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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of Paradoxes and Problemes, by John Donne
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  • Title: Paradoxes and Problemes
  • Author: John Donne
  • Release Date: April 8, 2020 [EBook #61783]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PARADOXES AND PROBLEMES ***
  • Produced by deaurider, David Wilson and the Online
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  • Transcriber’s Note
  • This document uses the “long s” character ſ extensively, albeit at times
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  • PARADOXES
  • _and_
  • PROBLEMES
  • _by_ Iohn Donne
  • _with two Characters
  • and an Essay of_
  • VALOUR
  • [Decoration]
  • _Now for the first time reprinted from the editions
  • of 1633 and 1652 with one additional =Probleme=_
  • SOHO
  • _THE NONESUCH PRESS
  • 30 Gerrard Street_
  • 1923
  • _This edition is limited to 645 copies, printed and made in
  • England for the Nonesuch Press in the 17th century Fell types by
  • Frederick Hall, printer to the University of Oxford. The type has
  • been distributed. This is number 9_
  • [Decoration]
  • The
  • CONTENTS
  • ❧ PARADOXES
  • 1. _A Defence of Womens Inconſtancy:_ P. 1.
  • 2. _That Women ought to paint:_ P. 6.
  • 3. _That by Diſcord things increase:_ P. 9.
  • 4. _That good is more common then evill:_ P. 12.
  • 5. _That all things kill themſelves:_ P. 15.
  • 6. _That it is poſſible to find ſome vertue in Some Women:_ P. 17.
  • 7. _That Old men are more fantaſtike then Young:_ P. 19.
  • 8. _That Nature is our worſt Guide:_ P. 21.
  • 9. _That only Cowards dare dye:_ P. 24.
  • 10. _That a Wiſe Man is knowne by much laughing:_ P. 26.
  • 11. _That the gifts of the Body are better then thoſe
  • of the Minde:_ P. 30.
  • 12. _That Virginity is a Vertue:_ P. 34.
  • ❧ PROBLEMES
  • 1. _Why have Bastards beſt Fortune?_ P. 40.
  • 2. _Why Puritanes make long Sermons?_ P. 42.
  • 3. _Why did the Divel reſerve Jeſuites till theſe latter
  • dayes:_ P. 43.
  • 4. _Why is there more variety of Green then of other
  • Colours?_ P. 44.
  • 5. _Why doe young Lay-men ſo much ſtudy Divinity:_ P. 45.
  • 6. _Why hath the common Opinion afforded Women Soules?_ P. 47.
  • 7. _Why are the Faireſt, Falſeſt?_ P. 49.
  • 8. _Why Venus-ſtar only doth caſt a ſhadow?_ P. 51.
  • 9. _Why is Venus-ſtar multinominous, called both =Heſperus=
  • and =Veſper=:_ P. 54.
  • 10. _Why are New Officers leaſt oppreſſing?_ P. 56.
  • 11. _Why does the Poxe ſo much affect to undermine the Noſe?_ P. 58.
  • 12. _Why die none for Love now?_ P. 60.
  • 13. _Why do Women delight much in Feathers?_ P. 61.
  • 14. _Why doth not Gold ſoyl the fingers?_ P. 62.
  • 15. _Why do great men of all dependents, chuſe to preſerve
  • their little Pimps?_ P. 63.
  • 16. _Why are Courtiers ſooner Atheiſts then men of other
  • conditions?_ P. 64.
  • 17. _Why are ſtateſmen moſt incredulous?_ P. 66.
  • 18. _Why was Sir Walter Raleigh thought the fitteſt Man, to write
  • the Hiſtorie of theſe Times?_ P. 68.
  • ❧ CHARACTERS
  • 1. _The Character of a =Scot= at the first ſight:_ P. 69.
  • 2. _The true Character of a =Dunce=:_ P. 71.
  • ❧ AN ESSAY OF VALOUR: P. 75.
  • [Decoration]
  • _BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE_
  • Donne’s Paradoxes and Problemes are clever and entertaining trifles,
  • which were probably written before 1600, during the more wanton period
  • of their author’s life. Owing to their scurrilous nature they could
  • not be published during his lifetime, but shortly after his death the
  • greater part of them were licensed to be printed, the _Imprimatur_
  • printed at the end both of the eleven Paradoxes and of the ten
  • Problemes being signed by Sir Henry Herbert and dated October 25,
  • 1632. The volume was published under the title of _Juvenilia_ in 1633,
  • but already on November 14, 1632, an order of inquiry had been
  • delivered at the King’s command by the Bishop of London, calling upon
  • Sir Henry Herbert to explain before the Board of the Star Chamber his
  • reasons ‘why hee warrented the booke of D. Duns paradoxes to be
  • printed’. Perhaps Herbert’s explanations were regarded as
  • satisfactory, but, however this may have been, the King was not
  • successful in suppressing the book. The volume is a thin quarto
  • containing only thirty-two leaves, and was printed by Elizabeth
  • Purslowe for Henry Seyle, to be sold at the sign of the Tyger’s Head
  • in St. Paul’s Church-yard. The printer seems to have been somewhat
  • careless in imposing the licences, for, although most copies contain
  • the two, copies occur from which one or both have been omitted. It is
  • not known through what channels the publisher obtained possession of
  • the text, but it is probable that the publication was quite
  • unauthorized, and took place even without the knowledge of the younger
  • Donne, who, when he reprinted the _Juvenilia_ in 1652, made no
  • reference to any previous issue.
  • The _Juvenilia_ were at once in considerable demand, and seem to have
  • been bought by many of the purchasers of the _Poems_, which were also
  • first published in quarto in 1633. This is evident from the fact that
  • the two books are so often found together in contemporary bindings,
  • the lesser volume usually being relegated to the end. The first
  • edition of the _Juvenilia_ was thus soon exhausted and a second
  • edition was published in the same year. So ineffectual did the Star
  • Chamber inquiry prove to have been that in this edition the publisher
  • not only omitted the _Imprimaturs_ altogether and so abandoned all
  • pretence of having any official sanction for the publication, but even
  • added to the first Probleme, ‘Why have Bastards best Fortune?’, which
  • was particularly offensive to the Court, twenty-three lines which had
  • not appeared in the first edition. This edition, as before a quarto
  • and with the same imprint, but containing only twenty-four leaves, is
  • considerably rarer than its predecessor. It is unlikely, however, that
  • this fact is to be attributed to the King’s having had any greater
  • success than before in suppressing it. More probably the demand for it
  • was less, so that part of the edition remained unsold and was
  • subsequently destroyed.
  • In 1652 the younger Donne, in the course of his exploitation of his
  • father’s writings, prepared an authorized edition of the _Juvenilia_,
  • which was printed by Thomas Newcomb for Humphrey Moseley. The number
  • of the Paradoxes was now increased to twelve and of the Problemes to
  • seventeen, the offensive passages in the first Probleme being allowed
  • to remain. To these were added two ‘Characters’, ‘An Essay of Valour’,
  • ‘A Sheaf of Miscellany Epigrams’, a reprint of _Ignatius his
  • Conclave_, and, finally, the _Essays in Divinity_. The Epigrams
  • purport to have been written by the elder Donne in Latin and to have
  • been translated into English by Jasper Mayne, D.D. They may have been
  • printed by the younger Donne in good faith, as it seems to be certain
  • that his father’s _Epigrammata mea Latina_ once existed; but the
  • epigrams attributed to him in this volume are, as Mr. Gosse has shown
  • (_Life and Letters of Donne, i. 16_), certainly spurious, and may well
  • have been composed, as well as translated, by Mayne, who was an
  • unprincipled, though witty, divine. The _Essays in Divinity_ had been
  • printed in 1651 for a different publisher, but they are very rarely
  • found as a separate volume in a contemporary binding, for the younger
  • Donne, as he made clear in his preface, sought to temper the
  • secularity of the _Juvenilia_ by issuing them in company with the
  • _Essays in Divinity_, and in this way to invest the volume with an
  • altogether fictitious respectability.
  • Even in 1652 the Paradoxes and Problemes were not printed entire.
  • Another Probleme concerning Sir Walter Raleigh has been preserved in
  • the Bodleian Library (Tanner MSS. 299, f. 32), the copier stating that
  • it ‘was so bitter that his son, Jack Donne, LL.D., thought fit not to
  • print it with the rest’. Yet another has recently been discovered in a
  • manuscript containing Donne’s poems.
  • The _Juvenilia_ have not been reprinted since 1652. In the present
  • edition the text follows that of the second edition of 1633, amplified
  • from the third edition of 1652 and with the additional Probleme from
  • the Bodleian manuscript, already printed by Mr. Edmund Gosse in his
  • _Life and Letters of Donne, 1899, ii. 52_. The spurious epigrams have
  • not been included.
  • GEOFFREY KEYNES
  • [Decoration]
  • PARADOXES
  • 1.
  • _A Defence of Womens Inconſtancy._
  • That Women are _Inconſtant_, I with any man confeſſe, but that
  • _Inconſtancy_ is a bad quality, I againſt any man will maintaine: For
  • every thing as it is one better than another, ſo is it fuller of
  • _change_; The _Heavens_ themſelves continually turne, the _Starres_
  • move, the _Moone_ changeth; _Fire_ whirleth, _Ayre_ flyeth, _Water_
  • ebbs and flowes, the face of the _Earth_ altereth her lookes, _time_
  • ſtayes not; the Colour that is moſt light, will take moſt dyes: ſo in
  • Men, they that have the moſt reaſon are the moſt alterable in their
  • deſignes, and the darkeſt or moſt ignorant, do ſeldomeſt change;
  • therefore Women changing more than Men, have alſo more _Reaſon_. They
  • cannot be immutable like ſtockes, like ſtones, like the Earths dull
  • Center; Gold that lyeth ſtill, ruſteth; Water, corrupteth; Aire that
  • moveth not, poyſoneth; then why ſhould that which is the perfection of
  • other things, be imputed to Women as greateſt imperfection? Becauſe
  • thereby they deceive men. Are not your wits pleaſed with thoſe jeſts,
  • which coozen your expectation? You can call it Pleaſure to be beguil’d
  • in troubles, and in the moſt excellent toy in the world, you call it
  • Treachery: I would you had your _Miſtreſſes_ ſo conſtant, that they
  • would never change, no not ſo much as their _ſmocks_, then ſhould you
  • ſee what ſluttiſh vertue, _Conſtancy_ were. _Inconſtancy_ is a moſt
  • commendable and cleanely quality, and Women in this quality are farre
  • more abſolute than the Heavens, than the Starres, Moone, or any thing
  • beneath it; for long obſervation hath pickt certainety out of their
  • mutability. The Learned are ſo well acquainted with the Starres,
  • Signes and Planets, that they make them but Characters, to reade the
  • meaning of the Heaven in his owne forehead. Every ſimple Fellow can
  • beſpeake the change of the _Moone_ a great while beforehand: but I
  • would faine have the learnedſt man ſo skilfull, as to tell when the
  • ſimpleſt Woman meaneth to varie. Learning affords no rules to know,
  • much leſſe knowledge to rule the minde of a Woman: For as _Philoſophy_
  • teacheth us, that _Light things doe alwayes tend upwards_, and _heavy
  • things decline downeward_; Experience teacheth us otherwiſe, that the
  • diſpoſition of a _Light_ Woman, is to fall downe, the nature of Women
  • being contrary to all Art and Nature. Women are like _Flies_, which
  • feed among us at our Table, or _Fleas_ ſucking our very blood, who
  • leave not our moſt retired places free from their familiarity, yet for
  • all their fellowſhip will they never bee tamed nor commanded by us.
  • Women are like the _Sunne_, which is violently carryed one way, yet
  • hath a proper courſe contrary: ſo though they, by the maſtery of ſome
  • over-ruling churliſh Husbands, are forced to his Byas, yet have they a
  • motion of their owne, which their Husbands never know of. It is the
  • nature of nice and faſtidious mindes to know things onely to bee weary
  • of them: Women by their ſlye _changeableneſſe_, and pleaſing
  • doubleneſſe, prevent even the miſlike of thoſe, for they can never be
  • ſo well knowne, but that there is ſtill more unknowne. Every Woman is
  • a _Science_; for hee that plods upon a Woman all his life long, ſhall
  • at length find himſelfe ſhort of the knowledge of her: they are borne
  • to take downe the pride of wit, and ambition of wiſedome, making
  • _fooles_ wiſe in the adventuring to winne them, _wiſemen_ fooles in
  • conceit of loſing their labours; witty men ſtarke mad, being
  • confounded with their uncertaineties. _Philoſophers_ write againſt
  • them for ſpight, not deſert, that having attained to ſome knowledge in
  • all other things, in them onely they know nothing, but are meerely
  • ignorant: _Active_ and _Experienced_ men raile againſt them, becauſe
  • they love in their liveleſſe and decrepit age, when all goodneſſe
  • leaves them. Theſe envious _Libellers_ ballad againſt them, becauſe
  • having nothing in themſelves able to deſerve their love, they
  • maliciouſly diſcommend all they cannot obtaine, thinking to make men
  • beleeve they know much, becauſe they are able to diſpraiſe much, and
  • rage againſt _Inconſtancy_, when they were never admitted into ſo much
  • favour as to be forſaken. In mine Opinion ſuch men are happy that
  • Women are _Inconſtant_, for ſo may they chance to bee beloved of ſome
  • excellent Women (when it comes to their turne) out of their
  • _Inconſtancy_ and mutability, though not out of their owne deſert. And
  • what reaſon is there to clog any Woman with one Man, bee hee never ſo
  • ſingular? Women had rather, and it is farre better and more Iudiciall
  • to enjoy all the vertues in ſeverall Men, than but ſome of them in
  • one, for otherwiſe they loſe their taſte, like divers ſorts of meat
  • minced together in one diſh: and to have all excellencies in one Man
  • (if it were poſſible) is _Confuſion_ and _Diverſity_. Now who can
  • deny, but ſuch as are obſtinately bent to undervalue their worth, are
  • thoſe that have not ſoule enough to comprehend their excellency, Women
  • being the moſt excellenteſt Creatures, in that Man is able to ſubject
  • all things elſe, and to grow wiſe in every thing, but ſtill perſiſts a
  • foole in Woman? The greateſt _Scholler_, if hee once take a Wife, is
  • found ſo unlearned, that he muſt begin his _Horne-booke_, and all is
  • by _Inconſtancy_. To conclude therefore; this name of _Inconſtancy_,
  • which hath ſo much beene poyſoned with ſlaunders, ought to bee changed
  • into _variety_, for the which the world is ſo delightfull, _and a
  • Woman for that the moſt delightfull thing in this world_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 2.
  • _That Women ought to paint._
  • _Fouleneſſe_ is _Lothſome_: can that be ſo which helpes it? who
  • forbids his Beloved to gird in her waſte? to mend by ſhooing her
  • uneven lameneſſe? to burniſh her teeth? or to perfume her breath? yet
  • that the _Face_ bee more preciſely regarded, it concernes more: For as
  • open confeſſing ſinners are alwaies puniſhed, but the wary and
  • concealing offenders without witneſſe doe it alſo without puniſhment;
  • ſo the ſecret parts needs the leſſe reſpect; but of the _Face_,
  • diſcovered to all Examinations and ſurvayes, there is not too nice a
  • Iealouſie. Nor doth it onely draw the buſie eyes, but it is ſubject to
  • the divineſt touch of all, to _kiſſing_, the ſtrange and myſticall
  • union of ſoules. If ſhee ſhould proſtitute her ſelfe to a more
  • unworthy Man than thy ſelfe, how earneſtly and juſtly wouldſt thou
  • exclaime? that for want of this eaſier and ready way of repairing, to
  • betray her body to ruine and deformity (the tyrannous _Raviſhers_, and
  • ſodaine _Deflourers_ of all Women) what a heynous Adultery is it? What
  • thou loveſt in her _face_ is _colour_, and _painting_ gives that, but
  • thou hateſt it, not becauſe it is, but becauſe thou knoweſt it. Foole,
  • whom ignorance makes happy; the Starres, the Sunne, the Skye whom thou
  • admireſt, alas, have no _colour_, but are faire, becauſe they ſeeme to
  • bee coloured: If this ſeeming will not ſatisfie thee in her, thou haſt
  • good aſſurance of her _colour_, when thou ſeeſt her _lay_ it on. If
  • her _face_ bee _painted_ on a Boord or Wall, thou wilt love it, and
  • the Boord, and the Wall: Canſt thou loath it then when it ſpeakes,
  • ſmiles, and kiſſes, becauſe it is _painted_? Are wee not more
  • delighted with ſeeing Birds, Fruites, and Beaſts _painted_ then wee
  • are with Naturalls? And doe wee not with pleaſure behold the _painted_
  • ſhape of Monſters and Divels, whom true, wee durſt not regard? Wee
  • repaire the ruines of our houſes, but firſt cold tempeſts warnes us of
  • it, and bytes us through it; wee mend the wracke and ſtaines of our
  • Apparell, but firſt our eyes, and other bodies are offended; but by
  • this providence of Women, this is prevented. If in _kiſſing_ or
  • _breathing_ upon her, the _painting_ fall off, thou art angry, wilt
  • thou be ſo, if it ſticke on? Thou didſt love her, if thou beginneſt to
  • hate her, then ’tis becauſe ſhee is not _painted_. If thou wilt ſay
  • now, thou didſt hate her before, thou didſt hate her and love her
  • together, bee conſtant in ſomething, and love her who ſhewes her great
  • _love_ to thee, in taking this paines to ſeeme _lovely_ to thee.
  • [Decoration]
  • 3.
  • _That by Diſcord things increaſe._
  • _Nullos eſſe Deos, inane Cœlum
  • Affirmat Cœlius, probatq; quod ſe
  • Factum vidit, dum negat hæc, beatum._
  • So I aſſevere this the more boldly, becauſe while I maintaine it, and
  • feele the _Contrary repugnancies_ and _adverſe fightings_ of the
  • _Elements_ in my Body, my Body increaſeth; and whilſt I differ from
  • common opinions by this _Diſcord_, the number of my _Paradoxes_
  • increaſeth. All the rich benefits we can frame to our ſelves in
  • _Concord_, is but an _Even_ conſervation of things; in which
  • _Evenneſſe_ wee can expect no _change_, no _motion_; therefore no
  • _increaſe_ or _augmentation_, which is a _member of motion_. And if
  • this _unity_ and _peace_ can give _increaſe_ to things, how mightily
  • is _diſcord_ and _war_ to that purpoſe, which are indeed the onely
  • ordinary _Parents_ of _peace_. _Diſcord_ is never ſo barren that it
  • affords no fruit; for the _fall_ of one _eſtate_ is at the worſt the
  • _increaſer_ of another, becauſe it is as impoſſible to finde a
  • _diſcommodity_ without _advantage_, as to finde _Corruption_ without
  • _Generation_: But it is the _Nature_ and _Office_ of _Concord_ to
  • _preſerve_ onely, which property when it leaves, it differs from it
  • ſelfe, which is the greateſt _diſcord_ of all. All _Victories_ and
  • _Emperies_ gained by _warre_, and all _Iudiciall_ decidings of doubts
  • in _peace_, I doe claime children of _Diſcord_. And who can deny but
  • _Controverſies_ in _Religion_ are growne greater by _diſcord_, and not
  • the _Controverſie_, but _Religion_ it ſelfe: For in a _troubled
  • miſery_ Men are alwaies more _Religious_ then in a _ſecure peace_. The
  • number of _good_ men, the onely charitable nouriſhers of _Concord_,
  • wee ſee is thinne, and daily melts and waines; but of _bad diſcording_
  • it is infinite, and growes hourely. Wee are aſcertained of all
  • _Diſputable_ doubts, onely by _arguing_ and differing in _Opinion_,
  • and if formall _diſputation_ (which is but a painted, counterfeit, and
  • diſſembled _diſcord_) can worke us this benefit, what ſhall not a full
  • and maine _diſcord_ accompliſh? Truely me thinkes I owe a _devotion_,
  • yea a _ſacrifice_ to _diſcord_, for caſting that _Ball_ upon _Ida_,
  • and for all that buſineſſe of _Troy_, whom ruin’d I admire more then
  • _Babylon_, _Rome_, or _Quinzay_, removed _Corners_, not onely
  • fulfilled with her _fame_, but with _Cities_ and _Thrones_ planted by
  • her _Fugitives_. Laſtly, between _Cowardice_ and _deſpaire_, _Valour_
  • is gendred; and ſo the _Diſcord_ of _Extreames_ begets all vertues,
  • but of the _like things_ there is no iſſue without a miracle:
  • _Vxor peſſima, peſſimus maritus
  • Miror tam malè convenire._
  • Hee wonders that betweene two ſo _like_, there could be any _diſcord_,
  • yet perchance for all this _diſcord_ there was nere the leſſe
  • _increaſe_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 4.
  • _That good is more common then evill._
  • I have not been ſo pittifully tired with any _vanity_, as with ſilly
  • _Old Mens_ exclaiming againſt theſe times, and extolling their owne:
  • Alas! they betray themſelves, for if the _times_ be _changed_, their
  • manners have changed them. But their ſenſes are to _pleaſures_, as
  • _ſick Mens_ taſtes are to _Liquors_; for indeed no _new thing_ is done
  • in the _world_, all things are what, and as they were, and _Good_ is
  • as ever it was, more plenteous, and muſt of neceſſity be _more common
  • then evill_, becauſe it hath this for _nature_ and _perfection_ to bee
  • _common_. It makes _Love_ to all _Natures_, all, all affect it. So
  • that in the _Worlds_ early _Infancy_, there was a time when nothing
  • was _evill_, but if this _World_ ſhall ſuffer _dotage_ in the
  • extreameſt _crookedneſſe_ thereof, there ſhall be no time when nothing
  • ſhal be _good_. It dares appeare and ſpread, and gliſter in the
  • _World_, but _evill_ buries it ſelfe in night and darkneſſe, and is
  • chaſtiſed and ſuppreſſed when _good_ is cheriſhed and rewarded. And as
  • _Imbroderers_, _Lapidaries_, and other _Artiſans_, can by all things
  • adorne their workes; for by adding better things, the better they ſhew
  • in _Luſh_ and in _Eminency_; ſo _good_ doth not onely proſtrate her
  • _amiableneſſe_ to all, but refuſes no end, no not of her utter
  • contrary _evill_, that ſhee may bee the more _common_ to us. For
  • _euill manners_ are _parents_ of _good Lawes_; and in every _evill_
  • there is an _excellency_, which (in common ſpeech) we call _good_. For
  • the faſhions of _habits_, for our moving in _geſtures_, for phraſes in
  • our _ſpeech_, we ſay they were _good_ as long as they were uſed, that
  • is, as long as they were _common_; and wee eate, wee walke, onely when
  • it is, or ſeemes _good_ to doe ſo. All _faire_, all _profitable_, all
  • _vertuous_, is _good_, and theſe three things I thinke embrace all
  • things, but their utter _contraries_; of which alſo _faire_ may be
  • _rich_ and _vertuous_; _poore_ may bee _vertuous_ and _faire_;
  • _vitious_ may be _faire_ and _rich_; ſo that _good_ hath this good
  • meanes to be _common_, that ſome ſubjects ſhe can poſſeſſe intirely;
  • and in ſubjects poyſoned with _evill_, ſhe can humbly ſtoop to
  • accompany the _evill_. And of _indifferent_ things many things are
  • become perfectly good by being _common_, as _cuſtomes_ by uſe are made
  • binding _Lawes_. But I remember nothing that is therefore _ill_,
  • becauſe it is _common_, but _Women_, of whom alſo; _They that are moſt
  • common, are the beſt of that Occupation they profeſſe_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 5.
  • _That all things kill themſelves._
  • To affect, yea to effect their owne _death_ all _living_ things are
  • importuned, not by _Nature_ only which perfects them, but by _Art_ and
  • _Education_, which perfects her. _Plants_ quickened and inhabited by
  • the moſt unworthy _ſoule_, which therefore neither _will_ nor _worke_,
  • affect an _end_, a _perfection_, a _death_; this they ſpend their
  • _ſpirits_ to attaine, this attained, they languiſh and wither. And by
  • how much more they are by mans _Induſtry_ warmed, cheriſhed, and
  • pampered; ſo much the more early they climbe to this _perfection_,
  • this _death_. And if amongſt _Men_ not to _defend_ be to _kill_, what
  • a hainous _ſelfe-murther_ is it, not to _defend it ſelfe_. This
  • _defence_ becauſe _Beaſts_ neglect, they kill themſelves, becauſe they
  • exceed us in _number_, _ſtrength_, and a _lawleſſe liberty_: yea, of
  • _Horſes_ and other beaſts, they that inherit _moſt courage_ by being
  • bred of _gallanteſt parents_, and by _Artificial nurſing_ are
  • bettered, will runne to their owne _deaths_, neither ſollicited by
  • _ſpurres_ which they need not, nor by _honour_ which they apprehend
  • not. If then the _valiant_ kill himſelfe, who can excuſe the _coward_?
  • Or how ſhall _Man_ bee free from this, ſince the _firſt Man_ taught us
  • this, except we cannot kill our ſelves, becauſe he kill’d us all. Yet
  • leſt ſomething ſhould repaire this _Common ruine_, we daily kill our
  • _bodies_ with _ſurfeits_, and our mindes with _anguiſhes_. Of our
  • _powers_, _remembring_ kils our _memory_; Of _Affections_, _Luſting_
  • our _luſt_; Of _vertues_, _Giving_ kils _liberality_. And if theſe
  • kill themſelves, they do it in their beſt & ſupreme _perfection_: for
  • after _perfection_ immediately follows _exceſſe_, which changeth the
  • natures and the names, and makes them not the ſame things. If then the
  • beſt things kill themſelves ſooneſt, (for no _affection_ endures, and
  • all things labour to this _perfection_) all travell to their owne
  • _death_, yea the frame of the whole _World_, if it were poſſible for
  • _God_ to be _idle_, yet becauſe it _began_, muſt _dye_. Then in this
  • _idleneſſe_ imagined in _God_, what could kill the _world_ but it
  • ſelfe, ſince _out of it, nothing is_?
  • [Decoration]
  • 6.
  • _That it is poſsible to find ſome vertue in ſome Women._
  • I am not of that ſeard _Impudence_ that I dare defend _Women_, or
  • pronounce them good; yet we ſee _Phyſitians_ allow ſome _vertue_ in
  • every _poyſon_. Alas! why ſhould we except _Women_? ſince certainely,
  • they are good for _Phyſicke_ at leaſt, ſo as ſome _wine_ is good for a
  • _feaver_. And though they be the _Occaſioners_ of many ſinnes, they
  • are alſo the _Puniſhers_ and _Revengers_ of the ſame ſinnes: For I
  • have ſeldome ſeene one which conſumes his _ſubſtance_ and _body_ upon
  • them, eſcape _diſeaſes_, or _beggery_; and this is their _Iuſtice._
  • And if _ſuum cuiq; dare_, bee the fulfilling of all _Civill Iuſtice_,
  • they are _moſt juſt_; for they deny that which is theirs to no man.
  • _Tanquam non liceat nulla puella negat._
  • And who may doubt of great wiſdome in them, that doth but obſerve with
  • how much labour and cunning our _Iuſticers_ and other _diſpenſers_ of
  • the _Lawes_ ſtudy to imbrace them: and how zealouſly our _Preachers_
  • dehort men from them, onely by urging their _ſubtilties_, and
  • _policies_, and _wiſedome_, which are in them? Or who can deny them a
  • good meaſure of _Fortitude_, if hee conſider how _valiant men_ they
  • have overthrowne, and being themſelves overthrowne, how much and how
  • patiently they _beare_? And though they bee moſt _intemperate_, I care
  • not, for I undertooke to furniſh them with _ſome vertue_, not with
  • _all_. _Neceſſity_, which makes even bad things good, prevailes alſo
  • for them, for wee muſt ſay of them, as of ſome ſharpe pinching
  • _Lawes_; If men were free from _infirmities_, they were needleſſe.
  • Theſe or none muſt ſerve for _reaſons_, and it is my great
  • happineſſe that _Examples_ prove not _Rules_, for to confirme this
  • _Opinion_, the World yeelds not _one Example._
  • [Decoration]
  • 7.
  • _That Old men are more fantaſtike then Young._
  • Who reads this _Paradox_ but thinks mee more _fantaſtike_ now, than I
  • was yeſterday, when I did not think thus: And if one day make this
  • ſenſible change in men, what will the burthen of many yeeres? To bee
  • _fantaſtike_ in _young men_ is _conceiptfull diſtemperature_, and a
  • _witty madneſſe_; but in _old men_, whoſe ſenſes are withered, it
  • becomes _naturall_, therefore more full and perfect. For as when wee
  • _ſleepe_ our _fancy_ is moſt ſtrong; ſo it is in _age_, which is a
  • _ſlumber_ of the _deepe ſleepe of death_. They taxe us of
  • _Inconſtancy_, which in themſelves _young_ they allowed; ſo that
  • reprooving that which they did approove, their _Inconſtancy_ exceedeth
  • ours, becauſe they have changed _once more_ then wee. Yea, they are
  • more idlely buſied in _conceited apparell_ then wee; for we, when we
  • are _melancholy_, weare _blacke_; when _luſty_, _greene_; when
  • _forſaken_, _tawney_; pleaſing our owne _inward_ affections, leaving
  • them to others indifferent; but they preſcribe _lawes_, and conſtraine
  • the _Noble_, the _Scholer_, the _Merchant_, and all _Eſtates_ to a
  • certaine _habit_. The _old men_ of our time have changed with patience
  • their owne _bodies_, much of their _lawes_, much of their _languages_;
  • yea their _Religion_, yet they accuſe us. To be _Amorous_ is proper
  • and _naturall_ in a _young man_, but in an _old man_ most
  • _fantaſtike_. And that _ridling humour_ of _Iealouſie_, which ſeekes
  • and would not finde, which requires and repents his knowledge, is in
  • them moſt common, yet moſt _fantaſtike_. Yea, that which falls never
  • in _young men_, is in them moſt _fantaſtike_ and _naturall_, that is,
  • _Covetouſneſſe_; even at their _journeyes end_ to make great
  • proviſion. Is any _habit_ of _young men_ ſo _fantaſtike_, as in the
  • hotteſt ſeaſons to be _double-gowned_ or _hooded_ like our _Elders_?
  • Or ſeemes it ſo _ridiculous_ to weare long haire, as to weare _none_.
  • Truely, as among the _Philoſophers_, the _Skeptike_, which _doubts
  • all_, was more contentious, then either the _Dogmatike_ which
  • _affirmes_, or _Academike_ which _denyes all_; ſo are theſe uncertaine
  • _Elders_, which both cals them _fantaſtike_ which follow others
  • _inventions_, and them alſo which are led by their owne humorous
  • ſuggeſtion, more _fantaſtike_ then other.
  • [Decoration]
  • 8.
  • _That Nature is our worſt Guide._
  • Shal ſhe be _guide_ to all _Creatures_, which is her ſelfe one? Or if
  • ſhe alſo have a _guide_, ſhall any _Creature_ have a better guide then
  • wee? The affections of _luſt_ and _anger_, yea even to _erre_ is
  • _naturall_; ſhall we follow theſe? Can ſhee be a good _guide_ to us,
  • which hath corrupted not us onely but her ſelfe? Was not the _firſt
  • man_, by the deſire of _knowledge_, corrupted even in the _whiteſt
  • integrity_ of _Nature_? And did not _Nature_ (if _Nature_ did any
  • thing) infuſe into him this deſire of _knowledge_, and ſo this
  • _corruption_ in him, into us? If by _Nature_ wee ſhall underſtand our
  • _eſſence_, our _definition_, or _reaſon_, _nobleneſſe_, then this
  • being alike common to all (the _Idiot_ and the _Wizard_ being equally
  • _reaſonable_) why ſhould not all men having equally all one _nature_,
  • follow one courſe? Or if we ſhall underſtand our _inclinations_;
  • alas! how unable a guide is that which followes the _temperature_ of
  • our ſlimie _bodies_? for we cannot ſay that we derive our
  • _inclinations_, our _mindes_, or _ſoules_ from our _Parents_ by any
  • way: to ſay that it is _all from all_, is _error_ in _reaſon_, for
  • then with the firſt nothing remaines; or is a _part from all_, is
  • _errour_ in _experience_, for then this _part_ equally imparted to
  • many children, would like _Gavel-kind lands_, in few generations
  • become nothing; or to ſay it by _communication_, is _errour_ in
  • _Divinity_, for to communicate the _ability_ of communicating _whole
  • eſſence_ with any but God, is utter _blaſphemy_. And if thou hit thy
  • _Fathers nature_ and _inclination_, he alſo had his _Fathers_, and ſo
  • climbing up, all comes of one man, and have one _nature_, all ſhall
  • imbrace one courſe; but that cannot bee, therefore our _complexions_
  • and whole _bodies_, wee inherit from _Parents_; our _inclinations_ and
  • minds follow that: For our minde is heavy in our _bodies afflictions_,
  • and rejoyceth in our _bodies pleaſure_: how then ſhall this _nature_
  • governe us, that is governed by the worſt part of us? _Nature though
  • oft chaſed away, it will returne_; ’tis true, but thoſe _good motions_
  • and _inſpirations_ which be our guides muſt bee _wooed_, _courted_,
  • and _welcomed_, or elſe they abandon us. And that old _Axiome_,
  • _nihil invita, &c._ muſt not be ſaid thou _ſhalt_, but thou _wilt_ doe
  • nothing againſt _Nature_; ſo _unwilling_ he notes us to curbe our
  • _naturall appetites_. Wee call our _baſtards_ alwayes our _naturall
  • iſſue_, and we define a _Foole_ by nothing ſo ordinary, as by the name
  • of _naturall_. And that poore knowledge whereby we conceive what
  • _raine_ is, what _wind_, what _thunder_, wee call _Metaphyſicke,
  • ſupernaturall_; ſuch _ſmall_ things, ſuch _no_ things doe we allow to
  • our pliant _Natures_ apprehenſion. Laſtly, by following her, we loſe
  • the pleaſant, and lawfull commodities of this life, for wee ſhall
  • drinke water and eate rootes, and thoſe not ſweet and delicate, as now
  • by Mans _art_ and _induſtry_ they are made: we ſhall loſe all the
  • neceſſities of _ſocieties_, _lawes_, _arts_, and _ſciences_, which are
  • all the workemanſhip of _Man_: yea we ſhall lack the laſt _beſt
  • refuge_ of miſery, _death_; becauſe _no death is naturall_: for if yee
  • will not dare to call all _death violent_ (though I ſee not why
  • _ſickneſſes_ be not _violences_) yet _cauſes_ of all _deaths_ proceed
  • of the _defect_ of that which _nature_ made perfect, and would
  • preſerve, and therefore all againſt _nature_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 9.
  • _That only Cowards dare dye._
  • _Extreames_ are equally removed from the _meane_; ſo that headlong
  • _deſperateneſſe_ aſmuch offends true _valour_, as backward
  • _Cowardice_: of which ſort I reckon juſtly all _un-inforced deaths_.
  • When will your _valiant_ man dye of neceſſity? ſo _Cowards_ ſuffer
  • what cannot be avoided: and to runne into _death unimportun’d_, is to
  • runne into the firſt condemned deſperateneſſe. Will he dye when he is
  • _rich_ and _happy_? then by living he may doe more good: and in
  • _afflictions_ and _miſeries_, _death_ is the choſen refuge of
  • _Cowards_.
  • _Fortiter ille facit, qui miſer eſſe poteſt._
  • But it is taught and practiſed among our _Galants_, that rather than
  • our reputations ſuffer any _maime_, or we any _miſery_, wee ſhall
  • offer our _breſts_ to the _Cannons_ mouth, yea to our _ſwords_ points:
  • And this ſeemes a very _brave_ and a very _climbing_ (which is a
  • _Cowardly_, earthly, and indeed a very _groveling_) _ſpirit_. Why doe
  • they _chaine_ theſe ſlaves to the _Gallyes_, but that they thruſt
  • their _deaths_, and would at every looſe leape into the _ſea_? Why doe
  • they take weapons from _condemned_ men, but to barre them of that eaſe
  • which _Cowards_ affect, _a ſpeedy death_. Truely this _life_ is a
  • _tempeſt_, and a _warfare_, and he which _dares dye_, to eſcape the
  • _anguiſh_ of it, ſeems to mee, but ſo _valiant_, as hee which dares
  • _hang_ himſelfe, leſt hee be _preſt_ to the _warres_. I have ſeene one
  • in that extremity of _melancholy_, which was then become _madneſſe_,
  • to make his owne _breath_ an _Inſtrument_ to ſtay his breath, and
  • labour to choake himſelfe, but alas! he was _mad_. And we knew another
  • that languiſhed under the _oppreſſion_ of a poore _diſgrace_ ſo much,
  • that hee tooke more _paines to dye_, then would have ſerved to have
  • nouriſhed _life_ and _ſpirit_ enough to have outlived his _diſgrace_.
  • What _Foole_ will call this _Cowardlineſſe_, _Valour_? or this
  • _Baſeneſſe_, _Humility_? And laſtly, of theſe men which dye the
  • _Allegoricall death_ of entring into _Religion_, how few are found fit
  • for any ſhew of _valiancy_? but onely a _ſoft_ and _ſupple metall_,
  • made onely for _Cowardly_ ſolitarineſſe.
  • [Decoration]
  • 10.
  • _That a Wiſe Man is knowne by much laughing._
  • _Ride, ſi ſapis, ô puella ride_; If thou beeſt _wiſe_, _laugh_: for
  • ſince the _powers_ of _diſcourſe_, _reaſon_, and _laughter_, bee
  • equally _proper_ unto Man onely, why ſhall not hee be onely moſt
  • _wiſe_, which hath moſt uſe of _laughing_, aſwell as he which hath
  • moſt of _reaſoning_ and _diſcourſing_? I alwaies did, and ſhall
  • underſtand that _Adage_;
  • _Per riſum multum poſſis cognoſcere ſtultum_,
  • That by much _laughing_ thou maiſt know there is a _foole_, not, that
  • the _laughers_ are _fooles_, but that among them there is ſome
  • _foole_, at whome _wiſemen_ laugh: which moved _Eraſmus_ to put this
  • as his firſt _Argument_ in the mouth of his _Folly_, that _ſhee made
  • Beholders laugh_: for _fooles_ are the moſt laughed at, and laugh the
  • leaſt themſelves of any. And _Nature_ ſaw this _faculty_ to bee ſo
  • neceſſary in man, that ſhee hath beene content that by _more cauſes_
  • we ſhould be importuned to _laugh_, then to the _exerciſe_ of any
  • other _power_; for things in themſelves utterly _contrary_, beget this
  • effect; for wee laugh both at _witty_ and _abſurd_ things: At both
  • which ſorts I have ſeen Men _laugh ſo long_, and _ſo earneſtly_, that
  • at laſt they have _wept_ that they could laugh no more. And therfore
  • the _Poet_ having deſcribed the quietneſſe of a _wiſe retired man_,
  • ſaith in one, what we have ſaid before in many lines; _Quid facit
  • Canius tuus? ridet_. We have received that even the _extremity_ of
  • _laughing_, yea of _weeping_ alſo, hath beene accounted _wiſedome_:
  • And that _Democritus_ and _Heraclitus_, the _lovers_ of theſe
  • _Extremes_, have been called _lovers of wiſedome_. Now among our
  • _wiſemen_ I doubt not, but many would be found who would laugh at
  • _Heraclitus_ weeping, none which weepe at _Democritus_ laughing. At
  • the hearing of _Comedies_ or other witty reports, I have noted ſome,
  • which not underſtanding _jeſts_, &c. have yet choſen this as the beſt
  • meanes to ſeeme _wiſe_ and _underſtanding_, to laugh when their
  • _Companions laugh_; and I have preſumed them _ignorant_, whom I have
  • ſeene _unmoved_. A _foole_ if he come into a _Princes Court_, and ſee
  • a _gay_ man leaning at the wall, ſo _gliſtering_, and ſo _painted_ in
  • many _colours_ that he is hardly diſcerned from one of the _pictures_
  • in the _Arras_, hanging his _body_ like an _Iron-bound-cheſt_, girt in
  • and thicke ribb’d with _broad gold laces_, may (and commonly doth)
  • envy him. But alas! ſhall a _wiſeman_, which may not onely not _envy_,
  • but not _pitty_ this _monſter_, do nothing? Yes, let him _laugh_. And
  • if one of theſe _hot cholerike firebrands_, which nouriſh themſelves
  • by _quarrelling_, and kindling others, ſpit upon a _foole_ one
  • _ſparke_ of _diſgrace_, he, like a _thatcht houſe_ quickly burning,
  • may bee _angry_; but the _wiſeman_, as _cold_ as the _Salamander_, may
  • not onely not be _angry_ with him, but not be _ſorry_ for him;
  • therefore let him _laugh_: ſo he ſhall be knowne a Man, becauſe he can
  • _laugh_, a _wiſe Man_ that hee knowes at _what_ to laugh, and a
  • _valiant Man_ that he _dares_ laugh: for he that _laughs_ is juſtly
  • reputed more _wiſe_, then at whom it is _laughed_. And hence I thinke
  • proceeds that which in theſe later _formall_ times I have much noted;
  • that now when our _ſuperſtitious civility_ of _manners_ is become a
  • mutuall _tickling flattery_ of one another, almoſt every man affecteth
  • an _humour_ of _jeſting_, and is content to be _deject_, and to
  • _deforme_ himſelfe, yea become _foole_ to no other _end_ that I can
  • ſpie, but to give his _wiſe Companion_ occaſion to _laugh_: and to
  • ſhew themſelves in _promptneſſe_ of _laughing_ is ſo great in
  • _wiſemen_, that I thinke all _wiſemen_, if any _wiſeman_ do reade this
  • _Paradox_, will _laugh_ both at it and me.
  • [Decoration]
  • 11.
  • _That the gifts of the Body are better then thoſe of the Minde._
  • I ſay againe, that the _body_ makes the _minde_, not that it created
  • it a _minde_, but _formes_ it a _good_ or a _bad mind_; and this
  • _minde_ may be confounded with _ſoule_ without any violence or
  • injuſtice to _Reaſon_ or _Philoſophy_: then the _ſoule_ it ſeemes is
  • enabled by our _body_, not this by it. My _Body_ licenſeth my _ſoule_
  • to _ſee_ the Worlds _beauties_ through mine _eyes_; to _heare_
  • pleaſant things through mine _eares_; and affords it apt _Organs_ for
  • the conveiance of all perceivable _delight_. But alas! my _ſoule_
  • cannot make any _part_, that is not of it ſelfe diſpoſed, to _ſee_ or
  • _heare_, though without doubt ſhe be as able and as willing to ſee
  • _behind_ as _before_. Now if my _ſoule_ would ſay, that ſhee enables
  • any part to taſte theſe pleaſures, but is her ſelfe onely delighted
  • with thoſe rich _ſweetneſſes_ which her _inward eyes_ and _ſenſes_
  • apprehend, ſhee ſhould diſſemble; for I ſee her often ſolaced with
  • _beauties_, which ſhee ſees through mine _eyes_, and with _muſicke_
  • which through mine _eares_ ſhe heares. This _perfection_ then my
  • _body_ hath, that it can impart to my _minde_ all his _pleaſures_; and
  • my _minde_ hath ſtill many, that ſhe can neither teach my _indiſpoſed_
  • part her _faculties_, nor to the beſt _eſpouſed_ parts ſhew it
  • _beauty_ of _Angels_, of _Muſicke_, of _Spheres_, whereof ſhe boaſts
  • the _contemplation_. Are _chaſtity_, _temperance_, and _fortitude_
  • gifts of the _mind_? I appeale to _Phyſitians_ whether the _cauſe_ of
  • theſe be not in the _body_, _health_ is the gift of the _body_, and
  • _patience_ in ſickeneſſe the gift of the _minde_: then who will ſay
  • that _patience_ is as good a happineſſe, as _health_, when wee muſt be
  • extremely _miſerable_ to purchaſe this _happineſſe_. And for
  • nouriſhing of _civill ſocieties_ and _mutuall love_ amongſt men, which
  • is our _chiefe end_ while wee are men; I ſay, this _beauty_,
  • _preſence_, and _proportion_ of the _body_, hath a more _maſculine_
  • force in begetting this _love_, then the _vertues_ of the _minde_: for
  • it ſtrikes us _ſuddenly_, and poſſeſſeth us _immoderately_; when to
  • know thoſe _vertues_ requires ſome _Iudgement_ in him which ſhall
  • diſcerne, a _long time_ and _converſation_ betweene them. And even at
  • _laſt_ how much of our _faith_ and _beleefe_ ſhall we be driven to
  • beſtow, to aſſure our ſelves that theſe _vertues_ are not
  • _counterfeited_: for it is the ſame to _be_, and _ſeeme vertuous_,
  • becauſe that he that hath _no vertue_, can _diſſemble_ none, but he
  • which hath a _little_, may _gild_ and _enamell_, yea and transforme
  • much _vice_ into _vertue_: For allow a man to be _diſcreet_ and
  • _flexible_ to _complaints_, which are great _vertuous_ gifts of the
  • _minde_, this _diſcretion_ will be to him the _ſoule_ & _Elixir_ of
  • all _vertues_, ſo that touched with this, even _pride_ ſhal be made
  • _humility_; and _Cowardice_, honourable and wiſe _valour_. But in
  • things _ſeene_ there is not this danger, for the _body_ which thou
  • loveſt and eſteemeſt _faire_, is _faire_; certainely if it bee not
  • _faire_ in _perfection_, yet it is _faire_ in the ſame _degree_ that
  • thy _Iudgement_ is good. And in a _faire body_, I doe ſeldome ſuſpect
  • a _diſproportioned minde_, and as ſeldome hope for a _good_ in a
  • _deformed_. When I ſee a _goodly houſe_, I aſſure my ſelfe of a
  • _worthy poſſeſſour_, from a _ruinous weather-beaten building_ I turn
  • away, becauſe it ſeems either ſtuffed with _varlets_ as a _Priſon_, or
  • handled by an _unworthy_ and _negligent tenant_, that ſo ſuffers the
  • _waſte_ thereof. And truely the gifts of _Fortune_, which are
  • _riches_, are onely _handmaids_, yea _Pandars_ of the _bodies
  • pleaſure_; with their ſervice we nouriſh _health_, and preſerve
  • _dainty_, and wee buy _delights_; ſo that _vertue_ which muſt be loved
  • for _it ſelfe_, and reſpects no further _end_, is indeed _nothing_:
  • And _riches_, whoſe _end_ is the _good_ of the _body_, cannot be ſo
  • _perfectly good_, as the _end_ whereto it levels.
  • [Decoration]
  • 12.
  • _That Virginity is a Vertue._
  • I call not that _Virginity a vertue_, which reſideth only in the
  • _Bodies integrity_; much leſſe if it be with a purpoſe of perpetuall
  • keeping it: for then it is a moſt inhumane vice—But I call that
  • _Virginity a vertue_ which is willing and deſirous to yeeld itſelfe
  • upon honeſt and lawfull termes, when juſt reaſon requireth; and untill
  • then, is kept with a modeſt chaſtity of Body and Mind. Some perchance
  • will say that _Virginity_ is in us by _Nature_, and therefore no
  • _vertue_. True, as it is in us by _Nature_, it is neither a _Vertue_
  • nor _Vice_, and is onely in the body: (as in Infants, Children, and
  • such as are incapable of parting from it). But that _Virginity_ which
  • is in Man or Woman of perfect age, is not in them by _Nature_:
  • _Nature_ is the greateſt enemy to it, and with moſt ſubtile
  • allurements ſeeks the over-throw of it, continually beating againſt it
  • with her _Engines_, and giving ſuch forcible aſſaults to it, that it
  • is a ſtrong and more then ordinary _vertue_ to hold out till marriage.
  • _Ethick_ Philoſophy ſaith, _That no Vertue is corrupted, or is taken
  • away by that which is good_: Hereupon ſome may ſay, that _Virginity_
  • is therefore no vertue, being taken away by marriage. _Virginity_ is
  • no otherwiſe taken away by marriage, then is the light of the ſtarres
  • by a greater light (the light of the Sun:) or as a leſſe Title is
  • taken away by a greater: (an Eſquire by being created an Earle) yet
  • _Virginity_ is a _vertue_, and hath her Throne in the middle: The
  • extreams are, in _Exceſſe_; to violate it before marriage; in defect,
  • not to marry. In ripe years as ſoon as reaſon perſwades, and
  • opportunity admits, Theſe extreams are equally removed from the mean:
  • The exceſſe proceeds from _Luſt_, the defect from _Peeviſhneſſe_,
  • _Pride_ and _Stupidity_. There is an old Proverb, That, _they that dy
  • maids, muſt lead Apes in Hell_. An Ape is a ridiculous and
  • unprofitable Beaſt, whoſe fleſh is not good for meat, nor its back for
  • burden, nor is it commodious to keep an houſe: and perchance for the
  • unprofitableneſſe of this Beaſt did this proverb come up: For surely
  • nothing is more unprofitable in the Commonwealth of _Nature_, then
  • they that dy old maids, becauſe they refuſe to be uſed to that end
  • for which they were only made. The Ape bringeth forth her young, for
  • the moſt part by twins; that which ſhe loves beſt, ſhe killeth by
  • preſſing it too hard: so fooliſh maids ſoothing themſelves with a
  • falſe conceit of _vertue_, in fond obſtinacie, live and die maids; and
  • ſo not only kill in themſelves the _vertue_ of _Virginity_, and of a
  • Vertue make it a Vice, but they also accuſe their parents in
  • condemning marriage. If this application hold not touch, yet there may
  • be an excellent one gathered from an Apes tender love to Conies in
  • keeping them from the Weaſel and Ferret. From this ſimilitude of an
  • Ape & an old Maid did the aforeſaid proverb firſt ariſe. But alas,
  • there are ſome old Maids that are _Virgins_ much againſt their wills,
  • and fain would change their _Virgin-life_ for a _Married_: ſuch if
  • they never have had any offer of fit Huſbands, are in ſome ſort
  • excuſable, and their willingneſſe, their deſire to marry, and their
  • forbearance from all diſhoneſt, and unlawful copulation, may be a kind
  • of inclination to _vertue_, although not _Vertue_ it ſelfe. This
  • _Virtue_ of _Virginity_ (though it be ſmall and fruitleſſe) it is an
  • extraordinary, and no common _Vertue_. All other _Vertues_ lodge in
  • the _Will_ (it is the _Will_ that makes them _vertues_.) But it is the
  • unwillingneſſe to keep it, the deſire to forſake it, that makes this a
  • _vertue_. As in the naturall generation and formation made of the ſeed
  • in the womb of a woman, the body is joynted and organized about the 28
  • day, and so it begins to be no more an _Embrion_, but capable as a
  • matter prepared to its form to receive the ſoule, which faileth not to
  • inſinuate and inneſt it ſelfe into the body about the fortieth day;
  • about the third month it hath motion and ſenſe: Even ſo _Virginity_ is
  • an _Embrion_, an unfaſhioned lump, till it attain to a certain time,
  • which is about twelve years of age in women, fourteen in men, and then
  • it beginneth to have the ſoule of _Love_ infuſed into it, and to
  • become a _vertue_: There is alſo a certain limited time when it
  • ceaſeth to be a _vertue_, which in men is about fourty, in women about
  • thirty years of age: yea, the loſſe of ſo much time makes their
  • _Virginity_ a _Vice_, were not their endeavour wholly bent, and their
  • deſires altogether fixt upon marriage: In Harveſt time do we not
  • account it a great vice of ſloath and negligence in a Huſband-man, to
  • overſlip a week or ten dayes after his fruits are fully ripe; May we
  • not much more account it a more heynous vice, for a _Virgin_ to let
  • her Fruit (_in potentia_) conſume and rot to nothing, and to let the
  • _vertue_ of her _Virginity_ degenerate into _Vice_, (for _Virginity_
  • ever kept is ever loſt.) Avarice is the greateſt deadly ſin next
  • Pride: it takes more pleaſure in hoording Treaſure then in making uſe
  • of it, and will neither let the poſſeſſor nor others take benefit by
  • it during the Miſers life; yet it remains intire, and when the Miſer
  • dies muſt come to ſom body. _Virginity_ ever kept, is a vice far worſe
  • then Avarice, it will neither let the poſſeſſor nor others take
  • benefit by it, nor can it be bequeathed to any: with long keeping it
  • decayes and withers, and becomes corrupt and nothing worth. Thus
  • ſeeing that _Virginity_ becomes a vice in defect, by exceeding a
  • limited time; I counſell all female _Virgins_ to make choyce of ſome
  • _Paracelſian_ for their Phyſitian, to prevent the death of that
  • _Vertue_: The _Paracelſians_ (curing like by like) ſay, That if the
  • lives of living Creatures could be taken down, they would make us
  • immortall. By this rule, female _Virgins_ by a diſcreet marriage
  • ſhould ſwallow down into their _Virginity_ another _Virginity_, and
  • devour ſuch a life & ſpirit into their womb, that it might make them
  • as it were, immortall here on earth, beſides their perfect
  • immortality in heaven: And that _Vertue_ which otherwiſe would
  • putrifie and corrupt, ſhall then be compleat; and ſhall be recorded in
  • Heaven, and enrolled here on Earth; and the name of _Virgin_ ſhall be
  • exchanged for a far more honorable name, _A Wife_.
  • [Decoration]
  • PROBLEMES
  • 1.
  • _Why have Baſtards beſt Fortune?_
  • Becauſe _Fortune_ herſelfe is a _Whore_, but ſuch are not moſt
  • indulgent to their _iſſue_; the old naturall reaſon (but thoſe
  • meetings in _ſtolne love_ are moſt _vehement_, and ſo contribute more
  • _ſpirit_ then the _eaſie_ and _lawfull_) might governe me, but that
  • now I ſee _Miſtreſſes_ are become _domeſtike_ and _inordinary_, and
  • they and wives _waite_ but by _turnes_, and _agree_ aſwell as they had
  • _lived_ in the _Arke_. The old Morall reaſon (that _Baſtards_ inherit
  • _wickedneſſe_ from their _Parents_, and ſo are in a better way to
  • _preferment_ by having a _ſtocke_ before-hand, then thoſe that build
  • all their _fortune_ upon the _poore_ and _weake_ ſtocke of _Originall
  • ſinne_) might prevaile with me, but that ſince wee are fallen into
  • ſuch times, as now the _world_ might _ſpare_ the _Divell_, because
  • _ſhe_ could be bad enough without _him_. I ſee men _ſcorne_ to be
  • _wicked_ by _example_, or to bee _beholding_ to others for their
  • _damnation_. It ſeems reaſonable, that ſince _Lawes_ rob them of
  • _ſucceſſion_ in _civill benefits_, they ſhould have ſomething elſe
  • _equivalent_. As _Nature_ (which is _Lawes patterne_) having denyed
  • Women _Conſtancy_ to _one_, hath provided them with _cunning_ to
  • allure _many_; and ſo _Baſtards_ _de jure_ ſhould have better _wits_
  • and _experience_. But beſides that by _experience_ wee ſee many
  • _fooles_ amongſt them, wee ſhould take from them one of their chiefeſt
  • helpes to _preferment_, and we ſhould deny them to be _fools_, and
  • (that which is onely left) that _Women_ chuſe _worthier_ men then
  • their _husbands_, is falſe _de facto_; either then it muſt bee that
  • the _Church_ having removed them from all place in the _publike
  • Service_ of _God_, they have better meanes then others to be _wicked_,
  • and ſo _fortunate_: Or elſe becauſe the two _greateſt powers_ in this
  • _world_, the _Divell_ and _Princes_ concurre to their _greatneſſe_;
  • the one giving _baſtardy_, the other _legitimation_: As _nature_
  • frames and conſerves great _bodies_ of _contraries_. Or the cauſe is,
  • becauſe they abound moſt at _Court_, which is the _forge_ where
  • _fortunes_ are made, or at leaſt the _ſhop_ where they be _ſold_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 2.
  • _Why Puritanes make long Sermons?_
  • It needs not _perſpicuouſneſſe_, for God knowes they are plain
  • enough: nor doe all of them uſe _Sem-briefe-Accents_ for ſome
  • of them have _crotchets_ enough. It may bee they intend not
  • to riſe like _glorious Tapers_ and _Torches_, but like
  • _Thinne-wretched-ſicke-watching-Candles_, which _languiſh_ and are in
  • a Divine _Conſumption_ from the firſt minute, yea in their _ſnuffe_,
  • and _ſtink_ when others are in their more profitable _glory_. I have
  • thought ſometimes, that out of _conſcience_, they allow _long meaſure_
  • to _courſe ware_. And ſometimes, that _uſurping_ in that place a
  • _liberty_ to _ſpeak freely_ of _Kings_, they would _raigne_ as long as
  • they could. But now I thinke they doe it out of a _zealous_
  • imagination, that, _It is their duty to preach on till their Auditory
  • wake_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 3.
  • _Why did the Divel reſerve Jeſuites till theſe latter dayes._
  • Did he know that our _Age_ would deny the _Devils poſſeſſing_, and
  • therfore provided by theſe to _poſſeſſe_ men and kingdomes? Or to end
  • the _diſputation_ of _Schoolemen_, why the _Divell_ could not make
  • _lice_ in _Egypt_; and whether thoſe things hee _preſented_ there,
  • might be _true_, hath he ſent us a _true_ and _reall plague_, worſe
  • than thoſe _ten_? Or in _oſtentation_ of the _greatneſſe_ of his
  • _Kingdome_, which even _diviſion_ cannot _ſhake_, doth he ſend us
  • theſe which _diſagree_ with all the reſt? Or knowing that our _times_
  • ſhould diſcover the _Indies_, and aboliſh their _Idolatry_, doth he
  • ſend theſe to give them _another_ for it? Or peradventure they have
  • beene in the _Roman Church_ theſe _thouſand yeeres_, though we have
  • called them by _other names_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 4.
  • _Why is there more variety of Green then of other Colours?_
  • It is becauſe it is the figure of _Youth_ wherin _nature_ wuld provide
  • as many _green_, as _youth_ hath _affections_; and ſo preſent a
  • _Sea-green_ for _profuſe waſters_ in _voyages_; a _Graſſe-green_ for
  • ſudden _new men enobled_ from _Graſiers_; and a _Gooſe-greene_ for
  • ſuch _Polititians_ as pretend to preſerve the _Capitol_. Or elſe
  • _Prophetically_ foreſeeing an _age_, wherein they ſhall all _hunt_.
  • And for ſuch as _miſdemeane_ themſelves a _Willow-greene_; For
  • _Magiſtrates_ muſt aſwell have _Faſces_ born before them to _chaſtize_
  • the _ſmall_ offences, as _Secures_ to _cut off_ the _great_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 5.
  • _Why doe young Lay-men ſo much ſtudy Divinity._
  • Is it becauſe others tending buſily _Churches preferment_ neglect
  • _ſtudy_? Or had the _Church_ of _Rome_ ſhut up all our wayes, till the
  • _Lutherans_ broke downe their _uttermoſt ſtubborne doores_, and the
  • _Calviniſts_ picked their _inwardeſt_ and _ſubtleſt lockes_? Surely
  • the _Devill_ cannot be ſuch a _Foole_ to hope that he ſhall make this
  • ſtudy _contemptible_, by making it _common_. Nor that as the
  • _Dwellers_ by the River _Origus_ are ſaid (by drawing infinite
  • _ditches_ to ſprinkle their _barren Country_) to have exhauſted and
  • intercepted their _maine channell_, and ſo loſt their more profitable
  • courſe to the _ſea_; ſo we, by providing every _ones ſelfe, divinity_
  • enough for his _own uſe_, ſhould neglect our _Teachers_ and _Fathers_.
  • Hee cannot hope for better _hereſies_ then hee hath had, nor was his
  • _Kingdome_ ever ſo much advanced by _debating Religion_ (though with
  • ſome _aſperſions_ of _Error_) as by a _dull_ and _ſtupid ſecurity_, in
  • which many _groſe things_ are ſwallowed. Poſſible out of ſuch an
  • _ambition_ as we have now, to ſpeake _plainely_ and _fellow-like_ with
  • _Lords_ and _Kings_, wee thinke alſo to acquaint our ſelves with _Gods
  • ſecrets_: Or perchance when we ſtudy it by _mingling humane_ reſpects,
  • _It is not Divinity_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 6.
  • _Why hath the common Opinion afforded Women Soules?_
  • It is agreed that wee have not ſo much from them as any _part_ of
  • either our _mortall ſoules_ of _ſenſe_, or _growth_, and we deny
  • _ſoules_ to others equal to them in all but in _ſpeech_ for which they
  • are beholding to their _bodily inſtruments_: For perchance an _Oxes_
  • heart, or a _Goates_, or a _Foxes_, or a _Serpents_ would ſpeake juſt
  • ſo, if it were in the _breaſt_, and could move that _tongue_ and
  • _jawes_. Have they ſo many _advantages_ and _meanes_ to hurt us (for,
  • ever their _loving_ deſtroyed us) that we dare not _diſpleaſe_ them,
  • but give them what they will? And ſo when ſome call them _Angels_,
  • ſome _Goddeſſes_, and the _Palpulian Heretikes_ made them _Biſhops_,
  • wee deſcend ſo much with the ſtreame, to allow them _ſoules_? Or doe
  • we ſomewhat (in this dignifying of them) flatter _Princes_ and _great
  • Perſonages_ that are ſo much governed by them? Or do we in that
  • _eaſineſſe_ and _prodigality_, wherein we daily loſe our owne _ſoules_
  • to we care not whom, ſo labour to perſwade our ſelves, that ſith a
  • _woman_ hath a _ſoule_, a _ſoule_ is no great matter? Or doe wee lend
  • them _ſoules_ but for _uſe_, ſince they for our ſakes, give their
  • _ſoules_ againe, and their _bodies_ to boote? Or perchance becauſe the
  • _Deuill_ (who is all _ſoule_) doth moſt _miſchiefe_, and for
  • _convenience_ and _proportion_, becauſe they would come neerer him,
  • wee allow them ſome ſoules; and ſo as the _Romanes_ naturalized ſome
  • _Provinces_ in revenge, and made them _Romans_, onely for the
  • _burthen_ of the _Common-wealth_; ſo we have given _women_ ſoules
  • onely to make them capable of _damnation_?
  • [Decoration]
  • 7.
  • _Why are the Faireſt, Falſeſt?_
  • I meane not of falſe _Alchimy Beauty_, for then the _queſtion_ ſhould
  • be inverted, _Why are the Falſeſt, Faireſt_? It is not onely becauſe
  • they are _much ſolicited_ and _ſought_ for, ſo is _gold_, yet it is
  • not ſo _common_; and this _ſuite_ to them, ſhould teach them their
  • _value_, and make them more _reſerved_. Nor is it becauſe the
  • _delicateſt blood_ hath the _beſt ſpirits_, for what is that to the
  • fleſh? perchance ſuch _conſtitutions_ have the _beſt wits_, and there
  • is no _proportionable ſubject_, for _Womens wit_, but deceipt? doth
  • the _minde_ ſo follow the _temperature_ of the _body_, that becauſe
  • thoſe _complexions_ are apteſt to change, the _mind_ is therefore ſo?
  • Or as _Bells_ of the _pureſt metall_ retaine their _tinkling_ and
  • _ſound_ largeſt; ſo the _memory_ of the laſt _pleaſure_ laſts longer
  • in theſe, and diſpoſeth them to the next. But ſure it is not in the
  • _complexion_, for thoſe that doe but thinke themſelves _faire_, are
  • preſently inclined to this _multiplicity_ of _loves_, which being but
  • _faire in conceipt_ are _falſe in deed_: and ſo perchance when they
  • are _borne_ to this _beauty_, or have _made_ it, or have dream’d it,
  • they eaſily believe all _addreſſes_ and _applications_ of every _man_,
  • out of a _ſenſe_ of their own _worthineſſ_ to be directed to them,
  • which others _leſſ worthy_ in their own thoughts apprehend not, or
  • diſcredit. But I think the _true reaſon_ is, that being like _gold_ in
  • many properties (as that _all ſnatch_ at them, but the _worſt poſſeſſ_
  • them, that they care not how deep we dig for them, and that by the Law
  • of nature, _Occupandi conceditur_) they would be like alſo in this,
  • that as Gold to make it ſelf of uſe admits allay, ſo they, that they
  • may be tractable, mutable, and currant, have to allay _Falſhood_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 8.
  • _Why Venus-ſtar only doth caſt a ſhadow?_
  • Is it becauſe it is nearer the earth? But they whoſe profeſſion it is
  • to ſee that nothing be done in heaven without their conſent (as _Re_ —
  • ſays in himſelf of _Aſtrologers_) have bid _Mercury_ to be nearer. Is
  • it becauſe the works of _Venus_ want ſhadowing, covering and
  • dignifying? But thoſe of _Mercury_ need it more; For Eloquence, his
  • occupation, is all ſhadow and colours; let our life be a ſea, and then
  • our reaſons and even paſſions are wide enough to carry us whether we
  • ſhould go, but Eloquence is a ſtorm and tempeſt that miſcarries: and
  • who doubts that Eloquence which muſt perſwade people to take a yoke of
  • ſoveraignty (and then beg and make Laws to tye them faſter, and then
  • give money to the invention, repair and ſtrengthen it) needs more
  • ſhadows and coloring, then to perſwade any man or woman to that which
  • is natural. And _Venus_ markets are ſo natural, that when we ſolicite
  • the beſt way (which is by _marriage_) our perſwaſions work not ſo much
  • to draw a woman to us, as againſt her nature to draw her from all
  • other beſides. And ſo when we go againſt nature, and from _Venus-work_
  • (for marriage is chaſtitie) we need ſhadowes and colours, but not
  • elſe. In _Seneca’s_ time, it was a courſe, an un-_Roman_ and a
  • contemptible thing even in a _Matron_, not to have had a _Love_ beſide
  • her huſband, which though the Law required not at their hands, yet
  • they did it _zealouſly_ out of the Council of Cuſtom and faſhion,
  • which was _venery_ of _ſupererrogation_:
  • _Et te ſpectator pluſquam delectat Adulter_,
  • saith _Martial_: And _Horace_, becauſe many lights would not ſhew him
  • enough, created many _Images_ of the ſame Object by wainſcoting his
  • chamber with looking-glaſſes: ſo that _Venus_ flies not light, as much
  • as _Mercury_, who creeping into our underſtanding, our darkneſs would
  • be defeated, if he were perceived. Then either this _ſhadow_
  • confeſſeth that ſame dark Melancholy Repentance which accompanies; or
  • that ſo violent fires, needs ſome ſhadowy refreſhing and
  • intermiſſion: Or elſe light ſignifying both day and youth, and ſhadow
  • both night and age, ſhe pronounceth by this that ſhe profeſſeth both
  • all perſons and times.
  • [Decoration]
  • 9.
  • _Why is Venus-ſtar multinominous, called both =Heſperus= and
  • =Veſper=._
  • The Moon hath as many names, but not as ſhe is a ſtar, but as ſhe hath
  • divers governments; but _Venus_ is _multinominous_ to give example to
  • her _proſtitute diſciples_, who ſo often, either to renew or refreſh
  • themſelves towards lovers, or to diſguiſe themſelves from
  • _Magiſtrates_, are to take new names. It may be ſhe takes new names
  • after her many functions, for as ſhe is ſupream Monarch of all Suns at
  • large (which is _luſt_) ſo is ſhe joyned in Commiſſion with all
  • _Mythologicks_, with _Juno_, _Diana_, and all others for marriage. It
  • may be becauſe of the divers names to her ſelf, for her affections
  • have more names than any vice: _ſcilicet_, _Pollution_, _Fornication_,
  • _Adultery_, _Lay-Inceſt_, _Church-Inceſt_, _Rape_, _Sodomy_,
  • _Maſtupration_, _Maſturbation_, and a thouſand others. Perchance her
  • divers names ſhewed her appliableneſs to divers men, for _Neptune_
  • diſtilled and wet her in love, the Sun warms and melts her, _Mercury_
  • perſwaded and ſwore her, _Jupiters_ authority ſecured, and _Vulcan_
  • hammer’d her. As _Heſperus_ ſhe preſents you with her _bonum utile_,
  • becauſe it is wholeſomeſt in the morning: As _Veſper_ with her _bonum
  • delectabile_, becauſe it is pleaſanteſt in the evening. And becauſe
  • induſtrious men riſe and endure with the Sun in their civil
  • buſineſſes, this Star caſts them up a little before, and remembers
  • them again a little after for her buſineſs; for certainly,
  • _Venit Heſperus, ite capellae_:
  • was ſpoken to Lovers in the perſons of _Goats_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 10.
  • _Why are New Officers leaſt oppreſſing?_
  • Muſt the old Proverbe, that _Old dogs bite ſorest_, be true in all
  • kinde of _dogs_? Me thinkes the freſh _memory_ they have of the _mony_
  • they parted with for the _place_, ſhould haſten them for the
  • _re-imburſing_: And perchance they doe but ſeeme eaſier to their
  • _ſuiters_; who (as all other _Patients_) doe account all change of
  • paine, eaſie. But if it bee ſo, it is either becauſe the ſodain
  • _ſenſe_ & _contentment_ of the _honor_ of the _place_, retards and
  • remits the rage of their _profits_, and ſo having ſtayed their
  • _ſtomackes_, they can forbeare the ſecond _courſe_ a while: Or having
  • overcome the _ſteepest_ part of the _hill_, and clambered above
  • _Competitions_ and _Oppoſitions_ they dare loyter, and take breath:
  • Perchance being come from _places_, where they taſted _no gaine_, a
  • _little_ ſeems _much_ to them at firſt, for it is _long before a
  • Christian conſcience overtakes, or straies into an Officers heart_. It
  • may be that out of the _generall diſeaſe_ of all men not to love the
  • _memory_ of a _predeceſſor_, they ſeeke to diſgrace them by ſuch
  • _eaſineſſe_, and make good _firſt impreſſions_, that ſo having drawen
  • much _water_ to their _Mill_, they may afterward _grind_ at eaſe: For
  • if from the rules of good _Horſe-manſhip_, they thought it wholeſome
  • to _jet_ out in a moderate _pace_, they ſhould alſo take up towards
  • their _journeys_ end, not mend their pace continually, and _gallop_ to
  • their _Innes-doore_, the _grave_; except perchance their _conſcience_
  • at that time ſo touch them, that they thinke it an _injury_ and
  • _damage_ both to him that muſt _ſell_, and to him that muſt _buy_ the
  • _Office_ after their _death_, and a kind of _dilapidation_ if they by
  • continuing _honeſt_ ſhould diſcredit the _place_, and bring it to a
  • _lower-rent_, or _under-value_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 11.
  • _Why does the Poxe ſo much affect to undermine the Noſe?_
  • _Paracelſus_ perchance ſaith true, That every Diſeaſe hath his
  • exaltation in ſome part certaine. But why this in the Noſe? Is there
  • ſo much mercy in this diſeaſe, that it provides that one ſhould not
  • ſmell his own ſtinck? Or hath it but the common fortune, that being
  • begot and bred in obſcureſt and ſecreteſt places, becauſe therefore
  • his ſerpentine crawling and inſinuation ſhould not be ſuſpected, nor
  • ſeen, he comes ſooneſt into great place, and is more able to deſtroy
  • the worthieſt member, then a diſeaſe better born? Perchance as mice
  • defeat Elephants by knawing their _Proboſcis_, which is their Noſe,
  • this wretched Indian Vermine practiſeth to doe the ſame upon us. Or as
  • the ancient furious Cuſtome and Connivency of ſome Lawes, that one
  • might cut off their Noſe whome he deprehended in Adulterie, was but a
  • Tipe of this; And that now more charitable lawes having taken away all
  • Revenge from particular hands, this common Magiſtrate and Executioner
  • is come to do the ſame office inviſibly? Or by withdrawing this
  • conſpicuous part, the Noſe, it warnes us from all adventuring upon
  • that Coaſt; for it is as good a mark to take in a flag as to hang one
  • out. Poſſibly heate, which is more potent and active then cold,
  • thought her ſelfe injured, and the Harmony of the world out of tune,
  • when cold was able to ſhew the high-way to Noses in _Muscovia_, except
  • ſhe found the meanes to doe the ſame in other Countries. Or becauſe by
  • the conſent of all, there is an Analogy, Proportion, and affection
  • between the Noſe and that part where this diſeaſe is firſt contracted,
  • and therefore _Heliogabalus_ choſe not his Minions in the Bath but by
  • the Noſe: And _Albertus_ had a knaviſh meaning when he preferd great
  • Noſes; And the licentious Poet was _Naſo Poeta_. I think this reaſon
  • is neareſt truth, That the Noſe is moſt compaſſionate with this part:
  • Except this be nearer, that it is reaſonable that this Diſeaſe in
  • particular ſhould affect the moſt eminent and perſpicuous part, which
  • in general doth affect to take hold of the moſt eminent and
  • conſpicuous men.
  • [Decoration]
  • 12.
  • _Why die none for Love now?_
  • Becauſe women are become eaſyer. Or becauſe theſe later times have
  • provided mankind of more new means for the deſtroying of themſelves
  • and one another, _Pox_, _Gunpowder_, _Young marriages_, and
  • _Controverſies_ in _Religion_. Or is there in true Hiſtory no
  • Precedent or Example of it? Or perchance ſome die ſo, but are not
  • therefore worthy the remembring or ſpeaking of?
  • [Decoration]
  • 13.
  • _Why do Women delight much in Feathers?_
  • They think that Feathers imitate wings, and ſo ſhew their reſtleſſneſs
  • and inſtability. As they are in matter, ſo they would be in name, like
  • _Embroiderers_, _Painters_, and ſuch _Artificers_ of curious
  • _vanities_, which the vulgar call _Pluminaries_. Or elſe they have
  • feathers for the ſame reaſon, which moves them to love the unworthieſt
  • men, which is, that they may be thereby excuſable in their inconſtancy
  • and often changing.
  • [Decoration]
  • 14.
  • _Why doth not Gold ſoyl the fingers?_
  • Doth it direct all the venom to the heart? Or is it becauſe bribing
  • ſhould not be diſcovered? Or becauſe that ſhould pay purely, for which
  • pure things are given, as _Love_, _Honor_, _Justice_ and Heaven? Or
  • doth it ſeldom come into innocent hands but into ſuch as for former
  • foulneſs you cannot diſcern this?
  • [Decoration]
  • 15.
  • _Why do great men of all dependants, chuſe to preſerve their little
  • Pimps?_
  • It is not becauſe they are got neareſt their ſecrets, for they whom
  • they bring come nearer. Nor commonly becauſe they and their bawds have
  • lain in one belly, for then they ſhould love their brothers aſwel. Nor
  • becauſe they are witneſſes of their weakneſs, for they are weak ones.
  • Either it is becauſe they have a double hold and obligation upon their
  • maſters for providing them ſurgery and remedy after, aſwel as pleaſure
  • before, and bringing them always ſuch ſtuff, as they ſhal always need
  • their ſervice? Or becauſe they may be received and entertained every
  • where, and Lords fling off none but they ſuch as they may deſtroy by
  • it. Or perchance we deceive our ſelves, and every Lord having many,
  • and, of neceſſity, ſome riſing, we mark only theſe.
  • [Decoration]
  • 16.
  • _Why are Courtiers ſooner Atheiſts then men of other conditions?_
  • Is it becauſe as _Phyſitians_ contemplating Nature, and finding many
  • abſtruſe things ſubject to the ſearch of Reaſon, thinks therefore that
  • all is ſo; so they (ſeeing mens deſtinies, mad at Court, neck out and
  • in joynt there, _War_, _Peace_, _Life_ and _Death_ derived from
  • thence) climb no higher? Or doth a familiarity with greatneſs, and
  • daily converſation and acquaintance with it breed a contempt of all
  • greatneſs? Or becauſe that they ſee that opinion or need of one
  • another, and fear makes the degrees of ſervants, Lords and Kings, do
  • they think that God likewiſe for ſuch Reaſon hath been mans Creator?
  • Perchance it is becauſe they ſee Vice proſper beſt there, and,
  • burthened with ſinne, doe they not, for their eaſe, endeavour to put
  • off the feare and Knowledge of God, as facinorous men deny
  • Magiſtracy? Or are the moſt Atheiſts in that place, becauſe it is the
  • foole that ſaid in his heart, There is no God.
  • [Decoration]
  • 17.
  • _Why are ſtateſmen moſt incredulous?_
  • Are they all wiſe enough to follow their excellent pattern _Tiberius_,
  • who brought the ſenate to be diligent and induſtrious to believe him,
  • were it never so oppoſite or diametricall, that it deſtroyed their
  • very ends to be believed, as _Aſinius Gallus_ had almoſt deceived this
  • man by believing him, and the Major and Aldermen of _London_ in
  • _Richard_ the Third? Or are buſineſſes (about which theſe men are
  • converſant) ſo conjecturall, ſo ſubject to unſuſpected interventions
  • that they are therefore forc’d to ſpeak oraculouſly, whiſperingly,
  • generally, and therefore eſcapingly, in the language of
  • Almanack-makers for weather? Or are thoſe (as they call them) _Arcana
  • imperii_, as by whom the Prince provokes his luſt, and by whom he
  • vents it, of what Cloath his ſocks are, and ſuch, ſo deep, and ſo
  • irreveald, as any error in them is inexcuſable? If theſe were the
  • reaſons, they would not only ſerve for ſtate-buſineſs. But why will
  • they not tell true, what a Clock it is, and what weather, but abſtain
  • from truth of it, if it conduce not to their ends, as Witches will not
  • name Jeſus, though it be in a curſe? eithere they know little out of
  • their own Elements, or a Cuſtom in one matter begets an habite in all.
  • Or the lower ſort imitate Lords, they their Princes, theſe their
  • Prince. Or elſe they believe one another, and ſo never hear truth. Or
  • they abſtain from the little Channel of truth, leaſt, at laſt, they
  • ſhould _finde the fountain it ſelf, God_.
  • [Decoration]
  • 18.
  • _Why was Sir Walter Raleigh thought the fitteſt Man, to write the
  • Hiſtorie of theſe Times?_
  • Was it becauſe that being told at his Arraignement, that a Witneſs
  • accuſing himſelf had the ſtrength of two; he may ſeem by Writing the
  • ills of his own Time to be believed? Or is it, becauſe he might
  • reenjoy thoſe Times by the Meditation of them? Or becauſe if he ſhould
  • undertake higher Times, he doth not think, that he can come nearer to
  • the Beginning of the World? Or becauſe like a Bird in a Cage, he takes
  • his Tunes from every paſſenger, that laſt whiſtled? Or becauſe he
  • thinks not that the beſt Echo which repeats moſt of the Sentence, but
  • that which repeats Leſs more plainly?
  • [Decoration]
  • CHARACTERS
  • 1.
  • _The Character of a =Scot= at the first ſight._
  • At his firſt appearing in the _Charterhouſe_, an Olive coloured Veluet
  • ſuit owned him, which ſince became mous-colour, A pair of unſkour’d
  • ſtockings-gules, One indifferent ſhooe, his band of _Edenburgh_, and
  • cuffs of _London_, both ſtrangers to his ſhirt, a white feather in a
  • hat that had bin ſod, one onely cloak for the rain, which yet he made
  • ſerve him for all weathers: A Barren-half-acre of Face, amidſt whereof
  • an eminent Noſe advanced himſelf, like the new Mount at _Wanſted_,
  • overlooking his Beard, and all the wilde Country thereabouts; He was
  • tended enough, but not well; for they were certain dumb creeping
  • Followers, yet they made way for their Maſter, the Laird. At the
  • firſt preſentment his Breeches were his Sumpter, and his Packets,
  • Trunks, Cloak-bags, Portmanteau’s and all; He then grew a
  • Knight-wright, and there is extant of his ware at 100_l._ 150_l._ and
  • 200_l._ price. Immediately after this, he ſhifteth his ſuit, ſo did
  • his Whore, and to a Bear-baiting they went, whither I followed them
  • not, but _Tom. Thorney_ did.
  • [Decoration]
  • 2.
  • _The true Character of a =Dunce=._
  • He hath a Soule drownd in a lump of Fleſh, or in a piece of Earth that
  • _Prometheus_ put not half his proportion of Fire into, a thing that
  • hath neither edge of deſire, nor feeling of affection in it, The moſt
  • dangerous creature for confirming an _Atheiſt_, who would ſtraight
  • ſwear, his ſoul were nothing but the bare temperature of his body: He
  • ſleeps as he goes, and his thoughts ſeldom reach an inch further than
  • his eyes; The moſt part of the faculties of his ſoul lye Fallow, or
  • are like the reſtive Jades that no ſpur can drive forwards towards the
  • purſuite of any worthy deſign; one of the moſt unprofitable of all
  • Gods creatures, being as he is, a thing put clean beſides his right
  • uſe, made fitt for the cart & the flail, and by miſchance Entangled
  • amongſt books and papers, a man cannot tel poſſible what he is now
  • good for, ſave to move up and down and fill room, or to ſerve as
  • _Animatum Inſtrumentum_ for others to work withal in baſe Imployments,
  • or to be a foyl for better witts, or to ſerve (as They ſay monſters
  • do) to ſet out the variety of nature, and Ornament of the Univerſe, He
  • is meer nothing of himſelf, neither eates, nor drinkes, nor goes, nor
  • ſpits but by imitation, for al which, he hath ſet forms & faſhions,
  • which he never varies, but ſticks to, with the like plodding conſtancy
  • that a milhors follows his trace, both the muſes and the graces are
  • his hard Miſtriſſes though he daily Invocate them, though he ſacrifize
  • _Hecatombs_, they ſtil look a ſquint, you ſhall note him oft (beſide
  • his dull eye and louting head, and a certain clammie benum’d pace) by
  • a fair diſplai’d beard, a Nightcap and a gown, whoſe very wrincles
  • proclaim him the true genius of formality, but of al others, his
  • diſcours and compoſitions beſt ſpeak him, both of them are much of one
  • ſtuf & faſhion, he ſpeaks juſt what his books or laſt company ſaid
  • unto him without varying one whit & very ſeldom underſtands himſelf,
  • you may know by his diſcourſe where he was laſt, for what he read or
  • heard yeſterday he now diſchargeth his memory or notebook of, not his
  • underſtanding, for it never came there; what he hath he flings abroad
  • at al adventurs without accomodating it to time, place, perſons or
  • occaſions, he commonly loſeth himſelf in his tale, and flutters up and
  • down windles without recovery, and whatſoever next preſents it ſelf,
  • his heavie conceit ſeizeth upon and goeth along with, however
  • _Heterogeneal_ to his matter in hand, his jeſts are either old flead
  • proverbs, or lean-ſtarv’d-hackny-_Apophthegm’s_, or poor verball quips
  • outworn by Servingmen, Tapſters and Milkmaids, even laid aſide by
  • Balladers, He aſſents to all men that bring any ſhadow of reaſon, and
  • you may make him when he ſpeaks moſt Dogmatically, even with one
  • breath, to averr pure contradictions, His Compoſitions differ only
  • _terminorum poſitione_ from Dreams, Nothing but rude heaps of
  • Immaterial-inchoherent droſſie-rubbiſh-ſtuffe, promiſcuouſly thruſt up
  • together, enough to Infuſe dullneſs and Barrenneſs of Conceit into him
  • that is ſo Prodigall of his eares as to give the hearing, enough to
  • make a mans memory Ake with ſuffering ſuch dirtie ſtuffe caſt into it,
  • as unwellcome to any true conceit, as Sluttiſh Morſells or Wallowiſh
  • Potions to a Nice-Stomack which whiles he empties himſelfe of, it
  • ſticks in his Teeth nor can he be Delivered without Sweate and
  • Sighes, and Humms, and Coughs enough to ſhake his Grandams teeth out
  • of her head; Heel ſpitt, and ſcratch, and yawn, and ſtamp, and turn
  • like ſick men from one elbow to another, and Deſerve as much pitty
  • during this torture as men in Fits of Tertian Feavors or ſelfe laſhing
  • Penitentiaries; in a word, Rip him quite aſunder, and examin every
  • ſhred of him, you ſhall finde him to be juſt nothing, but the ſubject
  • of Nothing, the object of contempt, yet ſuch as he is you muſt take
  • him, for there is no hope he ſhould ever become better.
  • [Decoration]
  • 21.
  • _An Eſſay of Valour._
  • I am of opinion that nothing is ſo potent either to procure or merit
  • Love, as Valour, and I am glad I am ſo, for thereby I ſhall do my ſelf
  • much eaſe, becauſe Valour never needs much wit to maintain it: To
  • ſpeak of it in it ſelf, It is a quality which he that hath, ſhall have
  • leaſt need of, so the beſt League between Princes is a mutual fear of
  • each other, it teacheth a man to value his reputation as his life, and
  • chiefly to hold the Lye unſufferable, though being alone, he holds
  • finds no hurt it doth him, It leaves it ſelf to others cenſures, for
  • he that brags of his own valour, diſſwades others from believing it,
  • It feareth a word no more than an Ague, It always makes good the
  • Owner, for though he be generally held a fool, he ſhall ſeldom hear ſo
  • much by word of mouth, and that enlargeth him more than any
  • ſpectacles, for it maketh a little fellow be called a tall man, it
  • yeilds the wall to none but a woman, whoſe weakneſs is her
  • prerogative, or a man ſeconded with a woman as an uſher, which always
  • goes before his betters, It makes a man become the witneſs of his own
  • words, and ſtand to whatever he hath ſaid, and thinketh it a reproach
  • to commit his reviling unto the Law, it furniſheth youth with action,
  • and age with diſcourſe, and both by futures, for a man muſt ever boaſt
  • himſelf in the preſent tenſe, and to come nearer home, nothing drawes
  • a woman like to it; for Valour towards men, is an Emblem of an ability
  • towards women, a good quality ſignifies a better. Nothing is more
  • behooffull for that Sex; for from it they receive protection, and we
  • free from the danger of it: Nothing makes a ſhorter cut for obtaining,
  • for a man of Arms is always void of Ceremony, which is the wall that
  • ſtands between _Pyramus_ and _Thiſbe_, that is, _Man_ and _Woman_, for
  • there is no pride in women but that which rebounds from our own
  • baſeneſſe (as Cowards grow valiant upon thoſe that are more Cowards)
  • ſo that only by our pale aſking we teach them to deny, and by our
  • ſhamefac’dneſs, we put them in minde to be modeſt, whereas indeed it
  • is cunning _Rhetorick_ to perſwade the hearers that they are that
  • already which he would have them to be; This kinde of baſhfulneſs is
  • far from men of Valour, and eſpecially from ſouldiers, for ſuch are
  • ever men (without doubt) forward and confident, loſing no time leaſt
  • they ſhould loſe opportunity, which is the beſt Factor for a Lover,
  • and becauſe they know women are given to diſſemble, they will never
  • believe them when they deny, _Whilome_ before this age of wit, and
  • wearing black, were broke in upon us, there was no way known to win a
  • Lady but by Tylting, Turnying, and riding through Forreſts, in which
  • time theſe ſlender ſtriplings with little legs were held but of
  • ſtrength enough to marry their widows, and even in our days there can
  • be given no reaſon of the Inundation of Servingmen upon their
  • Miſtreſſes, but (only) that uſually they carry their Maſters Weapons,
  • and his Valour: To be accounted handſome, juſt, learned, or well
  • favoured, all this carries no danger with it, but it is to be admitted
  • to the Title of Valiant Acts, at leaſt the adventuring of his
  • mortality, and al women take delight to hold him safe in their arms
  • who hath ’ſcapt thither through many dangers: To ſpeak at once, Man
  • hath a priviledge in Valour; In clothes and good faces we but imitate
  • women, and many of that Sex will not think much (as far as an anſwer
  • goes) to diſſemble wit too. So then theſe neat youths, theſe women in
  • mens apparel are too near a woman to be beloved of her, They be both
  • of a Trade, but be grim of aſpect, and ſuch a one as Glaſs dares take,
  • and ſhe will deſire him for neatneſs and varietie; A ſkar in a mans
  • face is the ſame that a mole in a womans; a Jewel ſet in white to make
  • it ſeem more white, for the ſkar in a man is a mark of honour and no
  • blemiſh, for ’tis a ſkar and a blemiſh too in a Souldier too to be
  • with out one: Now as for al things elſe which are to procure Love, as
  • a good face, wit, good clothes, or a good body, each of them I confeſs
  • may work ſomewhat for want of a better, That is, if _Valour be not
  • their Rivall_; A good face avails nothing if it be in a coward that is
  • baſhfull, the utmoſt of it is to be kiſſ’d, which rather encreaſeth
  • then quencheth appetite; He that ſends her gifts ſends her word alſo,
  • that he is a man of ſmall gifts otherwiſe, for wooing by ſigns and
  • tokens implies the Author dumb; and if _Ovid_ who writ _the Law of
  • Love_, were alive (as he is extant) would allow it as good a
  • diverſity, that gifts ſhould be ſent as gratuities, not as bribes;
  • Wit getteth rather promiſe then Love, Wit is not to be ſeen, and no
  • woman takes advice of any in her loving, but of her own eyes, and her
  • waiting womans; Nay which is worſe, wit is not to be felt, and ſo no
  • good fellow; Wit apply’d to a woman makes her diſſolve (or diſcloſe)
  • her ſimpering, and diſcover her teeth with laughter, and this is
  • ſurely a purge for love; for the beginning of love is a kind of
  • fooliſh melancholy, as for the man that makes his Taylor his Bawd, and
  • hopes to inveagle his Love with ſuch a coloured ſuit, ſurely the ſame
  • deeply hazards the loſs of her favour upon every change of his
  • clothes; So likewiſe for the other, that Courts her ſilently with a
  • good body, let me certifie him that his clothes depend upon the
  • comelyneſſe of the body, and ſo both upon opinion; ſhe that hath been
  • ſeduced by Apparel, let me give her to wit, _that men always put off
  • their clothes before they go to bed_; and let her that hath been
  • enamour’d of her ſervants body, underſtand, _that if ſhe ſaw him in a
  • ſkin of cloth_, that is, in a ſuit made to the pattern of his body,
  • _ſhe would ſee ſlender cauſe to love him ever after_; there are no
  • clothes ſit ſo well in a woman’s eye, as a ſuit of Steel, though not
  • of the faſhion, and no man ſo ſoon ſurpriſeth a womans affections as
  • he that is the ſubject of all whiſperings, and hath always twenty
  • ſtories of his own deeds depending upon him; Miſtake me not, I
  • underſtand not by valour one that never fights but when he is back’d
  • by drink or anger, or hiſſ’d on with beholders, nor one that is
  • deſperate, nor one that takes away a Servingmans weapons when
  • perchance it coſt him his quarters wages, nor yet one that wears a
  • Privy coat of defence and therein is confident, for then ſuch as made
  • Bucklers, would be accounted the _Catalines_ of this Commonwealth—I
  • intend one of an even Reſolution grounded upon reaſon, which is always
  • even, having his power reſtrained by the Law of not doing wrong. But
  • now I remember I am for Valour and therefore I muſt be a man of few
  • words.
  • Transcriber’s Note
  • Inconsistent period spelling retained as printed. The original printing
  • used _ß_ occasionally, but inconsistently, in place of _ſſ_: this usage
  • has not been retained.
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