Religio Medici
Sir Thomas Browne
Introduction | Religio Medici | Urn-Burial | Letter
to a Friend | Notes
Part
the First | Part the Second
Note on the e-text: this Renascence
Editions text was transcribed from the edition of J. W.
Willis Bund, 1869, by Judy Boss of Omaha, Nebraska, by whose kind
permission it is here published. The text is in the public
domain. Content unique to this presentation is copyright ©
1998 The University of Oregon. For nonprofit and educational uses
only. Send comments and corrections to the Publisher, rbear at
uoregon.edu.
TO
THE READER.
ERTAINLY that man were greedy of life, who
should desire to live when all the world were at an end; and he
must needs be very impatient, who would repine at death in the
society of all things that suffer under it. Had not almost every
man suffered by the press, or were not the tyranny thereof become
universal, I had not wanted reason for complaint: but in times
wherein I have lived to behold the highest perversion of that
excellent invention, the name of his Majesty defamed, the honour
of Parliament depraved, the writings of both depravedly,
anticipatively, counterfeitly, imprinted: complaints may seem
ridiculous in private persons; and men of my condition may be as
incapable of affronts, as hopeless of their reparations. And
truly had not the duty I owe unto the importunity of friends, and
the allegiance I must ever acknowledge unto truth, prevailed with
me; the inactivity of my disposition might have made these
sufferings continual, and time, that brings other things to
light, should have satisfied me in the remedy of its
oblivion. But because things evidently false are not only
printed, but many things of truth most falsely set forth; in this
latter I could not but think myself engaged: for, though we have
no power to redress the former, yet in the other reparation being
within ourselves, I have at present represented unto the world a
full and intended copy of that piece, which was most imperfectly
and surreptitiously published before. This I confess, about seven
years past, with some others of affinity thereto, for my private
exercise and satisfaction, I had at leisurable hours composed;
which being communicated unto one, it became common unto many,
and was by transcription successively corrupted, until it arrived
in a most depraved copy at the press. He that shall peruse that
work, and shall take notice of sundry particulars and personal
expressions therein, will easily discern the intention was not
publick: and, being a private exercise directed to myself, what
is delivered therein was rather a memorial unto me, than an
example or rule unto any other: and therefore, if there be any
singularity therein correspondent unto the private conceptions of
any man, it doth not advantage them; or if dissentaneous
thereunto, it no way overthrows them. It was penned in such a
place, and with such disadvantage, that (I protest), from the
first setting of pen unto paper, I had not the assistance of any
good book, whereby to promote my invention, or relieve my memory;
and therefore there might be many real lapses therein, which
others might take notice of, and more that I suspected myself. It
was set down many years past, and was the sense of my conceptions
at that time, not an immutable law unto my advancing judgment at
all times; and therefore there might be many things therein
plausible unto my passed apprehension, which are not
agreeable unto my present self. There are many things delivered
rhetorically, many expressions therein merely tropical, and as
they best illustrate my intention; and therefore also there are
many things to be taken in a soft and flexible sense, and not to
be called unto the rigid test of reason. Lastly, all that is
contained therein is in submission unto maturer discernments;
and, as I have declared, shall no further father them than the
best and learned judgments shall authorize them: under favour of
which considerations, I have made its secrecy publick, and
committed the truth thereof to every ingenuous reader.
THOMAS
BROWNE.
RELIGIO
MEDICI.
SECT. 1.--For my
religion, though there be
several circumstances that might persuade the world I have none
at all,--as the general scandal of my profession,1--the natural course of my
studies,--the indifferency of my behaviour and discourse in
matters of religion (neither violently defending one, nor with
that common ardour and contention opposing another),-- yet, in
despite hereof, I dare without usurpation assume the honourable
style of a Christian. Not that I merely owe this title to the
font, my education, or the clime wherein I was born, as being
bred up either to confirm those principles my parents instilled
into my understanding, or by a general consent proceed in the
religion of my country; but having, in my riper years and
confirmed judgment, seen and examined all, I find myself obliged,
by the principles of grace, and the law of mine own reason, to
embrace no other name but this. Neither doth herein my zeal so
far make me forget the general charity I owe unto humanity, as
rather to hate than pity Turks, Infidels, and (what is worse)
Jews; rather contenting myself to enjoy that happy style,
than maligning those who refuse so glorious a title.
Sect. 2.--But,
because the name of a Christian is
become too general to express our faith,--there being a geography
of religion as well as lands, and every clime distinguished not
only by their laws and limits, but circumscribed by their
doctrines and rules of faith,--to be particular, I am of that
reformed new-cast religion, wherein I dislike nothing but the
name; of the same belief our Saviour taught, the apostles
disseminated, the fathers authorized, and the martyrs confirmed;
but, by the sinister ends of princes, the ambition and avarice of
prelates, and the fatal corruption of times, so decayed,
impaired, and fallen from its native beauty, that it required the
careful and charitable hands of these times to restore it to its
primitive integrity. Now, the accidental occasion whereupon, the
slender means whereby, the low and abject condition of the person
by whom, so good a work was set on foot, which in our adversaries
beget contempt and scorn, fills me with wonder, and is the very
same objection the insolent pagans first cast at Christ and his
disciples.
Sect. 3.--Yet have
I not so shaken hands
with those desperate resolutions who had rather venture at large
their decayed bottom, than bring her in to be new-trimmed in the
dock,--who had rather promiscuously retain all, than abridge any,
and obstinately be what they are, than what they have been,--as
to stand in diameter and sword's point with them. We have
reformed from them, not against them: for, omitting those
improperations2 and
terms of scurrility betwixt us, which only difference our
affections, and not our cause, there is between us one common
name and appellation, one faith and necessary body of principles
common to us both; and therefore I am not scrupulous to
converse and live with them, to enter their churches in defect of
ours, and either pray with them or for them. I could never
perceive any rational consequences from those many texts which
prohibit the children of Israel to pollute themselves with the
temples of the heathens; we being all Christians, and not divided
by such detested impieties as might profane our prayers, or the
place wherein we make them; or that a resolved conscience may not
adore her Creator anywhere, especially in places devoted to his
service; if their devotions offend him, mine may please him: if
theirs profane it mine may hallow it. Holy water and crucifix
(dangerous to the common people) deceive not my judgment, nor
abuse my devotion at all. I am, I confess, naturally inclined to
that which misguided zeal terms superstition: my common
conversation I do acknowledge austere, my behaviour full of
rigour, sometimes not without morosity; yet, at my devotion I
love to use the civility of my knee, my hat, and hand, with all
those outward and sensible motions which may express or promote
my invisible devotion. I should violate my own arm rather than a
church; nor willingly deface the name of saint or martyr. At the
sight of a cross, or crucifix, I can dispense with my hat, but
scarce with the thought or memory of my Saviour. I cannot laugh
at, but rather pity, the fruitless journeys of pilgrims, or
contemn the miserable condition of friars; for, though misplaced
in circumstances, there is something in it of devotion. I could
never hear the
* A church-bell, that tolls every day
at six
and twelve of the clock; at the hearing whereof every one, in
what place soever, either of house or street, betakes himself to
his prayer, which is commonly directed to the Virgin. |
Ave-Mary bell* without an elevation, or think it a sufficient
warrant, because
they erred in one circumstance, for me to err in all,--that is,
in silence and dumb contempt. Whilst, therefore, they direct
their devotions to her, I offered mine to God; and rectify the
errors of their prayers by rightly ordering mine own. At a solemn
procession I have wept abundantly, while my consorts, blind with
opposition and prejudice, have fallen into an excess of scorn and
laughter. There are, questionless, both in Greek, Roman, and
African churches, solemnities and ceremonies, whereof the wiser
zeals do make a Christian use; and stand condemned by us, not as
evil in themselves, but as allurements and baits of superstition
to those vulgar heads that look asquint on the face of truth, and
those unstable judgments that cannot resist in the narrow point
and centre of virtue without a reel or stagger to the
circumference.
Sect. 4.--As there
were many reformers,
so likewise many reformations; every country proceeding in a
particular way and method, according as their national interest,
together with their constitution and clime, inclined them: some
angrily and with extremity; others calmly and with mediocrity,
not rending, but easily dividing, the community, and leaving an
honest possibility of a reconciliation;--which, though peaceable
spirits do desire, and may conceive that revolution of time and
the mercies of God may effect, yet that judgment that shall
consider the present antipathies between the two extremes,--their
contrarieties in condition, affection, and opinion,--may, with
the same hopes, expect a union in the poles of heaven.
Sect. 5.--But, to
difference myself nearer, and draw
into a lesser circle; there is no church whose every part so
squares unto my conscience, whose articles, constitutions,
and customs, seem so consonant unto reason, and, as it were,
framed to my particular devotion, as this whereof I hold my
belief--the Church of England; to whose faith I am a sworn
subject, and therefore, in a double obligation, subscribe unto
her articles, and endeavour to observe her constitutions:
whatsoever is beyond, as points indifferent, I observe, according
to the rules of my private reason, or the humour and fashion of
my devotion; neither believing this because Luther affirmed it,
nor disproving that because Calvin hath disavouched it. I condemn
not all things in the council of Trent, nor approve all in the
synod of Dort.3 In
brief, where the Scripture is silent, the church is my text;
where that speaks, 'tis but my comment;4
where there is a joint silence of
both, I borrow not the rules of my religion from Rome or Geneva,
but from the dictates of my own reason. It is an unjust scandal
of our adversaries, and a gross error in ourselves, to compute
the nativity of our religion from Henry the Eighth; who, though
he rejected the Pope, refused not the faith of Rome,5 and effected no more than what his
own predecessors desired and essayed in ages past, and it was
conceived the state of Venice would have attempted in our
days.6 It is as
uncharitable a point in us to fall upon those popular
scurrilities and opprobrious scoffs of the Bishop of Rome, to
whom, as a temporal prince, we owe the duty of good language. I
confess there is a cause of passion between us: by his sentence I
stand excommunicated; heretic is the best language he affords me:
yet can no ear witness I ever returned to him the name of
antichrist, man of sin, or whore of Babylon. It is the method of
charity to suffer without reaction: those usual satires and
invectives of the pulpit may perchance produce a good effect on
the vulgar, whose ears are opener to rhetoric than logic;
yet do they, in no wise, confirm the faith of wiser believers,
who know that a good cause needs not be pardoned by passion, but
can sustain itself upon a temperate dispute.
Sect.
6.--I could never divide myself from any man upon the difference
of an opinion, or be angry with his judgment for not agreeing
with me in that from which, perhaps, within a few days, I should
dissent myself. I have no genius to disputes in religion: and
have often thought it wisdom to decline them, especially upon a
disadvantage, or when the cause of truth might suffer in the
weakness of my patronage. Where we desire to be informed, 'tis
good to contest with men above ourselves; but, to confirm and
establish our opinions, 'tis best to argue with judgments below
our own, that the frequent spoils and victories over their
reasons may settle in ourselves an esteem and confirmed opinion
of our own. Every man is not a proper champion for truth, nor fit
to take up the gauntlet in the cause of verity; many, from the
ignorance of these maxims, and an inconsiderate zeal unto truth,
have too rashly charged the troops of error and remain as
trophies unto the enemies of truth. A man may be in as just
possession of truth as of a city, and yet be forced to surrender;
'tis therefore far better to enjoy her with peace than to hazard
her on a battle. If, therefore, there rise any doubts in my way,
I do forget them, or at least defer them, till my better settled
judgment and more manly reason be able to resolve them; for I
perceive every man's own reason is his best OEdipus,7 and will, upon a reasonable truce,
find a way to loose those bonds wherewith the subtleties of error
have enchained our more flexible and tender judgments. In
philosophy, where truth seems double-faced, there is no man more
para doxical than myself: but in divinity I love to keep
the road; and, though not in an implicit, yet an humble faith,
follow the great wheel of the church, by which I move; not
reserving any proper poles, or motion from the epicycle of my own
brain. By this means I have no gap for heresy, schisms, or
errors, of which at present, I hope I shall not injure truth to
say, I have no taint or tincture. I must confess my greener
studies have been polluted with two or three; not any begotten in
the latter centuries, but old and obsolete, such as could never
have been revived but by such extravagant and irregular heads as
mine. For, indeed, heresies perish not with their authors; but,
like the river Arethusa,8 though
they lose their currents in
one place, they rise up again in another. One general council is
not able to extirpate one single heresy: it may be cancelled for
the present; but revolution of time, and the like aspects from
heaven, will restore it, when it will flourish till it be
condemned again. For, as though there were metempsychosis, and
the soul of one man passed into another, opinions do find, after
certain revolutions, men and minds like those that first begat
* A
revolution of certain thousand years, when all things should
return unto their former estate, and he be teaching again in his
school, as when he delivered this opinion. |
them. To see ourselves again, we need not
look for Plato's year:* every man is not only himself; there have
been many Diogenes, and as many Timons, though but few of that
name; men are lived over again; the world is now as it was in
ages past; there was none then, but there hath been some one
since, that parallels him, and is, as it were, his revived self.
Sect. 7.--Now, the
first of mine was that of the
Arabians;9 that the
souls of men perished with their bodies, but should yet
be raised again at the last day: not that I did absolutely
conceive a mortality of the soul, but, if that were (which faith,
not philosophy, hath yet thoroughly disproved), and that both
entered the grave together, yet I held the same conceit thereof
that we all do of the body, that it rise again. Surely it is but
the merits of our unworthy natures, if we sleep in darkness until
the last alarm. A serious reflex upon my own unworthiness did
make me backward from challenging this prerogative of my soul: so
that I might enjoy my Saviour at the last, I could with patience
be nothing almost unto eternity. The second was that of Origen;
that God would not persist in his vengeance for ever, but, after
a definite time of his wrath, would release the damned souls from
torture; which error I fell into upon a serious contemplation of
the great attribute of God, his mercy; and did a little cherish
it in myself, because I found therein no malice, and a ready
weight to sway me from the other extreme of despair, whereunto
melancholy and contemplative natures are too easily disposed. A
third there is, which I did never positively maintain or
practise, but have often wished it had been consonant to truth,
and not offensive to my religion; and that is, the prayer for the
dead; whereunto I was inclined from some charitable inducements,
whereby I could scarce contain my prayers for a friend at the
ringing of a bell, or behold his corpse without an orison for his
soul. 'Twas a good way, methought, to be remembered by posterity,
and far more noble than a history. These opinions I never
maintained with pertinacity, or endeavoured to inveigle any man's
belief unto mine, nor so much as ever revealed, or disputed them
with my dearest friends; by which means I neither propagated them
in others nor confirmed them in myself: but, suffering
them to flame upon their own substance, without addition of new
fuel, they went out insensibly of themselves; therefore these
opinions, though condemned by lawful councils, were not heresies
in me, but bare errors, and single lapses of my understanding,
without a joint depravity of my will. Those have not only
depraved understandings, but diseased affections, which cannot
enjoy a singularity without a heresy, or be the author of an
opinion without they be of a sect also. This was the villany of
the first schism of Lucifer; who was not content to err alone,
but drew into his faction many legions; and upon this experience
he tempted only Eve, well understanding the communicable nature
of sin, and that to deceive but one was tacitly and upon
consequence to delude them both.
Sect. 8.--That
heresies should arise, we have the prophecy of Christ; but, that
old ones should be abolished, we hold no prediction. That there
must be heresies, is true, not only in our church, but also in
any other: even in the doctrines heretical there will be
superheresies; and Arians, not only divided from the church, but
also among themselves: for heads that are disposed unto schism,
and complexionally propense to innovation, are naturally
indisposed for a community; nor will be ever confined unto the
order or economy of one body; and therefore, when they separate
from others, they knit but loosely among themselves; nor
contented with a general breach or dichotomy10 with their church, do subdivide
and mince themselves almost into atoms. 'Tis true, that men of
singular parts and humours have not been free from singular
opinions and conceits in all ages; retaining something, not only
beside the opinion of his own church, or any other, but also
any particular author; which, notwithstanding, a sober
judgment may do without offence or heresy; for there is yet,
after all the decrees of councils, and the niceties of the
schools, many things, untouched, unimagined, wherein the liberty
of an honest reason may play and expatiate with security, and far
without the circle of a heresy.
Sect. 9.--As for
those
wingy mysteries in divinity, and airy subtleties in religion,
which have unhinged the brains of better heads, they never
stretched the pia mater11
of mine. Methinks there be not
impossibilities enough in religion for an active faith: the
deepest mysteries our contains have not only been illustrated,
but maintained, by syllogism and the rule of reason. I love to
lose myself in a mystery; to pursue my reason to an O
altitudo! 'Tis my solitary recreation to pose my apprehension
with those involved enigmas and riddles of the Trinity--with
incarnation and resurrection. I can answer all the objections of
Satan and my rebellious reason with that odd resolution I learned
of Tertullian, "Certum est quia impossibile
est." I desire to exercise my faith in the difficultest
point; for, to credit ordinary and visible objects, is not faith,
but persuasion. Some believe the better for seeing Christ's
sepulchre; and, when they have seen the Red Sea, doubt not of the
miracle. Now, contrarily, I bless myself, and am thankful, that I
lived not in the days of miracles; that I never saw Christ nor
his disciples. I would not have been one of those Israelites that
passed the Red Sea; nor one of Christ's patients, on whom he
wrought his wonders: then had my faith been thrust upon me; nor
should I enjoy that greater blessing pronounced to all that
believe and saw not. 'Tis an easy and necessary belief, to credit
what our eye and sense hath examined. I believe he was
dead, and buried, and rose again; and desire to see him in his
glory, rather than to contemplate him in his cenotaph or
sepulchre. Nor is this much to believe; as we have reason, we owe
this faith unto history: they only had the advantage of a bold
and noble faith, who lived before his coming, who, upon obscure
prophesies and mystical types, could raise a belief, and expect
apparent impossibilities.
Sect. 10.--'Tis
true, there
is an edge in all firm belief, and with an easy metaphor we may
say, the sword of faith; but in these obscurities I rather use it
in the adjunct the apostle gives it, a buckler; under which I
conceive a wary combatant may lie invulnerable. Since I was of
understanding to know that we knew nothing, my reason hath been
more pliable to the will of faith: I am now content to understand
a mystery, without a rigid definition, in an easy and Platonic
description.
* "Sphæra cujus centrum ubique,
circumferentia nullibi." |
That allegorical description of Hermes*
pleaseth me beyond all the metaphysical definitions of divines.
Where I cannot satisfy my reason, I love to humour my fancy: I
had as lieve you tell me that anima est angelus
hominis, est corpus Dei, as enteleheia;-- lux
est umbra Dei, as actus perspicui. Where there
is an obscurity too deep for our reason, 'tis good to sit down
with a description, periphrasis, or adumbration;12 for, by acquainting our reason how
unable it is to display the visible and obvious effects of
nature, it becomes more humble and submissive unto the subtleties
of faith: and thus I teach my haggard and unreclaimed reason to
stoop unto the lure of faith. I believe there was already a tree,
whose fruit our unhappy parents tasted, though, in the same
chapter when God forbids it, 'tis positively said, the
plants of the field were not yet grown; for God had not caused it
to rain upon the earth. I believe that the serpent (if we shall
literally understand it), from his proper form and figure, made
his motion on his belly, before the curse. I find the trial of
the pucelage and virginity of women, which God ordained the Jews,
is very fallible. Experience and history informs me that, not
only many particular women, but likewise whole nations, have
escaped the curse of childbirth, which God seems to pronounce
upon the whole sex; yet do I believe that all this is true,
which, indeed, my reason would persuade me to be false: and this,
I think, is no vulgar part of faith, to believe a thing not only
above, but contrary to, reason, and against the arguments of our
proper senses.
Sect. 11.--In my
solitary and retired
imagination ("neque enim cum porticus aut me lectulus
accepit, desum mihi"), I remember I am not alone;
and therefore forget not to contemplate him and his attributes,
who is ever with me, especially those two mighty ones, his wisdom
and eternity. With the one I recreate, with the other I confound,
my understanding: for who can speak of eternity without a
solecism, or think thereof without an ecstasy? Time we may
comprehend; 'tis but five days elder than ourselves, and hath the
same horoscope with the world; but, to retire so far back as to
apprehend a beginning,--to give such an infinite start forwards
as to conceive an end,--in an essence that we affirm hath neither
the one nor the other, it puts my reason to St Paul's sanctuary:
my philosophy dares not say the angels can do it. God hath not
made a creature that can comprehend him; 'tis a privilege of his
own nature: "I am that I am" was his own definition
unto Moses; and 'twas a short one to confound mortality,
that durst question God, or ask him what he was. Indeed, he only
is; all others have and shall be; but, in eternity, there is no
distinction of tenses; and therefore that terrible term,
predestination, which hath troubled so many weak heads to
conceive, and the wisest to explain, is in respect to God no
prescious determination of our estates to come, but a definitive
blast of his will already fulfilled, and at the instant that he
first decreed it; for, to his eternity, which is indivisible, and
altogether, the last trump is already sounded, the reprobates in
the flame, and the blessed in Abraham's bosom. St Peter speaks
modestly, when he saith, "a thousand years to God are but as
one day;" for, to speak like a philosopher, those continued
instances of time, which flow into a thousand years, make not to
him one moment. What to us is to come, to his eternity is
present; his whole duration being but one permanent point,
without succession, parts, flux, or division.
Sect.
12.--There is no attribute that adds more difficulty to the
mystery of the Trinity, where, though in a relative way of Father
and Son, we must deny a priority. I wonder how Aristotle could
conceive the world eternal, or how he could make good two
eternities. His similitude, of a triangle comprehended in a
square, doth somewhat illustrate the trinity of our souls, and
that the triple unity of God; for there is in us not three, but a
trinity of, souls; because there is in us, if not three distinct
souls, yet differing faculties, that can and do subsist apart in
different subjects, and yet in us are thus united as to make but
one soul and substance. If one soul were so perfect as to inform
three distinct bodies, that were a pretty trinity. Conceive the
distinct number of three, not divided nor separated by the
intellect, but actually comprehended in its unity, and that a
perfect trinity. I have often admired the mystical way of
Pythagoras, and the secret magick of numbers. "Beware of
philosophy," is a precept not to be received in too large a
sense: for, in this mass of nature, there is a set of things that
carry in their front, though not in capital letters, yet in
stenography and short characters, something of divinity; which,
to wiser reasons, serve as luminaries in the abyss of knowledge,
and, to judicious beliefs, as scales and roundles to mount the
pinnacles and highest pieces of divinity. The severe schools
shall never laugh me out of the philosophy of Hermes, that this
visible world is but a picture of the invisible, wherein, as in a
portrait, things are not truly, but in equivocal shapes, and as
they counterfeit some real substance in that invisible fabrick.
Sect. 13.--That
other attribute, wherewith I recreate
my devotion, is his wisdom, in which I am happy; and for the
contemplation of this only do not repent me that I was bred in
the way of study. The advantage I have therein, is an ample
recompense for all my endeavours, in what part of knowledge
soever. Wisdom is his most beauteous attribute: no man can attain
unto it: yet Solomon pleased God when he desired it. He is wise,
because he knows all things; and he knoweth all things, because
he made them all: but his greatest knowledge is in comprehending
that he made not, that is, himself. And this is also the greatest
knowledge in man. For this do I honour my own profession, and
embrace the counsel even of the devil himself: had he read such a
lecture in Paradise as he did at Delphos,*13
we had
* "Gnothi
seauton." "Nosce teipsum." |
better known ourselves; nor had we stood in
fear to know him. I know God is wise in all; wonderful in
what we conceive, but far more in what we comprehend not: for we
behold him but asquint, upon reflex or shadow; our understanding
is dimmer than Moses's eye; we are ignorant of the back parts or
lower side of his divinity; therefore, to pry into the maze of
his counsels, is not only folly in man, but presumption even in
angels. Like us, they are his servants, not his senators; he
holds no counsel, but that mystical one of the Trinity, wherein,
though there be three persons, there is but one mind that decrees
without contradiction. Nor needs he any; his actions are not
begot with deliberation; his wisdom naturally knows what's best:
his intellect stands ready fraught with the superlative and
purest ideas of goodness, consultations, and election, which are
two motions in us, make but one in him: his actions springing
from his power at the first touch of his will. These are
contemplations metaphysical: my humble speculations have another
method, and are content to trace and discover those expressions
he hath left in his creatures, and the obvious effects of nature.
There is no danger to profound14
these mysteries, no sanctum
sanctorum in philosophy. The world was made to be inhabited
by beasts, but studied and contemplated by man: 'tis the debt of
our reason we owe unto God, and the homage we pay for not being
beasts. Without this, the world is still as though it had not
been, or as it was before the sixth day, when as yet there was
not a creature that could conceive or say there was a world. The
wisdom of God receives small honour from those vulgar heads that
rudely stare about, and with a gross rusticity admire his works.
Those highly magnify him, whose judicious enquiry into his acts,
and deliberate research into his creatures, return the
duty of a devout and learned admiration. Therefore,
Search while
thou wilt; and let thy reason go,
To ransom
truth, e'en to th' abyss below;
Rally the scatter'd causes;
and that line
Which nature twists be able to untwine.
It
is thy Maker's will; for unto none
But unto reason can he
e'er be known.
The devils do know thee; but those damn'd
meteors
Build not thy glory, but confound thy creatures.
Teach my endeavours so thy works to read,
That learning them
in thee I may proceed.
Give thou my reason that instructive
flight,
Whose weary wings may on thy hands still light.
Teach me to soar aloft, yet ever so,
When near the sun, to
stoop again below.
Thus shall my humble feathers safely
hover,
And, though near earth, more than the heavens
discover.
And then at last, when homeward I shall drive,
Rich with the spoils of nature, to my hive,
There will I sit,
like that industrious fly,
Buzzing thy praises; which shall
never die
Till death abrupts them, and succeeding glory
Bid me go on in a more lasting story.
And this
is almost all wherein an humble creature may endeavour to
requite, and some way to retribute unto his Creator: for, if not
he that saith, "Lord, Lord, but he that doth the will of the
Father, shall be saved," certainly our wills must be our
performances, and our intents make out our actions; otherwise our
pious labours shall find anxiety in our graves, and our best
endeavours not hope, but fear, a resurrection.
Sect.
14.--There is but one first cause, and four second causes, of all
things. Some are without efficient,15
as God; others without matter, as
angels; some without form, as the first matter: but every
essence, created or uncreated, hath its final cause, and some
positive end both of its essence and operation. This is the cause
I grope after in the works of nature; on this hangs the
providence of God. To raise so beauteous a structure as the world
and the creatures thereof was but his art; but their sundry and
divided operations, with their predestinated ends, are from the
treasure of his wisdom. In the causes, nature, and affections, of
the eclipses of the sun and moon, there is most excellent
speculation; but, to profound further, and to contemplate a
reason why his providence hath so disposed and ordered their
motions in that vast circle, as to conjoin and obscure each
other, is a sweeter piece of reason, and a diviner point of
philosophy. Therefore, sometimes, and in some things, there
appears to me as much divinity in Galen his books, De Usu
Partium,16 as in
Suarez's Metaphysicks. Had Aristotle been as curious in the
enquiry of this cause as he was of the other, he had not left
behind him an imperfect piece of philosophy, but an absolute
tract of divinity.
Sect. 15.--Natura
nihil agit
frustra, is the only indis- putable axiom in philosophy.
There are no grotesques in nature; not any thing framed to fill
up empty cantons, and unnecessary spaces. In the most imperfect
creatures, and such as were not preserved in the ark, but, having
their seeds and principles in the womb of nature, are everywhere,
where the power of the sun is,--in these is the wisdom of his
hand discovered. Out of this rank Solomon chose the object of his
admiration; indeed, what reason may not go to school to the
wisdom of bees, ants, and spiders? What wise hand teacheth them
to do what reason cannot teach us? Ruder heads stand amazed at
those prodigious pieces of nature, whales, elephants,
dromedaries, and camels; these, I confess, are the colossus and
majestick pieces of her hand; but in these narrow engines there
is more curious mathematicks; and the civility of these little
citizens more neatly sets forth the wisdom of their Maker. Who
admires not Regio Montanus his fly beyond his eagle;17 or wonders not more at the
operation of two souls in those little bodies than but one in the
trunk of a cedar? I could never content my contemplation with
those general pieces of wonder, the flux and reflux of the sea,
the increase of Nile, the conversion of the needle to the north;
and have studied to match and parallel those in the more obvious
and neglected pieces of nature which, without farther travel, I
can do in the cosmography of myself. We carry with us the wonders
we seek without us: there is all Africa and her prodigies in us.
We are that bold and adventurous piece of nature, which he that
studies wisely learns, in a compendium, what others labour at in
a divided piece and endless volume.
Sect. 16.--Thus
there are two books from whence I collect my divinity. Besides
that written one of God, another of his servant, nature, that
universal and publick manuscript, that lies expansed unto the
eyes of all. Those that never saw him in the one have discovered
him in the other; this was the scripture and theology of the
heathens; the natural motion of the sun made them more admire him
than its supernatural station did the children of Israel. The
ordinary effects of nature wrought more admiration in them than,
in the other, all his miracles. Surely the heathens knew better
how to join and read these mystical letters than we Christians,
who cast a more careless eye on these common hiero- glyphics, and
disdain to suck divinity from the flowers of nature. Nor do I so
forget God as to adore the name of nature; which I define
not, with the schools, to be the principle of motion and rest,
but that straight and regular line, that settled and constant
course the wisdom of God hath ordained the actions of his
creatures, according to their several kinds. To make a revolution
every day is the nature of the sun, because of that necessary
course which God hath ordained it, from which it cannot swerve
but by a faculty from that voice which first did give it motion.
Now this course of nature God seldom alters or perverts; but,
like an excellent artist, hath so contrived his work, that, with
the self-same instrument, without a new creation, he may effect
his obscurest designs. Thus he sweeteneth the water with a word,
preserveth the creatures in the ark, which the blest of his mouth
might have as easily created;--for God is like a skilful
geometrician, who, when more easily, and with one stroke of his
compass, he might describe or divide a right line, had yet rather
do this in a circle or longer way, according to the constituted
and forelaid principles of his art: yet this rule of his he doth
sometimes pervert, to acquaint the world with his prerogative,
lest the arrogancy of our reason should question his power, and
conclude he could not. And thus I call the effects of nature the
works of God, whose hand and instrument she only is; and
therefore, to ascribe his actions unto her is to devolve the
honour of the principal agent upon the instrument; which if with
reason we may do, then let our hammers rise up and boast they
have built our houses, and our pens receive the honour of our
writing. I hold there is a general beauty in the works of God,
and therefore no deformity in any kind of species of creature
whatsoever. I cannot tell by what logick we call a toad, a bear,
or an elephant ugly; they being created in those outward shapes
and figures which best express the actions of their
inward forms; and having passed that general visitation of God,
who saw that all that he had made was good, that is, conformable
to his will, which abhors deformity, and is the rule of order and
beauty. There is no deformity but in monstrosity; wherein,
notwithstanding, there is a kind of beauty; nature so ingeniously
contriving the irregular part, as they become sometimes more
remarkable than the principal fabrick. To speak yet more
narrowly, there was never any thing ugly or mis-shapen, but the
chaos; wherein, notwithstanding, to speak strictly, there was no
deformity, because no form; nor was it yet impregnant by the
voice of God. Now nature is not at variance with art, nor art
with nature; they being both the servants of his providence. Art
is the perfection of nature. Were the world now as it was the
sixth day, there were yet a chaos. Nature hath made one world,
and art another. In brief, all things are artificial; for nature
is the art of God.
Sect. 17.--This is
the ordinary and
open way of his providence, which art and industry have in good
part discovered; whose effects we may foretell without an oracle.
To foreshow these is not prophecy, but prognostication. There is
another way, full of meanders and labyrinths, whereof the devil
and spirits have no exact ephemerides: and that is a more
particular and obscure method of his providence; directing the
operations of individual and single essences: this we call
fortune; that serpentine and crooked line, whereby he draws those
actions his wisdom intends in a more unknown and secret way; this
cryptic18 and involved
method of his providence have I ever admired; nor can I relate
the history of my life, the occurrences of my days, the escapes,
or dangers, and hits of chance, with a bezo las
manos to Fortune, or a bare gramercy to my good stars.
Abraham might have thought the ram in the thicket came thither by
accident: human reason would have said that mere chance conveyed
Moses in the ark to the sight of Pharaoh's daughter. What a
labyrinth is there in the story of Joseph! able to convert a
stoick. Surely there are in every man's life certain rubs,
doublings, and wrenches, which pass a while under the effects of
chance; but at the last, well examined, prove the mere hand of
God. 'Twas not dumb chance that, to discover the fougade,19 or powder plot, contrived a
miscarriage in the letter. I like the victory of '8820 the better for that one
occurrence which our enemies imputed to our dishonour, and the
partiality of fortune; to wit, the tempests and contrariety of
winds. King Philip did not detract from the nation, when he said,
he sent his armada to fight with men, and not to combat with the
winds. Where there is a manifest disproportion between the powers
and forces of two several agents, upon a maxim of reason we may
promise the victory to the superior: but when unexpected
accidents slip in, and unthought-of occurrences intervene, these
must proceed from a power that owes no obedience to those axioms;
where, as in the writing upon the wall, we may behold the hand,
but see not the spring that moves it. The success of that petty
province of Holland (of which the Grand Seignior proudly said, if
they should trouble him, as they did the Spaniard, he would send
his men with shovels and pickaxes, and throw it into the sea) I
cannot altogether ascribe to the ingenuity and industry of the
people, but the mercy of God, that hath disposed them to such a
thriving genius; and to the will of his providence, that
disposeth her favour to each country in their preordinate
season. All cannot be happy at once; for, because the glory of
one state depends upon the ruin of another, there is a revolution
and vicissitude of their greatness, and must obey the swing of
that wheel, not moved by intelligencies, but by the hand of God,
whereby all estates arise to their zenith and vertical points,
according to their predestinated periods. For the lives, not only
of men, but of commonwealths and the whole world, run not upon a
helix that still enlargeth; but on a circle, where, arriving to
their meridian, they decline in obscurity, and fall under the
horizon again.
Sect. 18.--These
must not therefore be
named the effects of fortune but in a relative way, and as we
term the works of nature. It was the ignorance of man's reason
that begat this very name, and by a careless term miscalled the
providence of God: for there is no liberty for causes to operate
in a loose and straggling way; nor any effect whatsoever but hath
its warrant from some universal or superior cause. 'Tis not a
ridiculous devotion to say a prayer before a game at tables; for,
even in sortileges21
and matters of greatest uncertainty, there is a settled and
preordered course of effects. It is we that are blind, not
fortune. Because our eye is too dim to discover the mystery of
her effects, we foolishly paint her blind, and hoodwink the
providence of the Almighty. I cannot justify that contemptible
proverb, that "fools only are fortunate;" or that
insolent paradox, that "a wise man is out of the reach of
fortune;" much less those opprobrious epithets of
poets,--"whore," "bawd," and
"strumpet." 'Tis, I confess, the common fate of men of
singular gifts of mind, to be destitute of those of fortune;
which doth not any way deject the spirit of wiser judgments who
thoroughly understand the justice of this proceeding; and, being
enriched with higher donatives, cast a more careless eye
on these vulgar parts of felicity. It is a most unjust ambition,
to desire to engross the mercies of the Almighty, not to be
content with the goods of mind, without a possession of those of
body or fortune: and it is an error, worse than heresy, to adore
these complimental and circumstantial pieces of felicity, and
undervalue those perfections and essential points of happiness,
wherein we resemble our Maker. To wiser desires it is
satisfaction enough to deserve, though not to enjoy, the favours
of fortune. Let providence provide for fools: 'tis not
partiality, but equity, in God, who deals with us but as our
natural parents. Those that are able of body and mind he leaves
to their deserts; to those of weaker merits he imparts a larger
portion; and pieces out the defect of one by the excess of the
other. Thus have we no just quarrel with nature for leaving us
naked; or to envy the horns, hoofs, skins, and furs of other
creatures; being provided with reason, that can supply them all.
We need not labour, with so many arguments, to confute judicial
astrology; for, if there be a truth therein, it doth not injure
divinity. If to be born under Mercury disposeth us to be witty;
under Jupiter to be wealthy; I do not owe a knee unto these, but
unto that merciful hand that hath ordered my indifferent and
uncertain nativity unto such benevolous aspects. Those that hold
that all things are governed by fortune, had not erred, had they
not persisted there. The Romans, that erected a temple to
Fortune, acknowledged therein, though in a blinder way, somewhat
of divinity; for, in a wise supputation,22
all things begin and end in the
Almighty. There is a nearer way to heaven than Homer's
chain;23 an easy
logick may conjoin a heaven and earth in one argument, and, with
less than a sorites24
resolve all things to God. For
though we christen effects by their most sensible and nearest
causes, yet is God the true and infallible cause of all; whose
concourse, though it be general, yet doth it subdivide itself
into the particular actions of every thing, and is that spirit,
by which each singular essence not only subsists, but performs
its operation.
Sect. 19.--The bad
construction and
perverse comment on these pair of second causes, or visible hands
of God, have perverted the devotion of many unto atheism; who,
forgetting the honest advisoes of faith, have listened unto the
conspiracy of passion and reason. I have therefore always
endeavoured to compose those feuds and angry dissensions between
affection, faith, and reason: for there is in our soul a kind of
triumvirate, or triple government of three competitors, which
distracts the peace of this our commonwealth not less than did
that other25 the state
of Rome. As reason is a rebel unto faith, so passion unto reason.
As the propositions of faith seem absurd unto reason, so the
theorems of reason unto passion and both unto reason; yet a
moderate and peaceable discretion may so state and order the
matter, that they may be all kings, and yet make but one
monarchy: every one exercising his sovereignty and prerogative in
a due time and place, according to the restraint and limit of
circumstance. There are, as in philosophy, so in divinity, sturdy
doubts, and boisterous objections, wherewith the unhappiness of
our knowledge too nearly acquainteth us. More of these no man
hath known than myself; which I confess I conquered, not in a
martial posture, but on my knees. For our endeavours are not only
to combat with doubts, but always to dispute with the devil. The
villany of that spirit takes a hint of infidelity from
our studios; and, by demonstrating a naturality in one way, makes
us mistrust a miracle in another. Thus, having perused the
Archidoxes, and read the secret sympathies of things, he would
dissuade my belief from the miracle of the brazen serpent; make
me conceit that image worked by sympathy, and was but an Egyptian
trick, to cure their diseases without a miracle. Again, having
seen some experiments of bitumen, and having read far more of
naphtha, he whispered to my curiosity the fire of the altar might
be natural, and bade me mistrust a miracle in Elias, when he
intrenched the altar round with water: for that inflamable
substance yields not easily unto water, but flames in the arms of
its antagonist. And thus would he inveigle my belief to think the
combustion of Sodom might be natural, and that there was an
asphaltick and bituminous nature in that lake before the fire of
Gomorrah. I know that manna is now plentifully gathered in
Calabria; and Josephus tells me, in his days it was as plentiful
in Arabia. The devil therefore made the query, "Where was
then the miracle in the days of Moses?" The Israelites saw
but that, in his time, which the natives of those countries
behold in ours. Thus the devil played at chess with me, and,
yielding a pawn, thought to gain a queen of me; taking advantage
of my honest endeavours; and, whilst I laboured to raise the
structure of my reason, he strove to undermine the edifice of my
faith.
Sect. 20.--Neither
had these or any other ever
such advantage of me, as to incline me to any point of infidelity
or desperate positions of atheism; for I have been these many
years of opinion there was never any. Those that held religion
was the difference of man from beasts, have spoken
probably, and proceed upon a principle as inductive as the other.
That doctrine of Epicurus, that denied the providence of God, was
no atheism, but a magnificent and high-strained conceit of his
majesty, which he deemed too sublime to mind the trivial actions
of those inferior creatures. That fatal necessity of the stoicks
is nothing but the immutable law of his will. Those that
heretofore denied the divinity of the Holy Ghost have been
condemned but as hereticks; and those that now deny our Saviour,
though more than hereticks, are not so much as atheists: for,
though they deny two persons in the Trinity, they hold, as we do,
there is but one God. That villain and secretary of hell,26 that composed that
miscreant piece of the three impostors, though divided from all
religions, and neither Jew, Turk, nor Christian, was not a
positive atheist. I confess every country hath its Machiavel,
every age its Lucian, whereof common heads must not hear, nor
more advanced judgments too rashly venture on. It is the
rhetorick of Satan; and may pervert a loose or prejudicate
belief.
Sect. 21.--I
confess I have perused them all,
and can discover nothing that may startle a discreet belief; yet
are their heads carried off with the wind and breath of such
motives. I remember a doctor in physick, of Italy, who could not
perfectly believe the immortality of the soul, because Galen
seemed to make a doubt thereof. With another I was familiarly
acquainted, in France, a divine, and a man of singular parts,
that on the same
* "Post mortem nihil est, ipsaque
mors
nihil, mors individua est noxia corpori, nec patiens animæ.
. . . Toti morimur nullaque pars manet nostri." |
point was so plunged and gravelled
with three lines of Seneca,* that all our antidotes, drawn from
both Scripture and philosophy, could not expel the poison
of his error. There are a set of heads that can credit the
relations of mariners, yet question the testimonies of Saint
Paul: and peremptorily maintain the traditions of Ælian or
Pliny; yet, in histories of Scripture, raise queries and
objections: believing no more than they can parallel in human
authors. I confess there are, in Scripture, stories that do
exceed the fables of poets, and, to a captious reader, sound like
Garagantua or Bevis. Search all the legends of times past, and
the fabulous conceits of these present, and 'twill be hard to
find one that deserves to carry the buckler unto Samson; yet is
all this of an easy possibility, if we conceive a divine
concourse, or an influence from the little finger of the
Almighty. It is impossible that, either in the discourse of man
or in the infallible voice of God, to the weakness of our
apprehensions there should not appear irregularities,
contradictions, and antinomies:27
myself could show a catalogue of
doubts, never yet imagined nor questioned, as I know, which are
not resolved at the first hearing; not fantastick queries or
objections of air; for I cannot hear of atoms in divinity. I can
read the history of the pigeon that was sent out of the ark, and
returned no more, yet not question how she found out her mate
that was left behind: that Lazarus was raised from the dead, yet
not demand where, in the interim, his soul awaited; or raise a
law-case, whether his heir might lawfully detain his inheritance
bequeathed upon him by his death, and he, though restored to
life, have no plea or title unto his former possessions. Whether
Eve was framed out of the left side of Adam, I dispute not;
because I stand not yet assured which is the right side of a man;
or whether there be any such distinction in nature. That she was
edified out of the rib of Adam, I believe; yet raise no
question who shall arise with that rib at the resurrection.
Whether Adam was an hermaphrodite, as the rabbins contend upon
the letter of the text; because it is contrary to reason, there
should be an hermaphrodite before there was a woman, or a
composition of two natures, before there was a second composed.
Likewise, whether the world was created in autumn, summer, or the
spring; because it was created in them all: for, whatsoever sign
the sun possesseth, those four seasons are actually existent. It
is the nature of this luminary to distinguish the several seasons
of the year; all which it makes at one time in the whole earth,
and successively in any part thereof. There are a bundle of
curiosities, not only in philosophy, but in divinity, proposed
and discussed by men of most supposed abilities, which indeed are
not worthy our vacant hours, much less our serious studies.
Pieces only fit to be placed in Pantagruel's library,28 or bound up with Tartaratus, De
Modo Cacandi. *
29
Sect. 22.--These
are
niceties that become not those that peruse so serious a mystery.
There are others more generally questioned, and called to the
bar, yet, methinks, of an easy and possible truth. 'Tis
ridiculous to put off or down the general flood of Noah, in that
particular inundation of Deucalion.30
That there was a deluge once seems
not to me so great a miracle as that there is not one always. How
all the kinds of creatures, not only in their own bulks, but with
a competency of food and sustenance, might be preserved in one
ark, and within the extent of three hundred cubits, to a reason
that rightly examines it, will appear very feasible. There is
another secret, not contained in the Scripture, which is more
hard to comprehend, and put the honest Father31 to the refuge of a
miracle; and that is, not only how the distinct pieces of the
world, and divided islands, should be first planted by men, but
inhabited by tigers, panthers, and bears. How America abounded
with beasts of prey, and noxious animals, yet contained not in it
that necessary creature, a horse, is very strange. By what
passage those, not only birds, but dangerous and unwelcome
beasts, come over. How there be creatures there (which are not
found in this triple continent). All which must needs be strange
unto us, that hold but one ark; and that the creatures began
their progress from the mountains of Ararat. They who, to salve
this, would make the deluge particular, proceed upon a principle
that I can no way grant; not only upon the negative of Holy
Scriptures, but of mine own reason, whereby I can make it
probable that the world was as well peopled in the time of Noah
as in ours; and fifteen hundred years, to people the world, as
full a time for them as four thousand years since have been to
us. There are other assertions and common tenets drawn from
Scripture, and generally believed as Scripture, whereunto,
notwithstanding, I would never betray the liberty of my reason.
'Tis a paradox to me, that Methusalem was the longest lived of
all the children of Adam; and no man will be able to prove it;
when, from the process of the text, I can manifest it may be
otherwise. That Judas perished by hanging himself, there is no
certainty in Scripture: though, in one place, it seems to affirm
it, and, by a doubtful word, hath given occasion to
translate32 it; yet,
in another place, in a more punctual description, it makes it
improbable, and seems to overthrow it. That our fathers, after
the flood, erected the tower of Babel, to preserve
themselves against a second deluge, is generally opinioned and
believed; yet is there another intention of theirs expressed in
Scripture. Besides, it is improbable, from the circumstance of
the place; that is, a plain in the land of Shinar. These are no
points of faith; and therefore may admit a free dispute. There
are yet others, and those familiarly concluded from the text,
wherein (under favour) I see no consequence. The church of Rome
confidently proves the opinion of tutelary angels, from that
answer, when Peter knocked at the door, "'Tis not he, but
his angel;" that is, might some say, his messenger, or
somebody from him; for so the original signifies; and is as
likely to be the doubtful family's meaning. This exposition I
once suggested to a young divine, that answered upon this point;
to which I remember the Franciscan opponent replied no more, but,
that it was a new, and no authentick interpretation.
Sect. 23.--These
are but the conclusions and fallible
discourses of man upon the word of God; for such I do believe the
Holy Scriptures; yet, were it of man, I could not choose but say,
it was the singularest and superlative piece that hath been
extant since the creation. Were I a pagan, I should not refrain
the lecture of it; and cannot but commend the judgment of
Ptolemy, that thought not his library complete without it. The
Alcoran of the Turks (I speak without prejudice) is an
ill-composed piece, containing in it vain and ridiculous errors
in philosophy, impossibilities, fictions, and vanities beyond
laughter, maintained by evident and open sophisms, the policy of
ignorance, deposition of universities, and banishment of
learning. That hath gotten foot by arms and violence: this,
without a blow, hath disseminated itself through the whole earth.
It is not unremarkable, what Philo first observed, that
the law of Moses continued two thousand years without the least
alteration; whereas, we see, the laws of other commonwealths do
alter with occasions: and even those, that pretended their
original from some divinity, to have vanished without trace or
memory. I believe, besides Zoroaster, there were divers others
that writ before Moses; who, notwithstanding, have suffered the
common fate of time. Men's works have an age, like themselves;
and though they outlive their authors, yet have they a stint and
period to their duration. This only is a work too hard for the
teeth of time, and cannot perish but in the general flames, when
all things shall confess their ashes.
Sect. 24.--I have
heard some with deep sighs lament the lost lines of Cicero;
others with as many groans deplore the combustion of the library
of Alexandria;33 for
my own part, I think there be too many in the world; and could
with patience behold the urn and ashes of the Vatican, could I,
with a few others, recover the perished leaves of Solomon. I
would not omit a copy of Enoch's pillars,34
had they many nearer authors than
Josephus, or did not relish somewhat of the fable. Some men have
written more than others have spoken. Pineda35 quotes more authors, in
*
Pineda, in his "Monarchia Ecclesiastica," quotes one
thousand and forty authors. learning, to reduce it, as it
lay at first, in a few and solid authors; and to condemn to the
fire those swarms and millions of rhapsodies, begotten only to
distract and abuse the weaker judgments of scholars, and to
maintain the trade and mystery of typographers. |
one work,* than are necessary in a
whole world. Of those three great inventions in Germany,36 there are two which are not
without their incommodities, and 'tis disputable whether they
exceed not their use and commodities. 'Tis not a melancholy utinam
of my own, but the desires of better heads, that
there were a general synod--not to unite the incompatible
difference of religion, but,--for the benefit of
Sect.
25.--I cannot but wonder with what exception the Samaritans could
confine their belief to the Pentateuch, or five books of Moses. I
am ashamed at the rabbinical interpretation of the Jews upon the
Old Testament,37 as
much as their defection from the New: and truly it is beyond
wonder, how that contemptible and degenerate issue of Jacob, once
so devoted to ethnick superstition, and so easily seduced to the
idolatry of their neighbours, should now, in such an obstinate
and peremptory belief, adhere unto their own doctrine, expect
impossibilities, and in the face and eye of the church, persist
without the least hope of conversion. This is a vice in them,
that were a virtue in us; for obstinacy in a bad cause is but
constancy in a good: and herein I must accuse those of my own
religion; fo there is not any of such a fugitive faith, such an
unstable belief, as a Christian; none that do so often transform
themselves, not unto several shapes of Christianity, and of the
same species, but unto more unnatural and contrary forms of Jew
and Mohammedan; that, from the name of Saviour, can condescend to
the bare term of prophet: and, from an old belief that he is
come, fall to a new expectation of his coming. It is the promise
of Christ, to make us all one flock: but how and when this union
shall be, is as obscure to me as the last day. Of those four
members of religion we hold a slender proportion.38 There are, I confess, some new
additions; yet small to those which accrue to our adversaries;
and those only drawn from the revolt of pagans; men but
of negative impieties; and such as deny Christ, but because they
never heard of him. But the religion of the Jew is expressly
against the Christian, and the Mohammedan against both; for the
Turk, in the bulk he now stands, is beyond all hope of
conversion: if he fall asunder, there may be conceived hopes; but
not without strong improbabilities. The Jew is obstinate in all
fortunes; the persecution of fifteen hundred years hath but
confirmed them in their error. They have already endured
whatsoever may be inflicted: and have suffered, in a bad cause,
even to the condemnation of their enemies. Persecution is a bad
and indirect way to plant religion. It hath been the unhappy
method of angry devotions, not only to confirm honest religion,
but wicked heresies and extravagant opinions. It was the first
stone and basis of our faith. None can more justly boast of
persecutions, and glory in the number and valour of martyrs. For,
to speak properly, those are true and almost only examples of
fortitude. Those that are fetched from the field, or drawn from
the actions of the camp, are not ofttimes so truly precedents of
valour as audacity, and, at the best, attain but to some bastard
piece of fortitude. If we shall strictly examine the
circumstances and requisites which Aristotle requires39 to true and perfect valour, we
shall find the name only in his master, Alexander, and as little
in that Roman worthy, Julius Cæsar; and if any, in that
easy and active way, have done so nobly as to deserve that name,
yet, in the passive and more terrible piece, these have
surpassed, and in a more heroical way may claim, the honour of
that title. 'Tis not in the power of every honest faith to
proceed thus far, or pass to heaven through the flames.
Every one hath it not in that full measure, nor in so audacious
and resolute a temper, as to endure those terrible tests and
trials; who, notwithstanding, in a peaceable way, do truly adore
their Saviour, and have, no doubt, a faith acceptable in the eyes
of God.
Sect. 26.--Now, as
all that die in the war are
not termed soldiers, so neither can I properly term all those
that suffer in matters of religion, martyrs. The council of
Constance condemns John Huss for a heretick;40 the stories of his own party style
him a martyr. He must needs offend the divinity of both, that
says he was neither the one nor the other. There are many
(questionless) canonized on earth, that shall never be saints in
heaven; and have their names in histories and martyrologies, who,
in the eyes of God, are not so perfect martyrs as was that wise
heathen Socrates, that suffered on a fundamental point of
religion,--the unity of God. I have often pitied the miserable
bishop41 that suffered
in the cause of antipodes; yet cannot choose but accuse him of as
much madness, for exposing his living on such a trifle, as those
of ignorance and folly, that condemned him. I think my conscience
will not give me the lie, if I say there are not many extant,
that, in a noble way, fear the face of death less than myself;
yet, from the moral duty I owe to the commandment of God, and the
natural respect that I tender unto the conservation of my essence
and being, I would not perish upon a ceremony, politick points,
or indifferency: nor is my belief of that untractable temper as,
not to bow at their obstacles, or connive at matters wherein
there are not manifest impieties. The leaven, therefore, and
ferment of all, not only civil, but religious, actions, is
wisdom; without which, to commit ourselves to the flames
is homicide, and (I fear) but to pass through one fire into
another.
Sect. 27.--That
miracles are ceased, I can
neither prove nor absolutely deny, much less define the time and
period of their cessation. That they survived Christ is manifest
upon record of Scripture: that they outlived the apostles also,
and were revived at the conversion of nations, many years after,
we cannot deny, if we shall not question those writers whose
testimonies we do not controvert in points that make for our own
opinions: therefore, that may have some truth in it, that is
reported by the Jesuits of their miracles in the Indies. I could
wish it were true, or had any other testimony than their own
pens. They may easily believe those miracles abroad, who daily
conceive a greater at home --the transmutation of those visible
elements into the body and blood of our Saviour;--for the
conversion of water into wine, which he wrought in Cana, or, what
the devil would have had him done in the wilderness, of stones
into bread, compared to this, will scarce deserve the name of a
miracle: though, indeed, to speak properly, there is not one
miracle greater than another; they being the extraordinary
effects of the hand of God to which all things are of an equal
facility; and to create the world as easy as one single creature.
For this is also a miracle; not only to produce effects against
or above nature, but before nature; and to create nature, as
great a miracle as to contradict or transcend her. We do too
narrowly define the power of God, restraining it to our
capacities. I hold that God can do all things: how he should work
contradictions, I do not understand, yet dare not, therefore,
deny. I cannot see why the angel of God should question Esdras to
recall the time past, if it were beyond his own power; or
that God should pose mortality in that which he was not able to
perform himself. I will not say that God cannot, but he will not,
perform many things, which we plainly affirm he cannot. This, I
am sure, is the mannerliest proposition; wherein,
notwithstanding, I hold no paradox: for, strictly, his power is
the same with his will; and they both, with all the rest, do make
but one God.
Sect.
28.--Therefore, that miracles have
been, I do believe; that they may yet be wrought by the living, I
do not deny: but have no confidence in those which are fathered
on the dead. And this hath ever made me suspect the efficacy of
relicks, to examine the bones, question the habits and
appertenances of saints, and even of Christ himself. I cannot
conceive why the cross that Helena42
found, and whereon Christ himself
died, should have power to restore others unto life. I excuse not
Constantine from a fall off his horse, or a mischief from his
enemies, upon the wearing those nails on his bridle which our
Saviour bore upon the cross in his hands. I compute among piæ
fraudes, nor many degrees before consecrated
swords and roses, that which Baldwin, king of Jerusalem, returned
the Genoese for their costs and pains in his wars; to wit, the
ashes of John the Baptist. Those that hold, the sanctity of their
souls doth leave behind a tincture and sacred faculty on their
bodies, speak naturally of miracles, and do not salve the doubt.
Now, one reason I tender so little devotion unto relicks is, I
think the slender and doubtful respect which I have always held
unto antiquities. For that, indeed, which I admire, is far before
antiquity; that is, Eternity; and that is, God himself; who,
though he be styled the Ancient of Days, cannot receive the
adjunct of antiquity, who was before the world, and shall
be after it, yet is not older than it: for, in his years there is
no climacter:43 his
duration is eternity; and far more venerable than antiquity.
Sect. 29.--But,
above all things, I wonder how the
curiosity of wiser heads could pass that great and indisputable
miracle, the cessation of oracles; and in what swoon their
reasons lay, to content themselves, and sit down with such a
far-fetched and ridiculous reason as Plutarch allegeth for
it.44 The Jews, that
can believe the supernatural solstice of the sun in the days of
Joshua, have yet the impudence to deny the eclipse, which every
pagan confessed, at his death; but for this, it is evident beyond
all contradiction: the devil
* In his oracle to Augustus. |
himself confessed it.*
Certainly it is not a warrantable curiosity, to examine the
verity of Scripture by the concordance of human history; or seek
to confirm the chronicle of Hester or Daniel by the authority of
Megasthenes45 or
Herodotus. I confess, I have had an unhappy curiosity this way,
till I laughed myself out of it with a piece of Justin, where he
delivers that the children of Israel, for being scabbed, were
banished out of Egypt. And truly, since I have understood the
occurrences of the world, and know in what counterfeiting shapes
and deceitful visards times present represent on the stage things
past, I do believe them little more than things to come. Some
have been of my own opinion, and endeavoured to write the history
of their own lives; wherein Moses hath outgone them all, and left
not only the story of his life, but, as some will have it, of his
death also.
Sect. 30.--It is a
riddle to me, how the
story of oracles hath not wormed out of the world that doubtful
conceit of spirits and witches; how so many learned heads
should so far forget their metaphysicks, and destroy the ladder
and scale of creatures, as to question the existence of spirits;
for my part, I have ever believed, and do now know, that there
are witches. They that doubt of these do not only deny them, but
spirits: and are obliquely, and upon consequence, a sort, not of
infidels, but atheists. Those that, to confute their incredulity,
desire to see apparitions, shall, questionless, never behold any,
nor have the power to be so much as witches. The devil hath made
them already in a heresy as capital as witchcraft; and to appear
to them were but to convert them. Of all the delusions wherewith
he deceives mortality, there is not any that puzzleth me more
than the legerdemain of changelings.46
I do not credit those
transformations of reasonable creatures into beasts, or that the
devil hath a power to transpeciate a man into a horse, who
tempted Christ (as a trial of his divinity) to convert but stones
into bread. I could believe that spirits use with man the act of
carnality; and that in both sexes. I conceive they may assume,
steal, or contrive a body, wherein there may be action enough to
content decrepit lust, or passion to satisfy more active
veneries; yet, in both, without a possibility of generation: and
therefore that opinion, that Antichrist should be born of the
tribe of Dan, by conjunc- tion with the devil, is ridiculous, and
a conceit fitter for a rabbin than a Christian. I hold that the
devil doth really possess some men; the spirit of melancholy
others; the spirit of delusion others: that, as the devil is
concealed and denied by some, so God and good angels are
pretended by others, whereof the late defection of the maid of
Germany hath left a pregnant example.47
Sect. 31.--Again,
I
believe that all that use sorceries, incantations, and
spells, are not witches, or, as we term them, magicians. I
conceive there is a traditional magick, not learned immediately
from the devil, but at second hand from his scholars, who, having
once the secret betrayed, are able and do empirically practise
without his advice; they both proceeding upon the principles of
nature; where actives, aptly conjoined to disposed passives,
will, under any master, produce their effects. Thus, I think, at
first, a great part of philosophy was witchcraft; which, being
afterward derived to one another, proved but philosophy, and was
indeed no more than the honest effects of nature:--what invented
by us, is philosophy; learned from him, is magick. We do surely
owe the discovery of many secrets to the discovery of good and
bad angels. I could never pass that sentence of Paracelsus
without an asterisk, or
* Thereby is
meant our good angel, appointed
us from our nativity. |
annotation: "ascendens* constellatum multa revelat
quærentibus magnalia naturæ, i.e. opera
Dei." I do think that many mysteries ascribed to our own
inventions have been the corteous revelations of spirits; for
those noble essences in heaven bear a friendly regard unto their
fellow-nature on earth; and therefore believe that those many
prodigies and ominous prognosticks, which forerun the ruins of
states, princes, and private persons, are the charitable
premonitions of good angels, which more careless inquiries term
but the effects of chance and nature.
Sect. 32.--Now,
besides these particular and divided spirits, there may be (for
aught I know) a universal and common spirit to the whole world.
It was the opinion of Plato, and is yet of the hermetical
philosophers. If there be a common nature, that unites and ties
the scattered and divided individuals into one species,
why may there not be one that unites them all? However, I am sure
there is a common spirit, that plays within us, yet makes no part
in us; and that is, the spirit of God; the fire and scintillation
of that noble and mighty essence, which is the life and radical
heat of spirits, and those essences that know not the virtue of
the sun; a fire quite contrary to the fire of hell. This is that
gentle heat that brooded on the waters, and in six days hatched
the world; this is that irradiation that dispels the mists of
hell, the clouds of horror, fear, sorrow, despair; and preserves
the region of the mind in serenity. Whatsoever feels not the warm
gale and gentle ventilation of this spirit (though I feel his
pulse), I dare not say he lives; for truly without this, to me,
there is no heat under the tropick; nor any light, though I dwelt
in the body of the sun.
"As when the
labouring
sun hath wrought his track
Up to the top of lofty Cancer's
back,
The icy ocean cracks, the frozen pole
Thaws with
the heat of the celestial coal;
So when thy absent beams
begin t'impart
Again a solstice on my frozen heart,
My
winter's o'er, my drooping spirits sing,
And every part
revives into a spring.
But if thy quickening beams a while
decline,
And with their light bless not this orb of mine,
A chilly frost surpriseth every member.
And in the midst of
June I feel December.
Oh how this earthly temper doth
debase
The noble soul, in this her humble place!
Whose
wingy nature ever doth aspire
To reach that place whence
first it took its fire.
These flames I feel, which in my
heart do dwell,
Are not thy beams, but take their fire from
hell.
Oh quench them all! and let thy Light
divine
Be as the sun to this poor orb of mine!
And to thy
sacred Spirit convert those fires,
Whose earthly fumes choke
my devout aspires!"
Sect.
33.--Therefore, for spirits, I am so far from denying their
existence, that I could easily believe, that not only whole
countries, but particular persons, have their tutelary and
guardian angels. It is not a new opinion of the Church of Rome,
but an old one of Pythagoras and Plato: there is no heresy in it:
and if not manifestly defined in Scripture, yet it is an opinion
of a good and wholesome use in the course and actions of a man's
life; and would serve as an hypothesis to salve many doubts,
whereof common philosophy affordeth no solution. Now, if you
demand my opinion and metaphysicks of their natures, I confess
them very shallow; most of them in a negative way, like that of
God; or in a comparative, between ourselves and fellow-creatures:
for there is in this universe a stair, or manifest scale, of
creatures, rising not disorderly, or in confusion, but with a
comely method and proportion. Between creatures of mere existence
and things of life there is a large disproportion of nature:
between plants and animals, or creatures of sense, a wider
difference: between them and man, a far greater: and if the
proportion hold on, between man and angels there should be yet a
greater. We do not comprehend their natures, who retain the first
definition of Porphyry;48 and
distinguish them from
ourselves by immortality: for, before his fall, man also was
immortal: yet must we needs affirm that he had a different
essence from the angels. Having, therefore, no certain knowledge
of their nature, 'tis no bad method of the schools, whatsoever
perfection we find obscurely in ourselves, in a more
complete and absolute way to ascribe unto them. I believe they
have an extemporary knowledge, and, upon the first motion of
their reason, do what we cannot without study or deliberation:
that they know things by their forms, and define, by specifical
difference what we describe by accidents and properties: and
therefore probabilities to us may be demonstrations unto them:
that they have knowledge not only of the specifical, but
numerical, forms of individuals, and understand by what reserved
difference each single hypostatis (besides the relation to its
species) becomes its numerical self: that, as the soul hath a
power to move the body it informs, so there's a faculty to move
any, though inform none: ours upon restraint of time, place, and
distance: but that invisible hand that conveyed Habakkuk to the
lion's den, or Philip to Azotus, infringeth this rule, and hath a
secret conveyance, wherewith mortality is not acquainted. If they
have that intuitive knowledge, whereby, as in reflection, they
behold the thoughts of one another, I cannot peremptorily deny
but they know a great part of ours. They that, to refute the
invocation of saints, have denied that they have any knowledge of
our affairs below, have proceeded too far, and must pardon my
opinion, till I can thoroughly answer that piece of Scripture,
"At the conversion of a sinner, the angels in heaven
rejoice." I cannot, with those in that great father,49 securely interpret the work
of the first day, fiat lux, to the creation of angels;
though I confess there is not any creature that hath so near a
glimpse of their nature as light in the sun and elements: we
style it a bare accident; but, where it subsists alone, 'tis a
spiritual substance, and may be an angel: in brief, conceive
light invisible, and that is a spirit.
Sect.
34.--These are certainly the magisterial and masterpieces of the
Creator; the flower, or, as we may say, the best part of nothing;
actually existing, what we are but in hopes, and probability. We
are only that amphibious piece, between a corporeal and a
spiritual essence; that middle form, that links those two
together, and makes good the method of God and nature, that jumps
not from extremes, but unites the incompatible distances by some
middle and participating natures. That we are the breath and
similitude of God, it is indisputable, and upon record of Holy
Scripture: but to call ourselves a microcosm, or little world, I
thought it only a pleasant trope of rhetorick, till my near
judgment and second thoughts told me there was a real truth
therein. For, first we are a rude mass, and in the rank of
creatures which only are, and have a dull kind of being, not yet
privileged with life, or preferred to sense or reason; next we
live the life of plants, the life of animals, the life of men,
and at last the life of spirits: running on, in one mysterious
nature, those five kinds of existencies, which comprehend the
creatures, not only of the world, but of the universe. Thus is
man that great and true amphibium, whose nature is
disposed to live, not only like other creatures in divers
elements, but in divided and distinguished worlds; for though
there be but one to sense, there are two to reason, the one
visible, the other invisible; whereof Moses seems to have left
description, and of the other so obscurely, that some parts
thereof are yet in controversy. And truly, for the first chapters
of Genesis, I must confess a great deal of obscurity; though
divines have, to the power of human reason, endeavoured to make
all go in a literal meaning, yet those allegorical
interpretations are also probable, and perhaps the mystical
method of Moses, bred up in the hieroglyphical schools of
the Egyptians.
Sect. 35.--Now for
that immaterial
world, methinks we need not wander so far as the first moveable;
for, even in this material fabrick, the spirits walk as freely
exempt from the affection of time, place, and motion, as beyond
the extremest circumference. Do but extract from the corpulency
of bodies, or resolve things beyond their first matter, and you
discover the habitation of angels; which if I call the ubiquitary
and omnipresent essence of God, I hope I shall not offend
divinity: for, before the creation of the world, God was really
all things. For the angels he created no new world, or
determinate mansion, and therefore they are everywhere where is
his essence, and do live, at a distance even, in himself. That
God made all things for man, is in some sense true; yet, not so
far as to subordinate the creation of those purer creatures unto
ours; though, as ministering spirits, they do, and are willing to
fulfil the will of God in these lower and sublunary affairs of
man. God made all things for himself; and it is impossible he
should make them for any other end than his own glory: it is all
he can receive, and all that is without himself. For, honour
being an external adjunct, and in the honourer rather than in the
person honoured, it was necessary to make a creature, from whom
he might receive this homage: and that is, in the other world,
angels, in this, man; which when we neglect, we forget God, not
only to repent that he hath made the world, but that he hath
sworn he would not destroy it. That there is but one world, is a
conclusion of faith; Aristotle with all his philosophy hath not
been able to prove it: and as weakly that the world was eternal;
that dispute much troubled the pen of the philosophers,
but Moses decided that question, and all is salved with the new
term of a creation,--that is, a production of something out of
nothing. And what is that?--whatsoever is opposite to something;
or, more exactly, that which is truly contrary unto God: for he
only is; all others have an existence with dependency, and are
something but by a distinction. And herein is divinity conformant
unto philosophy, and generation not only founded on
contrarieties, but also creation. God, being all things, is
contrary unto nothing; out of which were made all things, and so
nothing became something, and omneity50
informed nullity into an essence.
Sect. 36.--The
whole creation is a mystery, and
particularly that of man. At the blast of his mouth were the rest
of the creatures made; and at his bare word they started out of
nothing: but in the frame of man (as the text describes it) he
played the sensible operator, and seemed not so much to create as
make him. When he had separated the materials of other creatures,
there consequently resulted a form and soul; but, having raised
the walls of man, he was driven to a second and harder
creation,--of a substance like himself, an incorruptible and
immortal soul. For these two affections we have the philosophy
and opinion of the heathens, the flat affirmative of Plato, and
not a negative from Aristotle. There is another scruple cast in
by divinity concerning its production, much disputed in the
German auditories, and with that indifferency and equality of
arguments, as leave the controversy undetermined. I am not of
Paracelsus's mind, that boldly delivers a receipt to make a man
without conjunction; yet cannot but wonder at the multitude of
heads that do deny traduction, having no other arguments to
confirm their belief than that rhetorical sentence and antimetathesis51
of Augustine, "creando
infunditur, infundendo creatur." Either opinion will
consist well enough with religion: yet I should rather incline to
this, did not one objection haunt me, not wrung from speculations
and subtleties, but from common sense and observation; not pick'd
from the leaves of any author, but bred amongst the weeds and
tares of my own brain. And this is a conclusion from the
equivocal and monstrous productions in the copulation of a man
with a beast: for if the soul of man be not transmitted and
transfused in the seed of the parents, why are not those
productions merely beasts, but have also an impression and
tincture of reason in as high a measure, as it can evidence
itself in those improper organs? Nor, truly, can I peremptorily
deny that the soul, in this her sublunary estate, is wholly, and
in all acceptions, inorganical: but that, for the performance of
her ordinary actions, is required not only a symmetry and proper
disposition of organs, but a crasis and temper correspondent to
its operations; yet is not this mass of flesh and visible
structure the instrument and proper corpse of the soul, but
rather of sense, and that the hand of reason. In our study of
anatomy there is a mass of mysterious philosophy, and such as
reduced the very heathens to divinity; yet, amongst all those
rare discoveries and curious pieces I find in the fabrick of man,
I do not so much content myself, as in that I find not,--that is,
no organ or instrument for the rational soul; for in the brain,
which we term the seat of reason, there is not anything of moment
more than I can discover in the crany of a beast; and this is a
sensible and no inconsiderable argument of the inorganity of the
soul, at least in that sense we usually so conceive it. Thus we
are men, and we know not how; there is something in us
that can be without us, and will be after us, though it is
strange that it hath no history what it was before us, nor cannot
tell how it entered in us.
Sect. 37.--Now,
for these
walls of flesh, wherein the soul doth seem to be immured before
the resurrection, it is nothing but an elemental composition, and
a fabrick that must fall to ashes. "All flesh is
grass," is not only metaphorically, but literally, true; for
all those creatures we behold are but the herbs of the field,
digested into flesh in them, or more remotely carnified in
ourselves. Nay, further, we are what we all abhor, anthropophagi,
and cannibals, devourers not only of men,
but of ourselves; and that not in an allegory but a positive
truth: for all this mass of flesh which we behold, came in at our
mouths: this frame we look upon, hath been upon our trenchers; in
brief, we have devoured ourselves. I cannot believe the wisdom of
Pythagoras did ever positively, and in a literal sense, affirm
his metempsychosis, or impossible transmigration of the souls of
men into beasts. Of all metamorphoses or transmigrations, I
believe only one, that is of Lot's wife; for that of
Nabuchodonosor proceeded not so far. In all others I conceive
there is no further verity than is contained in their implicit
sense and morality. I believe that the whole frame of a beast
doth perish, and is left in the same state after death as before
it was materialled unto life: that the souls of men know neither
contrary nor corruption; that they subsist beyond the body, and
outlive death by the privilege of their proper natures, and
without a miracle: that the souls of the faithful, as they leave
earth, take possession of heaven; that those apparitions and
ghosts of departed persons are not the wandering souls of men,
but the unquiet walks of devils, prompting and suggesting
us unto mischief, blood, and villany; instilling and stealing
into our hearts that the blessed spirits are not at rest in their
graves, but wander, solicitous of the affairs of the world. But
that those phantasms appear often, and do frequent cemeteries,
charnel-houses, and churches, it is because those are the
dormitories of the dead, where the devil, like an insolent
champion, beholds with pride the spoils and trophies of his
victory over Adam.
Sect. 38.--This is
that dismal
conquest we all deplore, that makes us so often cry, O Adam, quid
fecisti? I thank God I have not those strait
ligaments, or narrow obligations to the world, as to dote on
life, or be convulsed and tremble at the name of death. Not that
I am insensible of the dread and horror thereof; or, by raking
into the bowels of the deceased, continual sight of anatomies,
skeletons, or cadaverous relicks, like vespilloes, or
gravemakers, I am become stupid, or have forgot the apprehension
of mortality; but that, marshalling all the horrors, and
contemplating the extremities thereof, I find not anything
therein able to daunt the courage of a man, much less a
well-resolved Christian; and therefore am not angry at the error
of our first parents, or unwilling to bear a part of this common
fate, and, like the best of them, to die; that is, to cease to
breathe, to take a farewell of the elements; to be a kind of
nothing for a moment; to be within one instant of a spirit. When
I take a full view and circle of myself without this reasonable
moderator, and equal piece of justice, death, I do conceive
myself the miserablest person extant. Were there not another life
that I hope for, all the vanities of this world should not
entreat a moment's breath from me. Could the devil work my belief
to imagine I could never die, I would not outlive that
very thought. I have so abject a conceit of this common way of
existence, this retaining to the sun and elements, I cannot think
this is to be a man, or to live according to the dignity of
humanity. In expectation of a better, I can with patience embrace
this life; yet, in my best meditations, do often defy death. I
honour any man that contemns it; nor can I highly love any that
is afraid of it: this makes me naturally love a soldier, and
honour those tattered and contemptible regiments, that will die
at the command of a sergeant. For a pagan there may be some
motives to be in love with life; but, for a Christian to be
amazed at death, I see not how he can escape this dilemma-- that
he is too sensible of this life, or hopeless of the life to come.
Sect. 39.--Some
divines52 count Adam thirty
years old at his
creation, because they suppose him created in the perfect age and
stature of man: and surely we are all out of the computation of
our age; and every man is some months older than he bethinks him;
for we live, move, have a being, and are subject to the actions
of the elements, and the malice of diseases, in that other world,
the truest microcosm, the womb of our mother; for besides that
general and common existence we are conceived to hold in our
chaos, and whilst we sleep within the bosom of our causes, we
enjoy a being and life in three distinct worlds, wherein we
receive most manifest gradations. In that obscure world, the womb
of our mother, our time is short, computed by the moon; yet
longer than the days of many creatures that behold the sun;
ourselves being not yet without life, sense, and reason;53 though, for the
manifestation of its actions, it awaits the opportunity of
objects, and seems to live there but in its root and soul of
vegetation. Entering afterwards upon the scene of the
world, we arise up and become another creature; performing the
reasonable actions of man, and obscurely manifesting that part of
divinity in us, but not in complement and perfection, till we
have once more cast our secundine, that is, this slough of flesh,
and are delivered into the last world, that is, that ineffable
place of Paul, that proper ubi of spirits. The smattering
I have of the philosopher's stone (which is something more than
the perfect exaltation54 of
gold) hath taught me a great
deal of divinity, and instructed my belief, how that immortal
spirit and incorruptible substance of my soul may lie obscure,
and sleep a while within this house of flesh. Those strange and
mystical transmigrations that I have observed in silkworms turned
my philosophy into divinity. There is in these works of nature,
which seem to puzzle reason, something divine; and hath more in
it than the eye of a common spectator doth discover.
Sect. 40.--I am
naturally bashful; nor hath
conversation, age, or travel, been able to effront or enharden
me; yet I have one part of modesty, which I have seldom
discovered in another, that is (to speak truly), I am not so much
afraid of death as ashamed thereof; 'tis the very disgrace and
ignominy of our natures, that in a moment can so disfigure us,
that our nearest friends, wife, and children, stand afraid, and
start at us. The birds and beasts of the field, that before, in a
natural fear, obeyed us, forgetting all allegiance, begin to prey
upon us. This very conceit hath, in a tempest, disposed and left
me willing to be swallowed up in the abyss of waters, wherein I
had perished unseen, unpitied, without wondering eyes, tears of
pity, lectures of mortality, and none had said, "Quantum
mutatus ab illo!" Not that I am ashamed
of the anatomy of my parts, or can accuse nature of playing the
bungler in any part of me, or my own vicious life for contracting
any shameful disease upon me, whereby I might not call myself as
wholesome a morsel for the worms as any.
Sect.
41.--Some, upon the courage of a fruitful issue, wherein, as in
the truest chronicle, they seem to outlive themselves, can with
greater patience away with death. This conceit and counterfeit
subsisting in our progenies seems to be a mere fallacy, unworthy
the desire of a man, that can but conceive a thought of the next
world; who, in a nobler ambition, should desire to live in his
substance in heaven, rather than his name and shadow in the
earth. And therefore, at my death, I mean to take a total adieu
of the world, not caring for a monument, history, or epitaph; not
so much as the bare memory of my name to be found anywhere, but
in the universal register of God. I am not yet so cynical, as to
approve the testament of
* Who willed
his friend not to bury him, but
to hang him up with a staff in his hand, to fright away the
crows.
+ "Pharsalia," vii. 819.
|
Diogenes,* nor do I altogether allow that
rodomontado of Lucan;+
-----"Coelo
tegitur,
qui non habet urnam."
He that unburied lies wants
not his hearse;
For unto him a tomb's the universe.
but commend, in my calmer
judgment, those ingenuous
intentions that desire to sleep by the urns of their fathers, and
strive to go the neatest way unto corruption. I do not envy the
temper55 of crows and
daws, nor the numerous and weary days of our fathers before the
flood. If there be any truth in astrology, I may outlive a
jubilee;56 as yet I
have not seen one revolution of Saturn,57
nor hath my pulse beat thirty
years, and yet, excepting one,58
have seen the ashes of, and left
under ground, all the kings of Europe; have been contemporary to
three emperors, four grand signiors, and as many popes: methinks
I have outlived myself, and begin to be weary of the sun; I have
shaken hands with delight in my warm blood and canicular days; I
perceive I do anticipate the vices of age; the world to me is but
a dream or mock-show, and we all therein but pantaloons and
anticks, to my severer contemplations.
Sect. 42.--It is
not, I confess, an unlawful prayer to desire to surpass the days
of our Saviour, or wish to outlive that age wherein he thought
fittest to die; yet, if (as divinity affirms) there shall be no
grey hairs in heaven, but all shall rise in the perfect state of
men, we do but outlive those perfections in this world, to be
recalled unto them by a greater miracle in the next, and run on
here but to be retrograde hereafter. Were there any hopes to
outlive vice, or a point to be superannuated from sin, it were
worthy our knees to implore the days of Methuselah. But age doth
not rectify, but incurvate our natures, turning bad dispositions
into worser habits, and (like diseases) brings on incurable
vices; for every day, as we grow weaker in age, we grow stronger
in sin, and the number of our days doth but make our sins
innumerable. The same vice, committed at sixteen, is not the
same, though it agrees in all other circumstances, as at forty;
but swells and doubles from the circumstance of our ages,
wherein, besides the constant and inexcusable habit of
transgressing, the maturity of our judgment cuts off pretence
unto excuse or pardon. Every sin, the oftener it is committed,
the more it acquireth in the quality of evil; as it succeeds in
time, so it proceeds in degrees of badness; for as they
proceed they ever multiply, and, like figures in arithmetick, the
last stands for more than all that went before it. And, though I
think no man can live well once, but he that could live twice,
yet, for my own part, I would not live over my hours past, or
begin again the thread of my days;
not upon Cicero's
ground,* because I have lived them well, but for fear I should
live them worse. I find my growing judgment daily instruct me how
to be better, but my untamed affections and confirmed vitiosity
make me daily do worse. I find in my confirmed age the same sins
I discovered in my youth; I committed many then because I was a
child; and, because I commit them still, I am yet an infant.
Therefore I perceive a man may be twice a child, before the days
of dotage; and stand in need of Æson's bath59 before threescore.
Sect.
43.--And truly there goes a deal of providence to produce a man's
life unto threescore; there is more required than an able temper
for those years: though the radical humour contain in it
sufficient oil for seventy, yet I perceive in some it gives no
light past thirty: men assign not all the causes of long life,
that write whole books thereof. They that found themselves on the
radical balsam, or vital sulphur of the parts, determine not why
Abel lived not so long as Adam. There is therefore a secret gloom
or bottom of our days: 'twas his wisdom to determine them: but
his perpetual and waking providence that fulfils and
accomplisheth them; wherein the spirits, ourselves, and all the
creatures of God, in a secret and disputed way, do execute his
will. Let them not therefore complain of immaturity that die
about thirty: they fall but like the whole world, whose
solid and well-composed substance must not expect the duration
and period of its constitution: when all things are completed in
it, its age is accomplished; and the last and general fever may
as naturally destroy it before six thousand,60 as me before forty. There is
therefore some other hand that twines the thread of life than
that of nature: we are not only ignorant in antipathies and
occult qualities; our ends are as obscure as our beginnings; the
line of our days is drawn by night, and the various effects
therein by a pencil that is invisible; wherein, though we confess
our ignorance, I am sure we do not err if we say, it is the hand
of God.
Sect. 44.--I am
much taken with two verses of
Lucan, since I have been able not only, as we do at school, to
construe, but understand:
"Victurosque
Dei
celant ut
vivere, durent,
Felix esse
mori."*
We're all deluded, vainly searching ways
To make us happy by the length of days;
For cunningly, to
make's protract this breath,
The gods conceal the happiness
of death.
There be many excellent
strains in
that poet, wherewith his stoical genius hath liberally supplied
him: and truly there are singular pieces in the philosophy of
Zeno,61 and doctrine
of the stoics, which I perceive, delivered in a pulpit, pass for
current divinity: yet herein are they in extremes, that can allow
a man to be his own assassin, and so highly extol the end and
suicide of Cato. This is indeed not to fear death, but yet to be
afraid of life. It is a brave act of valour to contemn death;
but, where life is more terrible than death, it is then the
truest valour to dare to live: and herein religion hath taught us
a noble example; for all the valiant acts of Curtius,
Scævola, or Codrus, do not parallel, or match, that one of
Job; and sure there is no torture to the rack of a disease, nor
any poniards in death itself, like those in the way or prologue
unto it. "Emori nolo, sed me esse mortuum nihil
curo;" I would not die, but care not to be dead. Were I
of Cæsar's religion,62 I
should be of his desires, and
wish rather to go off at one blow, than to be sawed in pieces by
the grating torture of a disease. Men that look no further than
their outsides, think health an appurtenance unto life, and
quarrel with their constitutions for being sick; but I, that have
examined the parts of man, and know upon what tender filaments
that fabrick hangs, do wonder that we are not always so; and,
considering the thousand doors that lead to death, do thank my
God that we can die but once. 'Tis not only the mischief of
diseases, and the villany of poisons, that make an end of us; we
vainly accuse the fury of guns, and the new inventions of
death:--it is in the power of every hand to destroy us, and we
are beholden unto every one we meet, he doth not kill us. There
is therefore but one comfort left, that though it be in the power
of the weakest arm to take away life, it is not in the strongest
to deprive us of death. God would not exempt himself from that;
the misery of immortality in the flesh he undertook not, that was
immortal. Certainly there is no happiness within this circle of
flesh; nor is it in the opticks of these eyes to behold felicity.
The first day of our jubilee is death; the devil hath therefore
failed of his desires; we are happier with death than we should
have been without it: there is no misery but in himself, where
there is no end of misery; and so indeed, in his own sense, the
stoic is in the right.63 He
forgets that he can die, who
complains of misery: we are in the power of no calamity
while death is in our own.
Sect. 45.--Now,
besides this
literal and positive kind of death, there are others whereof
divines make mention, and those, I think, not merely
metaphorical, as mortification, dying unto sin and the world.
Therefore, I say, every man hath a double horoscope; one of his
humanity,--his birth, another of his Christianity,-- his baptism:
and from this do I compute or calculate my nativity; not
reckoning those horæ combusæ,64 and odd days, or esteeming myself
anything, before I was my Saviour's and enrolled in the register
of Christ. Whosoever enjoys not this life, I count him but an
apparition, though he wear about him the sensible affections of
flesh. In these moral acceptions, the way to be immortal is to
die daily; nor can I think I have the true theory of death, when
I contemplate a skull or behold a skeleton with those vulgar
imaginations it casts upon us. I have therefore enlarged that
common memento mori into a more Christian memorandum, memento
quatuor novissima,--those four inevitable points
of us all, death, judgment, heaven, and hell. Neither did the
contemplations of the heathens rest in their graves, without a
further thought, of Rhadamanth65
or some judicial proceeding after
death, though in another way, and upon suggestion of their
natural reasons. I cannot but marvel from what sibyl or oracle
they stole the prophecy of the world's destruction by fire, or
whence Lucan learned to say--
"Communis mundo
superest
rogus, ossibus astra
Misturus--
"* There yet remains to th' world one common fire,
Wherein our
bones with stars shall make one pyre.
I
believe the world grows near its end; yet is neither old nor
decayed, nor will ever perish upon the ruins of its own
principles. As the work of creation was above nature, so its
adversary, annihilation; without which the world hath not its
end, but its mutation. Now, what force should be able to consume
it thus far, without the breath of God, which is the truest
consuming flame, my philosophy cannot inform me. Some believe
there went not a minute to the world's creation, nor shall there
go to its destruction; those six days, so punctually described,
make not to them one moment, but rather seem to manifest the
method and idea of that great work of the intellect of God than
the manner how he proceeded in its operation. I cannot dream that
there should be at the last day any such judicial proceeding, or
calling to the bar, as indeed the Scripture seems to imply, and
the literal commentators do conceive: for unspeakable mysteries
in the Scriptures are often delivered in a vulgar and
illustrative way, and, being written unto man, are delivered, not
as they truly are, but as they may be understood; wherein,
notwithstanding, the different interpretations according to
different capacities may stand firm with our devotion, nor be any
way prejudicial to each single edification.
Sect.
46.--Now, to determine the day and year of this inevitable time,
is not only convincible and statute madness, but also manifest
impiety. How shall we interpret Elias's six thousand years, or
imagine the secret communicated to a Rabbi which God hath denied
unto his angels? It had been an excellent quære to have
posed the devil of Delphos, and must needs have forced him to
some strange amphibology. It hath not only mocked the predictions
of sundry astrologers in ages past, but the prophecies of many
melancholy heads in these present; who, neither
understanding reasonably things past nor present, pretend a
knowledge of things to come; heads ordained only to manifest the
incredible effects of melancholy and to fulfil old
*
"In those days there shall come liars and false
prophets." |
prophecies,* rather than be the authors of new. "In those
days there shall come wars and rumours of wars" to me seems
no prophecy, but a constant truth in all times verified since it
was pronounced. "There shall be signs in the moon and
stars;" how comes he then like a thief in the night, when he
gives an item of his coming? That common sign, drawn from the
revelation of antichrist, is as obscure as any; in our common
compute he hath been come these many years; but, for my own part,
to speak freely, I am half of opinion that antichrist is the
philosopher's stone in divinity, for the discovery and invention
whereof, though there be prescribed rules, and probable
inductions, yet hath hardly any man attained the perfect
discovery thereof. That general opinion, that the world grows
near its end, hath possessed all ages past as nearly as ours. I
am afraid that the souls that now depart cannot escape that
lingering expostulation of the saints under the altar, "quousque,
Domine?" how long, O Lord? and groan
in the expectation of the great jubilee.
Sect.
47.--This is the day that must make good that great attribute of
God, his justice; that must reconcile those unanswerable doubts
that torment the wisest understandings; and reduce those seeming
inequalities and respective distributions in this world, to an
equality and recompensive justice in the next. This is that one
day, that shall include and comprehend all that went before it;
wherein, as in the last scene, all the actors must enter, to
complete and make up the catastrophe of this great piece.
This is the day whose memory hath, only, power to make us honest
in the dark, and to be virtuous without a witness. "Ipsa
sui pretium virtus sibi," that virtue is her own reward,
is but a cold principle, and not able to maintain our variable
resolutions in a constant and settled way of goodness. I have
practised that honest artifice of Seneca,66
and, in my retired and solitary
imaginations to detain me from the foulness of vice, have fancied
to myself the presence of my dear and worthiest friends, before
whom I should lose my head rather than be vicious; yet herein I
found that there was nought but moral honesty; and this was not
to be virtuous for his sake who must reward us at the last. I
have tried if I could reach that great resolution of his, to be
honest without a thought of heaven or hell; and, indeed I found,
upon a natural inclination, and inbred loyalty unto virtue, that
I could serve her without a livery, yet not in that resolved and
venerable way, but that the frailty of my nature, upon an easy
temptation, might be induced to forget her. The life, therefore,
and spirit of all our actions is the resurrection, and a stable
apprehension that our ashes shall enjoy the fruit of our pious
endeavours; without this, all religion is a fallacy, and those
impieties of Lucian, Euripides, and Julian, are no blasphemies,
but subtile verities; and atheists have been the only
philosophers.
Sect. 48.--How
shall the dead arise, is
no question of my faith; to believe only possibilities is not
faith, but mere philosophy. Many things are true in divinity,
which are neither inducible by reason nor confirmable by sense;
and many things in philosophy confirmable by sense, yet not
inducible by reason. Thus it is impossible, by any solid or
demonstrative reasons, to persuade a man to believe the
conversion of the needle to the north; though this be
possible and true, and easily credible, upon a single experiment
unto the sense. I believe that our estranged and divided ashes
shall unite again; that our separated dust, after so many
pilgrimages and transformations into the parts of minerals,
plants, animals, elements, shall, at the voice of God, return
into their primitive shapes, and join again to make up their
primary and predestinate forms. As at the creation there was a
separation of that confused mass into its pieces; so at the
destruction thereof there shall be a separation into its distinct
individuals. As, at the creation of the world, all the distinct
species that we behold lay involved in one mass, till the
fruitful voice of God separated this united multitude into its
several species, so, at the last day, when those corrupted
relicks shall be scattered in the wilderness of forms, and seem
to have forgot their proper habits, God, by a powerful voice,
shall command them back into their proper shapes, and call them
out by their single individuals. Then shall appear the fertility
of Adam, and the magick of that sperm that hath dilated into so
many millions. I have often beheld, as a miracle, that artificial
resurrection and revivification of mercury, how being mortified
into a thousand shapes, it assumes again its own, and returns
into its numerical self. Let us speak naturally, and like
philosophers. The forms of alterable bodies in these sensible
corruptions perish not; nor, as we imagine, wholly quit their
mansions; but retire and contract themselves into their secret
and unaccessible parts; where they may best protect them selves
from the action of their antagonist. A plant or vegetable
consumed to ashes to a contemplative and school-philosopher seems
utterly destroyed, and the form to have taken his leave for ever;
but to a sensible artist the forms are not perished, but
withdrawn into their incombustible part, where they lie secure
from the action of that devouring element. This is made good by
experience, which can from the ashes of a plant revive the plant,
and from its cinders recall it into its stalk and leaves
again.67 What the art
of man can do in these inferior pieces, what blasphemy is it to
affirm the finger of God cannot do in those more perfect and
sensible structures? This is that mystical philosophy, from
whence no true scholar becomes an atheist, but from the visible
effects of nature grows up a real divine, and beholds not in a
dream, as Ezekiel, but in an ocular and visible object, the types
of his resurrection.
Sect. 49.--Now,
the necessary
mansions of our restored selves are those two contrary and
incompatible places we call heaven and hell. To define them, or
strictly to determine what and where these are, surpasseth my
divinity. That elegant apostle, which seemed to have a glimpse of
heaven, hath left but a negative description thereof; which
"neither eye hath seen, nor ear hath heard, nor can enter
into the heart of man:" he was translated out of himself to
behold it; but, being returned into himself, could not express
it. Saint John's description by emeralds, chrysolites, and
precious stones, is too weak to express the material heaven we
behold. Briefly, therefore, where the soul hath the full measure
and complement of happiness; where the boundless appetite of that
spirit remains completely satisfied that it can neither desire
addition nor alteration; that, I think, is truly heaven: and this
can only be in the enjoyment of that essence, whose infinite
goodness is able to terminate the desires of itself, and the
unsatiable wishes of ours. Wherever God will thus manifest him
self, there is heaven, though within the circle of this
sensible world. Thus, the soul of man may be in heaven anywhere,
even within the limits of his own proper body; and when it
ceaseth to live in the body it may remain in its own soul, that
is, its Creator. And thus we may say that Saint Paul, whether in
the body or out of the body, was yet in heaven. To place it in
the empyreal, or beyond the tenth sphere, is to forget the
world's destruction; for when this sensible world shall be
destroyed, all shall then be here as it is now there, an empyreal
heaven, a quasi vacuity; when to ask where heaven is, is
to demand where the presence of God is, or where we have the
glory of that happy vision. Moses, that was bred up in all the
learning of the Egyptians, committed a gross absurdity in
philosophy, when with these eyes of flesh he desired to see God,
and petitioned his Maker, that is truth itself, to a
contradiction. Those that imagine heaven and hell neighbours, and
conceive a vicinity between those two extremes, upon consequence
of the parable, where Dives discoursed with Lazarus, in Abraham's
bosom, do too grossly conceive of those glorified creatures,
whose eyes shall easily out-see the sun, and behold without
perspective the extremest distances: for if there shall be, in
our glorified eyes, the faculty of sight and reception of
objects, I could think the visible species there to be in as
unlimitable a way as now the intellectual. I grant that two
bodies placed beyond the tenth sphere, or in a vacuity, according
to Aristotle's philosophy, could not behold each other, because
there wants a body or medium to hand and transport the visible
rays of the object unto the sense; but when there shall be a
general defect of either medium to convey, or light to prepare
and dispose that medium, and yet a perfect vision, we must
suspend the rules of our philosophy, and make all good by a
more absolute piece of opticks.
Sect. 50.--I
cannot
tell how to say that fire is the essence of hell; I know not what
to make of purgatory, or conceive a flame that can either prey
upon, or purify the substance of a soul. Those flames of sulphur,
mentioned in the scriptures, I take not to be understood of this
present hell, but of that to come, where fire shall make up the
complement of our tortures, and have a body or subject whereon to
manifest its tyranny. Some who have had the honour to be textuary
in divinity are of opinion it shall be the same specifical fire
with ours. This is hard to conceive, yet can I make good how even
that may prey upon our bodies, and yet not consume us: for in
this material world, there are bodies that persist invincible in
the powerfulest flames; and though, by the action of fire, they
fall into ignition and liquation, yet will they never suffer a
destruction. I would gladly know how Moses, with an actual fire,
calcined or burnt the golden calf into powder: for that mystical
metal of gold, whose solary and celestial nature I admire,
exposed unto the violence of fire, grows only hot, and liquefies,
but consumeth not; so when the consumable and volatile pieces of
our bodies shall be refined into a more impregnable and fixed
temper, like gold, though they suffer from the action of flames,
they shall never perish, but lie immortal in the arms of fire.
And surely, if this flame must suffer only by the action of this
element, there will many bodies escape; and not only heaven, but
earth will not be at an end, but rather a beginning. For at
present it is not earth, but a composition of fire, water, earth,
and air; but at that time, spoiled of these ingredients, it shall
appear in a substance more like itself, its ashes. Philosophers
that opinioned the world's destruction by fire, did never
dream of annihilation, which is beyond the power of sublunary
causes; for the last and proper action of that element is but
vitrification, or a reduction of a body into glass; and therefore
some of our chymicks facetiously affirm, that, at the last fire,
all shall be crystalized and reverberated into glass, which is
the utmost action of that element. Nor need we fear this term,
annihilation, or wonder that God will destroy the works of his
creation: for man subsisting, who is, and will then truly appear,
a microcosm, the world cannot be said to be destroyed. For the
eyes of God, and perhaps also of our glorified selves, shall as
really behold and contemplate the world, in its epitome or
contracted essence, as now it doth at large and in its dilated
substance. In the seed of a plant, to the eyes of God, and to the
understanding of man, there exists, though in an invisible way,
the perfect leaves, flowers, and fruit thereof; for things that
are in posse to the sense, are actually existent to the
understanding. Thus God beholds all things, who contemplates as
fully his works in their epitome as in their full volume, and
beheld as amply the whole world, in that little compendium of the
sixth day, as in the scattered and dilated pieces of those five
before.
Sect. 51.--Men
commonly set forth the torments
of hell by fire, and the extremity of corporal afflictions, and
describe hell in the same method that Mahomet doth heaven. This
indeed makes a noise, and drums in popular ears: but if this be
the terrible piece thereof, it is not worthy to stand in diameter
with heaven, whose happiness consists in that part that is best
able to comprehend it, that immortal essence, that translated
divinity and colony of God, the soul. Surely, though we place
hell under earth, the devil's walk and purlieu is about it.
Men speak too popularly who place it in those flaming
mountains, which to grosser apprehensions represent hell. The
heart of man is the place the devils dwell in; I feel sometimes a
hell within myself; Lucifer keeps his court in my breast; Legion
is revived in me. There are as many hells as Anaxagoras68 conceited worlds. There was
more than one hell in Magdalene, when there were seven devils;
for every devil is an hell unto himself,69
he holds enough of torture in his
own ubi; and needs not the misery of circumference to
afflict him: and thus, a distracted conscience here is a shadow
or introduction unto hell hereafter. Who can but pity the
merciful intention of those hands that do destroy themselves? The
devil, were it in his power, would do the like; which being
impossible, his miseries are endless, and he suffers most in that
attribute wherein he is impassible, his immortality.
Sect. 52.--I thank
God, and with joy I mention it, I
was never afraid of hell, nor ever grew pale at the description
of that place. I have so fixed my contemplations on heaven, that
I have almost forgot the idea of hell; and am afraid rather to
lose the joys of the one, than endure the misery of the other: to
be deprived of them is a perfect hell, and needs methinks no
addition to complete our afflictions. That terrible term hath
never detained me from sin, nor do I owe any good action to the
name thereof. I fear God, yet am not afraid of him; his mercies
make me ashamed of my sins, before his judgments afraid thereof:
these are the forced and secondary method of his wisdom, which he
useth but as the last remedy, and upon provocation;-- a course
rather to deter the wicked, than incite the virtuous to his
worship. I can hardly think there was ever any scared
into heaven: they go the fairest way to heaven that would serve
God without a hell: other mercenaries, that crouch unto him in
fear of hell, though they term themselves the servants, are
indeed but the slaves, of the Almighty.
Sect. 53.--And
to be true, and speak my soul, when I survey the occurrences of
my life, and call into account the finger of God, I can perceive
nothing but an abyss and mass of mercies, either in general to
mankind, or in particular to myself. And, whether out of the
prejudice of my affection, or an inverting and partial conceit of
his mercies, I know not,--but those which others term crosses,
afflictions, judgments, misfortunes, to me, who inquire further
into them than their visible effects, they both appear, and in
event have ever proved, the secret and dissembled favours of his
affection. It is a singular piece of wisdom to apprehend truly,
and without passion, the works of God, and so well to distinguish
his justice from his mercy as not to miscall those noble
attributes; yet it is likewise an honest piece of logick so to
dispute and argue the proceedings of God as to distinguish even
his judgments into mercies. For God is merciful unto all, because
better to the worst than the best deserve; and to say he
punisheth none in this world, though it be a paradox, is no
absurdity. To one that hath committed murder, if the judge should
only ordain a fine, it were a madness to call this a punishment,
and to repine at the sentence, rather than admire the clemency of
the judge. Thus, our offences being mortal, and deserving not
only death but damnation, if the goodness of God be content to
traverse and pass them over with a loss, misfortune, or disease;
what frenzy were it to term this a punishment, rather than an
extremity of mercy, and to groan under the rod of his judgments
rather than admire the sceptre of his mercies! Therefore
to adore, honour, and admire him, is a debt of gratitude due from
the obligation of our nature, states, and conditions: and with
these thoughts he that knows them best will not deny that I adore
him. That I obtain heaven, and the bliss thereof, is accidental,
and not the intended work of my devotion; it being a felicity I
can neither think to deserve nor scarce in modesty to expect. For
these two ends of us all, either as rewards or punishments, are
mercifully ordained and disproportionably disposed unto our
actions; the one being so far beyond our deserts, the other so
infinitely below our demerits.
Sect. 54.--There
is no
salvation to those that believe not in Christ; that is, say some,
since his nativity, and, as divinity affirmeth, before also;
which makes me much apprehend the end of those honest worthies
and philosophers which died before his incarnation. It is hard to
place those souls in hell, whose worthy lives do teach us virtue
on earth. Methinks, among those many subdivisions of hell, there
might have been one limbo left for these. What a strange vision
will it be to see their poetical fictions converted into
verities, and their imagined and fancied furies into real devils!
How strange to them will sound the history of Adam, when they
shall suffer for him they never heard of! When they who derive
their genealogy from the gods, shall know they are the unhappy
issue of sinful man! It is an insolent part of reason, to
controvert the works of God, or question the justice of his
proceedings. Could humility teach others, as it hath instructed
me, to contemplate the infinite and incomprehensible distance be
twixt the Creator and the creature; or did we seriously perpend
that one simile of St Paul, "shall the vessel say to
the potter, why hast thou made me thus?" it would prevent
these arrogant disputes of reason: nor would we argue the
definitive sentence of God, either to heaven or hell. Men that
live according to the right rule and law of reason, live but in
their own kind, as beasts do in theirs; who justly obey the
prescript of their natures, and therefore cannot reasonably
demand a reward of their actions, as only obeying the natural
dictates of their reason. It will, therefore, and must, at last
appear, that all salvation is through Christ; which verity, I
fear, these great examples of virtue must confirm, and make it
good how the perfectest actions of earth have no title or claim
unto heaven.
Sect. 55.--Nor
truly do I think the lives
of these, or of any other, were ever correspondent, or in all
points conformable, unto their doctrines. It is evident that
Aristotle transgressed the rule of his own ethicks;70 the stoicks, that condemn passion,
and command a man to laugh in Phalaris's71
bull, could not endure without a
groan a fit of the stone or colick. The scepticks, that affirmed
they knew nothing,72
even in that opinion confute themselves, and thought they knew
more than all the world beside. Diogenes I hold to be the most
vainglorious man of his time, and more ambitious in refusing all
honours, than Alexander in rejecting none. Vice and the devil put
a fallacy upon our reasons; and, provoking us too hastily to run
from it, entangle and profound us deeper in it. The duke of
Venice, that weds himself unto the sea, by a ring of gold,73 I will not accuse of
prodigality, because it is a solemnity of good use and
consequence in the state: but the philosopher, that threw his
money into the sea to avoid avarice, was a notorious
prodigal.74 There is
no road or ready way to virtue; it is not an easy point of art to
disentangle ourselves from this riddle or web of sin. To
perfect virtue, as to religion, there is required a panoplia,
or complete armour; that whilst we lie at
close
ward against one vice, we lie not open to the veney75 of another. And indeed wiser
discretions, that have the thread of reason to conduct them,
offend without a pardon; whereas under heads may stumble without
dishonour. There go so many circumstances to piece up one good
action, that it is a lesson to be good, and we are forced to be
virtuous by the book. Again, the practice of men holds not an
equal pace, yea and often runs counter to their theory; we
naturally know what is good, but naturally pursue what is evil:
the rhetorick wherewith I persuade another cannot persuade
myself. There is a depraved appetite in us, that will with
patience hear the learned instructions of reason, but yet perform
no further than agrees to its own irregular humour. In brief, we
all are monsters; that is, a composition of man and beast:
wherein we must endeavour to be as the poets fancy that wise man,
Chiron; that is, to have the region of man above that of beast,
and sense to sit but at the feet of reason. Lastly, I do desire
with God that all, but yet affirm with men that few, shall know
salvation,--that the bridge is narrow, the passage strait unto
life: yet those who do confine the church of God either to
particular nations, churches, or families, have made it far
narrower than our Saviour ever meant it.
Sect. 56.--The
vulgarity of those judgments that wrap the church of God in
Strabo's cloak,76 and
restrain it unto Europe, seem to me as bad geographers as
Alexander, who thought he had conquered all the world, when he
had not subdued the half of any part thereof. For we cannot deny
the church of God both in Asia and Africa, if we do not
forget the peregrinations of the apostles, the deaths of the
martyrs, the sessions of many and (even in our reformed judgment)
lawful councils, held in those parts in the minority and nonage
of ours. Nor must a few differences, more remarkable in the eyes
of man than, perhaps, in the judgment of God, excommunicate from
heaven one another; much less those Christians who are in a
manner all martyrs, maintaining their faith in the noble way of
persecution, and serving God in the fire, whereas we honour him
in the sunshine. 'Tis true, we all hold there is a number of
elect, and many to be saved; yet, take our opinions together, and
from the confusion thereof, there will be no such thing as
salvation, nor shall any one be saved: for, first, the church of
Rome condemneth us; we likewise them; the sub-reformists and
sectaries sentence the doctrine of our church as damnable; the
atomist, or familist,77
reprobates all these; and all
these, them again. Thus, whilst the mercies of God do promise us
heaven, our conceits and opinions exclude us from that place.
There must be therefore more than one St Peter; particular
churches and sects usurp the gates of heaven, and turn the key
against each other; and thus we go to heaven against each other's
wills, conceits, and opinions, and, with as much uncharity as
ignorance, do err, I fear, in points not only of our own, but one
another's salvation.
Sect. 57.--I
believe many are
saved who to man seem reprobated, and many are reprobated who in
the opinion and sentence of man stand elected. There will appear,
at the last day, strange and unexpected examples, both of his
justice and his mercy; and, therefore, to define either is folly
in man, and insolency even in the devils. These acute and subtile
spirits, in all their sagacity, can hardly divine who
shall be saved; which if they could prognostick, their labour
were at an end, nor need they compass the earth, seeking whom
they may devour. Those who, upon a rigid application of the law,
sentence Solomon unto damnation,78
condemn not only him, but
themselves, and the whole world; for by the letter and written
word of God, we are without exception in the state of death: but
there is a prerogative of God, and an arbitrary pleasure above
the letter of his own law, by which alone we can pretend unto
salvation, and through which Solomon might be as easily saved as
those who condemn him.
Sect. 58.--The
number of those
who pretend unto salvation, and those infinite swarms who think
to pass through the eye of this needle, have much amazed me. That
name and compellation of "little flock" doth not
comfort, but deject, my devotion; especially when I reflect upon
mine own unworthiness, wherein, according to my humble
apprehensions, I am below them all. I believe there shall never
be an anarchy in heaven; but, as there are hierarchies amongst
the angels, so shall there be degrees of priority amongst the
saints. Yet is it, I protest, beyond my ambition to aspire unto
the first ranks; my desires only are, and I shall be happy
therein, to be but the last man, and bring up the rear in heaven.
Sect. 59.--Again,
I am confident, and fully persuaded,
yet dare not take my oath, of my salvation. I am, as it were,
sure, and do believe without all doubt, that there is such a city
as Constantinople; yet, for me to take my oath thereon were a
kind of perjury, because I hold no infallible warrant from my own
sense to confirm me in the certainty thereof. And truly, though
many pretend to an absolute certainty of their salvation, yet
when an humble soul shall contemplate our own unworthiness,
she shall meet with many doubts, and suddenly find how little we
stand in need of the precept of St Paul, "work out your
salvation with fear and trembling." That which is the
cause of my election, I hold to be the cause of my salvation,
which was the mercy and beneplacit of God, before I was,
or the foundation of the world. "Before Abraham was, I
am," is the saying of Christ, yet is it true in some sense
if I say it of myself; for I was not only before myself but Adam,
that is, in the idea of God, and the decree of that synod held
from all eternity. And in this sense, I say, the world was before
the creation, and at an end before it had a beginning. And thus
was I dead before I was alive; though my grave be England, my
dying place was Paradise; and Eve miscarried of me, before she
conceived of Cain.
Sect.
60.--Insolent zeals, that do
decry good works and rely only upon faith, take not away merit:
for, depending upon the efficacy of their faith, they enforce the
condition of God, and in a more sophistical way do seem to
challenge heaven. It was decreed by God that only those that
lapped in the water like dogs, should have the honour to destroy
the Midianites; yet could none of those justly challenge, or
imagine he deserved, that honour thereupon. I do not deny but
that true faith, and such as God requires, is not only a mark or
token, but also a means, of our salvation; but, where to find
this, is as obscure to me as my last end. And if our Saviour
could object, unto his own disciples and favourites, a faith
that, to the quantity of a grain of mustard seed, is able to
remove mountains; surely that which we boast of is not anything,
or, at the most, but a remove from nothing. This is the
tenour of my belief; wherein, though there be many things
singular, and to the humour of my irregular self, yet, if they
square not with maturer judgments, I disclaim them, and do no
further favour them than the learned and best judgments shall
authorize them.
PART
THE SECOND.
SECTION
1.--Now, for that other virtue of charity, without which faith is
a mere notion and of no existence, I have ever endeavoured to
nourish the merciful disposition and humane inclination I
borrowed from my parents, and regulate it to the written and
prescribed laws of charity. And, if I hold the true anatomy of
myself, I am delineated and naturally framed to such a piece of
virtue,--for I am of a constitution so general that it consorts
and sympathizeth with all things; I have no antipathy, or rather
idiosyncrasy, in diet, humour, air, anything. I wonder not at the
French for their dishes of frogs, snails, and toadstools, nor at
the Jews for locusts and grasshoppers; but, being amongst them,
make them my common viands; and I find they agree with my stomach
as well as theirs. I could digest a salad gathered in a
church-yard as well as in a garden. I cannot start at the
presence of a serpent, scorpion, lizard, or salamander; at the
sight of a toad or viper, I find in me no desire to take up a
stone to destroy them. I feel not in myself those common
antipathies that I can discover in others: those national
repugnances do not touch me, nor do I behold with prejudice the
French, Italian, Spaniard, or Dutch; but, where I find their
actions in balance with my countrymen's, I honour, love, and
embrace them, in the same degree. I was born in the eighth
climate, but seem to be framed and constellated unto all. I am no
plant that will not prosper out of a garden. All places, all
airs, make unto me one country; I am in England everywhere, and
under any meridian. I have been shipwrecked, yet am not enemy
with the sea or winds; I can study, play, or sleep, in a tempest.
In brief I am averse from nothing: my conscience would give me
the lie if I should say I absolutely detest or hate any essence,
but the devil; or so at least abhor anything, but that we might
come to composition. If there be any among those common objects
of hatred I do contemn and laugh at, it is that great enemy of
reason, virtue, and religion, the multitude; that numerous piece
of monstrosity, which, taken asunder, seem men, and the
reasonable creatures of God, but, confused together, make but one
great beast, and a monstrosity more prodigious than Hydra. It is
no breach of charity to call these fools; it is the style all
holy writers have afforded them, set down by Solomon in canonical
Scripture, and a point of our faith to believe so. Neither in the
name of multitude do I only include the base and minor sort of
people: there is a rabble even amongst the gentry; a sort of
plebeian heads, whose fancy moves with the same wheel as these;
men in the same level with mechanicks, though their fortunes do
somewhat gild their infirmities, and their purses compound for
their follies. But, as in casting account three or four men
together come short in account of one man placed by himself below
them, so neither are a troop of these ignorant Doradoes79 of that true esteem and
value as many a forlorn person, whose condition doth place him
below their feet. Let us speak like politicians; there is
a nobility without heraldry, a natural dignity, whereby one man
is ranked with another, another filed before him, according to
the quality of his desert, and pre-eminence of his good parts.
Though the corruption of these times, and the bias of present
practice, wheel another way, thus it was in the first and
primitive commonwealths, and is yet in the integrity and cradle
of well ordered polities: till corruption getteth ground;--ruder
desires labouring after that which wiser considerations
contemn;--every one having a liberty to amass and heap up riches,
and they a licence or faculty to do or purchase anything.
Sect. 2.--This
general and indifferent temper of mine
doth more nearly dispose me to this noble virtue. It is a
happiness to be born and framed unto virtue, and to grow up from
the seeds of nature, rather than the inoculations and forced
grafts of education: yet, if we are directed only by our
particular natures, and regulate our inclinations by no higher
rule than that of our reasons, we are but moralists; divinity
will still call us heathens. Therefore this great work of charity
must have other motives, ends, and impulsions. I give no alms to
satisfy the hunger of my brother, but to fulfil and accomplish
the will and command of my God; I draw not my purse for his sake
that demands it, but his that enjoined it; I relieve no man upon
the rhetorick of his miseries, nor to content mine own
commiserating disposition; for this is still but moral charity,
and an act that oweth more to passion than reason. He that
relieves another upon the bare suggestion and bowels of pity doth
not this so much for his sake as for his own; and so, by
relieving them, we relieve ourselves also. It is as erroneous a
conceit to redress other men's misfortunes upon the
common considerations of merciful natures, that it may be one day
our own case; for this is a sinister and politick kind of
charity, whereby we seem to bespeak the pities of men in the like
occasions. And truly I have observed that those professed
eleemosynaries, though in a crowd or multitude, do yet direct and
place their petitions on a few and selected persons; there is
surely a physiognomy, which those experienced and master
mendicants observe, whereby they instantly discover a merciful
aspect, and will single out a face, wherein they spy the
signature and marks of mercy. For there are mystically in our
faces certain characters which carry in them the motto of our
souls, wherein he that can read A, B, C, may read our natures. I
hold, moreover, that there is a phytognomy, or physiognomy, not
only of men, but of plants and vegetables; and is every one of
them some outward figures which hang as signs or bushes of their
inward forms. The finger of God hath left an inscription upon all
his works, not graphical, or composed of letters, but of their
several forms, constitutions, parts, and operations, which, aptly
joined together, do make one word that doth express their
natures. By these letters God calls the stars by their names; and
by this alphabet Adam assigned to every creature a name peculiar
to its nature. Now, there are, besides these characters in our
faces, certain mystical figures in our hands, which I dare not
call mere dashes, strokes à la volee or at random,
because delineated by a pencil that never works in vain; and
hereof I take more particular notice, because I carry that in
mine own hand which I could never read of nor discover in
another. Aristotle, I confess, in his acute and singular book of
physiognomy, hath made no mention of chiromancy:80 yet I believe the Egyptians,
who were nearer addicted to those abstruse and mystical
sciences, had a knowledge therein: to which those vagabond and
counterfeit Egyptians did after81
pretend, and perhaps retained a
few corrupted principles, which sometimes might verify their
prognosticks. It is the common wonder of all men, how, among so
many millions of faces, there should be none alike: now,
contrary, I wonder as much how there should be any. He that shall
consider how many thousand several words have been carelessly and
without study composed out of twenty-four letters; withal, how
many hundred lines there are to be drawn in the fabrick of one
man; shall easily find that this variety is necessary: and it
will be very hard that they shall so concur as to make one
portrait like another. Let a painter carelessly limn out a
million of faces, and you shall find them all different; yes, let
him have his copy before him, yet, after all his art, there will
remain a sensible distinction: for the pattern or example of
everything is the perfectest in that kind, whereof we still come
short, though we transcend or go beyond it; because herein it is
wide, and agrees not in all points unto its copy. Nor doth the
similitude of creatures disparage the variety of nature, nor any
way confound the works of God. For even in things alike there is
diversity; and those that do seem to accord do manifestly
disagree. And thus is man like God; for, in the same things that
we resemble him we are utterly different from him. There was
never anything so like another as in all points to concur; there
will ever some reserved difference slip in, to prevent the
identity; without which two several things would not be alike,
but the same, which is impossible.
Sect. 3.--But, to
return from philosophy to charity, I hold not so narrow a
conceit of this virtue as to conceive that to give alms is only
to be charitable, or think a piece of liberality can comprehend
the total of charity. Divinity hath wisely divided the act
thereof into many branches, and hath taught us, in this narrow
way, many paths unto goodness; as many ways as we may do good, so
many ways we may be charitable. There are infirmities not only of
body, but of soul and fortunes, which do require the merciful
hand of our abilities. I cannot contemn a man for ignorance, but
behold him with as much pity as I do Lazarus. It is no greater
charity to clothe his body than apparel the nakedness of his
soul. It is an honourable object to see the reasons of other men
wear our liveries, and their borrowed understandings do homage to
the bounty of ours. It is the cheapest way of beneficence, and,
like the natural charity of the sun, illuminates another without
obscuring itself. To be reserved and caitiff82 in this part of goodness is the
sordidest piece of covetousness, and more contemptible than the
pecuniary avarice. To this (as calling myself a scholar) I am
obliged by the duty of my condition. I make not therefore my head
a grave, but a treasure of knowledge. I intend no monopoly, but a
community in learning. I study not for my own sake only, but for
theirs that study not for themselves. I envy no man that knows
more than myself, but pity them that know less. I instruct no man
as an exercise of my knowledge, or with an intent rather to
nourish and keep it alive in mine own head than beget and
propagate it in his. And, in the midst of all my endeavours,
there is but one thought that dejects me, that my acquired parts
must perish with myself, nor can be legacied among my honoured
friends. I cannot fall out or contemn a man for an error, or
conceive why a difference in opinion should divide an
affection; for controversies, disputes, and argumentations, both
in philosophy and in divinity, if they meet with discreet and
peaceable natures, do not infringe the laws of charity. In all
disputes, so much as there is of passion, so much there is of
nothing to the purpose; for then reason, like a bad hound, spends
upon a false scent, and forsakes the question first started. And
this is one reason why controversies are never determined; for,
though they be amply proposed, they are scarce at all handled;
they do so swell with unnecessary digressions; and the
parenthesis on the party is often as large as the main discourse
upon the subject. The foundations of religion are already
established, and the principles of salvation subscribed unto by
all. There remain not many controversies worthy a passion, and
yet never any dispute without, not only in divinity but inferior
arts. What a Batrachomyomachia and hot skirmish is betwixt
S. and T. in Lucian!83
How do grammarians hack and slash for the genitive case in
Jupiter!84 How do they
break their own pates, to salve that of Priscian!85 "Si foret in terris,
rideret Democritus." Yes, even amongst wiser militants,
how many wounds have been given and credits slain, for the poor
victory of an opinion, or beggarly conquest of a distinction!
Scholars are men of peace, they bear no arms, but their tongues
are sharper than Actius's razor.86
their pens carry farther, and give
a louder report than thunder. I had rather stand the shock of a
basilisko87 than in
the fury of a merciless pen. It is not mere zeal to learning, or
devotion to the muses, that wiser princes patron the arts, and
carry an indulgent aspect unto scholars; but a desire to have
their names eternized by the memory of their writings, and a fear
of the revengeful pen of succeeding ages: for these are
the men that, when they have played their parts, and had their exits,
must step out and give the moral of their scenes,
and deliver unto posterity an inventory of their virtues and
vices. And surely there goes a great deal of conscience to the
compiling of an history: there is no reproach to the scandal of a
story; it is such an authentick kind of falsehood, that with
authority belies our good names to all nations and posterity.
Sect. 4.--There is
another offence unto charity, which
no author hath ever written of, and few take notice of, and
that's the reproach, not of whole professions, mysteries, and
conditions, but of whole nations, wherein by opprobrious epithets
we miscall each other, and, by an uncharitable logick, from a
disposition in a few, conclude a habit in all.
Le
mutin Anglois, et le bravache Escossois
Le bougre Italien, et
le fol Francois;
Le poltron Romain, le larron de
Gascogne,
L'Espagnol superbe, et l'Alleman yvrogue.
St Paul, that calls the
Cretians liars, doth it but
indirectly, and upon quotation of their own poet.88 It is as bloody a thought in one
way as Nero's was in another.89
For by a word we wound a thousand,
and at one blow assassin the honour of a nation. It is as
complete a piece of madness to miscall and rave against the
times; or think to recall men to reason by a fit of passion.
Democritus, that thought to laugh the times into goodness, seems
to me as deeply hypochondriack as Heraclitus, that bewailed them.
It moves not my spleen to behold the multitude in their proper
humours; that is, in their fits of folly and madness, as well
understanding that wisdom is not profaned unto the world;
and it is the privilege of a few to be virtuous. They that
endeavour to abolish vice destroy also virtue; for contraries,
though they destroy one another, are yet the life of one another.
Thus virtue (abolish vice) is an idea. Again, the community of
sin doth not disparage goodness; for, when vice gains upon the
major part, virtue, in whom it remains, becomes more excellent,
and, being lost in some, multiplies its goodness in others, which
remain untouched, and persist entire in the general inundation. I
can therefore behold vice without a satire, content only with an
admonition, or instructive reprehension; for noble natures, and
such as are capable of goodness, are railed into vice, that might
as easily be admonished into virtue; and we should be all so far
the orators of goodness as to protect her from the power of vice,
and maintain the cause of injured truth. No man can justly
censure or condemn another; because, indeed, no man truly knows
another. This I perceive in myself; for I am in the dark to all
the world, and my nearest friends behold me but in a cloud. Those
that know me but superficially think less of me than I do of
myself; those of my near acquaintance think more; God who truly
knows me, knows that I am nothing: for he only beholds me, and
all the world, who looks not on us through a derived ray, or a
trajection of a sensible species, but beholds the substance
without the help of accidents, and the forms of things, as we
their operations. Further, no man can judge another, because no
man knows himself; for we censure others but as they disagree
from that humour which we fancy laudable in ourselves, and
commend others but for that wherein they seem to quadrate and
consent with us. So that in conclusion, all is but that we all
condemn, self-love. 'Tis the general complaint of these
times, and perhaps of those past, that charity grows cold; which
I perceive most verified in those which do most manifest the
fires and flames of zeal; for it is a virtue that best agrees
with coldest natures, and such as are complexioned for humility.
But how shall we expect charity towards others, when we are
uncharitable to ourselves? "Charity begins at home," is
the voice of the world; yet is every man his greatest enemy, and
as it were his own executioner. "Non occides,"
is the commandment of God, yet scarce observed by any man; for I
perceive every man is his own Atropos, and lends a hand to cut
the thread of his own days. Cain was not therefore the first
murderer, but Adam, who brought in death; whereof he beheld the
practice and example in his own son Abel; and saw that verified
in the experience of another which faith could not persuade him
in the theory of himself.
Sect. 5.--There
is, I think,
no man that apprehends his own miseries less than myself; and no
man that so nearly apprehends another's. I could lose an arm
without a tear, and with few groans, methinks, be quartered into
pieces; yet can I weep most seriously at a play, and receive with
a true passion the counterfeit griefs of those known and
professed impostures. It is a barbarous part of inhumanity to add
unto any afflicted parties misery, or endeavour to multiply in
any man a passion whose single nature is already above his
patience. This was the greatest affliction of Job, and those
oblique expostulations of his friends a deeper injury than the
down-right blows of the devil. It is not the tears of our own
eyes only, but of our friends also, that do exhaust the current
of our sorrows; which, falling into many streams, runs more
peaceably, and is contented with a narrower channel. It is an act
within the power of charity, to translate a passion out
of one breast into another, and to divide a sorrow almost out of
itself; for an affliction, like a dimension, may be so divided
as, if not indivisible, at least to become insensible. Now with
my friend I desire not to share or participate, but to engross,
his sorrows; that, by making them mine own, I may more easily
discuss them: for in mine own reason, and within myself, I can
command that which I cannot entreat without myself, and within
the circle of another. I have often thought those noble pairs and
examples of friendship, not so truly histories of what had been,
as fictions of what should be; but I now perceive nothing in them
but possibilities, nor anything in the heroick examples of Damon
and Pythias, Achilles and Patroclus, which, methinks, upon some
grounds, I could not perform within the narrow compass of myself.
That a man should lay down his life for his friend seems strange
to vulgar affections and such as confine themselves within that
worldly principle, "Charity begins at home." For mine
own part, I could never remember the relations that I held unto
myself, nor the respect that I owe unto my own nature, in the
cause of God, my country, and my friends. Next to these three, I
do embrace myself. I confess I do not observe that order that the
schools ordain our affections,--to love our parents, wives,
children, and then our friends; for, excepting the injunctions of
religion, I do not find in myself such a necessary and
indissoluble sympathy to all those of my blood. I hope I do not
break the fifth commandment, if I conceive I may love my friend
before the nearest of my blood, even those to whom I owe the
principles of life. I never yet cast a true affection on a woman;
but I have loved my friend, as I do virtue, my soul, my God.
From hence, methinks, I do conceive how God loves man; what
happiness there is in the love of God. Omitting all other, there
are three most mystical unions; two natures in one person; three
persons in one nature; one soul in two bodies. For though,
indeed, they be really divided, yet are they so united, as they
seem but one, and make rather a duality than two distinct souls. Sect.
6.--There are wonders in true affection. It is a
body of enigmas, mysteries, and riddles; wherein two so become
one as they both become two: I love my friend before myself, and
yet, methinks, I do not love him enough. Some few months hence,
my multiplied affection will make me believe I have not loved him
at all. When I am from him, I am dead till I be with him. United
souls are not satisfied with embraces, but desire to be truly
each other; which being impossible, these desires are infinite,
and must proceed without a possibility of satisfaction. Another
misery there is in affection; that whom we truly love like our
own selves, we forget their looks, nor can our memory retain the
idea of their faces: and it is no wonder, for they are ourselves,
and our affection makes their looks our own. This noble affection
falls not on vulgar and common constitutions; but on such as are
marked for virtue. He that can love his friend with this noble
ardour will in a competent degree effect all. Now, if we can
bring our affections to look beyond the body, and cast an eye
upon the soul, we have found out the true object, not only of
friendship, but charity: and the greatest happiness that we can
bequeath the soul is that wherein we all do place our last
felicity, salvation; which, though it be not in our power to
bestow, it is in our charity and pious invocations to desire, if
not procure and further. I cannot contentedly frame a
prayer for myself in particular, without a catalogue for my
friends; nor request a happiness wherein my sociable disposition
doth not desire the fellowship of my neighbour. I never hear the
toll of a passing bell, though in my mirth, without my prayers
and best wishes for the departing spirit. I cannot go to cure the
body of my patient, but I forget my profession, and call unto God
for his soul. I cannot see one say his prayers, but, instead of
imitating him, I fall into supplication for him, who perhaps is
no more to me than a common nature: and if God hath vouchsafed an
ear to my supplications, there are surely many happy that never
saw me, and enjoy the blessing of mine unknown devotions. To pray
for enemies, that is, for their salvation, is no harsh precept,
but the practice of our daily and ordinary devotions. I cannot
believe the story of the Italian;90
our bad wishes and uncharitable
desires proceed no further than this life; it is the devil, and
the uncharitable votes of hell, that desire our misery in the
world to come.
Sect. 7.--"To do
no injury nor take
none" was a principle which, to my former years and
impatient affections, seemed to contain enough of morality, but
my more settled years, and Christian constitution, have fallen
upon severer resolutions. I can hold there is no such things as
injury; that if there be, there is no such injury as revenge, and
no such revenge as the contempt of an injury: that to hate
another is to malign himself; that the truest way to love another
is to despise ourselves. I were unjust unto mine own conscience
if I should say I am at variance with anything like myself. I
find there are many pieces in this one fabrick of man; this frame
is raised upon a mass of antipathies: I am one methinks but as
the world, wherein notwithstanding there are a swarm of
distinct essences, and in them another world of contrarieties; we
carry private and domestick enemies within, public and more
hostile adversaries without. The devil, that did but buffet St
Paul, plays methinks at sharp91
with me. Let me be nothing, if
within the compass of myself, I do not find the battle of
Lepanto,92 passion
against reason, reason against faith, faith against the devil,
and my conscience against all. There is another man within me
that's angry with me, rebukes, commands, and dastards me. I have
no conscience of marble, to resist the hammer of more heavy
offences: nor yet so soft and waxen, as to take the impression of
each single peccadillo or scape of infirmity. I am of a strange
belief, that it is as easy to be forgiven some sins as to commit
some others. For my original sin, I hold it to be washed away in
my baptism; for my actual transgressions, I compute and reckon
with God but from my last repentance, sacrament, or general
absolution; and therefore am not terrified with the sins or
madness of my youth. I thank the goodness of God, I have no sins
that want a name. I am not singular in offences; my
transgressions are epidemical, and from the common breath of our
corruption. For there are certain tempers of body which, matched
with a humorous depravity of mind, do hath and produce
vitiosities, whose newness and monstrosity of nature admits no
name; this was the temper of that lecher that carnaled with a
statua, and the constitution of Nero in his spintrian
recreations. For the heavens are not only fruitful in new and
unheard-of stars, the earth in plants and animals, but men's
minds also in villany and vices. Now the dulness of my reason,
and the vulgarity of my disposition, never prompted my invention
nor solicited my affection unto any of these;-- yet even
those common and quotidian infirmities that so necessarily attend
me, and do seem to be my very nature, have so dejected me, so
broken the estimation that I should have otherwise of myself,
that I repute myself the most abject piece of mortality. Divines
prescribe a fit of sorrow to repentance: there goes indignation,
anger, sorrow, hatred, into mine, passions of a contrary nature,
which neither seem to suit with this action, nor my proper
constitution. It is no breach of charity to ourselves to be at
variance with our vices, nor to abhor that part of us, which is
an enemy to the ground of charity, our God; wherein we do but
imitate our great selves, the world, whose divided antipathies
and contrary faces do yet carry a charitable regard unto the
whole, by their particular discords preserving the common
harmony, and keeping in fetters those powers, whose rebellions,
once masters, might be the ruin of all.
Sect. 8.--I
thank God, amongst those millions of vices I do inherit and hold
from Adam, I have escaped one, and that a mortal enemy to
charity,--the first and father sin, not only of man, but of the
devil,--pride; a vice whose name is comprehended in a
monosyllable, but in its nature not circumscribed with a world, I
have escaped it in a condition that can hardly avoid it. Those
petty acquisitions and reputed perfections, that advance and
elevate the conceits of other men, add no feathers unto mine. I
have seen a grammarian tower and plume himself over a single line
in Horace, and show more pride, in the construction of one ode,
than the author in the composure of the whole book. For my own
part, besides the jargon and patois of several provinces,
I understand no less than six languages; yet I protest I have no
higher conceit of myself than had our fathers before the
confusion of Babel, when there was but one language in
the world, and none to boast himself either linguist or critick.
I have not only seen several countries, beheld the nature of
their climes, the chorography of their provinces, topography of
their cities, but understood their several laws, customs, and
policies; yet cannot all this persuade the dulness of my spirit
unto such an opinion of myself as I behold in nimbler and
conceited heads, that never looked a degree beyond their nests. I
know the names and somewhat more of all the constellations in my
horizon; yet I have seen a prating mariner, that could only name
the pointers and the north-star, out-talk me, and conceit himself
a whole sphere above me. I know most of the plants of my country,
and of those about me, yet methinks I do not know so many as when
I did but know a hundred, and had scarcely ever simpled further
than Cheapside. For, indeed, heads of capacity, and such as are
not full with a handful or easy measure of knowledge, think they
know nothing till they know all; which being impossible, they
fall upon the opinion of Socrates, and only know they know not
anything. I cannot think that Homer pined away upon the riddle of
the fishermen, or that Aristotle, who understood the uncertainty
of knowledge, and confessed so often the reason of man too weak
for the works of nature, did ever drown himself upon the flux and
reflux of Euripus.93
We do but learn, to-day, what our better advanced judgments will
unteach to-morrow; and Aristotle doth but instruct us, as Plato
did him, that is, to confute himself. I have run through all
sorts, yet find no rest in any: though our first studies and
junior endeavours may style us Peripateticks, Stoicks, or
Academicks, yet I perceive the wisest heads prove, at last,
almost all Scepticks,94 and
stand like Janus in the field
of knowledge. I have therefore one common and authentick
philosophy I learned in the schools, whereby I discourse and
satisfy the reason of other men; another more reserved, and drawn
from experience, whereby I content mine own. Solomon, that
complained of ignorance in the height of knowledge, hath not only
humbled my conceits, but discouraged my endeavours. There is yet
another conceit that hath sometimes made me shut my books, which
tells me it is a vanity to waste our days in the blind pursuit of
knowledge: it is but attending a little longer, and we shall
enjoy that, by instinct and infusion, which we endeavour at here
by labour and inquisition. It is better to sit down in a modest
ignorance, and rest contented with the natural blessing of our
own reasons, than by the uncertain knowledge of this life with
sweat and vexation, which death gives every fool gratis, and is
an accessary of our glorification.
Sect. 9.--I was
never yet once, and commend their resolutions who never marry
twice. Not that I disallow of second marriage; as neither in all
cases of polygamy, which considering some times, and the unequal
number of both sexes, may be also necessary. The whole world was
made for man, but the twelfth part of man for woman. Man is the
whole world, and the breath of God; woman the rib and crooked
piece of man. I could be content that we might procreate like
trees, without conjunction, or that there were any way to
perpetuate the world without this trivial and vulgar way of
coition: it is the foolishest act a wise man commits in all his
life, nor is there anything that will more deject his cooled
imagination, when he shall consider what an odd and unworthy
piece of folly he hath committed. I speak not in prejudice, nor
am averse from that sweet sex, but naturally amorous of all that
is beautiful. I can look a whole day with delight upon a
handsome picture, though it be but of an horse. It is my temper,
and I like it the better, to affect all harmony; and sure there
is musick, even in the beauty and the silent note which Cupid
strikes, far sweeter than the sound of an instrument. For there
is a musick wherever there is a harmony, order, or proportion;
and thus far we may maintain "the musick of the
spheres:" for those well-ordered motions, and regular paces,
though they give no sound unto the ear, yet to the understanding
they strike a note most full of harmony. Whatsoever is
harmonically composed delights in harmony, which makes me much
distrust the symmetry of those heads which declaim against all
church-musick. For myself, not only from my obedience but my
particular genius I do embrace it: for even that vulgar and
tavern- musick which makes one man merry, another mad, strikes in
me a deep fit of devotion, and a profound contemplation of the
first composer. There is something in it of divinity more than
the ear discovers: it is an hieroglyphical and shadowed lesson of
the whole world, and creatures of God,--such a melody to the ear,
as the whole world, well understood, would afford the
understanding. In brief, it is a sensible fit of that harmony
which intellectually sounds in the ears of God. I will not say,
with Plato, the soul is an harmony, but harmonical, and hath its
nearest sympathy unto musick: thus some, whose temper of body
agrees, and humours the constitution of their souls, are born
poets, though indeed all are naturally inclined unto rhythm. This
made Tacitus, in the very first line of his story, fall upon a
*
"Urbem a Romam in principio reges habuere."
*
"In qua me non inferior mediocriter esse."--Pro
Archia Poeta.
|
verse;*
and Cicero, the worst of poets, but declaiming for a poet, falls
in the very first sentence upon a perfect hexameter.* I
feel not in me those sordid and unchristian desires of my
profession; I do not secretly implore and wish for plagues,
rejoice at famines, revolve ephemerides and almanacks in
expectation of malignant aspects, fatal conjunctions, and
eclipses. I rejoice not at unwholesome springs nor unseasonable
winters: my prayer goes with the husbandman's; I desire
everything in its proper season, that neither men nor the times
be out of temper. Let me be sick myself, if sometimes the malady
of my patient be not a disease unto me. I desire rather to cure
his infirmities than my own necessities. Where I do him no good,
methinks it is scarce honest gain, though I confess 'tis but the
worthy salary of our well intended endeavours. I am not only
ashamed but heartily sorry, that, besides death, there are
diseases incurable; yet not for my own sake or that they be
beyond my art, but for the general cause and sake of humanity,
whose common cause I apprehend as mine own. And, to speak more
generally, those three noble professions which all civil
commonwealths do honour, are raised upon the fall of Adam, and
are not any way exempt from their infirmities. There are not only
diseases incurable in physick, but cases indissolvable in law,
vices incorrigible in divinity. If general councils may err, I do
not see why particular courts should be infallible: their
perfectest rules are raised upon the erroneous reasons of man,
and the laws of one do but condemn the rules of another; as
Aristotle ofttimes the opinions of his predecessors, because,
though agreeable to reason, yet were not consonant to his own
rules and the logick of his proper principles. Again,-- to speak
nothing of the sin against the Holy Ghost, whose cure not
only, but whose nature is unknown,--I can cure the gout or stone
in some, sooner than divinity, pride, or avarice in others. I can
cure vices by physick when they remain incurable by divinity, and
they shall obey my pills when they contemn their precepts. I
boast nothing, but plainly say, we all labour against our own
cure; for death is the cure of all diseases. There is no catholicon
or universal remedy I know, but this, which
though nauseous to queasy stomachs, yet to prepared appetites is
nectar, and a pleasant potion of immortality.
Sect.
10.--For my conversation, it is, like the sun's, with all men,
and with a friendly aspect to good and bad. Methinks there is no
man bad; and the worst best, that is, while they are kept within
the circle of those qualities wherein they are good. There is no
man's mind of so discordant and jarring a temper, to which a
tuneable disposition may not strike a harmony. Magnæ
virtutes, nec minora vitia; it is the poy95 of the best natures, and may be
inverted on the worst. There are, in the most depraved and
venomous dispositions, certain pieces that remain untouched,
which by an antiperistasis96
become more excellent, or by the
excellency of their antipathies are able to preserve themselves
from the contagion of their enemy vices, and persist entire
beyond the general corruption. For it is also thus in nature: the
greatest balsams do lie enveloped in the bodies of the most
powerful corrosives. I say moreover, and I ground upon
experience, that poisons contain within themselves their own
antidote, and that which preserves them from the venom of
themselves; without which they were not deleterious to others
only, but to themselves also. But it is the corruption that I
fear within me; not the contagion of commerce without me.
'Tis that unruly regiment within me, that will destroy me; 'tis
that I do infect myself; the man without a navel97 yet lives in me. I feel that
original canker corrode and devour me: and therefore, "Defenda me,
Dios, de me!" "Lord, deliver
me from myself!" is a part of my litany, and the first voice
of my retired imaginations. There is no man alone, because every
man is a microcosm, and carries the whole world about him. "Nunquam
minus solus quam cum
* "Cic. de Off.," I.
iii. |
solus,"*
though it be the apothegm of a wise man is yet true in the mouth
of a fool: for indeed, though in a wilderness, a man is never
alone; not only because he is with himself, and his own thoughts,
but because he is with the devil, who ever consorts with our
solitude, and is that unruly rebel that musters up those
disordered motions which accompany our sequestered imaginations.
And to speak more narrowly, there is no such thing as solitude,
nor anything that can be said to be alone, and by itself, but
God;--who is his own circle, and can subsist by himself; all
others, besides their dissimilary and heterogeneous parts, which
in a manner multiply their natures, cannot subsist without the
concourse of God, and the society of that hand which doth uphold
their natures. In brief, there can be nothing truly alone, and by
its self, which is not truly one, and such is only God: all
others do transcend an unity, and so by consequence are many.
Sect. 11.--Now for
my life, it is a miracle of thirty
years, which to relate, were not a history, but a piece of
poetry, and would sound to common ears like a fable. For the
world, I count it not an inn, but an hospital; and a place not to
live, but to die in. The world that I regard is myself; it is the
microcosm of my own frame that I cast mine eye on: for
the other, I use it but like my globe, and turn it round
sometimes for my recreation. Men that look upon my outside,
perusing only my condition and fortunes, do err in my altitude;
for I am above Atlas's shoulders.98
The earth is a point not only in
respect of the heavens above us, but of the heavenly and
celestial part within us. That mass of flesh that circumscribes
me limits not my mind. That surface that tells the heavens it
hath an end cannot persuade me I have any. I take my circle to be
above three hundred and sixty. Though the number of the ark do
measure my body, it comprehendeth not my mind. Whilst I study to
find how I am a microcosm, or little world, I find myself
something more than the great. There is surely a piece of
divinity in us; something that was before the elements, and owes
no homage unto the sun. Nature tells me, I am the image of God,
as well as Scripture. He that understands not thus much hath not
his introduction or first lesson, and is yet to begin the
alphabet of man. Let me not injure the felicity of others, if I
say I am as happy as any. Ruat coelum, fiat voluntas
tua," salveth all; so that, whatsoever happens, it is
but what our daily prayers desire. In brief, I am content; and
what should providence add more? Surely this is it we call
happiness, and this do I enjoy; with this I am happy in a dream,
and as content to enjoy a happiness in a fancy, as others in a
more apparent truth and reality. There is surely a nearer
apprehension of anything that delights us, in our dreams, than in
our waked senses. Without this I were unhappy; for my awaked
judgment discontents me, ever whispering unto me that I am from
my friend, but my friendly dreams in the night requite me, and
make me think I am within his arms. I thank God for my happy
dreams, as I do for my good rest; for there is a
satisfaction in them unto reasonable desires, and such as can be
content with a fit of happiness. And surely it is not a
melancholy conceit to think we are all asleep in this world, and
that the conceits of this life are as mere dreams, to those of
the next, as the phantasms of the night, to the conceits of the
day. There is an equal delusion in both; and the one doth but
seem to be the emblem or picture of the other. We are somewhat
more than ourselves in our sleeps; and the slumber of the body
seems to be but the waking of the soul. It is the ligation of
sense, but the liberty of reason; and our waking conceptions do
not match the fancies of our sleeps. At my nativity, my ascendant
was the watery sign of Scorpio. I was born in the
planetary hour of Saturn, and I think I have a piece of
that leaden planet in me. I am no way facetious, nor disposed for
the mirth and galliardise99 of
company; yet in one dream I can
compose a whole comedy, behold the action, apprehend the jests,
and laugh myself awake at the conceits thereof. Were my memory as
faithful as my reason is then fruitful, I would never study but
in my dreams, and this time also would I choose for my devotions:
but our grosser memories have then so little hold of our
abstracted understandings, that they forget the story, and can
only relate to our awaked souls a confused and broken tale of
that which hath passed. Aristotle, who hath written a singular
tract of sleep, hath not, methinks, thoroughly defined it; nor
yet Galen, though he seem to have corrected it; for those noctambulos
and night-walkers, though in their sleep, do
yet enjoy the action of their senses. We must therefore say that
there is something in us that is not in the jurisdiction of
Morpheus; and that those abstracted and ecstatick souls
do walk about in their own corpses, as spirits with the bodies
they assume, wherein they seem to hear, see, and feel, though
indeed the organs are destitute of sense, and their natures of
those faculties that should inform them. Thus it is observed,
that men sometimes, upon the hour of their departure, do speak
and reason above themselves. For then the soul beginning to be
freed from the ligaments of the body, begins to reason like
herself, and to discourse in a strain above mortality.
Sect. 12.--We term
sleep a death; and yet it is waking
that kills us, and destroys those spirits that are the house of
life. 'Tis indeed a part of life that best expresseth death; for
every man truly lives, so long as he acts his nature, or some way
makes good the faculties of himself. Themistocles therefore, that
slew his soldier in his sleep, was a merciful executioner: 'tis a
kind of punishment the mildness of no laws hath invented; I
wonder the fancy of Lucan and Seneca did not discover it. It is
that death by which we may be literally said to die daily; a
death which Adam died before his mortality; a death whereby we
live a middle and moderating point between life and death. In
fine, so like death, I dare not trust it without my prayers, and
an half adieu unto the world, and take my farewell in a colloquy
with God:--
The night is
come, like
to the day;
Depart not thou, great God, away.
Let not my
sins, black as the night,
Eclipse the lustre of thy
light.
Keep still in my horizon; for to me
The sun makes
not the day, but thee.
Thou whose nature cannot sleep,
On
my temples sentry keep;
Guard me 'gainst those
watchful foes,
Whose eyes are open while mine close.
Let
no dreams my head infest,
But such as Jacob's temples
blest.
While I do rest, my soul advance:
Make my sleep a
holy trance:
That I may, my rest being wrought,
Awake
into some holy thought,
And with as active vigour run
My
course as doth the nimble sun.
Sleep is a death;--Oh make me
try,
By sleeping, what it is to die!
And as gently lay my
head
On my grave, as now my bed.
Howe'er I rest, great
God, let me
Awake again at last with thee.
And thus
assured, behold I lie
Securely, or to wake or die.
These
are my drowsy days; in vain
I do now wake to sleep again:
Oh come that hour, when I shall never
Sleep again, but wake
for ever!
This is the dormitive I
take to bedward; I need no other laudanum than this to
make me sleep; after which I close mine eyes in security, content
to take my leave of the sun, and sleep unto the resurrection.
Sect. 13.--The
method I should use in distributive
justice, I often observe in commutative; and keep a geometrical
proportion in both, whereby becoming equable to others, I become
unjust to myself, and supererogate in that common principle,
"Do unto others as thou wouldst be done unto thyself."
I was not born unto riches, neither is it, I think, my star to be
wealthy; or if it were, the freedom of my mind, and frankness of
my disposition, were able to contradict and cross my fates: for
to me avarice seems not so much a vice, as a deplorable
piece of madness; to conceive ourselves urinals, or be persuaded
that we are dead, is not so ridiculous, nor so many degrees
beyond the power of hellebore,100
as this. The opinions of theory,
and positions of men, are not so void of reason, as their
practised conclusions. Some have held that snow is black, that
the earth moves, that the soul is air, fire, water; but all this
is philosophy: and there is no delirium, if we do but speculate
the folly and indisputable dotage of avarice. To that
subterraneous idol, and god of the earth, I do confess I am an
atheist. I cannot persuade myself to honour that the world
adores; whatsoever virtue its prepared substance may have within
my body, it hath no influence nor operation without. I would not
entertain a base design, or an action that should call me
villain, for the Indies; and for this only do I love and honour
my own soul, and have methinks two arms too few to embrace
myself. Aristotle is too severe, that will not allow us to be
truly liberal without wealth, and the bountiful hand of fortune;
if this be true, I must confess I am charitable only in my
liberal intentions, and bountiful well wishes. But if the example
of the mite be not only an act of wonder, but an example of the
noblest charity, surely poor men may also build hospitals, and
the rich alone have not erected cathedrals. I have a private
method which others observe not; I take the opportunity of myself
to do good; I borrow occasion of charity from my own necessities,
and supply the wants of others, when I am in most need myself:
for it is an honest stratagem to take advantage of ourselves, and
so to husband the acts of virtue, that, where they are defective
in one circumstance, they may repay their want, and multiply
their goodness in another. I have not Peru in my desires,
but a competence and ability to perform those good works to
which he hath inclined my nature. He is rich who hath enough to
be charitable; and it is hard to be so poor that a noble mind may
not find a way to this piece of goodness. "He that giveth to
the poor lendeth to the Lord:" there is more rhetorick in
that one sentence than in a library of sermons. And indeed, if
those sentences were understood by the reader with the same
emphasis as they are delivered by the author, we needed not those
volumes of instructions, but might be honest by an epitome. Upon
this motive only I cannot behold a beggar without relieving his
necessities with my purse, or his soul with my prayers. These
scenical and accidental differences between us cannot make me
forget that common and untoucht part of us both: there is under
these centoes101 and
miserable outsides, those mutilate and semi bodies, a soul of the
same alloy with our own, whose genealogy is God's as well as
ours, and in as fair a way to salvation as ourselves. Statists
that labour to contrive a commonwealth without our poverty take
away the object of charity; not understanding only the
commonwealth of a Christian, but
* "The poor ye have always with
you." |
forgetting the
prophecy of Christ.*
Sect. 14.--Now,
there is another
part of charity, which is the basis and pillar of this, and that
is the love of God, for whom we love our neighbour; for this I
think charity, to love God for himself, and our neighbour for
God. And all that is truly amiable is God, or as it were a
divided piece of him, that retains a reflex or shadow of himself.
Nor is it strange that we should place affection on that which is
invisible: all that we truly love is thus. What we adore under
affection of our senses deserves not the honour of so pure a
title. Thus we adore virtue, though to the eyes of sense
she be invisible. Thus that part of our noble friends that we
love is not that part that we embrace, but that insensible part
that our arms cannot embrace. God being all goodness, can love
nothing but himself; he loves us but for that part which is as it
were himself, and the traduction of his Holy Spirit. Let us call
to assize the loves of our parents, the affection of our wives
and children, and they are all dumb shows and dreams, without
reality, truth, or constancy. For first there is a strong bond of
affection between us and our parents; yet how easily dissolved!
We betake ourselves to a woman, forgetting our mother in a wife,
and the womb that bare us in that which shall bear our image.
This woman blessing us with children, our affection leaves the
level it held before, and sinks from our bed unto our issue and
picture of posterity: where affection holds no steady mansion;
they growing up in years, desire our ends; or, applying
themselves to a woman, take a lawful way to love another better
than ourselves. Thus I perceive a man may be buried alive, and
behold his grave in his own issue.
Sect. 15.--I
conclude therefore, and say, there is no
* Who holds that the sun
is the centre of the world. |
happiness under (or, as Copernicus* will
have it, above) the sun; nor any crambe102
in that repeated verity and
burthen of all the wisdom of Solomon: "All is vanity and
vexation of spirit;" there is no felicity in that the world
adores. Aristotle, whilst he labours to refute the ideas
of Plato, falls upon one himself: for his summum bonum is
a chimæra; and there is no such thing as his felicity. That
wherein God himself is happy, the holy angels are happy, in whose
defect the devils are unhappy;--that dare I call happiness: what
soever conduceth unto this, may, with an easy metaphor,
deserve that name; whatsoever else the world terms happiness is,
to me, a story out of Pliny, a tale of Bocace or Malizspini, an
apparition or neat delusion, wherein there is no more of
happiness than the name. Bless me in this life with but the peace
of my conscience, command of my affections, the love of thyself
and my dearest friends, and I shall be happy enough to pity
Cæsar! These are, O Lord, the humble desires of my most
reasonable ambition, and all I dare call happiness on earth;
wherein I set no rule or limit to thy hand or providence; dispose
of me according to the wisdom of thy pleasure. Thy will be done,
though in my own undoing.
Introduction |
Religio Medici | Urn-Burial | Letter to a Friend | Notes
|