James I's Basilikon Doron
Source: James I. Basilikon Doron or His Majesties Instrvctions
To His Dearest Sonne, Henry the Prince. [Edinburgh 1599, 7 copies only;
Edinburgh, London (2 edns) 1603; London, Hanoviae, 1604 (Latin); Paris
1603, 1604 (French), according to Introduction, p ciii].
Poitical Works
of James I. Ed. Charles Howard McIlwain. Cambridge: Harvard University
Press, 1918. 3-52. Before using any portion of this text in any theme,
essay, research paper, thesis, or dissertation, please read the disclaimer.
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Table of Contents: THE
ARGUMENT+ | TO HENRY MY DEAREST SONNE+
| TO THE READER+ | OF A KINGS CHRISTIAN DVETIE
TOWARDS GOD+ | OF A KINGS DVETIE IN HIS
OFFICE+. | OF A KINGS BEHAVIOVR IN INDIFFERENT+
THINGS.
Index: Items singled out for indexing are marked
by plus signs and underlined for access by mouseclcick.
Im the index, numbers in parentheses indicate how many times the item will
occur in the text.
aduice+(1) | affability+(1)
| affable+(1) | amateur+(2)
| amitie+(1) | Anabaptists+(1)
| anger+(1) | Antonio+(2)
| bastard+(1) | benefits+(1)
| burthen+(1) |
Cardinall_vertues+(1) | cheere+(1) |
chesse+(1) | clemencie+(1) |
Clemencie+(1) | compassion+(1) |
Constancie+(1) | contemplation+(1) |
Cordelia+(1) | courage+(1) |
courtesies+(1) | death+(1) |
deeds+(1) |
deeds_words+(1) |
Democracie+(1) | deserts+(1) |
Edmund+(1) | effeminate+(1) |
Falstaff+(1) | father+(1) |
fatherly_loue+(1) | Fathers+(1) |
Flatterie+(1) | flattering+(1) |
fortitude+(1) | Fortunae+(1) |
friendship+(2) | grace+(1) |
Gunnes+(1) | Hal+(2) | hazard+(1)
| histories+(1) | honest+(2)
| Humilitie+(1) | ingratitude+(1)
| instruction+(1) |
iust_quarrels+(1) | iustice+(1) |
Iustice+(1)
| just_war+(1) | justice_mercy+(1)
| king_over_self+(1) |
Lear+(2) | liberal_arts+(1) |
Liberalitie+(1) | liberall+(1) |
liberall_artes+(1) | louing+(1) |
Magnanimitie+(1) | mean_extreme+(1) |
Merchants+(1) | merrinesse+(1) |
moderation+(1) | neighbours+(1) |
noble_blood+(1) | obligation+(1) |
oblige+(1)
| office+(1) | open+(1) |
order+(1) | passion+(1) |
pedant+(1) | PlainDealer+(6) |
plaine+(7) | plaine_and_single+(1)
| plainenesse+(1) | Plainly+(1)
| plainnest+(1) | poore+(1)
| Portia+(1) | precise+(2)
|
promise+(1) | Prospero+(3)
| puritanes+(1) | Puritanes+(1)
| Republicke+(1) |
Roman_Christian+(1) | self_criticism+(1)
| Shylock+(1) | Stoic+(1)
| stoic_unfeeling+(1) |
Stoicke+(1) | sufficient_unto_day+(1)
| three_Kingdomes+(1) |
Timon+(1) | Tyran+(1) |
Tyrant+(1) | Tyrants+(1) |
usthem+(1) | vtile_dulci+(1) |
wrath+(1) | Wyf+(1) |
THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
THE ARGUMENT+. SONNET.
GOD giues not Kings the stile of Gods in vaine,
For on his Throne his Scepter doe they swey:
And as their subjects ought them to obey,
So Kings should feare and serue their God againe
If then ye would enjoy a happie raigne,
Obserue the Statutes of your heauenly King,
And from his Law, make all your Lawes to spring:
Since his Lieutenant here ye should remain,
Reward the iust, be stedfast, true, and
plaine+,
Represse the proud, maintayning aye the right,
Walke alwayes so, as euer in his sight,
Who guardes the godly, plaguing the prophane:
And so ye shall in Princely vertues shine,
Resembling right your mightie King Diuine.
TO HENRY MY DEAREST SONNE+,
AND NATVRAL SVCCESSOVR.
WHOM-to can so rightly appertaine this Booke
of instructions to a Prince in all the points of his calling, as well generall,
as a Christian towards God; as particular, as a King towards his people?
Whom-to, I say, can it so iustly appertaine, as vnto you my dearest Sonne?
Since I the authour thereof, as your naturall Father, must be carefull
for your godly and vertuous education, as my eldest Sonne, and the first
fruits of Gods blessing towards mee in thy posteritie: and as a King
must timously prouide for your trayning vp in all the points of a Kings
Office; since yee are my naturall and lawfull successour therein:
that being rightly informed hereby, of the weight of your
burthen+, ye may in time beginne to consider, that being borne to be
a king, ye are rather borne to onus, then honos: not excelling all
your People sofarre in ranke and honour, as in daily care and hazardous
paines-taking, for tke dutifull administration of that great office, that
God hath laide vpon your shoulders. Laying so a just symmetrie and
proportion, betwixt the height of your
[Basil-3]
[Basil-4] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
honourable place, and the heauie weight of your great charge:
and consequently, in case of failing, which God forbid, of the sadnesse
of your fall, according to the proportion of that height. I haue
therefore for the greater ease to your memory, and that yee may, at the
first cast up any part that yee haue to doe with, deuided this Treatise
in three parts. The first teacheth you your duetie towards God as
a Christian: the next, your duetie in your Office as a King:
and the third informeth you how to behaue your selfe in indifferent things,
which of them-selues are neither right nor among, but according as they
are rightly or wrong vsed; and yet will serue according to your behauiour
therein, to augment or empaire your fame and authoritie at the handes of
your people. Receiue and welcome this Booke then, as a faithfull
Preceptour and counsellour vnto you: which, because my affaires will
not permit mee euer to bee present with you, I ordaine to bee a resident
faithfull admonisher of you: And because the houre of death is vncertaine
to mee, {usthem+} as vnto all flesh,
I leaue it as my Testament, and latter will vnto you. Chargeing you
in the presence of GOD, and by the fatherly authoritie I haue ouer you,
that yee keepe it euer with you, as carefully, as Alexander did the Iliads
of Homer. Yee will finde it a iust and impartiall counsellour; neither
flattering you in any vice, not importuning you at vnmeete times.
It will not come vn-called, neither speake vnspeered at: and yet conferring
with it when yee are at quiet, yee shall say with Scipio, that yee are
nunquam minas solus, quam cum solus. To conclude then, I charge you,
as euer yee thinks to deserue my Fatherly blessing, to follow and put in
practise, as farre as lyeth in you, the precepts hereafter following. And
if yee follow the contrary course, i take the Great GOD to record, that
this Booke shall one day bee a witnesse betwixt mee and you; and shall
procure to bee ratified in Heauen, the curse that in that case here I giue
vnto you. For I protest before that Great GOD, I had rather not bee
a Father, and childlesse, then bee a Father of wicked children. But
hoping, yea, euen promising vnto my selfe, that GOD, who in his great blessing
sent you vnto mee; shall in the same blessing, as hee hath giuen mee a
Sonne; so make him a good and a godly Sonne; not repenting him of his mercie
shewed vnto mee, I end, with my earnest prayer to GOD, to worke effectually
unto you, the fruites of that blessing, which here from my eart I bestow
vpon you.
Your louing Father
I. R.
TO THE READER+.
CHARITABLE Reader; it is one of the golden
Sentences, which Christ our Sauiour vttered to his Apostles, that there
is nothing so couered, that shal not be reuealed, neither so hidde, that
shall not be knowen; and whatsoeuer they haue spoken in darkenesse, should
be heard in the light: and that which they had spoken in the care
in secret place, should, be publikely preached on the tops of the houses:/1
And since he hath said it, most trew must it be, since the authour thereof
is the fountaine and very being of trewth: which should mooue all
godly and honest
-----
Luk. 12.
BASIELIKON DORON [Basil-5]
men, to be very warie in all their secretest actions, and whatsoeuer
middesses they vse for attaining to their most wished ends; lest
otherwise how auowable soeuer that the marke be, whereat they aime, the
middesses being discouered to be shamefull whereby they climbe, it may
turne to the disgrace both of the good worke it selfe, and of the author
thereof; since the deepest of our secrets, cannot be hidde from that all-seeing
eye, and penetrant light, piercing through the bowels of very darkenesse
it selfe. But as this is generally trew in the actions of all men,
so is it more specially trew in the affaires of Kings: for Kings
being publike persons, by reason of their office and authority, are as
it were set (as it was said of old) vpon a publike stage, in the sight
of all the people; where all the beholders eyes are attentiuely bent to
looke and pry in the least circumstance of their secretest drifts:
Which should make Kings the more carefull not to harbour the secretest
thought in their minde, but such as in the owne time they shall not be
ashamed openly to auouch; assuring themselues that Time the mother of Veritie,
will in the due season bring her owne daughter to perfection.
The trew practise hereof, I haue as a King
oft found in my owne person, though
I thanke God, neuer to my shame, hauing laide my count, euer to walke
as in the eyes of the Almightie, examining cuer so the secretest
of my drifts, before I gaue them course, as how they might some day bide
the touchstone of a publike triall. And amongst the rest of my secret
actions, which haue (vnlooked for of me) come to pub-like knowledge, it
hath so fared with my BAMAIKON AUPON, directed, to my eldest son; which
I wrote for exercise of mine owne ingyne, and instruction of him, who is
appointed by God (I hope) to sit on my Throne after me: For the purpose
and matter thereof being onely fit for a King, as teaching him his office;
and the personwhom for it was ordained, as Kings heire, whose secret counsellor
and faithfull ad-
monisher it must be, I thought it no wayes conuenient nor comely, that
either it should to all be proclaimed, which to one onely appertained (and
specially being a messenger betwixt two so coniunct persons) or yet
that the mould whereupon he should frame his future behauiour, when hee
comes both vnto the perfection of his yeeres, and possession of his inheritance,
should before the hand be made common to the people, the subiect of his
future happy gouernment. And thereforefor the more secret and close
keeping of them, I onely permitted semen of them to be printed, the Printer
being first sworne for secrecie: and these semen I dispersed amongst
some of my trustieft seruants, to be keeped closely by them, lest in case
by the iniquitie or wearing of time, any of them might haue beene lost,
yet some of them might haue remained after me, as witnesses to my Sonne,
both of the honest integritie of my heart, and of my fatherly affection
and our naturall care towards him. But since contrary to my ntention
and expectation, as I ledy haue alreadie said, this Booke is now vented,
and setfoorth to the publike view of the world, and consequently subiect
to euery mans censure, as the current of his affection leades him; I am
now forced, as well for esisting to the malice of the children of enuie,
who like waspes sucke venome out of euery wholsome herbe; as for the satisfaction
of the godly honest sort, in any thing that they may mistake therein, both
to publish and spread the true copies thereof, for defacing of the false
copies that are
[Basil-6] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
alreadie spread, as I am enformed; as likewise by this Preface, to cleare
such parts thereof, as in respect of the concised shortnesse of my Style,
may be mis-In'terpreted therein.
To come then particularly to the matter of
my Booke, there are two speciall great points, which (as I am informed)
the malicious sort of men haue detracted therein; and some of the honest
sort haue seemed a little to mistake: whereof the first and greatest
is, that some sentences therein should seeme to furnish grounds to men,
to doubt of my sinceritie in that Religion, which I have euer constantly
professed; the other is, that in some parts thereof I should seeme to nourish
in my minde, a vindictiue resolution against England, or at the least,
some principals there, for the Queene my mothers quarrell.
The first calumnie (most grieuous indeed)
is grounded vpon the sharpe and bitter wordes, that therein are vsed in
the description of the humors of Puritanes, and rash-headie Preachers,
that thinke it their honour to contend with Kings, and perturbe whole kingdomes.
The other point is onely grounded vpon the strait charge I giue my Sonne,
not to heare nor suffer any vnreuerent speeches or bookes against any of
his parents or progenitors: wherein I doe alledge my owne experience
anent the Queene my mother; affirming, that I neuer found any that were
of Perfit aage the time of her reigne here, so steadfastly trew to me in
all my troubles, as these that constantly kept their allegiance to her
in her time. But if the charitable Reader will aduisedly consider,
both the methode and matter of my Treatise, he will easily iudge, what
wrong I haue sustained by the carping at both: For my Booke, suppose
very small, being diuided in three seuerall parts; the first Part thereof
onely treats of a Kings duety towards God in Religion, wherein I haue so
clearely made profession of my Religion, calling it the Religion wherein
I was brought vp, and euer made profession of, and wishing him euer to
continue in the same, as the onely trew forme of Gods worship; that I would
haue thought my sincere plainnesse in that first part vpon that subiect,
should haue ditted the mouth of the most enuious Momus, that euer hell
did hatch, from barking at any other part of my booke vpon that ground,
except they would alledge me to be contrarie to my selfe, which in so small
a volume would smell of too great weakenesse, and sliprinesse of memory.
And the second part of my booke, teaches my Sonne how to vse his Office,
in the administration of Iustice and Politicke Gouernment: The third
ondy containing a Kings outward behauiour in indifferent things; what agreeance
and onformitie hee ought to keepe betwixt his outward behauiour in these
things, and the vertuous qualities of his minde; and how they should seruefor
trunsh-men, to interprete the inward disposition of the minde, to the eyes
of them that cannot see farther within him, and therefore must onely iudge
of him by the outward appearance: So as if there were no more to
be looked into, but the very methode and order of the booke, it will sufficiently
cleare me of that first and grieuousest imputation, in the point of Religion:
since in thefirst part, where Religion is onely treated of, I speake soPlainly+.
And what in other parts I speake of Puritanes+,
it is onely of their morall faults, in that part where I
speake of Policie: declar-
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-7]
ing when they contemne the Law and souereigne authoritie, what exemplare
punishment they deserue for the same. And now as to the matter it
selfe whereupon this scandall is taken, that I may sufficiently satisfie
all honest men, and by a iust Apologie raise vp a brasen wall or bulwarke
against all the darts of the enuious, I will the more narrowly rip vp the
words, whereat they seeme to be somewhat stomacked.
First then, as to the name of Puritanes, I
am not ignorant that the style thereof doeth properly belong onely to that
vile sect amongst the Anabaptists, called the Family of loue; because they
thinke themselues onely pure, and in a maner without sinne, the onely trwe
Church, and onely worthy to be participant of the Sacraments, and all the
rest of the world to be but abomination in the sight of God. Of this
speciall sect I principally meane, when I speake of Puritans; divers of
them, as Browne, Penry and others, hauing at sundrie times come into Scotland,
to sow their popple amongst vs (and from my heart I wish, that they had
left no schollers behinde them, who by their fruits will in the owne time
be manifested) and partly indeede, I giue this style to such brain-sicke
and headie Preachers their disciples and followers, as refusing to be called
of that sect, yet participate too much with their humours, in maintaining
the aboue-mentioned errours; not onely agreeing with the generall rule
of all Anabaptists, in the contempt of the ciuill Magistrate, and in leaning
to their owne dreams and reuelations; but particularly with this sect,
in accounting all men profane that sweare not to all their fantasies, in
making for euery particular question of the policie of the Church, as great
commotion, as if the article of the Trinitie were called in very controuersie,
in making the scriptures to be ruled by their conscience, and not their
conscience by the Scripture; and he that denies the least iote of their
grounds, sit tibi tanquam ethnicus & publicanus; not worthy to enioy
the benefite of breathing, much lesse to participate with them of the Sacraments:
and before that any of their grounds be impugned, let King, people, Law
and all~be trode vnder foote: Such holy warres are to be preferred
to an vngodly peace: no, in such cases Christian Princes are not
onely to be resisted vnto, but not to be prayed for, for prayer must come
of Faith; and it is reuealed to their consciences, that GOD will heare
no prayer for such a Prince. Iudge then, Christian Reader, if I wrong
this sort of people, in giuing them the stile of that sect, whose errours
they imitate: and since they are contented to weare their liuerie, let
them not be ashamed to borrow also their name.
It is onely of this kinde of men that in this booke I write so sharply;
and whom I wish my Sonne to punish, in-case they refuse to obey the Law,
and will not cease to sturre vp a rebellion: Whom against I haue
written the more bitterly, in respect of diuers famous libels, and iniurious
speaches spread by some of them, not onely dishonourably inuective against
all Christian Princes, but euen reproachfull to our profession and Religion
in respect they are come out vnder coulour thereof. and yet were
neuer answered but by Papists, who generally medle aswell against them,
as the religion it selfe; whereby the skandale was rather doubled, then
taken away. But on the other part, I
protest vpon mine honour, I meane it not generally of all Preachers,
or others, that like better of the single forme of policie in our Church,
then of the many Ceremonies in the
[Basil-8] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES
Church of England; that are perswaded, that their Bishops smell of a
Papall supremacie, that the Surplise, the cornerd cap, and such like, are
the outward badges of Popish errours. No, I am so farre from being
contentious in these things
(which for My owne part I euer esteemed as indifferent) as I doe equally
loue and honour the learned and graue men of either of these opinions.
It can no wayes become me to pronounce so lightly a sentence, in so old
a controuersie. Wee all (God be praised) doe agree in the grounds;
and the bitternesse of men vpon such questions, doeth but trouble the peace
of the Church; and giues aduantage and entry to the Papists by our diuision:
But towards them, I onely vse this prouision, that where the Law is other-wayes,
they may content themselues soberly and quietly with their owne opinions,
not resisting to the authoritie, nor breaking the Law of the Countrey;
neither aboue all, slurring any rebellion or schisme: but possessing
their soules in peace, let them preasse by patience, and well grounded
reasons, either to perswade all the rest to like of their iudgements; or
where they see better grounds on the other part, not to bee ashamed peaceably
to incline thereunto, laying aside all prceoccupied opinions.
And that this is the onely meaning of my Booke, and not any coldnesse
or cracke in Religion, that place doeth plainly witnesse, where, after
I haue spoken of the faults in our Ecclesiasticall estate, I exhort my
sonne to be beneficiall vnto the good-men of the Ministrie; praising God
there, that there is presently a suffi cient number of good men of them
in this kingdom; and yet are they all knowne to be against the forme of
the English Church. Yea, so farre I am in that place from admitting
corruption in Religion, as I wish him in promoouing them, to vse such caution,
as may preserue their estate from creeping to corruption; euer vsing that
forme through the whole Booke, where euer I speake of bad Preachers, terming
them some of the Ministers, and not Ministers or Ministrie in generall.
And to conclude this point of Religion, what indifferencie of Religion
can Momus call that in Mee, where, speaking of my sonnes marriage (in case
it pleased God before that time to cut the threed of my life)
I plainly forewarne him of the inconuenients that were like to ensew,
incase he should marry any that be of a different profession in Religion
from him: notwithstanding that the number of Princes professing our
Religion be so small, as it is hard to foresee, how he can be that way,
meetly matched according td his ranke.
And as for the other point, that by some parts
in this booke, it should appeare, that I doe nourish in my minde, a vindictiue
resolution against England, or some principals there; it -is surely more
then wonderfull vnto me, vpon what grounds they can haue gathered such
conclusions. For as vpon the one part, I neither by name nor description
poynt out England in that part of my discourse; so vpon the other, I plainly
bewray my meaning to be of Scottish-men, where I conclude that purpose
in these termes: That the loue I beare to my Sonne, hath mooued me
to be so plaine in this argument: for so that I discharge my conscience
to him in vttering the verity, I care not what any traitour or treason-allower
doe thinke of it. And English-men could not thereby be meant, since
they could be no traitours, where they ought no alleageance. I am
not ignorant of a wise and princely apophthegme, which the same Queene
of Eng-
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-9]
land vttered about the time of her owne Coronation. But the drift
of that discourse doth fully cleare my intention, being onely grounded
vpon that precept to my Sonne, that he should not permit any vnreuerent
detracting of his pradecessours; bringing in that purpose of my mother
onely for an example of my experience anent Scottish-men, without vsing
any perswasion to him of reuenge. For a Kings giuing of any doe fault
the dew stile, inferres no reduction of thefaulters pardon. No, I
am by a degree but nearer of kinne vnto my mother then he is, neither thinke
I myselfe, either that our vnworthie, or that neere my end, that I
neede to make such a Dauidicall testament; since I have euer thought
it the dewtie of a worthie Prince, rather with a Pike, then a Penne, to
write his iust reuenge: But in this matter I haue no delite to be
large, wishing all men to iudge of my future proiects, according to my
by-past actions.
Thus hauing as much insisted in the clearing
of these two points, as will
(I hope) giue sufficient satisfaction to all honest men, and leauing
the enuious to the foode of their owne venome; I will heartily pray thee,louing+
Reader, charitably to conceiue of my honest intention in this Booke. I
know the greatest Part of the people of this whole Isle, haue beene very
curious for a sight thereof: some for the loue they beare me, either
being particularly acquainted with me, or by a good report that perhappes
they haue heard of me; and therefore longed to see any thing, that proceeded
from that authour whom they so loued and honoured; since bookes are viue
Idees of the authours minde. Some onely for meere curiositie, that
thinke it their honour to know all new reserue things, were curious to
glut their eyes therewith, onely that they might vaunt them to haue seene
it: and some fraughted with causlesse enuie at the A uthour, did
greedily search out the booke, thinking their stomacke fit ynough, for
turning neuer so whole- some foode into noysome and infectiue humours:
So as this their great concurrence in curiositie (though proceeding from
farre different complexions) hath enforced the vn-timous divulgating of
this Booke, farre contrarie to my intention, as I
haue alreadie said. To which Hydra of diuersly-enclined spectatours,
I
have no targe to oppone but plainenesse+,
patience, and sinceritie: plainenesse, for resoluing and satisfying of
the first sort; patience, for to beare with the shallownesse of the next;
and sinceritie, to defie the malice of the third with-all. Though
I cannot please all men therein, I
am contented, so that I onel please the vertuous sort: and though
they also finde not euery thing therein, so fully to answere their expectation,
as the argument would seeme to require; although I would wish them modestly
to remember, that God has not bestowed all his gifts vpon one, but parted
them by a iustice distributiue; and that many eyes see more than one; and
that the varietie of mens mindes is such, that tot capita tot sensus; yea,
and that euen the very faces, that God hath by nature brought foorth in
the world, doe euery one in some of their particular lineaments, differ
from any other: yet in trewth it was not my intention in handling
of this purpose (as it is easie to percciue) fully to set downe heere all
such grounds, as might out of the best writers haue beene alledged, and
out of my owne inuention and experience addedi for the perfite institution
of a King: but onely to giue some such precepts to my owne Sonne,
[Basil-10] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
for the gouernement of this kingdome, as was meetest for him to be instructed
in, and best became me to be the informer of.
If I in this Booke haue beene too particularlyplaine+,
impute it to the necessitie of the subiect, not so much being ordained
for the institution of a Prince in generall, as I haue said, as containing
particular precepts to my Sonne in speciall: whereof he could
haue made but a generall vse, if they had not contained the particular
diseases of this kingdome, with the best remedies for the same, which it
became me best as a King, hauing learned both the theoricke and practicke
thereof, more plainely to expresse, then any simple schoole-man, that onely
knowes matters of kingdomes by contemplation+.
But if in some places it seeme too obscure,
impute it to the shortnesse thereof, being both for the respect of my selfe,
and of my Sonne, constrained there-unto: my owne respect, for fault
of leasure, being so continually occupied in the affairs of my office,
as my great burthen, and restlesse fashery is more then knowen, to all
that knowes or heares of me: for my Sonnes respect, because I know
by myself, that a Prince so long as he is young, wil be so caried away
with some sort of delight or other, that he cannot patiently abide the
reading of any large volume: and when he comes to a ful maturity
of aage, he must be so busied in the actiue part of his charge, as he will
not be permitted to bestow many houres vpon the contemplatiue part thereof.
So as it was neither fit for him, nor possiblefor me, to haue made this
Treatise any more ample then it is. Indeed I am litle beholden to
the curiositie of some, who thinking it too large alreadie (as appears)
for lacke of leisure to copy it, drew some notes out of it, for speeds
sake; putting in the one halfe of the purpose, and leauing out the other:
not vnlike the man that alledged that part of the Psalme, non est Deus,
but left out the prceceeding words, Dixit insipiens in corde suo.
And of these notes making a little pamphlet (lacking, both my methode and
halfe of my matter) entituled it, forsooth, the Kings Testament, as if
I had eiked a third Testament of my owne to the two that are in the holy
Scriptures. It is trew that in a place thereof, for affirmation of
the purpose I am speaking of to my Sonne, I bring my slefe in there, as
speaking vpon my Testament: for in that sense, euery record in write
of a mans opinion in anything (in respect that papers outliue their authors)
is as it were a Testament of that mans will in that case: and in
that liue their authours) is as it were a Testament of that mans will in
that case: and in that sense it is, that in that place I call this
Treatise a Testament. But from any particular sentence in a booke,
to giue the booke it selfe a title, is as ridiculous, as to style the booke
of the Psalmes, the booke of Dixit insipiens, because with these wordes
one of them doeth begin.
Well, leauing these new baptizers and blockers
of other mens,books, to their owne follies, I returne to my purpose, anent
the shortnesse of this booke, suspecting that all my excusesfor the shortnesse
thereof, shall not satisfie some, especially
-in our neighbour countrey: who thought, that as I haue so narrowly
in this Treatise touched all the principall sicknesses in our kingdome,
with ouerturesfor the remedies thereof, as I
said before: so looked they to hauefound something therein, that
should haue touched the sickenesses of their state, in the like sort.
But they will easily excuse me thereof, if
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-11]
they will consider the forme I haue vsed in this Treatise; wherein I
onely teach my Son, out of my owne experience, whatforme of gouernment
is fittest for this kingdome: and in one part thereof speaking of
the borders, I plainly there doe excuse my selfe, that I will speake nothing
of the state of England, as a matter wherein I neuer had experience.
I know indeed, no kingdome lackes her owne diseases, and likewise what
interest I haue in the prosperitie of that state: for although I
would be silent, my blood and discent doeth sufficiently proclaime it.
But notwithstanding, since there is a lawfull Queene there presently reigning,
who hath so long with so great wisedome and felicitie gouerned her kingdomes,
as (I must in trew sinceritie confesse) the like hath not beene read nor
heard of, either in our time, or since the dayes of the Romane Emperour
Augustus; it could no wayes become me, farre inferiour to her in knowledge
and experience, to be a busie-body in other princes matters, and to fish
in other folkes waters, as the prouerbe is: No, I hope by the contrary
(with Gods grace) euer to keepe that Christian rule, To doe as I would
be done to: and I doubt nothing, yea euen in her name I dare promise,
by the bypast experience of her happy gouernment, as I haue already said,
that no good subiect shall be more carefull to enforme her of any corruptions
stollen in in her state, then shee shall be zealous for the discharge of
her conscience and honour, to see the same purged, and restored to the
ancient integritie; andfurther during her time, becomes me least of any
to meddle in.
And thus hauing resolued all the doubts, so
farre as I can imagine, may be moued against this Treatise; it onely rests
to pray thee (charitable Reader) to interprete fauourably this birth of
mine, according to the integritie of the author, and not looking for perfection
in the worke it selfe. As for my part, I
onely glory thereof in this point, that I trust no sort of vertue is condemned,
nor any degree of vice allowed in it: and that (though it be not
perhaps so gorgeously decked, and richly attired as it ought to be) it
is at the least rightly proportioned in all the members, without any monstrous
deformitie in any of them: and specially that since it was first
written in secret, andis now published, not of ambition, but of a kinde
of necessitie; it must be taken of all men, for the trezv image of
my very minde, and forme of the rule, which I haue prescribed to my selfe
and mine: Which as in all my actions I haue hitherto preassed to
expresse, so farre as the nature of my charge, and the condition of time
would permit me: so beareth it a discouery of that which may be lookedfor
at my hand, and whereto euen in my secret thoughts, I haue engaged my selfe
for the time to come. And thus in a firme trust that it shall please
God, who with my being and Crowne, gaue me this minde, to maintaine and
augment the same in me and my posteritie, to the discharge owne of our
conscience, the maintenance of our Honour, and weale of our people, I bid
thee heartily farewell.
[Basil-12] THE POOLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
OF A KINGS CHRISTIAN DVETIE TOWARDS GOD+.
THE FIRST BOOKE.
As he cannot be thought worthy to rule and command others, that cannot
rule and dantone his owne proper affections and vnreasonable appetites,
so can hee not be thought worthie to gouerne a Christian people,{king_over_self+}
knowing and fearing God, that in his owne person and heart, feareth not
and loueth not the Diuine Maiestie. Neither can anything in his gouernment
succeed well with him, (deuise and labour as he list) as comming from a
filthie spring, if his person be vnsanctified: for (as that royal
Prophet saith) Except the Lord build the house, they labour in vaine that
build it: except the Lord keepe the City, the keepers watch it in
vaine: /1 in respect the blessing of God hath onely power to giue the successe
thereunto: and as Paul saith, he planteth, Apollos watereth; but it is
God onely that giueth the increase./2 Therefore (my Sonne) first of all
things, learne to know and loue that God, whom-to ye haue a double
obligation+; first, for thathe madeyou aman; and next, for that he
made you a little GOD to sit on his Throne, and rule ouer other men.
Remember, that as in dignitie hee hath erected you aboue others, so ought
ye in thankfulnesse towards him, goe as farre beyond all others.
A moate in anothers eye, is a beame into yours: a blemish in another,
is a leprouse byle into you: and a veniall sinne (as the Papifts
call it) in another, is a great crime into you. Thinke not therefore,
that the highnesse of your dignitie, diminisheth your faults (much lesse
giueth you a licence to sinne) but by the contrary your fault shall be
aggrauated, according to the height of your dignitie; any sinne that ye
commit, not being a single sinne procuring but the fall of one; but being
an exemplare sinne, and therefore drawing with it the whole multitude to
be guiltie of the same. Remember then, that this glistering worldly
glorie of Kings, is giuen them by God, to teach them to preasse so to glister
and shine before their people, in all workes of sanctification and righteousnesse,
that their persons as bright lampes of godlinesse and vertue, may, going
in and out before their people, giue light to all their steps. Remember
also, that by the right knowledge, and feare of God (which is the beginning
of Wisedome,/3 as Salomon saith) ye shall know all the things necessarie
for the discharge of your duetie, both as a Christian, and as a King; seeing
in him, as in a mirrour, the course of all earthly things, whereof hee
is the spring and onely moouer.
Now, the onely way to bring you to this knowledge,
is diligently to reade his word, and earnestly to pray for the right vnderstanding
thereof. Search the Scriptures, sayth Christ, for they beare testimonie
of me:/4 and, the whole Scripture, saith Paul, is giuen by inspiration
of God, and is profitable to teach, to conuince, to correct, and to instruct
in righteousnesse; that the man of God may be absolute, being made perfite
vnto all good workes./5 And most properly of any other, belong-
-----
1 Psal. 12.7. 2 1. Cor. 3. 6. 3
Prou. 9.10. 4 Iohn 5.39. 5 2Tim. 3.
16,17.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-13]
eth the reading thereof vnto Kings, since in that part of Scripture,
where the godly Kings are first made mention of, that were ordained to
rule ouer the people of God, there is an expresse and most notable exhortation
and commandement giuen them, to reade and meditate in the Law of `God./1
I ioyne to this, the carefull hearing of the doctrine with attendance and
reuerence: for, faith commeth by hearing,/2 sayeth the same Apostle.
But aboue all, beware ye wrest not the word to your owne appetite, as ouer
many doe, making it like a bell to sound as ye please to interprete:
but by the contrary, frame all your affections, to follow precisely the
rule there set downe.
The whole Scripture chiefly containeth two
things: a command, and a prohhibition, to doe such things, and to
abstaine from the contrary. Obey in both; neither thinke it enough
to abstaine from euill, and do no good; nor thinke not that if yee doe
many good things, it may serve you for a cloake to mixe euill turnes therewith.
And as in these two points, the whole Scripture principally consisteth,
so in two degrees standeth the whole seruice of God by man: interiour,
or vpward; exteriour, or downward: the first, by prayer in-faith
towards God; the next, by workes flowing therefra before the world:
which is nothing else, but the exercise of Religion towards God, and of
equitie towards your neighbour.
As for the particular points of
Religion, I need not to dilate them; I am no hypocrite, follow my footsteps,
and your owne present education therein. I thanke God, I was neuer
ashamed to giue account of my profession, howsoeuer the malicious lying
tongues of some haue traduced me: and if my conscience had not resolued
me, that all my Religion presently professed by me and my kingdome, was
grounded vpon the plaine words of the Scripture, without the which all
points of Religion are superfluous, as any thing contrary to the same is
abomination, I had neuer outwardly auowed it, for pleasure or awe of any
flesh. And as for the points of equitie towards your neighbour (because
that will fall in properly, vpon the second part concerning a Kings
office+) I leaue it to the owne roume. For the first part then
of mans seruice to his God, which is Religion, that is, the worship of
God according to his reuealed will, it is wholly grounded vpon the Scripture,
as I haue alreadie said, quickened by faith, and conserued by conscience:
For the Scripture, I haue now spoken of it in generall, but that yee may
the more readily make choice of any part thereof, for your instruction
or comfort, remember shortly this methode. The whole Scripture is
dyted by Gods Spirit, thereby, as by his liuely word, to instruct and rule
the whole Church militant to the and of the world: It is composed
of two parts, the Olde and New Testament: The ground of the former
is the Lawe, which sheweth our sinne, and containeth
iustice+: the ground of the other is Christ, who pardoning sinne
containeth grace+. The summe of the
Law is the tenne Commandements, more largely delated in the bookes of Moses,
in-
-----
1. Deut. 17. 2. Rom. 10.17.
[Basil-14] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
terpreted and applied by the Prophets; and by the
histories+, are the examples shewed of obedience or disobedience thereto,
and what praemium or paena was accordingly giuen by God: But because
no man was able to keepe the Law, nor any part thereof, it pleased God
of his infinite wisedome and goodnesse, to incarnate his only Sonne in
our nature, for satisfaction of his iustice in his suffering for vs; that
since we could not be saued by doing, we might at least, bee saued by beleeuing.
The ground therefore of the word of grace,
is contained in the foure histories of the birth, life, death, resurrection
and ascention of Christ: The larger interpretation and vse thereof,
is contained in the Epistles of the Apostles: and the practise in
the faithfull or vnfaithfull, with the historie of the infancie and first
progresse of the Church is contained in their Actes.
Would ye then know your sinne by the Lawe
? reade the bookes of Moses containing it. Would ye haue a commentarie
thereupon? Reade the Prophets, and likewise the bookes of the Prouerbes
and Ecclesiastes, written by that great patterne of wisedome Salomon, which
will not only serue you for instruction, how to walke in the obedience
of the Lawe of God, but is also so full of golden sentences, and morall
precepts, in all things that can concerne your conuersation in the world,
as among all the prophane Philosophers and Poets, ye shall not finde so
rich a storehouse of precepts of naturall wisedome, agreeing with the will
and diuine wisedome of God. Would ye see how good men are rewarded,
and wicked punished? looke the historicall parts of these same bookes of
Moses, together with the histories of Ioshua, the ludges, Ezra, Nehemiah,
Esther, and Iob: but especially the bookes, of the Kings , and Chronicles,
wherewith ye ought to bee familiarly acquainted: for there shall
yee see your selfe, as in a myrrour, in the catalogue either of the good
or the euill Kings.
Would yee know the doctrine, life, and death
of our Sauiour Christ? reade the Euangelists. Would ye bee more particularly
trained vp in his Schoole? meditate vpon the Epistles of the Apostles.
And would ye be acquainted with the practises of that doctrine in the persons
of the primitiue Church? Cast vp the Apostles Actes. And as
to the Apocryphe bookes, I omit them, because I am no Papist, as I said
before; and indeed some of them are no wayes like the dytement of the Spirit
of God.
But when ye reade the Scripture, reade it
with a sanctified and chaste heart: admire reuerently such
obscure places as ye vnderstand not, blaming onely your owne capacitie:
read with delight the plaine places, and studie carefully to vnderstand
those that are somewhat difficile: preasse to bee a, good textuarie;
for the Scripture is euer the best interpreter of it selfe; but preasse
not curiously to seeke out farther then is contained therein; for that
were ouer vnmannerly a presumption, to striue to bee further vpon Gods
secrets, then he hath will ye be; for what hee thought needfull for vs
to know, that hath he reuealed there: And delyte most in reading
such parts of the Scripture, as may best serue for your
instruction+
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-15]
iin your calling; reiecting foolish curiosities vpon genealogies and
contentions, was which are but vaine, and profite not,/1 as Paul saith.
Now, as to Faith, which is the nourisher
and quickner of Religion, as I haue alreadie said, It is a sure perswasion
and apprehension of the promises of God, applying them to your soule:
and therefore may it iustly be called, the golden chaine that linketh the
faithfullsoule to Christ: And because it groweth not in our garden,
but is the free gift of God,/2 as the same Apostle saith, it must be nourished
by prayer, Which is nothing else, but a friendly talking with God.
As for teaching you the forme of your prayers, the
Psalmes of Dauid are the the meetest schoole-master that ye can be acquainted
with (next the prayer of our t Sauiour, which is the onely rule of prayer)
whereout of, as of most rich and pure fountaines, ye may learne all
forme of prayer necessarie for your comfort at all occasions: And
so much the fitter are they for you, then for the common sort, n and in
respect the composer thereof was a King: and therefore best behoued
to knowKings wants, and what things were meetest to be required by a King
at Gods hand for remedie thereof.
Vse often to pray when ye are quietest, especially
forget it not in your bed how oft soeuer ye doe it at other times:
for publike prayer serueth as much for example, as for any particular comfort
to the supplicant.
In your prayer, bee neither ouer strange with
God, like the ignorant common sort, that prayeth nothing but out of
bookes, nor yet ouer homely with him, like some of the vaine Pharisaicallpuritanes+,
that thinke they rule him vpon their fingers: The former way
will breede an vncouth coldnesse in you towards him, the other will breede
in you a contempt of him. But in your prayer to God speake the with
all reuerence: for if a subiect will not speake but reuerently to
a King, much lesse should any flesh presume to talke with God as with his
companion.
Craue in your prayer, not onelythings spirituall,
but also things temporall, sometimes of greater, and sometimes of
lesse consequence; that yee may lay vp in store his grant of these things,
for confirmation of your faith, and to be an arles-peny vnto you of his
loue. Pray, as yee finde your heart moueth you, pro re nata:
but see that yee sute no vnlawfull things, as reuenge, lust, or such like:
for that prayer can not come of faith: and whatsoeuer is dome without
faith, is sinne,/ 3 as the Apostle saith.
When ye obtaine your prayer, thanke him ioyfully
therefore: if otherwaies, beare patiently, preassing to winne him
with importunitie, as the widow did the vnrighteous Iludge: and if
notwithstanding thereof yee be not heard, assure your selfe, God foreseeth
that which yee aske is not for your weale: and learne in time, so
to interprete all the aduersities that God shall send vnto you; so shall
yee in the middest of them, not onely be armed with patience, but
ioyfully lift vp your eyes from the present trouble, to the happie end
that God will turne it to. And when ye finde it once so fall out
by proofe, arme your selfe with the experience
------
1. Tit. 3.9 2. Philip. 1. 29.
3. Rom. 14. 23- n bb nn
[Basil-16] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
thereof against the next trouble, assuring your selfe, though yee cannot
in time of the showre see through the cloude, yet in the end shall ye find,
God sent if for your weale, as ye found in the former.
And as for conscience, which I called the
conseruer of Religion, It is nothing else, but the light of knowledge that
God hath planted in man, which euer watching ouer all his actions, as it
beareth him a ioyfull testimonie when he does right, so choppeth it him
with a feeling that hee hath done wrong, when euer he commiteth any sinne.
And surely, although this conscience be a great torture to the wicked,
yet is it as great a comfort to the godly, if we will consider it rightlyz
For haue wee not a great aduantage, that haue within our selues while wee
liuc here, a Count-booke and Inuentarie of all the crimes that wee shall
bee accused of, either at the houre of our death, or at the Great day of
Iudgement; which when wee please (yea though we forget) will chop, and
remember vs to looke vpon it; that while we haue leasure and are here,
we may remember to amend; and so at the day of our triall, compeare with
new and white garments washed in the blood of the Lambe,/1 as St. Iohn
saith. Aboue all them, my Sonne, labour to keepe sound this conscience,
which many prattle of, but ouer few feele: especially be carefull
to keepe it free from two diseases, wherewith it vseth oft to be infected;
to wit, Leaprosie, and Superstition; the former is the mother of Atheisme,
the other of Heresies. By a leaprouse conscience, I meane a cauterized
conscience,/2 as Paul calleth it, being become senselesse of sinne, through
sleeping in a carelesse securitie as King Dauids was after his murther
and adulterie, euer til he was wakened by the Prophet Nathans similitude.
And by superstition, I meane, when one restraines himselfe to any other
rule in the seruice of God, then is warranted by the word, the onely trew
square of Gods seruice?
As for a preseruatiue against this Leaprosie, remember
euer once in the foure and twentie houres, either in the night, or when
yee are at greatest quiet, to call your selfe to account of all your last
dayes actions, either wherein ye haue committed things yee should not,
or omitted the things ye should doe, either in your Christian or Kingly
calling: and in that account, let not your selfe be smoothed ouer
with that flattering+ OtXavrla, which
is ouerkindly a sicknesse to all mankind: but censure your selfeas sharply,
as if ye were your owne enemie:{self_criticism+}
For if ye iudge your selfe, ye shall not be iudged,/3 as the Apostle
saith: and then according to your censure, reforme your actions as
farre as yee may, eschewing euer wilfully and wittingly to contrare your
conscience: For a small sinne wilfully committed, with a deliberate resolution
to breake the bridle of conscience therein, is farre more grieuous before
God, then a greater sinne committed in a suddaine passion, when conscience
is asleepe.
Remember therefore in all your actions, of the great account that yee
are one day to make: in all the dayes of your life, euer learning
to die, {Stoic+} and liuing euery day
as it were you last;|
Omnem diem crede tibi diluxisse supremum./4
{sufficient_unto_day+}
-----
1. Reu. 7.14. 2. 1. Tim. 4. 2.
3. 1. Cor. 11. 31. 4 Horat. lib. i. Epist.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-17]
And therefore, I would not haue you to pray
with the Papists, to be preserued from suddaine death, but that God would
giue you grace so to liue, as ye may euery houre of your life be ready
for death: so shall ye attaine to the vertue of trew
fortitude+, neuer being afraid for the horrour of
death+, come when he list: And especially, beware to offend your
conscience with vse of swearing or lying, suppose but in iest; for othes
are but an vse, and a sinne cloathed with no delight nor gaine, and therefore
the more inexcusable euen in the sight of men: and lying commeth also much
of a vile vse, which banisheth shame: Therefore beware euen to deny
the trewth, which is a sort of lie, that may best be eschewed by a person
of your ranke. For if any thing be asked at you that yee thinke not
meete to reueale, if yee say, that question is not pertinent for them to
aske, who dare examine you further? and vsing sometimes this answere both
in trew and false things that shall be asked at you, such vnmanerly people
will neuer be the wiser thereof.
And for keeping your conscience sound from
that sickenesse of superstition, yee must neither lay the safetie of your
conscience vpon the credit of your owne conceits, nor yet of other mens
humors, how great doctors of Diuinitie that euer they be; but yee must
onely ground it vpon the expresse Scripture: for consciencenot grounded
vpon sure knowledge, is either an ignorant fantasie, or an arrogant
vanitie. Beware therefore in this case with two extremities:
the one, to beleeue with the Papists, the Churches authority, better then
your owne knowledge; the other, to leane with the
Anabaptists+, tio your owne conceits and dreamed reuellations.
But learne wisely to discerne betwixt points of
saluation and indifferent things, betwixt substance and ceremonies; and
etwixt the expresse commandement and will of God in his word, and the inuention.
or ordinance of man; since all that is necessarie for saluation is contained
in the Scripture: For in any thing that is urexpressely commanded
or prohibited in the booke of God, ye cannot be ouer
precise+, euen in the least thing; counting euery sinne, not according
to the light estimation and common vse of it in the world, but as the booke
of Gad counteth ye iudgeof it. But as for all other things not contained
in the scripture, spare not to vse or alter them, as the necessitie of
the time shall require. And when any of the spirituall office-bearers
in the Church, speake vnto you any thing that is well warranted by the
word, reuerence and obey them as the heraulds of the most high God:
but, if passing that bounds, they vrge you to embrace any of their fantasies
in the place of Gods word, or would colour their particulars with a pretended
zeal, acknowledge them for no other then vaine men, exceeding the bounds
of their alling; and according to your office, grauely and with authoritie
redact them in order againe.
To conclude then, both this purpose of conscience,
and the first part of this booke, keepe God more sparingly in your mouth,
but abundantly in your heart: be precise in effect, but sociall in
shew: kythe more by your deeds+ then
by your
[Basil-18] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
wordes, the loue of vertue and hatred of vice: and delight more
to be godly and vertuous indeed, then to be thought and called so; expecting
more for your praise and reward in heauen, then heere: and apply
to all your outward actions Christs command, to pray and giue your almes
secretly: {Wyf+} So shal ye on the one
part be inwardly garnished with trew Christian humilitie, not outwardly
(with the proud Pharisie) glorying in your godlinesse; but saying, as Christ
commandeth vs all, when we haue done all that we can, Inutiles serui sumus:/1
And on the other part, yee shall eschew outwardly before the world, the
suspition of filthie proude hypocrisie, and deceitfull dissimulation.
OF A KINGS DVETIE IN HIS OFFICE+.
THE SECOND BOOKE.
BVT as ye are clothed with two callings,
so must ye be alike careful for the discharge of them both: that
as yee are a good Christian, so yee may be a good King, discharging your
Office (as I shewed before) in the points, of Iustice and Equitie:
which in two sundrie waies ye must doe: the one, in establishing
and executing, (which is the life of the Law) good Lawes among your people:/2
the other, by your behauiour in your owne person, and with your seruants,
to teach your people by your example:/3 for people are naturally inclined
to counterfaite (like apes) their Princes maners, according to the notable
saying of Plato,/4 expressed by the Poet -
Componitur orbis
Regis ad exemplum, nec sic inflectere
sensus
Humanos edicia valent, quam vita regentis./5
For the part of making, and executing
of Lawes, consider first the trew difference betwixt a lawfull good King,
and an vsurping Tyran+, and yee shall the
more easily vnderstand your duetie herein: for contraria iuxta se
posita magis elucescunt. The one acknowledgeth himselfe ordained
for his people, hauing receiued from God a burthen of gouernment, whereof
he must be countable:/6 the other thinketh his people ordained for him,
a prey to his passions and inordinate appetites, as the fruites of his
magnanimitie:/7 {Timon+} And therefore,
as their ends are directly contrarie, so are their whole actions, as meanes,
whereby they preasse to attaine to their endes. A good King, thinking
his highest honour to consist in the due discharge of his calling, emploieth
all his studie and paines, to procure and maintaine, by the making and
execution of good Lawes, the well-fare and peace of his people;/8 and as
their naturall father and kindly Master, thinketh his greatest contentment
standeth in their prosperitie, and his greatest suretie in hauing their
hearts, subjecting his owne priuate affections and appetites to
-----
1 Luke 10. 17. 2 Plato in Polit.
3 Isocr. in Sym. 4 Plato in Polit.
5 Claudian in 4..cons. Hon. 6 Plato in Polit.
7 Arist. 5. Polit.
8 Xen. 8. Cyr.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-19]
the weale and standing of his Subiects, euer thinking common interesse
his chiefest particular:/1 where by the contrarie, an vsurping Tyran, thinking
his greatest honour and felicitie to consist in attaining per fas, vel
nefas to his ambitious pretences, thinketh neuer himselfe sure, but by
the dissention and factions among his people, and counterfeiting the Saint
while he once creepe in credite, will then (by inuerting all good Lawes
to serve onely for his vnrulie priuate affections) frame the common-weale
euer to aduance his particular: building his suretie vpon his peoples
miserie:/2 and in the end (as a stepfather and an vncouth hireling) make
vp his owne hand vpon the ruines of the Republicke+./3
And according to their actions, so receiue they their reward: For
a good King (after a happie and famous reigne) dieth in peace, lamented
by his subiects, and admired by his neighbours; and leauing a reuerent
renowne behinde him in earth, obtaineth the Crowne of eternall felicitie
in heauen./4 And although some of them (which falleth out very rarelie)
may be cut off by the treason of some vnnaturall subiects, yet liueth their
fame after them, and some notable plague faileth neuer to ouertake the
committers in this life, besides their infamie to all posterities hereafter:
Where by the contrarie, a Tyrannes miserable and infamous life, armeth
in end his owne Subjects to become his burreaux:/5 and although that rebellion
be euer vnlawfull on their part, yet is the world so wearied of him, that
his fall is little meaned by the rest of his Subjects, and but smiled at
by his neighbours./6 And besides the infamous memorie he leaueth behind
him here, and the endlesse paine hee sustaineth hereafter, it oft falleth
out, that the committers not onely escape vnpunished, but farther, the
fact will remaine as allowed by the Law in divers aages thereafter. It
is easie then for you (my Sonne) to make a choise of one of these two sorts
of rulers, by following the way of vertue to establish your standing; yea,
in case ye fell in the high way, yet should it be with the honourable report,
and iust regrate of all honest men.
And therefore to returne to my purpose anent
the gouernement of your Subiects, by making and putting good Lawes to execution;
I remit the making of them to your owne discretion, as ye shall finde the
necessitie of new-rising corruptions to require them: for, ex malis
moribus bona leges natae sunt: besides, that in this country, wee
haue alreadie moe good Lawes then are well execute, and am onely to insist
in your forme of gouernment anent their execution. Onely remember,
that as Parliaments haue bene ordained for making of Lawes, so ye abuse
not their institution, in holding them for any mens particulars:
For as a Parliament is the honourablest and highest iudgement in the land
(as being the Kings head Court) if it be well vsed, which is by making
of good Lawes in it; so is it the in-iustest Iudgement-seat that may be,
being abused to mens particulars: irreuocable decreits against particular
parties, being giuen therein vnder colour of generall Lawes, and oft-times
th'Estates not knowing themselues whom
-----
1 Cic. lib. 5. de Rep. 2 Arist. 5. Polit. 3 Tacit.
4. hist. 4 Cic. 6. de Rep. 5 Arist. 5. Polit.
6 Isocr. in Sym.
[Basil-20] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
thereby they hurt./1 And therefore hold no Parliaments, but for necessitie
of new Lawes, which would be but seldome: for few Lawes and well
put in execution, are best in a well ruled common-weale. As for the
matter of fore-faltures, which also are done in Parliament, it is not good
tigging with these things; but my aduice is, ye fore-fault none but for
such odious crimes as may make them vnworthie euer to be restored againe:/2
And for smaller offences, ye haue other penalties sharpe enough to be vsed
against them.
And as for the execution of good Lawes, whereat
I left, remember that among the differences that I put betwixt the formes
of the gouernment of a good King, and an vsurping Tyran; I shew how,a Tyran
would enter like a Saint while he found himselfe fast vnder-foot, and then
would suffer his vnrulie affections to burst foorth. Therefore be
yee contrare at your first entrie to your Kingdome, to that Quinquennium
Neronis, with his tender hearted wish, Vellem nescirem literas,/3 in giuing
the Law full execution against all breakers thereof but exception./4 For
since ye come not to you reigne precario, nor by conquest, but by right
and due discent; feare no vproares for doing of Iustice, since ye may assure
your selfe, the most part of your people will euer naturally fauour Iustice:/5
prouiding alwaies, that ye doe it onely for loue to Iustice, and not for
satisfying any particular passions of yours, {anger+}
vnder colour thereof:/6 otherwise, how iustly that euer the offender deserue
it, ye are guiltie of murther before God: For ye must consider, that
God euer looketh to your inward intention in all your actions.
And when yee haue by the seueritie of Iustice
once setled your countries, and made them know that ye can strike, then
may ye thereafter all the daies of your life mixe iustice with Mercie,{Portia+}
punishing or sparing, as ye shall finde the crime to haue bene wilfully
or rashly committed, and according to the by-past behauiour of the committer./7
For if otherwise ye kyth your clemencie+
at the first, the offences would soone come to such heapes, and the contempt
of you grow so great, that when ye would fall to punish, the number of
them to be punished, would exceed the innocent; and yee would be troubled
to resolue whomat to begin: and against your nature would be compelled
then to wracke many, whom the chastisement of few in the beginning might
haue preserued. But in this, my ouer-deare bought experience may
serue you for a sufficient lesson: For I confesse, where I thought
(by being gracious at the beginning) to win all mens hearts to a louing
and willing obedience, I by the contrary found, the disorder of the countrie,
and the losse of my thankes to be all my reward.
But as this seuere Iustice of yours vpon all
offences would bee but for a time, (as I haue alreadie said) so is there
some horrible crimes that yee are bound in conscience neuer to forgiue
: such as Witch-craft, wilfull murther, Incest, (especially within the
degrees of consanguinitie) Sodomie, poisoning, and false coine. As
for offences against your owne person and authoritie, since the fault concern-
-----
1 12. Tab. 2 Cic. 3 de leg. pro D. s. & pro Sest. 3
Sen. de cl. 4 Plato 2. & 10 de Repub.
5 Ar. 7. pol. 6 Cic. ad Q. fr.
7 Plato in Pol. & 9. de L. Sal. orat. ad Caesar.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-21]
eth your selfe, I remit to your owne choise to punish or pardon therein,
as your heart serueth you, and according to the circumstances of the turne,
and the qualitie of the committer.
Here would I also eike another crime to bee
vnpardonable, if I should not be thought partiall: but the fatherly
loue I beare you, will make mee breake the bounds of shame in opening it
vnto you. It is then, the false and vnreuerent writing or speaking
of malicious men against your Parents and Predecessors: ye know the
command in Gods lawe, Honour your Father and Mother:/1 and consequently,
sen ye are the lawful magistrate, suffer not both your Princes and your
Parents to be dishonoured by any; especially, sith the example also toucheth
your selfe, in leauing thereby to your successors, the measure of that
which they shal mete out againe to you in your like behalfe./2 I graunt
wee haue all our faults, which, priuately betwixt you and God, should serue
you for examples to meditate vpon, and mend in your person; but should
not be a matter of discourse to others whatsoeuer. And sith ye are
come of as honourable Predecessours as any Prince liuing, represse the
insolence of such, as vnder pretence to taxe a vice in the person, seeke
craftily to staine the race, and to steale the affection of the people
from their posteritie: For how can they loue you, that hated them
whom-of ye are come? Wherefore destroy men innocent young sucking Wolues
and Foxes, but for the hatred they beare to their race? and why wil a coult
of a Courser of Naples, giue a greater price in a market, then an Asse-colt,
but for loue of the race? It is therefore a thing monstrous, to see a man
loue the childe, and hate the Parents: as on the other part, the infaming
and making odious of the parents, is the readiest way to bring the sonne
in contempt. And for conclusion of this point, I may also alledge
my owne experience: For besides the iudgments of God, that with my
eyes I haue seene fall vpon all them that were chiefe traitours to my parents,
I may iustly affirme, I neuer found yet a constant biding by me in all
my straites, by any that were of perfite aage in my parents dayes, but
onely by such as constantly bode by them; I meane specially by them that
serued the Queene my mother: for so that I discharge my conscience
to you, my Sonne, in reuealing to you the trewth, I care not, what any
traitour or treason-allower thinke of it.
And although the crime of oppression be not
in this ranke of vnpardonable crimes, yet the ouer-common vse of it in
this nation, as if it were a vertue, especially by the greatest ranke of
subjects in the land, requireth the King to be a sharpe censurer thereof.
Be diligent therefore to trie, and awfull to beate downe the hornes of
proud oppressours:/3 embrace the quarrell of the
poore+ and distressed, as your owne particular, thinking it your greatest
honour to represse the oppressours:/4 care for the pleasure of none, neither
spare ye anie paines in your owne person, to see their wrongs redressed:
5 and remember of the honour-
-----
1 Exod. 20. 12. 2 Plat. 4. de Legib. 3 Arist.
5. Polit. 4 Isocr. de reg. 5 Cic. in Of. & ad Q. fr.
[Basil-22] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
able stile giuen to my grand-father of worthie memorie, in being called
the poore mans King. And as the most part of a Kings office, standeth
in deciding that question of Meum and Tuum, among his subjects; so remember
when ye sit in iudgement, that the Throne ye sit on is Gods,/1 as Moyses
saith, and sway neither to the right hand nor to the left; either louing
the rich, or pittying the poore. {compassion+}
Iustice+ should be blinde and friendlesse: it is not there ye
should reward your friends, or seeke to crosse your enemies./2
Here now speaking of oppressours and of iustice,
the purpose leadeth me to speake of Hie-land and Border oppressions.
As for the Hie-lands, I shortly comprehend them all in two sorts of people:
the one, that dwelleth in our maine land, that are barbarous for the most
part, and yet mixed with some shewe of ciuilitie: the other, that
dwelleth in the Iles, and are alluterly barbares, without any sort or shew
of ciuilitie. For the first sort, put straitly to execution the Lawes made
alreadie by me against their Ouer-lords, and the chiefes of their Clanness,
and it will be no difficultie to danton them. As for the other sort,
follow forth the course that I haue intended, in planting Colonies among
them of answerable In-lands subiects, that within short time may reforme
and ciuilize the best inclined among them; rooting out or transporting
the barbarous and stubborne sort, and planting ciuilitie in their roomes.
But as for the Borders, because I know, if
ye enioy not this whole Ile, according to Gods right and your lineall discent,
yee will neuer get leaue to brooke this North and barrennest part thereof;
no, not your owne head whereon the Crowne should stand; I neede not in
that case trouble you with them: for then they will be the middest
of the Ile, and so as easily ruled as any part thereof.
And that yee may the readier with wisedome
and Iustice gouerne your subiects, by knowing what vices they are naturallie
most inclined to, as a good Physician, who must first know what peccant
humours his Patient naturallie is most subiect vnto, before he can begin
his cure:/3 I shall therefore shortly note vnto you, the principall faults
that euery ranke of the people of this countrey is most affected vnto.
And as for England, I will not speake be-gesse of them, neuer having been
among them, although I hope in that God, who euer fauoureth the right,
before I die, to be as well acquainted with their fashions.
As the whole Subjects of our countrey (by
the ancient and fundamentall policie of our Kingdome) are diuided into
three estates, so is euerie estate hereof generally subiect to some speciall
vices; which in a maner by long habitude, are thought rather vertue then
vice among them; not that cuerie particular man in any of these rankes
of men, is subiect vnto them, for there is good and euill of all sorts;
but that I meane, I haue found by experience, these vices to haue taken
greatest holde with these rankes of men.
And first, that I prejudge not the Church
of her ancient priuiledges, reason would shee should haue the first place
for orders sake, in this catalogue.
-----
1 Deut. ii. 2 Plat. in polit.; Cic. ad Q. frat.;
Arist. i. Ret.; Plat.in Is. 3 Plato in polit.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-23]|
The naturall sickenesse that hath euer troubled,
and beene the decay of all the Churches, since the beginning of the world,
changing the candlesticke from one to another, as Iohn saith, hath beene
Pride, Ambition, and Auarice: and now last, these same infirmities
wrought the ouerthrow of the Popish Church, in this countrey and diuers
others. But the reformation of Religion in Scotland, being extraordinarily
wrought by God, wherin many things were inordinately done by a popular
tumult and rebellion, of such as blindly were doing the worke of God, but
clogged with their owne passions and particular respects, as well appeared
by, the destruction of our policie, and not proceeding from the Princes
order, as it did in our neighbour countrey of England, as likewise in Denmarke,
and sundry parts of Germanie; some fierie spirited men in the ministerie,
got such a guiding of the people at that time of confusion, as finding
the gust of gouernment sweete, they begouth to fantasie to themselues a
Democraticke forme of gouernment: and hauing (by the iniquitie of
time) beene ouerwell baited vpon the wracke, first of my Grandmother, and
next of mine owne mother, and after vsurping the libertie of the time in
my long minoritie, setled themselues so fast vpon that imagined
Democracie+, as they fed themselues with the hope to become Tribuni
plebis: and so in a popular gouernment by leading the people by the
nose, to beare the sway of all the rule. And for this cause, there
neuer rose faction in the time of my minoritie, nor trouble sen-syne, but
they that were vpon that factious part, were euer carefull to perswade
and allure these vnruly spirits among the ministerie, to spouse that quarrell
as their owne: where-through I was ofttimes calumniated in their
populate Sermons, not for any euill or vice in me, but because I was a
King, which they thought the highest euill. And because they were ashamed
to professe this quarrel, they were busie to look narrowly in all my actions;
and I warrant you a mote in my eye, yea a false report, was matter enough
for them to worke vpon: and yet for all their cunning, whereby they
pretended to distinguish the lawfulnesse of the office, from the vice of
the person, some of them would sometimes snapper out well grossely with
the trewth of their intentions, informing the people, that all Kings and
Princes were naturally enemies to the libertie of the Church, and could
neuer patiently beare the yoke of Christ: with such sound doctrine
fed they their flockes. And because the learned, graue, and honest
men of the ministerie, were euer ashamed and offended with their temeritie
and presumption, preassing by all good meanes by their authoritie and example,
to reduce them to a greater moderation; there could be no way found out
so meete in their conceit, that were turbulent spirits among them, for
maintaining their plots, as paritie in the Church: whereby the ignorants
were emboldened (as bairdes) to crie the learned, godly, and modest out
of it: paritie the mother of confusion, and enemie to Vnitie, which
is the mother of order+: For if by the
example thereof, once established in the Ecclesiasticall gouernment, the
Politicke and ciuill estate should be drawen to the like, the great confusion
that thereupon would arise may easily be discerned. Take heede therefore
(my Sonne) to such
[Basil-24] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
Puritanes, verie pestes in the Church and Commonweale, whom no
deserts+ can oblige+, neither oathes
or promises binde, breathing nothing but sedition and calumnies, aspiring
without measure, railing without reason, and making their owne imaginations
(without any warrant of the word) the square of their conscience.
I protest before the great God, and since I am here as vpon my Testament,
it is no place for me to lie in, that ye shall neuer finde with any Hieland
or Border-theeues greater ingratitude+,
and moe lies and vile periuries, then with these phanaticke spirits:
And suffer not the rincipals of them to brooke your land, if ye like to
sit at rest; except yee would keepe them for trying your patience, as Socrates
did an euill wife./1
And for preseruatiue against their poison,
entertaine and aduance the godly, learned and modest men of the ministerie,
whom-of (God be praised) there lacketh not a sufficient number: and
by their prouision to Bishoprickes and Benefices (annulling that vile acte
of Annexation, if ye finde it not done to your hand) yee shall not onely
banish their conceited paritie, whereof I haue spoken, and their other
imaginarie grounds; which can neither stand with the order of the Church,
nor the peace of a commonweale and well ruled Monarchie: but ye shall
also re-establish the olde institution of three Estates in Parliament,
which can no otherwise be done: But in this I hope (if God spare
me dayes) to make you a faire entrie, alwayes where I leaue, follow ye
my steps.
And to end my aduice anent the Church estate, cherish
no man more then a good Pastor, hate no man more then a proude tane; thinking
it one of your fairest styles, to be called a louing nourish-father to
the Church, seeing all the Churches within your dominions planted with
good Pastors, the Schooles (the seminarie of the Church) maintained, the
doctrine and discipline preserued in puritie, according to Gods word, a
sufficient prouision for their sustentation, a comely order in their policie,
pride punished, humilitie aduanced, and they so to reuerence their superiours,
and their flockes them, as the flourishing of your Church in pietie, peace,
and learning, may be one of the chiefe points of your earthly glory, being
euer alike ware with both the extremities; as well as yee represse the
vaine Puritane, so not to suffer proude Papall Bishops; but as some for
their qualities will deserue to bee preferred before others, so chaine
them with such bondes as may preserue that estate from creeping to corruption.
The next estate now that by order commeth in purpose, according to their
rankes in Parliament, is the Nobilitie, although second in ranke, yet ouer
farre first in greatnesse and power, either to doe good or euill, as they
are inclined.
The naturall sickenesse that I haue perceiued
this estate subiect to in my time, hath beene, a fectlesse arrogant conceit
of their greatnes and power; drinking in with their very nourish-milke,
that their honor stood in committing three points of iniquitie: to
thrall by oppression, the meaner sort that dwelleth neere them, to their
seruice and following, although they holde nothing of them: to maintaine
------
1. Xantippe.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-25]
their seruants and dependers in any wrong, although they be not answerable
to the lawes (for any body will maintaine his man in a right cause) and
for anie displeasure, at they apprehend to be done vnto them by their neighbour,
to take vp a plaine feide against him; and (without respect to God, King,
or commonweale) to bang it out brauely, hee and all his kinne, against
him and all his: yea they will thinke the King farre in their common,
in-case they agree to grant an assurance to a short day, for keeping of
the peace: where, by their naturall dewtie, they are oblished to obey the
lawe, and keepe the peace all the daies of their life, vpon the perill
of their verie craigges.
For remeid to these euils in their estate,
teach your Nobilitie to keepe your lawes as precisely as the meanest;/1
I feare not their orping or beeing discontented, as long as yee rule well;
for their pretended reformation of Princes taketh neuer effect, but where
euill gouernement precedeth. Acquaint your selfe so with all the
honest men of your Barrons and Gentlemen, and be in your giuing accesse
so open+ and affable+
to euery ranke of honest+
persons, as may make them peart without scarring at you, to make their
owne suites to you themselue's, and not to employ the great Lordes their
intercessours; /2 for intercession to Saints is Papistrie:
so shall ye bring to a measure their monstrous backes. And for their
barbarous feides, put the lawes to due execution made by mee there-anent;
beginning euer rathest at him that yee loue best, and is most oblished
vnto you; to make him an example to the rest.{Falstaff+}
For yee shall make all your reformations to beginne at your elbow, and
so by degrees to flow to the extremities of the land. And rest not,
vntill yee roote out these barbarous feides; that their effects may bee
as well smoared downe, as their barbarous name is vnknowen to anie other
nation: For if this Treatise were written either in French or Latine,
I could not get them named vnto you but by circumlocution. And for
your easier abolishing of them, put sharpelie to execution my lawes made
against Gunnes+ and traiterous Pistolets;
thinking in your heart, tearming in your speech, and vsing by your punishments,
all such as weare and vse them, as brigands and cut-throates.
On the other part, eschew the other extremitie,
in lightlying and contemning your Nobilitie. Remember howe that errour
brake the King my grand-fathers heart. But consider that vertue followeth
oftest noble_blood+: the worthinesse
of their antecessors craueth a reuerent regard to be had vnto them:/3 honour
them therfore that are obedient to the law among them, as Peeres and
Fathers+ of your land: the more frequently that your Court can
bee garnished with them; thinke it the more your honour;/4 acquainting
and employing them in all your greatest affaires; sen it is, they must
be your armes and executers of your lawes: and so vse your selfe
louinglie to the obedient, and rigorously to the stubborne, as may make
the greatest of them to thinke, that the chiefest point of their honour,
standeth in striuing with the meanest of the land in humilitie towards
you, and obedi-
------
1 Arist. 5. POlit. 2.Zeno in Cyr.; Iso. in Eu.; Cic. ad
Q. fra. 3 Plat. in I. Al. in Pol & 5.del 1. Arist. 2. Oecon
4 Zeno in Cyr.
[Basil-26] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
ence to your Lawes: beating euer in their eares, that one of the principall
points of seruice that ye craue of them, is, in their persons to practise,
and by their power to procure due obedience to the Law; without the which,
no seruice they can make, can be agreeable vnto you.
But the greatest hinderance to the execution
of our Lawes in this countrie, are these heritable Shirefdomes and Regalities,
which being in the hands of the great men, do wracke the whole countrie:
For which I know no present remedie, but by taking the sharper account
of them in their Offices; vsing all punishment against the slouthfull,
that the Law will permit:/1 and euer as they vaike, for any offences
committed by them, dispone them neuer heritably againe: preassing,
with time, to draw it to the laudable custome of England: which ye
may the easilier doe, being King of both, as I hope in God ye shall.
And as to the third and last estate, which is our
Burghes (for the small Barrones are but an inferiour part of the Nobilitie
and of their estate) they are composed of two sorts of men;
Merchants+ and Craftes-men: either of these sorts being subiect
to their owne infirmities.
The Merchants thinke the whole commonweale
ordeined for making them vp; and accounting it their lawfull gaine and
trade, to enrich themselues vpon the losse of all the rest of the people,
they transport from vs things necessarie; bringing backe sometimes vnnecessary
things, and at other times nothing at all.
They buy for vs the worst wares, and sell them at the dearest prices:
and albeit the victuals fall or rise of their prices, according to the
aboundance or skantnesse thereof; yet the prices of their wares euer rise,
but neuer fall: being as constant in that their euill custome, as
if it were a setled Law for them. They are also the speciall cause
of the corruption of the coyne, transporting all our owne, and bringing
in forraine, vpon what price they please to set on it: For order
putting to them, put the good Lawes in execution that are already made
anent these abuses; but especially doe three things: Establish honest,
diligent, but few Searchers, for many hands make slight worke; and haue
an honest and diligent Thesaurer to take count of them: Permit and
allure forraine Merchants to trade here :/2 so shall ye haue best and best
cheape wares, not buying them at the third hand:
And set euery yeere downe a certaine price of all things; considering
first, how it is in other countries: and the price set reasonably
downe, if the Merchants will not bring them home on the price, cry forrainers
free to bring them.
And because I haue made mention here of the coyne,
make your money of fine Gold and Siluer; causing the people be payed with
substance, and not abused with number: so shall ye enrich the commonweale,
and haue a great treasure laid vp in store, if ye fall in warres or in
any straites: For the making it baser, will breed your commoditie;
but it is not to bee vsed, but at a great necessitie.
And the Craftes-men thinke, we should be conteFnt with
their worke, how bad and deare soeuer it be:/3 and if they in any thing
be controlled, vp goeth the
------
1. Ar. 2. p0l. 2. Pl. 2. de Rep. 8. & II. de leg.
3 Plat. II de leg.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-27]
blew-blanket: But for their part, take example by ENGLAND,
how it hath flourished both in wealth and policie, since the strangers
Craftes-men came in among them: Therefore not onely permit, but allure
strangers to come heere also;/1 taking as strait order for repressing the
mutining of ours at them, as was done in ENGLAND, at their first in-bringing
there.
But vnto one fault is all the common people of this
Kingdome subiect, as well burgh as land; which is, to iudge and speake
rashly of their Prince, setting the Commonweale vpon foure props, as wee
call it; euer wearying of the present estate, and desirous of nouelties./2
For remedie whereof (besides the execution of Lawes that are to be used
against vnreuerent speakers) I know no better meane, then so to rule, as
may iustly stop their mouthes from all such idle and vnreuerent speeches;
and so to prop the weale of your people, with prouident care for their
good gouernment, that iustly, Momus himselfe may haue no ground to grudge
at: and yet so to temper and mixe your seueritie with mildnes, {justice_mercy+}
that as the vniust railers may be restrained with a reuerent awe; so the
good and louing Subjects, may not onely liue in suretie and wealth, but
be stirred vp and inuited by your benigne
courtesies+, to open their mouthes in the iust praise of your so well
moderated regiment./3 In respect whereof, and therewith also
the more to allure them to a common amitie+
among themselues, certaine dayes in the yeere would be appointed, for delighting
the people with publicke spectacles of all honest games, and exercise of
armes:/4 as also for conueening of
neighbours+, for entertaining
friendship+ and heartlinesse, by honest feasting and
merrinesse+: For I cannot see what greater
superstition can be in making playes and lawfull games in Maie, and good
cheere+ at Christmas, then in eating fish in Lent, and vpon Fridayes,
the Papists as well vsing the one as the other: so that alwayes the
Sabboths be kept holy, and no vnlawfull pastime be vsed: And as this
forme of contenting the peoples mindes, hath beene vsed in all well gouerned
Republicks: so will it make you to performe in your gouernment that
olde good sentence,
Omne tulit punctum, qui miscuit
vtile_dulci+./5
Ye see now (my Sonne) how for the zeale I beare to acquaint
you with the plaine_and_single+
veritie of all things, I haue not spared to be something Satyricke, in
touching well quickly the faults in all the estates of my kingdome:
But I protest before God, I doe it with thefatherly_loue+
that I owe to them all; onely hating their vices, whereof there is a good
number of honest+ men free in euery estate.
And because, for the better reformation of all these
abuses among your estates, it will be a great helpe vnto you, to be well
acquainted with the nature and humours of all your Subjects, and to know
particularly the estate of euery part of your dominions;/6 {affability+}
I would therefore counsell you, once in the yeere to visite
-----
1. Plat. 9. de leg. 2. Sal. in Iug. 3. Arist 5. POL
2 4. Isoc. in Paneg. 5. Hor. de art. poet. 6. Plat. in
pol. & Min.
[Basil-28] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
the principall parts of the countrey, ye shal be in for the time:/1
and because I hope ye shall be King of moe countries then this, once in
the three yeeres to visite all your Kingdomes; not lipening to Vice-royes,
but hearing your selfe their complaints; and hauing ordinarie Councels
and iustice-seates in euerie Kingdome, of their owne countriemen:
and the principall matters euer to be decided by your selfe when ye come
in those parts.
Ye haue also to consider, that yee must not
onely bee carefull to keepe your subiects, from receiuing anie wrong of
others within; but also yee must be careful to keepe them from the wrong
of any forraine Prince without: sen the sword is giuen you by God
not onely to reuenge vpon your owne subiects, the wrongs committed amongst
themselues; but further, to reuenge and free them of forraine injuries
done vnto them: And therefore warres vpon
iust_quarrels+ are lawful: but aboue all, let not the wrong cause
be on your side./2
Vse all other Princes, as your brethren,
honestly and kindely: Keepe precisely your
promise+ vnto them, although to your hurt: Striue with euerie
one of them in courtesie and thankefulnesse:/3{benefits+}
and as with all men, so especially with them, bee
plaine+ and trewthfull; keeping euer that Christain rule, to doe as
yee would be done to: especially in counting rebellion against any
other Prince, a crime against your owne selfe, because of the preparatiue.
Supplie not therefore, nor trust not other Princes rebels but pittie and
succour all lawfull Princes in their troubles. But if any of them
will not abstaine, notwithstanding what-soeuer your good deserts, to wrong
you or your subjects, craue redresse at leasure;/4 heare and doe all reason:
and if no offer that is lawfull or honourable, can make him to abstaine,
nor repaire his wrong doing; then for last refuge, commit the iustnesse
of your cause to God, {Hal+}
giuing first honestly vp with him, and in a publicke and honourable forme./5
But omitting now to teach you the forme
of making warres, because that arte is largely treated of by many, and
is better learned by practise then speculation; I will onely set downe
to you heere a few precepts therein. Let first the iustnesse {just_war+}
of your cause be your greatest strength; and then omitte not to vse all
lawfull meanes for backing of the same./6 Consult therefore with no Necromancier
nor false Prophet, vpon the successe of your warres, remembring on king
Saules /7 miserable end: but keepe your land cleane of all South-sayers,
according to the commaund in the Law of God,/8 dilated by Ieremie.
Neither commit your quarrell to bee tried by a Duell: for beside
that generally all Duell appeareth to bee vnlawful, committing the quarrell,
as it were, to a lot; whereof there is no warrant in the Scripture, since
the abrogating of the olde Lawe: it is specially moste vn-
-----
1 Tacit. 7. an. Mart. 2 Xeno. 8. Cyr.; Arist. 5. pol.; Polib.
6; Dion. Hal. de Romul. 3 Isoc. in Plat. & Parag. 4 Arist.
ad A.; Varr. ii. de V. P. R.; Cic. 2. Of.; Liu. lib. 4. 5 Liu.
lib. i; Cic. eod. 6 Prop. 4. Eleg.; Lucan 7; Varro ii. de V.
P. R.
7 1. Sam. 31. 8 Deut. 18.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-29]
lawfull in the person of a King;/1 who being a publicke person hath
no power therefore to dispose of himselfe, in respect, that to his preseruation
or fall, the safetie or wracke of the whole common-weale is necessarily
coupled, as the body is to the head.
Before ye take on warre, play the wise Kings
part described by Christ; foreseeing how ye may beare it out with all necessarie
prouision:/2 especially remember, that money is Neruus belli. Choose
old experimented Captaines, and yong able souldiers. Be extreamely
strait and seuere in martiall Discipline, as well for keeping of order,
which is as requisite, as hardinesse in the warres, and punishing of slouth,
which at a time may put the whole armie in hazard; as likewise for repressing
of mutinies, which in warres are wonderfull dangerous. And looke
to the Spaniard, whose great successe in all his warres, hath onely come
through straitnesse of Discipline and order: for such errours may
be committed in the warres, as cannot be gotten mended againe./3
Be in your owne person walkrife, diligent,
and painefull; vsing the aduice+ of such
as are skilfullest in the craft, as ye must also doe in all other.
Be homely with your souldiers as your companions, for winning their hearts;
and extreamly liberall+, for then is no
time of sparing. Be cold and foreseeing in deuising, constant in
your resolutions, and forward and quicke in your executions./4 Fortifie
well your Campe, and assaile not rashly without an aduantage: neither
feare not lightly your enemie./5 Be curious in deuising stratagems, but
alwayes honestly: for of any thing they worke greatest effects in
the warres, if secrecie be ioyned to inuention./6 And once or twise in
your owne person hazard+ your selfe fairely;
but, hauing acquired so the fame of courage+
and magnanimitie, make not a daily soudier of your selfe, exposing rashly
your person to euery perill: but conserue your selfe thereafter for
the weale of your people, for whose sake yee must more care for your selfe,
then for your owne./7
And as I haue counselled you to be slow
in taking on a warre, so aduise I you to be slow in peace-making./8 Before
ye agree, looke that the ground of your warres be satisfied in your peace;
and that ye see a good suretie for you and your people: otherwaies
a honourable and iust warre is more tollerable, then a dishonourable and
dis-aduantageous peace./9
But it is not enough to a good King,
by the scepter of good Lawes well execute to gouerne, and by force of armes
to protect his people; if he ioyne not therewith his vertuous life in his
owne person, and in the person of his Court and company; by good example
alluring his Subjects to the loue of vertue, and hatred of vice.
And therefore (my Sonne) sith all people are naturally inclined to follow
-----
1 Plutar. in Sert. & Ant. 2 Luke 14.
3 Thuc. 2. Sal. in lug.; Cic. pro l. Man.; Demost. olyn.
2; Liu. li. 30; Vegct I; Caes. 1 & 3. de bel. ciuili; Proh.
in Thras. 4 Caes. 31. de bello ciu.; Liu. 1. 7.; Xen. 1 &
5; Cyr. & de discp. mi.; Xen. in Ages. 5 Pol. 1. 5.
6 Xen. 1. Cyr. Thuc. 5. 7 Isoc. ad Phil.; Pla. 9. de leg.;
Liu. 1. 22. & 31; Tac. 2. his.; Plut. de fort. 8 Isocr.
in Arch. 9 Polib. 3; Cic 1. Of. & 7. Phil.; Tac. 4. his.
[Basil-30] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
their Princes example (as I shewed you before) let it not be said, that
ye command others to keepe the contrary course to that, which in your owne
person ye practise, making so your wordes and deeds to fight together:/1
but by the contrary, let your owne life be a law-booke and a mirrour to
your people; that therein they may read the practise of their owne Lawes;
and therein they may see, by your image, what life they should leade.
And this example in your owne life and person,
I likewise diuide in two parts: The first, in the gouernment of your
Court and followers, in all godlinesse and vertue: the next, in hauing
your owne minde decked and enriched so with all vertuous qualities, that
therewith yee may worthily rule your people: For it is not ynough
that ye haue and retaine (as prisoners) within your selfe neuer so many
good qualities and vertues, except ye employ them, and set them on worke,
for the weale of them that are committed to your charge: Virtutis
enim laus omnis in actione consistit./2 {deeds_words+}
First then, as to the gouernment of your Court
and followers, King Dauid sets downe the best precepts, that any wise and
Christian King can practise in that point: For yee ought to haue
a great care for the ruling well of all your Subjects, so ought yee to
haue a double care for the ruling well of your owne seruants;/3 since vnto
them yee are both a Politicke and Oeconomicke gouernour. And as euery
one of the people will delite to follow the example of any of the Courteours,
as well in euill as in good:/4 so what crime so horrible can there be committed
and ouer-seene in a Courteour, that will not be an exemplare excuse for
any other boldly to commit the like? And therfore in two points haue ye
to take good heed anent your Court and houshold: first, in choosing
them wisely; next, in carefully ruling them whom ye haue chosen.
It is an olde and trew saying, That a kindly
Auer will neuer become a good horse: for albeit good education and
company be great helpes to Nature,/5 and education be therefore most iustly
called altera natura, yet is it euill to get out of the flesh,/6 that is
bred in the bone, as the olde prouerbe sayth. Be very ware then in
making choice of your seruants and companie: -
Nam
Turpius eiicitur, quam non admittitur
hospes:/7
and many respects may lawfully let an admission, that will not be sufficient
causes of depriuation.
All your seruants and Court must be composed
partly of minors such as young Lords, to be brought vp in your company,
or Pages and such like; and partly of men of perfit aage, for seruing you
in such roumes, as ought to be filled with men of wisedome and discretion.
For the first sort, ye can doe no more, but choose them within aage, that
are come of a good and vertuous kinde,/8 In fide
-----
1 Pl. in Pol. & 4. de leg. 2 Plat. in Theae. &
Euth.; Arist. 1. Eth.; Cic. in Offic. 3 Psal. 101.
4 Cic. ad Q frat.
5 Plat. 5. de Leg. 6 Arisr. 2. oecon. 7 Ouid. 5.
de Trist. 8 Arist. 1. & 5. polit.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-31]
parentum, as Baptisme is vsed: For though anima non venit ex traduce,/1
but is immediatly created by God, and infused from aboue; yet it is most
certaine, that vertue or vice will oftentimes, with the heritage, be transferred
from the parents to the posteritie, and runne on a blood (as the Prouerbe
is) the sickenesse of the minde becomming as kindly to some races, as these
sickenesses of the body, that infect in the seede:/2 Especially choose
such minors as are come of a trew and honest race, and haue not had the
house whereof they are descended, infected with falsehood./3
And as for the other sort of your companie
and seruants, that ought to be of perfit aage; first see that they be of
a good fame and without blemish/4 otherwise, what can the people thinke,
but that yee haue chosen a company vnto you, according to your owne humour,
and so haue preferred these men, for the loue of their vices and crimes,
that ye knew them to be guiltie of? For the people that see you not within,
cannot iudge of you, but according to the outward appearance of your actions
and companie, which onely is subiect to their sight:/5 And next, see that
they be indued with such honest qualities, {PlainDealer+}
as are meete for such offices, as ye ordaine them to serue in; that your
iudgement may be knowen in imploying euery man according to his giftes:/6
And shortly, follow good king Dauids counsell in the choise of your seruants,
by setting your eyes vpon the faithfull and vpright of the land to dwell
with you./7
But here I must not forget to remember,
and according to my fatherly authoritie, to charge you to preferre specially
to your seruice, so many as haue trewly serued me, and are able for it:
the rest, honourably to reward them, preferring their posteritie before
others, as kindliest: so shall ye not onely be best serued, (for
if the haters of your parents cannot loue you, as I shewed before, it followeth
of necessitie their louers must loue you) but further, ye shall kyth your
thankefull memorie of your father, and procure the blessing of these olde
seruants, in not missing their olde master in you; which otherwise would
be turned in a prayer for me, and a curse for you. Vse them therefore
when God shall call me, as the testimonies of your affection towards me;
trusting and aduancing those farthest, whom I found faithfullest:
which ye must not discerne by their rewards at my hand (for rewards as
they are called Bona fortunae, so are they subiect vnto fortune) but according
to the trust I gaue them; hauing oft-times had better heart then hap to
the rewarding of sundry: And on the other part, as I wish you to
kyth your constant loue towards them that I loued, so desire I you to kyth
in the same measure, your constant hatred to them that I hated: I
meane, bring not home, nor restore not such, as ye finde standing banished
or fore-faulted by me. The contrary would kyth in you ouer great a contempt
of me, and lightnesse in
-----
1 Cic. ad Q. frat. 2 Witnesse the experience of the late
house of Gowrie. 3 Plat. 6. de leg.; Arist. 2. oecon. & 1. pol.
4 Plat. 6. de leg.; Isocr. in pan.; Arist. 5. pol.
5 Dem. 2. ph. 6 Plat. 7. de Rep.; 3. et 12. de
Leg.; Arist. 5. et 6. polit. 7 Psal. 101. {PlainDealer+}
[Basil-32] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
your owne nature: for how can they be trew to the Sonne, that
were false to the Father?
But to returne to the purpose anent the choise
of your seruants, yee shall by this wise forme of doing, eschew the inconuenients,
that in my minoritie I fell in, anent the choise of my seruants:
For by them that had the command where I was brought vp, were my seruants
put vnto mee; not choosing them that were meetest to serue me, but whom
they thought meetest to serue their turne about me, as kythed well in many
of them at the first rebellion raised against mee, which compelled mee
to make a great alteration among my seruants. And yet the example
of that corruption made mee to be long troubled there-after with solliciters,
recommending seruants vnto me, more for seruing in effect, their friends
that put them in, then their master that admitted them. Let my example
then teach you to follow the rules here set downe, choosing your seruants
for your owne vse, and not for the vse of others:/1 And since ye must bee
communis parens to all your people, so choose your seruants indifferently
out of all quarters; not respecting other mens appetites, but their owne
qualilies: For as ye must command all, so reason would, ye should
be serued out of al, as ye please to make choice.
But specially take good heed to the choice
of your seruants, that ye preferre to the offices of the Crowne and estate:
for in other offices yee haue onely to take heede to your owne weale;/2
but these concerne likewise the weale of your people; for the which yee
must bee answerable to God. Choose then for all these Offices, men
of knowen wisedome, honestie and good conscience; well practised in the
points of the craft, that yee ordaine them for, and free of all factions
and partialities; but specially free of that filthie vice of
Flatterie+, the pest of all Princes, and wracke of Republicks:/3 For
since in the first part of this Treatise, I fore-warned you to be at warre
with your owne inward flatterer OtxaVTt'a, how much more should ye be at
war with outward flatterers, who are nothing so sib to you, as your selfe
is; by the selling of such counterfeit wares, onely preassing to ground
their greatnesse vpon your ruines?/4 And therefore bee carefull to preferre
none, as yee will bee answerable to God but onely for their worthinesse:
But specially choose honest, diligent, meane, but responsall men, to bee
your receiuers in money matters: meane I say, that ye may when yee
please, take a sharpe account of their intromission, without perill of
their breeding any trouble to your estate: for this ouersight hath
beene the greatest cause of my mis-thriuing in money matters. Especially,
put neuer a forrainer, in any principall office of estate: for that
will neuer faile to stirre vp sedition and enuie in the countreymens hearts,
both against you and him: But (as I saide before) if God prouide
you with moe countries then this; choose the borne-men of euery countrey,
to bee your chief counsellers therein./5
-----
1 Arist. 2. Pol. 2 Plat. de repub.; Cic. ad Q. frat.;
Isoc. in Panath. ad Nic. & de pace. 3 Thuc. 6; Plutar.
in pol.
4 Plat. in Phedr. & Menex.; Arist. 5 pol.; Isoc. in Sym.;
Tacit. 3. hist.; Curt. 8. 5 Arist. 5. pol.; Cic. ad Q. frat.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-33]
And for conclusion of my aduice anent the choice
of your feruants, delight to be serued with men of the noblest blood that
may bee had: for besides that their seruice shall breed you great
good-will and least enuie, contrarie to that of startvps ye shall oft finde
vertue follow noble races, as I haue said before speaking of the Nobilitie./1
Now, as to the other point, anent your
gouerning of your seruants when yee haue chosen them; make your Court and
companie to bee a patterne of godlinesse and all honest vertues, to all
the rest of the people./2 Bee a daily watch-man ouer your seruants,
that they obey your lawes precisely:/3 For how can your lawes bee kept
in the countrey, if they be broken at your eare? Punishing the breach thereof
in a Courteour, more seuerely, then in the person of any other of your
subjects: and aboue all, suffer none of them (by abusing their credite
with you to oppresse or wrong any of your subiects. Be homely or
strange with them, as ye thinke their behauiour deserueth, and their nature
may beare with./4 Thinke a quarrellous man a pest in your companie.
Bee carefull euer to preferre the gentilest natured and trustiest, to the
inwardest Offices about you, especially in your chalmer./5 Suffer none
about you to meddle in any mens particulars, but like the Turkes Ianisares,
let them know no father but you, nor particular but yours./6 And if any
will medde in their kinne or friends quarrels, giue them their leaue:
for since ye must be of no surname nor kinne, but equall to all honest
men; it becommeth you not to bee followed with partiall or factious seruants.
Teach obedience to your seruants, and not to thinke themselues ouer-wise:/7
and, as when any of them deserueth it, ye must not spare to put them away,
so, without a seene cause, change none of them. Pay them, as all
others your subiects, with praemium or poena as they deserue, which is
the very ground-stone of good gouernement. Employ euery man as ye
thinke him qualified, but vse not one in all things, lest he waxe proude,
and be enuied of his fellowes. Loue them best, that are
plainnest+ with you, and disguise not the trewth for all their kinne:
suffer none to be euill tongued, nor backbiters of them they hate:
command a hartly and brotherly loue among all them that serue you./8 And
shortly, maintaine peace in your Court, bannish enuie, cherish modestie,
bannish deboshed insolence, foster humilitie, and represse pride:
setting downe such a comely and honourable order in all the points of your
seruice; that when strangers shall visite your Court, they may with the
Queene of Sheba, admire your wisedome in the glorie of your house,/9 and
comely order among your seruants.
But the principall blessing that yee can get
of good companie, will stand in your marrying of a godly and vertuous wife:
for shee must bee nearer vnto you,
-----
1 Plat. in i. Al. in pol. & 5. de legib.; Arist. 2. oecon.
2 Isocr. in Areop. 3 Idem in Panath. 4 Arist.
2. pol.; Tacit. 1. hist.
5 Val. lib. 2; Curt. 4. 6 Demost. 8. phil.; Sal. in Cat.;
Liu. 22. 7 Tacit eod. & i. An. 8 Ar. 5. polit.;
Tacit. in Ag.;
Dion li. 52; Xeno. in Ages.; Isoc. in Sym. et ad Ph.; Id. de
permutat.; Cic. ad Q. frat. 9 1. King. 10.
[Basil-34] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
then any other companie, being Flesh of your flesh, and bone of your
bone,/1 as Adam saide of Heuah. And because I know not but God may
call me, before ye be readie for Mariage; I will shortly set downe to you
heere my aduice therein.
First of all consider, that Mariage is the
greatest earthly felicitie or miserie, that can come to a man, according
as it pleaseth God to blesse or curse the same. Since then without
the blessing of God, yee cannot looke for a happie successe in Mariage,
yee must bee carefull both in your preparation for it, and in the choice
and vsage of your wife, to procure the same. By your preparation,
I meane, that yee must keepe your bodie cleane and vnpolluted, till yee
giue it to your wife, whom-to onely it belongeth. For how can ye
iustly craue to bee ioyned with a pure virgine, if your bodie be polluted?
why should the one halfe bee cleane, and the other defiled? And although
I know, fornication is thought but a light and veniall sinne, by the most
part of the world, yet remember well what I said to a you in my first Booke
anent conscience, and count euery sinne and breach of Gods law, not according
as the vaine world esteemeth of it, but as God the Iudge and maker of the
lawe accounteth of the same. Heare God commanding by the mouth of
Paul, to abstaine from fornication, declaring that the fornicator shall
not inherite the Kingdome of heauen:/2 and by the mouth of Iohn, reckoning
our fornication amongst other grieuous sinnes, that debarre the committers
amongst dogs and swine, from entry in that spirituall and heauenly Ierusalem./3
And consider, if a man shall once take vpon him, to count that light, which
God calleth heauie; and veniall that, which God calleth grieuous; beginning
first to measure any one sinne by the rule of his lust and appetites, and
not of his conscience; what shall let him to doe so with the next, that
his affections shall stirre him to, the like reason seruing for all:
and so to goe forward till he place his whole corrupted affections in Gods
roome? And then what shall come of him; but, as a man giuen ouer to his
owne filthy affections, shall perish into them? And because wee are all
of that nature, that sibbest examples touch vs neerest, consider the difference
of successe that God granted in the Mariages of the King my grand-father,
and me your owne father: the reward of his incontinencie, (proceeding from
his euill education) being the suddaine death at one time of two pleasant
yong Princes; and a daughter onely borne to succeed to him, whom hee had
neuer the hap, so much as once to see or blesse before his death:
leauing a double curse behinde him to the land, both a Woman of sexe, and
a new borne babe of aage to reigne ouer them. And as for the blessing
God hath bestowed on mee, in granting me both a greater continencie, and
the fruits following there-upon, your selfe, and sib folkes to you, are
(praise be to God) sufficient witnesses: which, I hope the same God
of his infinite mercie, shall continue and increase, without repentance
to me and my posteritie. Be not ashamed then, to keepe cleane your
body, which is the Temple of the holy Spirit,/4 notwithstanding all vaine
allurements to
-----
1 Gen. 2. 23. 2 1. Cor. 6. 10. 3 Reuel.
22. 15. 4 1. Cor. 6. 19.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-35]
the contrary, discerning trewly and wisely of euery vertue and vice,
according to the trew qualities thereof, and not according to the vaine
conceits of men.
As for your choise in Mariage, respect chiefly
the three causes, wherefore Mariage was first ordained by God; and then
ioyne three accessories, so farre as they may be obtained, not derogating
to the principalles.
The three causes it was ordained for, are,
for staying of lust, for procreation of children, and that man should by
his Wife, get a helper like himselfe. Deferre not then to Marie till your
aage: for it is ordained for quenching the lust of your youth:/1
Especially a King must tymouslie Marie for the weale of his people./2 Neither
Marie yee, for any accessory cause or worldly respects, a woman vnable,
either through aage, nature, or accident, for procreation of children:
for in a King that were a double fault, as well against his owne weale,
as against the weale of his people. Neither also Marie one of knowne
euill conditions, or vicious education: for the woman is ordained
to be a helper, and not a hinderer to man.
The three accessories, which as I haue said,
ought also to be respected:, without derogating to the principall causes,
are beautie, riches, and friendship+
by alliance, which are all blessings of God. For beautie increaseth
your loue to your Wife, contenting you, the better with her, without caring
for others: and riches and great alliance, doe both make her the
abler to be a helper vnto you./3 But if ouer great respect being had to
these accessories, the principall causes bee ouerseene (which is ouer oft
practised in the world) as of themselues they are a blessing being well
vsed; so the abuse of them will turne them in a curse. For what can all
these worldly respects auaile when a man shall finde himselfe coupled with
a diuel, to be one flesh with him, and the halfe marrow in his bed? Then
(though too late) shall he finde that beautie without bountie, wealth without
wisdome, and great friendship without grace and honestie; are but faire
shewes, and the deceitfull masques of infinite miseries.
But haue ye respect, my Sonne, to these three
speciall causes in your Mariage, which flow from the first institution
thereof, & coetera omnia adjicientur vobis./4 And therefore I would
rathest haue you to Marie one that were fully of your owne Religion; her
ranke and other qualities being agreeable to your estate. For although
that to my great regrate, the number of any Princes of power and account,
professing our Religion, bee but very small; and that therefore this aduice
seemes to be the more strait and difficile: yet ye haue deeply to
weigh, and consider vpon these doubts, how ye and your wife can bee of
one flesh, and keepe vnitie betwixt you, being members of two opposite
Churches: disagreement in Religion bringeth euer with it, disagreement
in maners; and the dissention betwixt your Preachers and hers, wil breed
and foster a dissention among your subiects, taking their example from
your family; besides the perill of the euill education of your children.
Neither pride you that ye wil be able to frame and
-----
1 Arist. 7. pol. 2 Id. eod. 3 AEg.
Ro. 2. de reg. pr. 4 Matth. 13.
[Basil-36] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
make her as ye please: that deceiued Solomon the wisest King that
euer was; the grace of Perseuerance, not being a flower that groweth in
our garden.
Remember also that Mariage is one of the greatest
actions that a man doeth in all his time, especially in taking of his first
Wife: and if hee Marie first basely beneath his ranke, he will euer
be the lesse accounted of thereafter. And lastly, remember to choose
your Wife as I aduised you to choose your seruants: that she be of
a whole and cleane race, not subiect to the hereditary sicknesses, either
of the soule or the body: For if a man wil be careful to breed horses
and dogs of good kinds, how much more careful should he be, for the breed
of his owne loines?/1 So shal ye in your Mariage haue respect to your conscience,
honour, and naturall weale in your successours.
When yee are Maried, keepe inuiolably your
promise made to God in your Mariage; which standeth all in doing of one
thing, and abstayning from another: to treat her in all things as
your wife, and the halfe of your selfe; and to make your body (which then
is no more yours, but properly hers) common with none other./2 I trust
I need not to insist here to disswade you from the filthy vice of adulterie:
remember onely what solemne promise yee make to God at your Mariage:
and since it is onely by the force of that promise that your children succeed
to you, which otherwayes they could not doe; equitie and reason would,
ye should keepe your part thereof./3 God is euer a seuere auenger of all
periuries; and it is no oath made in iest, that giueth power to children
to succeed to great kingdomes. Haue the King my grand-fathers example
before your eyes, who by his adulterie, bred the wracke of his lawfull
daughter and heire; in begetting that bastard+
[Earl of Murray, Moray, Protestant] {Edmund+}
who vnnaturally rebelled, and procured the ruine of his owne Souerane and
sister. And what good her posteritie hath gotten sensyne, of some
of that vnlawfull generation, Bothuell his treacherous attempts can beare
witnesse. Keepe praecisely then your promise made at Mariage, as ye would
wish to be partaker of the blessing therein.
And for your behauiour to your Wife, the Scripture
can best giue you counsell therein: Treat her as your owne flesh,
command her as her Lord, cherish her as your helper, rule her as your pupill,
and please her in all things reasonable; but teach her not to be curious
in things that belong her not:/4 Ye are the head, shee is your body; It
is your office to command, and hers to obey; but yet with such a sweet
harmonie, as shee should be as ready to obey, as ye to command; as willing
to follow, as ye to go before; your loue being wholly knit vnto her, and
an her affections louingly bent to follow your will.
And to conclude, keepe specially three rules
with your Wife: first, suffer her neuer to meddle with the Politicke
gouernment of the Commonweale, but holde her at the Oeconomicke rule of
the house; and yet all to be subiect to your direc-
-----
1 Pla. 5. de Rep.; Cic. 2. de Diu.; Arist. de gen. An.;
Lucr. 4. 2 Pl. 11. de leg.; Is. in Sym. 3 Cic. 2. de leg.
4 Arist. 8. AEth. & 1. Pol.; Xen. & Arist. in oeco.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-37]
tion:/1 keepe carefully good and chaste company about her, for women
are the frailest sexe; and be neuer both angry at once but when ye see
her in passion, ye should with reason danton yours: for both when
yee are setled, ye are meetest to iudge of her errours; and when she is
come to her selfe, she may be best made to apprehend her offence, and reuerence
your rebuke.
If God send you succession, be carefull for
their vertuous education: loue them as ye ought, but let them know
as much of it, as the gentlenesse of their nature will deserue; contayning
them euer in a reuerent loue and feare of you. And in case it please
God to prouide you to all these three_Kingdomes+,
make your eldest sonne Isaac, leauing him all your kingdomes; and prouide
the rest with private possessions: Otherwayes by deuiding your kingdomes,
yee shall leaue the seed of diuision and discord among your posteritie;/2 {Lear+}
as befell to this Ile, by the diuision and assignement thereof, to the
three sonnes of Brutus, Locrine, Albanact, and Camber./3 But if God giue
you not succession, defraud neuer the nearest by right, what-soeuer conceit
yee haue of the person: For Kingdomes are euer at Gods disposition, {Antonio+} {Hal+}
and in that case we are but liue-rentars, lying no more in the Kings, nor
peoples hands to dispossesse the righteous heire.
And as your company should be a paterne to
the rest of the people, so should your person be a lampe and mirrour to
your company:/4 giuing light to your seruants to walke in the path
of vertue, and representing vnto them such worthie qualities, as they should
preasse to imitate.
I need not to trouble you with the particular
discourse of the foure Cardinall_vertues+,
it is so troden a path: but I will shortly say vnto you; make one
of them, which is Temperance, Queene {Cordelia+}
of all the rest within you. I meane not by the vulgar interpretation
of Temperance, which onely consists in gustu & tactu, by the moderating
of these two senses:/5 but, I meane of that wise moderation, that first
commaunding your selfe, shall as a Queene, command all the affections.
and passions of your minde, and as a Phisician, wisely mixe all your actions
according thereto. Therefore, not onely in all your affections and
passions, but euen in your most vertuous actions, make euer moderation
to be the chiefe ruler: For although holinesse be the first and most
requisite qualitie of a Christian, as proceeding from a feeling feare and
trew knowledge of God: yet yee remember how in the conclusion of
my first booke I aduised you to moderate al your outward actions flowing
there-fra. The like say I now of Iustice, which is the greatest vertue
that properly belongeth to a Kings office.
Vse Iustice, but with such moderation, as
it turne not in Tyrannie: otherwaies summum Ius, is summa iniuria.
As for example: if a man of a knowen honest life, be inuaded by brigands
or theeues for his purse, and in his owne defence slay
-----
1 Arist. 1 rhet.; Plu. in Menon.; AEgid. R. de reg. pr.[;]
Plu. [sic] 5. de Rep. & 7. de leg. 2 Plu. in Thes. 4. &
5. deRep. & 6. & 7. de l. Arist. 7. Pol. 3 Polid. 1.
4 Plu. in Pol.; Cic. ad Q. frat. 5 Arist. 5. pol.; Pol. 6.; Cic. 1. Off.
2. de inuen. & in Par. 6 Pla. 4. de Leg.; Arist. 1. mag.
mor.; Cic. 1. off. pro Rab. & ad Q. frat.; Seneca de cl.
[Basil-38] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
one of them, they beeing both moe in number, and also knowen to bee
deboshed and insolent liuers; where by the contrarie, hee was single alone,
beeing a man of sound reputation: yet because they were not at the
home, or there was no eyewitnesse present that could verifie their first
inuading of him, shall hee therefore lose his head? And likewise, by the
law-burrowes in our lawes, men are prohibited vnder great pecuniall paines,
from any wayes inuading or molesting their neighbours person or bounds:
if then his horse breake the halter, and pastour in his neighbours medow,
shall he pay two or three thousand pounds for the wantonnesse of his horse,
or the weaknesse of his halter? Surely no: for lawes are ordained
as rules of vertuous and sociall huing, and not to bee snares to trap your
good subjects: {Shylock+} and therefore
the lawe must be interpreted according to the meaning, and not to the literall
sense thereof: Nam ratio est anima legis./1
And as I said of Iustice, so say I ofClemencie+,
Magnanimitie+, Liberalitie+,
Constancie+, Humilitie+, and all other
Princely vertues; Nam in medio stat virtus. And it is but the craft
of the Diuell that falsly coloureth the two vices that are on either side
thereof, with the borrowed titles of it, albeit in very deede they haue
no affinitie therewith and the two extremities themselues, although they
seeme contrarie, yet growing to the height, runne euer both in one:
For in infinites omnia concurrunt; and what difference is betwixt extreame
tyrannie, delighting to destroy all mankinds; and extreame slackenesse
of punishment, permitting euery man to tyrannize ouer his companion? {mean_extreme+}
Or what differeth extreame prodigalitie, by wasting of all to possesse
nothing; from extreame niggardnesse, by hoarding vp all to enjoy nothing;
like the Asse that carying victuall on her backe, is like to starue for
hunger, and will bee glad of thrissels for her part? And what is betwixt
the pride of a glorious Nebuchadnezzar, and the preposterous humilitie
of one of the proud Puritanes, claiming to their Paritie, and crying, Wee
are all but vile wormes, and yet will iudge and giue Law to their King,
but will be iudged nor controlled by none? Surely. there is more
pride vnder such a ones blacke bonnet, then vnder Alexander the great his
Diademe, as was said of Diogenes in the like case.
But aboue all vertues, study to know well
your owne craft, which is to rule your people. And when I say this,
I bid you know all crafts: For except ye know euery one, how can
yee controll euery one, which is your proper office? Therefore besides
your education, it is necessarie yee delight in reading, and seeking the
knowledge of all lawfull things; but with these two restrictions:/2 first,
that yee choose idle houres for it, not interrupting therewith the discharge
of your office: and next, that yee studie not for knowledge nakedly, but
that your principall ende be, to make you able thereby to vse your office;/3
practising according to your knowledge in all the points of your calling:
not like these vaine Astrologians {Prospero+},
that studie night and day on the course of the starres, onely that they
may,
-----
1 Arist. 5. aeth. & 1. rhet.; Cicer. pro Caec. 2 Plat.
in pol. 5. de Rep. & Epist 7; Cic. ad Q. frat. & de or.
3 Id. 1. de fin.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-39]
for satisfying their curiositie, know their course./1 But since all
Artes and sciences are linked euery one with other, their greatest principles
agreeing in one (which mooued the Poets to faine the nine Muses to be all
sisters) studie them, that out of their harmonie, ye may sucke the knowledge
of all faculties; and consequently be on the counsell of all crafts, that
yee may be able to containe them all in order, as I haue alreadie said:
For knowledge and learning is a light burthen, the weight whereof will
neuer presse your shoulders. {liberal_arts+}
First of all then, study to be well seene
in the Scriptures, as I remembred you in the first booke;/2 as well for
the knowledge of your owne saluation, as that ye may be able to containe
your Church in their calling, as Custos vtriusque Tabula. For the
ruling them well, is no small point of your office; taking specially heede,
that they vague not from their text in the Pulpit: and if euer ye
would haue peace in your land, suffer them not to meddle in that place
with the estate or policie; but punish seuerely the first that presumeth
to it. Doe nothing towards them without a good ground and warrant,
but reason not much with them: for I haue ouermuch surfeited them
with that, and it is not their fashion to yeeld. And suffer no conuentions
nor meetings among Church- men, but by your knowledge and permission.
Next the Scriptures, studie well your
owne Lawes: for how can ye discerne by the thing yee know not? But
preasse to draw all your Lawes and processes, to be as short and plaine
as ye can: assure your selfe the longsomnesse both of rights and processes,
breedeth their vnsure loosenesse and obscuritie, the shortest being euer
both the surest and plainest forme,/3 {PlainDealer+}
and the longsomnesse seruing onely for the enriching of the Aduocates and
Clerkes, with the spoile of the whole countrey:/4 And
therefore delite to haunt your Session, and spie carefully their proceedings;
taking good heede, if any briberie may be tried among them, which cannot
euer seuerely be punished. Spare not to goe there, for gracing that
farre any that yee fauour, by your presence to procure them expedition
of justice; although that should be specially done, for the poore that
cannot waite on, or are debarred by mightier parties. But when yee
are there, remember the throne is Gods and not yours, {Antonio+}
that ye sit in, and let no fauour, nor whatsoeuer respects mooue you from
the right. Ye sit not there, as I shewe before, for rewarding of
friends or seruants, nor for crossing of contemners, but onely for doing
of Iustice./5 Learne also wisely to discerne betwixt Iustice and equitie;
and for pitie of the poore, rob not the rich, because he may better spare
it, but giue the little man the larger coat if it be his; eschewing the
errour of young Cyrus/6 therein: For Iustice, by the Law, giueth
euery man his owne; and equitie in things arbitrall, giueth euery one that
which is meetest for him.
Be an ordinarie sitter in your secret Counsell:
that Judicature is onely ordained for matters of estate, and repressing
of insolent oppressions. Make that iudge-
-----
1 Id. 1 Offic. 2 Deut. 17. 3 Plat. 4.
de Rep. & 6. de Leg.; Arist. 1. rhet. 4 Cic. 1. de Orat.;
Sen. in Lud.
5 Plat. in pol.; Arist. 1. Rhet.; Cic. ad Q. frat.; Plut. in Is.
6 Xen. 1. Cyr.
[Basil-40] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
ment as compendious and plaine as ye can; and suffer no Aduocates to
be heard there with their dilatours, but let euery partie tell his owne
tale himselfe: and wearie not to heare the complaints of the oppressed,
aut ne Rex sis./1 Remit euery thing to the ordinary Judicature, for
eschewing of confusion: but let it be your owne craft, to take a
sharpe account of euery man in his office.
And next the Lawes, I would haue you to be
well versed in authentick histories, and in the Chronicles of all nations,
but specially in our owne histories (Ne sis peregrinus domi) the example
whereof most neerely concernes you: I meane not of such infamous
inuectiues, as Buchanans or Knoxes Chronicles: and if any of these
infamous libels remaine vntill your dayes, vse the Law vpon the keepers
thereof: For in that point I would haue you a Pythagorist,/2 to thinke
that the very spirits of these archibellouses of rebellion, haue made transition
in them that hoardes their bookes, or maintaines their opinions; punishing
them, euen as it were their authours risen againe./3 But by reading of
authenticke histories and Chronicles, yee shall learne experience by Theoricke,
applying the bypast things to the present estate, quia nihil nouum sub
sole:/4 such is the continuall volubilitie of things earthly, according
to the roundnesse of the world, and reuolution of the, heauenly circles:
which is expressed by the wheeles in Ezechiels visions,/5 and counterfeited
by the Poets in rota Fortunae+. And
likewise by the knowledge of histories, yee shall knowe how to behaue your
selfe to all Embassadours and strangers; being able to discourse with them
vpon the estate of their owne countrey. And among al prophane histories,
I must not omit most specially to recommend vnto you, the Commentaries
of Caesar; both for the sweete flowing of the stile, as also for the worthinesse
of the matter it selfe: For I haue euer beene of that opinion, that
of all the Ethnick Emperors, or great Captaines that euer were, he hath
farthest excelled, both in his practise, and in his precepts in martiall
affaires.
As for the studie of other
liberall_artes+ and sciences, I would haue you reasonably versed in
them, but not preassing to bee a passe-master in any of them: for
that cannot but distract you from the points of your calling, as I shewed
you before:/6 and when, by the enemie winning the towne, yee shall bee
interrupted in your demonstration, as Archimedes/7 was; your people (I
thinke) will looke very bluntly vpon it. I graunt it is meete yee
haue some entrance, specially in the Mathematickes; for the knowledge of
the arte militarie, in situation of Campes, ordering of battels, making
Fortifications, placing of batteries, or such like./8 And let not this
your knowledge be dead without fruites, as Saint Iames speaketh of Faith:
but let it appeare in your daily conuersation, and in all the actions of
your life./9
-----
1 Cic. ad Q. frat.; Tac. 1. hist.; Plut. in Demet. 2 Plat.
in Menon. 3 Arist. 1. Rhet.; Polit. 1; Plut. in Timo.; Cic. 2. de
Or.
4 Eccles. 1. 5 Ezech. 1. 6 Sen. ep. 84. 7 Liu.
1. 24; Plut. in Marc. 8 Pl. 7. de leg.; Arist. 2. Meta.
9 Iam. 2.17.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-41]
Embrace trew magnanimitie, not in beeing vindictiue,
which the corrupted iudgements of the world thinke to be trew Magnanimitie/1
but by the contrarie, in thinking your offendour not worthie of your wrath,
empyring ouer your owne passion, and triumphing in the commaunding your
selfe to forgiue:/2 {Prospero+}
husbanding the effects of your courage and wrath, to be rightly employed
vpon repelling of injuries within, by reuenge taking vpon the oppressours;
and in reuenging iniuries without, by iust warres vpon forraine enemies.
And so, where ye finde a notable iniurie, spare not to giue course to the
torrents of your wrath. The wrath+ of
a King, is like to the roaring of a Lyon./3
Foster trew Humilitie, in bannishing
pride, not onely towards God (considering yee differ not in stuffs, but
in vse, and that onely by his ordinance, from the basest of your people)
but also towards your Parents./4 And if it fall out that my Wife
shall out-liue me, as euer ye thinke to purchase my blessing, honour your
mother: set Beersheba in a throne on your right hand: offend
her for nothing, much lesse wrong her: remember her
Quae longa decem tulerit fastidia menses;
and that your flesh and blood is made of hers: and beginne not, like
the young lordes and lairdes, your first warres vpon your Mother; but presse
earnestly to deserue her blessing. Neither deceiue your selfe with
many that say, they care not for their Parents curse, so they deserue it
not. O inuert not the order of nature, by iudging your superiours, chiefly
in your owne particular! But assure your selfe, the blessing or curse of
the Parents, hath almost euer a Propheticke power ioyned with it:
and if there were no more, honour your Parents, for the lengthning of your
owne dayes, as GOD in his Law/5 promiseth. Honour also them that
are in loco Parentum vnto you, such as your gouemours, vp-bringers, and
Praeceptours:/6 be thankefull vnto them and reward them, which is your
dewtie and honour.
But on the other part, let not this trew humilitie
stay your high indignation to appeare, when any great oppressours shall
presume to come in your presence;/7 then frowne as ye ought: And
in-case thay vse a colour of Law in oppressing their poore ones, as ouer-many
doe, that which ye cannot mend by Law, mend by the withdrawing of your
countenance from them:/8 and once in the yeere crosse them, when their
erands come in your way, recompencing the oppressour, according to Christs
parable of the two debtours./9
Keepe trew Constancie, not onely in
your kindenesse towards honest men; but being also inuicti animi against
all aduersities: not with that Stoicke+
insensible stupiditie, wherewith many in our dayes, preassing to winne
honour, in imitating that ancient sect, by their inconstant behauiour in
their owne liues, belie their
-----
1 Arist. 4. eth. Sen. de cl. 2 Cic. 1. off.; Virg. 6. AEn.
3 Prou. 20. 4 Plat. 4. de Leg.; Xen. 2. de dict. & fact.
Soc.
5 Exod. 20. 6 Xen. 1. & 3. Cyr. 7 Cic.
ad Q. frat. 8 Arist. 5. pol. 9 Matth. 18.
[Basil-42] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
profession./1 But although ye are not a stocke, {stoic_unfeeling+}
not to feele calamities; yet let not the feeling of them, so ouer-rule
and doazen your reason, as may stay you from taking and vsing the best
resolution for remedie, that can be found out.
Vse trew Liberalitie in rewarding the good,
and bestowing frankly for your honour and weale: but with that proportionall
discretion, that euery man may be serued according to his measure, wherein
respect must be had to his ranke, deserts, and necessitie: And prouide
how to haue, but cast not away without cause. In speciall, empaire
not by your Liberalitie the ordinarie rents of your crowne whereby the
estate Royall of you, and your successours, must be maintained, ne exhaurias
fontem liberalitatis: for that would euer be kept sacrosanctum &
extra commercium:/2 otherwaies, your Liberalitie would decline to Prodigalitie,
in helping others with your, and your successours hurt. And aboue
all, enrich not your selfe with exactions vpon your subjects; but thinke
the riches of your people your best treasure, by the sinnes of offenders,
where no praeuention can auaile, making iustly your commoditie./3 And in-case
necessitie of warres, or other extraordinaries compell you to lift Subsidies,
doe it as rarely as ye can: employing it onely to the vse it was
ordained for; and vsing your selfe in that case, as fidus depositarius
to your people./4
And principally, exercise trew Wisedome;
in discerning wisely betwixt trew and false reports: First, considering
the nature of the person reporter; Next, what entresse he can haue in the
weale or euill of him, of whom hee maketh the report; Thirdly, the likely-hood
of the purpose it selfe; And, last, the nature and by-past life of the
dilated person: and where yee finde a tratler, away with him./5 And
although it bee true, that a Prince can neuer without secrecie doe great
things, yet it is better ofttimes to try reports, then by credulitie to
foster suspicion vpon an honest man. For since suspition is the
Tyrants+ sickenesse, as the fruites of an euill Conscience, potius
in alteram partem peccato:/6 I meane, in not mistrusting one, whom-to no
such vnhonestie was knowne before. But as for such as haue slipped
before, former experience may iustly breed praeuention by fore-sight.
And to conclude my aduice anent your behauiour
in your person; consider that GOD is the authour of all vertue, hauing
imprinted in mens mindes by the very light of nature, the loue of all morall
vertues; as was seene by the vertuous liues of the old Romanes: {Roman_Christian+}/7
and preasse then to shine as farre before your people, in all vertue and
honestie; as in greatnesse of ranke: that the vse thereof in all
your actions, may turne, with time, to a naturall habitude in you; and
as by their hearing of your Lawes, so by their sight of your person, both
their eyes and their eares, may leade and allure them to the loue of vertue,
and hatred of vice.
-----
1 Arist. 4. Aeth.; Thuc. 3. 6; Cic. 1. Of. & ad Q.f.; Brut. ad
Cic. 2 Cic. 1. & 2. Of.; Sal. in Iug.; Sen. 4. de ben.
3 Isoc. epist. 7; Xen. 8. Cyr.; Phil. Com. 10. 4 Arist.
5. pol.5 Isocr. ad Ph. in Panath. & de per.; Cic. ad Q.fr.; Plut. de
cursos.
6 Isoc. de pac.; Cic. 3. Of. 7 Cicer. 3. Tusc.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-43]
OF A KINGS BEHAVIOVR IN INDIFFERENT+
THINGS.
THE THIRD BOOKE.
IT is a trew old saying, That a King is as
one set on a stage, whose smallest actions and gestures, all the peoplle
gazingly doe behold:/1 and therefore although a King be neuer so precise
in the discharging of his Office, the people, who seeth but the outward
part, will euer iudge of the substance, by the circumstances;/2 and according
to the outward appearance, if his behauiour bee light or dissolute, will
conceiue prae-occupied conceits of the Kings inward intention: which
although with time, (the trier of all trewth,) it will euanish, by the
euidence of the contrary effects, yet interim patitur iustus; and praeiudged
conceits will, in the meane time, breed contempt, the mother of rebellion
and disorder./3 And besides that, it is certaine, that all the indifferent
actions and behauiour of a man, haue a certaine holding and dependance,
either vpon vertue or vice, according as they are vsed or ruled:/4 for
there is not a middes betwixt them, no more then betwixt their rewards,
heauen and hell.
Be carefull then, my Sonne, so to frame all
your indifferent actions and outward behauiour, as they may serue for the
furtherance and forth-setting of your inward vertuous disposition.
The whole indifferent actions of a man, I
deuide in two sorts: in his behauiour in things necessary, as food,
sleeping, raiment, speaking, writing, and gesture; and in things not necessary,
though conuenient and lawfull, as pastimes or exercises, and vsing of company
for recreation.
As to the indifferent things necessary, although
that of themselues they cannot bee wanted, and so in that case are not
indifferent; as likewise in-case they bee not vsed with
moderation+, declining so to the extremitie, which is vice; yet the
qualitie and forme of vsing them, may smell of vertue or vice, and be great
furtherers to any of them.
To beginne then at the things necessarie;
one of the publickest indifferent actions of a King, and that maniest,
especially strangers, will narrowly take heed to; is his maner of refection
at his Table, and his behauiour thereat. Therefore, as Kings vse
oft to eate publickly, it is meete and honourable that ye also doe so,
as well to eschew the opinion that yee loue not to haunt companie, which
is one of the markes of a Tyrant+;/5 as likewise,
that your delight to eate priuatlie, be not thought to be for private satisfying
of your gluttonie; hich ye would be ashamed should bee publicklie seene.
Let your Table bee honourably serued; but serue your appetite with few
dishes, as yong Cyrus/6 did: which both is holesommest, and freest
from the vice of delicacie, which is a degree of gluttonie./7 {PlainDealer+}
And vse most to eate of reasonablie-grosse, and common-meates; aswell for
making your
-----
1 C. ph. 8. 3. de leg. Ouid. ad Liu. 2 Quin. 4. decl.
3 Arist. 5. pol. 4 Plato in Phil. & 9. de leg. 5 Xen. in
Cyr.
6 Xen. 1. Cyr. 7 Plut. in Apoth.
[Basil-44] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
bodie strong and durable for trauell at all occasions either in peace
or in warre: as that yee may bee the heartlier receiued by your meane
Subiects in their houses, when their cheare may suffice you: which
otherwayes would be imputed to you for pride and daintinesse, and breed
coldnesse and disdaine in them. Let all your food bee simple, without
composition or sauces; which are more like medecines then meate./1 The
vsing of them was counted amongst the ancient Romanes a filthie vice of
delicacie; because they serue onely for pleasing of the taste, and not
for satisfying of the necessitie of nature; abhorring Apicius/2 their owne
citizen, for his vice of delicacie and monsterous gluttonie. Like
as both the Grecians and Romanes had in detestation the very name of Philoxenus,/3
for his filthie wish of a Crane-craig. And therefore was that sentence
vsed amongst them, against these artificiall false appetites, optimum condimentum
fames./4{PlainDealer+}
But beware with vsing excesse of meat and drinke; and chiefly, beware of
drunkennesse, which is a beastlie vice, namely in a King: but specially
beware with it, because it is one of those vices that increaseth with aage.
In the forme of your meate-eating, bee neither vnciuill, like a grosse
Cynicke; nor affectatlie mignarde, like a daintie dame; but eate in a manlie,
round, and honest fashion./5 It is no wayes comely to dispatch affaires,
or to be pensiue at meate: but keepe then an open and cheerefull
countenance, causing to reade pleasant histories vnto you, that profite
may be mixed with pleasure: and when ye are not disposed, entertaine pleasant,
quicke, but honest discourses.
And because meat prouoketh sleeping, be also
moderate in your sleepe;/6 for it goeth much by use: and remember
that if your whole life were deuided in four parts, three of them would
be found to be consumed on meat, drinke, sleepe, and vnnecessarie occupations.
But albeit ordinarie times would commonly
bee kept in meate and sleepe, yet vse your selfe some-times so, that any
time in the foure and twentie houres may bee alike to you for any of them;
that thereby your diet may be accommodate to your affaires, and not your
affaires to your diet:/7 not therefore vsing your selfe to ouer great softnesse
and delicacie in your sleepe, more then in your meate; and specially in-case
yee haue adoe with the warres.
Let not your Chalmer be throng and common
in the time of your rest, aswell for comelinesse as for eschewing of carrying
reports out of the same. Let them that haue the credite to serue
in your Chalmer, be trustie and secret; for a King will haue need to vse
secrecie in may things:/8 but yet behaue your selfe so in your greatest
secrets, as yee neede not bee ashamed, suppose they were all proclaimed
at the mercate crosse:/9 But specially see that those of your Chalmer be
of a sound fame, and without blemish.
-----
1 Sen. ep. 96. 2 Sen. de consol. ad Alb.; Iuuen. sat. 2.
6 Pla. 7. de leg. 3 Arist. 4. eth. 4 Xen. de dict.
& fact. Socr.; Laert. in Socr.; Cic. 5. Tus.; Plat. 6. de Leg.; Plin.
1. 14. 5 Cic. 1. Off. 6 Pla. 7. de leg.
7 Pla. 6. de leg.
8 Val. 2; Cur. 4. 9 Pla. 6. de leg.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-45]
Take no heede to any of your dreames, for all
prophecies, visions, and propheticke dreames are accomplished and ceased
in Christ: And therefore take no heede to freets either in dreames,
or any other things; for that errour proceedeth of ignorance, and is vnworthy
of a Christian, who should be assured, Omnia esse pura puris,/1 as Paul
sayth; all dayes and meates being alike to Christians./2
Next followeth to speake of raiment,
the on-putting whereof is the ordinarie action that followeth next to sleepe./3
Be also moderate in your raiment, neither ouer superfluous, like a deboshed
waster; nor yet ouer base, like a miserable wretch; not artificially trimmed
and decked, like a Courtizane, nor yet ouer sluggishly clothed, like a
countrey clowne, not ouer lightly like a Candie souldier or a vaine young
Courtier; nor yet ouer grauely, like a Minister: but in your garments
be proper, cleanely, comely and honest, wearing your clothes, in a carelesse,
yet comely forme: {PlainDealer+}
keeping in them a middle forme, inter Togatos & Paludatos,/4 betwixt
the grauitie of the one and lightnesse of the other: thereby to signifie,
that by your calling yee are mixed of both the professions; Togatus, as
a Iudge making and pronouncing the Law;/5 Paludatus, by the power of the
sword: as your office is likewise mixed, betwixt the Ecclesiasticall
and ciuill estate: For a King is not mere laicus, as both the Popists
and Anabaptists would haue him, to the which error also the Puritanes incline
ouer farre. But to returne to the purpose of garments, they ought
to be vsed according to their first institution by God, which was for three
causes: first to hide our nakednesse and shame; next and consequently,
to make vs more comely, and thirdly, to preserue vs from the injuries of
heate and colde. {Lear+} If to hide our
nakednesse and shamefull parts, then these naturall parts ordained to be
hid, should not be represented by any vndecent formes in the cloathes:
and,if they should helpe our comelinesse, they should not then by their
painted preened fashion, serue for baites to filthie lecherie, as false
haire and fairding does amongst vnchast women: and if they should
preserue vs from the injuries of heat and colde, men should not, like senselesse
stones, contemne God, in lightlying the seasons, glorying to conquere honour
on heate and colde. And although it be praise-worthy and necessarie
in a Prince, to be patiens algoris &, aestus, when he shall haue adoe
with warres vpon the fields; yet I thinke it meeter that ye goe both cloathed
and armed, then naked to the battell, except you would make you light for
away-running: and yet for cowards, metus addit alas. And shortly,
in your cloathes keepe a proportion, aswell with the seasons of the yeere,
as of your aage: in the fashions of them being carelesse, vsing them
according to the common forme of the time, sometimes richlier, some-times
meanlier cloathed, as occasion serueth, without keeping any
precise+ rule therein:/6 For if your mind be found occupied vpon them,
it wil be thought idle otherwaies, and ye shall bee accounted in the number
of one of these comptiiuuenes;/7 which wil make your spirit and iudgment
to be lcsse thought of. But
-----
1 Rom. 14. 2 Titus 1. 3 Isocr. de reg.
4 Cic. 1. Offic. 5 Plat. de rege. 6 Cic.
1. Off. 7 Ar. ad Alex.
[Basil-46] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
specially eschew to be effeminate+
in your cloathes, in perfuming, preening, or such like: and faile
neuer in time of warres to bee galliardest and brauest, both in cloathes
and countenance. And make not a foole of yourselfe in disguising
or wearing long haire or nailes, which are but excrements of nature, and
bewray such misusers of them, to bee either of a vindictiue, or a vaine
light naturall. Especially, make no vowes in such vaine and outward
things, as concerne either meate or cloathes.
Let your selfe and all your Court weare no
ordinarie armour with your cloathes, but such as is knightly and honourable;
I meane rapier-swordes, and daggers: For tuilyesome weapons in the
Court, betokens confusion in the countrey. And therefore bannish
not onely from your Court, all traiterous offensiue weapons, forbidden
by the Lawes, as guns and such like (whereof I spake alreadie) but also
all traiterous defensiue armes, as secrets, platesleeues, and such like
vnseene armour: For, besides that the wearers thereof, may be presupposed
to haue a secret euill intention, they want both the vses that defensiue
armour is ordained for; which is, to be able to holde out violence, and
by their outward glaunsing in their enemies eyes, to strike a terrour in
their hearts: Where by the contrary, they can serue for neither,
being not onely vnable to resist, but dangerous for shots, and giuing no
outward showe against the enemie; beeing onely ordained, for betraying
vnder trust, whereof honest men should be ashamed to beare the outward
badge, not resembling the thing they are not. And for answere against
these arguments, I know none but the olde Scots fashion; which if it be
wrong, is no more to be allowed for ancientnesse, then the olde Masse is,
which also our forefathers vsed.
The next thing that yee haue to take heed
to, is your speaking and language; whereunto I ioyne your gesture, since
action is one of the chiefest qualities, that is required in an oratour:/1
for as the tongue speaketh to the eares, so doeth the gesture speake to
the eyes of the auditour./2 In both your speaking and your gesture, vse
a naturall and plaine+ forme,
not fairded with artifice:/3 for (as the French-men say) Rien contre-faict
fin: but eschew all affectate formes in both.
In your language be plaine, honest, naturall,
comely, cleane, short, and sententious, eschewing both the extremities,
aswell in not vsing any rusticall corrupt leide, as booke-language, and
pen and inke-horne termes:/4 and least of all mignard and effoeminate tearmes.
But let the greatest part of your eloquence consist in a naturall, cleare,
and sensible forme of the deliuerie of your minde, builded euer vpon certaine
and good grounds;/5 tempering it with grauitie, quickenesse, or merinesse,
according to the subiect, and occasion of the time; not taunting in Theologie,
nor alleadging and prophaning the Scripture in drinking purposes, as ouer
many doe.
-----
1 Arist. 3. ad Theod. 2 Cic. in orat. ad Q. frat. &
ad Bren. 3 Cic. i. Offic. 4 Id. eod. 5 Cic.
ad Q. frat. & ad Brut.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-47]
Vse also the like forme in your gesture; neither looking sillily, like
a stupide pedant+;/1 nor vnsetledly, with
an vncouth morgue, like a new-comeouer Cavalier: but let your behauiour
be naturall, graue, and according to the fashion of the countrey./2 Be
not ouer-sparing in your courtesies, for that will be imputed to inciuilitie
and arrogancie:/3 nor yet ouer prodigall in iowking or nodding at euery
step: for that forme of being popular, becommeth better aspiring
Absalons, then lawfull Kings:/4 framing euer your gesture according to
your present actions:/5 looking grauely and with a maiestie when yee sit
in iudgement, or giue audience to Embassadours, homely, when ye are in
priuate with your owne seruants; manly, when ye are at any pastime or merrie
discourse; and let your countenance smell of courage and magnanimitie when
ye are at the warres. And remember (I say ouer againe) to be
plaine+ and sensible in your language:/6 for besides that it is the
tongues office, to be the messenger of the mind, it may be thought a point
of imbecillitie of spirit in a King, to speake obscurely, much more vntrewly;
as if he stood in awe of any in vttering his thoughts./7
Remember also, to put a difference betwixt
your forme of language in reasoning, and your pronouncing of sentences,
or declaratour of your wil in iudgement, or any other waies in the points
of your office:/8 For in the former case, yee must reason pleasantly and
patiently, not like a king, but like a priuate man and a scholer; otherwaies,
your impatience of contradiction will be interpreted to be for lacke of
reason on your part. Where in the points of your office, ye should
ripely aduise indeede, before yee giue foorth your sentence: but
fra it be giuen foorth, the suffering of any contradiction diminisheth
the maiestie of your authoritie, and maketh the processes endelesse./9
The like forme would also bee obserued by all your inferiour Iudges and
Magistrates./10
Now as to your writing, which is nothing
else, but a forme of enregistrate speech; vse a plaine, short, but stately
stile, both in your Proclamations and missiues, especially to forraine
Princes. And if your engine spur you to write any workes, either
in verse or in prose, I cannot but allow you to practise it: but
take no longsome workes in hand, for distracting you from your calling.{Prospero+}
Flatter not your selfe in your labours, but
before they bee set foorth, let them first bee priuily censured by some
of the best skilled men in that craft, that in these workes yee meddle
with./11 And because your writes will remaine as true pictures of
your minde, to all posterities; let them bee free of all vncomelinesse
and vn-honestie: and according to Horace his counsell
- Nonumquam premantur in annum./12
-----
1 Idem. i. Off. 2 Phil, ad Alex. 3 CiC. 2.
Off. 4 Arist. 4. aeth. 5 Cic. ad At. 6 Isoc. de
reg. & in Euagr. 7 Cic. 3. Off.
8 Id. 1. Off. 9 Isoc. ad Nic. 10 Cic. ad Q.
frat. 11 Cic. i. Off. 12 De arte Poetica.
[Basil-48] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
I meane both your verse and your prose letting first that furie and
heate wherewith they were written, coole at leasure; and then as an vncouth
iudge and censour, reuising them ouer againe, before they bee published,
--- quia nescit vox missa reuerti./1
If yee would write worthily, choose subiects
worthie of you, that bee not full of vanitie, but of vertue; eschewing
obscuritie, and delighting euer to bee
plaine+ and sensible. And if yee write in verse, remember that it is
not the principall part of a Poeme to rime right, and flowe well with many
pretie wordes: but the chiefe commendation of a Poeme is, that when
the verse shall bee shaken sundrie in prose, it shall bee found so rich
in quicke inuentions, and poeticke flowers, and in faire and pertinent
comparisons; as it shall retaine the lustre of a Poeme, although in prose./2
And I would also aduise you to write in your owne language: for there
is nothing left to be saide in Greeke and Latine alreadie; and ynew of
poore schollers would match you in these languages; and besides that, it
best becommeth a King to purifie and make famous his owne tongue; wherein
he may goe before all his subjects; as it setteth him well to doe in all
honest and lawfull things.
And amongst all vnnecessarie things that are
lawfull and expedient, I thinke exercises of the bodie most commendable
to be vsed by a young Prince, in such honest games or pastimes, as may
further abilitie and maintaine health:/3 For albeit I graunt it to be most
requisite for a King to exercise his engine, which surely with idlenesse
will ruste and become blunt; yet certainely bodily exercises and games
are very commendable;/4 as well for bannishing of idlenesse (the mother
of all vice) as for making his bodie able and durable for trauell, which
is very necessarie for a King./5 But from this count I debarre all rough
and violent exercises, as the footeball; meeter for laming, then making
able the vsers thereof:/6 as likewise such tumbling trickes as only serue
for Comoedians and Balladines, to win their bread with. But the exercises
that I would haue you to vse (although but moderately, not making a craft
of them) {amateur+}
are running, leaping, wrastling, fencing, dancing, and playing at the caitch
or tennise, archerie, palle maille, and such like other faire and pleasant
fieldgames./7 And the honourablest and most commendable games that yee
can vse, are on horsebacks:/8 for it becommeth a Prince best of any man,
to be a faire and good horse-man./9 Vse therefore to ride and danton great
and couragious horses; that I may say of you, as Philip said of great Alexander
his sonne, Maicebovta ob ce xcopc.^t/10 And specially vse such games on
horse-backe, as may teach you to handle your armes thereon; such as the.tilt,
the ring, and low-riding for handling of your sword.
I cannot omit heere the hunting, namely with
running hounds; which is the most honourable and noblest sorte thereof:
for it is a theeuish forme of hunting
-----
1 Idem eod. 2 Ar. de art. Poet. 3 Xen. 1. Cyr.
4 Plat. 6. de leg. 5 Ar. 7. & 8. pol. 6 Cic. 1. Off.
7 Pl. eod.
8 Xen. in Cyr. 9 Is. de iug. 10 Plut. in Alex.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-49]
to shoote with gunnes and bowes; and greyhound hunting is not so martiall
a game: But because I would not be thought a partiall praiser of
this sport, I remit yon to Xenophon,/1 an olde and famous writer, who had
no minde of flattering you or me in this purpose: and who also setteth
downe a faire paterne, for the education of a yong king, vnder the supposed
name of Cyrus./2
As for hawking I condemne it not, but
I must praise it more sparingly, because it neither resembleth the warres
so neere as hunting doeth, in making a man hardier and skilfully ridden
in all grounds, and is more vncertaine and subiect to mischances; and (which
is worst of all) is therethrough an extreme stirrer vp of passions:
But in vsing either of these games, obserue that moderation, that ye slip
not therewith the houres appointed for your affaires, which ye ought euer
precisely to keepe;/3 remembring that these games are but ordained for
you, in enabling you for your office, for the which ye are ordained.
And as for sitting house-pastimes, wherewith
men by drilling time, spurre a free and fast ynough running horse (as the
prouerbe is) although they are not profitable for the exercise either of
minde or body,/4 yet can I not vtterly condemne them; since they may at
times supply the roome, which being emptie, would be patent to pernicious
idlenesse, quia nihil potest esse vacuum./5 I will not therefore agree
with the curiositie of some learned men in our aage, in forbidding cardes,
dice, and other such like games of hazard; although otherwayes surely I
reuerence them as notable and godly men: For they are deceiued therein,
in founding their argument vpon a mistaken ground, which is, that the playing
at such games, is a kind of casting of lot, and therefore vnlawfuh; wherein
they deceiue themselues: For the casting of lot was vsed for triall
of the trewth in any obscure thing, that otherwayes could not be gotten
cleared; and therefore was a sort of prophecie: where by the contrary,
no man goeth to any of these playes, to cleare any obscure trewth, but
onely to gage so much of his owne money, as hee pleaseth, vpon the hazard
of the running of the cardes or dice, aswell as he would doe vpon the speede
of a horse or a dog, or any such like gaigeour: And so, if they be
vnlawfull, all gaigeours vpon vncertainties must likewayes be condemned:
Not that thereby I take the defence of vaine carders and dicers, that waste
their moyen, and their time (whereof fewe consider the pretiousnesse) vpon
prodigall and continuall playing:/6 no, I would rather allow it to be discharged,
where such corruption cannot be eschewed. But only I cannot condemne
you at some times, when ye haue no other thing adoe (as a good King will
be seldome) and are wearie of reading, or euill disposed in your person,
and when it is foule and stormie weather; then, say, may ye lawfully play
at the cardes or tables: For as to dicing, I thinke it becommeth
best deboshed souldiers to play at, on the head of their drums, being onely
ruled by hazard, and subiect to knauish cogging. And as for the
chesse+, I thinke it ouer fond, because it is ouer-wise and Philosophicke
a folly. For where
-----
1 In Cyn. i. Cyr. & de rep. Lac.; Cic. 1. Offic. 2
Cyropoedia. 3 Arist. 10. Eth. 4 Arist. 8. pol. 5 Dan.
de lus. al.
6 Cic. 1. Offic.
[Basil-50] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
all such light playes, are ordained to free mens heads for a time, from
the fashious thoughts on their affaires; it by the contrarie falleth and
troubleth mens heads, with as many fashious toyes of the play, as before
it was filled with thoughts on his affaires.
But in your playing, I would haue you to keepe
three rules: first, or ye play, consider yee doe it onely for your recreation,
and resolue to hazard the losse of all that ye play; and next, for that
cause play no more then yee care to cast among Pages: and last, play
alwaies faire play precisely, that ye come not in vse of tricking and lying
in least: otherwise, if yee cannot keepe these rules, my counsell
is that yee allutterly abstaine from these playes: For neither a
madde passion for losse, nor falshood vsed for desire of gaine, can be
called a play.
Now, it is not onely lawfull, but necessarie,
that yee haue companie meete for euery thing yee take on hand, as well
in your games and exercises, as in your graue and earnest affaires:
But learne to distinguish time according to the occasion, choosing your
companie accordingly./1 Conferre not with hunters at your counsell, nor
in your counsell affaires; nor dispatch not affaires at hunting or other
games. And haue the like respect to the seasons of your aage, vsing your
sortes of recreation and companie therefore, agreeing thereunto:
For it becommeth best, as kindliest, euery aage to smell of their owne
qualitie, insolence and vnlawful things beeing alwaies eschewed/2 and not
that a colt, should draw the plough, and an olde horse run away with the
harrowes. But take heede specially, that your companie for recreation,
be chosen of honest persons, not defamed or vicious, mixing filthie talke
with merrinesse,
Corrumpunt bonos mores colloquia praua.
And chiefly abstaine from haunting before your mariage, the idle companie
of dames, which are nothing else, but irritamenta libidinis. Bee
warre likewaies to abuse your selfe, in making your sporters your counsellers:
and delight not to keepe ordinarily in your companie, Comoedians or Balladines:/3
for the Tyrans delighted most in them, glorying to bee both authors and
actors of Comoedies and Tragedies themselues: Whereupon the answere
that the poet Philoxenus disdainfully gaue to the Tyran of Syracuse there-anent,
is now come in a prouerbe, reduc me in latomias./4 And all the ruse
that Nero made of himselfe when he died, was Qualis artifex pereo?/5 meaning
of his skill in menstrally, and playing of Tragoedies; as indeede his whole
life and death, was all but one Tragoedie.
Delight not also to bee in your owne person
a player vpon instruments; especially on such as commonly men winne their
liuing with: nor yet to be fine of any mechanicke craft: {amateur+}
Leur esprit s'en fuit au bout des doists, saith Du Bartas: whose
workes, as they are all most worthie to bee read by any Prince, or other
good Christian; so would I especially wish you to bee well versed in them.
But
-----
1 Isoc. de reg.; Cic. 1. Off. 2 Ar. 2. ad Theod.
3 Pl. 3. de rep.; Ar. 7. & 8. Pol.; Sen. 1. ep. Dyon.
4 Suidas.
5 Suet. in Ner. 6 1. Sep.
BASILIKON DORON [Basil-51]
spare not some-times by merie company, to be free from importunitie;
for ye should be euer mooved with reason, which is the onely qualitie whereby
men differ from beasts; and not with importunitie:/1 For the which cause
(as also for augmenting your Maiestie) ye shall not be so facile of accesse-giuing
at all times, as I haue beene; and yet not altogether retired/2 or locked
vp,/3 like the Kings of Persia; appointing also certaine houres for publicke
audience./4
And since my trust is, that God hath
ordained you for moe Kingdomes then this (as I haue oft alreadie said)
preasse by the outward behauiour as well of your owne person, as of your
court, in all indifferent things, to allure piece and piece, the rest of
your kingdomes, to follow the fashions of that kingdome of yours, that
yee finde most ciuill, easiest to be ruled, and most obedient to the Lawes:
for these outward and indifferent things will serue greatly for allurements
to the people, to embrace and follow vertue. But beware of thrawing
or constraining them thereto; letting it bee brought on with time, and
at leisure; specially by so mixing through alliance and daily conuersation,
the inhabitants of euery kingdom with other, as may with time make them
to grow and welde all in one: Which may easily be done betwixt these
two nations, being both but one Ile of Britaine, and alreadie ioyned in
vnitie of Religion and language. So that euen as in the times of
our ancestours, the long warres and many bloodie battels betwixt these
two countreys, bred a naturall and hereditarie hatred in euery of them,
against the other: the vniting and welding of them hereafter in one, by
all sort of friendship, commerce, and alliance, will by the contrary produce
and maintaine a naturall and inseparable vnitie of loue amongst them.
As we haue already (praise be to God) a great experience of the good beginning
hereof, and of the quenching of the olde hate in the hearts of both the
people; procured by the meanes of this long and happy amitie, betweene
the Queene my dearest sister and me; which during the whole time of both
our Reignes, hath euer beene inuiolably obserued.
And for conclusion of this my whole Treatise,
remember my Sonne, by your trew and constant depending vpon God, to looke
for a blessing to all your actions in your office: by the outward
vsing thereof, to testifie the inward vprightnesse of your heart; and by
your behauiour in all indifferent things, to set foorth the viue unage
of your vertuous disposition; and in respect of the greatnesse and weight
of your burthen, to be patient in hearing, keeping your heart free from
preoccupation, ripe in concluding, and constant in your resolution:/5 For
better it is to bide at your resolution, although there were some defect
in it, then by daily changing, to effectuate nothing:/6 taking the paterne
thereof from the microcosme of your owne body; wherein ye haue two eyes,
signifying great foresight and prouidence, with a narrow looking in all
things; and also two eares, signifying patient hearing, and that of both
the parties: but ye haue but one tongue, for pronouncing a
plaine+, sensible, and vniforme sentence; and but one head, and
-----
1 Curt. 8. 2 Liu. 35. 3 Xen. in Ages. 4 Cic.
ad Q. frat. 5 Thuc. 6. 6 Dion. 52.
[Basil-52] THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES I
one heart, for keeping a constant & vniforme resolution, according
to your apprehension: hauing two hands and two feete, with many fingers
and toes for quicke execution, in employing all instruments meet for effectuating
your deliberations.
But forget not to digest euer your
passion+, before ye determine vpon anything, since Ira furor breuis
est: /1 vttering onely your anger according to the Apostles rule, Irascimini,
sed ne peccetis:/2 taking pleasure, not only to reward, but to aduance
the good, which is a chiefe point of a King's glory (but make none ouer-great,
but according as the power of the countrey may beare) and punishing the
euill; but euery man according to his owne offence:/3 not punishing nor
blaming the father for the sonne, nor the brother for the brother;/4 much
lesse generally to hate a whole race for the fault of one: for noxa
caput sequitur./5 And aboue all, let the measure of your loue to euery
one, be according to the measure of his vertue; letting your fauour to
be no longer tyed to any, then the continuance of his vertuous disposition
shall deserue: not admitting the excuse vpon a iust reuenge, to procure
ouersight to an iniurie: For the first iniurie is committed against
the partie; but the parties reuenging thereof at his owne hand, is a wrong
committed against you, in vsurping your office, whom-to onely the sword
belongeth, for reuenging of all the injuries committed against any of your
people.
Thus hoping in the goodnes of God, that your
naturall inclination shall haue a happy sympathie with these precepts,
making the wise-mans scholemaster, which is the example of others, to bee
your teacher, according to that old verse,
Felix quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum;
eschewing so the ouer-late repentance by your owne experience, which is
the schoole-master of fooles; I wil for end of all, require you my Sonne,
as euer ye thinke to deserue my father+ly
blessing, to keepe continually before the eyes of your minde, the greatnesse
of your charge:/6 making the faithfull and due discharge thereof, the principal
butt ye shoot at in all your actions:/7 counting it euer the principall,
and all your other actions but as accessories, to be emploied as middesses
for the furthering of that principall. And being content to let others
excell in other things, let it be your chiefest earthly glory, to excell
in your owne craft: according to the worthy counsel and charge of
Anchises to his posteritie, in that sublime and heroicall Poet, wherein
also my dicton is included;
Excudent alij spirantia mollius era,
Credo equidem, & viuos ducent de
marmore vultus,
Orabunt causas melius, caelique meatus
Describent radio, & surgentia sydera
dicent.
Tu, regere imperio populos, Romane,
memento
(Hae tibi erunt artes) pacique imponere
morem,
Parcere subiectis, & debellare superbos./8
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1 Hor. lib. 1. epist. 2 Ephes. 4. 3 Arist. 5. pol.
4 Dion. 52. 5 Plat. 9. de leg. 6 Plat. in pol.
7 Cic. 5. de rep.
8 Virg 6. AEn.
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