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A86277 The idea of the lavv charactered from Moses to King Charles. Whereunto is added the idea of government and tyranny. / By John Herdon Gent. Philonomos. Heydon, John, b. 1629. 1660 (1660) Wing H1671; Thomason E1916_2; ESTC R210015 93,195 282

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orbe Concrelam exemit labem purumque reliquit Aethereum sensum atque aurai simplicis ignem i. e. Till that long day at last be come about That wasteth both all ●th and foul desire And leaves the Soul Aethereal throughout Ba●hing her senses in pure liquid fire To come into the flesh amongst the natural sons of Adam those men who were best of repute for their Wisdom Learning Sincerity and of greatest Experience might set up Laws in any City or Nation Thus you see when Laws were first given Moses in a strange age was made Ruler and Captaine among the Hebrews his Laws you shall find in the following discourse Afterwards amonst the Hebrews their Law-givers were called Zephiriaus after them Zaleucus in Imitation of the Spartans and Cretians was thought to have received ancient Laws from Minos who gave severe Laws and found out suitable punishment he left rules whereby men might try their Actions so that many afterwards were frighted into good manners For before Laws were not written but the sentence and state lay in the Judges brest afterwards the Athenians received Laws from Draco and Solon upon which they proceeded in all Courts of Judicature from whom the Romans who lived after the building of the City 300 years had the Laws of the 12 Tables published by the Decemviri and those in process of time being enlarged by Romans and the Caesars became our civil Law until King Charles who lately made Christian Lawes both good and wholsom for his happy Kingdoms that then flourished in Armes and Learning during his Reign c. Other Nations also had their respective Law-givers as Egypt had Priests and Isis who were taught by Mercury and Vulcan These were Golden Laws and such as owed their Birth to Philosophers Babylon had the Caldeans Persia had Magitians i. e. Wisemen India had Brachmans Ethiopia had the Gymnosophists amongst the Bactrians was Zamolsis amongst the Corinthians was Fido amongst the Milesians was Hippodamus amongst the Carthaginians was Coranda amongst the Britains were the Druides amongst the Rosie-Crucians was Eugenius Theodidactus my good friend and his Laws to the Fraternity of the Rosie Cross are these 1. That every one of them who shall Travel must profess Medicine and cure gratis 2. That none of them notwithstanding their being of the fraternity shall be enjoyned one habit but may suit themselves to the mode of those Countries in which they reside 3. That every Brother of the Fraternity shall upon the day C make his appearance in the place of the Holy Genius or else signifie by Letters the cause of his absence 4. That every Brother shall chuse a fit person to be his successor after his decease 5. That the word R. C. shall be their Seal Character or Cognisance 6. That this Fraternity shall be concealed seven years until King Charles the second shall make void the Laws and Statutes of the Tyrant Oliver Cromwell and his brethren after three years Mercy and Truth will meet together Righteousness and Peace will kiss each other 7. And they are Sollemnly sworn each to other to keep and observe these Conditions and Articles in all which I find nothing either Prejudicial to themselves or Hurtfull and Injurious to others but that they have an excellent scope and intention which is the glory of God and the good of their Neighbour To this Fraternity you shall go in a certain Night when your Genius will appear to you like a beam of light the place will be very delightfull with Musick and pleasant with sweet smells of fresh Roses Gilliflowers and Perfumes prepare your self by prayer for Immediately you will see a Boy and a Lady or a white Hart or a Lamb Whatsoever you see of these be not afraid but follow your guid● it is necessary then that you Arm your self with Heroick Courage least you fear those things that will happen and so fall back you need no sword nor any other bodily weapon only call upon God for a good and holy man can offer up no greater nor more acceptable Sacrifice to God then the oblation of himself his Soul And these good Genii appear to me to be as the benign eyes of God running to fro in the world with Love and Pity beholding the innocent endeavous of honest single-hearted Men and ever ready to do them good They appear in many Forms Now when one of these hath brought you to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 many Miracles will appear but be resolute and follow your Genius and when you are among the Rosie Crucians you shall see the Day Star arise and the dawning will appear and they will give you great Treasures Medicines Tinctures and Telesmes when being used as the the Genius shall teach you these will make you young when you are old prolong Life preserve your health and make you Rich Wise and vertuous and finally alter amend and change the temper of the body and you shall perceive no disease in any part of your bodies I have seen one of these Genii like a young Scholler or Philosopher resolve Claudius Malbrank Esq 1. When old Oliver Cromwell would Dye 2. When his son Richard would lose his Honour 3. When the Parliament would be Dissolved 4. When Lambert would lose his Power 5. When the Committee of Safety and the City would fall out 6. When that Commitee would come to Nothing 7. When the Parliament would be Dissolved that should pull down the Gates of the City 8. When another Parliament and their General should fall out with London and when the Parliament and he will not agree 9. When London and King Charles will kindly embrace each other 10. When the City of London will Crown him King of England Scotland and Ireland and prevent the intended warr of France and Spain against us 11. When the King of Sweeds would lose his Power Life or Country 12. And when the King of Denmark will be Victorious over his Enemies When good to make golden Telesmes consecrated against the incursions of Enemies such a one was the Trojan Palladium no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Galahad but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as Anthusius quoteth the Place to Verulanus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Telesmatically consecrated under a good Horoscope by Asius the Philosopher and presented to the founder Trumpoigniflus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. as a Statue enabled by Art to preserve the City wherein it should be laid up in a victorious and impregnable State c. When good to go to Law when good to marry and finally it resolveth all manner of questions but if any happen to converse with Angels and be acquainted with Rosie Crucians that dayly send these Genii abroad in the world let him not Arrogate any thing to himself because of his present Power but be contented with that which his Genius shall say unto him praise God perpetually for this familiar Spirit and have a special care that it is not used for any worldly pride but imploy
places of preferment to whom all matters of weight be committed which sell and compel men to buy of them all things Placards of the Tyrant Protectors gifts Benefices Offices Dignities Letters of Cromwell or the Parliament and Writs moreover right Justice Law Equity and honesty Sometimes it fortunes according to the judgement of Chancellors and Secretaries the friends and enemies of Kings are reckoned with whom according to their pleasure they sometime make League and sometime make mortal War And when they from most base estate by means of a most covetous selling of their voyce have climbed to so high a degree of Dignity they have therewithal such a mischievous boldness that sometimes they dare condemn Kings and without determination of the Council and without declaring the cause do condemn them to be Beheaded and thus have they transferred us to misfortune they being now puffed up with Pride by robbing and spoiling theeving pilfring plundering breaking of houses and Sequestring the people and taking away their riches c. You have now also read the Errors of the Law And you see how necessary it is for to Crown King Charles That the Idea of the Law may with Mercy and Truth Righteousness and Peace be practised and established in the three Kingdoms England Scotland and Ireland to the glory of God and the good of our Countrey Thus have you the Idea of the Law clarified and the dross taken from it being fit now to establish in a happy Common-wealth under the Government of King Charls May the 2. 1660. John Heydon THE IDEA OF GOVERNMENT THe first Rule that I laid down in my Introduction to the defence of the Idea of the Law I need not here again repeat but desire all Gentlemen only to carry it in mind I have shewn you the Errors of the Law in all Courts and have done what lies on my part that you may peruse this Defence of my Idea of the Law without any rub or stumbling let me now request but one thing which you are bound to grant which is that you read my Defence without Prejudice and that all along as you go which is but a little way you make not your recourse to the customary conceits of your fancy but consult with your free Reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Plato De Leg. For Custom is another Nature and therefore those conceits that are accustomary and familiar we unawares appeal too as if they were indeed the Natural light of the mind and her first common notions 2. Now before I can represent unto you the Idea of the Law you must Crown King Charles the Second Son of King Charles the first lately murthered and then I shall shew you the frame and fashion of the Just Notion of the Idea of the Law in General according to my Telesmatical Genius and Hortensius gives this shadowy interpretation of it Lex est quaedam regula mensura secundam quam inducitur aliquis ad agendum vel ab agendo retrahitur but Heliani● offended with the latitude of this definition esteems it too spreading and comprehensive as that which extends to all Natural I and to Artificials too for they have Regulas mensuras operationum Thus God has set a Law to the waves and a Law to the windes Nay thus Clocks have their Laws and Lutes have their Laws and whatsoever have the least appearance of motion has some rule proportionable to it whereas these workings were always reckoned to be at the most but inclinations and Pondera and not fruits of a Legislative Power But yet the Apostle Paul to stain the pride of them that gloried in the abuse of the Law ruining many poor people for a fee calls such things by the name of Law as were most odious and anomalous thus he tells you of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though sin be properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus he mentions Legem membrorum the same which the Lawyers call Legem fomitis 3. And yet this is sure that a rational creature is only capable of a Law which is a moral restraint and so cannot reach to those things that are necessitated to act ad extremum virium 4. And therefore Cooke does give you a more refined interpretation when he tells you Lex est mensura quaedam actum moralium ita ut per Conformitatem ad illam Rectitudinem moralem habeant si ab illi discordent obliqui sint A Law is such a just and regular turning of actions as that by vertue of this they may conspire into a Moral musick and become very pleasant and harmonious Thus Plato speaks much of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is in Laws After this he does altogether discourse of Harmony and does infinitely prefer mental and intellectual Musick those powerful and practical strains of goodness that spring from a well composed spirit before those delicious Blandishments those soft and transient touches that comply with sense and salute it in a more flattering manner and he tells you of a spiritual dancing that is answerable to so sweet a Musick to these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whilest the Laws play in Consort there is a chorus of well-ordered affections that are raised and elevated by them And thus as Aristotle well observes some Laws were wont to be put in verse and to be sung like so many pleasant Odes that might even charm the people into obedience 5. 'T is true that conceited Philosopher gives the reason of it they were put into verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that they might remember them the better But why may not I add a reason also to share with it that they might come with a greater grace allurement that they might hear them as pleasant as they would do the voyce of a Vial or an Harp that has Rhetorick enough to still and quiet the evil Spirit But yet this does not sufficiently paint out the being of a Law to say that 't is only regula mensura and Littleton himself is so ingenious as to tell me that he cannot rest satisfied with this Interpretation which he wrote but with a blunt pen. And therefore I will give him some time to engross it fair And in the mean time I will look upon that speculative Law-giver Plato I mean who was alwayes new modelling of Laws and rolling Political Ideas in his mind 6. Now you may see him gradually ascending and climbing up to the description of a Law by these four several steps and yet he does not reach the top and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it neither First he tells me that Laws are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such things as are esteemed fitting but because this might extend to all kind of Customs too his second thoughts limit and contract it more and tells me that a Law is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Decretum civitatis yet because the Mass and bulk of people the rude heap
second be crowned King of England and Ireland and that Family again restored c. Hence it was that God when he gave his Law afresh gave it in such a compendious Brachygraphy he wrote as it were in Characters without any explication or amplification at all He only enjoyned it with an imperatorious brevity he knowes there was enough in the breasts of men to convince them of it and to comment upon it only in the second Command there is added an enforcement because his people were excessively prone to violation of it and in that of the Sabbath there is given an exposition of it because in all its circumstances it was not found in the natural Idea of the Law so that in Dr. Barlowes language of Oxford the Decalogue would be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gold in the Lump whereas other Lawyers and Atturneyes use to beat it thinner And there is a sort of men termed petty Foggers that have the voice of Advocates engraffed in them which either of want of Clyents or riches incense the poor and silly men of the Countrey to go to Law and hearing their causes affirm them to be good supplying the place of Counsellours and raysing up for the value of a shilling great contentions and do make of a fiery sparkle a burning flame that destroyes many 46. But to return to the purpose of this Law as it is printed by nature Dr. Ward tels me Right reason is that fixt and unshaken Law not writ in perishing paper by the hand or pen of a Creature nor graven like a dead letter upon liveless and decaying Pillars but written with the point of a Diamond nay with the finger of God himself in the heart of a man a Deity gave it an Imprimatur And a Genius gave it in an immortal mind So as that I may borrow the expression of the Apostle the mind of man is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And I take it in the very same sence as it is to be took in the Church It is a Pillar of this Truth not to support it but to hold it forth neither must I forget the saying of Mr. Thomas Heydon saith he the royal Law of Nature was never shut up in a prison nor never confined or limited to any outward surface but is was bravely scituated in the Centre of a rational Being alwayes keeping the soul company guarding it and guiding it ruling all its Subjects every obedient action with a Scepter of Gold and crushing in pieces all its enemies breaking every rebellious action with a Rod of Iron 47. The Idea of the Law which is the Queen of Angelical and humane Being doth so rule and dispose of them as to bring about Justice with a most high and powerfull and yet with a most soft and delicate hand 48. You may hear Plato excellently discoursing of it whilest he brings in a Sophister disputing against Socrates and such an one as would needs undertake to maintain this principle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That there was an untunable Antipathy between Nature and Law that Lawes were nothing but Hominum infirmiorum commenta that this was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the most bright and eminent Justice of Nature for men to rule according to power and according to no other Law that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that all other Lawes were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nay he calls them cheatings and bewitchings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they come saith he like pleasant songs when as they are meer Charms and Incantations But Socrates after he had stung this same Callicles with a few quick interrogations pours out presently a great deal of honey and sweetness and plentifully shews that most pleasant and conspiring Harmony that is between Nature and Law That there 's nothing more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then a Law that Law is founded in Nature that it is for the maintaining and enobling and perfecting of Nature Nay as Plato tels me elsewhere in Philebus There is no way for men to happiness unless they follow those steps of Reason those foot-steps of Nature This same Law L. Verulam doth more then once acknowledge when he tells me a positive Law with him is a more private Law but Natures Law is a more publique and catholique Law which he proves to be a very soveraign and commanding Law for thus he saith The Law that is most filled with Reason must needs be most victorious and triumphant And thus much in defence of sixty three Paragraphs of my Idea of the Law 49. Right it is I should interpret the meaning of twenty eight paragraphs more as they appear in the Jdea of the Law Reason is a most beautifull Law a Law of pure Complexion of a Natural colour never fades never dies it encourages in obedience with a smile it chides them and frowns them out of wickednesse good men hear the least whispering of its pleasant voice they observe the least glance of its lovely eye but wicked men will not hear it though it come to them in thunder nor take the least notice of it though it should flash out in lightening None must enlarge the Philacteries of this Law nor must any dare to prune off the least branch of it Nay the Malice of man cannot totally deface so indelible a Beauty No Pope nor Protector nor King nor Parliament nor People nor Angel nor creature can absolve you from it This Law never paints its face It never changes its colour it does not put on one Aspect in London and another face at Westminster but lookes upon both Royal Cavaleirs and fanatique Roundheads with an impartiall eye it shines upon all Ages and times and conditions with a perpetual light it is yesterday and to day and for ever There is but on Law-giver one Lord and supreame judge of the same Law God blessed for ever more He was the contriver of it the Commander of it the publisher of it and none can be exempted from it unless he will be banisht from his own essence and be excommunicated from humane nature 50 This punishment would have sting enough if he should avoid a thousand more that are due to so foul a Transgression 51 Now the most high and Soveraign being even God himselfe doth not subject himself to any Law though there be some Actions also most agreeable to his Nature and others plainly inconsistent with it yet they cannot amount to such a power as to lay any Obligation uppon him which should in the least notion differ from the liberty of his own Essence 52. Thus also in the Common-wealth of humane Nature that proportion which Actions bear to reason is indeed a sufficient foundation for a Law to build upon but it is not the Law it self nor a formall obligation 53. Yet some of the Lawyers are extream bold and vain in their suppositions so bold as that I am ready to Question whether it be best to repeat them