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A03207 The hierarchie of the blessed angells Their names, orders and offices the fall of Lucifer with his angells written by Tho: Heywood Heywood, Thomas, d. 1641.; Cecil, Thomas, fl. 1630, engraver. 1635 (1635) STC 13327; ESTC S122314 484,225 642

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out of that Desart they fixed their eyes vpon three strange humane shapes of a fearefull and vnmeasurable stature in long loose gownes and habited after the manner of Mourners with blacke and grisly haire hanging ouer their shoulders but of countenance most terrible to behold Who calling and beckoning to them both with voice and gesture and they not daring to approch them they vsed such vndecent skipping and leaping with such brutish and immodest gestures that halfe dead with feare they were inforced to take them to their heeles and runne till at length they light vpon a poore countrey-mans cottage in which they were relieued and comforted Sabellicus deliuereth this discourse The father of Ludovicus Adolisius Lord of Immola not long after his decease appeared to a Secretarie of his in his journey whom he had sent vpon earnest businesse to Ferrara The Spectar or Sylvan Spirit being on horse-backe attyred like an huntsman with an Hawke vpon his fist who saluted him by his name and desired him to entreat his sonne Lodowicke to meet him in that very place the next day at the same houre to whom hee would discouer certaine things of no meane consequence which much concerned him and his estate The Secretarie returning and reuealing this to his Lord at first he would scarse giue credit to his report and jealous withall that it might be some traine laid to intrap his life he sent another in his stead to whom the same Spirit appeared in the shape aforesaid and seemed much to lament his sonnes diffidence to whom if hee had appeared in person hee would haue related strange things which threatned his estate and the means how to preuent them Yet desired him to commend him to his sonne and tel him That after two and twenty yeares one moneth and one day prefixed he should lose the gouernment of that City which he then possessed And so he vanished It happened iust at the same time which the Spectar had predicted notwithstanding his great care and prouidence That Philip Duke of Mediolanum the same night besieged the City and by the helpe of Ice it being then a great frost past the Moat and with ladders scaled the wall surprised the city and tooke Lodowicke prisoner Fincelius remembreth vnto vs That in the yeare 1532 a Nobleman of his country had commanded a countreyman a Tenant of his with whom he was much offended either to bring home to his Mannor house a mighty huge Oke which was newly felld betwixt that and Sun-set or he should forfeit his time and the next day be turned out of his cottage The poore husbandman bringeth his cart to the place but looking vpon the massie timber and finding it a thing vnpossible to be done he sits down wrings his hands and falls into great lamentation When presently appeared before him one of these Spirits in the shape of a laboring man and demanding him the cause of his sorrow he was no sooner resolued but If that be all saith the Diuell follow me and I will saue thee the forfeiture of thy Leafe Which he no sooner said but he tooke the huge Oke boughes branches and all and threw it vpon his shoulder as lightly as if it had beene a burthen of Firres or Broome and bearing it to the house cast it crosse the gate which was the common entrance into the house and there left it The Gentleman returning towards night with his friends from hawking spying the doore barricadoed commanded his seruants to remoue the tree But forcing themselues first to stir it then to hew it with axes and lastly to set it on fire and finding all to be in vaine the master of the Mannor was inforced to haue another doore cut out in the side of his house to let his Ghests in for at the backe gate hee had vowed not to enter hauing before made a rash Oath to the contrarie By the aid of these Spirits as Caspinianus giueth testimonie the Bulgarians gaue the Romans a great ouerthrow in the time of the Emperour Anastasius The like the Huns did to the French King Sigebert defeating him notwithstanding the oddes of his great and puissant Armie Of this kinde those were said to be who when the Poet Simonides was set at a great feast came like two yong men and desired to speake with him at the gate Who rising in haste from the table to know their businesse was no sooner out of the roome but the roofe of the hall fell suddenly and crushed all the rest to pieces he onely by this meanes escaping the ruin Those Spirits which the Greekes cal Paredrij are such as haunt yong men maids and pretend to be greatly in loue with them yet many times to their hurts and dammage Mengius speaketh of a Youth about sixteene yeares of age who was admitted into the Order of Saint Francis whom one of these Spirits did so assiduately haunt that hee scarce could forbeare his company one instant but visibly he appeared to him sometimes like one of the Friers belonging to the house sometimes one of the seruants and sometimes againe he would personate the Gouernour Neither was he onely seene of the Youth himselfe whom he pretended so much to loue but of diuers of the Domesticks also One time the Youth sent this Spirit with a Present of two Fishes vnto a certaine Monke who deliuered them to his own hands and brought him backe a commendatorie answer The same Mengius in the selfe same booke speaketh likewise of a faire yong Virgin that dwelt in a Noblemans house of Bonnonia and this saith he happened in the yere 1579. haunted with the like Spirit who whithersoeuer she went or came stirred not from her but attended on her as her Page or Lackey And if at any time vpon any occasion her Lord or Lady had either chid or strooke her he would reuenge that iniury done to her vpon them with some knauish tricke or other Vpon a time hee pretending to be extremely angry with her catched her by the gowne and tore it from head to heele which shee seeming to take ill at his hands hee in an instant sowed it vp so workeman-like that it was not possible to discerne in what place hee had torne it Againe she being sent downe into the cellar to draw wine he snatcht the candle out of her hand and cast it a great distance from her by which occasion much of the wine was spilt this he confest he did only to be reuenged on them who the same day before threatened her Neither could he by any exorcismes be forced to leaue her company till at length shee was persuaded to eat so often as she was forced to do the necessities of nature and thereby she was deliuered from him Another of these Paredrij haunted a Virgin of the same City who was about the age of fifteene yeares who would doe many trickes in the house sometimes merrily and as often vnhappily
prodigalitie was such His exhibition he exceeded much And when his money was exhausted cleane His credit flaw'd and there remain'd no meane Either to score or pawne he walks alone And fetching many a deepe suspire and grone His melanch'ly grew almost to despaire Now as we finde the Diuels ready are And prest at such occasions ev'n so than One of these Sp'rits in semblance of a man Appeares and of his sadnesse doth demand The cause Which when he seem'd to vnderstand He makes free protestation That with ease He can supply him with what Coine he please Then from his bosome drawes a Booke and it Presents the Youth and saith If all that 's writ Within these leaues thou giv'st beleefe to I Will furnish all thy wants and instantly Vpon condition thou shalt neuer looke On any page or once vnclaspe the booke The yong man 's pleas'd the contract he allowes And punctually to keepe it sweates and vowes Now saith the Spectar note and vnderstand What thou seest done Then holds in his left hand The fast-shut booke his right he casts about Then with his thumbe and finger stretched out Meaning the middle of that hand holds fast The charmed Volume speaking thus at last Natat as saliat Aurum and instantly Six hundred Crownes into his pocket fly This shew'd and done he stands himselfe aloofe Giues him the Booke and bids the Youth make proofe As he before did The same order kept The selfe same summe into his bosome leapt They part the youthfull Schollar is surpris'd With ioyes incredible and well advis'd Within himselfe thinks he How should I curse To lose this more than Fortunatus Purse Which to preuent the surest way I 'le chuse Transcribiug it lest I perchance might loose Th'originalll copy Then downe close he sits Shuts fast his dore and summons all his wits From hand to hand the Booke he moues and heaues Weighing and poising the inchanted leaues Then layes it ope But in the stead of Histories Or Poëms he spies nought saue Magicke mysteries First page by page he turnes it ouer all Saue Characters most diabolicall He nothing sees then pausing a good space His eye by chance insists vpon a place At which he wonders namely'a circle that Is fill'd with confus'd lines he knowes not what Their meaning is and from the Center riseth A Crucifix which the Crosse much disguiseth Clov'n through th' midst and quite throughout dissect Aboue an head of horrible aspect Resembling the great Diuels ougly foule Which seemes on his rash enterprise to scoule On the right side two Crosses more appeare That after a strange guise conioyned were And these are interchangeably commixt And vpon each a Caca-Damon fixt Vpon the left that part exposed wide Which modest women most desire to hide Oppos'd as ev'n as iust proportion can Was plac'd th' erected virile part of man At these much wondring and asham'd withall He feeles a sudden feare vpon him fall Which Feuer shakes him his eye 's dull and dead And a strange megrim toxicates his head Imagining behinde him one to reach Ready t' arrest him for his promise-breach He calls aloud his Tutor is by chance At hand beats ope the dore and halfe in ●●ance He findes his Pupill and before him spies This booke of most abhorrid blasphemies And questions how it came there He tells truth Then he in stead of chiding cheares the Youth And hauing caus'd a great fire to be made Now sacrifice this cursed Booke he said The Pupill yeelds the flame about it flashes Yet scarce in a full houre 't is burnt to ashes Though it were writ in paper Thus we see Though these Familiar Spirits seeming bee Mans profest friends their loue 's but an induction Both to the Bodies and the Soules destruction Explicit Metrum Tractatus octavi Theologicall Philosphicall Poeticall Historicall Apothegmaticall Hierogliphicall and Emblematicall Obseruations touching the further illustration of the former Tractat. PRide was the first sinne and therefore the greatest It was the Fall of Angels and is that folly in Man to bring him to perdition It striueth to haue a hand in euery noble Vertue as it hath an interest in euerie detestable Vice The Valiant it swells with vain-glory the Learned with selfe-conceit Nay further it hath beene knowne That men of most submissiue spirits haue gloried That they could so far humble themselues as being proud that they haue not been more proud It hath made zealous men presume of their merit wretched men to boast of their misery Come to the Deadly sins It is Pride in the Enuious man to maligne the prosperitie of his neighbor in the Wrathfull man to triumph in the slaughter of his enemy in the Luxurious man to trick himselfe vp and glory in the spoile of his Mistresse in the Sloathfull to scorne labour and delight in his ease in the Auaritious to despise the Poore and trust in his aboundance According to that of Ovid in the fift booke of his Metamorph. Sum foelix quis enim neg at hoc foelixque manebo Hoc quoque quis dubitat tutum me copia fecit Happy I am for who can that deny And happy will remaine perpetually For who shall doubt it Plenty makes me such Bee'ng made so great that Fortune dares not touch Pride saith Isiodor est amor propriae excellentiae It is a loue of our proper excellencie Saint Augustine telleth vs That all other vices are to be feared in euill deeds but Pride is not to be trusted euen in good actions lest those things which be laudibly done and praise-worthy bee smothered and lost in too much desire of Praise Humilitie maketh men like Angels but Pride hath made Angels Diuels It is the beginning the end and cause of all other euills for it is not onely a sinne in it selfe but so great an one that no other sinne can subsist without it All other iniquities are exercised in bad deeds that they may be done but Pride in good deeds that they may be left vndone Pride saith Hieron was borne in heauen still striuing to possesse and infect the sublimest mindes and as if it coueted still to soare vp to the place from whence it fell it striues to make irruption and breake into the glory and power of men which first broke out from the glory and power of Angels that whom it found Copartners in nature it might leaue Companions in ruin From heauen it fell saith Hugo but by the suddennesse of the fall hauing forgot the way by which it fell though thither it aime it can neuer attaine All other Vices seek only to hinder those Vertues by which they are restrained and brideled as Wantonnesse Chastitie Wrath Patience and Avarice Bounty c. Pride onely aduanceth it selfe against all the Vertues of the minde and as a generall and pestiferous disease laboureth vniuersally to corrupt them Now the signes by which Pride is discouered and knowne are Loquac●ty and clamor in speech bitternes in silence
Potencie Protection Power to guide With all such things as are to these ally'de His Nosthrils by which he is said to smell Doth vnto vs his Acceptation tell Of Sacrifice and Prayer His Incenst Ire Againe it notes when thence fly sparks of fire His Eyes emblem to vs that choice Respect And Fauor which he beares to his Elect. Sometimes they'import his Prouidence Diuine Sometimes they wrathfully are said to shine Against the Wicked By his Feet are meant Stabilitie and Power Omnipotent By th' Apple of his Eye he would haue knowne Th'Indulgence that he beares vnto his Owne The Diuine Wisedome knowing how dull and weake Mans heart and braine is taught the Text to speake To our capacities The Prophets they Did not of this great Deity display The absolute perfection but so leaue it That by a glimpse we far off might conceiue it His Eyes being nam'd it must impresse in me That God doth euery thing at all times see Or if his Eare then must I presuppose That hearing all that 's spoke he all things knowes That hauing wings to mount himselfe on high In vaine can Man his incenst vengeance fly O whither from thy Sprite shall I depart Thou that in euery place at all times art Fly thee none can but vnto thee repaire All may in their humilitie and prayer Appealing to thy Goodnsse For What place Can shadow me when I shall fly thy face If soare to Heauen thy Presence doth appeare Or if to Hell diue Thou art likewise there There is no way an angry God to shun But to a God well pleas'd for refuge run Now to proceed The Scripture Phrase doth reach No farther than our stupid sence to teach That by corporeall things we may prepare Our hearts to know what things spirituall are And by Inuisible make demonstration Of what 's vnseene beyond mans weake narration And for this cause our passions and affects Are in the Scriptures for some knowne respects Confer'd on the Almighty when 't is said God did repent him that he man had made Or when hee 's wrathfull herein is not meant That He is angry or He can repent But 't is a Figure from th' effect arose And that the Greeks call Metanumikos The Names the Scriptures attribute to Him Sometimes Iehouah sometimes Elohim And when the glorious Trinitie's proclaim'd The Father Sonne and Holy-Ghost are nam'd More appellations the Text affords As The Great God of Heauen The Lord of Lords The Lord of Armies and of Hosts the God That in the Highest Heauen hath his aboad The God of Abraham Isaac Iacob and He that brought Israel from th' Egyptians land God of the Spirits of all Flesh and he Lord God of Israel is knowne to be Him by the name of th' Hebrewes God we praise God of our Fathers Th' Antient of all dayes And Dauids God Yet further denomination The God of gods of Iustice Ioy Saluation These titles it ascribes to Him alone Israels Redeemer Israels Holy one Protector Father Shepheard then we sing To Israels God to Iacobs the great King So to the Euerlasting King and than King of all Worlds before the World began Whose Power whose Goodnesse shewn to euery Nation c. Extracts from me this serious Contemplation Soueraigne and holy God Fountaine and Spring Of all true Vertue the Omnipotent King Of whom by subtill search in things to'acquire Is not in Mans conception a thing higher Than his weake faculties can comprehend Yet not to know this God he should offend For how can it with reason consonant be One Godhood should remaine in persons three And they in such a firme connexure linkt To be although in separat yet distinct Thou art without beginning and againe Thou shalt to all Eternitie remaine Knowing no end The Onely and the Same Whom Time cannot impaire nor Age reclaime The space of things Thou do'st in space exceed And art contain'd in none How shouldst thou need That which thy Selfe hast made Or how should Sence Allot thee place who only art Immense Nor is it in Mans frailtie to deuise How Thee in the least kinde to ' annatomise Or tell what thou art like thy Image being A thing excluded from all mortall seeing Vnlesse thou of thy most especiall Grace Wilt shew some shadow of thy glorious Face No part of thee thou hast presented here Saue what doth in thy maruellous Works appeare No Strength can moue Thee of the Land or Ocean By whom we are and in whom haue our motion Thou art the Mind and Substance of all pure And holy minds Thou art the Reason sure And stedfast whence all other Reasons flow That are from perfect Wisedome said to grow Thou art that Vertue of all Vertues head Thou art the Life it selfe and thou art read Father of Life as being knowne to giue Breath with their Being to all things that liue The Light it selfe and yeelding Light to all The Cause and Strength of things in generall Beginning it 's beginning had from thee And whatsoeuer first began to be Vpon the sudden out of Nothing shin'd Which fil'd with thy great Power were so refin'd That either strength of knowledge they retaine Or excellent shape such as doth still remaine The sacred Scriptures are sufficient warrant By many Texts to make the Trine apparant As from the first Creation we may proue God did Create God Said the Spirit did Moue Create imports the Father Said the Sonne The Spirit that Mov'd the Holy-Ghost This done Come to the Gospell to Saint Paul repaire Of him Through him and For him all things are To whom be euerlasting praise Amen In which it is observ'd by Origen Through● and For three Persons to imply And the word Him the Godheads Vnitie Let Vs in Our owne Image Man create Saith God which Salomon doth thus explicate Remember the Creators in the dayes c. Which word those well verst in the Hebrew Phrase Reade in the plurall So when God did frowne On Babels Tower he said Let Vs go downe When Sodom was consum'd 't is said againe The Lord that fire did from the Lord downe raine So when Christs Glory Isay would declare To'expresse Three Persons in on Godhead are He Holy Holy Holy nam'd To show We might a Ternion in an Vnion know Come to Christs Baptisme you againe shall see In the same Trine the perfect Vnitie The Father the first Person is compris'd By sending downe a Voice The Son 's baptis'd By Iohn in Iorden and then from aboue The Third descends in figure of a Doue So likewise when Duke Moses went about To comment on the Law lest they should doubt Of this great Mysterie Hearke to my word O Israel
After To forsake That Countrey and his Spouse and Infant take And with them into AEgypt make all speed Till the Kings death which shortly did succeed We likewise reade The Wise men of the East Were in a dreame forewarn'd to see that Beast Herod no more nor turne the way they came How many of this nature might I name As that of Shimeon and of Pilats wife Examples in the holy Text are ri●e And each where frequent Then there is no doubt But there are such to leade vs in and out In visible forme they likewise haue appear'd Been seen to walke to eat to drinke and heard To speake more oft Two Abraham did receiue Into his Tent and hauing by their leaue First washt their feet they dranke with him and eat At least vnto his seeming tasted meat An Angell to yong T●by was a friend And trauel'd with him to his journies end An Angell 't was of the Coelestiall Crew That in one night all AEgypt● First borne slew When Daniel was with hunger almost dead Him in the Lions den an Angell fed An Angell came to Lot An Angell 't was Met Balaam and put speech into his Asse Like stories from the Gospell we may gleane Both of good Angels and of Spirits vncleane The Angell Gabriel in full forme and fashion Brought to the Virgin her Annuntiation He that before our blessed Sauiour stood To bring him comfort when his sweat was blood He that from prison did Saint Peter free And made that night a Gaole-deliuerie He that tooke Philip vp and to the place Brought him where then C●ndaces Eunuchwas Those that vnto the women did appeare When Christ was rose from death in Vesture cleare All these were blessed Angels Of the Bad We likewise many presidents haue had As those with which mens bodies were possest Some dumbe and others speaking who confest Our Sauiour to be God Some deafe and when One did torment the wretched Gadaren With many other of that hellish Rout Whom Christ himselfe extermin'd and cast out But now with leaue a little to digresse To finde some Learned or esteem'd no lesse What they of Spirits thought It doth exist Vpon Record The Iewish Cabalist Rabbi Achiba was of constant minde And wrot We Spirits should in all things finde In Earth in euery Riuer Brooke and Fountaine In Floud in Well in Valley Hill and Mountaine In Plant Herbe Grasse in Shrubs in euery Tree And when these Spirits 'mongst themselues agree Earth yeelds aboundance and affords encrease Trees swell with fruits Fields flourish by this peace The Seas are calme the Riuers wholsome and Yeeld Fish in plenty floating on the sand The Aire is tempe'rate But when they contend The Earth growes barren fruitfulnesse hath end Mildewes and Rots destroy both Grasse and Graine And then the labouring ploughman toiles in vaine Fruits wither on the trees Riuers rebell Leaue bare their channels or in torrents swell The Fountaines grow vnhealthfull and distaste And in this mutinie all runnes to waste The mustring Clouds obscure from vs the Sun The Heav'ns themselues into disorder run By Shoures tempestuous and rough stormes of Haile Then Inundations on the earth preuaile The Lightnings flash and loud-voyc'd Thunders rore As if Time tyr'd his journey had giuen o're Now as th'agreeing Spirits cause our health Pleasure strength gladnesse with encrease of wealth So those that are dissentious breed disease Want sorrow dearth with all things that displease Learn'd Abram Avenz●●a the Magition And Rabbi Azariel making inquisition By carefull study in their Works relate The cause to vs of extreme Loue or Hate Why that a man his Kindred and Allyance Ev'n his owne naturall Bloud sets at defiance And yet his strange loue should so far extend One that 's meere forreigne to select his friend Againe as we by proofe finde there should be 'Twixt man and man such an antipathee That though he can shew no iust reason why For any wrong or former injurie Can neither finde a blemish in his fame Nor ought in face or feature iustly blame Can challenge or accuse him of no euill Yet notwithstanding hates him as a Deuill They giue this reason The good Angels they So far to peace and vnitie obey That in the first they labour to attone And could it be to make ev'n Opposites one Bee'ng still at hand a friendship to persuade 'Twixt such as seeke each other to inuade When the malignant Spirits sole intention Is to set men at discord and dissention To kindle malice and the spleene inflame To hate yet shew no reason whence it came Ready to make him fly in that mans face Whose friendship others gladly would embrace King Ferdinand of Spaine their Annals say In his Procession on a solemne day Attended by his Traine in Barcelon Was by a Traiterous Spaniard set vpon With a short dagger and had then been slaine Had he not worne that time a golden chaine Which stayd the fatall blow The Traitor tooke And put to th' Racke with an vndaunted looke And constant suffering could no other reason Giue to the King of his vnnaturall treason But That the cause which to that act compeld him Was He ne're lov'd him since he first beheld him Nor could he brooke him then or reason why Shew of this deepe and strong Antipathy But in the midst of all his tortures vow'd If instantly he freedome were allow'd And that the King would him againe restore To his first state hee 'd kill him ten times o're Hence comes it that some Iudges are not cleare When Malefactors at the Bar appeare Of this they are made conscious when there 's brought Euidence 'gainst one bee 't for a thing of nought His Crime he aggrauates and in his fury If they Not guilty bring sends backe the Iury Stretches each quiddit of the Law to finde Him culpable onely to please his minde Againe If for some capitall offence Another's brought though Law hath no pretence Nor Conscience colour how to make his peace Yet he shall striue th' offendor to release Cite Statutes in his fauour what appeares Most grosse seeke to extenuate and with teares If so the Iuries Verdict 'gainst him run Pronounce the Sentence as against his Sonne Neither by him perhaps before-time seene Whence is the cause then of this Loue or Spleene Ev'n Princes are not from this passion free In some Kings Courts how many rais'd we see One ev'n as high as Hamon lifts his head And y●t for all that no desert can plead When as poore Mordechai envy'd out-brav'd Who notwithstanding the Kings life he sav'd Obscurely liues his seruice not regarded Nor with a single Sheckle once rewarded Nor doth the Prince in this his Power abuse Which by a story I can thus excuse Two Beggars as an Emperor once past by Saith one O would this Great man cast an eye Vpon our wants how happy were we than Saith the other How
be assembled he told them the whole circumstance before related Who vpon no other euidence summoned the party to make his appearance who after strict examination confessed the fact and made restitution of the Vessell For which discouery the Temple was euer after called Templum Herculis Indicis Alexander the Philosopher a man knowne to be free from all superstition reporteth of himselfe That sleeping one night hee saw his mothers funeralls solemnised being then a dayes journey distant thence and waking in great sorrow and many teares hee told this apparition to diuers of his Familiars and Friends The time being punctually obserued certaine word was brought him the next day after That at the same houre of his Dreame his mother expired Iovius reporteth That Sfortia Anno 1525 in a mornings slumber dreamed That falling into a Riuer he was in great danger of drowning and calling for succour to a man of extraordinary stature and presence such as Saint Christopher is pourtrayed who was on the farther shore he was by him sleighted and neglected This Dreame he told to his wife and seruants but no farther regarded it The same day spying a child fall into the water neere vnto the Castle Pescara thinking to saue the childe leaped into the Riuer but ouer-burthened with the weight of his Armor he was choked in the mud and so perished The like Fulgentius lib. 1. cap. 5. reporteth of Marcus Antonius Torellus Earle of Cynastall who admonished of the like danger in his sleep but contemning it the next day swimming in which exercise he much delighted though many were neere him yet he sunke in the midst of them and was drowned not any one being at that time able to helpe him Alcibiades Probus Iustine and Plutarch relate of him That a little before his death which happened by the immanitie of Tismenius and Bag●as sent from Critia dreamed That he was cloathed in his mistresses Petticoat or Kirtle Whose body after his murther being throwne out of the city naked and denied both buriall and couerture his Mistresse in the silence of the night stole out of the gates and couered him with her garment as well as she was able to shadow his dead Corps from the derision and scorne of his barbarous enemie No lesse strange was the Dreame of Croesus remembred by Herodotus and Valerius Max. Lib. 1. Cap. 7. Who of Atis the eldest and most excellent of his two sonnes dreamed That he saw him wounded and trans-pierced with steele And therefore with a fatherly indulgence sought to preuent all things that might haue the least reflection vpon so bad a disaster And thereupon where the youthfull Prince was before employed in the wars hee is now altogether detained at home in peace He had of his owne a rich and faire Arcenall or Armorie furnished with all manner of weapons in which hee much delighted which is shut vp and hee quite debarred both the pleasure and vse thereof His Seruants and Attendants are admitted into his presence but they are first vnarmed Yet could not all this care preuent Destiny for when a Bore of extraordinarie stature and fiercenesse had made great spoile and slaughter in the adiacent Region insomuch that the king was petitioned to take some order how he might be destroied the noble Prince by much importunitie and intercession obtained leaue of his father to haue the honour of this aduenture but with a strict imposition that he should expose his person vnto no seeming danger But whilst all the Gallantry that day assembled were intentiue on the pursuit of the Beast one Adrastus aiming his Bore-speare at him by an vnfortunate glance it turned vpon the Prince and slew him Valerius Maximus telleth vs of one Aterius Ruffus a Knight of Rome who when a great Sword-play was to be performed by the Gladiators of Syracusa dreamed the night before That one of those kinde of Fencers called Rhetiarij which vsed to bring Nets into the Theatre and by cunning cast them so to intangle their aduersaries to disable them either for offence or defence gaue him a mortal wound Which dream he told to such of his friends as fate next him It happened presently after That one of those Rhetiarij was brought by a certaine Gladiator being then Challenger into a Gallery next vnto the place where Aterius and his friends were seated as spectator Whose face hee no sooner beheld but hee started and told his Friends that hee was the man from whose hands he dream'd he had receiued his deadly wound When suddenly rising with his Friends to depart thence as not willing to tempt that Omen in thrusting hastily to get out of the throng there grew a sudden quarrell in which tumult Aterius was transpierced by the same mans sword and was taken vp dead in the place being by no euasion able to preuent his fate Cambyses King of Persia saw in a Vision his brother Smerdis sitting vpon an Imperiall Throne and his head touching the clouds And taking this as a forewarning that his brother had an aspiring purpose to supplant him and vsurpe the Crowne he wrought so far with Praxaspes a Nobleman and then the most potent in the Kingdome that by his practise he was murthered Yet did not all this avert the fate before threatned for another Smerdis a Magition and base fellow pretending to be the former Smerdis and the sonne of Cyrus after enioyed the Kingdome and Cambyses mounting his Steed was wounded with a knife in his hip or thigh of which hurt he miserably died Many Histories to the like purpose I could cite from Aristotle Plato Hippocrates Galen Pliny Socrates Diogines Laertius Themistocles Alexander Aphrodiensis Livy AElianus and others As of Ptolomeus besieging Alexandria Of Galen himselfe Lib. de venae Sectione Of two Arcadians trauelling to Megara Of Aspatia the daughter of Hermilinus Phocensis who after was the Wife of two mighty Kings Cyrus of Persia and Artaxes whose history Elianus de Varia Historia lib. 12. writeth at large As also that of Titus Atimius remembred by Cicero Lib. de Divinat 1. By Valer. Maxim Lib. 1. Cap. 7. By Livy lib. 2. By Macr●b Saturn 1. with infinite others To the further confirmation that there are Spirits I hold it not amisse to introduce some few Histories concerning Predictions The Emperor Nero asking counsel of the Diuell How long his empire and dominion should last Answer was returned him from that crafty and equivocating Pannurgist To beware of 64. Nero being then in youth and strength was wondrous ioyful in his heart to heare so desired a solution of his doubt and demand presuming that his principalitie should vndoubtedly continue to that prefixed yeare if not longer But soone after ●alba who was threescore and foure yeares of age being chosen to the Imperiall Purple deposed and depriued him both of his Crowne and life The like we reade of Philip King of Macedon and Father to
Alexander the Great Who sending to the Oracle of Delphos to know what should futurely betide him Answer was returned that his life should continue for a long season if it were not endangered by a Chariot Whereupon the King gaue strict and expresse commandement That all the Chariots within his kingdome should be pluckt in pieces and no further vse to be made of them and that no new ones should be after made neither would hee come neere vnto places that had any reference or relation to such a name Notwithstanding all his preuention hee was soone after slaine by Pausonias who wore at that time a sword which had a Chariot grauen vpon the pommell Dioclesian a man of a base and obscure parentage in Dalmatia serued as a common soldier in France and elsewhere vnder diuers and sundry Emperors Vpon a time reckoning with his Hostesse of the house wherein he was billited who was one of the sooth-saying Druides she told him that he was too penurious and did not beare the noble minde of a Souldier To whom he made answer That hee then reckoned with her according to his poore meanes and allowance and merrily added That if euer hee came to be made Emperor of Rome he would then shew himself much more bountifull To whom first looking stedfastly in his face she replied Souldier thou hast spoken truer than thou art aware of for after thou hast killed one Aper which signifieth a Boare thou shalt be made Caesar semper Augustus and weare the Imperiall Purple Dioclesian smiled and receiued it from her as a deli●ement or scoffe because hee had before bated her of her reckoning Yet after that time hee tooke great delight in the hunting and killing of Boares But diuers Emperors succeeding one another and he finding little alteration in his fortune hee was frequently wont to say I still kill the Boares but there be others that eat the flesh Yet in processe of time it happened that a potent man called Aper hauing married the sister of the Emperour Numerianus layd violent hands vpon his brother in law and most traiterously slew him For which facinerous act being apprehended by the souldiers and brought into that part of the Army where Dioclesian was who by reason of his long seruice was had in reputation with the prime Commanders the souldiers now demanding what should be done with the Traitor it was concluded amongst them that he should be at Dioclesians dispose who presently demanding of him his name and he answering Aper without further pause he drew his sword vttering these words And this Aper or Boare shall be added to the rest presently ranne him through the body and slew him Which done the soldiers commending it for an act of justice without further deliberation saluted him by the name of Emperor I haue read in the Chronicle of France concerning one of the French Henries That Gonvarus an Italian Astrologer hauing calculated his Natiuitie wrote vnto him about fiue yeares before the strange disaster of his death happened That the Starres and Planets threatned him in the one and fortieth yeare of his age with a dangerous wound in the head by which he should be strooke either blinde or dead and therefore aduised him to beware of tilts tourneys or any the like violent exercises for the space of that yeare Notwithstanding which in the predicted yeare at the solemne and pompous celebration of his Sisters mariage with the young King of Spaine after hee had three dayes together with great successe and generall applause demeaned himselfe in those Chiualrous exercises of Tilt and Barriers though hee was much persuaded by the Queene and entreated by the Lords after the breaking of many staues to giue ouer yet nothing could preuaile with him insomuch that in the very later end of the day when most of the Spectators were risen and departed out of the Tilt-yard he called to the Count Montgomerie Captain of his Guard earnestly importuning that he would runne one course more with him Which when hee sought by all meanes possible to excuse pretending many vnwilling delayes he tooke a speare and thrust it into his hand compelling him to another encounter in which he was most vnfortunately slaine by a splinter of the staffe that entring at the sight of his beauer pierced his braine and so concluded the great solemnitie with his owne lamentable Tragedie Before this accident happened in the beginning of the triumph one Nostrodanus told vnto diuers of the Kings seruants in secret that the King would be in great danger of death before the Tournament was fully finished And which is most remarkable a Merchants sonne of Paris a childe of about six yeares old not fully seuen being brought thither that day by his father and mother to see the Tilting at euery course the King ranne hee was heard to cry out aloud They will kill the King ô they will kill the King Plato was of opinion That children are no sooner born but they haue one of those Spirits to attend them which doth first copulate and conioyne the soule vnto the body and after being grown vnto some maturitie teach instruct and gouerne them The Academiques held That Spirits behold all mens actions and assist them that they know all our apprehensions and cogitations and when the Soule is deliuered from the Body they bring it before the high Iudge That they are questioned about our good or bad actions their testimonie being much preualent either to excuse or aggrauate That also they are vigilant ouer vs either sicke or in health waking or sleeping and especially in the very article and point of death oftentimes inspiring the parting Soule with a diuination surpassing all humane knowledge For instance Pheceredes Cyrus being vpon his death bed predicted victorie against the Magnesians which fell out accordingly And Possidonius telleth vs That a Rhodian dying nominated six men and told who should die first who second who third and so in order till he came to the last Neither did he any way faile in his prediction Porphirius was of opinion That not one onely but many Spirits or Genij had the charge of one and euery man one hauing care ouer his health another indulgent ouer his beauty and feature another to infuse into him courage and constancie c. But Iamblicus was of a contrarie assertion affirming That many needed not when one being of so pure and refined a nature was sufficient Some haue affirmed Spirits to be of diuers qualities therefore to worke in men according to their owne dispositions diuers effects Affirming That those AEthereall or Fierie stirre vp men to contemplation the Airy to the businesse and common affaires of this life the Waterie to pleasure the Earthy to base and gripple auarice So likewise the Martiall Spirits incite vs to fortitude the Ioviall to prudence the Venereall to lust the Mercuriall to policie and wisedome the Lunarie to fertilitie and plenty
Father another of the Mother yet hee is not one person of the Father another of the Virgin but hee is eternall of the Father and temporarie of the Virgin the same who created and was made He the beautifullest amongst men according to his Diuinitie and He of whom it is written He is despised and reiected of Men He is a Man full of sorrowes and hath experience of infirmities we hid as it were our faces from him He was despised and wee esteemed him not according to his Humanitie He that was before all worlds of a father without a mother Hee came towards the end of the world of a Mother without a Father He was the Temple of the Builder and the Builder of the Temple Hee was the Author of the Worke and the Worke of the Author remaining one Substance yet consisting of two Natures but neither confused in the commixtion of Natures nor doubled in the destruction of Natures Chrisostome speaketh thus The holy and blessed Mary a mother and a Virgin a Virgin before shee was deliuered a Virgin after Wilt thou saith he know how hee was borne of a Virgin and how after his birth she remained a Virgin I answer thee thus The dores were shut and Iesus entred Christ was miraculous in his Incarnation for as S. Augustine writing against the Iewes saith O you Iewes looke vpon the Harpe and obserue what a sweet musicall sound it yeelds to make vp which there be three necessarie instruments or helps Art the Hand and the String Art dictates the Hand toucheth the String soundeth all three worke together but amongst them the String is onely heard for neither the Art nor the Hand make any audible harmonie So neither the Father nor the Holy-Ghost tooke humane Flesh vpon them and yet they haue an equall coooperation with the Sonne the sound of the String is only heard and the Sonne is onely seene in the Flesh yet the effect and melodie consisteth of them all and as it solely belongeth to the String to make a sound so it belongeth to Christ onely to take humane Nature vpon him Further I demand of the incredulous Iew How Aarons dry Rod sprouted with leaues and bare Fruit And when he resolueth me that I will tell him how a Virgin conceiued and brought forth a Sonne But indeed neither can the Iew make manifest the one nor I giue warrantable reason of the other Saint Bernard writeth to this purpose Three Workes three Mixtures hath the Omnipotent Maiestie made in the assumption of our Flesh all miraculously singular and singularly miraculous Three such things as neuer the like before were nor shal the like hereafter happen vpon the face of the earth They are interchangeably God and Man a Mother and a Virgin Faith and the Heart of Man for the Word the Spirit and the Flesh met in one person and these Three are One and that One is Three not in the confusion of Substance but vnitie of Person and this is the first and super-excellent Commixtion The second is a Virgin and a Mother alike admirable and singular for it was not heard from the beginning of the world that a Virgin conceiued and that a Mother remained a Virgin The third is the co-Vnion of Faith with the Heart of Man and this though it seeme inferiour yet may it appeare euery way as powerfull if wee truly consider it For wonderfull it is that the Heart of Man should giue beleefe to the former For how can humane Vnderstanding conceiue That perfect God should be perfect Man Or that she should remaine an vntouched Virgin who had brought forth a Sonne As Iron and a Tyle-sheard cannot be moulded and made into one body so the other cannot be commixed vnlesse the glew and soder of the Spirit of God incorporat them He was miraculous in his Natiuitie for as Ambrose saith Contra Heretic It is impossible for me to search into the secret of his generation at the consideration of which my fences faile my tongue is silent and not mine only but euen those of the Angels It transcendeth the capacities of the Potestates the Cherubims and the Seraphims it is aboue conception for it is written The Peace of Christ passeth all vnderstanding Thou therefore lay thine hand vpon thy mouth since it is not lawfull for thee to enquire into these supernall Mysteries It is granted thee to know that hee is borne but how he is borne it is not granted thee to be inquisitiue for to doe so is fearefull since vnspeakeable is his generation according to the words of the Prophet Esayas Who can tell his Generation Concerning the place of his birth saith Ioan. Chrisostome vpon these words Intrantes Domum invenerunt puerum c. Did they finde a Pallace raised on pillars of Marble Found they a princely Court furnished with Officers and Attendants Found they guards of armed and well accommodated souldiers or Horses in rich and shining trappings or Chariots adorned with gold and ivorie Or did they finde the Mother crowned with an Imperiall Diadem or the Childe swathed in Bisse and Purple Surely no but rather a poore and base Cottage a vile and contemptible Stable more fit for beasts than men a Childe wrapped in sordid swathings and the Mother in an ordinarie garment prepared not so much for ornament as to couer nakednesse Yet the Nobility of Christs birth saith Saint Augustine appeared in the Virginitie of the Mother and the Nobilitie of the Mother was manifest in the Diuinitie of the Sonne And in another place Gold was offered him as to a potent King Frankincense as to a great God and Myrrhe as to a mercifull Redeemer who came to offer vp his life for the saluation of all Mankinde The Heauens were his Heralds Angels his Proclaimers Wise-men his Worshippers Saith Gregory vpon these words Cum natus esset Iesus in Bethlehem c. To this King borne we offer Gold when we shine in his sight by the claritie of Diuine wisedome Wee offer Frankincense when by holy and deuout prayers we burne the cogitations of the Flesh vpon the altar of our hearts which ascend a sweet sauour by our heauenly desires We offer Myrrhe when we mortifie all carnall affections through abstinence And Leo Pap. The Wise-men and Kings of the East adored the Word in the Flesh Wisedome in Infancie Strength in Infirmitie the Lord of Majestie in humane Veritie And to giue infalled testimonie of their faith what they beleeued with their hearts they professed by three guifts Myrrhe to a Man Gold to a King Frankincense to a God Hee was miraculous in his Life as being without sinne miraculous in his Doctrine for neuer man spake as hee did And of his Miracles we thus reade Claudian Angelus alloquitur Mariam quo praescia verbo c. Th'Angell to Mary speakes and saith that she Shall beare a Sonne and yet a Virgin be Three Chald'ae an Kings to him
Thy Maiestie and Might With Thy great Glory shining bright Are still to be adored solely V. The Heart that 's obstinate shall be With sorrowes laden heauily He that is wicked in his wayes What doth he but heape sinne on sin Which where it endeth doth begin Whom nothing being downe can raise VI. To the persuasion of the Prowd No remedie there is allow'd His steps shall faile that steddy seem'd Sinnes Root in him is planted deepe And there doth strong possession keepe He therefore shall not be esteem'd VII We know the Sinne from whence it grew We know the Torment thereto due And the sad place for it assign'd And yet the more we seeme to know The more we dull and stupid grow As if we sencelesse were and blind VIII Ope then our hearts our eyes vnmaske And grant vs what we humbly aske So much of Thy Diuinest Grace That we may neither erre nor stray But finding out the perfect way We may evade both Paine and Place IX Though Atheists seeme to jest at Hell There is a Tophet we know well O Atheismes pestilent infection There 's a Gehinnon a sad Graue Prepar'd at first for such as haue No hope in the blest resurrection X. Three times our Sauior wept we read When he heard Lazarus was dead Bewailing Humane frailty then When to Ierusalem he rid And a poore Asses Colt bestrid At the grosse folly blinding men XI He wept vpon the Crosse againe 'Gainst Humane Malice to complaine Seeing their insolence and pride When in such bitter grosse despight They crucify'd the Lord of Light Him who for Mans redemption dy'de XII How necessarie then are Teares To free vs from all future feares Of Death of Torment of Damnation Teares that can wash our Soules so white To bring vs to Eternall light Instating vs in our saluation XIII A contrite Spirit a broken Heart Moist eyes whence many dew drops start O grant vs then thou heav'nly King So we with Hearts and Tongues vnited May with the Psalmist be accited And Praise and Glory to Thee sing XIV Ye Sonnes of Men with one accord All Strength and Glory giue the Lord You that are Sonnes to men of Fame Giue them the Lord they are his due For know that it belongs to you To magnifie his holy Name XV. Within his glorious Temple Hee Deserueth Worship on the knee O kneele then at His sacred Shrine His Voice is on the Waters great His Glory thunders from his Seat His Pow'r doth on the Waters shine XVI His Voice is mighty glorious too For all things the Lords Voice can doo The strongest Cedars He doth breake When the Lords Voice from him is gon The Cedars ev'n of Lebanon Torne as they stand his Pow'r can speake XVII His Voice them of their leaues can strip He makes them like yong Calues to skip Nor doth the stedfast Mountaine scorne Or Hermon for his Dew so prais'd But when his voice aloft is rais'd To skip like a yong Vnicorne XVIII When the Lords Voice is lifted higher It doth diuide the flames of fire It makes the Wildernesse to quake Ev'n the great Wildernesse of all The Desart which we Kadesh call It doth compell to moue and shake XIX His Voice doth make the Hinde to beare And all those Forrests that cloath'd were Stand at his pleasure nak'd and bare And therefore in his Temple now All meet and to his Glory bow With Sacrifice of Praise and Prayer XX. The Lord the raging Seas doth sway The mighty Flouds to Him obay And neuer shall his Kingdome cease The Lord shall giue his People strength And will deliuer them at length And blesse them with his ioyfull Peace Non Delinquenti sed peccata relinquenti condonat Deus Ambros. THE PRINCIPAT Ex muner g glouer sculpt THE ARGVMENT of the seuenth Tractat. OF Gods great Works a serious view For which all praise to him is due The seuerall Classes that are held Amongst the Angels that rebel'd Of Lucifer the principall And his strange figure since his Fall Of Such as most in Power excell And of their Gouernment in Hell Their Orders Offices and Names And what Prioritie each claimes The List of Those that fell from Blisse The Knowledge that in Daemons is And how far stretcht Next of their Wrath Tow'rds Mankinde and what Bounds it hath Discouery of those Ginnes and Snares They lay t' entrap Men vnawares Of Compacts common in these Ages And of the Astrologomages The second Argument IN Heav'n in Earth in Hell some sway Others againe are taught t' obay The Principats GOds wondrous Works that haue before me beene I will record and speake what I haue seene Saith Wisedome No Worke present or decay'd But by his pow'rfull Word at first was made The Sun that shines and doth on all things looke What is it else but an illustrious booke In which th' Almighties Glory may be read Hath not the Lord who hath accomplished All things in season made each thing so rare That all his Saints his Glory shall declare These wondrous Workes surpassing humane sence T' expresse his Maiestie and Excellence The Heart he searcheth and the depth of man In his pre-Science knowing all he can Or thinke or act the wonders of the Skies And each obscure thing 's plaine before his eies Things past nor future can escape his brest All secret paths to Him are manifest No thought can Him escape of that be'assur'd Nor can the least word be from him obscur'd His Wisedomes exc'lent Works He doth extend From Euerlasting Neuer to haue end He needs no Counsellor his Will to act To Him can none adde no man can detract O how delectable Thou Lord of All Are thy stupendious Workes in generall By vs to be consider'd from things higher Ev'n to the very common sparks of Fire They liue by Thee created firme and sure And they to euerlasting shall endure And when he calls them to a reck'ning still As His they are obseruant to his Will Doubled they are one set against another And there is nothing his rare Works can smother The one the others workmanship commends How far then ô thou Mighty God extends Thy wondrous Pow'r or Who to Earth ally'd With thy great Glory can be satisfy'd Behold this high and sublime Ornament The beauty of the Heav'ns the Firmament So glorious to the eye in it the Sunne A maruellous Worke by the Creator done Which in it's dayly progresse through the Skie Points vnto vs the hand of the Most-Hye He burnes the Soile from his meridian seat And who is he that can abide his heat Three times more hot the mountaine tops he makes Than he that with his great care vndertakes To keepe a furnace in continuall ●lame His fiery vapors He casts out the same In their owne kinde so luminous and bright As that they dazle the beholders sight Great is the Lord that made the Sunne indeed And by his Word commands it run with speed The
Che Giganti nouo fan conte sue ●raccia Vedi Hoggimai quant ' esser Dee quel tutto Ch' a Cosi fatta parte si consaccia Se fu si bell● come e Hora brutto E contra al suo fattore alzo le Ciglia Ben de ●a lui procedor ogni lutto G quanto parve a me gran meraviglia Quando vide tre faccie a l●suatesta L' una dana●zia quella era vermiglia De l'altre due ches ' agginuge ano a questa Sour esso almeza Di Ciascuna spalla Es ' agginuge ano al somno de la Cresta La destra mi parea trabianca gialla La sinistra al vedere era tal quali Vegnon di la onde ' l nilo s' aunalla Sotto Ciascuna vsciuan Due grand Ali Quanto si Convenina a tanto ocello Vele di Mar non vidi Mai Cotuli Non Havean penna Ma di vespertello Era lor modo quelle ni su Alzana Si che tre venti si movean de ello Quindi Cocito tutto s' Aggellava Con sei sei occhi piangena con tre menti Gocciava il pianto sanguinosa Baua In which Description he first notes the place Where this great Prince of Darkenesse shut from Grace Is now tormented namely 'a congeal'd Lake His mighty stature next which he doth make Two thousand cubits By his Crest is meant His Enuy Arrogance and proud of●ent Three Faces with three sev'rall colours stain'd Import in him three Vices still maintain'd One fiery red Wrath and Exorbitation Denotes to vs with the Spleenes inflammation The pale and meagre Auarice implies From the third blacke and swarthy doth arise Vnprofitable Sloath. From the two eyes Which to each face belongs we may deuise All Appetites immod'rat In the growth Of these three Ills Ire Avarice and Sloath Two Wings two great accitements to those Sinnes Propose to vs The first of them beginnes In Turbulence and Fury from hence grow The windes of Crueltie that hourely blow Rapacitie and Gripplenesse are they That to the Misers Avarice obey The horrid blasts that hence proceed include The most vnnat'urall sin Ingratitude Sorrow with Negligence on Sloath attend Th' immoderat gusts of Hatred hence ascend Those windes of Wrath Ingratitude and Hate With fearefull stormes trouble and agitate Cocitus streames withall suppressing quite Those good and godly motions which accite Either to Faith or vnto Hope and Charity Lest any should in them claime singularity The greatnesse of his Wings improue th' elation Of his swel'd heart and proud imagination That ev'ry face hath a wide mouth and throat So much the Morall doth to vs denote That all whom such blacke sinnes contaminate His jawes and rav'nous throat ingurgitate His Teares which he did neuer yet imploy But as the Crocodile vseth to destroy Imports to vs that wretched Sinners state Whose slacke Repentance euer comes too late And so far Dante 's I must now enquire To what sphere these Refractories retyre Or in what place more seruile they remaine Who as they Knowledge more or lesse retaine Accordingly their faculties are squar'd One euill Angell takes into his gard A Kingdome he a Prouince and no more One lesser gifted hath predom'nance o're A City and some other but a Tower Some ouer one particular man hath power Some of one only Vice and limited there Nor striue they in lesse eminence t o'appeare Either subuerting Man Forts to demolish Cities subuert good Statutes to abolish T' encourage forreine or domesticke strife Than are the Angels the blest Sonnes of Life Each of them in their seuerall Place and Calling Either industrious to keepe men from Falling Preseruing Cit'adels instituting Lawes Wholsome and good or bee'ng th'immediat cause To secure Cities Countries and encrease Home and abroad happy and prosp'rous Peace Nor do the lower of bad Spirits obey Those of superior office because they Or loue them or esteeme them The cause why They yeeld themselues to such priority Is for that th' other haue more pow'r and can With greater subtiltie insidiate Man For in their Fall th' are stain'd with all impuritie From whose temptations there is no securitie Crafty they are and prone to all iniquity No place debar'd bee'ng pow'rfull in vbiquity With man they are at deadly opposition And into all his wayes make inquisition First tempt and then accuse hourely prepare By day them to intrap by night ensnare His sences they peruert his thoughts estrange From better vnto worse a fearefull change They bring Diseases Tempests Troubles Feares Not one of them but at his will appeares By transformation a blest Spirit of Light They challenge also as their proper right A Diuine pow'r And though these Daemons bee Amongst themselues at hostile enmitee Yet by conspiracie striue all they can How with vnanimous force to destroy Man Yet this worth obseruation we may reade In holy Scripture That such as mis-leade Our humane frailty haue not might a like With the good Spirits nor such force to strike As the blest Angels who the pow'r retaines To take and binde old Sathan fast in chaines One story I haue chosen out of many To shew the Diuell doth th' Almighty zany For in those great works which all wonder aske He is still present with his Anti-maske A man of Greece was with three children blest To him so deare all it could scarce be ghest Which he was most indulgent o're The first A sweet and hopefull Boy and therefore nurst Not with a common care for his estate Was great his birth did him nobilitate Two Daughters he had more the elder faire And well accomplisht but the yongest rare Not to be paralel'd for she was one Whom none was euer knowne to looke vpon But with such admiration that he said Nature surpast her selfe when she was made For all ingredients of her choice perfection Appear'd both in her feature and complexion So faire she was Three Lustres being spent And not a day but adding ornament Both to her growth and beauty now fifteene An age we cannot properly call greene Nor fully ripe not mellow scarce mature Not yet resolv'd a Virgin to endure Nor fancy Man but staggering betwixt Both agitations and her minde not fixt But sensible as being much commended How far she others of her Sex transcended Though quite sequestred from the common road Yet much delighted to be seene abroad And 'cause emergent Venus from the Seas Was said to rise her humor best to please It was her dayly custome to rise early To greet the goddesse whom she lov'd so dearly And hearing what of her the Poets sung To view the ●ome from which 't is said the sprung Stirring betimes one morning with the Cocke Pyrats had hid their ship behinde a rocke And as she tooke her pleasure on the shore Snacht her away and then with faile and oare Made speed from thence and proud of such a Peece Hurry'd her
For diuers Authors are in this agreeing Mans generation hath been multiply'de Aboue all other Animals beside Saith Daniel Thousand thousands Him before Stand and 'bout him ten thousand thousands more Which Thousand he thus duplicates to show Their countlesse number which our dull and slow Nature wants facultie to aphrehend As likewise when he further would extend Their Legions Miriads he to Miriads layes Noting to vs of those that sound his praise The infinite Armies like a Circle round The number ending where it first was found In Iohn 't is read A mighty voice I heard Of many Angels and their Troupes appear'd To be of thousand thousands Iob said well The number of his Souldiers who can tell 'Mongst others one much daring his bold Pen Seem'd to out-strip his Vnderstanding when He would confine each Chorus to containe The meere Chimaera of an idle braine Saying To each belongs in these blest Regions Six thousand six hundred sixty and six Legions Each Legion too doth bee'ng exactly told Six thousand six hundred sixty six Angels hold But of their number let no man discusse Further than sacred Scripture warrants vs. It followes that I next make inquisition Into the Angels motion a Position Needfull to be examin'd Know then He Is not contain'd in place as Brutes and we But Place it selfe he in Himself containes Bee'ng said to be still where his Pow'r remaines And though it passe our weake ingeniositie Yet He is knowne to be of strange velocitie And without passing places can with ease Or go or come at all times when he please From heav'n to earth He can descend and bee Aboue and here in space vnmomentarie Hence thence He vndisturb'd hath passage faire Through both the elements of Fire and Aire Without incumbrance or the least molest And though it sinke not into th' Ethnycks brest Hee 's without circumscription vnconfin'd For if these Spirits Places had assign'd And so from one into another shifted How could they then so suddenly be lifted Into the vpper Heav'ns or thence apply Themselues to th' earth in twinkling of an eye It is agreed vpon the Good and Euill The blessed Angell as the cursed Diuell Haue all those faculties and without aine Or passing intermediat things can gaine To what they purpose in one instant round The spatious world and where they please be found Those that the Mathematicke Art prosesse Tell vs That 'twixt th' eight Heav'n and earth's no lesse Than one hundred and sev'nty millions 100 and three Of spacious miles mete by Geometrie By which account the mighty space extending Is from the watry and tenth Heav'n descending Ten times so much at least for if a stone Should from the starry and eight Heav'n be throwne And ev'ry houre passe without intermission One thousand miles in it's swift expedition In motion still without stay or re-calling It must be sixty fiue yeares in it's falling To amplifie what hath before been said Some Sectifts haue their ignorance betray'd Affirming Angels are not If they were They with the Soule of force must likewise beare Bodies about them too and so to bee Subiect vnto our visibilitie How vaine this is it may be eas'ly ghest When none that hath Philosophy profest But hold That there are Substances Diuine Intelligence call'd which neuer did incline Into commixtion or knowne to require Substance from th' Earth the Water Aire or Fire A second thing th' object That if so great Their number be as that the Aire 's repleat With infinit Armies 't must be needs confest That they should hourely whole Mankinde molest But these consider not He that created All things out of meere Nothing hath instated Them in such order distance and consent One to another's no impediment Neither is any of his great Works found That hath the pow'r to passe beyond his Bound As in the Waters element though far It'exceeds the Earth yet keepes within it's ba● And though the proud waues with curl'd billowes rore Threatning as if to swallow vp the shore Yet by th' Almighties hand their pow'r is stay'd No Inundation or great Deluge made Vnlesse his Wrath some sudden vengeance brings Opening Heav'ns spouts and letting loose the Springs No maruell then that Spirits be in number So many that the very Aire they comber And they to vs and we to them so odious They neither hurtfull are nor discommodious Their Malice not bee'ng able to withstand Those bounds prefixt by the Almighties hand For so much in Iobs Historie is found When Sathan saith he hath compast the earth round He doth not say In his large progresse hee Hath done to Man least discommoditie Or harme at all not that he wanted Will But in himselfe the Pow'r to hurt or kill Nor durst he touching Io● make inquisition Till he from God himselfe had free permission Who gaue him limit and his fury s●aid Vpon his outward Fortunes when he said Lo all he hath now at thy ●●●cy stand Onely against his person 〈◊〉 hand Againe when He 〈◊〉 Body to him gaue Captiue his Life he did command him saue Whence we may ground Though this rebellious Prince Great Lucifer with his Adherents since Their Fall retaine th' abilitie and pow'r To measure th' Earth in least part of an houre Yet without leaue they neither dare nor can Vse the least violence on Gods creature Man Next touching the rare knowledge which insists In them by nature Some Theologists Affirme them pregnant in Theologie Philosophie Mathematicks Astrologie In Musicke they are skill'd expert in Physicke In Grammer Logicke and Arithmeticke Nay he that is among them the most low Contemn'd and vile more than weake Man doth know Nor are their reasons vaine for in respect A Spirit is but a meere Intellect Not burden'd with a body of agilitie Nimble and quicke therefore with much facilitie In all materials he acquainted is From the Earths superficies to th' Abisse He knowes such vertues as in Stones abide Gems Minerals creeping Wormes and Beasts for hide From him you nothing can for he doth vant Still in the Marble Porphyre Adamant The Corall Pumice and the Chrysolit The Smarage Topaz and the Margarit The Onyx Carbuncle Gold Siluer Lead Brasse Iron and Sulphur He is likewise read In the proprieties of Creeping things Ants Toads Snakes Serpents all that the earth brings Of all the sev'rall Fishes he hath notion Bred in fresh waters or the briny Ocean Of Beasts the sundry qualities he findes Lions Beares Tygres Camels Horses Hindes The Elephant the Fox Ape Asse Mule Cat Sheepe Wolfe Hare Hedge-hog with each other that The Earth produceth So in Herbs and Trees Plants Leaues Fruits Roots Seeds juices Liquors these No Artist hath like skill in He can tell The sev'rall qualities of Fowles and well Distinguish them as such and such belong To the Earth Aire or Water He is strong In further knowledge of the Elements As in their pow'r their natures and extents
he was put by his place of Stewardship which droue him into that desperation and impotencie of minde that by the counsell of a Iewish Magitian he renounced his Sauiour by an Indenture writ vnder his owne hand deliuering himselfe wholly into the empire of Sathan who was many times visible vnto him But now miserable man what shall he doe hee groweth repentant of the act and troubled in Spirit when he thinkes how much hee hath insenced his Maker and Redeemer by deliuering himselfe vp a voluntarie slaue and captiue to the great Aduersarie the Diuell The story saith In this anxietie and perturbation of minde he thought it best to fly for succor to the blessed Virgin Mary and to that purpose retired himselfe to a Temple consecrate vnto her in which he tendred many supplications and prayers ioyned with fasting and teares making great shew of effectuall repentance Forty dayes together hee frequented the Church without intermission or cessation of weeping and praying presenting his blasphemous writing vpon the Altar which miraculously as they say was taken thence and he receiued againe into Gods fauor The manner of this homage and others done to the Diuell is as followeth First the Magitian or Witch is brought before the Tribunal of Sathan either by a familiar Spirit or else by a Mage or Hag of the same profession hee sits crowned in a Majesticke Throne round inguirt with other Diuels who attend on him as his Lords Barons and Princes richly habited The Palace seemeth wholly to be built of marble the walls hung with gold and purple-coloured Arras all shewing the pompe of regalitie and state Sathan himselfe from his Royall seat casts his eyes round about as if ready to incline his benigne eares to any humble suitor whatsoeuer Then steps forth a Diuell of a venerable aspect and saith O most potent Lord and Master great Patron of the spacious Vniuerse in whose hands are all the riches and treasures of the earth and all the goods and gifts of the world this man I present before thine Imperiall Throne to follow thy standard and to fight vnder the patronage of thy great name and power who is ready to acknowledge thee to be God and Creator of all things none but thee It shall be in thy clemencie ô most soueraigne Lord to vouchsafe this man or woman the grace of thy benign aspect and receiue him or her into thy patronage and fauor To which he with a graue countenance and loud oration thus answereth I cannot but commend this thy friend who so cordially hath committed himselfe into our safegard and trust whom as our Client and Fauorit we accept and promise to supply him with all felicitie and pleasure both in this present life and the future This done the miserable wretch is commanded to renounce his Faith and Baptisme the Eucharist and all other holy things and to confesse Lucifer his onely Lord and Gouernor Which is done with many execrable ceremonies not fit to be here remembred Then is the Writing deliuered as was before spoken of Theophilus written with the bloud of the left thumbe Then doth the Diuell marke him either in the brow neck or shoulder but commonly in the more secret parts with the stampe or character of the foot of an Hare a blacke Dog or Toad or some such figure by which he brands him as the custome was of old to mark their slaues and captiues whom they bought in the market for mony to become his perpetuall slaue and Vassal And this Nigerius Sprangerus Bodinus c. say The wicked Spirit doth as desirous to imitate God in all things who in the old Testament marked his chosen People with the seale of Circumcision to distinguish them from the Gentiles and in the New Testament with the signe of the Crosse which as Hieronimus and Nazianzen say succeeded that of Circumcision And as the Diuell is alwayes aduerse to his Creator so hee will be worshipped with contrarie Rites and ceremonies Therefore when Magitians and Witches present themselues vnto him they worship him with their faces from and their backes toward him and somtimes standing vpon their heads with their heeles vpward but which is most beastly and abhominable of all in signe of homage hee presents vnto them his taile to kisse For so Petrus Burgolus and Michael Verdunus with diuers other Magitians besides haue confessed Now to speak of those Sorteligers and the effects of their Art S. Austin is of opinion That Pythagoras vsed characters numbers and letters by which he wrought many things seeming miraculous Amongst others he tamed a wilde Beare of an vnmeasurable greatnesse and fiercenesse making it to follow him like a dog whithersoeuer he went or came and at length gaue him leaue to depart againe into the Desarts but with condition That hee should neuer offer any violence to man or woman which Couenant it is said he kept inuiolate Coelius telleth vs That the same Pythagoras neere to Tarentum spying an Oxe to feed vpon Beanes called the Heardsman and bid him driue away the beast and to forbid him from eating any more of that kinde of graine To whom the other laughing replied That his Oxe was not capable of such admonition but told him his aduice had been better bestowed in his Schoole amongst his Schollers Which said Pythagoras hauing murmured some few words to himselfe the Oxe left eating ran to his manger in the City could neuer after be coupled to the Yoke but like a domesticke Spaniel would take food from the hands of any man Much after this kinde is that which the Laplanders the Finlanders and the Bothnienses vse● The Necromancer entereth his chamber with his wife and one companion onely there he takes a brasen Frog and Serpent layeth it vpon an anvill and giueth it a certaine number of blowes with an iron hammer then after the muttering of some few Magicke Verses in a great rapture he falleth downe into a trance Whilest he thus lies as seeming dead his Attendant watcheth him lest he be troubled with Flea Flie or any such thing At length comming to himselfe he can resolue you of any difficultie whose solution you before demanded The like may be said of that superstition vsed by the Magitian Iamnes Schoolemaster to the Emperor Theophilus who as Cedrenus witnesseth when three great Commanders and Captaines of the barbarous Nations were vp in armes against the Empire Theophilus doubtfull of the euent of that warre desired of Iamnes to be resolued thereof Who presently caused three great iron Hammers to be made which done hee deliuered them into the hands of three strong and able men and about mid-night after some incantations whispered he brought forth a statue with three heads and commanded them with all their strength to strike vpon those three heads at once which they did two of them were quite beat off and the third was much bruised but not decollated By which Iamnes gaue the Emperour hope
shooes could water tred And neuer hasard drowning The like fame Another that Othimius had to name Behinde him left Hadingus King of Danes Mounted vpon a good Steed by the raines Th' Inchanter tooke and crosse the main sea brought him Safe whilest in vaine the hot pursuer sought him Oddo the Danish Pyrat by the aid Of the like Sp'rits whole Nauies durst inuade And with his Magicke Charmes could when he please Raise mighty stormes and drowne th●m in the seas At length by one of greater practise found Aiming at others Wracke himselfe was drown'd Some Authors vnto this accursed Tribe Of watry Daemons Deluges ascribe And flux of waters Such we reade were knowne Whilest Damasus was Pope when ouerthrowne Were many cities in Sicilia And By Historiographers we vnderstand The like chanc'd in Pope Alexanders dayes In Italy afflicting diuers wayes Both losse of beasts and great depopulation In Charles the fifts time by an Inundation Happend in Holland Zeeland Friseland these Had their maritime shores drown'd by the seas In Poland neere Cracovia chanc'd the same And in one yeare if we may credit Fame In Europ besides Townes and Cities then Perisht aboue fiue hundred thousand men To these belong what we call Hydromantia Gastromantia Lacomantia Pagomantia Touching the Spirits of the Earth there bee Of diuers sorts each knowne in his degree As Genij the Domesticke gods and those They Lares call Spectars Alastores Larvae Noone-Diuels Syluanes Satyrs Fawnes And they frequ●nt the Forrests Groues and Lawnes Others th' Italians F'oletti call Paredrij there are too yet these not all Now what these Genij are Philostratus Eunapius Athenaeus Maximus With all the other Platonicks profest Them to be Sp'rits of men before deceast Who had they liv'd a good life and vnstain'd By licence of th' Infernall Pow'rs obtain'd In their owne houses to inhabit still And their posteritie to guard from ill Such they call'd Lares But all those that lead Liues wicked and debosht they being dead Wandred about the earth as Ghosts exil'd Doing all mischiefe such they Larvae stil'd And of this kinde that Spirit we may guesse Remembred in the booke of Socrates Who in the shape o● Moses did appeare The space togethe● of one compleat yeare I' th Isle of Creet persuading with the Iewes There liuing That he such a meanes would vse That if they met at a fixt day with ease He would traject them dry-foot through the seas To which they trusting by appointment meet All who that time were resident in Creet And follow their false Captaine lesse and more Ev'n to the very margent of the shore Then turning tow'rds them in a short oration Bespeakes them thus O you the chosen nation Behold as great a wonder from my hand As your fore-fathers did from Moses Wand Then with his finger points vnto a place 'Twixt them and which a Creeke ran no great space And seeming shallow All of you now fling Your selues saith he and follow me your King Into this sea swim but to yonder strand And you shall then arriue vpon a land From whence I will conduct you ev'ry man Dry-foot into a second Canaan He plungeth first they follow with one minde In hope a second Palestine to finde But hauing past their depths the rough windes blew When this Seducer straight himselfe withdrew Leaues them to ruin most of them bee'ng drown'd Some few by fish-boats sav'd he no wher● found With these the Spectars in some points assent Bee'ng tow'rds Mankinde alike maleuolent Whose in-nate malice nothing can asswage Authors of death depopulation strage By Origen they are Alastares nam'd By Zoroaster bloudy and vntam'd Concerning which the learned mens opinion Is That Abaddon hath of them dominion What time Iustinian did the Empire sway Many of these did shew themselues by day To sundry men both of good braine and sence After which follow'd a great Pestilence For to all such those Spectars did appeare It was a certaine signe their death drew neare King Alexander of that name the third That reign'd in Scotland if Boethius word May be beleev'd by match himselfe ally'de With England tooke Ioanna to his Bride Sister to the third Henry She bee'ng dead And issuelesse he after married Marg'ret his daughter Did on her beget Prince Alexander David Margaret These dying in their nonage and she too With sorrow as most thinke the King doth woo Iolanta the faire daughter as some say Vnto the great Earle of Campania Being as 't seemes most ardently inclin'd After his death to leaue some heire behind In the mid Reuels the first ominous night Of their espousals when the roome shone bright With lighted tapers the King and the Queene leading The curious Measures Lords and Ladies treading The selfe same straines the King looks backe by chance And spies a strange intruder fill the dance Namely a meere Anatomy quite bare His naked limbes both without flesh and haire As we decipher Death who stalks about Keeping true measure till the dance was out The King with all the rest afrighted stand The Spectar vanisht and then strict command Was giv'n to breake vp reuels each 'gan feare This Omen and presage disaster neere If any aske What did of this succeed The King soone ●fter falling from his Steed Vnhappily dy'de After whose death ensuing Was to the land sedition wracke and ruin The Syluanes Fawnes and Satyrs are the same The Greekes Paredrij call the Latines name Familiar Spirits who though in outward shew They threat no harme but seeme all good to owe Poore ambusht mankinde though their crafty Mines And snares do not appeare by ev'dent signes Yet with malicious hate they are infected And all their deeds and counsels are directed To make a faire and flatt'ring preparation Vnto the bodies death and soules damnation And of these Spirits as Macrobius saith The mount Pernassus in aboundance hath Neere to mount Hecta And Olaus writes The like appeare most frequently by nights And verbally deliuer kinde commends To men from their deceast and shipwrackt friends Vsing their helpe one Iohn Teutonicus By Acromaticke Magicke sported thus This Iohn was knowne a bastard and yet had Great fame for learning who in Halberstad Had for his worth admittance to a place Where none but the Nobilitie had grace To be in Commons yet it seemes so great Was his repute with them he sate and eat But yet with small content the yong men proud Of their high noble births much disallow'd His company and tooke it in great scorne To sit with one though learn'd yet basely borne And whether they were serv'd with flesh or fish His bastardy was sauce still in his dish But skil'd in hidden Arts I will thought he Some sudden means deuice henceforth to free My selfe from all their scoffes and taunts Hee then Inuites vnto his chamber those yong men Who most seem'd to oppose him feasts
his next expedition gaine an assured and most remarkable victorie Satisfied with this their liberall promise hee tooke his leaue recollected his dispersed Troupes and tooke the field The night before the battell being vigilant to suruey his Enemies Tents and see what watch they kept he espied three Damosels carying vp three dishes of mea● into one of the Tents whom following apace for he might easily trace them by their steps in the dew and hauing a Citharon about him on which he played most curiously he receiued meat for his musick and returning the same way he came the next day he gaue them a strong battell in which the enemies were slaine almost to one man● Pertinax as Sabellicus witnesseth a little before his death saw one of these Spectars in a fish-poole threatning him with a naked sword Of the like nature was that Bore which Zonarus speaketh of who meeting with Isaaccius Comnenes who was hunting neere vnto Naples and being pursued from a promontorie cast himselfe headlong into the sea leauing the Emperor almost exanimate and without life In Finland which is vnder the dominion of the King of Sweden there is a castle which is called the New Rock moted about with a riuer of an vnsounded depth the water blacke and the fish therein very distastefull to the palat In this are Spectars often seene which fore-shew either the death of the Gouernor or some prime Officer belonging to the place and most commonly it appeareth in the shape of an Harper sweetly singing and dallying and playing vnder the water There is a Lake neere Cracovia in Poland which in the yeare 1378 was much troubled with these Spirits but at length by the prayers of some deuout Priests the place was freed from their impostures The Fishermen casting their nets there drew vp a Fish with a Goats head and hornes and the eyes flaming and sparkling like fire with whose aspect and filthy stench that it brought with it being terrified they fled and the Monster making a fearefull noise like the houling of a wolfe troubling the water vanished Alexander ab Alexandro maketh mention of one Thomas a Monke who in an euening seeking an horse and comming neere vnto the brinke of a Riue● he espied a countrey fellow who of his voluntarie free-will offered to traject him ouer on his shoulders The Monke is glad of the motion and mounts vpon his backe but when they were in the midst of the floud Thomas casting his eye downe hee perceiued his legs not to be humane but goatish and his feet clouen Therefore suspecting him to be one of these watry Diuels hee commended himselfe to God in his prayers The Spirit then forsakes him and leaues him well washed in the middle of the Riuer to get vnto the shore with no small difficultie Sabellicus hath left recorded That when Iulius Caesar with his army was to passe the riuer Rubicon to come into Italy and to meet with Pompey one of these Spirits in the shape of a man but greater than ordi●arie sate piping vpon the banke of the Riuer Which one of Caesars soldiers seeing snatched away his pipe and broke it when the Spirit presently swimming the Riuer beeing on the other side sounded a shrill and terrible blast from a trumpet which Caesar interpreted to be a good and happy omen of his succeeding victorie Of the Spirits of the earth there are diuers sorts and they haue diuers names as Genij Lares Dij domestici Spectra Alastores Daemonia meridiana as likewise Fauni Sylvani Satyri folletti Fatuelli Paredrij Spiritus Familiares c. Of some of these I haue spoken in the preceding Tractat. Servius Honoratus and Sabinus are of opinion That Man consisteth of three parts but most ignorantly and aduerse to truth of a Soule a Body and a Shadow and at his dissolution the Soule ascends to heanen the Bodie inclines to the earth and the Shadow descends ad Inferos to hell They hold the Shadow is not a true body but a corporeall Species which cannot be touched or taken hold of no more than the winde and that this aswell as the Soule doth oft times appeare vnto men liuing and the soule after it hath left the body is called Genius and the Shadow Larva or the Shadow infernall These Genij are malicious Spirits of the earth who when they most promise health and safety vnto mankinde do then most endeauour their vtter ruine and destruction Constantine the Emperor marching from Antiochia said That he often saw his own Genius and had conference with it and when he at any time saw it pale and troubled which he held to be the preseruer and protectour of health and liuelyhood hee himselfe would much grieue and sorrow By the Spirits called Lares or Houshold gods many men haue been driuen into strange melancholies Amongst others I will cite you one least common A young man had a strong imagination that he was dead and did not onely abstaine from meat and drinke but importuned his parents that he might be caried vnto his graue and buried before his flesh was quite putrified By the counsell of Physitions he was wrapped in a winding sheet laid vpon a Beere and so carried toward the Church vpon mens shoulders But by the way two or three pleasant fellowes suborned to that purpose meeting the Herse demanded aloud of them that followed it Whose body it was there coffined and carried to buriall They said it was such a yong mans and told them his name Surely replied one of them the world is very well rid of him for he was a man of a very bad and vitious life and his friends may reioyce he hath rather ended his dayes thus than at the gallowes Which the yong man hearing and vexed to be so injured rowsed himselfe vp vpon the Beere and told them That they were wicked men to do him that wrong which he had neuer deserued and told them That if hee were aliue as hee was not hee would teach them to speake better of the Dead But they proceeding to depraue him and giue him much more disgraceful and contemptible language he not able to endure it leapt from the Herse and fell about their eares with such rage and fury that hee ceased not buffetting with them till quite wearied and by his violent agitation the humors of his body altered hee awakened as out of a sleepe or trance and being brought home and comforted with wholesome dyet he within few dayes recouered both his pristine health strength and vnderstanding But to returne to our seuerall kindes of Terrestriall Spirits There are those that are called Spectra meridiana or Noon-diuels In the Easterne parts of Russia about haruest time a Spirit was seen to walke at mid-day like a sad mourning Widow and whosoeuer she met if they did not instantly fall on their knees to adore her they could not part from her without a leg or
griefe cherish And in his minde growes witty how to perish But Wretch remoue the Visard and that terror Before so horrid thou shalt finde vaine error A Meditation vpon the former Tractate I. TO rip vp Gods great Counsels who shall striue Or search how far his hidden works extend Into the treasure of his wonders diue Or thinke his Maiestie to comprehend These things are granted vnto none aliue For how can such as know not their owne end Nor can of their beginning reason show Presume his Pow'r aud Might vnspeakable to know II. If He should say Weigh me the weight of Fire Or striue to call backe Yesterday that 's past To measure out the Windes I thee desire Or search the dwellings of the Ocean Vast How the Seas flow or how their Ebbes retyre Or in what moulds the Sun and Moone were cast Whence thou hadst life and fashion in the wombe Or wherfore born thence now to seek a second tomb III. Sure thou wouldst answer Fire cannot be weigh'd Or if What ballance can the heat sustaine And of the Windes what measure can be made For I shall striue t' imprison them in vaine And how the chambers of the Depth are layd Which none hath seene that hath return'd againe Or who the Houres already past can summe Or by his art preuent those seasons are to come IV. How should I frame a Modell so capatious In which to cast the body of the Sunne Or of the Moone so infinitely spatious Or truly tell the courses that they run Neither can humane wit proue so audatious To question of his end e're he begun Neither with our weake sence doth it agree To find how meere from nothing we first came to bee V. If of the Fire which thou dost hourely try If of the Winde which blowes vpon thy face If of the Day which dayly passeth by And what is now to morrow hath no place Or those bright Planets mouing in the sky Which haue Times Daughters in perpetuall chase Or if the Seas abisse thou canst not sound To search whose chanels yet there neuer line was found VI. If of thy selfe thou canst no reason show By all the vnderstanding thou canst claime How in the wombe thou first beganst to grow Or how thy life into thy body came Yet all these things to be we see and know They lie before vs and we giue them name But if we cannot show the reason why How can we search the mysteries of the most Hye VII Number we may as well the things to come Gather the scatter'd drops of the last raine The sands that are vpon the shore to summe Or make the wither'd Floures grow fresh againe Giue the Mole eyes or speech vnto the Dumbe Or with small Vessels th' Ocean striue to d●aine Tell all the glorious stars that shine by night Or make a Sound or Voice apparant to the sight VIII The Forrest of it's lofty Cedars prowd Whose spatious boughes extended neere and far And from the earth the Sun aid seeme to cloud Much glorying in it's strength thinks none should bar His circumscribed limits therefore vow'd Against the mighty Ocean to make war Calling a Councell of each aged Tree Who with vnanimous consent thereto agree IX Like counsell did the curled Ocean take And said Let vs rise vp against the Land Let 's these our spatious borders larger make Nor suffer one tree in his place to stand The Earths foundations we haue pow'r to shake And all their lofty mountaines countermand Much honour by this conflict may be had If we to these our bounds can a new Countrey add X. Yet was the purpose of the Forrest vaine For a Fire came and all the Woods destroy'd And 'gainst the raging practise of the Maine Sands interpos'd and it 's swift course annoy'd Some Pow'r there was which did their spleens restrain For neither of them their intents enioy'd 'Twixt these I make thee Vmpire vse thy skill Which canst thou say did well or which of thē did ill XI Both their intents were idle thou wilt say And against Nature that they did deuise The Woods were made within their bounds to stay And therefore to transgresse them were vnwise The Seas that quiet in their channels lay And would so proud an action enterprise Be thou the judge betweene each vndertaker Whether they both rebelled not 'gainst their Maker XII For as the Earth is for the Woods ordain'd Fixt there not to remoue their setled station And as the Flouds are in their shores restrain'd But neither to exceed their ordination So must all Flesh in frailty be contain'd For so it hath been from the first Creation And only the things heauenly vnderstand Who are in heav'n and prest at Gods almighty hand XIII If then things supernaturall we finde The depth whereof we cannot well conceiue So abdite and retruse from Mans weake minde Them we into our frailty cannot weave As what 's aboue Capacitie assign'd Those to the first Disposer let vs leaue What 's common amongst men is knowne to all But we may faile in those things metaphysicall XIV But be it euer our deuout intention To be so far remote from all ambition That whatsoeuer's aboue apprehension If it be true and of Diuine condition To quarrell with it in no vaine dissention But rather yeeld hereto with all submission Man made of earth to Earth God did confine Grace from aboue is the free gift of Pow'r Diuine XV. This Grace is the third Person in the Trinitie The second Wisedome and the first all Power To whom that we may haue more free affinitie Let vs submit vs henceforth from this hower And that we may attaine to true Diuinitie Pray That they will their mercies on vs shower Here in this life from Sathan vs defend And after bring vs to that joy which hath no end Crux pendentis est Cathedra docentis S. Augustine THE ANGELL Thom Hammon Armig Rich Gethinge M of the pen. THE ARGVMENT of the ninth Tractat. TO Spirits call'd Lucifugi From shunning Light I next apply My neere-tyr'd Pen of which be store In Mines where workmen dig for Oare Of Robin Good-fellow and of Fairies With many other strange Vagaries Done by Hob-goblins I next write Of a Noone-Diuell and a Buttry-Sprite Of graue Philosophers who treat Of the Soules essence and her seat The strange and horrid deaths related Of learn'd Magitians animated By Sathan the knowne truth t' abiure And study Arts blacke and impure Of Curious Science last the vanity Grounded on nothing but incertainty And that no Knowledge can abide the Test Like that in Sacred Scripture is exprest ¶ The second Argument THe Angell vnto Man knowne best As last of Nine concludes the rest The Angell THree Yong-men of Darius Court contend What thing should strongest be One doth commend Wine to haue chiefe dominion The other sayes The King hath prime place And the third doth praise The pow'r of Women to make others thrall But aboue
Stumpsius recites this story which 't m' appeare By computation hapned in the yeare One thousand fiue hundred twenty There 's a place Neere Basill which hath entrance by a space Narrow and strait but is within capatious And as fame goes possest with Sp'rits vngratious The like is in our Peke-hills to be seene Where many men for nouel-sake haue beene Another that 's call'd Ouky hole neere Wells All vnder earth and full of spatious cells Both wondrous caues Nor can't be truly said Whether by Art or Nature they were made But to the first A Botcher of that towne Rude of behauior almost a meere clowne Yet bold and blunt vncapable of dread Especially when wine was in his head Into that Caue this Groome presum'd to enter Further than any man till then durst venter He lights a waxen taper which before Was consecrate then enters at a dore Of sollid iron which difficultly past Then chamber after chamber comes at last To a fresh fragrant garden ev'ry thing Seeming as if there had been lasting Spring In midst of which a goodly Pallace stands The frame appeares not built by mortall hands So curious was the structure no inuention There but exceeding humane apprehension When entring the great Hall he may espye Vpon a throne magnificent and hye A Virgin of surpassing beauty plac't Incomparable vpward from the wast Her golden haires about her shoulders hung Smooth brow'd cleare ey'd her visage fresh and young But all below the girdle seem'd to twine About the chaire and was meere serpentine Before her stood an huge great brasen chest Crosse-barr'd and double lockt it seemes possest Of mighty treasure and at either end A blacke fierce ban-Dog couched to defend That Magosin for such as approch neere With their sharpe phangs they threat to rend and teare She checks their fury makes them stoope and lye Flat on their bellies She doth next vntye A strong and double-warded Key that hung About her necke in a silke Ribbond strung The Chest she first vnlocks then heaues the lid And shewes th' Aduent'rer what was therein hid Gold of all stamps and siluer in great store Midas it seemes of Bacchus askt no more A small piece of each Coine to him she giues Desiring him to keepe it whilest he liues Her bounty stretcht but to an easie load All that he got he after shew'd abroad And when she gaue it thus she him bespake A Princesse see who for a step-dames sake Am thus transform'd my fortunes ouerthrowne And I despoyl'd both of my state and Crowne But were I by a yong man three times kist Who from his childe-hood euer did persist In modesty and neuer stept astray I by his meanes should be remov'd away And as his vertues guerdon for a dower He should receiue this masse now in my power Twice as he said he stroue her lips to touch But in th' attempt her gesture appear'd such Her face so alter'd her aspect so grim Her chattring teeth so gnashing as if him She would haue instantly deuour'd it seem'd 'Twixt hope and feare to be as then redeem'd But yet so terrible his offer was That for the worlds wealth added to that masse He durst not on the like exploit be sent But turned thence by the same way he went Yet by this strange relation after mov'd By some of his Allyes whom he best lov'd To second his attempt he neuer more Could finde the way backe to that charmed dore Not many yeares ensuing this another Of the same towne a kinsman or a brother Hoping thereby a desp'rat state to raise By his direction had made oft essayes This strange inchanted Pallace to discouer And to that Queene to be a constant Louer At length he entred but there nothing found Saue bones and skulls and Coarses vnder ground But was withall so far distract in sence He dy'd some three dayes after parting thence The like vaine hope did Apollonius blinde Who though he studied by his Art to finde Hid gold and wholly gaue his minde vnto 't His fare thereby not better'd by a root For so mine Authors say The great Magition Agrippa minding to make inquisition By Magicks helpe and search for treasures hidden Not only by the Emp'ror was forbidden Carolus the fift but histories report He for that notion banisht was the Court. Andrew Theuerus tells vs One Macrine A Greeke labor'd the earth to vndermine In Paros Isle and in that hope resolv'd Him suddenly the earth quite circumvolv'd Of Cabades the mighty Persian King Two Authors Glycas and Cedrenius bring This Historie to light 'Twixt the confines Of Persia and of India there be Mines In Mount Zudaderin of stones and gems Some valu'd at no lesse than Diadems But how to compasse them was found no meane The passage being kept by Sp'rits vncleane Th' ambitious King for such a masse of pelfe Daring to tug with Lucifer himselfe Brings thither an huge army sundry wayes Assaults the mountaine still the Diuels raise Tempests of fire and thunder to their wracke And maugre opposition force them backe After retreat the covetous King persists In his attempt and of the Cabalists And Magi calls a Councell and of them Demands By what vnheard of stratagem This Treasure may be compast They agree It by one onely meanes atchiev'd may bee Namely That in his prouinces reside A Sect of Christians at that time deny'de Their liberty of conscience now if they Will to that God they serue deuoutly pray Their Orisons haue sole pow'r to withstand The force and fury of that hellish Band. By one of his great Princes the King Vnto the Patriarch many kinde commends Of him desiring their spirituall aid Those damned Caca●daemons to inuade The Bishop grants proclaimes a gen'rall Fast All shrieue them of their sinnes which done at last Betwixt the Mountaine and the Campe they bend Their humble knees and in their pray'rs commend The Sultans safety This no sooner done But these infernall Fiends afrighted runne With horrid cries and yells the aire they fill And leaue to him the conquest of the hill Of Faustus and Agrippa it is told That in their trauels they bare seeming gold Which would abide the touch and by the way In all their Hostries they would freely pay But parted thence myne Host thinking to finde Those glorious Pieces they had left behinde Safe in his bag sees nothing saue together Round scutes of horne and pieces of old leather Of such I could cite many but I 'le hye From them to those we call Lucifugi These in obscurest Vaults themselues inuest And aboue all things Light and Day detest In Iohn Milesius any man may reade Of Diuels in Sarmatia honored Call'd Kottri or Kibaldi such as wee Pugs and Hob-goblins call Their dwellings bee In corners of old houses least frequented Or beneath stacks of wood and these conuented Make fearefull noise in Buttries and in Dairies Robin good-fellowes some some call
them Fairies In solitarie roomes These vprores keepe And beat at dores to wake men from their sleepe● Seeming to force locks be they ne're so strong And keeping Christmasse gambols all night long Pots glasses trenchers dishes pannes and kettles They will make dance about the shelues and settles As if about the Kitchen tost and cast Yet in the moruing nothing found misplac't Others such houses to their vse haue fitted In which base murthers haue been once committed Some haue their fearefull habitations taken In desolat houses ruin'd and forsaken Examples faile not to make these more plaine The house wherein Caligula was slaine To enter which none euer durst aspire After his death till 't was consum'd by fire The like in Athens of which Pliny writes In his Epistles As Facetius cites In Halberstad saith he there is a Dwelling Of great remarke the neighbour roofes excelling For architecture in which made aboad A mighty rich man and a belly-god After whose death his soule gon Heav'n knowes whither Not one night fail'd for many moneths together But all the roomes with lighted tapers shone As if the darknesse had beene chac't and gone And Day there onely for his pleasure stay'd In the great chamber where before were made His riotous feasts the casements standing wide Clearely through that transparance is espy'de This Glutton whom they by his habit knew At the boords end feasting a frolicke crew Of lusty stomacks that about him sate Serv'd in with many a costly delicate Course after Course and ev'ry Charger full Neat Seruitors attended not one dull But ready to shift trenchers● and fill wine In guilded bowles for all with plate doth shine And amongst them you could not spy a guest But seem'd some one he in his life did feast At this high rate they seem'd to spend the night But all were vanisht still before day light Of Bishop Datius a learn'd Clerke thus saith He for the true profession of his Faith Sent into exile in his difficult way Opprest with penurie was forc'd to stay In Corinth nor there lodging could he haue In any Inne or place conuenient saue A corner house suppos'd to be inchanted And at that time with sundry Diuels haunted There taking vp his lodging and alone He soundly slept till betwixt twelue and one When suddenly he knew not by what cranny The dores bee'ng fast shut to him came a many Of Diuels thronging deckt in sundry shapes Like Badgers Foxes Hedge-hogs Hares and Apes Others more terrible like Lions rore Some grunt like hogs the like ne're heard before Like Bulls these bellow those like Asses bray Some barke like ban-dogs some like horses ney Some howle like Wolues others like Furies yell Scarse that blacke Santus could be match'd in hell At which vp starts the noble Priest and saith O you accursed Fiends Vassals of wrath That first had in the East your habitation Till you by pride did forfeit your saluation With the blest Angels you had then your seat But by aspiring to be god-like great Behold your rashnesse punisht in your features Being transhap'd into base abject creatures This hauing spoke the Spirits disappeard The house of them for euer after clear'd One thing though out of course it may appeare Yet I thought fit to be inserted here The rather too the Reader I prepare Because it may seeme wonderfull and rare Receiue 't as you thinke good or if you please To beleeue Plutarch then his words are these One call'd Enapius a yong man well bred By the Physitions was giv'n out for dead And left to his last sheet After some howers He seem'd to recollect his vitall powers To liue againe and speake The reason why Demanded of his strange recouerie His answer was That he was dead 't was true And brought before th' infernall Bar. They view Him o're and o're then call to them who'haue charge The spirit from the body to inlarge Whom Pluto with the other Stygian Pow'rs Thus threat Base Vassals can we thinke you ours Or worthy our imployment to mistake In such a serious errand Do we make You Officers and Lictors to arrest Such as are call'd to their eternall rest And when we send for one whose dismall fate Proclaimes him dead you bring vs one whose date Is not yet summ'd but of a vertue stronger As limited by vs to liue much longer We sent that with Nicander you should meet A Currier that dwells in such a street And how haue you mistooke This Soule dismisse And fetch his hither to our darke Abisse With that saith he I waken'd His friends sent Vnto the Curriers house incontinent And found him at the very instant dead When he his former life recouered And though meere fabulous this seeme to be Yet is it no impossibilitie Fiends should delude the Ethnicks and on them Confer this as a cunning stratagem To make them thinke that he dispos'd mans breath And had the sole pow'r ouer life and death At nothing more these auerse Spirits aime Than what is Gods vnto themselues to claime Others there are as if destin'd by lot To haue no pow'r but ouer goods ill got For instance One long with the world at strife Who had profest a strict religious life And taken holy Orders at his booke Spending his spare houres to a crafty Cooke Was neere ally'de and at his best vacation Findes out a time to giue him visitation And greets him with a blessing The fat Host Is glad to see his Vncle Sod and Rost He sets before him there is nothing fit To bid him welcome wanting downe they sit The good old man after some small repast More apt to talke than eat demands at last Of his Lay Nephew since he toiles and striues In this vaine world to prosper how he thriues The Cooke first fetcheth a deepe sigh then sayes O Vncle I haue sought my state to raise By ev'ry indirect and law lesse meane Yet still my couetous aimes are frustrat cleane I buy stale meat and at the cheapest rate Then if my Guests complaine I cog and prate Out-facing it for good Sometimes I buy Beeues haue been told me of the murrain dye What course haue I not tooke to compasse riches Ventur'd on some haue been found dead in ditches Bak'd dogs for Venison put them in good paste And then with salt and pepper helpt their taste Meat rosted twice and twice boyl'd I oft sell Make pies of fly-blowne joints and vent them well I froth my cannes in ev'ry jug I cheat And nicke my Ghests in what they drinke or eat And yet with these and more sleights all I can Doth not declare me for a thriuing man I pinch myne owne guts and from others gleane And yet though I shew fat my stocke is leane The good old man though at his tale offended No interruption vs'd till he had ended First hauing shooke his head then crost his brest Cousin said he this lewd life I detest Let me aduise
they Cannot endure it puts them to dismay Lactantius tells vs When vpon a season An Emp'ror of his Idoll askt the reason Of some doubt that perplext him a long space He answer'd not the cause was that in place A Christian then was present at that time Who had new blest him with the Crosses signe Good Angels when to man they first appeare Although they strike him with amase and feare Their em affies bee'ng done before they part They leaue him with great joy and cheare of heart As he at whose dread presence Daniel shooke As th' Angell Gabriel whom the Holy-Booke Makes mention of who when he came to bring To the blest Maid a message from heav'ns King Frightfull at first appear'd his salutation But th' end thereof was full of consolation But the bad Spirits bringing seeming ioy The end thereof's disaster and annoy From circumstance might many more arise But these for this place at this time suffice Be it held no digression to looke backe From whence I came inquiring if I lacke No fit accoutrement that may be found Behoofull for the journey I am bound Something I had forgot in my great speed Of Musicke then e're further I proceed I must deriue it from the first of dayes The Spheres chime Musicke to their Makers praise In the worlds first Creation it begunne From the word Fiat spoke and it was done Was sound and sweetnesse voice and symphonie Concord Consent and heav'nly harmonie The three great Orders of the Hierarchie Seruants vnto th' eternall Majestie In their degrees of Ternions hourely sing Loud Haleluiahs to th' Almighty King The Seraphins the Cherubins and Thrones Potestates Vertues Dominations The Principats Arch-Angels Angels all Resound his praise in accents musicall So doe the Heav'ns and Planets much below them Touching the first those that seeme best to know them Thus of their quicke velocitie relate As the supreme and highest agitate Their wheeles with swiftest motion so conclude The lowest finish their vicissitude That is their naturall courses much more soone As first in nine and twenty dayes the Moone The Sun and Venus in one twelue-month theirs And Saturne his in thirty compleat yeares But many thousands must be fully done Before the starry heav'ns their course haue runne Such and so great is mans innate ambition Into all knowledge to make inquisition The depth of Natures hidden wayes to sound Mystries to search and diue in arts profound As if we looke into the first of Time When as the World was in it's youth and prime Ev'n to this latest Age those much commended For deepe conceptions greatly haue contended Almost aboue capacitie indeed Laboriously each other to exceed But as the Fable of Ixion proud Saith he in Iuno's stead embrac'd a Cloud So for the most part those of wits refin'd Building vpon their amplitude of mind And by their owne vaine apprehensions sway'd In their maine course erroneously haue stray'd Either in all mistaking or some part Error for Truth and Ignorance for Art The reason is That in things vndecided By selfe-conceit bee'ng obstinatly guided And not acquiring out the perfect ground What 's finite they with infinite confound What 's humane with diuine what 's wrong with right As out of darknesse striuing to draw light Hence comes so many Sects and Schooles t' arise Amongst the Sophists thinking themselues wise As Py●hagorians Epicures Platonicks Pythonicks Scepticks and Academicks Eleaticks Perepateticks Stoicks too With others more And all these as they doo Differ in names so in opinions and Vpon diuersitie of judgements stand For instance First as touching the foundation Of things that since the Chaos had creation And cause efficient some hold Earth some Fire Some Water others Aire some Sects conspire Vpon the full foure Elements to impose it One names the Heav'ns another saith he knowes it The Stars were workers● Atoms this man names Another Number and the former blames Some Musicall consent drawne from the Spheres Some Full some Empty by all which appeares Those things are only quarrel'd with not prov'd For nothing's constant sollid or immov'd In all their doctrines each with other jar And are indeed still in seditious war And therefore God reproues Iob for aspiring And to his hidden wayes too deepe inquiring Thus saying Who is he that doth obscure Knowledge with words imperfect and impure Gird vp thy loines thee like a man prepare I will demand and thou to me declare Where wast thou when I layd the earths foundation If thou hast knowledge giue me true narration Who measur'd it now if thou canst divine Or ouer it what 's he hath stretcht the line Vpon what are the solid Bases made Or who the corner stone thereof first layd When all the Morning Starres as but one-voic't Prais'd me together when all Saints reioyc't Who shut the Sea with dores vp when the same As from the wombe it selfe issu'd and came When for it I the Clouds a cov'ring found And as in swathing ●ands in darkenesse bound And said Thou hitherto shalt haue free way No further thou shalt here thy proud waues stay And after this the secrets doth pursue Of Snow Haile Tempests with the Light and Dew Raine Ice Death Darknesse and so further runnes To th' Pleiades Arcturus and his sonnes Saith Paul In this world none himselfe deceiue To thinke hee 's wise but such vaine pha●sies leaue And let him be a foole so to be wise For this worlds wisedome is a meere disguise Of foolishnesse with God Scriptures thus treat The Wise he catcheth in his owne conceit In Esays Prophesie the words thus sound The wisedome of the Wise I will confound The prudence of the Prudent reprehend Where is the wise man Where 's the Scribe now or He of this world the great Inquisitor Hath not God made all the worlds Wisedome Folly Who then dares thinke himselfe or wise or holy What was it that to Socrates first gaue Wisedomes great attribute and honour saue That he confest In all he did pursue He only knew this That he nothing knew What saith the Preacher When I did apply My heart to search out Wisedome curiously And to behold on earth the secrets deepe That day nor night the eyes of man take sleepe Gods entire worke before myne eyes I brought That Man could not finde out the worke he sought Beneath the Sun for which mans busie minde Labors to search but it can neuer finde And though the Wise man thinke it to conceiue He cannot doo 't without th' Almighties leaue When as the Academicks of the rest Of all the Ethnycke Sophists were held best Yet in their then supreme authoritie None durst contest and say So this shall be The Pyrhonicks of no lesse approbation Would not of any thing make attestation But made a doubt in all and held for true Whoeuer humane Science shall pursue No other base he hath whereon to sit Sauing the fraile
As Mice in walls the Diuell so Into our brest doth venter Where either he findes hidden paths Or makes new wayes to enter Notwithstanding which I propose one Distich more for our generall comfort Si Sathanas Christi sine nutu invadere Porcam Non potis est Christi quomodo laedat Ovem If Sathan without leaue of Christ A Swine could not inuade How can a Sheepe of Christs owne flocke By Sathan be betray'd But as a remedy for these and the like temptations let vs heare that worthy and learned Author Gregorie Nazianzen in Tetrasc Vinum Libido Liuor Daemon pares Hos mente privant quos tenent hos tu prece Medere fusis lachrimis jejunio Medela morbis haec enim certa est meis Wine Enuy Lust the Diuell are alike These where they rule the minde with madnesse strike Therefore to pray to fast to weepe be sure For These of my Diseases are the cure Concerning those Daemons wee call Lucifugi or flying light we may reade Prudentius Cathemerinon Him 1. thus Ferunt vagantes Daemones Laetos tenebris noctium Gallo canente exterritos Sparsim timere caedere c. They say The loose and wandring Sp'rits Take pleasure in the shade of nights But when they heare the Cocke to crow Th' are frighted and away they go The neerenesse of the light they feare And dare not stay till day appeare Before the rising Sun they spye They into close darke cauerns flye Which is a signe they know the scope And crowne of our re-promis'd hope That when sleepe hath our eyes forsooke We for Christs comming wait and looke Additions to the Premisses OF the Sylvans Faunes Satyrs Folletti Paredrij c. all included within the number of such as wee call Familiar Spirits there are diuers stories extant as That they can assume the shapes and figures of men and eat drinke sit at table talke and discourse after the manner of our fellowes so that they may be easily tooke for some friend or acquaintance Macrobius writeth That in the mountaine of Pernassus these Sylvans and Satyrs yearely keepe their Bacchanalian feasts where they meet in great companies singing and dancing to rurall musicke which may be easily heard at the foot of the mountaine and their trouping and skipping together easily discerned In Silesia a Nobleman man hauing inuited many Ghests to dinner and prepared a liberall and costly feast for their entertainment when all things were in great forwardnesse in stead of his friends whom he expected he onely receiued excuses from them that they could not come euery one pretending some businesse or other occasion that he could not keep appointment Whereat the Inuitor being horribly vexed broke out into these words saying Since all these men haue thus failed me I wish that so many Diuels of hell would feast with me to day and eat vp the victuals prouided for them And so in a great rage left the house and went to Church where was that day a Sermon His attention to which hauing tooke away the greatest part of his choler in the interim there arriued at his house a great troupe of horsmen very blacke and of extraordinarie aspect and stature who alighting in the Court called to a Groome to take their horses and bade another of the seruants run presently to his master and tell him his Ghests were come The seruant amased runneth to Church and with that short breath and little sence he had left deliuers to his master What had happened The Lord calls to the Preacher and desiring him for that time to breake off his Sermon and aduise him by his Ghostly counsel what was best to doe in so strict an exigent hee persuades him That all his seruants should with what speed they could depart the house In the meane time they with the whole congregation came within view of the Mansion Of which all his seruants as well men as maids had with great affright cleared themselues and for haste forgot and left behinde a yong childe the Noblemans sonne sleeping in the cradle By this the Diuels were reuelling in the dining chamber making a great noise as if they had saluted and welcommed one another and looked through the casements one with the head of a Beare another a Wolfe a third a Cat a fourth a Tygre c. taking bowles and quaffing as if they had drunke to the Master of the house By this time the Nobleman seeing all his seruants safe began to remember his sonne and asked them What was become of the childe Those words were scarce spoke when one of the Diuels had him in his armes and shewed him out of the window The good-man of the house at this sight being almost without life spying an old faithfull seruant of his fetcht a deep sigh and said O me what shall become of the Infant The seruant seeing his master in that sad extasie replyed Sir by Gods helpe I will enter the house and fetch the childe out of the power of yon Diuell or perish with him To whom the master said God prosper thy attempt and strengthen thee in thy purpose When hauing taken a blessing from the Priest he enters the house and comming into the next roome where the Diuels were then rioting hee fell vpon his knees and commended himselfe to the protection of Heauen Then pressing in amongst them he beheld them in their horrible shapes some sitting some walking some standing Then they all came about him at once and asked him what busines he had there He in a great sweat and agonie yet resolued in his purpose came to that Spirit which held the Infant and said In the name of God deliuer this childe to mee Who answered No but let thy master come and fetch him who hath most interest in him The seruant replied I am come now to doe that office and seruice to which God hath called me by vertue of which and by his power loe I seise vpon the Innocent And snatching him from the Diuell tooke him in his armes and carried him out of the roome At which they clamored and called aloud after Ho thou Knaue ho thou Knaue leaue the childe to vs or we wil teare thee in pieces But he vnterrified with their diabolicall menaces brought away the Infant and deliuered it safe to the father After some few dayes the Spirits left the house and the Lord re-entred into his antient possession In this discourse is to be obserued With what familiaritie these Familiar Spirits are ready to come being inuited Of the Sylvans Alexander de Alexandro makes this relation A Friend of mine of approued fidelitie saith he called Gordianus trauelling with a Neighbour of his towards A retium they lost their way and fell into desarts and vninhabited places insomuch that the very solitude bred no small feare The Sunne being set and darknesse growing on they imagin they heare men talking and hasting that way to enquire of them the readiest path to bring them