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A17081 A discourse of ciuill life containing the ethike part of morall philosophie. Fit for the instructing of a gentleman in the course of a vertuous life. By Lod: Br. Bryskett, Lodowick.; Giraldi, Giambattista Cinzio, 1504-1573. Ecatommiti. VIII.5. 1606 (1606) STC 3958; ESTC S116574 181,677 286

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A DISCOVRSE OF CIVILL LIFE Containing the Ethike part of Morall Philosophie Fit for the instructing of a Gentleman in the course of a vertuous life By LOD BR Virtute summa Caetera Fortunâ ANCHORA SPEI LONDON Printed for EDVVARD BLOVNT 1606. TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE HIS SINGVLAR GOOD LORD ROBERT Earle of Salisbury Vicount Cranborne Lord Cecill Baron of Essenden Principall Secretarie to his Maiestie Knight of the most noble order of the Garter c. THis booke treating of the Morall vertues being now to come vnder the censure of the world doth summon me of it self to craue protection from your Lordships honorable fauour as the personage who knowing best their worth may best protect him from the iniury of any that should attempt to carpe the same And my priuate obligations for your manifold fauours among which the great benefite of my libertie and redeeming from a miserable captiuitie euer fresh in my remembrance doth make me hope not onely of your Honors willingnesse to patronize both my selfe and my labour but also that you wil be pleased therein to accept of the humble and deuoted affection wherwith most reuerently I present it vnto your Lordshippe Vouchsafe therefore my most honored good Lord to yeeld me the comfort of so gracious an addition to your former fauors and benefits and to giue to all the yong Gentlemen of England encouragement to embrace willingly that good which they may receiue by reading a booke of so good a subiect the title whereof bearing in front your noble name shall giue them cause to think it worthy to be passed with the approbation of your graue iudgement VVhich being the most desired frute of my endeuour I will acknowledge as none of the least of your great graces and euer rest Your Lordships most bounden and humbly deuoted LOD BRYSKETT TO THE GENTLE and discreet Reader RIght well saith the Wise man that there is nothing new vnder the Sunne and further that there is no end of writing books For howsoeuer in a generalitie the subiect of any knowledge be declared yet the particulars that may be gathered out of the same be so many as new matter may be produced out of the same to write thereof againe so great is the capacitie of mans vnderstanding able to attaine further knowledge then any reading can affoord him And therefore Horace also affirmeth that it is hard to treate of any subiect that hath not bene formerly handled by some other Yet do we see dayly men seeke partly by new additions and partly with ornaments of stile to out-go those that haue gone before them which haply some atchieue but many moe rest farre behind This hath bred the infinitenesse of bookes which hath introduced the distinction of good from bad vsed in best Common-weales to prohibite such as corrupt manners and to giue approbation to the good For that the simpler sort by the former drinke their bane in steed of medicine and in lieu of truth the proper obiect of mans vnderstanding they introduce falshood decked in truths ornaments to delude the vnheedful Reader Whereas on the other side the benefite which we receiue by the reading of good books being exceeding great they deserue commendation that offer their endeuours to the benefiting of others with books of better matter Which hath made me resolue to present vnto thy view this discourse of Morall Philosophie tending to the wel ordering and composing of thy mind that through the knowledge and exercise of the vertues therein expressed thou mayst frame thy selfe the better to attaine to that further perfection which the profession of a Christian requireth and that euerlasting felicitie which assisted with Gods grace neuer refused to them that humbly and sincerely call for the same thou mayst assuredly purchase As my meaning herein is thy good chiefly so let thy fauourable censure thankfully acknowledge my labor and goodwil which may moue me to impart after vnto thee another treating of the Politike part of Morall Philosophie which I haue likewise prepared to follow this if I shall find the fauourable acceptation hereof such as may encourage me thereunto The booke written first for my priuate exercise and meant to be imparted to that honorable personage qui nobis haec otia fecit hath long layne by me as not meaning he being gone to communicate the same to others But partly through the perswasion of friends and partly by a regard not to burie that which might profit many I haue bin drawne to consent to the publishing thereof Gather out of it what good thou canst and whatsoeuer thou mayst find therein vnperfect or defectiue impute charitably to my insufficiencie and weaknesse and let not small faults blemish my trauell and desire to benefite thee But say to thy selfe with that worthy bright light of our age Sir Philip Sidney Let vs loue men for the good is in them and not hate them for their euill Farewell A DISCOVRSE CONTAINING THE ETHICKE PART OF MORALL PHILOSOPHIE FIT TO INstruct a Gentleman in the course of a vertuous life Written to the right Honorable ARTHVR late Lord Grey of Wilton By LOD BRYSKETT WHen it pleased you my good Lord vpon the decease of maister Iohn Chaloner her Maiesties Secretarie of this State which you then gouerned as Lord Deputie of this Realme to make choice of me to supply that place and to recommend me by your honorable letters to that effect I receiued a very sufficient testimonie of your good opinion and fauourable inclination towards me And albeit your intention and desire in that behalfe tooke not effect whether through my vnworthinesse or by the labour and practise of others yet because your testimonie was to me instar multorum Iudicum and because that repulse serued you as an occasion to do me after a greater fauor I haue euermore sithens caried a continual desire to shew my selfe thankfull to your Lordship For when at my humble sute you vouchsafed to graunt me libertie without offence to resigne the office which I had then held seuen yeares as Clerke of this Councell and to withdraw my selfe from that thanklesse toyle to the quietnes of my intermitted studies I must needes confesse I held my selfe more bound vnto you therefore then for all other the benefits which you had bestowed vpon me and all the declarations of honorable affection whereof you had giuen me many testimonies before And therefore being now freed by your Lordships meane from that trouble and disquiet of mind and enioying from your speciall fauour the sweetnesse and contentment of my Muses I haue thought it the fittest meanes I could deuise to shew my thankfulnes to offer to you the first fruites that they haue yeelded me as due vnto you from whom onely I acknowledge so great a good That they will be acceptable vnto you I make no doubt were it but in regard of the true and sincere affection of the giuer who in admiring and reuerencing your vertues giueth place to no