plants commeth of their seedes from which they take their beginning And when the seede which is the least part of the whole plant is put into the ground it taketh roote therein and then commeth foorth encreasing dayly vntill it come to those bounds that are alotted vnto it by the Creatour which it can not passe because it can not attaine to greater perfection being of that kinde but then daily falleth to decay vntill it be wholly consumed and returned to the elements from whence it was taken The like is done in the generation of all liuing creatures and namely in that of man For what is his beginning and what is his conception natiuitie childehoode adolescencie youth mans estate and then old-age Wee see howe small his beginning is and howe hee groweth steppe by steppe and from age to age vntill hee commeth to the flower of his age and to his full strength as plantes doe and from thence the neerer hee draweth to olde-age the more hee fadeth and decayeth vntill hee come to death whereby the body returneth to the Elements out of which it is taken For as God hath giuen him a beginning so hath hee appointed him limites vnto which hee may ascend vp vntill hee come to his highest and then hee is to descend as the ordinance of God shall leade him As for the soule the same can not befall it in regard of bignesse seeing it is not corporall as the body is neither yet in respect of death seeing it is immortall For it can not be resolued as the body may to returne into the elements out of which it is not taken but it abideth alwayes in that substance and nature which first it had because it is of a celestiall and diuine nature But if the question be of the faculties powers and vertues thereof the seedes of which it hath in it selfe wee see by experience howe they shewe themselues more and more perfect and howe the vse of them is greater in one age then in an other For as long as the infant is in his mothers wombe no man can perceiue that as yet hee vseth anie other vertue and facultie of the soule that is in him then that which heeretofore wee called the vegetatiue or nourishing facultie by which hee is nourished as plants are After when hee is borne hee continueth a long time like to other liuing creatures as though he had only a vegetatiue and sensitiue soule as they haue Then by little and little as hee groweth from one age to an other those vertues of the soule whereby hee differeth from beastes appeare euery day more and more And yet hee hath no other soule in substaunce nor any other senses and minde throughout his whole life then hee had when it first mooued as also hee hath no other body But a man may easily iudge that this cōmeth not of the nature of the soule but of the instruments it hath in
qualitie of that Good which being fitte for them is the greatest they can attaine vnto so also hath man a knowledge according to his nature and to the ende for the which hee was created So that the knowledge that God hath giuen him serueth to stirre vp his appetite and desire of that Good which hee knoweth and this appetite also serueth his knowledge so farre foorth as man being mooued and pricked forward to loue God reioyceth and reposeth himselfe in him huing knowen him to bee his soueraigne Good But to the end wee may the better vnderstand this whole matter we must note that there are three kinds of appetites among the creatures which are commonly called the one naturall the other sensitiue and the third voluntary As for the naturall wee may diuide it into two sortes For there is one generall to all creatures whether liuing or without life which is nothing else but a naturall inclination without any action proceeding from any soule or life as when wee say that heauy things desire to go downeward and light things vpward as wee see it in the nature of the Elements which are without soule and life But beside this naturall appetite common to all creatures there is an other that hath action ioyned with the inclination which neuerthelesse proceedeth not of any sense This appetite is proper to the vegetatiue and nourishing soule and life whereof plants are partakers For wee see by experience that they haue a naturall appetite to drawe vnto them and to retaine that which is meete for their nature and foode and to expell the contrary For if a plant waxe drie it desireth to be watered and draweth and keepeth humour and moisture necessary for it selfe Wee see the like in mens bodies For when the members want nourishment they sucke the veynes and the veines drawe vnto them blood And as the members desire their foode so they desire to bee vnburthened when they haue too much The appetite which we call hunger thirst may be referred to this kind of naturall appetite if this be excepted that we can not say it is without sense and feeling For beside the desire of eating and drinking there is withall a sense of this attraction whereby the members sucke the veines and the veines the blood and this sense is not without greefe and displeasure So that euery liuing creature is stirred vp to seeke for his foode and to take his refection Wherevpon wee may diuide this naturall appetite also into two kindes whereof the one shal be proper to plants that haue no sense and the other belong to liuing creatures that haue this feeling of which I made mention euen now and which differeth from that sense that is proper to the outward senses already spoken of The reason whereof is because it is properly such a kind of feeling as those creatures haue which keepe a meane betweene plants and liuing creatures beeing partakers of both their natures and yet are neither simply plants nor perfect liuing creatures as it hath beene already shewed As therefore we heard in our former discourse speaking of the growing vp of mans body and of the manifestation by little and little of the powers of the soule namely that as long as the child is in his mothers wombe he is like to plants so also hee hath then great agreement with these middle sorts of creatures in regard of this kinde of appetite and of the manner of nourishing whereby it is fedde For the seede whereof hee is begotten and conceiued is nourished and groweth vp as plants do vntill such time as the Infant that is fashioned haue sense and feeling much like to that sense of the aforesaide creatures which are partakers of the nature both of plants and of liuing creatures For as yet he hath no vse of his externall senses vntill such time as hee be borne Nowe the seate of this kinde of naturall appetite is chiefly in the liuer and in the stomacke and generally in all the members that serue for nourishment For these members haue that appetite that is ioyned with this kinde of sense of which I spake euen nowe And as for the appetite of the other members which serue not for the nourishing of the whole body but onely for themselues it is more like to that appetite that is in plantes For they feele neither hunger nor thirst as other members doe And thus much for the natural appetite and the kinds thereof Concerning the sensitiue appetite it is that which accompanieth the sense and belongeth onely to liuing creatures There are two sorts of this For either it is made with touching or without touching Pleasure and griefe belong properly to the first kinde and the instruments and seats thereof are in the sinewes or els in that small sinewy skinne which giueth the sense For those things delight the sinewes which agree with their nature and looke what is contrary vnto them the same affecteth them with griefe which tendeth to their destruction as delight procureth their preseruation So that heate colde drynesse and moysture reioyce helpe and comfort the sinewes or els grieue hurt indamage them according as they are eyther wel or ill applied vnto them Therfore the sinewes were created to the end they might be instruments of sense and motion and that they shoulde receiue pleasure and paine Now all these sorts of appetites are not in the will and power of man neither proceed they from his imagination For whether he will or no he shall be subiect to hunger and thirst and shall in the same manner feele and perceiue thinges as they are applied vnto him if he be so disposed in body as he ought to be True it is he may wel abstaine from eating drinking from touching whatsoeuer he pleaseth but this abstinence in the meane time wil not take from him that appetite which hee hath but will increase it the more For it cannot hinder but that all the members will still desire their nourishment and the body will alwayes haue this sense and feeling And as for the sense of touching it will alwayes feele that which it toucheth and euen such as it is when it shal be touched But there are appetites of an other kinde which are bredde without any touch at all and follow the thought and imagination of a man These are properly called affections and haue their seate in the heart Therefore they must bee distinguished from others that hauing sence of delectation and of griefe are placed in the stomacke or in the sinewes or in the rest of the body Now by the affections we meane properly those motions of the heart which follow knowledge and either seeke after or reiect that which is offered vnto them so that according to the order of nature knowledge goeth before these motions Hereof it is that we commonly say that a man must know before he loue and that no man desireth that which
it is cleane contrary in regarde of euilles For they quickely finde whereupon to stay and to plant themselues within vs and to spreade their rootes so deepe and broade that they cannot easily be plucked vp Whereupon they are felt a great deale more and continue longer in our heart and memory Not without cause then doe men say that the pleasures seruices and good things done vnto vs are madeof feathers and therefore they are easily carried away by reason of their lightnesse but offences euilles and displeasures are made of lead and therefore they abide in the bottome of the heart by reason of their waight And forasmuch as loue proceedeth of that which is good and hatred of euill whether it bee euill in trueth or in opinion onely as euill is commonly greater and of longer continuance then Good for the causes spoken of so is it with Loue and Hatred and with their rootes and long abode Now of Hatred commeth backebiting and euill speaking which being kindled bringeth foorth bitternesse and crueltie and as loue whetteth a man on to doe well so contrariwise Hatred turneth men aside from well doing and prouoketh them to hurt For this cause it soweth the seedes of enmitie and laboureth craftily to cause the party hated to fall into danger For it desireth to hurt him and to bring euill vpon him either by it selfe or by an other secretely or openly In a worde seeing it is wholly contrary to Loue wee may without any long discourse knowe the nature thereof by that which hath beene spoken of the nature of Loue taking it cleane contrary thereunto But let vs see whether the affection of hatred bee altogether together euill of it selfe or whether a man may reape any profite thereby We may say of this as we did of anger and of other affections already spoken of For it is giuen to man to cause him to withdrawe himselfe from all euill that may hurt him to flee from it and to repell it as being contrary vnto him Therefore Saint Paul sayeth Hate that which is euill and cleaue to that which is good For true and perfect hatred shoulde hate nothing but that which is euill indeede as true loue shoulde loue that onely which is good indeede But contrariwise wee commonly hate the Good and good men and loue the Euill and the workers thereof Besides wee are faulty in this that in steade of hating mens vices wee hate their persons Wherefore it is needefull that in this matter of Hatred wee shoulde put that in practice which wee haue already saide of Anger namely that wee shoulde aboue all things hate our owne vices and that euill which is in vs and in ours But wee that practise the cleane contrary change Loue into Hatred and Hatred into Loue. For when wee supporte and beare with our owne vices or with the vices of our friendes and kinsemen which are not to be suffered or borne withall it seemeth that this toleration proceedeth from the loue wee beare either to our selues or to others but it is farre otherwise For if wee loued our selues well and our neighbours as our selues wee woulde bee carefull to remooue all hurtefull things farre from our soules and to furnish them with that which is conuenient and wholsome for them and so likewise for our friendes whereas wee procure vnto them that which turneth to their dishonour hurt and ouerthrowe by nourishing them in their vices through our dissembling and bearing with them And thus much for that profite which wee may receiue by this affection of hatred being well guided according vnto the will of GOD and to a sound and reasonable nature Nowe against the passion of euill Hatred amongest a great number of remedies which may very well bee applied thereunto we haue two principall ones that are very good and profitable The first remedie is the example of the loue of GOD and of Iesus Christ towardes vs of which wee haue spoken already with those holie Preceptes which doe commaunde Loue and forbidde Hatred The second remedie is the contempt of all earthly things and the regarde that is to be had vnto the things that are Celestiall and Eternall For if wee shall set light by all mortall and corruptible things and lift vp our heartes to higher thinges wee shall verie easilie breake off all hatred and enmitie neither wil we take any thing greatly to heart but when we see God offended Now as concerning Enuy that alwayes accompanieth hatred it is an affection quite contrary to mercy which is a sorrowe conceiued by reason of the miseries of an other whereas Enuy is a griefe arising of other mens felicitie Therefore it doth naturally reioyce at another mans harme and is grieued at his good so that according to the varietie of good things that may befall other men so there are diuers kinds of Enuy. For first some are enuious when other mens profite is so great that it hindreth theirs There is also a kinde of enuy at the wellfare of another which albeit it neither hurt nor hinder vs yet wee are grieued because the like is not befallen to vs or not rather to vs or not aswell to vs as to another to whome it is happened And this is a spice of couetousnesse There is yet a third kinde of Enuy which maketh vs vnwilling that others shoulde obtaine that good which wee haue or which wee desire or haue wished for but coulde not get it And when the question is of those good things which it seemeth we shuld enioy but doe not or which we thinke belong to vs but are bestowed vpon others then is our enuy greater and may also be called iealousie Moreouer there is a fourth kinde that is worst of all to which the name of Enuy agreeth more properly as being often bredde of the former kindes when a man giueth them the bridle and suffereth them to raigne too much ouer him This enuy is a griefe conceiued at anothers good without any regard of it owne profite but onely because it iudgeth it selfe hurt when others receiue good or do good And this is the very enuy of the Deuil and of his children which is an affection that is mingled of hatred and of ioy For it hateth vertue and reioyceth at vice and at the prosperitie of the wicked Contrariwise it is grieued at the felicitie of good men and glad of their miseries But what kinde soeuer of enuy is in a man there is in him griefe and as it were a biting that gnaweth him by reason that the heart in this affection shrinketh in as it were and closeth vp it selfe at the good and benefit of another So that sorrowe is alwayes ioyned therewith The goods against which enuy rusheth most are such as are in greatest reputation amongst men as honour and glory insomuch that it is more moued at the good renowme honour and praise giuen to men in respect of the good things that are in them
of their places in mans body I meane in the whole masse and distribution of the blood and in the coniunction they haue together euen as the elements haue their places each after other For as the fire of it owne nature is light and therefore laboureth alwayes to ascend vpward to attaine to his naturall place so the cholerike humour which agreeth with the nature thereof occupieth the highest place among the humours mingled with the blood as we may perceiue by that that hath beene already spoken of the floure and skimme of blood according to that comparison which wee made betwixt blood and wine The like may be saide of the rest For as the aire is lightest next to the fire and the neerest element vnto it and to the rest of the celestiall fires so the blood properly so called keepeth the place of the aire among the humours of the body For it is not so light as the fire nor so heauie as the water or the earth And so consequently the flegmatike and melancholike humours occupy the lower places according to their degrees as the water and the earth doe in this great world For this cause all these humours besides their common offices and effects haue others more speciall agreeable to their nature as God willing we wil declare heereafter And namely the flegmatike humour that holdeth of the nature of the water is to be considered of For as in this great visible world there are waters both aboue and beneath I meane those that are contained and retained within the clouds in the ayre those that are in the sea in riuers kept within their bounds assigned them for their course so the like is to be foūd in the litle world which is mā Nowe hitherto haue wee learned howe the water and the other humours are carried with the blood throughout the body aswell vpwarde as downewarde by meanes of the veines which water all the partes of it howe high or lowe soeuer they be and therewithall carrie vnto them their foode and nourishement And this agreeth fitly to the woonderfull worke of GODS prouidence in nature which of the vapours arising out of the earth gathereth the cloudes together and these like to sponges sucke vp vapours from the waters of which themselues are engendered and which afterward they cary about as it were in chariots to distribute them into all quarters of the worlde according as it shall please God to dispose of them by sending his blessing vpon the earth by the meanes of raine wherewith being watred it nourisheth all those herbs trees plantes and fruites which it bringeth foorth not onely for the sustenance of men but also of beasts Let vs then imagine before vs a garden wherein is infinite varietie of trees and plantes of all sortes and that this garden is watred either by raine from heauen or by pipes and conduites whereby the water is brought thither and dispersed in all places thereof We shall see that in this great diuersitie of nature there is but one and the same nourishment for them all and but one place And albeeit the liquor that affoordeth this nourishment to so many sorts of plants be but one neuerthelesse it is conuerted into the nature of all those things which it nourisheth so that the nature of it is changed according to the distinct propertie of each of them For there are plants and herbes of all qualities and of all tastes and colours Some are hote others colde some drie others moist either in the first or second or third or fourth degree or else are tempered and intermingled according to their seuerall natures As for their tastes some are sweet others sharpe or bitter or of no certaine taste In a worde there are of all kindes of tastes both simple and compound And yet the humour or liquor is but one that receiueth all these qualities as in wormwood it becommeth bitter and in the Vine or Figge-tree sweete And if the herbes bee either for food or for physicke or of a poysonfull nature the same may be saide of the humour that nourisheth them The like is seene also in colours Neither doe wee obserue all this by experience onely in some great diuersitie of trees and of all sortes of plantes but euen in eche of them seuerally For I pray you what difference is there in euery herbe or in euery seuerall tree I meane betweene the roote and the stalke the body and the branches the boughes and the leaues the floures seedes and fruites And yet all these sundry partes receiue nourishment from one Mother and from one and the same substance and liquor Moreouer we see that as man and all other liuing creatures haue their heart in the midst of their bodies which is the fountaine of life so all trees herbes and plantes haue their heart in the middest of them according to their nature without which they could not liue For we call their heart the inwarde part within which their pith remaineth which is vnto them as the heart is to liuing and sensible creaatures Whereupon we haue further to note in regard of those herbes that haue weak stalks especially hollow ones or such as haue strawes insteede of stalkes that the prouidence of God hath giuen vnto them knots seuered as it were into sundry smal knees which are vnto thē in place of their stomack and of other nutritiue members to reteine their nourishment the longer to concoct it the better as also to strengthē them thereby And this we may euidently see in all sorts of corne and pulse Euen so doth nature or rather the prince therof worke in a mans body which is as it were a garden that hath a soule Wherein the Creator of this whole frame sheweth himselfe no lesse wonderful nay rather much more then in this great garden of the whole earth and of the great world of both which he is the Gardener that watreth them to nourish all the fruits they bring forth to cause them to grow For frō whence proceed or are nourished the bones gristles ligamēts sinews arteries veines flesh kernels fatte together with all the other partes of which the body is compounded May not the like be saide of the eyes of their coats and humors of the eares nose tongue teeth belly stomack guts liuer spleene kidneies of all the other bowls and inward parts And if we come to the hands and feet and to the other outward members to al the other parts called Instrumentall distinguished according to their office we shall finde that onely through the alteration of their foode into liquor they all receiue such nourishment as is proper to eche of them Yet notwithstanding one and the same sustenance is offered to so many sundry members beeing made familiar and of the same nature with that part vnto which it is ioyned For if it goe to the eyes it becommeth of the same temperament that the nerues and spirites
holes vnable to hold in and keepe anie secret matter they are fierce in assailing but inconstant in sustaining the assault in some sort resembling the nature of dogges which barke and bite if they can and afterward flie away And if there bee excesse of the melancholike humour the natures of such are sadde still hard to please suspicious conceited obstinate some more and some lesse And if the cholericke and melancholike humours be corrupt and mingled together their natures become monstrous prowd full of enuy fraud subtilties venemous and poisonfull hatefull and diabolicall And when the malignant spirits know mens natures thus disposed no doubt but they take occasion thereby to intermingle themselues if God permit them and purpose to vse them for the punishing of men I say they will ioyne themselues vnto them and make them their instruments as God on the other side vseth those natures that are most moderate and best tempered making them instruments of his glorie Now we may call to mind what we learned before almost to the same ende touching the meanes whereby euill spirites might trouble the imagination fantasie and mindes of men We may say as much of the humours of the body whose motions and nature they knowe very well Whereby they can so much the more easily abuse them in their damnable worke and will as wee may iudge by the example of him that was possessed and lunatike of whom the Euangelists make mention and whome they call by those two names And by that which they wrote of him it seemeth that he was subiect to the falling sickenesse that returneth oftentimes according to the course of the moone which naturally hath great affinitie with the humors and great power ouer them And therefore it is very likely that the euill spirit which tormented this poore lunatike watched the occasions of his disease to afflict him the more and to cause him to fall either in the fire or in the water as he did indeede thereby to worke his death if he had could Which example sheweth vnto vs what is the malice of the deuil what pleasure hee taketh in hurting of men what meanes and what occasions he seeketh for and maketh choice of and what accesse vnto vs we may offer him through our corrupt nature through our vices and sinnes and through our inclinations and manners that are naturally euill and peruerse if God letteth him loose the bridle by his iust iudgement seeing he spareth not the little children as it appeareth in that which is written of him of whom we spake euen now For this cause we ought to take good heede that we giue not our common enemie those occasions that he seeketh to haue from vs to the ende that hee abuse vs not nor any thing that is ours and which God hath bestowed vpon vs. This is the reason why the consideration of our temperature complexion and naturall inclination is very necessary for vs because the knowledge hereof affoordeth vnto vs many good instructions that may stand vs in great steade throughout our whole life as well for the preseruation of the health of our bodies as for the rule and gouernement of our affections and manners as also in regarde of the familiaritie and acquaintance which wee haue one with an other For through the contemplation hereof wee may knowe not onely the causes of health and sickenesse of the life and death of the body but also of that of the soule For as the good humours corrupt in our bodies according as wee haue heard and breede in them sundry diseases which finally leade them vnto death euen so by means of sinne all those good and naturall affections which ought to bee the seedes of vertues in vs are corrupted and turne into vices that are the diseases of the soule and bring vnto it the second and eternall death as contrariwise vertues are the health and life thereof But as GOD hath prouided corporall medicines for the bodie so hee hath prepared spirituall Physicke for the soule against all the diseases thereof Therefore when wee consider with our selues vnto what vices wee are inclined by nature wee must labour to correct and bridle them and to quench such inclinations as much as wee can through sobrietie vigilancie and continuall practise to the contrary least wee nourish and encrease them when as wee ought to diminish and wholy to abolish them For the common prouerbe is not without reason that Education passeth Nature or that it is another nature Wee see by experience what Education and Instruction are able to doe both to goodnesse and vice according as they are either good or euill For as there is no nature so good which can not bee corrupted and peruerted through euill education and teaching so there is none so vicious and euill which can not at the least in some measure through the helpe and grace of GOD bee corrected and amended by good education instruction and discipline And because conuersation and familiaritie are of great efficacie in this point wee are diligently to consider with what persons and natures wee acquaint our selues and bee carefull to eschew such natures as are vicious prowd fierce enuious hatefull malicious suspicious disloyall and traiterous as well in regarde of the corruption of manners wherewith wee may bee infected by them as also in respect of other harmes that may befall vs by reason they are vnsociable natures or at the least very difficult to conuerse withall being indeede such as towardes whome no man can beare any true loue or firme friendship But when wee haue vsed all the diligence wee can possible about these things the chiefest point wherein the whole consisteth is this that wee haue recourse to Iesus Christ the eternall sonne of GOD to the end that by his holy Spirit hee woulde correct represse and quench in vs all the vicious affections and disordered motions that wee haue contrary to his holy will according to that promise which is made vnto vs wherein it is saide that if fathers knowe howe to giue good gifts to their children and such things as are necessarie for them much more will our heauenly Father giue his holie Spirite to them that aske it of him And this is the true meanes wee ought to keepe for the correcting of these vices and defectes that are in our naturall inclinations Now wee haue spoken sufficiently of those things which concerne the naturall powers of the soule in respect of the nourishment and growth of the body and of those instruments which it hath in the same for the performaunce of her actions It remaineth nowe that wee consider what effectes it hath in Generation First then ASER thou shalt handle the restauration and reparation of all natures by that vertue and power of Generation that is in them and namely in man to the end wee may after proceede with those other points that concerne this matter Of the restauration and reparation of all
are themselues or what they haue receaued of God except they bee brought backe to that first dust and earth out of which they are taken euen to their first creation and generation Therefore the holy spirite doeth esteeme it a thing not vnworthy his diuine maiestie often to instruct and to admonish vs by his worde and that so plainely and familiarly as no man be hee neuer so skilfull or so ignorant but he may greatly profit in this schoole at leastwise be made altogether inexcusable if he learne not that which the spirit doeth there teach him For concerning them that are most ignorant he speaketh very plainly to be vnderstood of them propounding that vnto them whereof they cannot be ignorant although they woulde at leastwise which they cannot easily know And as for the skilfuller sort who by their knowledge are able to vnderstand more then others they are so much the more guiltie if they will not giue credite to the woorkes of God as they are propounded vnto vs in the holy scriptures For what idole of nature soeuer they frame to themselues yet must they alwayes come to this first beginning of man which is clean contrary to the reason of humane sense and vnderstanding and so giue glory vnto God otherwise the fruite of all their studie will bee nothing els but confusion and ignorance Now the more we consider of the daily generation of men the more like we shall find it in all admiration to their first originall and creation For who coulde euer I say not beleeue but onely thinke or imagine that out of pressed milk and cruds as it were such as the beginning of man seemeth to bee there could proceede any liuing creature at all especially such an image of God as man is And yet we see this daily come to passe Now from whence commeth this milke Wee cannot for shame speake it without blushing So that if the worke and prouidence of God bee woonderfull in the conception and fashioning of man and in the life and preseruation he affoordeth him in his Mothers belly as wee haue shewed heeretofore surely it is no lesse admirable in his natiuitie and birth as we may now vnderstand Wee haue already heard howe by the faculties and powers of the soule and generatiue vertue thereof the seede is retained and preserued and how the child is formed thereof in the wombe Now all this while it is nourished by blood which is drawne vnto it by the veins of the nauill ordained to that end and therfore also the issue of this blood commonly ceasseth in women with childe as that which is then diuided into three partes For the childe draweth the purest thereof to it selfe and is therewithal nourished Secondly the wombe by veins leading directly to the breasts sendeth that part which is lesse pure wherof the milk is prepared that feedeth the child after it is borne The third part which is the worst staieth still in the wombe and so soone as the child is borne it issueth forth also This foode which the childe receiueth thus in the wombe caused Galen to allege an ancient sentence out of Athenaeus saying That the childe receiueth more from the mother then from the father euen as the plants draw more from the earth then they doe from the husbandman For this menstrual blood first encreaseth the seede and after serueth towardes the growth of the members by ministring food vnto them And for this cause this Authour teacheth that naturally the loue of the children is very great towardes their Mothers and so of the Mothers towardes their children as also in respect of the exceeding great mixture of their substaunce But when the childe is nowe encreased and growne so great and strong that he is well able to moue himselfe and to receiue his foode at the mouth as he is waxen greater so he must haue more store of nourishment then he is able to draw in at the nauil Likewise forasmuch as naturall heate is more augmented he had neede of the more aire and to receiue it in by respiration and breathing so farre foorth as is necessary for his refreshing Whereupon the childe stirreth and moueth with greater strength and violence so that it breaketh the skinnes bands wherein it was wrapped and some veines also and so maketh an issue and way for it self as that which cannot any longer be kept in the wombe Now when the child feeleth that aire entring in which it desireth and seeketh for the reason before alleadged it mooueth it selfe towardes the mouth of the wombe which is the most naturall and easie way of birth by reason that it is borne with the head forwarde Nowe so soone as it is come into the light it cryeth as if it did prognosticate and foretell of the miseries of that life into which it is entered The Philosophers and Phisitions referre the cause of this weeping to that motion which driueth it to the birth as also to those handlings and touchings wherewith it is receiued which cannot bee without some sense of griefe conceiued by this litle tender bodie Which body so long as it is in the wombe is bowed round as it were in a lumpe so that the heeles of it ioyne to the buttockes and the handes lay fast holde of the knees towards which it doeth bow downe the head so lowe that the eyes are ioyned to the thumbes as if they were fastened to them and the nose is thrust down betweene the knees Now when it hath attained to the ninth moneth so that it may no longer tarie there for the reasons before mentioned it turneth it selfe in the womb first with the head downeward and stretching out the legges and other members vpward Then when the houre of child-birth approcheth the babe by kicking and turning it selfe more violently maketh many ruptures by litle and litle so that the skinnes wherein both the Vrine and the sweate are contained bursting asunder whole streames gush out which shew that the birth is hard at hand For presently vpon the renting and breach of the After-burthen through the violence of the childe because there is nothing els that holdeth it vp the babe falleth downe euen as an apple or a peare falleth from the tree when it is ripe And as the childe doeth his best to come foorth at that time which God hath prescribed vnto it so the wombe and the mother of the child doe their partes as much as lieth in them to performe by the prouidence of God who hath prouided accordingly For during the space of those nine monethes wherein the childe is contained in the wombe it is shut vp and embraceth the burthen as close as it may And when the time of birth commeth the wombe doeth not onely open it selfe by litle and litle but all the top of it doeth gather it selfe as close together as it can and so thrust the babe towards the mouth of it wherunto also the neighbour parts lend
it is so there is but one onelie Soule in euery liuing creatures body by which it doeth liue but yet this soule is distinguished according to the vertues and offices thereof Wherein it falleth out with the soule as it doeth with a man that hath many charges and offices or that exerciseth many Artes and occupations which hee practiseth in seueral places at sundry times and by diuers instruments and seruants Yea the very varietie of those instruments which the soule vseth and the repugnance that is betweene the actions thereof doe shewe manifestly that there is but one workemaster from whome the whole proceedeth and which gouerneth and moderateth all as a liuing creature ought to doe For there could not be so great agreement in such diuersitie if there were diuers workemen and so many soules as there are effects and actions in all the partes of man Besides if there were such diuersitie of kindes of all things as there is diuersity of effectes the number of them woulde bee infinite whereupon there woulde great confusion follow in the searching out of nature and of naturall things Therefore seeing there is but one soule in euery body we must learn whether it hath any certaine place and seate in the body or whether the whole body be the lodging for it Now as euery forme of each body is in the whole body so the soule is wholly in the whole body in which the true forme principall essence of man consisteth For if there were any part thereof that had no soule within it that part should haue no life as we see it by experience in a member that is dry or putrified or cut off from the body So that as an Husbandman hath his sundry instruments for the trimming of the ground and by them effecteth diuers works according to the vse of each seueral instrument so fareth it with the soule in the bodie For the husbandman worketh another woorke with his plough then hee doeth with his harrowes and otherwise with his spades and shouels then with the other aboue named instruments so that according to the diuersitie of his tooles he worketh diuers workes And yet all this while there are not so many husbandmen as there are sundry instruments but one alone vseth all these to serue his turne And hee that should demand in which of all his instruments the Husbandman were should he not thinke you mooue an impertinent question For hee may be both without his instruments also with them and when he vseth them he applieth them to himselfe and himselfe vnto them And to aske which of his instruments is the chiefest were not to speake very much to purpose For euery one of them is principall in his vse and for that worke whereunto it it is applied and so is it with the soule and with the instruments thereof For it can be both with them and without them in that maner that hath beene already declared And as the plough is the chiefe instrument which the Husbandman hath to cutte and diuide the grounde into furrowes and the pickaxe to digge in hard places so the eye is the chiefe instrument the soule hath for seeing the eare for hearing the brayne with the thinne cleare and bright spirits therein for all kinde of vnderstanding and knowledge and the heart for the fountaine of life Nowe because the soule hath so many sundry powers offices and actions it is also taken in diuers sences and significations but especially in the holy scriptures as God willing we shal learne hereafter In the meane time that vnion which it hath with the body is marueilous and ought to be diligently considered of vs. Wee are to know then that all things whatsoeuer are ioyned together in nature are alwaies so knit and vnited by some means which meane consisteth either in this that the essence of two extreames doe participate one of another ioyne together or els in the agreement of action and of worke Now as the bond of the first meane is between the elements themselues and also betweene them and that matter whereof bodies are compounded because there is betweene them an agreement and participation of nature euery one in his degree according as they are neerer or further remoued off one from another so we haue the bond of the second meane betweene the body and the soule namely the agreement of action and worke Let vs then consider of the coniunction and agreement that is betweene a workeman and his worke together with those instruments whereby he effecteth his worke For there is an agreement and coniunction betweene the painter and his picture by reason of the pensill wherewith hee woorketh And the like may be said of all other workmen Euen so the form and kinde of all things is as it were the Workemaster in regard of the matter and the qualities and fashioning of the matter are the instruments whereby the Species or kinde of any thing is vnited and knit vnto the matter Now the soule is ioyned to the body as light is vnto the aire For by reason of the coniunction of the aire and light together the aire is made cleare and lightsome and yet the aire and light remaine whole and perfect without any mixture or confusion of the one with the other For they are not mingled together as the elements are in naturall mixtures or as hearbes that are beaten together into powder or drugges of the Apothecary in a medicine that lie mingled and confused one within another But the vnion and bond of two substances ioyned together is a great deale more neere in other kinds and creatures then in the soule wherein it is remooued farther of by reason that the nature of corporall things admitteth of a neerer coniunction and agreement among themselues then there can be naturally betweene corporall and spirituall thinges So that the greater agreement of natures there is the straiter is the bonde and vnion-betweene them Nowe wee may knowe of what nature euerie kinde of thing is by the offices and actions thereof As if the question were touching the nature of that soule which heeretofore we called the Nourishing and Vegetatiue Soule it appeareth by the office and actions thereof that it is hote and that it taketh part as also all the actions thereof of the nature of fire which is the highest and purest element and that which approcheth neerest to the celestiall natures But that kinde of soule which wee called Sensitiue and Cogitatiue such as it is in brute beastes ascendeth yet higher and by agreement is linked neerer to the heauens and to the nature of heauenly bodies And therefore beasts haue not onlie sense but some kinde of knowledge also whereby they doe in some sort marke and perceiue the course of the heauens and heauenly bodies and doe seeme after a sort to vnderstande them For they haue knowledge both of the day and of the night of Winter and of Summer
yea they haue some sense and perseuerance of the alteration of seasons according as they fall out by the course of the spheres but yet not by any such knowledge and vnderstanding as is in man Nowe sense and knowledge cannot proceede of the power of the elements but is deriued from some higher thing For it is by meanes of a more celestiall power that beastes are distinguished from plants holding more of the excellencie of their Creatour declaring it a great deale more But man hee mounteth vp much higher For hee ascendeth vp aboue all the heauens euen vnto God and to those spirituall natures by meanes of reason and vnderstanding which make his soule capable of heauenly light and wisedome and of diuine inspirations Whereupon it followeth that the originall and birth of the Soule is celestiall And therefore in this diuersitie of the faculties and powers of the soule and life of man wee must note this that the lower kindes of the soule and life are not the Well-springs and fountaines of the highest as if those powers and faculties did first set these latter awoorking or as if the highest did spring of the basest and receiued their vertues from them but they are onelie certaine aydes and degrees of helpe whereby the highest and chiefest descende and ascende So that the Vegetatiue and nourishing life and vertue is not the originall of the sences and sensitiue vertue but onelie a degree by which the facultie of sense is deriued to the bodie and by little and little ascendeth vp to her powers and offices The like may bee sayde of the vnderstanding and of reason in regarde of the sensitiue facultie For euerie sort and kinde of life and euerie power of the soule hath beginning of it selfe and certaine boundes within which it is conteined Wherein we haue to consider a marueilous woorke and prouidence of GOD in that hee hath ioyned and linked togethet in man things that are so diuers For wee take this as graunted that the soule of man is a spirituall nature and not corporall that it is immortall and created for the contemplation of celestiall and eternall things On the other side wee see howe this so excellent and diuine a nature is ioyned to that part and power that is called Vegetatiue and Nourishing which seemeth rather to bee corporall then spirituall to bee more terrestriall then celestiall and to bee as it were the Kitchen of the bodies of liuing creatures and the Store-house and Originall of their generation So that there is no man of any sounde minde who knowing this marueilous coniunction of nature in thinges so diuers and considering that it cannot come to passe by happe-hazard and at aduenture but hee must needes bee rauished with great admiration and acknowledge an admirable prouidence of God the Creator and Lord of nature But they that are instructed in the holie worde and in the doctrine of the Church haue yet a further consideration of these thinges For they knowe well that albeeit this Kitchin of mans bodie shall haue no necessarie vse in the life to come neuerthelesse God hath established this order and woulde haue it thus ioyned to the soule and spirite to the ende that those beginnings of eternall life and of that true and perpetuall wisedome which hee hath put into vs shoulde bee kindled and inflamed in this mortall life For they shall not shine foorth in anie there who haue not heere had some beginnings but haue suffered those to bee cleane extinguished which they haue receiued of GOD. For this cause doeth the voyce of God and of his heauenly doctrine sounde in mens eares and to these endes hath hee ordayned that gouernement which ought to bee amongest them and hath bounde and fortified it with manie bondes and rampires Wherefore wee stande in neede of doctrine of instruction and discipline vnto which things the consideration of mans nature may greatly helpe vs. For there is no science or humane wisedome howe great soeuer it bee that is able to rehearse and comprehende the great profite which this consideration can affoorde to men euen so farre foorth as they may verie well learne and knowe And of this wee may the better bee resolued if we consider well of that which hath alreadie bene handled yea we may the better iudge hereof if wee perfectly vnderstand that diuision of man made by S. Paul and mentioned by vs in this discourse Therefore AMANA proceede you in the residue of this matter giuing vs first to vnderstand what is the nature and offices of those pure animal cleare and bright spirits which we saide were seruiceable to the soule for all kinde of vnderstanding and knowledge Afterwardes you may more easily instruct vs at large and teach vs what difference there is not onely betweenethe soule and the instruments thereof whereby it worketh but also betweene the instruments themselues and their nature and offices and which of them are nearest or remoued farthest from the soule Of the nature and varietie of the animall spirites and how they are onely instruments of the soule and not the soule it selfe of the nature of those bodies wherein the soule may dwell and worke of the difference that is not onely betweene the soule and the instrumenes by which it woorketh but also betweene the instruments themselues and their natures and offices and which of them are neerest or farthest of of the degrees that are in the vnion and coniunction of the soule with the bodie Chap. 78. AMANA It is requisite that workmen should haue instruments answerable to those works which they are to make and if they haue taken in hand but one single and simple worke they neede but one toole fitte for that purpose as to sawe timber there needeth but a sawe But they that are to make many workes or one woorke that is full of varietie stand in need of many instruments as painters ioyners carpenters masons and such like The same may bee saide of the soule and therefore it hath many members in the body that are giuen vnto it as instruments to serue for those woorkes which it hath outwardly to perfourme Moreouer the soule hath humours to preserue and vphold the members and to keepe them alwayes ready for their worke by those meanes which we haue heard already besides it hath vital spirits of which the animall spirites are bred which serue in steade of a light to garde and conduct it in the actions both of the external and the internall senses And as there is great force in a toole or instrument to cause a good or euil worke so is there in the humors spirites and members of the bodie whereby we are made fitte to exercise and to execute all actions whether they concerne life and sense knowledge and vnderstanding or will and affections For it fareth in this matter as it doeth in the disposition of the aire which the thicker and more obscure it is the lesse cleare will the light
and motion that are therein are inflamed by this vital spirite and not by any other means whatsoeuer whether it be the blood or the flesh And yet this spirite is as well of a corporall and bodily matter as all the rest of which the body is compounded so that it hath his originall of the selfe-same elements from whence that matter is deriued out of which it springeth But of such inquisitours I woulde likewise demaund from whence the heauens the Sunne and Moone with the other planets and starres haue their motion their light and properties It is very certaine they can yeeld mee no other true cause but that God hath created them of that nature that hee hath so framed them and that hee alwayes preserueth them such by the diuine vertue and power of his prouidence So I say to them that wee ought not to searche for any other cause or reason of that we mentioned before or goe any further or mount higher in the inquisition thereof But forasmuch as that which wee haue nowe deliuered of the nature and matter of the Soule is proper to that Sensitiue and Sensuall soule which wee attribute to beastes we must come more particularly to that that is proper to men which wee call the reasonable soule This is that matter and poynt about which the greatest and most ingenious wittes haue most laboured and disputed from time to time For they that affirmed the soule of man to bee no other thing then the Vitall and Animall spirites by means of which the body receiueth life or the temperature and temperament of the humours and matter of which the bodie is compounded these men put no difference betweene the soule of beastes and the soule of men And as for them that take it to bee the breath or a fire of which the naturall heate proceedeth they iumpe in opinion with the former who place it in the Vitall spirites And they that say it is in the harmonie of the whole bodie are of the same minde with them that place it in the temperament So that according to the opinion of all these the soule of man is nothing els but naturall heate or els the Vitall spirite that is in the blood as the Physicions commonly take it whose consideration reacheth not farther then to that they can comprehend by their naturall reason following therein Hippocrates who agreeable to this opinion saieth that the soule is daily engendered after that manner which wee haue alreadie declared But they that more diligently looke into the properties and excellent giftes wherewith the reasonable soule is endued know assuredly by their naturall reason that these opinions are very vnworthy the noble excellencie thereof and that they are of no force in regarde thereof For they iudge very well that the vnderstanding and reason with the discourses thereof that the iudgement and such memory as it hath that the discerning of good and euill of thinges honest and dishonest of vertues and vices with the knowledge of humane and diuine thinges whereof it is partaker are woorkes and actions which cannot proceede from such matter as the elements are as we haue touched else-where Whereupon it followeth that it is some other thing then the Vitall spirite or the temperament of the bodie and that it is of a farre differing nature from that of beasts which consisteth in these thinges And by the same reason also they conclude that if the soule of man were of any such matter as to be the Vitall spirite or the temperament of the bodie it would follow that it were mortall like to the bodie and that nothing shoulde remaine of it after the death thereof Which thing they finde to be too much contrarie vnto that which a man may iudge of the nature and substance of the soule by those effectes of it that were euen nowe mentioned which effectes are such as cannot agree to a corruptible and mortall nature nor to any other then to a celestiall and immortall nature like to that of the Angels aud blessed spirits which are endued with such vertues But I desire to heare thee ARAM vpon the things now spoken of that thou maiest goe on with the matter of our discourses Of the opinion of Galen of Plat● and of Aristotle touching the substance and nature of mans soule of the opinion of Occam touching the Vegetatine and Sensitiue power thereof and of the distinction of soules he maketh in man of the sentence of the Platonists and of Origen touching the creation birth and nature of the soule of the coniunction of the Soule with the bodie and the estate thereof in the same Chap. 83. ARAM. The Ancients speaking of man often call him a great miracle and indeede the more wee bend our mindes to consider of it the more marueilous weshal find it to be Insomuch as in the particular contemplation of the soule which is truely man I woulde gladly aske whether it were better either to discourse Philosophically of this matter hauing store of argument or by way of admiration to crie out with S. Paul O the deepenes of the riches both of the wisedom and knowledge of God! Neuerthelesse being drawen on with the same desire that hath hitherto pricked vs forward to search out and to be instructed in the trueth according to my knowledge I will goe forward ARAM with thy speech For the causes then alleged by thee out of them that consider more diligently the properties excellent gifts of the soule although Galen who otherwise was a prophane man in respect of the knowledge of God and an idolatrous worshipper of nature durst not boldly determine what the reasonable soule was yet as for that which is commonly called the vegetatiue or nourishing and the sensitiue or sensuall soule he feareth not boldly to affirme that it is no other thing then either the naturall and vitall spirits or the temperament But as for the reasonable soule he leaueth it in doubt whether it be of a bodilie nature or of some other that is not corporall and which subsisteth by it selfe being seperated from the bodie Neither doth he conclude any other thing but that it is either a shining substance and an ethereall body that is to say of a more pure and celestiall nature then any of the elements or els that it is of a nature that is not corporall but yet hath this body by which he meaneth the animal spirit to be as a chariot to carie it Plato before him sayd that soules were litle portions taken from the substance of the celestiall fires and hee maketh three parts of a mans soule diuiding them according to the principall parts of the body and those instruments which they haue in the same Which diuision is vnderstood of some as if he made so many sorts of soules as we haue shewed that there are principall powers and offices which haue their seuerall seats and places assigned vnto them in the body Therefore Galen
deny nothing of all this but they say onely that God did then establish this order nowe spoken of which hee daily continueth in the generation of man I omit heere many other opinions touching this matter which come not so neere vnto the trueth namely a great controuersie betweene the Doctors in Diuinitie and in Physicke touching the vegetatiue and sensitiue soule and the time when the burthen beginneth to bee nourished and to haue sence thereby considering that it is a great deale better to inquire of these things to sobrietie and to leaue the resolution to GOD who knoweth that which is hidde from vs then by vaine questions and curious disputations to thinke to determine of the matter according to trueth and to the contentation of euery one For as we haue before touched we can knowe nothing either of the generation or original or of the substance and nature of our soule or of the immortalitie thereof but onely by those testimonies which by the effects it aftoordeth vnto vs and which God setteth downe in his word Wherefore according to that which hath beene already handled wee must distinguish those things vnto which our mindes may in some sort reach and of which wee may haue some knowledge from them that are so hidden from vs that wee can not knowe or iudge of any thing but like blinde men by groping and gessing This is a matter then of which wee must speake very soberly and with great reuerence of God contenting our selues with that which it pleaseth him to make knowne vnto vs by the meanes aforesaid and goe no further by desiring to knowe that which wee can not conceiue or comprehend vntill such time as God himselfe shall giue vs more ample and cleere knowledge thereof And I suppose wee shall not erre if wee say the like touching the question propounded by vs in the beginning of our speech about this matter namely of the meanes by which the reasonable soule shoulde bee infected with originall sinne seeing it is not engendered of that corrupt seede of which the bodie is bredde Let it then suffice vs to knowe that albeit the soule can not be defiled with sinne as it is created of God yet as God created all mankinde in Adam so when he fell all the rest of the worlde fell with him and in him was bereaued both of originall iustice and of other gifts which he lost by his fall So that albeit mens soules are created and produced of God pure and entire yet they keepe not that puritie stil neither can they be the soules of men and ioyned vnto their bodies and so become members of mankinde in them with any other condition then with that into which the first Father brought all his children by his sinne as we haue before touched Wherefore we must not search for the cause of that original sinne wherewith they are infected either in their creation because they are created by God of a diuine and immortall essence or in the generation of the body and in that seede of which it is engendred as if the soule took her originall infection together with the body frō the seede Moreouer we must not as the Pythagoreans do search for the corruption of soules in their entrance and coniunction with their bodies as if they receiued it from them but we must seeke it in that blot of sinne vnto which the whole race of mākind was made subiect through the fall corruption of the first stocke and in that decree of God whereby hee hath condemned all mankinde by his iust iudgement without any further enquirie after the meanes and manner how it came to passe For this cause Saint Paul doth bring vs backe to this consideration when in propounding vnto vs the first stock of mankind he saith that by one man sinne entred into the world and by sinne death And then hee propounded vnto vs this stocke of sinne so on the contrary side he propoudeth to vs the stock of iustice and righteousnesse namely Christ Iesus the new man who is an other stocke of mankinde regenerated renewed and reformed after the image of GOD. Therefore hee saieth that as by the disobedience of one man many were made sinners so by the obedience of one many are made righteous Now as humane Philosopie knoweth not either the corruption of all mankinde such as it is or the fountaine thereof so it is ignorant of the meanes whereby it must bee restored neither knoweth it that the wound is so great and mortall as that it cannot be cured but onely by the hand of God For which cause hee was to giue vs his owne sonne to be the Surgion and Physicion The ignorance heereof is the cause why humane Philosophie so greatly magnifieth the nobilitie and excellencie of the soule as it is well worthy being considered in the first nature in which it was created But the sequele of this matter wee will heare of thee ARAM. Of those powers and properties which the soule of man hath common with the soule of beastes of those powers and vertues which are proper and peculiar to it selfe according to the Philosophers of the difference and agreement that is betweene humane philosophie and Christian doctrine touching these things Chap. 87. ARAM Amongst the heathen they that were most ancient and neerest to the true Church of God and conuersed most with his seruants had greater knowledge and better vnderstanding of the nature of God of Angelles and of mens soules and of other matters belonging to true religion then they that were farthest off and succeeded latest after the other For the farther off that the doctrine of heauenly things was drawne from the fountaine of it the more hath it beene altered and corrupted both by ignorance ouerwhelming it and by false vnderstanding of it as also because euery one hath added to and taken away what seemed him best and that either to boast themselues that they may seeme some body or to couer their thefts that none might knowe from whence that thing was first taken and borrowed that so they might bee thought to bee the first members thereof or lastly to please and satisfie the curiositie and vanitie of the minde of man No maruell therefore if there were heathen Philosophers among the ancients who beleeued and taught many things agreeable to the worde of God and if there be now some amongst vs who boast of their study in philosophie and yet haue no part of that first innocencie and puritie but haue their mindes filled with strange opinions contrary to all reason and trueth We see wel enough by experience what impietie raigneth in this our age For there are an infinite number to be founde of whose religion no man can iudge except it be heerein that they thinke there is none at all and therefore mocke at all religion what shewe soeuer they make to the contrary But I knowe not why they shoulde not blush for shame when they
heare from heathen Philosophers so many goodly instructions as they haue left vs concerning the nature and immortalitie of the soule It is true that the reason of man cannot of it selfe contemplate the soule in her first perfect nature in which it was created but it doth consider of it as it is at this present and yet as though it were verie sound Whereupon the Philosophers greatly magnifie the nobilitie and excellencie thereof Therefore when they are to consider of those points vpon which they ground the powers and vertues of the soule for the first they take the vegetatiue vertue which it hath common not onely with the beasts but also with the plants and this comprehendeth three other faculties vnderneath it namely the vertue of nourishing secondly of encreasing lastly of procreation as it hath bene already declared vnto vs. This vertue with the rest that are comprehended vnderneath it is the basest most earthy and vilest of them all besides that it followeth the sensitiue vertue which may be referred aswell to the internall as to the externall senses So that we may diuide it into two parts and more properly call that the sensitiue vertue which the soule hath in taking knowledge of corporall things by corporall senses and by their vse in the body The other part that belongeth to the internall senses may more specially be called the cogitatiue vertue And because these two powers serue to encrease knowledge and vnderstanding they are as it were the fountaine thereof or rather helps and instruments The Astronomers who referre all to the vertue of the starres and planets place the influence of the vegetatiue power with the parts of it vnder the Moone of which the soule as they say receiueth it the other two parts of the sensitiue power of which I spake euen now they place vnder the Sunne as they doe the fourth which is the will and vertue of desiring vnder the planet Venus The fift which is called the angry faculty giuing heart courage to a man and moouing him to wrath vnder the planet Mars Then for the sixt they place the vertue that giueth motion from one place to another For the seuenth that which the Physicians call the vitall vertue and others the spirituall because it conteineth vnder it the power of respiration and both these are attributed to the same because it is a propertie of the sensitiue power to moue and breathe Now all these powers of the soule are common to man with beasts or at least wise there is no great difference But these which now follow are proper and peculiar vnto him namely the reasonable power of which the other that ensue are kindes of which number the Philosophers or Astronomers place in the first ranke the vertue of speech where by the soule expresseth her conceits thoughts affections And although all mē vse northe same words to vtter their thoughts ech to other by reason of the diuersitie of languages that is amongst them notwithstanding as the things which they vnderstand conceiue and by which they are moued to speake are al of one substance and nature amongst all nations so all the conceits and affections of men which are signified by their language are alike in their soule and minde where they are written and ingrauen This vertue they attribute to Mercurie as the other that followeth to Iupiter which they call the practicke and actiue vertue whereby a man that hath his will at libertie doeth by counsaile and setled reason exercise and bring to passe through arte prudence and wisedome those things of which he hath sure knowledge For it is not enough to haue the contemplatiue vertue vnles the actiue also be ioined vnto it to declare it by effect Thus you see where they place free will which comprehendeth vnder it first election then action which is the practicke that followeth it And because the practicke dependeth of the theoricke which is the speculatiue and contemplatiue vertue and goeth before the actiue vertue therfore they ioyne this to that and so referre it to the planet of Saturne which is melancholicke And this is that vertue of the soule whereby man hath vnderstanding knowlege wisedome it comprehendeth the seats of such things as the minde is able to vnderstand and comprehend as also those generall rules and principles which it must afterward bring into vse and practise For this cause this speculatiue vertue must of necessitie go before the actiue because the practike is not very certain and sure without the theorike Afterward followeth that which they call the pollitike vertue which hath for her subiect al morall philosophie They vnderstand by this vertue of the soule that whereby a prudent wise and well experienced man moderateth his naughty desires pernicious affections through his vertue wherby he declareth by practise and setled reason that vertue goodnes which is requisit in the publike societie of men that not onely in his priuate behauiour but also in his publike affaires The principall vertues contained vnderneath it are prudence iustice fortitude and temperance which are commonly called cardinall vertues because they are chief containe vnder euery one of them many other vertues which depend of them as branches do of their stock He is accompted a ciuil good man a iust that hath this vertue which is diuided into sundry kinds according to the diuersity of estats that are in common societie For it is sufficient for a priuate person to haue so much of it as whereby he may know how to guide himselfe honestly according to his estate If he be a father of a family he hath need of that prudēce skil which is necessary for the gouernment of his house If he haue any publicke charge concerning ciuil affaires it is needful for him to haue that art skil and those vertues without which he cannot wel execute his office according to that place degree in which he is set For if he occupieth the roume of a Lawier or Counsailour at the Law he must haue skill and knowledge of the lawes If he be a captaine or souldier he must be skilful in military discipline If he be a iudge magistrate it is necessary likewise that he vnderstand what belongeth to his office If he be a diuine and pastour in the Church the science of Diuinitie which is the knowlege of the holy scriptures is necessary for him not only so much as is requisit for his owne saluation but also that he may be able to instruct others and to direct them in those things that appertaine to religion Besides to al these vertues they adde the heroicall vertue which is no vulgar common vertue but very rare and excellent if I may so speak rather diuine then humane In regard wherof they that were endued with this vertue among the Heathen were placed in a ranke degree by themselues betweene
our birth What similitude there is betweene our spirituall and our natural birth Why we abhorre natural death The first point to be considered touching mans nakednes Gen. 3. 19. The second point Man by nature hath least defence for himselfe A commendation of the hand of man The third point A double vse to be made of our wants Wherin men excell all other liuing creatures The fourth point What we ought to learne by the proportion of our bodies What man is The excellent frame of mans body Who they be that know not themselues Ioh. 15. 1 2 3 4 The soule proceedeth not of the matter Nor of the qualities Nor of the harmonie Nor of the composition of the body The nature of a Hog And of an Elephant The soule of a beast differeth from the substance and nature of his body The facultie of sense commeth not from the body The cause of the life of the body The degrees of mans age Iob 14. 5. The cause of the length and shortnes of life What naturall death is Psal 90. 10. Psal 7. 8 9. Iob 14. 1 2. Of the true difference betweene naturall and diuine Philosophie The cause of so many Atheists Gen. 3. 17 18. Iob 5. 6. The cause of barrennes Nothing abideth still in the same state The cause of the length of life What death is Naturall death Violent death Of the windpipe From whence the cough commeth Esay 2. 22. The blood necessary for life The difference betweene the death of beasts and of man An image of our spirituall death in the bodily Only sinne hurteth the soule What it is to be well A comfort against death Rom. 8. 22. Naturall philosophie affoordeth no found comfort against afflictions or death A profitable contemplation in nature The miserable estate of Atheists that haue no hope of another life Philosophicall reasons against the feare of death Sinne the cause of death Atheists more miserable then beasts The common sayings of Atheists Naturall reason not sufficient to stay the conscience Two sorts of Atheists Why there must needes be a second life What Nature is Nature is a creature The error of Galen such like Atheists nowe adayes What we are to iudge of Nature 1. Thes 5. 23. Dan. 9. 24. Man diuided into three parts One soule in one bodie The soule like to a man that hath many offices Of the seate of the soule in the body The soule compared to an Husbandman The chiefe instruments of the soule Two kinds of vniting things together Of the vnion betweene the soule and the body How the soule is ioyned to the bodie Diuers degrees of nature in the soule Beasts haue some kinde of knowledge The originall of the powers of the Soule An admirable worke of God Why God hath ioyned the body to the soule The naturall knowledge of mans body very profitable Why the soule worketh with sundry instruments Of the Vital and Animal spirites and of their operations The effects of the Vital and Animal spirits in man The Vital Animal spirits are not the soule A wonderfull worke of God 1. Sam. 18. 10. 31. 4. 2. Sam. 17 23. Matth. 27. 5. 1. Thess 5. 23. A comparison of the soule and a workeman A similitude Against the transmigration of soules The aptest instrument for the soule The necessary vse of the humours The humors are in continuall motion What partes of the body come nerest to the soule 1. Cor. 6. 19. Of the entire sanctification of mans bodie The body liueth not to eate but eateth to liue 1. Thes 5. 23. The name of Soule taken diuersly Math. 10. 28. Gen. 6. 17. esai 40. 6. luc 3. 6. leuit 4. 2. ezech 18. 4. rom 13. 1. Gen. 14. 21. 46. 27. When a man is perfectly sanctified Esay 26. 8 9. Luk. 1. 46 47. The soule deuided into three partes Ephe 4. 17 18. Iohn 1. 9. and 8. 12. and 9. 5. and 12. 46. Why the naturall powers are not mentioned in these diuisions Genes 37. 21. Deut. 19. 21. Ierem. 11. 21. Matth. 2. 20. Esay 5. 14. Esay 29. 8. Ierem. 31. 25. Ezech. 7. 19. Deut. 24. 15. leuit 19. 13. Deute 24. 6. Matth. 16. 17. Iohn 1. 12 13. 1. Cor. 2. 11 12 What is meant by liuing soule Genes 1. 1. Cor. 15. 44. What is meant by a naturall and by a spirituall man Genes 2. 7. What is meant by an animal or naturall man The soule put so the affections Gen. 34. 3. Gen. 44. 30. 1. Sam. 18. 1. Deut. 6. 5. matth 10. 39. mar 8. 35. luke 9. 24. iohn 12. 25. How we are to vnderstand that the soule dieth Num. 23. 10. Gen. 22. 16. Ierem. 51. 14. Amos 6. 8. Leuit. 21. 1. The name of soule put for the dead body Iob 33. 18 22. Psalme 30. 3. Psalm 56. 13. and 22. 20. What is meant by Spirite in the Scriptures Psalme 31. 5. luke 23. 46. Actes 7. 59. Eccles. 12. 7. Iob 27. 3 4. Rom. 8. 16. 1. Cor. 2. 11. Psal 33. 20 21. 1. Pet. 2. 11 12. Wisd 1. How the soule is after a sort mortall The ancient Academicall kinde of teaching P●at●n Phad The word of God the true glasse for the minde Who know the soule best The soule is not bred of corporall seede Genes 1. Modestie requisite in searching the trueth How we become guiltie of original sinne What originall sinne is How wee must learne to know the soule When wee shall know our s●lues perfectly What the soule is Varietie of opinions touching the essence of the soule Iohn 3. 6. Why one soule is called vegetatiue another sensitiue the third reasonable Iohn 3. 12. Of the distinction of the soule from the powers there of The soule of the beast is of a corporal substance Gen. 9. 4. Leui. 17. 14. The Vitall spirite compared to the flame of a lampe It is engendred of the blood in the heart God the author of nature Sundry opinion of the reasonable soule The soule proceedeth not frō the elements Rom. 11. 33. Galens opinion of the soule Gal. d● pl●s Hip. Platoes opinion touching the soule Aristotles opinion of the soule Occams opinion of the soule Of the creation of soules according to the Platonists Lib 11. chap. 23. of the citie of God Origens opinion of soules The Platonists opinion of the soule confuted God is not the soule of the world Act. 17. 28. Arat. Phae. How men are the linage of God Platoes opinion of Daemones or celestial spirits Plato dwelt with the Egyptians Lactautius lib. 2. cap. 13. Ecclus. 24. 5. The Soule created of nothing Of the transmigration of soules The regeneration of the Pythagoreans A fond opinion of certaine Heretikes Against the transmigration of soules Why Plato inuented the transmigration of soules Mans nature compared to a Monster How mē become like to beasts The ignorant wrest the sence of good writers Math. 14. 2. marke 6. 14. Luke 9. 7 8. Mat. 16. 13 14. luke 9. 19. Of the Iewes opinion of the transmigration