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A56827 Institutions, essays, and maxims, political, moral, and divine divided into four centuries / by the Right Honoura[ble] L. Marqu. of H[alifax]; Enchiridion. 1698 Quarles, Francis, 1592-1644.; Halifax, George Savile, Marquis of, 1633-1695. 1698 (1698) Wing Q100; ESTC R41062 51,002 313

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Just thou secretly confessest thy Anger to be unjust He that is angry with the Just Reprover kindles the fire of the Just Revenger MAX. 43. Do well whilst thou mayst least thou do evil when thou wouldst not He that takes not advantage of a good power shall lose the benefit of a good will MAX. 44. Let not Mirth be thy profession lest thou become a make-sport He that hath but gained the title of a Jester let him assure himself the Fool is not far off MAX. 45. In every Relative action change Conditions with thy Brother then ask thy Conscience what thou wouldst be done to being truly resolved exchange again and do thou the like to him and thy Charity shall never err It is injustice to do what without impatience thou canst not suffer MAX. 46. Love thy Neighbour for God's sake and God for his own sake who created all things for thy sake and redeemed thee for his mercy sake if thy love have any other object it is false love if thy object have any other end it is self Love MAX. 47. Let thy conversation with Men be sober and sincere let thy Devotion to God be dutiful and decent let the one be hearty and not haughty let the other be humble and not homely so live with Man as if God saw thee so pray to God as if Men heard thee MAX. 48. God's pleasure is the wind our actions ought to sail by Man's will is the stream that Titles them up and down if the wind blow not thou mayst take the advantage of the Tide if it blow no matter which way the stream runs If with thee thy Voyage will be the shorter if against thee the Sea will be the Rougher It is eaffer to strive against the Stream than to sail against the Wind. MAX. 49. If thou desire much rest desire not too much there is no less trouble in the preservation than in the acquisition of abundance Diogenes found more Rest in his Tub than Alexander on his Throne MAX. 50. Wouldst thou multiply thy Riches diminish them wisely or wouldst thou make thy Estate entire divide it charitably Seeds that are scattered encrease but hoarded up they Perish MAX. 51. How cam'st thou by thy Honour by Money How cam'st thou by thy Money by Extortion compare the Pennyworth with the Price and tell me truly how truly Honourable thou art It is an ill purchase that is Cumbred with a Curse and that Honour will be Ruinous that is built on Ruines MAX. 52. If thy Brother hath privately offended thee reprove him privately and having lost himself in an injury thou shalt find him in thy forgiveness he that rebukes a private fault openly betrays it rather than reproves it MAX. 53. What thou desirest inspect throughly before thou prosecute cast one Eye upon the Inconveniencies as well as the other upon the Conveniencies weigh the fulness of the Barn with the charge of the Plough weigh Honour with her burthen and Pleasure with her dangers so shalt thou undertake wisely what thou desirest or moderate thy Desires in undertaking MAX. 54. If thou owest thy whole self to thy God for thy Creation what hast thou left to pay for thy Redemption that was not so cheap as the Creation In thy Creation he gave thee thy self and by thy self to him in thy Redemption he gave himself to thee and through him restored thee to thy self Thou art given and restored now what owest thou to thy God If thou hast paid all thy Debts give him the Surplusage and thou hast merited MAX. 55. In thy Discourse take heed what thou speakest to whom thou speakest how thou speakest and when thou speakest What thou speakest speak truly when thou speakest speak wisely A Fool 's Heart is in his Tongue but a Wise man's Tongue is in his Heart MAX. 56. Before thou act a Theft consider what thou art about to do if thou take it thou losest thy self if thou keep it thou disenablest thy Redemption till thou restorest it thou canst not be restored when it is restored` it must cost the more Sorrow and Pain than ever it brought thee Profit or Pleasure It is a great Folly to please thy Palate with that which thou knowest must either be vomited or thy Death MAX. 57. Silence is the highest Wisdom of a Fool and Speech is the greatest Trial of a Wise man if thou would'st be known a Wise man let thy Words shew thee so if thou doubt thy Words let thy Silence feign thee so It is not a greater point of Wisdom to discover Knowledge than to hide Ignorance MAX. 58. The Clergy is a Copy-book their Life is the Paper whereof some is purer some courser their Doctrine is the Copies some written in a plain hand others in a flourishing hand some in a Text hand some in a Roman hand others in a Court hand others in a Bastard Roman If the choice be in thy power choose a Book that hath the finest Paper let it not be too straight nor too loosely bound but easie to lye open to every Eye Follow not every Copy lest thou be good at none among them all choose one that shall be most legible and useful and fullest of just Writing But if the Paper chance to have a Blot remember that Blot is no part of the Copy MAX. 59. Virtue is nothing but an Act of loving that which is to be beloved and that Act is Prudence from whence not to be removed by constraint is Fortitude not to be allured by Enticements is Temperance not to be diverted by Pride is Justice the declining of this Act is Vice MAX. 60. Rebuke thy Servant's Fault in Private publick Reproof hardens his Shame if he be past a Youth strike him not he is not fit for thy Service that after wise Reproofs will either deserve thy Stroaks or digest them MAX. 61. Take heed rather what thou receivest than what thou givest what thou givest leaves thee what thou takest sticks by thee he that presents a Gift buys the Receiver he that takes a Gift sells his Liberty MAX. 62. Things temporal are sweeter in expectation things eternal are sweeter in the fruition the first shames thy hopes the second crowns it It is a vain Journey whose end affords less pleasure than the way MAX. 63. Know thy self that thou may'st fear God know God that thou may'st love him in this thou art initiated to Wisdom in that perfected The Fear of God is the Beginning of Wisdom the Love of God is the fulfilling of the Law MAX. 64. If thou hast Providence to foresee a Danger let thy Providence rather prevent it than fear it the fear of future Evils brings often times a present Mischief whil'st thou seekest to prevent it practise to bear it He is a wise man can prevent an Evil he is a patient man that can endure it but he is a valiant man can conquer it MAX. 65. If thou hast the place of a Magistrate deserve it by thy
Justice and dignifie it with thy Mercy Take heed of early Gifts an open hand makes a blind Eye Be not more apt to punish Vice than to encourage Virtue be not too severe lest thou be hated nor too remiss lest thou be slighted So cute Justice that thou may'st be loved so execute Mercy that thou may'st be feared MAX. 66. Let not thy Table exceed the fourth part of thy Revenue let thy Provision be solid and not far fetch'd fuller of Substance than Art Be wisely frugal in thy Preparation and freely cheerful in thy Entertainment If thy Guest be right it is enough if not it is too much Too much is a Vanity enough is a Feast MAX. 67. Let thy Apparel be decent and suited to the Quality of thy place and purse Too much punctuality and too much morosity are the two Poles of Pride Be neither too early in the Fashion nor too long out of it nor too precisely in it what Custom hath civilized is become decent till then ridiculous Where thy Eye is the Jury thy Apparel is the Evidence MAX. 68. If thy Words be too luxuriant confine them lest they confine thee He that thinks he never can speak enough may easily speak too much a full Tongue and an empty Brain are seldom parted MAX. 69. In holding of an Argument be neither cholerick nor too opinionate the one distempers thy Understanding the other abuseth thy Judgment Above all things decline Paradoxes and Mysteries Thou shalt receive no Honour either in maintaining rank Falshoods or medling with secret Truths As he that pleads against the Truth makes Wit the Mother of his Error so he that argues beyond Warrant makes Wisdom the Midwife of his Folly MAX. 70. Detain not the Wages from the poor man that hath earn'd it lest God withold thy Wages from thee If he complain to thee hear him lest he complain to Heaven where he will be heard if he hunger for thy sake thou shalt not prosper for his sake The poor man's Peny is a Plague in the rich man's Purse MAX. 71. Be not too cautious in discerning the fit Objects of thy Charity lest a Soul perish through thy Discretion What thou givest to mistaken Want shall return a Blessing to thy deceived Heart better in relieving Idleness to commit an accidental Evil than in neglecting Misery to omit an essential Good better two Drones be preserv'd than one Bee perish MAX. 72. Theology is the Empress of the World Mysteries are her Privy Council Religion is her Clergy the Arts are her Nobility Philosophy her Secretary the Graces her Maids of Honour the moral Virtues the Ladies of her Bedchamber Peace her Chamberlain true Joy and endless Pleasures are her Courtiers Plenty her Treasurer Poverty her Exchequer the Temple is her Court If thou desire access to this great Majesty the way is by her Courtiers if thou hast not Power there the common way to the Sovereign is by the Secretary MAX. 73. It is an evil Knowledge to know the Good thou should'st embrace unless thou likewise embrace the Good thou knowest The Breath of Divine Knowledge is the Bellows of Divine Love and the Flame of Divine Love is the Perfection of Divine Knowledge MAX. 74. If thou desire Rest unto thy Soul be just he that doth no Injury fears not to suffer Injury The unjust mind is always in Labour it either practiseth the Evil it hath projected or projects to avoid the Evil it hath deserved MAX. 75. Accustom thy self to what is most usual He that delights in Rarities must often feed displeased and sometimes lye at the mercy of a dear market common food nourisheth best Delicates please most the sound Stomack prefers neither what art thou the worse for the last year's plain Diet or what now the better for the last great Feast MAX. 76. Whoever thou art thou hast done more evil in one day than thou canst expiate in six and canst thou think the evil of six days can require less than one God hath made us rich in days by allowing six and himself poor by reserving but one and shall we spare our own Flock and sheer his Lamb He that hath done nothing but what he can justifie in the six days may play the seventh MAX. 77. Hope and Fear like Hypocrates's Twins should live and dye together if Hope departs from Fear it travels by Security and lodgeth in Presumption if Fear depart from Hope it travels to Infidelity and Inns in Despair the one shuts up Heaven the other opens Hell the one makes thee insensible of God's Frowns the other incapable of God's Favour and both teach God to be unmerciful and thee to be most miserable MAX. 78. Close thine ear against him that shall open his mouth secretly against another if thou recieve not his words they fly back and wound the Reporter if thou receive them they fly forward and wound the Receiver MAX. 79. If thou would'st preserve a sound Body use fasting and walking if a healthful Soul Fasting and praying walking exerciseth the Body praying exerciseth the Soul fasting cleanseth both MAX. 80. Wouldest thou not be thought a Fool in another's Conceit be not wise in thine own he that trusts in his own Wisdom proclaims his own Folly He is truly wise and shall appear so that hath Folly enough to be thought not worldly wise or Wisdom enough to see his own Folly MAX. 81. Desirest thou Knowledge Know the end of thy desire Is it only to know then it is Curiosity is it because thou mayst be known then 't is Vanity if because thou mayst edifie then 't is Charity if because thou mayst be edified it is Wisdom That Knowledge turns to mere Excrement that hath not some heat of Wisdom to digest it MAX. 82. Wisdom without Innocency is Knavery Innocency without Wisdom is Foolery be therefore wise as Serpents and innocent as Doves The Subtilty of the Serpent instructs the Innocency of the Dove the Innocency of the Dove corrects the Subtilty of the Serpent What God hath joyned together let no man separate MAX. 83. The more thou imitatest the Virtues of a Saint departed the better thou celebratest the Saint's day God is not pleased with surfeiting for his sake who with his Fasting so often pleased his God MAX. 84. 〈◊〉 not thy serviceable Soldier out of soft Apparel lest he prove effeminate nor out of a full Purse lest he grow timorous They are more fit for action that are fiery to gain a Fortune abroad than they that have Fortunes to lose at home Expectation breeds Spirit Fruition brings Fear MAX. 85. God hath given to Mankind a common Library his Creatures and to every man a proper Book himself being an abridgement of all the others If thou read with Understanding it will make thee a great Master of Philosophy and a true Servant to the Divine Author if thou but barely read it will make thee thy own wise man and the Author's Fool. MAX. 86. Doubt is a weak Child lawfully