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A31383 The holy court in five tomes, the first treating of motives which should excite men of qualitie to Christian perfection, the second of the prelate, souldier, states-man, and ladie, the third of maxims of Christianitie against prophanesse ..., the fourth containing the command of reason over the passions, the fifth now first published in English and much augemented according to the last edition of the authour containing the lives of the most famous and illustrious courtiers taken out of the Old and New Testament and other modern authours / written in French by Nicholas Caussin ; translated into English by Sr. T.H. and others. Caussin, Nicolas, 1583-1651.; T. H. (Thomas Hawkins), Sir, d. 1640. 1650 (1650) Wing C1547; ESTC R27249 2,279,942 902

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forementioned Emperour Antoninus saith the wisdom of man consisteth in three points well to behave Antonin l. 5. de vita sua himself towards God which is done by Religion with himself which is done by mortification of his passions and with men which is effected by sparing and tolerating them every where doing good and after he hath done good to have his ears prepared to hear evil IX To govern his desires within the limits of his 9. Government of pretensions capacity and modesty It is a great note of folly to attempt all things and do nothing to be turmoyled with the present and to have always the throat of an enraged concupiscence gaping after the time to come to be vexed with himself and not to be of power to repose within himself to make the steps of honour the degrees of his ruin to raise a fortune like a huge Colossus to make it fall upon his Senec. ep ●● Contemnere omnia quivis potest omnia habere nem● own shoulders and to leave no other witnesses of his greatness but the prints of his fall It is a thing very difficult to have much and impossible to have all but it is so easie a matter to despise all that it consisteth in nothing but in a bare refusal X. To procure such an equality of spirit so even 10. Tranquility so regular that he scarcely feel the approach of happiness and when it is lost not to make any shew of it To behold the good of another as his own and his own as another mans To hold riches and honours as a river that glideth to day for you to morrow for another It is the nature thereof always to run gently what wrong doth it to us When prosperity laugheth on you look back upon adversity which cometh in the rere and remember you have seen tall ships lost in the harbour even as it were in jest S. Augustine pleased to repeat that verse of Virgil Mene sali placidi vultum fluctusque quietos August ep 113. alibi Ignorare jubes desirous thereby to signifie to us that we should no more confide in the prosperities of the world than to a still sea which in his over-great calm oft-times presageth the near approaching tempest Brave and valorous Captains heretofore made a Sacrifice to war in the midst of peace and in the midst of war dressed Altars to Peace to declare that in good we should live in distrust of ill and in evil in hope of good but in both the one and the other ever in equality This verily is one of the master-pieces of wisdom which God imparteth to spirits greatly resigned and who have passed through the most thin and slender searces XI To behave ones self prudently in all kind of 11. Discretion in affairs occasions to examine the tenents and utmost bounds the original progress end Never to judge till you have seen the bottom of the business and therein to carry your self so that if success cannot wait on your desires you may not justly accuse either any crooked intention or want of discretion We are masters of our wils but God hath reserved to himself the command over events XII To be always ready to depart from hence 12. Meditation of death chearfully when death shall sound the retreat Saint Chrysostom saith finely This life is a nest framed of straw Chrys hom 2. in epist Pauli ad Coloss and morter we are the little birds shall we putrifie in the stench of this filthy nest If devotion hath made us wings why are we slothful Let us bravely mount and take that flight which our Eagle tracked out unto us in the day of his Ascension Remember the quintessence of al wisdom is the meditation of death It is a business we should learn all our life time to exercise it once The faults therein committed are irreparable and the loss without recovery This consisteth in three things resignation dis-engagement and union As for resignation be not too faint-hearted nor suffer your self to be called upon to pay a debt which so many millions of men have discharged before you and which so many millions shall likewise pay after you shew to those who visit you patience in your sickness resolution at your last hour and not to desire any thing but spiritual assistances As for your departure go out of the world as the chicken out of the shell I. Dispose of your temporal goods in time by making a just clear and perspicuous will 2. Restore the goods of another 3. Pay your debts as far as you can 4. Lay open your affairs 5. Give pious legacies to charge the Altars of mercy with the last victims 6. Reconcile your self and above all things beware you carry not with you too much confidence and inordinate affection into the other world 7. Take order for the education of your children 8. Dispose of offices if you have any with an upright conscience 9. Forget not the labours of your poor servants After this disengagement draw the curtain betwixt your self and all creatures By a good confession unite your self to your Creatour by the sacred viaticum extream unction by acts of faith hope and charitie by good suffrages of the Church good admonitions good purposes good remembrances of the death of our Saviour yielding your soul up upon a Crucifix as a child who sleepeth on the breast of his nurce The eigthth SECTION The Practice of Devotion and Prayer ONe of the shortest ways to gain wisdom is to be devout Devotion is as it were the flame and lightening-flash of charitie and it is properly a prompt and affectionate vivacitie in Voluntas qu●dam prompta tradendi se ad ea quae pertinent ad Dei famulatum S. Th. 2. 2. quaest 82. S. Dionys de divin nomin cap. 3. Prayer in mount Tabor things which concern the service of God It principally shineth in prayer and in the exercise of the works of mercy Prayer as saith the great Saint Dionysius the Areopagite is as it were a chain of silver which from heaven hangeth downward to draw man up from earth and unite him to God It is the mount Tabor where an admirable transfiguration is made of the soul into God It is the spirit which speaketh to God which poureth it self on God in conclusion it is coloured by God even as Jacobs ews did denote their burden to be of Genes 30. the same colour of which those wands were that they stedfastly beheld It is it which the Apostle pleased to say Beholding the glory of God we are transfigured Corinth 2. 3. Gloriam Domini speculantes in eandem imaginem transformamur à claritate in claritatem tanquam à Domini spiritu into the same image from brightness to brightness as by the spirit of God Prayer is the conduit of grace It is as very well S. Ephraim hath said The standard of our warfare the conservation of our peace the bridle
him There are none but certain Harpies which as saith Cardinal Petrus Damianus flie round about Altars to pillage them who bear him the like good will as Ravens do to carrion He lives in a kind of stupidity of spirit in continual indisposition of body disgrace in his temporal fortunes the fable of the world the object of Heavens anger and earths execration Finally he resembleth an old sepulcher that hath nothing in it but stench and titles Happily then ponder in your heart what the life of a Priest ought to be who is the house of God of the cabinet and as it were of the bosom of God To think a wickedness is a crime to commit it a sacriledge to bear it to the Altar is a sin which hath no proper name there are titles and offices of all vices Oh how pure should that mouth be which approcheth to kiss the son of God! Oh how clean should those hands be which are chosen to purge away the worlds ordures Oh how chaste ought that heart to be that is bedewed with the bloud of the Word Eternal What a horrour when a faithless soul from the bed of wolves goeth out to find the Lamb and carrieth the pollutions of the earth to the Sanctuary of the living God like to that beastly Empress Messalina spoken of by the Satyrist (c) (c) (c) Faeda lupanaris tulit ad pulvinar odorem who bare to the Imperial bed of Claudius her husband the infamy and noisomness of places which should not be so much as named in the Palace of a Roman Emperour S. Peter (d) (d) (d) Instrueba● Petrus discipulos actus vitae suae omni horâ custo●ire in omni loco Deum respicere firmiter cogitationes malas cordi suo advenientes mox ad Christum allidere S. Clem. Ep. 1. ad Jacobum said we must break all ill thoughts by the exercise of the presence of Jesus Christ as the waves are dashed against the rocks And S. Chrysostom (e) (e) (e) Necesse est sacerdotem sic esse purum ut in Coelo collocatus inter ips●s Coeli virtutes medius staret Chrys de Sacerdotio advised Priests to be pure as if they were in Heaven amidst the Angels Chastity saith holy Zeno is happy in virgins strong in widdows faithfull in the married but with Priests it ought to be wholly Seraphicall It is fit he should have little of the body who is made to manage and handle the body of the Son of God It is fit he should have small commerce with the flesh who knoweth how to incarnate the living God in his hands A carnal soul ready to sell his patrimony for a mess of pottage as the unworthy Esau is more fit for hogs than the Sanctuary They heretofore sacrificed to the Sun without effusion of wine and those who sacrifice to the Master of the Sun ought to entermarrie sobrietie with chastitie which are ever mutually linked together The banquets of rich seculars said S. Jerome (f) (f) (f) Convivia vitanda sunt secularium maximè eorum qui honoribus tument Consolatores nos pot●us maeroribus suis quàm convivas prosperis noverint Facile contemnitur Clericus qui s●pe vocatus ad prandium ire non recusat Hieron Ep. 2. Neposian are not so proper for Church-men It is much fitter to comfort them in afflictions than to accompany them in their feasts A Priest who is still present at weddings is never well esteemed of He that would behold the modesty which is to be observed at the tables of Ecclesiastical men let him at the least take a model upon that which Tertullian writeth in his Apologetike of the Primitive Christians Our table saith he hath nothing in it which tasteth of sordidness sensuality or immodesty we eat there in proportion we drink according to the rules of temperance so much we satiate our selves as is necessary for men that must rise in the night to offer their prayers to God We there speak and converse as in the presence of God our hands washed and candles lighted every one reciteth what he knows of holy Scripture and of his own conceit all to the praise of God Prayer endeth the banquet as it gave beginning thereunto From the table we go to the exercise of modesty and honesty You would say if you saw us it were not a supper we had in hand but a lesson of piety The seventh SECTION The fourth perfection of a Prelate which is observed in Zeal and charitie YOur fourth mark is scarlet the sign of the ardent charity and zeal you ought to retain towards the house of God The buckler of brave Champions of the God of Hosts should be Num. 2. Clypeus fortium ejus ignitus viri exercitus in coccineis a buckler of fire and all his souldiers must appear in crimson cassocks You must early learn to bay the hares skin in the hall that you may afterward go into the field for the hunting of souls You must become a wall of fire to serve as a rampart in the house of God You must be a star to run over and enlighten the little world recommended to your charge You must oppose the power of great-ones the strength of the sturdy the wiles of the crafty the close practises of the wicked to divert ill actions advance good leave unprofitable destroy vice plant virtue chastise delinquents recompence men of merit protect the poor justifie the innocent You must be an eye to the blind a foot to the lame arm and hand to the maimed a Sanctuary to all the world You must have as many chains to oblige men to you as God hath given you means of well-doing Let the miseries which in a right line would hasten to you if it be possible may pass no further than you Let your house be a shop where from stones the sons of Abraham may be raised The High-Priest heretofore bare the whole world on his habit of which he was as it were the Advocate and you must think when you are in office all the world is on your shoulders and that both the living and dead shall have a share in the duty which you shall render thereunto It shall be your act to carry the torch of example before the people to instruct men to cure and comfort their infirmity to pray and sacrifice both for the world of the living and those whom death already hath divided from our conversation What charity think you can you have to be discharged from these obligations You must learn Nullum omnipotenti Deo tale sacrificium quale est z●lus animarum Greg. super Ezech. hom 12. to love souls as the most pretious moveables you have in the world to please your self with the places where the objects of your zeal are and the knots of your charge rather than the Courts of Princes when you shall have untamed spirits to govern let them serve as an arrest for
suitable to the greatness of this Mysterie Another having lived free from the bands of marriage caused to be set on his tomb Vixit sine impedimento Brisson for He lived without hinderance which was a phrase very obscure to express what he would say Notwithstanding it was found this hinderance whereof he spake was a woman This may well happen through the vice and misery wherein the state of this present life hath confined us but to speak generally we must affirm had it been the best way to frame the world without a woman God had done it never expecting the advise of these brave Cato's S. Zeno homil de continent Aut hostis publicus aut insanus and whosoever endeavoureth to condemn marriage as a thing not approved by God sheweth that he is either out of his wits or a publick enemy to mankind The great S. Peter in whose heart God locked up 1 Pet. 3. Vi qui non credunt Verbo per conversationem mulierum sine verbo lucri●i●nt the Maxims of the best policie of the world was of another opinion when he judged the good and laudable conversation of women rendered it self so necessary for Christianity that it was a singular mean to gain those to God who would not submit themselves to the Gospel Whereupon he affordeth an incomparable honour to the virtue of holy women disposing it in some sort into a much higher degree of force and utility than the preaching of the word of God and in effect it seemeth this glorious Apostle by a spirit of prophesie foresaw an admirable thing which afterward appeared in the revolution of many Ages which is that God hath made such use of the piety of Ladies for the advancement of Christianity that in all the most flourishing Kingdoms of Christendom there are observed still some Queens or Princesses who have the very first of all advanced the Standard of the Cross upon the ruins of Infidelity Helena planted true Religion in the Roman Empire Caesarea in Persia Theodelinda in Italie Clotilda in France Indegundis in Spain Margerite in England Gysellis in Hungarie Dambruca in Poland Olga in Russia Ethelberga in Germanie not speaking of an infinite number of others who have happily maintained and encreased that which was couragiously established Reason also favoureth my proposition for we must necessarily confess there is nothing so powerfull to perswade what ever it be as complacence and flattery since it was the smoothest attractive● which the evil spirit made use of in the terrestrial Paradise to overthrow the first man setting before him the alluring pleasures of an Eve very newly issued out of the hands of God Now every one knows nature hath imparted to woman a very good portion of these innocent charms and it many by these priviled ges are also powerfull in actions so wicked why should not so many virtuous souls generoully employed in the service of the great God bear as much sway since he accustometh to communicate a grace wholly new to the good qualities that are aimed to his honour I conjure all Women and Ladies who shall read this Treatise to take from hence a generous spirit and never permit vice and curiosity may derive tribute from such ornaments as God hath conferred on them it being unfit to stuff Babylon with the gold and marbles of Sion The second SECTION That women are capable of good lights and solid instruments SInce I see my self obliged by my design to make a brief model of principal perfections which may be desired for the complishment of an excellent Ladie and that this discourse cannot be throughly perfected without observing vicious qualities which are blemishes opposite to the virtues we endeavour to establish I will make use of the clew of some notable invention in so great a labyrinth of thoughts the better to facilitate the way I remember to have heretofore read a very rare manuscript of Theodosius of Malta a Greek Authour touching the nuptials of Theophilus Emperour of Constantinople and his wife Theodora which will furnish us with a singular enterance into that which we now seek for so that we adde the embelishment of so many Oracles of wisdom to the foundations which this Historian hath layed He recounteth that this Theophilus being on the Anno 830. Zonoras saith that she was onely step-mother and relateth it somewhat otherwise but let us follow our Authour point to dispose himself for marriage the Empress his mother named Euphrosina who passionately desired the contentment of her son in an affair of so great importance dispatched her Embassadours through all the Provinces of the Empire to draw together the most accomplished maidens which might be found in the whole circuit of his Kingdom And for that purpose she shut up within the walls of Constantinople the rarest beauties of the whole world assembling a great number of Virgins into a chamber of his Palace called for curiositie The Pearl The day being come wherein the Emperour was to make choice of her to whom he would give his heart with the Crown of the Empire the Empress his mother spake to him in these terms MY LORD AND SON Needs must I confess that since the day nature bound me so streightly to your person next after God I neither have love fear care hope nor contentment but for you The day yieldeth up all my thoughts to you and the night which seemeth made to arrest the agitations of our spirit never razeth the rememberance of you from my heart I acknowledge my self doubly obliged to procure with all my endeavours what ere concerneth your good because I am your mother and that I see you charged with an Empire which is no small burden to them who have the discretion to understand what they undertake It seems to me since the death of the Emperour your father my most honoured Lord I have so many times newly been delivered of you as I have seen thorny affairs in the mannage of your State And at this time when I behold you upon terms to take a wife and that I know by experience to meet with one who is accomplished with all perfections necessary for your State is no less rare than the acquisition of a large Empire the care I have ever used in all concerns your glory and contentment is therefore now more sensible with me than at any other time heretofore It is true O most dear Son that the praise-worthy inclinations which I have observed in your Mujestie give me as much hope as may reasonably by conceived in the course of humane things yet notwithstanding the accidents we see to happen so contrary to their proceedings do also entertain my mind in some uncertaintie That you may take some resolution upon this matter behold in the Pearl of Constantinople I have made choice of the most exquisite maidens of your Empire to the end your Majestie may elect her whom you shall judge most worthie of your chaste affections I beseech God
adhere to silly inventions of their own spirit and you would almost say the Father the Holy Ghost and the Word of God it self were nothing with them in comparison of particular devotions of some Saints or some slight observances which they practise according to their own fancie But if one happen to reprove them upon it they are uncivilly offended therewith and think such as speak with reason are not within the compass of the upright judgement of faith I affirm these kind of proceedings are not according to the order of the Church the which honoureth all Saints yea and the blessed Virgin in a degree infinitely beneath the Divine Majesty nor doth it honour them but to honour God in them and by them But if some abuse mysteries must we therefore overthrow Altars If some popular spirits ill instructed grow superstitious must one therefore become a Libertine Must innocency be forsaken the more to hate the guilty It is a pittifull thing to see good spirits who make profession of Catholick Religion and have in some things good apprehensions of piety to take such liberty of words to themselves that we know not what to make of them Ought not they to consider that a popular errour is one thing and a position of the Church another If some particulars introduce exorbitant devotions let them reject blame and condemn them We neither undertake to defend nor justifie them But when we speak of the invocation of Saints of their Reliques Canonizations Indulgences of the authority of our Holy Father of the Institution of Religious Orders and so many such like which are authorized by general Councels and by the belief of all antiquity doth not a good judgement see that to go about to oppose these Maxims is to do that which S. Augustine speaketh To suffer ones self to run into a folly which hastneth to the height of insolencie He who admitteth a leak in a ship drowns it who divideth Religion hath none at all who resolves to believe this and reject that believes nothing All that which cometh from one same authority ought to be believed with like equality Our faith is not grounded upon natural judgement upon wit and discourse but on the submission we ow to God and the Church which is the Interpretess of his counsels He who abideth therein abides in true wisedom who goeth out of it shall find nothing but an Ocean of disturbances and the shipwrack of his faith The second order of Libertines is of Neuters wavering and distrustfull who are almost upon the indifferencie of Religions and hold their faith as a hawk without leashes It quickly flies a way and leaveth them to replenish more setled brains and more capable souls In this number you have many squeazy stomachs who affect to be Masters in matter of Religion and are extream greedy of all sorts of innovations And if there be some bold spirit who with sensual reason censureth the mysteries of our Religion that man is according to their tast a brave fellow and his books deserve to be bound up in gold and purple The Bible is not wise enough for them their spirit of rebellion findeth faults and contradictions therein They are in search of hidden mysteries as were the Argonautes who went out to win the golden fleece And could they lay hold on Mahomets Alcoran they will not spare to read it the more to confound themselves in the labyrinth of their errours After they have run all over sounded all quoted all they find themselves empty and have nothing so assured as incertainty nothing so undoubted as the loss of their faith which they have almost wholly transformed into a cursed Neutrality the head-long descent of a horrible precipice The third order comprehendeth idle loyterers and people of the throat and kitchen who bear in their ensign for devise that which is said to have been inscribed on Sardanapalus his tomb Drink eat fill thy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self in the ordures of flesh and think thou hast nothing but that which thou affordest to thy sensualitie They all say with Epicurus As for my self I cannot understand any felicitie unless it be in palates in lips in ears in the belly and all that which is common to us with beasts These kind of men have not so much to do as other they are not sollicitous concerning the secrets of nature curious books mystical Cabals the Gospel not Turkish Alcoran they have found their God in themselves and indeed will acknowledge no other but the belly Their continual employment is to furnish out tables for it which are its Altars and to offer unto it dishes and sauces in sacrifice The fourth region containeth the malign covert and narrow observers who yet still retain some fear of the smoke of the faggot behold the cause why they dare not declare themselves in open manner They enter into the fold as wolves clothed in a sheeps skin and tell the sheep they are much affected to their conservation but that the dogs must be taken away which do nothing but deafen their ears with barking both day and night These are such as sow propositions with a double meaning and have ever a back-shop to hide themselves in such as say Catholick religion is good if it were purged from so many superstitions such as deceive young men under colour of doctrine and when they have hit upon a curious spirit whom they esteem retentive of a secret recommended they draw the curtain aside and reveal the mysteries of iniquity to him They are such as make disguises and differences which no man imagined and make truth combat against A theism with so feeble arms that it were much better defended to be left to its own nakedness such as have a store-house of evil books more impure than the stable of Augaeus out of which they derive all their profanations cloying the ears of the simple with a thousand objections ever made in the name of a third person who never dreamt of them Lastly such as silently build the Babylon of execrable confusions The fifth rank comprehendeth all those who have sold their souls to ambition and particular interest and have nothing of religion but seeming and ceremonies They are such as would make no scruple to set a foot upon the throat of their best friends to raise their own fortune higher Such as live fattened up with the Altar being many times enemies of the Altar Such as lift their children aloft with an arm of silver through all the ways of injustice above the heads of men and make the Church a prey to their ambition Such as are present at Divine Service with postures of a puppet-player Such as go to Gods word as to a Comedy to see and to be seen more for Adonis than Jesus and who in conclusion turn all piety into scoffs retaining nothing of it but a fantasm to serve their own ends The sixth manner is of such Vt introierunt quidam homines
profession 173 X. The Examples of great Prelates are very lively spurs to Virtue ibid. S. AMBROSE I. HIs Calling 175 II. A short Elogie of the life and manners of S. Ambrose 179 III. His Government ibid. IV. His Combats and first against Gentilism 182 Oration of Symmachus to Theodosius and Valentinian the Younger for the Altar of Victory Exercise of Pagan Religion and Revenue of Vestals ibid. V. Oration of S. Ambrose against Symmachus 184 VI. The triumph of S. Ambrose in the conversion of S. Augustine 188 VII Dispositions to the conversion of S. Augustine 191 VIII Agitations of Spirit in S. Augustine upon his conversion 194 IX Accidents which furthered this conversion 195 X. The Admirable change of S. Augustine 196 XI The Affairs of S. Ambrose with the Emperours Valentinian the Father and Gratian the son 199 XII The death of the Emperour Gratian and afflictions of S. Ambrose 202 XIII The Embassage of S. Ambrose 204 XIV The persecution of S. Ambrose raised by the Emperess Justina 206 XV. Maximus passeth into Italie 208 XVI Affliction of S. Ambrose upon the death of Valentinian 210 XVII The tyranny of Eugenius and not able liberty of S. Ambrose 211 XVIII The differences of S. Ambrose with the Emperour Theodosius his death 213 THE SOULDIER I. THe excellency of warlike virtue 217 II. He Enterance into the palace of Valour and the illusions of the Salmoneans and Rodomonts 218 III. The Temple of Valour and sage Precepts given by the Christian Sou●dier to refute the manners of the times And first That Piety helpeth Valour 220 IV. Manifest proofs which declare that Piety and Valour are not things incompatible 222 V. Against Duels 224 VI. Against the ill mannage of arms 225 VII Against sensual Love Impurity 228 VIII Against the perfidiousnes of interests 230 IX Short and notable Instructions 231 CONSTANTINE I. THe providence of God over Constantine 233 II. The Nobility of Constantine 235 III. His Education and Qualities 237 IV. His entery into the Empire 238 V. His prowess against Maxentius 242 VI. The death of Diocletian and feats of Arms performed by Constantine against Lycinius 243 VII The vices and passions of Constantine before his Baptism with the death of Crispus and Fausta 245 VIII The calling of Constantine to christianity The progress of his conversion and Baptism 247 IX The acts of Constantine after his Baptism 248 X. The endeavour of good works with the virtues and laws of Constantine 249 XI The Zeal of Constantine in the proceedings in the Councel of Nice 251 XII The government of Constantine 254 XIII The death of Constantine 255 THE STATES-MAN I. THe excellency of politick virtue 263 II. He Table of Babylon drawn from sundry conceptions of the most singular wits of Antiquity 264 III. The destruction of Babylon and the government of the Divine Providence over the Estates of the world 266 IV. The Table of the Citie of God otherwise called The Citie of honest men drawn out of many excellent conceits of ancient Authours and things practised in some former Common-wealths 268 V. Sage Precepts drawn out of the Monuments of the divine Agathopolis 271 BOETIUS I. HIs great Nobility 276 II. The eminent Wisdom and Learning of Boetius 278 III. His enterance into government of state 280 IV. The enterance of Theodorick into Rome and his happy Government by the counsel of Boetius 282 V. The Honours of Boetius and alteration of Theodorick 287 VI. The imprisonment of Boetius 291 VII The death of Boetius 293 THE LADIE I. THat the HOLY COURT cannot subsist without the virtue of Ladies and of their piety in the advancement of christianity 297 II. That Women are capable of good Lights and solid Instructions 298 III. The ten Orders of women and the vicious qualities which Ladies ought especially to avoid 299 IV. The tenth Order of Women full of Wisdom and Virtue 302 V. A brief Table of the excellent Qualities of a Lady And first of true Devotion 302 VI. Modestie 303 VII Chastitie 304 VIII Discretion in the manage of affairs 305 IX Conjugal Love 306 X. The care of children 307 XI The conclusion of the Discourse ibid. CLOTILDA I. HEr Birth and Education 307 II. Clodovaeus requireth Clotilda in marriage 308 III. Embassage to the King of Burgundie for the marriage of Clotilda 310 IV. The arrival of Clotilda in France the life she led in the time of her Wedlock 312 V. The prudence which the Queen used in the conversion of her Husband 313 VI. The conversion of Clodovaeus 315 VII What Clodovaeus did by the perswasion of Clotilda after his Baptism 316 VIII The good success which God gave to Clodovaeus after he became a christian 317 IX The life of Clotilda in her widowhood Her afflictions and glorious death 319 INDEGONDIS X. ISsued from the bloud and house of Clotilda she transporteth the Catholick Faith into Spain 323 XI The persecutions of Indegondis 324 XII The Retreat of Hermingildus and his conversion 325 XIII The Reciprocal letters of the father and the son upon their separation 326 XIV The Treatie of peace between Levigildus and his son by the mediation of Indegondis 327 XV. Hermingildus is wickedly betrayed 328 XVI The letter of Hermingildus to Indegondis and his generous resolution 330 XVII The death of Hermingildus 331 A TABLE OF THE MAXIMS AND EXAMPLES Contained in the third Tome of the HOLY COURT The First Part of the Third Tome touching the Divinitie I. Maxim OF Religion page 339 I. Example OF the esteem we ought to make of faith and Religion 342 II. Maxim Of the Essence of God 343 II. Example The power of God over faithless souls 346 III. Maxim Of the excellency of God 348 The greatness of God compared to the abjectness of man 349 III. Example Of the weakness of man and inconstancy of humane things 352 IV. Maxim Of the providence of God 354 The foundation of truths of the providence of God 356 IV. Example Divers observations upon providence 358 V. Maxim Of Accidents 359 V. Example Of the providence of God over the estates and riches of the world 363 VI. Maxim Of praedestination 365 VI. Example Of the secret power of praedestination 368 VII Maxim Of the Divinity of Jesus 370 Of the revelation of the Word Incarnate and how all creatures bear witness of his divinity ibid. VII Example The triumph of Jesus over the enemies of Faith 373 VIII Maxim Of perfections of Jesus which make him to be beloved 375 Excellencies in the person of our Saviour 376 VIII Example Of the admirable change of worldly love into the love of Jesus Christ 379. The Second Part touching the Order of this present Life IX Maxim OF Devotion 381 IX Maxim OF dark Devotion 382 IX Maxim Affected Devotion 383 IX Maxim Transcendent Devotion 384 IX Maxim Solid Devotion 386 IX Example Of solid Devotion 387 X. Maxim Of interest 389 X. Example Of liberality and the unhappiness of such as seek
water though it be boyled on burning coles returneth to its natural coldness honey assumeth not the nature of wormwood the Lion playeth not the Ape nor doth the Eagle become an Ostrich to trail her wings on the ground Now the nature of the spirit how much the more noble and elate it is so much the more it ought to transfer it self to the consideration of things divine to wit from whence it cometh whither it goeth what within it self it acteth This is saith the Oracle of Roman Philosophie an infallible Senec. praef l. 1. natur quaest Hoc habet argumentum Divinitatis suae quòd illum divina delectant nec ut alieni● interest sed us suis mark of a divine spirit when it pleaseth it self to discourse of things divine and is entertained in these contemplations as with her familiar and peculiar affairs Judge then what indignitie it is to bury this vigour and light of the spirit which God so freely hath communicated to you in frivolous employments and petty fopperies which discolour the lustre and honour of your name What a shame it is to say this Sovereign hand hath moulded man to be the King of creatures and he betraying his nature maketh himself the Comedian the mimike stage-player Man a Stage-player of the world of all creatures acting all sorts of personages but the good and that which his own excellency is obliged unto Which verily is the same the great Tertullian Tertul. de spect c. 2. Homo omnium flagitiorum actor non tantian opus Dei verumetiam imago est tamon corpore spiritu à suo discivit institutore deplored Man is the work and image of God who having apostatized from his Creatour as well in mind as bodie maketh himself an Actour of all the evil personages in the great Comedie of the world Yet that seemeth more tolerable in persons who are not eminent either in judgement learning or spirit but Great-ones whom God hath created advantageously to transcend all others and who should live and converse among men like Angels to play the Hogs and Monkeys abasing themselves to I know not what kind of childishness of spirit and to a life corrupted with the curious delights and voluptuousness of the bodie consider I pray whether this be not a thing as unreasonable in its own nature as prodigious in the effects Secondly It is to do a great wrong to ones self to live in such fashion yea it is a meer frenzy which is not made probable to any man but by the multitude of mad men See you not very well that to employ some rich and precious instrument to a base and sordid use is an act of a man who hath lost his wits If you see a great Monarch employ his purple A great indignitie in the abuse of the spirit robe to stop an oven with and his scepter to shake hay you would crie Out upon it and yet the soul which God hath given you incomparably more precious than the purple and scepter of Kings you suffer to wallow in the filths of flesh you apply it to perpetual idle discourses to vanities quarrels and revenges Is not this wholly to abuse the gifts of Almightie God It is said Nero took delight to dig Folly of Nero. the earth with a golden spade and when there was question about cutting the Isthmus of Corinth a design which long time troubled his brain he went thither led on with musical violins holding in his Mausonii dialog de Neron● hand the golden spade with which he began in the sight of the whole world to break the ground a matter which seemed ridiculous to the wisest living in that Age. For my own part I find it more strange that a noble spirit should amuse it self in things frivolous and impertinent For to dig the earth with gold was to bring back gold to its course since it first sprang from the entrails of the earth but for a heavenly spirit to delve in ordures stenches and dung-hils this is it which is wholly inexcusable especially in the Nobilitie In the third place I say that such manner of proceeding Sacriledge of fair souls is manifest sacriledge for two reasons the first is it retaineth wickedly and traiterously a thing sacred for a profane use S. Augustine in an Epistle Aug. Ep. ad Lucentium that he wrote to Licentius a young man of a noble spirit which a liltle too loosely he abused in the vanities of the world presseth this argument in these terms If by chance you had found a golden Chalice in Si calic●● aur●m invenisses in terra denares illum Ecclesiae Dei. Accepisti à Deo ingenium spiritaliter cure●● ministr●● inde libidinibus in illo Satan● propin●●●eipsum the streets you would take it from the ground and give it to the Church otherwise it would be a sacriledge God hath given you a soul all of gold so excellent it is so delicately purified and you use it as an instrument of sensuality and make of it a vessel of abomination wherein you present your soul to Satan as a sacrifice Fear you not the anger of God The other reason is You not onely with-hold a vessel consecrated to the service of the Omnipotent but you attempt upon the image of God himself This fair spirit which he hath given you as the flower and quintessence of your soul is a true character of the Divinitie and you hasten to prostitute it to publick affections Remember I pray it hath Images of Emperours how much reverenced Senec. de benof l. 3. c. 26. heretofore been held a capital crime to carrie the Emperours picture into a place undecent or uncleanly and expresly Paulus a man of eminent qualitie as one who had been Pretour was accused and prosecuted as criminal under Tiberius for that he took a chamber-pot into his hand having a ring upon his finger graved with the Emperours form And can you think it will be lawful for you to carrie not a dead figure but the living Image of your Heavenly Father into the impurities and pollutions which your exorbitant passions extrude as the scummie froth of folly Is not the blame most formidable which God by the mouth of the Prophet Ezechiel pronounceth against an ungrateful Ezech. 16. 17. Et ●ulisti ●asa decoris tui de ●uro meo atque argento meo fecisti tibi imagines masculin●s fornicata es in eis olcum ma●●● thymiama meum posuisti eoram ei● soul in such manner abandoning it self Ingrateful and wicked as thou art thou then hast dared to take away the most precious vessels framed of my gold and silver to make masculine idols and so to satisfie thy fornications Thou hast caused my oyl to burn and incense to smoke before their altars What ingratitude is like to this Alas what idols are daily made of the gold and silver of God when so many brave spirits
are employed to figure chymeras and monsters in their own sensual wills What oyl burneth and incense smoketh before the devils altar when Abuse of an idolatrous spirit Si quis Christianus ●le●m ●ulerit ad Sacra gentilium vel Synagogam Jud●●rum festi● ipsorum di●bus aut lucer●● accenderit de societate pellatur Canon Apost 70. Hel of science so many talents so many perfections are unprofitably wasted in vice and vanity In the mean time the 70. Canon of the Apostles excommunicateth those who onely bear oyl to the Jews Synagogue or the Paynims Temples And in what account shall we hold the Christians who make a perpetual sacrifice of all the faculties of their souls to the corrupt vices and follies of the world Wise men affirm that beside the fire which shall devour the bodies and souls of the damned for ever there is a hell of science and conscience which shall particularly torment those who have been endowed with a generous spirit and have ill employed it When Adam opened his eyes to see his nakedness his spirit and knowledge served him for a keen knife to transfix his soul his ignorance in that kind was a great part of his felicitie What disastrous misery shall then befal those unhappy spirits of the damned when they shall know their abilities all the good things they might have done and all the ill they have done Although all the flames and tortures should surcease they would find their hell in the eye of their own knowledge and in their own understanding No eye to a man is more troublesom than Bern. l. 3. de consider Nullus ●●lestior oculus enique suo non est aspectus quem tenebresa conscientia suff●gere magis volit minus possit his own It is that which the cloudie conscience desireth most to avoid and can least do it saith S. Bernard speaking of the eye Ponder hereon O Noblemen whether this motive meriteth not to be seriously considered Hell vomiteth up brave spirits who after they have served for instruments of vice are now become the food of flames Augment not the number The knowledge of God of ones self and the studie of virtue is a fair employment of a Noble spirit wherein man cannot be too seriously busied nor more fruitfully The seventh REASON Proceeding from Courage OF all these reasons before alledged which serve as a spur to the Nobilitie seriously to imbrace perfection I see not any comparable to Courage which is a force of spirit consisting in two principal points as Aristotle and S. Thomas Aristot 3. Eth. 22. q. 125 observe to wit to undertake and suffer great things with judgement and by the excitement of honesty This courage among all the excellencies of the spirit Courage compared to the river Tygris by S. Ambrose Ambros in haec verba Gen. 2. Nomen fluminis tertii Tygris Quodam cursis rapido resistentia quaequ● transverberat noque aliquibus cursus ejus impedimentorum har●● obstaculis Greatness of Courage is powerful elate stirring and astonishing and very well S. Ambrose compareth it to the river Tygris which among all streams hath its current most swift and violent so as with an unresistable impetuositie it combatteth and surmounteth all obstacles opposed against it Thus saith he Courage flieth through perils breaketh throngs and works it self a passage through a world of contrarieties This courage is an Eagle which confronteth storms a Lion which opposeth all violences a Diamond which never is broken a Rock which scorneth waves an Anvile which resisteth all the strokes of the hammer It is a thing which with admiration ravisheth heaven and earth to behold in the flesh of a frail and feeble man a spirit to make trial of all accidents which is amazed at nothing which surmounteth all difficulties and which would rather cast it self into the gates of hell with undoubted loss of bodie than into the least suspition of remisness This striketh the spirit with admiration and be it either in military actions or civil Courage is highly valued though success always answer not good enterprises and enemies most cruel are enforced to admire a valour and vigour of spirit that never bowed under an evil which it was not able to vanquish The Historie of Herodotus relateth that one called Herodot Suid. in voci Death of Callimachus Calimachus in the battel of Marathon being found by the Persians stuck all over with arrows like a hedge-hog standing boult upright amongst a heap of dead bodies as if he had been under-propped by the counterpoize of the same arrows they were so astonished with the dauntless valour of this dead man that they held himas immortal Never did Seneca Senec. de constantia sapi●nt so demonstratively shew the strength of his eloquence as in praising the courage of Cato This man saith he hath not opposed nor fought with savage beasts it is for hunters He hath not pursued monsters with fire and sword he lived not in an Age in which it was believed that a man supported Heaven with his shoulders Behold why he was not esteemed A notable praise of strength of Courage as a Hercules nor as an Atlas who notwithstanding fought with greater monsters than Hercules He carried another manner of burden than did the fabulous Atlas He alone combated against ambition a monster of many heads against the vices of a degenerate Citie and which daily like an old house was sinking with the excess of weight This incomparable St●●i● s●lus ●●dentem R●●publicam quātum modo una retrahi manu poterat retinuit donec vel abreptus vel abstractus comitem se ruin● di● sustentat● dedit A singular commendation of Cato man supported the Roman Common-wealth as long as he could yea even when it fell into the abyss of a thousand lamentable confusions he yet held it up with a hand prompt always upon the brink of the precipice and not being able longer to under-prop it over-born as he was by the violence of mischiefs he chose his tomb in the sepulchre of his Countrey What greatness what Majesty Undoubtedly courage hath so much lustre and glitter that obstinacy it self which is a vice in all things else very hard and rude being clothed with the mantle of courage findeth much reputation amongst men Now this generositie of which we speak is a faithful and an inseparable companion of true Nobilitie All great men ordinarily have a courage A lance graven on the skin Dion Chrys Orat. 4. very high and even as certain brave Lacedemonians were born from their mothers womb with a lance pourtrayed and characterized upon their skin so all Noblemen seem to bring magnanimitie into the world from the day of their birth This might be a marvellous motive to lead them in a straight and direct line to great and valiant actions were it not that the evil spirit instantly spreadeth a film over their eyes and makes them feel impressions of meer sluggishness
it is full of gall and darkness You know what is written in the vision of the prophet Elias God is not to be found in the rustling of impetuous winds in boysterous stormes in turmoyles in fire but in a gentle gale which bringeth light and refreshment in its wings Likewise veritie fit to handle the conversion of souls is not ordinarily in these ardent and contentious disputations where the prizes of fast and loose are played but in the repose of a quiet spirit temperate moulded in the hands of a prudent docibleness For faith runneth a different course from human sciences To say why this and why that to sift the causes the effects the tenents the utmost bounds of a point it is the vulgar track of inferiour schools Faith which hath God himself for object who is a bottomless abyss of light and perfection cannot demonstrate all that it believeth otherwise it would not be faith nor God would not no more be God He that seeketh faith seeketh not reason Athens hath nothing to intermeddle with Jerusalem nor the Academie with the Church Our school is the porch of Solomon which teacheth us we must search for God with simplicitie of heart and not with frivolous curiositie Faith moveth upon two poles the first is to believe what God hath revealed the second to believe because he who is an eternal truth hath revealed it without any other restriction specified modification or humane distinction What wrong doth the Creatour to us if he would have us believe more of him than we are able to comprehend It is not for the iron to ask of the Magnet or Load-stone from whence those charms and secret influences come wherewith he attracteth and captiveth him It is enough that he follow When God proposeth a verity unto thee by the voice and general consent of the Church poor man thou kickest thou friskest thou dost appeal to human reason to sense to judgement which have wings too short and insufficient to undertake such a flight Whilest thou therein proceedest in the manner thy faith will be no true faith but a phantasie which will entertain thee with false illusions and leave thee real torments It is a great science in matter of Religion to have a holy and conscientious ignorance All Hereticks saith Tertullian Omnes tument omnes scientiam pollicentur Sapientiae haec veritas ' est interdum sapere quod nolis Hilar. 5. de Trinit initio Third disposition Purity of life promise reason and knowledge All of them assail faith with human understanding God teacheth us another way which is to adore his mysteries with submission of spirit and make of our own proper judgements a sacrifice on the Altar of faith The third thing which you are to have in great recommendation is diligently to purge your conscience from the rust of sin The spirit of God is pleased and fed amongst lilies and nothing so much hindereth heavenly doctrine as impuritie of life Pearls are dissolved in vineger and truth in a heart made bitter with the corruption of vice If you desire that it should come to you observe three things exactly First endeavour as much as you can possibly to free your self from a certain spirit of presumption which puffeth men up and inebriateth them with the love of their own judgement before they be throughly awakened and from hence it cometh that they affectionately imbrace themselves and make such esteem of their own thoughts words maxims that all seemeth gold This is a pernicious illusion and which stoppeth up all excess to our Saviour who is much pleased to converse with the humble Secondly live with great puritie of soul and body Qui diligit cordis munditiem amicum habebit Regem incorruptio facit esse proximum Deo Prov. 2. 2. Sap. 6. carefully preserving your self from being engulfed in sensual affections pleasures and ordures of flesh which bury the soul in a puddle and make it uncapable of all good God hath not upon earth a more pleasing hostess than purity of heart 'T is that which procures for us the amity of the Sovereign King and placeth us near the Divinity Finally labour to adorn your self with Charity and the very bowels of pitie towards the poor and persons afflicted assisting them according to the ability which you have and when you fortified with such arms shall daily knock at the gates of Heaven by incessant prayer asking grace speaking and conferring oft-times with some Catholick Doctour virtuous charitable and peaceful I have infinite hopes the Father of light will dart upon your heart his beams and give you leave to know the truth In the mean space ponder a little in your heart Four very notable points to discover the falshood of the pretended four notable points which will make you discover the falsitie of the pretended Religion The first is the beginning The second the progress The third the foundation of the Doctrine The fourth the fruits Behold four touch-stones to judge aright of Religion If all this do well accord with reason and veritie in the pretended Religion I give you leave to follow it but if all therein be tottering and ruinous I beseech you open your eyes a little and view your misery after you have so often shut up your ears against reason and your heart against charitie Then first of all consider whether this Religion Original you profess be ancient or new If it be ancient and the Religion of the Apostles you ought to follow it if new you ought to condemn it no man doubteth Now it is as new as noveltie it self which is proved first by the name thereof since every Religion which is called reformed ought necessarily to have been deformed for a thing is not reformed which never had deformitie This is clear And every Religion which is said to be reformed in things essential as are Sacraments was then before deformed in matters essential and so deformed that in a word it was no longer a Religion For it is as impossible a Religion can subsist without the veritie of faith and Sacraments as to say that a man can be a man without a reasonable soul Now this Religion of which we make question according Pretended religion new and therefore none at all to your saying was deformed in essential things to wit in Sacraments whereby it appeareth it was no more a Religion than a lying truth to speak properly is truth it self Wherefore we must conclude that those which boast they have reformed it within these hundred years have made it wholly new as if the Sun had been annihilated for a thousand years space and that God came to restore it it would be an absolute new Sun so is this Religion wholly new Behold then The proof thereof is evident if every new Religion as is most evident carrie its condemnation see you not that this same which you profess is false since it proveth it self to be new and onely discovered
Apostles The Pretended quite contrary faigning they honour Saints as one would Socrates or Phocion perpetually mock thereat break down their images call them by the name of idols and false gods The Catholick Church holdeth man hath free wil Genes 4. Deut. 30. Eccl. 15. supported in this article upon so many passages of Scripture The Pretended dispoil man of all liberty which is to destroy the worth of his conditions and to deprive him of the best part of his essence The Catholick Church holdeth the bloud of our Saviour is a treasure infinite and very able to purge away all manner of evil and to merit all good but that it is applyed to us by works of satisfaction and merit and purgative pains in those who stand in need of it as a medicine which profiteth the sick man by the co-operation he bringeth The Pretended teacheth good works are not necessary to salvation but onely faith justifies which is to open a gate to the corruption of good manners and to all kind of liberty The Catholick Church believes a Purgatory for souls which going out of the bodie are not yet purified grounded therein on 19. or 20. passages of Scripture all understood by the ancient Fathers according to our belief The Pretended having disturbed the ashes of the dead deprive them of the assistance and prayers of the living contrary to divine and humane laws and the manifest practice of all antiquity The Catholick Church makes a Sacrament of marriage according to S. Paul and the interpretation of most eminent Fathers of the Church The Pretended make their marriages like those of Barbarians The Catholick Church holdeth the reality of the body of CHRIST in the Sacrament of the Altar and believe that under the Sacramental species which are sensible and corruptible our Saviour subsisteth with a glorious body which is called by S. Paul a spiritual body because it is dignified with qualities and conditions of spirit though it loose not the essence of a body She adoreth therein with all humility that which she cannot comprehend sufficiently after express passages of Scripture the decision of fourty Councels the testimony of five hundred Authours ancient grave and sincere Adding from the authority of the most illustrious Councel of Nice that it is the unbloudy Sacrifice presented for the expiation of the sins of the world The Pretended will place in stead of it chimaeraes imaginary figments cessation of Sacrifices and abominable desolation The Catholick Church publisheth confession and remission of sins by the ministery of Priests as the Son of God did institute it in S. John The Pretended shaking off so wholsom a yoak hath made himself a John 10. way to liberty and dissolution The Catholick Church acknowledgeth a visible Head on earth established by the express word of Jesus Christ in S. Matthew averred by all the holy Fathers Matth. 15. confessed by the continuation of a lawful succession in the revolution of so many Ages The Pretended seek to bring into the house of God an anarchy of the children of Belial The Catholick Church is the bright star of truths The Pretended is a furious Comet which throws disorder and poyson into all the parts of the world To say truly should an Angel have spoken to it yea could it create a golden Age never might this design be accomplished by ways so furious and turbulent But having cost France so much gold and bloud what hath it done but that which is mentioned by the excellent pen of Cardinal Berule in the Preface of the greatness of Jesus A Church without Apostles Apostles without mission Pastours without sheep sheep without Shepheards Faithful without Churches Christians without Baptism Prophets without miracles Temples without Altars Altars without Sacrifices a Religion without ceremonies a Law without obedience a Faith without works and a Charity without effects Behold excellent pieces and well worthy of a reformed Church In the name of God weigh at leisure these considerations Humamum fuit errare diabolicum per animositatem in errore manere August de verbis Apost serm which would deserve a whole volume and since you are convinced by reason kick no longer against the prick go no more about to forge difficulties nor say how shall I put this in execution What means have I to do it What will such and such say What will our whole side say in general Must I confess I have erred and a thousand other thoughts which are true illusions You shall no sooner set your foot in the Roman Catholick Church with so many men of note lately converted but all these fantasies will vanish you shall live in peace of conscience and shall receive before God glory immortal O that we might quickly see that great day wherein France may no longer speak but with one tongue wherein the names of Lutherans and Calvinists may be banished out of the memories of men wherein all French-men reunited under one faith one law one Head one Church may eternally bless the name of Jesus What joy what comfort what embracements of both sides what consolation for so much afflicted kindred which waste themselves with grief and sorrow for these poor straglers what satisfaction for the sacred person of the King what honour for France what peace for the Church what edification for all the world what triumphs for Heaven what blessings of God will fall upon their heads who shall give example of this reunion and shall consent to the peace safety and honour of this Monarchy The third OBSTACLE To live by Opinion THe tree of the knowledge of good and evil Over much wit troubleth us doth also yield fruits which cost us very dear we labour here with too much application of wit which goeth up and down searching and prying into all the objects of the world often forsaking the better for the worse S. Thomas most judiciously S. Them 1. 2. quaest 8. observeth that there is much difference between the natural appetite the sensual and the intellectual The natural aimeth always at things which are really Intellectual appetite faulty good for her and proportionable the sensual is scattered the intellectual much more to desire evil plaistered over with the semblance of good The plant desireth moysture with which it is nourished and will never take a stone for the dew Man having too much wit and sense not contenting himself with things that really are good and truly consonant to his nature forgetteth others in his idea which are good in apparance and evil in substance Notwithstanding apparence taketh upon her when Apparence she hath seduced the sense and conquered the imagination to dive even into the Cabinet of the Prince which is the understanding and putting false spectacles upon his eyes to make him believe that black is white glass is diamond and darkness light It is necessary that the will should dance to this tune and pursue the good which is represented unto her by the
what yce would not they pass to expiate the errours of their passed life From what Scepters what Empires what Diadems would not they voluntarily and freely dispoil themselves to purchase one hour of time and employ it in the rigours of a most austere penance Yet you suppose it may be lawful for you to live in this childish stupidity II. How many think you at the very instant when you read these lines are there of souls newly dislodged from bodies brought to the tribunal of God condemned to flames for this ill expence of time What know you at how little a threed the sword of Justice hangeth over your heads And you notwithstanding resemble snails which sing when their houses are on fire III. Take so much pain to avoid an eternal unhappiness as to raise to your self a little treasure out of the thrift of time by taking every day be it never so little leisure to retire your self within your self to behold from whence you come and whither you go and what passeth within you study in the book of your conscience which must be laid open and perhaps sooner than you think for IV. Prepare couragiously by the advise of those who guid your conscience a little oeconomy of all your actions in the day keep them strictly as much as you may possible and if you happen to loose time do not like spend-thrifts who loose and know not what they loose see why and how you loose that you may seasonably give remedy thereunto The seventh OBSTACLE Intemperance of tongue THis super-aboundance of time and idleness which ordinarily is amongst Courtiers doth undoubtedly cause in them so violent an overlashing of tongue that now adays it swelleth like another deluge overflowing all mankind Evagrius a good Evagrius apud Melissam The tongue compared to the Almond tree Authour cited by Melissa in the Bibliotheke of the Fathers hath produced a passage very remarkable to wit that among trees the Almond blossometh first of all and is the first that is pinched with frost and amongst the parts of man the tongue first of all cometh forth to the field and is the first surprized in the snares of Satan If all those who at this present might be taxed for their tongues should loose the use thereof the world would be replenished with dumb men but the evil spirit handleth his business much otherwise than the fowlers These catch birds to bereave them of liberty he layeth hold on the tongue to give it a false freedom to speak all things Three sorts of tongues at this day are most powerfully predominant in the occasions of the world the vain the slanderous and the scoffing The vain seemeth to me to have been mystically signified by the Prophet Isaiah under the title of a Isaiah 18. Vaeterrae cymbale alarum feathered cymbal The cymbal was an instrument composed of thin plates of brass with certain small bars of iron fastened and cross billited in the plates wherewith they made a great noise Others think the cymbals are bells which according to the opinion of some were consecrated to the service of the Church by Pope Sabinian It is not at this day that bells are in request but as for feathered bells they are things unheard of And yet notwithstanding The tongue a feathered bell the tongue is not onely a bell according to the allegorical interpretation of the words of the Prophet but a feathered bell The bell goeth not out of its steeple but the tongue cannot contain it self in its palate She maketh herself wings by the help of feathers and paper and after endeavoureth to pass the seas and to bear fire very far into the world A slight word spoken merily in the secret retirement of a closet shall sometimes be told again an hundred leagues off and shall enkindle in the hearts of many a fire able to put all into combustion The The tongue of the cymbal tongue of the cymbal as it is a cymbal is not the worst it offendeth more through complacence than malice It is a tongue truly vain which feedeth it self with a petty affectation of discourse with slight lies with trifling flatteries with prattle and tattle In this predicament we ordinarily place the tongues of indiscreet women The Gyants after the inundation of waters would build the tower of Babel Otiosae verbosae curiosae loquentes qu● non oportet 1 Tim. 5. 13. but women in the deluge of tongues raise the turrets of babble through an excess of idleness indiscretion and curiosity In the same rank are the tongues of an infinite number of effeminate Gallants who waste all their time in courting women complements affectations meer fopperies had they no other ill in them than never to pronounce a serious word yet are they culpable enough but lying and flattery wait on them as the shadow doth on the body A great note of the corruption of this Age is the liberty of lying which reigneth even in the mouthes of many men of quality It seemeth now adays that to lie is no longer a vice but a necessity of nature The Sages termed truth to be a Veritie sea which is never moved a haven where no man suffereth ship-wrack a way which wearieth not a gate which never is shut against any but at this present it is a sea where few merchants sail a haven little frequented a way which to many seemeth to be stopped up with thorns and briars and a gate which almost is never opened It is said Augustus Caesar after a long enquiry into all parts of his Empire found but one man who was accounted never to have told a lie for which cause he was deemed capable and worthy to be the Sacrificer in the Temple of truth If at this day the like inquisition should be made I much fear the Altar of Verity would rather be without a Priest than the shrine of lies without victims Little Children in their beginning practise this trade the spirit of imposture openeth the way unto them by the tongue making them in lies to find the key of all vices In speaking falsely one is so accustomed Lying the key of vice to lying that he liveth therein as in his proper element It is practised with as much boldness as a man would desire advantage to defend a just verity the ordinary proceeding of these counterfeit spirits will make us henceforth believe that to assure a thing with so much confidence is to affirm it is false Lies are most especially every where predominant Impertinent prattle in pratlings and flatteries which in my opinion are come to the height of extremitie so exorbitant they are And it is no wonder since the spirits of men are so disposed thereunto that those which have lost all the marks and impressions of virtue will yet retain the tribute which is praise They see themselves voluntarily to babble and self-love hath veiled their eyes with so gross an ignorance that they may do it
government of the Church III. Throughly to retain the summary of the Christian doctrine to inform your self of the explication of every Article not for curiosity but duty To read repeat meditate ruminate them very often To teach them to the ignorant in time of need But above all to give direction to your family that they may be instructed in those things which belong to the knowledge of their salvation It is an insupportable abuse to see so many who drag silk at their heels and have Linx's eyes in petty affairs to be many times stupid and bruitish in matter of Religion and in the knowledge of God IV. To abhor all innovation and liberty of speech which in any the least degree striketh at the ancient practices of the Church V. And therefore it is necessary as our Father Judicious notes of S. Ignatius concerning sincere faith S. Ignatius hath observed to praise and approve Confession which is made to a Priest and the frequent * * * Haec Authoris 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 notanda non probanda Communion of the faithful interpreting the devotion of others in a good sense VI. To recommend the Sacrifice of the Mass to love practice perswade others to the laudable custom of being present thereat as much as may be To esteem Church-musick prayers Canonical hours Supplications Processions and such like VII To praise the Orders of Religion the vows of poverty chastity obedience works of supererrogation and evangelical perfection ever generally preferring virginity and continency in discourse before marriage VIII To esteem of Reliques to recommend the veneration and invocation of Saints to be much affected to the service of the most blessed Mother of God to approve of pilgrimages which are orderly performed Indulgences and Jubilies which the glorious King S. Lewis recommended to Philip his son in his last words IX To have a religious opinion of the abstinences and fasts instituted by the Church and of the manner of penances and mortifications which religious and other devout persons piously practice X. To maintain the commandments of the Church and ordinances of Superiours both by word and example and though their lives should not be conformed to their doctrine yet not to detract nor murmure at their actions in publick or private thereby to alter in the peoples belief the reverence and respect to their dignity but as much as shall be expedient privately to admonish them of their defective carriage in their charges XI Highly to esteem the doctrine of sacred Theologie which is taught in schools and to make account of the great Doctours whom the Divine providence hath raised in this latter Age valourously to oppose heresies XII Not to insist in ordinary discourses upon exaggerations comparing men who live in this Age with the Apostles Doctours and Saints of antiquity XIII To fix our selves upon the resolutions of the Church that what our own peculiar reason would judge to be white we to esteem it black when the decrees of the Church it self shall be so always preferring the judgement of the Church before our private opinion knowing that humane reason especially in matters of faith may easily be deceived but the Church guided by the promised Spirit of truth cannot erre XIV Not in considerately to be embroyled in the thorny controversies of predestination Highly to commend grace and faith but warily without prejudice of free-will and good works XV. Not so to speak of the love and mercy of God that one may seem thereby to exclude the thoughts and considerations of fear and divine justice Behold the ordinary rules to preserve your self in faith If you now desire to know how this virtue is purified and refined in mans heart and in what consisteth the excellency of its acts behold them here You must carefully take heed of having onely a dead faith without charity or good works which S. Augustine calleth the faith of the devil It is a night-glimmer obscure and melancholy but lively faith is a true beam of the Sun The acts of a strong and lively faith are I. To have great and noble thoughts of God as Heroick acts of faith Matth. 8. that brave Centurion of whom it is spoken in S. Matthew who supposed the malady health death life of his servant absolutely depended upon one sole word of our Saviour and thought himself unworthy he should enter into his house Cassius Longinus a Pagan Cassius Longinus libro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so learned that he was called the Living Librarie one day reading Genesis could not sufficiently admire the sublime speculations which Moses had of the Divinity when he wrote of the worlds creation that God at the sound of one sole word made the great master-pieces of this universe to rise out of nothing as heaven earth water the Sun and Moon II. To believe with great simplicity removed from all manner of curiosity and nice inquisition God Si levaveris cultrum tuum super eo polluetur Exod. 20. would not the point of the knife should be lifted up on his Altar to cut it So likewise the point of humane spirit must not be raised on the Altar of faith nor the curtain drawn to enlightē the mysteries with the torch of reason S. Lewis was most perfect in this degree who would not stir a foot to behold a miracle in confirmation of his belief III. To believe with great fervour esteeming nothing impossible to your faith as did that simple shoemaker who under a King of the Tartars removed Paulus Veneus l. 1. c. 18. de reb orient a mountain in the sight of the whole world by the fervour and simplicity of his faith IV. Not to stagger nor be afflicted when you ask any thing of God in your prayers holding it undoubted that it will be granted if it be for the greater glory of the Sovereign Master and your more advantageable profit You must always hold your hands lifted up in some kind as Moses did even to the Exod. 17. setting of the Sun to vanquish our Amalekites V. To have a generous heart and full of confidence in adversity not to admit distrust during the storm but with firm footing to expect the consolation of heaven even when we shall be in the shades of death as said the Prophet VI. Little to prize temporal goods in comparison of eternal To be ready to dispoil ones self from all the pleasures and commodities of the world if there be any danger of faith as that brave Courtier Hebr. 11. Moses who forsook the contentments of Pharaohs Court to be afflicted with his own people VII To give alms liberally with a firm belief that the hand of the poor is the treasury of God VIII To employ even life it self as so many Martyrs have done and to seal your faith with your own bloud This is the most heroical act but yet it ought to be guided by discretion Now to make easie the acts of faith I.
the deluge which after it had born the whole world in the bowels thereof amongst so many storms and fatal convulsions of universal nature reposed on the mountains of Armenia So S. Monica when she so long time had carried in her entrails and heart a spirit as great as this universe among so many tears and dolours so soon as she was delivered of this painful burden went to take her rest on the mountains of Sion A little before her death beholding Heaven from a high window which opened on a garden she seemed there already to mark out her lodging so much she witnessed resentment and extasie towards her son Augustine who at that time made this admirable colloquie with her couched by him afterward in his Confessions The conclusion was that she said unto him My son I have now no more obligations to the world you have discharged all the promises of Heaven to me and I have consummated all the hopes I might have on earth seeing you a Catholick and which is more resolved to perfection of the life you have embraced When it shall please God to call me I am like fruit ripe and falling that holdeth on nothing Soon after she betook her to her bed being surprized with a feaver which she presently felt to be the messenger of her last hour Behold the cause why she being fortified with arms and assistances necessary for this combat took leave of Augustine and his brother there present affectionately entreating them to remember her soul at the Altar onely meditating on Heaven and neglecting the thought of the land of Africa which she had seemed at other times to desire for the sepulcher of her body And as her other son said unto her Madame my mother we as yet are not there we hope to close your eyes in our own countrey and burie you in the tomb of your husband this holy woman seeing this man would still tie her to the present life and divert her from cogitation of death which to her was most sweet beheld him with a severe eye and then turning her self towards her son Augustine Hearken saith she what he saith as if we absent from Africa must needs be further from God She often cast her dying eyes towards this son who was her precious conquest and who in her sickness served her with most particular assistances affirming that Augustine had ever been a good son towards her and though he had cost her many sorrows he never had forgotten the respect due to a mother Verily there was a great sympathie between the soul of such a mother and such a son which was infinitely augmented after this happy conversion and therefore we must give to nature that which belongs to it The child Adeodatus seeing his Grand-mother in the last agony as possessing the affections of his father threw out pitifull out-cries in which he could not be pacified And S. Augustine who endeavoured to comfort them all upon so happy a death withheld his tears for a time by violence but needs must he in the end give passage to plaints so reasonable The Saint died as a Phenix among Palms and they having rendered the last duties to her pursued the way begun directly for Africk Behold how the conversion of S. Augustine passed and though many cooperated therein yet next unto God S. Ambrose hath ever been reputed the principal Agent and for that cause his great disciple said of him (b) (b) (b) Aug. contra Julianum Pelagianum l. 1. c. 6. Excellens Dei dispensator qu●m veneror ut patrem in Christo enim Jesu per Evangelium ipse me genuit eo Christi ministerio lavacrum Regenerationis accepi Ambrose is the excellent steward of the great father of the family whom I reverence as my true father for he hath begotten me in Jesus Christ by the virtue of the Gospel and God hath been pleased to make use of his service to regenerate me by Baptism Whilest stars and elements shall continue it will be an immortal glory to the Bishop Ambrose to have given the Church a S. Augustine of whom Volusianus spake one word worth a thousand (c) (c) (c) Volusian Epist 2. Vir est totius gloriae capax Augustinus In aliis sacerdotibus absque detrimento cultus divini toleratur inscitia at cum ad Antistitem Augustinum venitur Legi deest quicquid ab eo contigerit ignorari Augustine is a man capable of all the glorie of the world There is much difference between him and other Bishops The ignorance of one Church-man alone prejudiceth not Religion but when we come to Bishop Augustine if he be ignorant of any thing it is not he but the law which is defective because this man is as knowing as the law it self The eleventh SECTION The affairs of S. Ambrose with the Empeperours Valentinian the father and Gratian the son LEt us leave the particulars of the life of S. Ambrose to pursue our principal design which is to represent it in the great and couragious actions he enterprized with the Monarchs of the world Let us not behold this Eagle beating his wings in the lower region of the ayr but consider him among lightenings tempests and whirl-winds how he plays with thunder-claps and ever hath his eye where the day breaketh The state of Christianitie stood then in need of a The state of Christendom brave Prelate to establish it in the Court of Great-ones The memory of J●lian the Apostata who endeavoured with all his power to restore Idols was yet very fresh it being not above ten years past since he died and yet lived in the minds of many Pagans of eminent quality who had strong desires to pursue his purpose On the other side the Arians who saw themselves so mightily supported by the Emperour Constans made a great party and incessantly embroyled the affairs of Religion Jovinian a most Catholick Emperour who succeeded Julian passed away as a lightening in a reign of seven moneths After him Valentinian swayed the Empire who had in truth good relishes of Religion but withal a warlick spirit and who to entertain himself in so great a diversitie of humours and sects whereon he saw this Empire to be built much propended to petty accommodations which for some time appeased the evil but took not away the root He made associate of the Empire his brother Valens who being a very good Catholick in the beginning of his reign suffered himself to be deceived by an Arian woman and did afterward exercise black cruelties against the faithfull till such time as defeated by the Goths and wounded in an encounter he was burnt alive by his enemies in a shepherds cottage whereunto he was retired so rendering up his soul in the bloud and flames where with he had filled the Church of God The association of this wicked brother caused much disorder in the affairs of Christendom and often slackened the good resolutions of Valentinian by coldness and
Beware how you enter into the list among so many noble spirits there to discover your weaknesse and to adde nothing to the lustre of the honour of so many worthy Ancestours but to render your own crimes the more remarkable Shew your self herein a reasonable man and endeavour that all your actions may be as lines which grow from the centre of wisdome to be produced with all felicitie Remember things past rectifie the present foresee those to come Above all learn to set a true estimation upon every thing in the world and suffer not your self to be surprised by the illusions of so many objects which when they have charmed the eyes and overthrown reason leave nothing behind them but sorrow to have done ill and impotencie of doing well In conversation take the measure of your self and the like of those with whom you deal to husband and accommodate your self reasonably to all the world yielding to every one the respect which his merit seems to require The exercise of devotion will not hinder you from the endeavour how to become an able man in your profession from being honest civil discreet affable liberal obliging stout couragious patient which are the principal qualities of a Courtier It is not desired that to be devout you should have a spirit drowzie sluggish overwhelmed not that through overmuch simplicitie you make profusion of your self in an Age where bountie seemeth to be the prey of insolent spirits Wisdom will teach you neither to intrude nor pour out your self to dissemble through virtue that which ought to be concealed to adapt your self to companies and affairs to believe nothing lightly nor to promise nor decide any thing without consideration to persevere in certain things not ill because you have begun them not to be harsh nor too much complying since the one tasteth of brutishness the other inclines to flatterie To propose to your self good and evil which may arise from an affair to moderate the one and tollerate the other Above all honour the King next after God as the source of all greatness and the fountain of the most noble lights which reflect on Nobilitie Honour him with profound respect as the lively Image of God Love him sincerely serve him with all fidelitie If you be employed in affairs and governments endeavour to persist therein with conscience and honour which are the two mansions of a great soul If you have merit without employment and recompence say not therefore that all is lost It is a good business to be well at rest to manure your spirit to enable your self with reading and peaceable conversion to govern your house Learn nothing but what you ought to know Search that onely which you may profitably find desire nothing but what you may honourably wish for And be not conceited to run after a spectre of imaginarie favour nor to mount to a place where you cannot stay without fear nor fall without ruin So many great Monarchs so many Princes Lords and valorous men who are come from Courts and the profession of arms to enter into the Temple of pietie assure us this life is capable of Saints and that no man ought to despair of virtue but he who renounceth it If the brevitie of this Treatise would permit I would willingly set before you a David a Josias an Ezechias a Charlemaign a S. Lewis a Hermingildes a Henry a Stephen a Casimire a Godfrey of Bovillon a Wenceslaus an Edward an Elzear an Amideus I would make you see flourishing Squadrons of Martyrs drawn from warfare amongst which you would admire a Maurice an Exuperius a Sebastian a Marius a Mennas an Olympiades a Meliton a Leontius a Maximus a Julian an Abdon a Sennen a Valens a Priscus a Marcellus a Marcellinus a Severinus a Philoromus a Philoctemon and so many such like Finally I would shew in the latter Ages men worthy of all honour eminent in arms and enobled with singular pietie but I now content my self to draw from Eusebius Theodoret Nicephorus Zozimus Socrates Sozomenus Cedrenus and above all Cardinal Baronius the life of Great Constantine who hath been the very prime man amongst Christian princes and hath witnessed especially after his Baptism a masculine pietie and a great example of sanctitie IMP. CAES. FLAVIVS CONSTAN AVG. CONSTANTINE The first SECTION The Providence of God over Constantine I Will shew to Christian Nobilitie its source in the life of the prime Gentleman of Christianitie If we respect antiquitie greatness and dignitie we shall not find a Prince either more anciently noble than he who first of all among Emperours deserved the title of Christian or more truly great than he who so happily engraffed the empire of the universe on the tree of the Cross or more justly honourable than he who cemented his honour with the bloud of the Lamb. It is the admirable Constantine Greatness of Constantine who so perfectly allied valour to pietie Monarchy to humilitie the wisdom of the Cross to the government of the world the nails and thorns of the passion to the Diadem of Kings and delights of the Court that he hath left matter of meditation for the wise of profit for Religious of imitation for Monarchs and of wonder for those who admire nothing vulgar Behold a marvellous Theatre of the providence of Theatre of Divine Providence God whereunto I would willingly invite all those spirits repleat with humane policie and devested of heavenly Maxims who are onely great by the greatness of their ruin to see how the breath of God demolisheth the Towers of Babel to raise the walls of Sion how the subtil are surprized in their subtility how the science of men becometh blind in its proper lights how the vigour of the world is slain by its own hands how stabilitie is overturned by the supports it chooseth how the spirit of flesh at unawares contributeth to plant the Gross on the top of Capitols and heads of Monarchs by the same ways wherewith it promised to over-cloud them with darkness and abysses I here produce a Constantine beed up very young in the Court of Diocletian who had an intention to become a scourge to Christianitie but God surprized him therein as Moses in the Court of Pharaoh to stop the stream of persecution to calm the tempests of the time confound Idols and raise the Church on the ruins of Gentilism Reader stay a little on the frontispice of this history and behold how the Eternal Providence led this young Constantine by the hand like another Cyrus to humble the Great-ones of the earth before his face and to give him hidden treasures to take Isaiah 49. from him so many bars and impediments to open for him so many gates of iron and to cause so many Kings to turn their faces and afford him their place There was at that time twelve heads which alreadie either wore the diadem or thought themselves capable of it Diocletian and Maximian held the highest place
understanding this defeat became so furious that he caused the head of his prisoner to be cut off with his wife and children by his second marriage commanding through extremitie of cruelty to throw the body into a ditch which was executed Nor content with this he re-entereth into Burgundie boyling with choller with intention to recover all to his obedience but he found himself assaulted by the Burgundians in a battel who slew him and knowing him by his long hair they cut off his head and fixed it on the point of a launce to serve for a sad spectacle to the French This accident afflicted the heart of the mother who bewailed her son with inconsolable tears as well because he was the first whom she had bred with all tender affection as for that she seeing him dead in the pursuit of so many bloudy acts was full of anxiety in the matter of salvation of his soul The poor Queen fortified her self as much as she might against the violences of sorrow and armed her self against other accidents which she foresaw might grow from the evil dispositions of her children Clodomer left three sons very young whom the holy woman bred up in her house and near her person into whom the most excellent Maxims of all wisdom and piety were distilled These little children very well bred and gently trained by the very good precepts of their grand-mother promised something excellent in time to come and served as a most sweet lenitive to this disconsolate turtle to sweeten the acerbities she had conceived upon the death of their father when behold a horrible frenzie crept into the souls of Childebert and Clotharius her two sons which is read in all our histories the brows whereof do blush to leave a blemish of execration on the wicked exorbitancy of ambition It were much fitter for the great men of the earth to have gnawing vultures and sharp rasors in their entrails than to nourish such a passion which being onely puffed up with a smoke violateth all it hath therein of right or humanity to fatten it self with bloud and never as it were openeth its eyes but in the flames of the damned Childebert and Clotharius sons of the great Clodovaeus and the holy Clotilda despoyling themselves of all respect sweetness and humanity conceived a mortal jealousie against their little Nephews imagining their mother would breed them up to their prejudice and so not taking counsel of ought but their own bruitish passion they resolved to be rid of them The poor children were perpetually under the wing of their good grand-mother Clotilda who could never suffer them out of her sight such fear had she of ill habits which are easily made to slide into the hearts of children by the corruption of evil companie These infamous Uncles besought their mother to let their little Nephews come to visit them to have thereby some harmless recreation promising to restore them again speedily into her hands The holy woman who could not imagine the execrable malice which was hatched in the hearts of these unnatural sons consented these little ones should go fearing lest the denial she might make would further exasperate the suspition of the suppliants Yet did she even then quake for fear and bidding them farewel kissed them with redoubled embracements raptures and affections not being able to contain her passion nor the presage of her unhappiness The little innocents went to the slaughter with a smiling countenance as children who have walks of recreation and play in their heads When they had them in their full power they dispatched a messenger to their mother to bear unto her most unwelcome news For he was commanded to shew her a poynard and a cyzars requiring her she would make choice which of these she should judge fittest for her grand-children either to pass them by the dint of sword or forcibly to shave them and make them Monks Clotilda extreamly astonished at this impudence answered As well dead as Monks which some very inconsiderately have interpreted thinking this answer proceeded from an ambition she had that her grand-children might reign but the admirable Princess would say that we ought not to apply any to the service of God but voluntaries and that she had rather see her children well dead than to behold them in a religious profession by constraint and force This wretched messenger made to the humour of his Masters in stead of sweetening the matter made a very harsh relation of his message which precipated the evil already beginning to fall into extremity Clotharius possessed with a diabolical spirit took Thibault the eldest of these children and striking him down to the ground thrust his sword quite through his body The little Guntharus who was the second besprinkled with the bloud of his brother whom he saw distended on the pavement grasped the knees of his uncle Childebert with lamentable out-cries saying O Uncle save my life wherein have I offended you He so quaked in all the parts of his body and so transfixed him with his sighs that the other though he purposed this mischief was seized with much compassion and prayed his brother to pass no further But Clotharius enraged and more ravenous than a Tyger of Armenia What saith he you have been of the Councel and yet now hinder me in the execution I will run you both through with my sword Childebert amazed threw the poor victim from his knees and delivered him to the executioner who in that very place cut his throat As they were upon these contestations the third son of Clodomer named Clodoaldus was taken away by a friend of the father and secretly bred up in Ecclesiastical condition wherein he arrived to so perfect a sanctity that forsaking the shadow of Diadems and Scepters which deceiveth the credulity of the most passionate by its illusions he hath merited Altars on earth and a Crown of glory in Heaven For this is that S. Cloud which we reverence near unto Paris What imagination is sufficiently powerfull to figure to its self the ardent dolours which seized on the spirit of poor Clotilda when she heard all that passed by the practise of her unnatural sons What might this soul think so free and purified from the contagions of the earth which apprehended the shadow of the least sins when she beheld her house polluted with so horrible sacriledges Yet still she guided the helm of reason in so tempestuous a storm of passions and in so dead a night of misery she adored a ray of the Providence of God which she considered in the depth of her sorrows she her self no whit affrighted took up the mangled bodies of these innocent creatures and gathered together the scattered members as well as she could saying Poor Children I bewail not your death although it cannot be too much bemoaned You are dead like little Abels like little Innocents forsaking the earth profaned with the crimes of your Uncles to hasten to possess a place in
of my Father that is in Heaven be is my brother and sister and mother Moralities 1. IT is a very ill sign when we desire signs to make us believe in God The signs which we demand to fortifie our faith are oft-times marks of our infidelity There is not a more dangerous plague in the events of worldly affairs than to deal with the devil or to cast nativities All these things fill men with more faults than knowledge For divine Oracles have more need to be reverenced than interpreted He that will find God must seek him with simplicity and profess him with piety 2. Some require a sign and yet between Heaven and earth all is full of signs How many creatures soever they are they are all steps and characters of the Divinity What a happy thing it is to study what God is by the volume of time and by that great Book of the world There is not so small a flower of the meadows nor so little a creature upon earth which doth not tell us some news of him He speaks in our ears by all creatures which are so many Organ-pipes to convey his Spirit and voice to us But he hath no sign so great as the Word Incarnate which carries all the types of his glory and power About him onely should be all our curiosity our knowledge our admiration and our love because in him we can be sure to find all our repose and consolation 3. Are we not very miserable since we know not our own good but by the loss of it which makes us esteem so little of those things we have in our hands The Ninivites did hear old Jonas the Prophet The Queen of Sheba came from far to hear the wisdom of Solomon Jesus speaks to us usually from the Pulpits from the Altars in our conversations in our affairs and recreations And yet we do not sufficiently esteem his words nor inspirations A surfeited spirit mislikes honey and is distasted with Manna raving after the rotten pots of Aegypt But it is the last and worst of all ills to despise our own good Too much confidence is mother of an approching danger A man must keep himself from relapses which are worse than sins which are the greatest evils of the world he that loves danger shall perish in it The first sin brings with it one devil but the second brings seven There are some who vomit up rheir sins as the Sea doth cockles to swallow them again Their life is nothing but an ebbing and flowing of sins and their most innocent retreats are a disposition to iniquity For as boiled water doth soonest freeze because the cold works upon it with the greater force so those little fervours of Devotion which an unfaithfull soul feels in confessions and receiving if it be not resolute quite to forsake wickedness serve for nothing else but to provoke the wicked spirit to make a new impression upon her It is then we have most reason to fear Gods justice when we despise his mercie We become nearest of kin to him when his Ordinances are followed by our manners and our life by his precepts Aspirations O Word Incarnate the great sign of thy heavenly Father who carriest all the marks of his glory and all the characters of his powers It is thou alone whom I seek whom I esteem and honour All that I see all I understand all that I feel is nothing to me if it do not carry thy name and take colour from thy beauties nor be animated by thy Spirit Thy conversation hath no trouble and thy presence no distast O let me never lose by my negligence what I possess by thy bounty Keep me from relapses keep me from the second gulf and second hell of sin He is too blind that profits nothing by experience of his own wickedness and by a full knowledge of thy bounties The Gospel for Thursday the first week in Lent out of S. Matth 15. Of the Woman of Canaan ANd Jesus went forth from thence and retired into the quarters of Tyre and Sidon And behold a woman of Canaan came forth out of these coasts and crying out said to him Have mercy upon me O Lord the Son of David my daughter is sore vexed of a devil who answered her not a word And his Disciples came and besought him saying Dismiss her because she crieth out after us And he answering said I was not sent but to the sheep that are lost of the house of Israel But she came and adored him saying Lord help me who answering said It is not good to take the bread of children and to cast it to the dogs but she said Yea Lord for the dogs also eat of the crums that fall from the tables of their masters Then Jesus answering said to her O woman great is thy faith be it done to thee as thou wilt and her daughter was made whole from that hour Moralities 1. OUr Saviour Jesus Christ after his great and wondrous descent from heaven to earth from being infinite to be finite from being God to be man used many several means for salvation of the world And behold entering upon the frontiers of Tyre and Sidon he was pleased to conceal himself But it is very hard to avoid the curiosity of a woman who seeking his presence was thereby certain to find the full point of her felicity A very small beam of illumination reflecting upon her carried her out of her Countrey and a little spark of light brought her to find out the clear streams of truth We must not be tired with seeking God and when we have found him his presence should not diminish but encrease our desire to keep him still We are to make enterance into our happiness by taking fast hold of the first means offered for our salvation and we must not refuse or lose a good fortune which knocks at our door 2. Great is the power of a woman when she applies her self to virtue behold at one instant how one of that sex assails God and the devil prevailing with the one by submission and conquering the other by command And he which gave the wild Sea arms to contain all the world finds his own arms tied by the chains of a prayer which himself did inspire She draws unto her by a pious violence the God of all strength such was the fervency of her prayer such the wisdom of her answers and such the faith of her words As he passed away without speaking she hath the boldness to call him to her whiles he is silent she prays when he excuseth himself she adores him when he refuseth her suit she draws him to her To be short she is stronger than the Patriarch Jacob for when he did wrestle with the Angel he returned lame from the conflict but this woman after she had been so powerfull with God returns strait to her house there to see her victories and possess her conquests 3. Mark with what weapons she overcame the
honour of God and the reverence of sacred things shall not accompany all your pretences For if you ground your piety upon any temporal respects you resemble that people which believes the highest mountains do support the skies 2. There are no sins which God doth punish more rigorously nor speedily than those which are committed against devotion and piety He doth not here take up the scourge against naughty Judges usurers and unchaste persons because the Church is to find remedy against all faults which happen in the life of man But if a man commit a sin against Gods Altar the remedy grows desperate King Ozias felt a leoprofie rise upon his face at the instant when he made the sume rise from the censor which he usurped from the high Priests Ely the chief Priest was buried in the ruins of his own house for the sacriledge of his children without any consideration of those long services which he had performed at the Tabernacle Keep your self from simonies from irreverence in Churches and from abusing Sacraments He can have no excuse which makes his Judge a witness 3. Jesus was violently moved by the zeal which he bare to the house of his heavenly Father But many wicked rich men limit their zeal onely to their own families They build great Palaces upon the peoples bloud and they nothing care though all the world be in a storm so long as they and what belongs to them be well covered But there is a revenging God who doth insensibly drie up the roots of proud Nations and throws disgrace and infamy upon the faces of those who neglect the glories of Gods Altars to advance their own He who builds without God doth demolish and whosoever thinks to make any great encrease without him shall find nothing but sterility Aspiration O Most pure Spirit of Jesus which wast consummate by zeal toward the house of God wilt thou never burn my heart with those adored flames wherewith thou inspirest chaste hearts Why do we take so much care of our houses which are built upon quick-silver and roll up and down upon the inconstancies of humane fortunes while we have no love nor zeal towards Gods Church which is the Palace which we should chuse here upon earth to be as the Image of heaven above I will adore thy Altars all my life with a profound humility But I will first make an Altar of my own heart where I will offer sacrifice to which I doubt not but thou wilt put fire with thine own hand The Gospel upon Tuesday the fourth week in Lent S. John 7. The Jews marvel at the learning of Jesus who was never taught ANd when the festivity was now half done Jesus went up into the Temple and taught And the Jews marvelled saying how doth this man know letters whereas he hath not learned Jesus answered them and said my doctrine is not mine but his that sent me If any man will do the will of him he shall understand of the doctrine whither it be of God or I speak of my self he that speaketh of himself seeketh his own glorie but he that seeketh the glorie of him that sent him he is true and injustice in him there is not Did not Moses give you the Law and none of you doth the Law Why seek you to kill me The multitude answered and said thou hast a Devil who seeketh to kill thee Jesus answered and said to them One work I have done and you do all marvel Therefore Moses gave you circumcision not that it is of Moses but of the Fathers and in the Sabbath ye circumcise a man If a man receive circumcision in the Sabbath that the law of Moses be not broken are you angry at me because I have healed a man wholly in the Sabbath Judge not according to the face judge just judgement Certain therefore of Jerusalem said Is not this he whom they seek to kill And behold he speaks openly and they say nothing to him Have the Princes known indeed that this is Christ But this man we know whence he is But when Christ cometh no man knowerh whence he is Jesus therefore cried in the Temple teaching and saying Both me you do know and whence I am you know and of my self I am not come But he is true that sent me whom you know not I know him because I am of him and he sent me They sought therefore to apprehend him and no man laid hands upon him because his hour was not yet come But of the multitude many believed in him Moralities 1. IT appears by this Gospel that Jesus was judged according to apparences not according to truth It is one of the greatest confusions which is deeply rooted in the life of man that every thing is full of painting and instead of taking it off with a spunge we foment it and make our illusions voluntary The Prophet Isay adviseth us to use our judgement as men do leaven to season bread All the objects presented to our imaginations which we esteem are fading if we do not adde some heavenly vigour to help our judgement 2. To judge according to apparences is a great want both of judgement and courage The first makes us prefer vanity before truth the second gives that to silk and golden clothes which is properly due to virtue We adore painted coals and certain dark fumes covered outwardly with snow But if we did know how many great miseries and what beastly ordure is hidden under cloth of gold silk and scarlet we would complain of our eyes for being so far without reason It is a kind of Apostacy and rebellion against Gods providence to judge without calling God to be a president in our counsel or to take in hand any humane inventions without the assistance of his Spirit 3. God is pleased to lodge pearls within cockles and bestows his treasures of wisdom and virtue many times upon persons who have the most unfashionable outsides to countercheck humane wisdom He makes his orators of those who are speechless and numbers of frogs and flies to overthrow mighty armies He makes Kings out of shepherds and serves himself of things which are not as if they were The most pleasing Sacrifice which he receives upon earth is from the humble and when we despise those we divert the honours of God We offer Sacrifice to the worlds opinion like the Sages of Egypt who did light candles and burn incense to Crocodiles The Jews lost their faith to follow apparences and there is no shorter way to Apostacy than to adore the world and neglect God 4. An ill opinion make folks many times pass a rash judgement They mount into Gods chair to judge the hearts of men The chaste doves are used like Ravens and Ravens like Swans Opinion puts false spectacles upon our eyes which make faults seem virtues and virtues crimes Yet nevertheless we should think that virtuous persons will not conceive an ill suspition of their neighbour without a very sure
whole world as he did proportioning his torments according to the fruits which were to proceed from his Cross Perhaps O faithfull soul thou lookest for a mans body in thy Jesus but thou findest nothing but the appearance of one crusted over with gore bloud Thou seekest for limbs and findest nothing but wounds Thou lookest for a Jesus which appeared glorious upon Mount Tabor as upon a Throne of Majestie with all the Ensigns of his Glory and thou findest onely a skin all bloudy fastened to a Cross between two thieves And if the consideration of this cannot bring drops of bloud from thy heart it must be more insensible than a diamond 3. To conclude observe the third quality of a good death which will declare it self by the exercise of great and heroick virtues Consider that incomparable mildness which hath astonished all Ages hath encouraged all virtues hath condemned all revenges hath instructed all Schools and crowned all good actions He was raised upon the Cross when his dolours were most sharp and piercing when his wounds did open on all sides when his precious bloud shed upon the earth and moistened it in great abundance when he saw his poor clothes torn in pieces and yet bloudy in the hands of those who crucified him He considered the extream malice of that cruel people how those which could not wound him with iron pierced him with the points of their accursed tongues He could quickly have made fire come down from Heaven upon those rebellious heads And yet forgetting all his pains to remember his mercies he opened his mouth and the first word he spake was in favour of his enemies to negotiate their reconciliation before his soul departed The learned Cardinal Hugues admiring this excessive charity of our Saviour toward his enemies applies excellent well that which is spoken of the Sun in Ecclesiasticus He brings news to all the world at his rising and at noon day he burns the earth and heats those furnaces of Nature which make it produce all her feats So Jesus the Sun of the intelligible world did manifest himself at his Nativity as in the morning But the Cross was his bed at noon from whence came those burning streams of Love which enflame the hearts of all blessed persons who are like furnaces of that eternal fire which burns in holy Sion On the other part admire that great magnanimity which held him so long upon the Cross as upon a throne of honour and power when he bestowed Paradise upon a man that was his companion in suffering I cannot tell whether in this action we should more admire the good fortune of the good thief or the greatness of Jesus The happiness of the good thief who is drawn for a cut-throat to prison from prison to the Judgement-hall from thence to the Cross and thence goes to Paradise without needing any other gate but the heart of Jesus On the other side what can be more admirable than to see a man crucified to do that act which must be performed by the living God when the world shall end To save some to make others reprobate and to judge from the heighth of his Cross as if he sate upon the chiefest throne of all Monarchs But we must needs affirm that the virtue of patience in this holds a chief place and teaches very admirable lessons He endures the torments of body and the pains of spirit in all the faculties of his soul in all the parts of his virgin flesh and by the cruelty and multiplicity of his wounds they all become one onely wound from the sole of his foot to the top of his head His delicate body suffers most innocently and all by most ingrate and hypocritical persons who would colour their vengeance with an apparance of holiness He suffers without any comfort at all and which is more without bemoaning himself he suffers whatsoever they would or could lay upon him to the very last gasp of his life Heaven wears mourning upon the Cross all the Citizens of Heaven weep over his torments the earth quakes stones rend themselves Sepulchers open the dead arise Onely Jesus dies unmoveable upon this throne of patience To conclude who would not be astonished at the tranquility of his spirit and amongst those great convulsions of the world which moved round about the Cross amongst such bloudy dolours insolent cries and insupportable blasphemies how he remained upon the Cross as in a Sanctuary at the foot of an Altar bleeding weeping and praying to mingle his prayers with his bloud and tears I do now understand why the Wiseman said He planted Isles within the Abyss since that in so great a Gulf of afflictions he shewed such a serenity of spirit thereby making a Paradise for his Father amongst so great pains by the sweet perfume of his virtues After he had prayed for his enemies given a promise of Paradise to the good thief and recommended his Mother to his Disciple he shut up his eyes from all humane things entertaining himself onely with prayers and sighs to his Heavenly Father O that at the time of our deaths we could imitate the death of Jesus and then we should be sure to find the streams of life Aspirations O Spectacles of horrour but Abyss of goodness and mercy I feel my heart divided by horrour pitie hate love execration and adoration But my admiration being ravished carries me beyond my self Is this then that bloudy sacrifice which hath been expected from all Ages This hidden mystery this profound knowledge of the Cross this dolorous Jesus which makes the honourable amends between Heaven and earth to the eternal Father for expiation of the sins of humane kind Alas poor Lord thou hadst but one life and I see a thousand instruments of death which have taken it away Was there need of opening so many bloudy doors to let out thine innocent soul Could it not part from thy body without making on all sides so many wounds which after they have served for the objects of mens cruelty serve now for those of thy mercy O my Jesus I know not to whom I speak for I do no more know thee in the state thou now art or if I do it is onely by thy miseries because they are so excessive that there was need of a God to suffer what thou hast endured I look upon thy disfigured countenance to find some part of thy resemblance and yet can find none but that of thy love Alas O beautifull head which dost carry all the glory of the highest Heaven divide with me this dolorous Crown of Thorns they were my sins which sowed them and it is thy pleasure that thine innocency should mow them Give me O Sacred mouth give me that Gall which I see upon thy lips suffer me to sprinkle all my pleasures with it since after a long continuance it did shut up and conclude all thy dolours Give me O Sacred hands and adored feet the Nails which have pierced
Essence and appertenances thereof HOpe is the gate of a great Pallace replenished with riches It is in my opinion the place The Image and nature of Hope which Tertullian termeth when he calls it the portresse of Nature It looketh on and considers upon one side pearls which are as yet in the shell and Naturae ja●tricem on the other upon Roses in the midst of thorns which it thinks it may enjoy with some labour Such is the nature of Hope according to S. Thomas It is a motion of the S. Thom. 1. 2 q. 40. art 2. appetite which followeth the knowledge one hath of a good future possible and somewhat difficult It hath two arms with which it endeavoureth to pursue and embrace objects whereof the one is called Desire and the other Belief to be able to obtain what one desireth Thus doth learned Occham define it It is not sufficient Occham quodlibeto 3. q 9. to say that a thing is beautifull pleasing and profitable to create Hope unlesse it be shewed it is possible and that one may arrive thereunto by certain wayes which are not out of his power who hopeth So Hope if it be reasonable hath ordinarily wisdome strength eloquence amity and money for it for these are the things which raise its courage At the gates of passion we see huge heaps of people of all manner of dispositons who flatter it and behold it of one side lovers who seek for a mate For Philo said it was the virtue of lovers on ●hilo lib. Quod deterius c. the other side Courtiers who run after favour on the other aspirers who canvas for offices and dignities on the other Laborours and Merchants but above all there are many young-men bold and resolute who therein have a great share because as saith Aristotle they Arist l. 2. Rhet. c. 12. have little of the past and much of the future Or as S. Gregory Nazianzen affirmeth for that nothing is Nazian de vita sua 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hard to a fervent spirit Moreover it sitteth upon a Peacock and its face is encompassed with a Rainbowe by reason it infinitely charmeth and recreateth the minds of such as follow it by very pleasing semblances and as King Mithridates saith it hath I know not what kind Mithrid in epist Graecis of sweetnesse which pleaseth even then when it deceiveth but if you observe it you shall find it holdeth an Anchor in the right hand to fix the desire of the wise as on the contrary it carryeth in the left hand an enchanted mirrour wherein it letteth fools see a thousand slight trifles all which turn into smoke Pleasure waiteth on it whilst we hope for it is that which sweetneth all the labours of life and which serves for a spur to all great and generous actions But if it falls out that things happen not as they were figured in the imagination then are all these Courtiers delivered over to a furious Monster called Despair which drags them down to the foot of a mountain and oft-times drencheth them in gulphs and precipices Behold in few words the nature definition difference composition object subject the causes and the effects of hope Let us now see how we may govern this Motion § 2. That one cannot live in the world without Hope and what course is to be held for the well ordering of it THey are of too haughty a strain who never friendly entertein Hope and think there is no life for them if Felicity be not alwayes at their gate The condition of creatures is such that all their blessings never come to them all at one It were to go about to expresse a word without letters to compose a happinesse without joyes and contentments succeeding one another How can hope be banished from earth sith Heaven which is so well content hath not renounced it The blessed souls after the vision of God do yet hope something which is the Resurrection of their bodies to which they most ardently wish to be reunited those which are represented under the Altar in the Apocalypse who ask vengeance Apoc. 6. of their blood at the tribunall of the Divine Justice are instantly clothed with white garments in token of this most bright flesh which is to be joyned to their immortall spirits Heaven which expecteth nothing for the perfection of its beauties ceaseth not to revolve each moment of the day and night to diversifie them But we must confesse that earth is the place of Hopes which are as seeds of our Felicities from whence it cometh that what the Grecians call to some we name it to hope Our soul here resembleth the Sperare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 First Matter which is perpetually enamoured of new forms and as the understanding of Angels according to the saying of a great Philosopher is all that which it ought to be from the beginning and becometh not Carolus Bovilus de intellectu humano Angelico new at all Contrariwise Humane understanding is nothing in the beginning and becomes all in processe of time So our will is like unto white Writing-tables wherein we easily write or blot out all we will The estate of perfection must be expected to imprint it with a lasting Character So many young plants so many little living creatures so many children so many imperfections so many wishes warn us that we may live here with hope we have so little of time present that we are enforced to dilate our selves upon the future This insensibly delighteth us and stirs us as Trees which seem to take pleasure to be rocked by the winds It being resolved that we necessarily must expect and hope The good husbanding of hopes whilst we are in the world It remaineth to consider how we may well employ this passion in hoping good things and hoping them by wayes very direct and in an orderly manner First It is a shamefull thing to say there are such who hope all that which is to be feared One promiseth himself the death of a Kinsman the other the confusion of a family another to seduce some silly maid another to debauch a married wife another to satisfie his revenge another to scrape together as much as his avarice can wish and so many other things which are most unhappy Hopes the successe whereof God sometimes permitteth when he will chastise wicked men What a horrour is it to hope for crimes and to feed ones self with anothers evils as if one sought nourishment from coals and serpents If our thoughts be not alwayes so high as the glory of heaven at least let us not abase them so low as Hell If they cannot be divine let them not be inhumane let them ty themselves to blessings permitted and not to objects so unworthy One may expect wealth children health knowledge honour an office a marriage and so many other things which are commodious for humane life without desiring disasters
of devils to draw life drop after drop out of a miserable body But not speaking at this present of these extremities of Cruelty which arise out of Hell it is evident that the Hardnesse of heart and the harshnesse of a nature devoid of Compassion is a monster in humane nature All great souls have I know not what tincture of good nesse which rendreth them pliant to the afflictions of such as suffer It is a feeling which God hath poured into the masse of mankind and which he would have communicated by the prime men of the world to all posterity The tradition of the Hebrews holdeth that the Mildnesse of the first men Patriarch Noah recommendeth mildnesse even among beasts accounting it a capitall crime to tear off a member of a living beast And the most sage common-wealths Fab. Quintilian l 5. cap. 9. have walked in the same wayes since that of Athens condemned to death a young child who took delight to prick out the eyes of crows and having made them blind let them fly for his pastime It judged this heart was base and bloudy and practised its first apprentiship of crueltie upon birds to exercise it one day upon men The Carthaginians publickly condemned Plin. l. 8. c. 16. a very industrious Citizen for no other cause but for having made a lion tractable supposing that a man who had so great conversation among wild beasts would lose all he had humane in him and put on the manners of a tyrant What can those answer to this call of Nature who are ashamed to compassionate their neighbours seeing pity extends it self even to beasts They fear that by shewing compassion it may be thought their courage thereby is greatly effeminate and see not that to seem valiant they cease to be men Conquerours have wept over their Laurels as yet Compassion of great courages all verdant blaming the just rigour of their arms albeit they could not hate the glory Marcellus desired to quench the coals of the city Syracusa with his tears Titus seeing the city of Jerusalem all covered with dead bodies found his heart much softned therewith protesting it was an act of Heaven and not an effect of his own disposition There is some touch of Divinity in good natures and God hath alwayes been pleased that they who nearest approach to him should be the most humane The first Images of the Saviour of the world were ordinarily painted in the form of a Lamb and it was likewise a Lamb of God which represented him in Great Constantine's Font and which poured forth the water of Baptism to shew us that the fountains of his Bounty ran throughout the whole Church The holy Ghost hath never been seen Concil 6. in Teul can 82 Damasus in Pontifieibus qui est potius Anastafius Bibliothecarius in the form of an Eagle or of a Hawk but of a Dove to stamp on our manners the impressions of his bounty It is an insupportable thing when there is observed even among those who approach nearest to Altars and who consecrate the Lamb of God in their hands some to be of imperious spirits and wills inflexible who torment poor subjects and make them groan under Non dominantes in Cleris sed forma facti● gregis ex animo 1 Pet. 5. 3. their Commands They resemble Semiramis who on her Banners bare a Dove which in its beak held a bloudy sword as meaning to say that under a vvomans face she had the courage and stem violence of tyrants So their name theircharacter and degree testifieth Revertamur ad populum nostrum à facie gladii columbae Hier. 46. 16 nought but mildnesse but their manners are full of rigour and acerbity which wound hearts even to bloud This happeneth to many out of a certain stupidity in such sort that it seems they entering into office at that instant drink of the water of forgetfulnesse which Rigour misbecometh persons Ecclesiasticall Its causes and differences in them blotteth out the memory of all they were to become that which they ought never to be They forget their inferiours are men who put their precious liberty to wit a good inestimable into their hands as a pledge and that they must very skilfully handle them there being not a creature in all nature more tender or more sensible then the King of creatures They consider not that the power of one man over another is a thing which is alwayes somewhat suspected by nature on what side soever it come and that it must be practised insensibly so that the flesh be rather cast into a slumber then irritated To others it comes from a most refined pride which being under the subjection of a superiour kept it self close in the interiour of the soul a serpent enchanted and fast asleep but so soon as he sees himself armed with a sword of authority he cuts with both edges not sparing any one as if the great mystery of making a dignity valuable were to encompasse it with all the ensignes of terrour Some are not Porta in Chao of a bad nature and do resemble the sea which is not by nature salt but the sunne stirreth up unto it vapours cold dry and terrestriall which being burnt by heat spread themselves on the superficies of the water and cause saltnesse so these lights of authority which environ a man raise smokes in him which being not wel tempered by prudence leave a bitter impression on manners communicating some haughtinesse to words and conversation It is gotten in others by a long assiduity of superiority which is the cause that beholding themselves perpetually with a head of gold and a breast of silver they consider not that being in some sort like to Nabuchodonozors statue they yet have feet of clay Others come thereunto by an indiscreet zeal and out of small experience of humane things who are no sooner raised unto some degree but they talk of reformation of correction of chastisements and to see them you would say they were so many Archimedes who seek for a place out of the world to set foot in of purpose to turn the world to psie-turvey Their power is not alwayes answerable to their purpose which makes them sad and dejected in their courage causing them to fall back to the other extremity from whence it cometh that they are one while harsh and another time gentle and by inequality in their manners thrust all into disorder That is it which Saint Gregory the great observed Gregor M. in epist ola ad Utbicum in Abbot Vrbicus saying that his Monastery was in distemper because he made himself unequall one while flattering some and another while reprehending the rest with immeasurable anger Lastly there are others who have a very good conscience and whose manners are rigid and they be not imprudent but they have such a desire to frame the whole world to their humour that out of the assiduity of their admonitions
Life those of Rigour He desires Peace and it is denyed him and sues for an agreement and is slighted His arrogance being sorely pricked vomits out nothing but whirlwinds of fire and comes to fall before Croye the Capitall City of the Valiant Castriot with an Army of two hundred thousand men The other defends himself with six thousand One onely place bayes that great Deluge the Storm is scattered the Siege raised the shame of it remains on the face of the Sultan with so lively a Tincture that the Shadow of death must passe over it to blot it out He that had lived with Glory dyes with the sadnesse of his Ignominy and carries with him into the other World the unability to revenge himself and an eternall desire of vengeance Mahomet his sonne the Scourge and Terrour of the Universe that overthrew two Empires took two hundred Cities killed twenty Millions of Men comes to split against the same Rock Was there need of so much blood to write upon Castriot's Trophies the Title of Invincible Who would Imagine that a mortall man should have gone so farre who should believe that those exploits were the Actions of a slave Truly we must avow that he lent his Name to God in all this businesse and that God lent his Arm to him It is said of him that he never refused Battell never turned his back never was wounded but once very Lightly He slew two thousand Barbarians with his own hand which he cleft ordinarily with his Coutelax from the head down to the Girdle Mahomet desired to see that Thunder-bolt that he bore in his hands and had it in veneration although so many times bedewed with his Subjects blood He saw the Steel but he never saw the Arm that gave it Life O brave Castriot If the State of Christians could have been delivered from the Tyranny of the Sultans it should have been by thy hands We must now acknowledge that our wounds are irrecoverable seeing that our divisions hinder us from enjoying the succour of so Divine an hand The Feaver that took thee hence in the City of Lissa in the Climactericall of seven and nine the most to be feared by old men extinguished all our hopes by the same burnings that consumed thy Body After thou hadst lived the most Admirable of Captains thou dyedst like a truly Religious melting the hearts of all those that beheld thee by a most sensible Devotion Thy victorious spirit soared up to the Palace of the Beautifull Sion after it had performed in the Body all that was possible for a most eminent Virtue and an Happinesse to which nothing was wanting but imitatours The most barbarous thy Enemies have kissed thy Sepulchre have Reverenced thy Ashes and shared thy Bones as the dearest Reliques of Valour And now thou hast no more to do with a Tomb seeing that thy Memory hath found as many Monuments as there are Hearts in all ages BOUCICAUT BAYARD BOVCICAVD BAYARD WE need not search the Catalogue of Saints and Martyrs for a Souldier Furnished before God and men with great and Divine virtues Behold one among a thousand I mean the brave Marshal Boucicaut who flourished in France under Charles the Sixth Those petty Rodomonts who boast of their Duels but indeed meer cowardise varnished with a glossy colour of valour durst not behold this most excellent Cavalier without doing that which was antiently done to the Statues of the Sunne that is to put finger on the mouth and admire For not to mention his other acts of prowesse it is he who was present at that daring Battell which the Turkish Emperour Bajazet waged against the King of Hungary the Duke of Burgundy then called the Count of Nevers with many other of the French Gentry being there in person The History relateth that the Turkish Emperour coming to fight with dreadfull forces began so furious a charge the air being darkned with a black cloud of Arrows that the Hungarians who were alwayes reputed good Souldiers being much amazed with this fierce assault fled away The French who in all Battels had ever learned to conquer or dye not willing to hear so much as the least speech of the name of flight pierced into the Turkish army notwithstanding a field of Pikes and stakes fastned in the earth did hinder their approch and attended by some other Troops brake the Vangard of the Turks by the counsell and example of this brave Marshall whereat Bajazet much amazed was about to retire but that at the same time it was told him that it was but a very little handfull of Frenchmen that made the greatest resistance and that it was best for him to assault them The Turk who kept his Battalions very fresh returneth and fell like lightning upon these poor Souldiers now extreamly wearied Never did an angry Lyon exercise more violent force against the Hunters Javelins then this generous Cavalier shewed prowesse which shined in the midst of the adventurous Pagans For seeing himself at last negligently betraied he having no other purpose but to sell his own life and those of his companions at as dear a rate as he could he with the French Cavalry and some other people that stuck to him did such feats of Arms that it was thought twenty thousand Turks were slain in the place At last this prodigious multitude able to tire out the most hardy although it had been but to cut them in pieces did so nearly encompasse our French that the Count of Nevers with Marshall Boucicaut and other the most worthy Personages were taken Prisoners The next day after this dismall Battell the proud Bajazet sitting under a Pavillion spread for him in the field caused the prisoners to be brought before him to drench himself in blood and revenge which he alwayes most passionately loved Never was seen a spectacle more worthy of Compassion A sad spectacle The poor Lords who had wrought wonders in Arms able to move Tygers were led to the slaughter half naked straight bound with cords and fetters no regard being had either to their bloud which was noble or youth which was pitifull or their behaviour which was most ravishing These Saracens ugly and horrible as Devils set them before the face of the Tyrant who in the twinkling of an eye caused their throats to be cut at his feet as if he meant to carouse their bloud The Count of Nevers with the Count of Ewe and the Count of Marche had now their heads under the Symiter and their lives hung as it were by a thread when Bajazet who had heard by his interpreters that they were near Kinsmen to the King of France caused them to be reserved commanding them to sit at his feet on the ground where they were enforced to behold the lamentable butchery of their Nobility The valiant Boucicaut covered with a little linnen cloth in his turn was brought forth to be massacred over the bodies of so many valiant men He being wise and in this
much onely as would load two mules to build an Altar to the true God with holy ground and not profaned by Idolatry expressing by this request that he desired to worship the true God in spirit and in truth though he received not Circumcision nor the other Ceremonies of the Jews He aded to his former suit the permission to accompany his master to the Temple of the Idols through a pure civility without rendring any inward adoration to the Gods of Syria which the Prophet granted him and sent him away in peace all full of blessing But Gehazi Elisha's servant was like to spoil all by a wicked cozenage for he ran after Naaman who seeing him come alighted out of his chariot and received him with much honour asking what he desired of him The other feigned that two children of the Prophets were come to see his master and that he desired to gratifie them with a talent of silver and to give to each of them a change of raiment Naaman thought himself obliged by this request and instead of one talent gave him two with two handsome suits of clothes causing all of it to be carried by two of his servants by reason that a talent of silver was a good load for one man Gehazi thought that he had succeeded bravely in his cheat but when he presented himself to his master he told him that he had been present in spirit at all that had passed and that he was not ignorant that he had at present silver from Naaman enough to become a great Lord and to buy lands and servants but for punishment of his crime the leprosie of Naaman should stay on him and should passe as an inheritance to all his race and at that instant he was stricken with the leprosie and retired himself leaving an horrible example to all those that betray their conscience to satiate their covetousnesse It happens that these bad servants extremely black the reputation of their masters that have not alwayes their eyes on their shouldiers as Elisha had to see that which passes behind them but when they imagine that they live very innocently and that they discharge their consciences in their charges one may find that a crafty wife or a corrupted Committee sell them by a thousand practices and devour the marrow and the bloud of men under the favour of their name Sigismond the Emperour made one of his officers named Pithon that had betrayed his affairs through covetousnesse of money drink up a glasse of melted gold 'T was but a bad potion but sutable for the chastisement of an overflowing avarice that hath no longer eyes for heaven having already given all her heart to the earth It is credible that Naaman was advertised of the untrustinesse of Gehazi and that this nothing blemished the high reputation of Elisha that was spread through all Syria After the cure of this Naaman Benhadad that was his Master and his King fell into a mortall sicknesse and when he had learnt that the Prophet Elisha was come as farre as his city of Damascus he dispatched Hazael one of the prime men of his Kingdome with fourty camels laden with great riches to consult with him about the hope that he might have of his recovery and to desire his help The Prophet was not like Hyppocrates that would cure none but Greeks and refused to go into Persia though he was invited thither by letters and by the offers of that great and magnificent King Artaxerxes But quite contrary the man of God thought that one ought not to limit the gifts of heaven and that he that opens the treasures of nature to all the Nations of the earth would not have one detain the marks of his power without communicating them to those that bear in any fashion his Image He cleansed the leprosie of Naaman but yet for all that cured not Benhadad because it was a decree of Providence that he should die of that sicknesse The Scripture tells us not expresly what became of those great presents but it leaves us to think that Elisha refused them as he had done those of Naaman and did nothing that belyed his generosity Although one may also believe that he accepted them as well to diminish the levies of the enemies of his people as to spread them amongst the poor of his own countrey He spake onely to this Hazael the Kings Embassadours a very short speech which was that he should die of that sicknesse and should never rise out of his bed again and yet in appearance he commands him to tell him that he should escape it and recover again his health Which causes here a question to arise thorny enough touching the permission of a lie and which hath made Cassian and other antient Divines say that there are some profitable lies which one ought to make use of as one uses serpents to make treacle But this opinion is no way followed but is found condemned by S. Augustine and the most renowned Doctours So that when Elisha said to Prince Hazael touching his King He shall die but tell him he shall escape we ought to take it as a command that authorizes a lie but as a prophecy of that which should be done For the Prophet foresaw these two things with one and the same sight both that Benhadad should die and that Hazael to flatter him should promise him health and life And therefore he addes Tell him that he shall escape which in a Prophets terms is as much as a future and means that although I declare to you his death yet I know you well and am certain that according to your politick Maxims you will not fail to promise him a cure It is just as God commaaded the evil spirit to lie and to deceive Ahab foretelling what he would do and not commanding that which ought not to be done according to the laws of a good conscience As Elisha was foretelling of that Kings death he felt an extasie of spirit and changed countenance notably and began to weep whereat Hazael was much astonished and had a curiosity to know the reason of a change so sudden But the Prophet continuing in the trans-ports of his spirit said unto him I weep and I sigh bitterly for I know the evils that thou wilt make my poor people one day suffer Thou wilt burn down the fair cities thou wilt make the young men passe by the edge of the sword thou wilt dash out the brains of the little infants thou wilt inhumanely rip up women great with child thou wilt sack my dear countrey for which I now pour out my tears by way of advance The Embassadour was amazed at a discourse so strange and said Why What am I should do all these outrages God forbid that I should ever ever proceed so farre I have in all this no more belief then hath my dog But Elisha insisting told him I know by divine Revelation that thou shalt be King of Syria and that which I