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A43420 Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus his Divine pymander in seventeen books : together with his second book called Asclepius, containing fifteen chapters with a commentary / translated formerly out of the Arabick into Greek, and thence into Latine, and Dutch, and now out of the original into English by Dr. Everard.; Poemander. English. 1657 Hermes, Trismegistus.; Everard, John, 1575?-1650?; Hermes, Trismegistus. Hermes Trismegistus his second book called Asclepius. 1657 (1657) Wing H1566; ESTC R25427 94,120 396

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it self 46. Whosoever therefore hath of Mercy obtained this Generation which is according to God he leaving all bodily sense knoweth himself to consist of divine things and rejoyceth being made by God stable and immutable 47. Tat. O Father I conceive and understand not by the sight of mine eyes but by the Intellectuall Operation which is by the Powers I am in Heaven in the Earth in the Water in the Air I am in living Creatures in Plants in the Womb every where 48. Yet tell me further this one thing How are the torments of Darknesse being in in number Twelve driven away and expelled by the Ten powers What is the manner of it Trismegistus 49. Herm. This Tabernacle O Son consists of the Zodiacall Circle and this consisting of twelve numbers the Idea of one but all formed Nature admits of divers Conjugations to the deceiving of Man 50. And though they be different in themselves yet are they united in practice as for example Rashnesse is inseparable from Anger and they are also indeterminate Therefore with good Reason do they make their departure being driven away by the Ten powers that is to say By the dead 51. For the number of Ten O Son is the Begetter of Souls And there Life and Light are united where the number of Unity is born of the Spirit 52. Therefore according to Reason Unity hath the number of Ten and the number of Ten hath Unity 53. Tat. O Father I now see the Universe and my self in the Minde 54. Herm. This is Regeneration O Son that we should not any longer fix our imagination upon this Body subject to the three dimensions according to this Speech which we have now commented That we may not at all calumniate the Universe 55. Tat. Tell me O Father This Body that consists of Powers shall it ever admit of any Dissolution 56. Herm. Good words Son and speak not things impossible for so thou shalt sin and the eye of thy minde grow wicked 57. The sensible Body of Nature is far from the Essentiall Generation for that is subject to Dissolution but this not and that is mortal but this immortall Dost thou not know that thou art born a God and the Son of the One as I am 58. Tat. How fain would I O Father hear that praise given by a Hymn which thou saidst thou heardest from the Powers when I was in the Ottonary 59. Herm. As Pimander said by way of Oracle to the Ottonary Thou dost well O Son to desire the Solution of the Tabernacle for thou art purified 60. Pimander the Minde of absolute Power and Authority hath delivered no more unto me then those that are written knowing that of my self I can understand all things and hear and see what I will And he commanded me to do those things that are good and therefore all the Powers that are in me sing 61. Tat. I would hear thee O Father and understand these things 62. Herm. Be quiet O Son and now hearken to that harmonious blessing and thanksgiving the hymn of Regeneration which I did not determine to have spoken of so plainly but to thy self in the end of all 63. Wherefore this is not taught but hid in silence 64. So then O Son do thou standing in the open Air worship looking to the North Wind about the going down of the Sun and to the South when the Sun ariseth And now keep silence Son The Secret Song The Holy Speech 65. LEt all the Nature of the world entertain the hearing of this Hymn 66. Be opened O Earth and let all the Treasure of the Rain be opened 67. You Trees tremble not for I will sing praise the Lord of the Creation and the All and the One. 68. Be opened you Heavens ye Winds stand still and let the immortall Circle of God receive these words 69. For I will sing and praise him that created all things that fixed the Earth and hung up the Heavens and commanded the sweet Water to come out of the Ocean into all the World inhabited and not-inhabited to the use and nourishment of all things or men 70. That commanded the fire to shine for every action both to Gods and Men. 71. Let us altogether give him blessing which rideth upon the Heavens the Creator of all Nature 72. This is he that is the Eye of the Minde and Will accept the praise of my Powers 73. O all ye Powers that are in me praise the One and the All. 74. Sing together with my Will all you Powers that are in me 75. O Holy Knowledge being enlightened by thee I magnifie the intelligible Light and rejoyce in the Joy of the Minde 76. All my Powers sing praise with me and thou my Continence sing praise my Righteousnesse by me praise that which is righteous 77. O Communion which is in me praise the All. 78. By me the Truth sings praise to the Truth the Good praiseth the Good 79. O Life O Light from us unto you comes this praise and thankgiving 80. I give thanks unto thee O Father the operation or act of my Powers 81. I give thanks unto thee O God the Power of my operations 82. By me thy Word sings praise unto thee receive by me this reasonable or verball Sacrifice in words 83. The powers that are in me cry the'e things they praise the All they fulfill thy Will thy Will and Counsell is from thee unto thee 84. O All receive a reasonable Sacrifice from all things 85. O Life save all that is in us O Light enlighten O God the Spirit for the Minde guideth or seedeth the Word O Spirit bearing Workman 86. Thou art God thy Man cryeth these things unto thee through by the Fire by the Air by the Earth by the Water by the Spirit by thy Creatures 87. From eternity I have found meanes to blesse and praise thee and I have what I seek for I rest in thy Will 88. Tat. O Father I see thou hast sung this Song of praise and blessing with thy whole Will and therefore have I put and placed it in my World 89. Herm. Say in thy Intelligible World O Son 90. Tat. I do mean in my Intelligible World for by the Hymn and Song of praise my Minde is enlightened and gladly would I send from my Understanding a Thanksgiving unto God 91. Herm. Not rashly O Son 92. Tat. In my Minde O Father 93. Herm. Those things that I see and contemplate I infuse into thee and therefore say thou Son Tat the Author of thy succeeding Generations I send unto God these reasonable Sacrifices 94. O God thou art the Father thou art the Lord thou art the Minde accept these reasonable Sacrifices which thou requirest of me 95. For all things are done as the Minde willeth 96. Thou O Son send this acceptable Sacrifice to God the Father of all things but propound it also O Son by word 97. Tat. I thank thee Father thou hast advised and instructed me thus to give
and Species in the World that is both of soul and life so likewise the world is the distributer and giver of all things which seem good to mortall creatures that is change of parts seasonable fruites nativity encrease and maturity and the like and by this God sitting above in the highest Heaven is every where and beholds all things for there is above these Lower Heavens a place without Starrs far from all earthly things this place betwixt Heaven and Earth the dispenser of a●…l things inhabiteth whom we call Iupiter or god but on the earth and the Sea Reigneth Iupiter Pluto and he is the nourisher and preserver of all Living and fruitfull mortall Creatures by the power of all these Fruits Trees Plants and the ground are refreshed and the power and effects of other Gods are distributed through all things that are They are distributed that shall bear rule on the Earth and shall be placed in the very entrance of Egypt in that City which is built in the West or where the Sun sets To which place all mortall Creatures both in Land and Sea shall hasten Asclep But at this time where are they O Trismegistus Trism They are placed in the great City in the Libyan Mountain and thus far this declaration The COMMENTARY This whole Ninth Chapter is prophane Which Augustine well reproveth in his Book of the City of God It maintaines Idolatry extolling and setting it forth with wonderfull praises and the decay or fall of it it much deplores In the highest Heaven he setteth a certain God beholding all things but in that place betwixt Heaven and Earth he placeth Jupiter the disposer or Steward and Pluto Jupiter to be the God and dispenser on Land and Sea as though there were one God in Heaven another in the Aire and another on the Land and Sea all which contein an infinite impiety of errors for out of divine Writ we are uncorruptly purely and holily taught that the Lord he is God in Heaven above and in Earth below and that there is no other God but against Idols and Idolatry the word of God and the ●…ly Prophets do warily admonish 〈◊〉 that we be not defiled with so great a blot of impiety nor corrupted with so great an error for the Idol it self is cursed and him that made it and again the worshipping of cursed Idols is the cause beginning and end of all mischief An Idol maker and this Idol are both an abomination to the Lord for both that which is made with him that it shall be consumed with fire these and many more things of Idolatry out of the Book of wisdome and in Leviticus God himself out of his own mouth commandeth I am the Lord your God you shall not make to your self any Idol or graven Image neither shall you erect any monument or Pillar in your Land to worship it And of the Idols of Aegypt he advertiseth in Ezekiel Be not polluted with the Idols of Aegypt for I am the Lord your God and of their abolishing 〈◊〉 speaketh by the same Prop●… 〈◊〉 will destroy their Images and make an end of their Idol Memphis he shall no more lead them out of the Land of Aegypt What Mercurius calleth the soul Spirit and sense of Idols and Images in that they shall bring diseases in firmities and fears upon men we know without doubt to be evill Spirits and in assurance to be those of which the Prophet truly affirmeth that all the Gods of the gentil●…s are divils or evil Spirits Let this little be sufficient against the impiety of Trismegistus in this ninth part for we speake to those who are seasoned with the true knowledge of God which as the wiseman saith to know and understand is perfect righteousnesse and to know his righteousnesse and power is the root of immortality Lazarelus draweth this place to an Analogie as though the Idols were the Apostles the Image of man Christ the power given from above the holy Ghost Aegypt the darknesse of the gentiles and the persecution of the Disciples Apostles Martyrs the graven pillars declaring their pious works and that the heart of posterity did ret●…ine not their works but their faith only these are piously invented but per adventure far from the Letter or meaning I think with Augustine that Hermes overshot himself both in this and the 13. Chapter for they seem to have the Prophets of the Gentiles as Balaam and the Sybills that they may suffer both Light and darknesse the lucid and obscure intermixture of Prophecies sometimes pure and sometimes impure This for the ninth Chapter CHAP. X. NOw we are to discourse of mortality immortality for hope and fear of death torments many which are ignorant of the true reason for death is caused by dissolution of the body tyred out with labour and the harmony being ended whereby the members of the body are fitted into one composition for lively uses for the body dieth when the vitall parts of man faile This is therefore death a dissolution of the body and an utter decay of the bodily senses about which to take thought for is to no purpose but there is an other thing necessary which either ignorance or mans incredulity seteth leight by Asclep What is that O Trismegistus that they are either ●…gnorant of or believe not to be Trism Hear therefore O Asclepius when there shall be a separation of the soul from the body then the Judgement and examination of his deserts shall passe over unto the great God and he when he shall see that it is just and righteous shall suffer it to abide in a fit Mansion but if he shall see it to be spotted and defiled with sin and iniquity he will cast it down and deliver it to Stormes Whirle-Winds fire Lightening and Tempest and it shall be snatched up betwixt Heaven and Earth with worldly tempests and with continuall torments be driven into divers places that in this respect the eternity of them is prejudicious because by an immortall sentence the Soul is condemned to everlasting judgment left therefore we be infolded with these miseries know that we must fear tremble and beware for the unbelievers are after their faults and pleasure in sin compelled to believe not by words but by examples not by threatenings but by the very suffering of punishment Asclep Are not then O Trismegistus the faults of men punished only by mans Law Trism Forsooth O Asclepius first all earthly things which are mortall then those things also which live by corporal reason and which swarve from living after that Law of reason all these according to their deserts and faults are liable to punishment but after death so much the sorer punishment as their faults have been concealed unpunished in this life for God foreknowing all things renders a like punishment to evey one according to the measure and quality of the fault Asclep Who are worthy of the greatest punishment O Trismegistus Trism Those who being condemned
of Generation 66. That which off-springs or begetteth another is it self an off-spring or begotten by another 67. Of things that are some are in Bodies some in their Ideas 68. Whatsoever things belong to operation or working are in a Body 69. That which is immortal partakes not of that which is mortal 70. That which is mortall cometh not into a Body immortall but that which is immortall cometh into that which is mortal 71. Operations or Workings are not carried upwards but descend downwards 72. Things upon Earth do nothing advantage those in Heaven but all things in Heaven do profit and advantage the things upon Earth 73. Heaven is capable and a fit receptacle of everlasting Bodies the Earth of corruptible Bodies 74. The Earth is bruitish the Heaven is reasonable or rational 75. Those things that are in Heaven are subjected or placed under it but the things on Earth are placed upon it 76. Heaven is the first Element 77. Providence is Divine Order 78. Necessity is the Minister or Servant of Providence 79. Forrune is the carriage or effect of that which is without Order the Idol of operation a lying fantasie or opinion 80. What is God The immutable or unalterable Good 81. What is man An unchangeable Evil. 82. If thou perfectly remember these Heads thou canst not forget those things which in more words I have largely expounded unto thee for these are the Contents or Abridgment of them 83. Avoyd all Conversation with the multitude or common People for I would not have thee subject to envy much lesse to be ridiculous unto the Many 84. For the like alwaies takes to it self that which is like but the unlike never argrees with the unlike Such Discourses as these have very few Anditors and peradventure very few will have but they have something peculiar unto themselves 85. They do rather sharpen and whet evil men to their maliciousnesse therefore it behoveth to avoyd the multitude take heed of them as not understanding the virtue and power of the things that are said 86. How dost thou mean O Father 87. Thus O Son the whole Nature and Composition of those living things called Men is very prone to Malieiousnesse and is very familiar and as it were nourished with it and therefore is delighted with it Now this Wight if it shall come to Learn or know that the vvorld vvas once made and all things are done according to Providence and Necessity Destiny or Fate bearing Rule over all Will he not be much vvorse then himself despising the vvhole because it vvas made And if he may lay the cause of Evill upon Fate or Destiny he vvill never abstain from any evillwork 88. Wherefore we must look warily to such kind of people that being in ignorance they may be lesse evil for fear of that which is hidden and kept secret The end of the first Book THE Second Book CALLED Poemander MY Thoughts being once seriously busied about the things that are and my Understanding lifted up all my bodily Senses being exceedingly holden back as it is vvith them that are very heavy of sleep by reason either of fulnesse of meat or of bodily labor Me thought I savv one of an exceeding great stature and an infinite greatnesse call me by my name and say unto me What wouldest then hear and sée or what wouldest thou understand to learn and know 2. Then said I Who art thou I am quoth he Poemander the minde of the great Lord the most Mighty and absolute Emperor I knovv vvhat thou vvouldst have and I am alvvayes present vvith thee 3. Then said I I would learn the things that are and understand the nature of them and know God How said he I answered That I would gladly hear Then he Have me again in thy minde and whatsoever thou wouldest learn I will teach thee 4. When he had thus said he was changed in his Idea or Form and straight-way in the twinckling of an eye all things were opened unto me And I saw an infinite sight all things were become light both sweet and exceedingly pleasant and I was wonderfully delighted in the beholding it 5. But after a little while there was a darknesse made in part coming down obliquely fearfull and hideous which seemed unto me to be changed into a certain moyst nature unspeakably troubled which yielded a smoke as from fire and from whence proceeded a voyce unutterable and very mournfull but inarticulate insomuch that it seemed to have come from the Light 6. Then from that Light a certain holy Word joyned it self unto Nature and out-flew the pure and unmixed Fire from the moyst Nature upward on high it was exceeding light and sharp and operative withall And the Air which was also light followed the Spirit and mounted up to Fire from the Earth and the Water insomuch that it seemed to hang and depend upon it 7. And the Earth and the Water stayed by themselves so mingled together that the Earth could not be seen for the Water but they were moved because of the Spirituall Word that was carried upon them 8. Then said Poemander unto me Dost thou understand this U●…on and what it meaneth I shall know said I Then said he I am that Light the Minde thy God who am before that moyst Nature that appeared out of darknesse and that bright and lightfull Word from the Minde is the Son of God 9. How is that quoth I Thus replyed he Understand it That which in thée séeth and heareth the Word of the Lord and the Minde the Father God differ not one from the other and the union of these is Life Trismeg I thank thee Pimand But first conceive well the Light in thy minde and know it 10. When he had thus said for a long time we looked stedfastly one upon the other insomuch that I trembled at his Idea or Form 11. But when he nodded to me I beheld in my minde the Light that is in innumerable and the truely indefinite ornament or world and that the fire is comprehended or contained in or by a most great Power and constrained to keep its station 12. These things I understood seeing the word of Pimander and when I was mightily amazed he said again unto me Hast thou seen in thy minde that Archetypall Form which was before the interminated and infinite Beginning Thus Pimander to me But whence quoth I or whereof are the Elements of Nature made Pimander Of the Will and Counsell of God which taking the Word and beholding the beautifull World in the Archetype thereof imitated it and so made this World by the Principles and vitall Seeds or Soul-like productions of it self 13. For the Minde Being God Male and Female Life Light brought forth by his word another Minde the Workman Which being God of the Fire the Spirit fashioned and formed seven other Governors which in their Circles contain the Sensible World whose Government or Disposition is called Fate or Destiny 14. Straight way leaped
Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus HIS Divine Pymander IN Seventeen Books Together with his Second Book Called Asclepius Containing fifteen Chapters with a Commentary Transl●…ted formerly out of the Arabick into Greek and thence into Latine and Dutch and now out of the Original into ENGLISH By that learned Divine Dr. Everard LONDON Printed by I. S. for Thomas Brewster at the three Bibles in Pauls Church-yard near the West End 1657. TO The Reader Iudicious Reader THis Book may justly challenge the first place for antiquity from all the Books in the World being written some hundreds of yeers before Moses his time as I shall endeavour to make good The Originall as far as is known to us is Arabick and severall Translations thereof have been published as Greek Latine French Dutch c. but never English before It is pity the Learned Translatour had not lived and received himself the honour and thanks due to him from Englishmen for his good will to and pains for them in translating a Book of such infinite worth out of the Originall into their Mother-tongue Concerning the Authour of the Book it self Four things are considerable viz. His Name Learning Countrey and Time 1. The name by which he was commonly styled is Hermes Trismegistus i. e. Mercurius ter Maximus or The thrice greatest Intelligencer And well might he be called Herm●…s for he was the first Intelligencer in the World as we read of that communicated Knowledge to the sons of Men by Writing or Engraving He was called Ter Maxi●…s for some Reasons which I shall afterwards mention 2. His Learning will appear as by his Works so by th●… right understanding the Reason of his Name 3. For his Countrey he was King of Egypt 4. For his Time it is not without much Controversie betwixt those that write of this Divine ancient Author what time he lived in Some say he lived after Moses his time giving this slender Reason for it viz. Because he was named Ter Maximus for being preferred according to the Egyptian Customs being chief Philosopher to be chief of the Priesthood and from thence to be chief in Government or King But if this be all their ground you must excuse my dissent from them and that for this reason Because according to the most learned of his followers he was called Ter Maximus for having perfect and exact Knowledge of all things contained in the World which things he divided into Three Kingdoms as he cals them viz. Mineral Vegetable Animal which Three he did excell in the right understanding of also because he attained to and transmitted to Posterity although in an Aenigmaticall and obscure style the Knowledge of the Quintestence of the whole Universe which Universe as I said before he divided into Three Parts otherwise called The great Elixir of the Philosophers which is the Receptacle of all Celestiall and Terrestiall Vertues which Secret many ignorantly deny many have chargeably sought after yet few but some yea and English-men have happily found The Description of this great Treasure is said to be found ingraved upon a Smaragdine Table in the Valley of Ebron after the Flood So that the Reason before alleaged to prove this Authour to live after Moses seems invalid neither doth it any way appear that he lived in Moses his time although it be the opinion of some as of Iohu Functius who saith in his Chronology That he lived twenty one yeers before the Law was given by Moses in the Wildernesse But the Reasons that he and others give are far weaker than those that I shall give for his living before Moses his time My reasons for that are these First Because it is received amongst the Ancients that he was the first that invented the Art of communicating Knowledge to the World by Writing or Engraving Now if so then in all probability he was before Moses for it is said of Moses that he was from his childhood skilled in all the Egyptian Learning which could not well have been without the help of Literature which we never read of any before that invented by Hermes Secondly He is said by himself to be the Son of Saturn and by others to be the scribe of Saturn Now Saturn according to Historians ●…ived in the time of Sa●…g Abra●…ams great Grand-Father I shall but take in Suidas his judgment and so rest satisfied that he did live not onely before but long before Moses His words are these Credo Mercurium Trismegistum sapientem Egyptium flornisse ante Pharaonem In this Book though so very old is contained more true knowledge of God and Nature than in all the Books in the World besides I except onely Sacred Writ And they that shall judiciously read it and rightly understand it may well be excused from reading many Books the Authors of which pretend so much to the knowledge of the Creatour and Creation If God ever appeared in any man he appeared in him as it appears by this Book That a man who had not the benefit of his Ancestors knowledge being as I said before The first Inventer of the Art of Communicating Knowledge to Posterity by writing should be so high a Divine and so deep a Philosopher seems to be a thing more of God than of Man and therefore it was the opinion of some That he came from Heaven not born upon Earth There is contained in this Book that true Philosophy without which it is impossible ever to attain to the heighth and exactnesse of Piety and Religion According to this Philosophy I call him a Philosopher that shall learn and study the things that are and how they are ordered and governed and by whom and for what cause or to what end and he that doth so will acknowledge thanks to and admire the Omni potent Creator Preserver and Director of all these things And he that shall be thus truly thankfull may truly be called Pious and Religious and he that is Religious shall more and more know where and what the Truth is And learning that he shall yet be more and more Religious The glory and splendour of Philosophy is an endevouring to understand the chief Good as the Fountain of all Good Now how can we come neer to or finde out the Fountain but by making use of the Streams as a conduct to it The operations of Nature are Streams running from the Fountain of Good which is God I am not of the ignorant and foolish opinion of those that say The greatest Philosophers are the greatest Atheists as if to know the Works of God and to understand his goings forth in the Way of Nature must necessitate a man to deny God The Scripture disapproves of this as a sottish Tenent and experience contradicts it For behold Here is the greatest Philosopher and therefore the greatest Divine Read understandingly this insuing Book and for thy help thou mayest make use of that voluminous Commentary written upon it
then it will speak more for its Author than can be spoken by any man at least by me Thine in the love of the Truth I. F. THE Titles of every Book OF Hermes Trismegistus Lib. Fol. 1. HIs first Book 1 2. Poemander 15 3. The holy Sermon 42 4. The Key 47 5. That God is not manifest and yet most manifest 72 6. That in God alone is good 84 7. The secret Sermon in the Mount of Regeneration and the Profession of Silence 93 8. That the greatest evil in Man is the not knowing of God 115 9. A Universall Sermon to Asclepius 123 10. The Minde to Hermes 135 11. Of the common minde to Tat. 159 12. Hermes Trismegistus his Crater or Monas 183 13 Of Sense and Understanding 194 14. Of Operation and Sense 206 15. Of truth to his son Ta●… 220 16. That none of the things that are can perish 232 17. To Asclepius to be truly wise 237 Hermes Trismegistus HIS First Book I O my Son write this first Book both for Humanity sake and for Piety towards God 2. For there can be no Religion more true or just than to know the things that are and to acknowledge thanks for all things to him that made them which thing I shall not cease continually to do 3. What then should a man do O Father to lead his life well seeing there is nothing here true 4. Be Pious and Religious O my Son for he that doth so is the best and highest Philosopher and without Philosophy it is impossible ever to attain to the heighth and exactnes of Piety or Religion 5. But he that shall learn and study the things that are and how they are ordered and governed and by whom and ●…r what cause or to what end will acknowledge thanks to the Work man as to a good Father an excellent Nurse and a faithfull Steward and he that gives thanks shall be Pious or Religious and he that is Religious shall know both where the truth is and what it is and learning that he will be yet more and more Reigious 6. For never O Son shall or can that Soul which while it is in the Body lightens and li●…ts up it self to know and comprehend that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is Good and True ●…de back to the contrary For it is infinitely enamoured thereof and forgetteth all Evils and when it hath learned and known its Father and Progenitor it can no more Apostatize or depart from that Good 7. And let this O Son be the end of Religion and Piety whereunto when thou art once arrived thou shalt both live wel and die blessedly whilest thy Soul is not ignorant whither it must return and flie back again 8. For this onely O Son is the way to the Truth which our Progenitors travelled in and by which making their Journey they at length attained to the Good It is a Venerable way and plain but hard and difficult for the Soul to go in that is in the Body 9. For first it must war against its own self and after much Strife and Dissention it must be overcome of one part for the Contention is of one against two whilest it flies away and they strive to hold and detain it 10. But the victory of both is not like for the one hasteth to that which is Good but the other is a neighbor to the things that are Evil and that which is Good desireth to be set at Liberty but the things that are Evil love Bondage and Slavery 11. And if the two parts be overcome they become quiet and are content to accept of it as their Ruler but if the one be overcome of the two it is by them led and carried to be pupunished by its being and continuance here 12. This is O Son the Guide in the way that leads thither for thou must first forsake the Body before thy end and get the victory in this Contention and Strifefull life and when thou hast overcome return 13. But now O my Son I will by Heads run thorow the things that are Understand thou what I say and remember what thou hearest 14. All things that are are moved onely that which is not is unmoveable 15. Every Body is changeable 16. Not every Body is dissolveable 17. Some Bodies are dissolveable 18. Every living thing is not mortall 19. Not every living thing is immortall 20. That which may be dissolved is also corruptible 21. That which abides alwayes is unchangeable 22. That which is unchangeable is eternall 23. That which is alwayes made is alwayes corrupted 24. That which is made but once is never corrupted neither becomes any other thing 25. First God Secondly the World Thirdly Man 26. The World for Man Man for God 27. Of the Soul that part which is Sensible is mortall but that which is Reasonable is immortall 28. Every Essence is immortall 29. Every Essence is unchangeable 30. Every thing that is is double 31. None of the things that are stand still 32 Not all things are moved by a Soul but every thing that is is moved by a Soul 33. Every thing that suffers is Sensible every thing that is Sensible suffereth 34. Every thing that is sad rejoyceth also and is a mortall living Creature 35. Not every thing that joyeth is also sad but is an eternall living thing 36. Not every Body is sick every Body that is sick is dissolveable 37. The Mind in God 38. Reasoning or disputing of discoursing in Man 39. Reason in the Mind 40. The Mind is voyd of suffering 41. No thing in a Body true 42. All that is incorporeall is voyd of Lying 43. Every thing that is made is corruptible 44. Nothing good upon Earth nothing evill in Heaven 45. God is good Man is evil 46. Good is voluntary or of its own accord 47. Evill is unvoluntary or against its will 48. The Gods choose good things as good things 49. Time is a Divine thing 50. Law is Humane 51. Malice is the nourishment of the World 52. Time is the Corruption of Man 53. Whatsoever is in Heaven is unalterable 54. All upon Earth is alterable 55. Nothing in Heaven is servanted nothing upon Earth free 56. Nothing unknown in Heaven nothing known upon Earth 57. The things upon Earth communicate not with those in Heaven 58. All things in Heaven are unblameable all things upon Earth are subject to Reprehension 59. That which is immortal is not mortal that which is mortal is not immortal 60. That which is sown is not alwayes begotten but that which is begotten alwayes is sown 61. Of a dissolveable Body there are two Times one from sowing to generation one from generation to death 62. Of an everlasting Body the time is only from the Generation 63. Dissolveable Bodies are increased and diminished 64. Dissolveable matter is altered into contraries to wit Corruption and Generation but Eternal matter into its self and its like 65. The Generation of Man is Corruption the Corruption of Man is the beginning
voyce of the speaker 59. The disposition of these Cloathings or Covers is done in the Earthly Body for it is impossible that the minde should establish or rest it self naked and of it self in an Earthly Body neither is the earthly Body able to bear such immottality And therefore that it might suffer so great vertue the Minde compacted as it were and took to it self the pasfible Body of the Soul as a Covering or a Cloathing And the Soul being also in some sort Divine useth the Spirit as her Minister and Servant and the Spirit governeth the living thing 60. When therefore the Minde is separated and departeth from the Earthly Body presently it puts on its Fiery Coat which it could not do having to dwell in an Earthly Body 61. For the Earth cannot suffer fire for it is all burned of a small spark therefore is the water powred round about the Earth as a Wall or defence to withstand the flame of fire 62. But the minde being the most sharp or swift of all the Divine Cogitations and more swift then all the Elements hath the fire for its Body 63. For the minde which is the Workman of all useth the fire as his Instrument in his workmanship and he that is 〈◊〉 ●…rkman of all useth it to 〈◊〉 ●…ng of all things as it is use●… 〈◊〉 man to the making of Earthly things only for the Minde that is upon Earth voyd or naked of fire cannot do the businesse of men nor that which is otherwise the affaires of God 64. But the Soul of Man and yet not every one but that which is pious and religious is Angelicall and Divine And such a Soul after it is departed from the Body having striven the strife of Piety becomes either Minde or God 65. And the strife of Piety is to know God and to injury no Man and this way it becomes Minde 66. But an impious Soul abideth in its own essence punished of it self and seeking an earthly and humane 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enter into 67. For no other Body is capable of an Humane Soul neither is it Lawfull for a Mans Soul to fall into the Body of an unreasonable living thing For it is the Law or Decree of God to preserve an Humane Soul from so great a contumely and reproach 68. Tat. How then is the Soul of Man punished O Father and what is i●… greatest torment●… 69. Herm. Impiety O my S●… for what Fire hath so great a flame 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or what biting Beast doth so tear the Body as it doth the Soul 70. Or dost thou not see how many Evils the wicked Soul suffereth roaring and crying out I am burner I am consumed I know not what to say or do I am devoured uuhappy wretch of the evils that compass and lay hold upon me miserable that I am I neither sée nor hear any thing 71. These are the voyces of a punished and tormented Soul and not as many and thou O Son thinkest that the Soul going out of the Body grows bruitish or enters into a Beast which is a very great Error for the Soul is punished after this manner 72. For the Minde when it is ordered or appointed to get a fiery Body for the services of God coming down into the wicked soul torments it with the whips of Sins wherewith the wicked Soul being scourged turns it self to Murthers and Contumelies and Blasphemies and divers Violences and other things by which men are in●…ured 73. But into a pious Soul the Minde entering leads it into the Light of Knowledge 74. And such a Soul is never satisfied with singing praise To God and speaking well of all men and both in words and deeds alwayes doing good in imitation of her Father 75. Therefore O Son we must give thanks and pray that we may obtain a good minde 76. The Soul therefore may be altered or changed into the better but into the worse it is impossible 77. But there is a communion of Souls and those of Gods communicate with those of men and those of men with those of Beasts 78. And the better alwayes take of the worse Gods of Men Men of bruit Beasts but God of all For he is the best of all and all things are lesse then he 79. Therefore is the World subject unto God Man unto the World and unreasonable things to Man 80. But God is above all and about all and the beames of God are operations and the beams of the World are Natures and the beams of Man are Arts and Sciences 81. And Operations do act by the World and upon man by the naturall beams of the World but Natures work by the Elements and man by Arts and Sciences 82. And this is the Government of the whole depending upon the Nature of the One and piercing or coming down by the One Minde than which nothing is more Divine and more efficacious or operative and nothing more uniting or nothing is more One The Communion of Gods to Men and of Men to Gods 83. This is the Bonus genius or good Demon●… Blessed Soul that is fullest of it and unhappy Soul that is empty of it 84. Tat. And wherefore Father 85. Trism Know Son that every Soul hath the Good Mind for of that it is we now speak and not of that Minister of which we said before That he was sent from the Judgement 86. For the Soul without the Minde can neither do nor say any thing for manytimes the Minde fl●…es away from the Soul and in that hour the Soul neither seeth nor heareth but is like an unreasonable thing so great is the power of the Minde 87. But neither brooketh is an idle or lazie Soul but leaves such a one fastened to the Body and by it pressed down 88. And such a Soul O Son hath no Minde wherefore neither must such a one be called a Man 89. For Man is a Divine living thing and is not to be compared to any bruit Beast that lives upon Earth but to them that are above in Heaven that are called Gods 90. Rather if we shall be bold to speak the truth he that is a man indeed is above them or at least they are equall in power one to the other For none of the things in Heaven will come down upon Earth and leave the limits of Heaven but a man ascends up into Heaven and measures it 91. And he knoweth what things are on high and what below and learneth all other things exactly 92. And that which is the greatest of all he leaveth not the Earth and yet is above So great is the greatnesse of his Nature 93. Wherefore we must be bold to say That an earthly man is a mortall God and that the heavenly God is an immortall Man 94. Wherefore by these two are all things governed the World and Man but they and all things else of that which is One. The End of the fourth Book THE Fifth Book That God is not manifest and yet most manifest
THis Discourse I will also make to thee O Tat that thou mayest not be ignorant of the more excellent Name of God 2. But do thou contemplate in thy Minde how that which to many seems hidden and unmanifest may be most manifest unto thee 3. For it were not All if it were apparent for whatsoever is apparent is generated or made for it was made manifest but that which is not manifest is ever 4. For it needeth not to be manifested for it is alwayes 5. And he maketh all other things manifest being unmanifest as being alwayes and making other things manifest he is not made manifest 6. Himself is not made yet in fantasie he fantasieth all things or in appearance he maketh them appear for appearance is only of those things that are generated or made for appearance is nothing but generation 7. But he that is Oue that is not made nor generated is also unapparent and unmanifest 8. But making all things appear he appeareth in all and by all but especially he is manifested to or in those things wherein himself listeth 9. Thou therefore O Tat my Son pray first to the Lord and Father and to the Alone and to the One from whom is one to be mercifull to thee that thou mayest know and understand so great a God and that he would shine one of his beams upon thee in thy understanding 10. For onely the Understanding sees that which is not manifest or apparent as being it self not manifest or apparent and if thou canst O Tat it will appear to the eyes of thy minde 11. For the Lord void of envie appeareth thorow the whole world Thou mayest see the intelligence and take it in thy hands and contemplate the Image of God 12. But if that which is in thee be not known or apparent unto thee how shall he in thee be seen and appear unto thee by the eyes 13. But if thou wilt see him consider and understand the Sun consider the course of the M●…n consider the order of the Stars 14. Who is he that keepeth order for all order is circumscribed or terminated in number and place 15. The Sun is the greatest of the Gods in Heaven to whom all the heavenly Gods give place as to a King and Potentate and yet he being such a one greater than the Earth or the Sea is content to suffer infinite lesser Stars to walk and move above himself whom doth he fear the while O Son 16. Every one of these Stars that are in Heaven do not make the like or an equall course who is it that hath prescribed unto every one the manner and the greatnesse of their course 17. This Bear that turns round about it own self and carries round the whole World with her who possessed and made such an Instrument 18. Who hath set the bounds to the Sea who hath established the Earth for there is some Body O Tat that is the Maker and Lord of these things 19. For it is impossible O Son that either place or number or measure should be observed without a Maker 20. For no order can be made by disorder or disproportion 21. I would it were possible for thee O my Son to have wings and to flie into the Air and being taken up in the midst between Heaven and Earth to see the stability of the Earth the fluidnesse of the Sea the courses of the Rivers the largenesse of the Air the sharpnesse or swiftnesse of the Fire the motion of the Stars and the speedinesse of the Heaven by which it goeth round about all these 22. O Son what a happy sight it were at one instant to see all these that which is unmoveable moved and that which is hidden appear and be manifest 23. And if thou wilt see and behold this Workman even by mortall things that are upon Earth and in the deep consider O Son how Man is made and framed in the Womb and examine diligently the skill and cunning of the Workman and learn who it was that wrought and fashioned the beautifull and Divine shape of Man who circumscribed and marked out his eyes who bored his nostrils and ears who opened his mouth who stretched out and tied together his sinews who channelled the veins who hardened and made strong the bones who clothed the flesh with skin who divided the fingers and the joynts who flatted and made broad the soals of the feet who digged the pores who stretched out the spleen who made the Heart like a Pyramis who made the Liver broad who made the Lights spungie and full of holes who made the belly large and capacious who set to outward view the more honourable parts and hid the filthy ones 24. See how many Arts in one Matter and how many Works in one Superscription and all exceedingly beautifull and all done in measure and yet all differing 25. Who hath made all these things what Mother what Father save only God that is not manifest that made all things by his own Will 26. And no man says that a statue or an image is made without a Carver or a Painter and was this workmanship made without a Workman O great Blindnesse O great Impiety O great Ignorance 27. Never O Son Tat canst thou deprive the Workmanship of the Workman rather it is the best Name of all the Names of God to call him the Father of all for so he is alone and this is his work to be the Father 28. And if thou wilt force me to say any thing more boldly It is his Essence to be pregnant or great with all things and to make them 29. And as without a Maker it is impossible that any thing should be made so it is that he should not alwayes be and always be making all things in Heaven in the Air in the Earth in the Deep in the whole World and in every part of the whole that is or that is not 30. For there is nothing in the whole World that is not himself both the things that are and the things that are not 31. For the things that are he hath made manifest and the things that are not he hath hid in himself 32. This is God that is better then any name this is he that is secret this is he that is most manifest this is he that is to be seen by the Minde this is he that is visible to the eye this is he that hath no body and this is he that hath many bodies rather there is nothing of any body which is not He. 33. For he alone is all things 34. And for this cause he hath all Names because he is the One Father and therefore he hath no Name because he is the Father of all 35. Who therefore can blesse thee or give thankes for thee or to thee 36. Which way shall I look when I praise thee upward downward outward inward 37. For about thee there is no manner nor place nor any thing else of all things that
and Immortality 14. Of the World Restitution and Decay or Destruction 15. Of Time Augmentation and Diminution 16. And of Generation qualities 17. Therefore Eternity is in God 18. The World in Eternity 19. Time in the World 20. And Generation in Time 21. And Eternity standeth about God 22. The World is moved in Eternity 23. Time is determined in the World 24. Generation is done in Time 25. Therefore the Spring and Fountain of all things is God 26. The Substance Eternity 27. The Matter is the World 28. The Power of God is Eternity 29. And the Work of Eternity is the World not yet made and yet ever made by Eternity 30. Therefore shall nothing be at any time destroyed for Eternity is incorruptible 31. Neither can any thing perish or be destroyed in the World the World being contained and embraced by eternity 32. But what is the Wisdom of God Even the G●…d and the Fair and Blessednesse and every Vertue and Eternity 33. Eternity therefore put into the Matter Immortality and Everlastingnesse for the Generation of that depends upon Eternity even as Eternity doth of God 34. For Generation and Time in Heaven and in Earth are of a double nature in Heaven they are unchangeable and incorruptible but on Earth they are changeable and corruptible 35. And the Soul of Eternity is God and the Soul of the World Eternity and of the Earth Heaven 36. God is in the Minde the Minde in the Soul the Soul in the Matter all things by eternity 37. All this Universall Body in which are all Bodies is full of Soul the Soul full of Minde the Minde full of God 38. For within he fills them and without he contains them quickning the Universe 39. Without he quickens this perfect living thing the World and within all living Creatures 40. And above in Heaven he abides in Identity or Selfnesse but below upon Earth he changeth Generation 41. Eternity comprehendeth the World either by Necessity or Providence or Nature 42. And if any man shall think any other thing it is God that actuateth or operateth this All. 43. But the operation or Act of God is Power insuperable to which none may compare any thing either Humane or Divine 44. Therefore O Hermes think none of these things below or the things above in any wise like unto God for if thou dost thou errest from the Truth 45. For nothing can be like the unlike and only and One nor mayest thou think that he hath given of his Power to any other thing 46. For who after him can make any thing either of Life or Immortality of Change or of Quality and himself what other thing should he make 47. For God is not idle for then all things would be idle for all things are full of God 48. But there is not any where in the World such a thing as Idlenesse for Idlenesse is a name that implieth a thing void or empty both of a Doer and a thing done 49. But all things must necessarily be made or done both alwayes and according to the nature of every place 50. For he that maketh or doth is in all things yet not fastened or comprehended in any thing nor making or doing one thing but all things 51. For being an active or operating Power and sufficient of himself for the things that are made and the things that are made are under him 52. Look upon through me the World is subject to thy sight and understand exactly the Beauty thereof 53. A Body immarcescible than the which there is nothing more ancient yet alwayes vigorous and young 54. See also the seven Worlds set over us adorned with an everlasting Order and filling Eternity with a different course 55. For all things are full of Light but the Fire is no where 56. For the friendship and commixture of contraries and unlike became Light shining from the Act or Operation of God the Father of all Good the Prince of all Order and the Ruler of the Seven Worlds 57. Look also upon the Moon the Fore-runner of them all the Instrument of Nature and which changeth the Matter here below 58. Behold the Earth the middle of the whole the firm and stable Foundation of the Fair World the Feeder and Nurse of Earthly things 59. Consider moreover how great the multitude is of immortall living things and of mortall ones also and see the Moon going about in the midst of both to wit of things immortall and mortall 60. But all things are full of Soul and all things are properly moved by it some things about the Heaven and some things about the Earth and neither of those on the right hand to the lest nor those on the left hand to the right nor those things that are above downward nor those things that are below upwards 61. And that all these things are made O beloved Hermes thou needest not learn or me 62. For they are Bodies and have a Soul and are moved 63. And that all these should come together into one it is impossible without some thing to gather them together 64. Therefore there must be some such ones and he altogether One 65. For seeing that the motions are divers and many and the Bodies not alike and yet one ordered swiftnesse among them all It is impossible there should be two or moe Makers 66. For one order is not kept by many 67. But in the weaker there would be jealousie of the stronger and thence also Contentions 68. And if there were one Maker of mutable and mortall living wights he would desire also to make immortall ones as he that were the Maker of immortal ones would do to make mortall 69. Moreover also if there were two the Matter being one who should be chief or have the disposing of the facture 70. Or if both of them which of them the greater part 71. But thinks thus that every living Body hath its consistence of Matter and Soul and of that which is immortall and that which is mortall and unreasonable 72. For all living Bodies have a Soul and those things that are not living are onely matter by it self 73. And the Soul likewise of it self drawing neer her Maker is the cause of Life and Being and being the cause of Life is after a manner the cause of immortal things 74. How then are mortal wights other from immortal 75. Or how cannot he make living wights that causeth immortal things and immortality 76. That there is some Body that doth these things it is apparent and that he is also one it is most manifest 77. For there is one Soul one Life and one Matter 78. Who is this who can it be other than the One God 79. For whom e●…e can it benefit to make living things save onely God alone 80. There is therefore one God 81. For it is a ridiculous thing to confesse the World to be one one Sun one Moon one Divinity and yet to have I know not how many gods 82. He
therefore being One doth all things in many things 83. And what great thing is it for God to make Life and Soul and Immortality and Change when thy self dost so many things 84. For thou both seest speakest and hearest smellest tastest and touchest walkest understandest and breathest 85. And it is not one that seeth and another that heareth and another that speaketh and another that toucheth and another that smelleth and another that walketh and another that understandeth and another that breatheth but One that doth all these things 86. Yet neither can these things possibly be without God 87. For as thou if thou shouldest cease from doing these things wert not a living wight so if God should cease from those he were not which is not lawful to say any longer God 88. For if it be already demonstrated that nothing can be idle or empty how much more may be affirmed of God 89. For if there be any thing which he doth not do then is he if it were lawful to say so imperfect 90. Whereas seeing he is not idle but perfect certainly he doth all things 91. Now give thy self unto me O Hermes for a little while thou shalt the more easily understand that it is the necessary work of God that all things should be made or done that are done or were once done or shall be done 92. And this O best Beloloved is life 93. And this is the Fair. 94. And this is the Good 95. And this is God 96. And if thou wilt understand this by work also mark what happens to thy self when thou wilt generate 97. And yet this is not like unto him for he is not sensible of pleasure for neither hath he any other Fellow-workman 98. But being himself the onely Workman he is alwayes in the Work himself being that which he doth or maketh 99. For all things if they were separated from him must needs fall and die as there being no life in them 100. And again if all things be living wights both which are in Heaven and upon Earth and that there be one Life in all things which is made by God and that is God then certainly all things are made or done by God 101. Life is the union of the Minde and the Soul 102. But death is not the destruction of those things that were gathered together but a dissolving of the Union 103. The Image therefore of God is Eternity of Eternity the World of the World the Sun of the Sun Man 104. But the people say That changing is Death because the Body is dissolved and the Life goeth into that which appeareth not 105. By this discourse my dearest Hermes I affirm as thou hearest That the World is changed because every day part thereof becomes invisible but that it is never dissolved 106. And these are the Passions of the World Revolutions and Occultations and Revolution is a turning but Occultation is Renovation 107. And the world being all formed hath not the forms lying without it but it self changeth in it self 108. Seeing then the World is all formed what must he be that made it for without form he cannot be 109. And if he be all formed he will be kept like the World but if he have but one form he shall be in this regard lesse then the World 110. What do we then say that he is we will not raise any doubts by our speech for nothing that is doubtfull concerning God is yet known 111. He hath therefore one Idea which is proper to him which because it is unbodily is not subject to the sight and yet shews all forms by the Bodies 112. And do not wonder if there be an incorruptible Idea 113. For they are like the Margents of that Speech which is in writing for they seem to be high and swelling but they are by nature smooth and even 114. But understand well this that I say more boldly for it is more true As a man cannot live without life so neither can God live not doing good 115. For this is as it were ●…he Life and Motion of God to move all things and quicken them 116. But some of the things I have said must have a particular explication Understand then what I say 117. All things are in God not as lying in a place for Place is both a Body and unmoveable and those things that are there placed have no motion 118. For they lie otherwise in that which is unbodily then in the fantasie or to appearance 119. Consider him that containes all things and understand that nothing is more capacious then that which is incorporeall nothing more swift nothing more powerfull but it is most capacious most swift and most strong 120. And judge of this by thy self command thy Soul to go into India and sooner then thou canst bid it it will be there 121. Bid it likewise passe over the Ocean and suddenly it will be there Not as passing from place to place but suddenly it will be there 122. Command it to flie into Heaven and it will need no Wings neither shall any thing hinder it not the fire of the Sun not the Aether nor the turning of the Spheres not the bodies of any of the other Stars but cutting through all it will flie up to the last and furthest Body 123. And if thou wilt even break the whole and see those things that are without the World if there be any thing without thou mayest 124. Behold how great power how great swiftnesse thou hast Canst thou do all these things and cannot God 125. After this manner therefore contemplate God to have all the whole World to himself as it were all thoughts or intellections 126. If therefore thou wilt not equall thy self to God thou canst not understand God 127. For the like are intelligible by the like 128. Increase thy self unto an immeasurable greatnesse leaping beyond every Body and transcending all Time become Eternity and thou shall understand God If thou believe in thyself that nothing is impossible but accountest thy self immortall and that thou canst understand all things every Art every Science and the manner and custom of every living thing 129. Become higher then all heighth lower then all depths comprehend in thy self the qualities of all the Creatures of the Fire the Water the Dry and Moyst and conceive likewise that thou canst at once be every where in the Sea in the Earth 130. Thou shalt at once ununderstand thy self not yet begotten in the Womb young old to be dead the things after death and all these together as also times places deeds qualities quantities or else thou canst not yet understand God 131. But if thou shut up thy Soul in the Body and abuse it and say I understand nothing I can do nothing I am affraid of the Sea I cannot climb up into Heaven I know not who I am I cannot tell what I shall be what hast thou to do with God for thou canst understand none of those Fair
thus 102. For Generation is not a Creation of Life but a production of things to Sense and making them manifest Neither is Change Death but an occultation or h●…ing of that which was 103. These things being so all things are Immortall Matter Life Spirit Soul Minde whereof every living thing consisteth 104. Every living thing therefore is Immortall because of the Minde but especially Man who both receiveth God and converseth with him 105. For with this living wight alone is God familiar in the night by dreams in the day by Symbols or Signes 106. And by all things doth he foretell him of things to come by Birds by Fowls by the Spirit or Winde and by an Oke 107. Wherefore also Man professeth to know things that have been things that are present and things to come 108. Consider this also O Son That every other living Creature goeth upon one part of the World Swimming things in the Water Land wights upon the Earth Flying Fowls in the Air. 109. But Man useth all these the Earth the Water the Air and the Fire nay he seeth and toucheth Heaven by his Sense 110. But God is both about all things and through all things for he is both Act and Power 111. And it is no hard thing O Son to understand God 112. And if thou wilt also see him look upon the Necessity of things that appear and the Providence of things that have been and are done 113. See the Matter being most full of Life and so great a God moved with all Good and Fair both Gods and Demons and Men. 114. Tat. But these O Father are wholly Acts or operations 115. Herm. If they be therefore wholly Acts or Operations O Son by whom are they acted or operated but by God 116. Or art thou ignorant that as the parts of the World are Heaven and Earth and Water and Air after the same manner the Members of God are Life and Immortality and Eternity and Spirit and Necessity and Providence and Nature and Soul and Minde and the Continuance or perseverance of all these which is called Good 117. And there is not any thing of all that hath been and all that is where God is not 118. Tat. What in the Matter O Father 119. Herm. The Matter Son what is it without God that thou shouldest ascribe a proper place to it 120. Or what dost thou think it to be peradventure some heap that is not actuated or operated 121. But if it be actuated by whom is it actuated for we have said that Acts or Operations are the parts of God 122. By whom are all living things quickned and the Immortall by whom are they immortalized the things that are changeable by whom are they changed 123. Whether thou speak of Matter or Body or Essence know that all these are acts of God 124. And that the Act of Matter is materiality and of the Bodies corporality and of essence essentiality and this is God the whole 125. And in the whole there is nothing that is not God 126. Wherefore about God there is neither Greatnesse Place Quality Figure or Time for he is All and the All through all and about all 127. This Word O Son worship and adore And the only service of God is not to be evil The End of the Eleventh Book THE Twelfth Book OF Hermes Trismegistus His Crater or Monas THe Workman made this Universall World not with his Hands but his Word 2. Therefore thus think of him as present every where and being always and making all things and one above that by his Will hath framed the things that are 3. For that is his Body not tangible nor visible nor measurable nor extensible nor like any other body 4. For it is neither Fire nor Water nor Air nor Wind but all these things are of him for being Good he hath dedicated that name unto himself alone 5. But he would also adorn the Earth but with the Ornament of a Divine Body 6. And he sent Man an Immortall and a Mortall wight 7. And Man had more then all living Creatures and the World because of his Speech and Minde 8. For man became the spectator of the Works of God and wondered and acknowledged the Maker 9. For he divided Speech among all men but not Minde and yet he envied not any for Envy comes not thither but is of abode here below in the Souls of men that have not the Minde 10. Tat. But wherefore Father did not God distribute the Minde to all men 11. Herm. Because it pleased him O Son to set that in the middle among all souls as a reward to strive for 12. Tat. And where hath he set it 13. He●… Filling a large Cup or Bowl therewith he ●…t it down giving also a Cryer or Proclaimer 14. And he commanded him to proclaim these things to the souls of men 15. Dip and wash thy self thou that art able in this Cup or Bowl Thou that beleevest that thou shalt return to him that sent this Cup thou that acknowledgest whereunto thou wert made 16. As many therefore as understood the Proclamation and were baptized or dowsed into the Minde these were made pertakers of Knowledge and became perfect men receiving the Minde 17. But as many as missed of the Proclamation they received Speech but not Minde being ignorant whereunto they were made or by whom 18. But their Senses are just like to bruit Beasts and having their temper in Anger and Wrath they do not admire the things worthy of looking on 19. But wholly addicted to the pleasures and desires of the Bodies they beleeve that man was made for them 20. But as many as partaked of the gift of God these O Tat in comparison of their works are rather immortall then mortall men 21. Comprehending all things in their Minde which are upon Earth which are in heaven and if there be any thing above Heaven 22. And lifting up themselves so high they see the Good and seeing it they account it a miserable calamity to make their abode here 23. And despising all things bodily and unbodily they make haste to the One and Only 24. Thus O Tat is the Knowledge of the Minde the beholding of Divine things and the Understanding of God the Cup it self being Divine 25. Tat. And I O Father would be baptized drenched therein 26. Herm. Except thou first hate thy body O Son thou canst not love thy self but loving thy self thou shalt have the Minde and having the Minde thou shalt also partake the Knowledge or Science 27. Tat. How meanest thou that O Father 28. Herm. Because it is impossible O Son to be conversant about things Mortall and Divine 29. For the things that are being two Bodies and things incorporeall wherein is the Mortal and the Divine the Election or Choice of either is left to him that will chuse For no man can chuse both 30. And of which soever the choice is made the other being diminished or overcome magnifieth
lost his proper Nature by the privation of the other 22. So if these Two be confessed That which maketh and that which is made then they are One in Union this going before and that following 23. And that which goeth before is God the Maker and that which follows is that which is made be it what it will 24. And let no man be afraid because of the variety of things that are made or done lest he should cast an aspersion of basenesse or infamy upon God for it is the only Glory of him to do or make All things 25. And this making or facture is as it were the Body of God and to him that maketh or doth there is nothing evil or filthy to be imputed or there is nothing thought evil or filthy 26. For these are Passions that follow Generation as Rust doth Copper or as Excrements do the Body 27. But neither did the Coppersmith make the Rust nor the Maker the Filth nor God the Evilnesse 28. But the vicissitude of Generation doth make them as it were to blossom out and for this cause did make Change to be as one should say The Purgation of Generation 29. Moreover is it Lawfull for the same Painter to make both Heaven and the Gods and the Earth and the Sea and Men and bruit Beasts and inanimate Things and Trees and is it impossible for God to make these things O the great madnesse and ignorance of men in things that concern God! 30. For men that think so suffer that which is most ridiculous of all for professing to blesse and praise God yet in not ascribing to him the making or doing of All things they know him not 31 And besides their not knowing him they are extreamly impious against him attributing unto him Passions as Pride or Oversight or Weaknesse or Ignorance or Envy 32. For if he do not make or do all things he is either proud or not able or ignorant or envious which is impious to affirm 33. For God hath only one Passion namely Good and he that is good is neither proud nor impotent nor the rest but God is Good it self 34. For G●…d is all Power to do or make all things and every thing that is made is made by God that is by the Good and that can make or do all things 35. See then how he maketh all things and how the things are done that are done and if thou wilt learn thou mayest see an Image thereof very beautifull and like 36. Look upon the Husbandman how he casteth Seeds into the Earth here Wheat there Barly and elsewhere some other Seeds 37. Look upon the same Man planting a Vine or an Apple-Tree or a Fig-Tree or some other Tree 38. So doth God in Heaven sow Immortality in the Earth Change in the whole Life and Motion 39. And these things are not many but few and easily numbred for they are all but four God and Generation in which are all things The End of the Seventeenth Book FINIS Hermes his Divine Pymander and Asclepius Hermes Trismegistus HIS Second Book CALLED Asclepius Containing fifteen Chapters With A Commentary LONDON Printed for Thomas Brewster at the three Bibles in St. Pauls Church-yard near the West End MDCLVII THE Second Book OF Hermes Trismegistus CHAP. I. THou Asclepius serves in stead of a Sun unto me for God hath brought thee to us that thou mightest be present with us in thy divine Discourse being such which may seem worthy to carry a greater lustre of Piety and Religion than all the works before done of us or any gifts inspired by divine Inspiration which if understandingly thou shalt regard thou shalt be richly filled with all good things thorowout thy whole Soul If notwithstanding there be many good things and not one generall in which all things are for the one is perceived to consent and agree with the other all these things belong to that One and that One is All for the one so coheres to the other that they cannot be separated But in the future Discourse by a diligent hearkening thou shalt fully know it But thou O Asclepius proceed a little and call forth him which should be present who entering Asclepius also suggesteth Amnon to be present Trismegistus saith No Envie hindereth Amnon from us for to his name we remember many things to be written of us as also to his loving and dear Son many things of naturall Philosophy and of many Out landish and strange things but this Tractate I will ascribe to your name neither call any other save Amnon lest a most devout Discourse of so weighty a matter should be violated by the intervention and presence of many comers for it is an argument of no honest and religious heart to publish a Tractate replenisht with the fulnesse of the divine Majesty to the view of every mans conscience Holy Amnon being now entered into a private closet fitted with the Religion of four men and the Divine Presence of God in much reverence and secrecie he begins thus to declare himself in the name of all the Hermetes to the consciences and souls of them who are prepared to hear Trism O Asclepius the soul of every man is immortall but not all alike for there is a difference both in the time and manner Asclep No indeed O Trismegistus for every Soul is of one quality Trism O Asclepius how quickly hast thou learned by the very light of reason for said I not this That all things are one and one all things that all things were in the Creatour before he created all things neither unworthily is he said to be All whose parts are all things therefore in this whole Discourse have a care to remember him who being One is All even the very Creatour of all things all things descend from Heaven into the Earth into the Water and into the Air. The Fire onely in that it is carried upward is lively subservient to that which descends for whatsoever descends from above is generating and whatsoever ascends upward is nourishing the earth alone abiding in it self is the receiver of all things and the restorer of all things she receiveth In this therfore wholly as you said even al things both the Soul and the World are naturally moved and concluded So the various equality of every shape being differenced that the Species of the qualities by distance may be known to be infinite yet so united to this that the whole may seem one and from that one all to have their being wherefore the whole World are the four Elements of which it is compounded Fire Water Earth Air one World one Soul one God Now be thou present with me as much as thou art able both in minde and wisdom for the reason of the Divinity which is to be known by the divine intention of the understanding is most like unto a Torrent running with a violent and swift stream from a high Rock whereby it glides away from the understanding of
great day for albeit they counterfeit themselves to be Lovers of men yet they love them not but draw them to the same damnation which they themselves have had from the Beginning They counterfeited even to love when they brought death upon all men saying Ye shall not die but shall be as Gods knowing good and evil what therefore he here speaketh of Angels or Spirits can not seeme fitly to be applyed to any divine knowledge but to imitate the error of the Gentiles but what he speaks of men are those which cleave unto God and grow religious but those which joyn themselves unto evil Spirits we confesse to be those which shall be received into the Company of Devils and shall be joyned unto the evil Angels which shall be reserved as hath been said in eternal chaines under darknesse unto the great day for we know it pronounced out of Gods mouth what he will say to them on the left hand in the day of Iudgment Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Devill and his angels and who are those but those who are joyned unto them and love the works of darknesse in this life Thus much for the Second Chapter CHAP. III. IN this regard O Asclepius Man is a great miracle a Creature both to be reverenced and honored being after the nature Image of God as though he were a God This the Angels know for as much as they were created after the same nature but disdained part of the humane Nature relied only on the Divine Nature O therefore the more temperate the Nature of man is and comes nearest to God and to the divinity the more he despiseth that part of his whereby he becomes earthly all other things below with whom he must needs be he knoweth with a Heavenly disposition and are near unto him in way of Charity yet his desires are in heaven so therefore he is happily placed in the middest that what things are here below him he loveth and is himself beloved of those things above He inhabiteth the earth and by his agility is mixed with the Elements yet by the sharpnesse of his understanding he diveth into the depths of the Se●… all things appear manifest to him neither do the Heavens seem to be above his reach but as it were near by the quicknesse of his Spirit no obscurity or darknesse of Air can disturbe his fantasie no thicknesse of ground can hinder his endeavour nor depth of water hinder his eye-sight all things are the same with him even all creatures whether they take root from above or below Things without life grow upwards from one root into woods and bushes some are nourished with two Elements some with one the food is for two parts the Life and the Body of which the Animal consisteth The soul of the World is alwaies nourished by a continuall and restles agitation Corporeall things encrease and are nourished by such things which the water and earth affordeth The Spirit of which all things are full is mixt with all things quickens and inlivens all things adding sense unto the understanding of man which fifth part by Divine Inspiration is only granted to man and which not to be seen in any other Creatures doth beautifie advance and lift up the understanding of manto the knowledge of divine mysteries but for that I am put in minde to speak of the understanding I will hereafter expound the reason of it unto you for it is most holy excellent and no lesse than that which belongs to the Divinity it self but now I will dispatch what I began for I said in the beginning that in the nearnesse and conjunction of the Deity onely men enjoy the favour of God for whosoever have attained to so much felicity that they perceive that Divine Sense of Understanding they are nearest unto the Divinity and Wisdom of God which men onely partake of Asclep O Trismegistus there is not a like understanding of all men Trism O Asclepius All men have not attained that true Understanding but apprehending some false fantasie and that without any true reason out of a rash opinion are meerly deceived which begets wickednesse in the minde and transforms the best man into the nature and likenesse of a beast But of the Understanding and the like when I come to speak of the Spirit I will give you the full reason for man is only of two parts the one part simple which the Graecians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or which we call the Image of God but the other fourfold which the Graecians call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and we the earthly substance or pourtraiture being ●…he body in which is inclosed that which we have affirmed to be the divine part of man which is his Soul In which the pure Divinity of the Soul with the sense and feeling of a clear conscience resteth at peace within it self as within a Castle of Defence The COMMENTARY This third Chapter extolleth the dignity of man in which the Authour of so great benefits is chiefly to be acknowledged and for ever to be praised and la●…ded who hath honoured man with such excellent gifts for as he meaneth man is made that he might be like unto Angels acknowledging them both to be and that they are born with him whom he hath to be his Guaraians and Preservers even from the first beginni●…g of his nativity consisting of a nature near unto Immortality marked with the character or image of God compounded of a mortall and immortall earthly and supernaturall part but who soareth after divine things despiseth and undervalues these earthly hath his assistance in immortall and heavenly things looks up and sighs after Heaven knowing that to be the place of the better part of him of neerest affinity to his Soul neverthelesse he is placed here in the middest of the world tying other things here below unto him with whom by Divine Ordinance he knows he must needs be in the bond of love and charity loving so these earthly things that he may be loved of heavenly He inhabiteth the earth by his agility is mixed with the elements by the sharpnesse of his understanding descends into the de●… All things are manifest to hi●… Heavens seem not to be above his reach for that by the quicknesse of his Spirit he perceives them to be as it were neer unto him The darknesse of the air can neither confound the intention of his minde nor yet the thicknesse of the earth hinder his endeavour or the depth of the waters obscure his eye-sight and above all creatures God hath beautified advanced and lifted up the understanding of man to partake of Divine Knowledge the understanding being onely the celestiall and immortall part and challengeth a Divine Essence and some men have attained to this Divine Knowledge and therein are happy bearing alwayes a zealous and religious minde towards God Others content themselves onely with a shadow of Divine Knowledge which
wh●… so followeth erreth and 〈◊〉 ●…eived for this mist of a 〈◊〉 of godlinesse beg●…tteth wickednesse in their mindes which are so deceived and transforms a man though by nature 〈◊〉 creature good and divine into the likenesse and condition of a beast CHAP. IV. ASclep Why then O Trismegistus must man have his abode in the world and not most happily live in that part where God is Trism Thou rightly enquirest Asclepius For we also beseech God that he will enable us to give the reason for seeing all things depend on his will then even those also which are most mysterious the reason of which we endeavour to unfold by our present discourse Hear therefore O Asclepius The Lord who is the Creatour of all things whom we truly call God made the world first which might be perceived and seen but yet I affirm it to have no sense For of this whether it hath or no I will declare another time but so that it may be seen of all Because therefore he made this first and that the work seemed fair and good unto him as most full of the variety of good things he loved it as a part of his Divinity and Power and therefore because it was of such excellencie and goodnesse he would have Man made that he might behold the works he had thus made and likewise imitate his Wisdom and Providence for the will of God is the chiefest perfection in that he fulfilled both his will and his deed in one and the same moment of time When therfore God perceived that that image of his the Soul could not be studious of all things unlesse he should cloath it with an earthly covering he builded for it this house of clay confounding and mixing both parts into one as much as each body should be capable Wherefore he made Man of an immortall Soul and mortall Body that being a Creature thus composed he might satisfie both ends which was to be in admiration of Heaven and to pray for spirituall and heavenly things and to inhabit and govern these earthly things below and I do not onely avouch the Earth and the Water to be mortall things which two out of the four Elements Nature hath subjected to the use of man but all other things whatsoever belonging to man as tillage pastorage buildings ports shipping navigation traffique merchandise which is the strongest bond of humane Society And there is a part of the world which is Water and Earth that which is the Earthly part of the world is preserved for the knowledge and use of Arts and discipline without which God would not have the world to be perfit for necessity followeth the pleasure of God and the effects follow his will for it is not credible that God should be displeased with his own will for he knew long be-before what would be and what would please him The COMMENTARY This fourth Chapter why God did not place man in the spirituall region but in this world and the answer is plaine and also why he formed man of both natures a mortall and immortall and why the soul which he created after his own Image and likenesse he put in a corporeall and earthy closure and that the will of God is the chief perfection of things which necessity follows and effect the necessity for God fulfilled both his will and his deed in one and the same ●…ment of time That he calleth the world the second Deity is as much as if you should call a second dueti●… and unity for two is one and one two but one is absolutely one but two not absolutely one but by participation and contraction one and the duity one So there is one absolutely God but the world is not God but God by participation being the very stamp of all sensible and delectable things Thus for the fourth part of Ascl●…pius CHAP. V. BUt O Asclepius I observe that thou dost earnestly desire to heare how a man may come to enjoy that musicall harmony and divine Worship which belongs to heaven Wherefore hear O Asclepius there is one frequent assemblie amongst men for this service of God and this no other Creature can perform but man alone For God is only pleased and delighted that man should extoll his admired work sing praises of thanksgiving unto him and perform such worship and service as belongs to his holy name Neither do those heavenly graces unworthily descend into the congregations of men lest that this earthly World should seeme unbeautified in respect of the want of this heavenly and sweet Musick but rather that his name who is the Father of all things might be celebrated with the well tuned voices and comely praises of men So that neither in heaven nor earth this sweet Harmony of thanksgiving might cease for there are some men though few in number that are indued with so divine and holy a spirit that their care is only to please reverence and serve the Lord but whoso ever through the confusion of both natures the flesh prevailing have darkned their spirituall understanding they are so much given over to their own lusts and are only intent upon these outward and lower things Therefore a man is not to be esteemed the weaker in respect that he is in part mortall but peradventure thereby he may seem the more fitly and effectualley composed to encrease in full knowledge and understanding to wit because unlesse he had been made of both natures he could not have susteined both therefore was he framed of both that he might have both an earthly and divine choice I desire thee O Asclepius not only to harken unto the reason of this tractate but also to entertain it with much Zeal fervency of Spirit For the reason to many is incredible but to devouter mindes it seemes true and good wherefore from hence I will begin The COMMENTARY This fifth Chapter sets forth that sweet Musick granted to men to set forth the praises of God which we know the prophet did well conceive who being full of the spirit of God commanded to sing psalmes unto the Lord with a loud voice and in the assemblies to praise the Lord upon the Cymbals upon the L●…e Harp and Organs for this is the chief ●…nd both of singing and Musicks The Letter is in it self conspicuous CHAP. VI. THe Lord of eternity is first God secondly the World and thirdly Man The maker of the World is God and all things therein governing all things with man whom he hath appointed Uicegerent or governor whom he hath made properly to take the Charge of his whole work that both he and the world might be an Ornament of praise unto himself that by this divine composition of man the world in Greek might be the more truly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is an Order or Ornament For he knew himself and knew the world to wit that remembring what resemblance it had with his parts what was for his use and what for his service
He might labour to give praise and great thankes unto God and to honour his Image being not Ignorant that he was made also after the Image of God of which there are two Images to wit the world and man whereby it cometh to passe that for as much as there is but one joyning together on that part he consists of soul and sense and Spirit and understanding he is divine and thereby may seeme to ascend up into heaven but on his earthly part which consists of fire water and air he remaines a mortall Creature upon earth is altogether fixed on the things below and swallowed up of Nature for so man is partly divine and partly mortall abiding in one body but he hath a measure of each Religion before all men which a virtuous life follows seemes only then to be perfit when there is a contempt of all lustfull desires and unlawfull concupiscence assisted with all manner of virtues For all such things are contrary to the Soul and Spirituall understanding which are possessed with a corporal and earthly desirel which are well called by the name of goods or possessions in that they are not born with us but afterwards are possessed of us wherefore all things of this kind are differing from man that we may even despise the body and those things which we greedily cover or any vice or wickednesse which we lustfully desire for so far as he is led by reason so far he is a man that contemplating of the divinity he may contemn and despise that part of his which is mortall but only so far as necessity compells for preservation of the soul. For that man may be most perfect in either part observe him in each to be formed of four Elements or principall parts with two hands and two feet and other members of his body with which he may do service to this lower or earthly world but with his other four parts to wit his understanding soul memory and providence he searcheth and looketh into all divine causes and things from whence it happens that man with a Restles search enquires into the diversities qualities and effects of things But being hindred by the weight and too much imperfection of his body he cannot properly foresee the true naturall causes of things This man therefore so framed and fashioned and that for such a ministery service commanded of the great God as in decently governing the world piously worshiping his God worthily fitly obedient to both the wills of God what gift dost thou think he shall be recompensed with for seeing that this world is the work of God and man by his labour and industry preserveth and encreaseth the beauty of it joyneth his labour with the will of God when by the help of his body and by daily paines and care he adorneth that Species and forme which by divine wisdom he first created but with that with which our parents were rewarded with which also that we may be rewarded if it may seem good to his wisdome we do most earnestly pray and desire that he will release and free us out of this worldly prison deliver us from these earthly bonds and restore us like unto the divine nature pure and holy Asclep Thou saiest thevery truth O Trismegistus for this is their reward who live piously towards God and faithfully to the World but to them that live otherwise and wickedly both a passage is denied them into heaven and a fearfull change into other shapes unbeseeming a righteous soul. But to proceed O Trismegistus sundry soules under the hope of future eternity are much indangered in this world which seemes to some Incredible to some Fabulous and to others Ridiculous for the fruit which is reapded by worldly possessions in this temporall life seemeth to be a very sweet thing wherefore it obliquely holdeth the soul that it cleaveth too much on that part of it which is mortall neither suffers it to take notice of the divine part envy hating immortallity for I will as it were by foreknowledge tell you that none after us shall have simple election which is true Philosophy being a frequent beholding a holy worship and knowledge of the divinity for many do confound it after a divers manner how therefore do many men corrupt this incomprehensible Philosophy or diversly confound it Trism O Asclepius in this manner mixing it by suttle devices into divers disciplines not comprehensible Arithmetick Musick Geometrie but pure Philosophy and that only hanging upon divine religion ought to apply it self wholly to the rest that it may admire the course of the Starrs and Planets their appointed stations and their Commutations and changes to consist of numbers but the dimensions qualities and quantities of the earth the depth of the Sea the Vertue of fire and the effects of all these acknowledging nature that it may admire adore and praise art and an excellent understanding But to know Musick is nothing else then to know the Order of all things which pertakes of divine wisdome for an order of all things artificially pitched upon one generall will make in divine Melodie a certain sweet sounding and most true Harmony Asclep What then shall become of men after us Trism They shall be deceived by the Subt●…ty of Sophisters and turned away from pure and divine Philosophy for out of a pure mind and soul to worship God to honour him in his works and to give thankes unto him for his will which is only full of goodnesse this is Philosophie violated or corrupted by no foolish or unseasonable curiosity of the minde and of these thus far The COMMENTARY This sixth Chapter discourseth that God is the first God absolutely the World the second not absolutely but by participation God as which is the first Image of an absolutely deity man the third God by participation of the divinity and the second Image of God but God is not an Image but the truth of all Images that man may ascend up into heaven by his soul by his understanding by his spirit by his reason as it were by the Superior Elements But wherein he is made of fire of air of water and earth he is subject to death and to dote upon all wordly things deprived of that divine part That the measure after which a man ought to live is religion which goodnesse follows and which seems to be perfit when being armed with Vertue it despiseth the coveting of other mens goods or any thing hurtfull to it as possessions the body it self and all those things we lust after even the very sense of appetite For so far he ought to be called a man whiles that this opinion is led only by reason and that in contemplation of the divinity he contemneth and despiseth that part of him which is mortall more then may serve for the preservation of his life Asclepius divineth that of the succeeding Aegyptians that there shall be none after them to attain to the pure Philosophy
the gods which man represents is fashioned of two natures Divine which is the more excellent and noble part and Earthly which is that which is here conversant in earth and which consists of the whole Fabrick or severall parts of the outward Man So Man being mindfull of his Divine Nature and Originall remains still in the likenesse of God For as the Father and the Lord hath made eternal Gods that might be like unto him So man hath fashioned out unto himself gods after the similitude of his own countenance Asclep Do you mean images O Trismegistus Trism Do you not see how far you are mistaken living images full of sense and spirit doing such and so great things Images having fore-knowledge of things to come and fore-telling by many other things infirmities cares and sorrows which shall happen deservedly to men Are you ignorant O Asclepius that Aegypt is the image of Heaven or which is more true a translation of descension of all things which are governed and exercised in Heaven And if we speak rightly Our land is the Temple of the whole World and yet for that it beseemeth wise men to fore-know all things it behoveth you not to be ignorant that the time will come when it may appear that the Aegyptians have by a constant and pious practice in religion served God in vain and all their holy worship shall become void and of no effect For the Divinity shall return back from Earth into Heaven Aegypt shall be forsaken and the Land which was the seat of the Divinity shall be destitute of Religion and deprived of the presence of the Deity For when strangers shall possesse and fill up this Land and Kingdom not onely there shall be a neglect of Religion but which is more miserable there shall be Laws enacted against Religion Piety and Divine Worship with punishment inflicted upon those that seem to favour it then this holy seat shall be full of Iolatry Idols Temples and dead mens Sepulchres O Aegypt Aegypt there shall remain only a fained shew of thy Religion and which will seem incredible to posterity and onely letters shall stand ingraven upon thy pillars which may declare thy pious deeds and in thee shall inhabit the Scythian Indian or some other neer barbarous Nation For the Divinity shall fly to Heaven the whole Nation forsaken shall die and so Aegypt shall be forsaken of God and man I call upon thee thou most holy River and presage unto thee things which shall come to passe thy waters and divine streams shall be filled with blood which shall overflow thy banks and make a violent inundation so that there shall be more dead than living and he that remains alive shall onely by his language be known to be an Aegyptian but by his deeds he shall seem a Barbarian Why weep you O Asclepius Aegypt shall be furnished with far greater and worse evils than these she being heretofore a holy and great Favourer of the Deity and Divine Worship and Religion and that worthily upon earth separated alone from other Nations became the Mistresse of Sanctity and Piety shall be an example of the greatest cruelty and then with grief of heart the world shall not seem to be admired and adored This whole good than the which there neither is hath or shall be any thing that shall appear of more excellencie shall be indangered and seem burdenous to men and in this respect shall be despised neither shall the world be esteemed which is the immutable work of God a most glorious Fabrick a work compounded with the different variety of shapes an instrument of the will of God who in his work without envie bespake all things to become one which of the beholders might be honoured praised and loved being an united heap of sundry shapes For darknesse shall be preferred before light death shall seem sweeter than life no man shall look up to Heaven a religious man shall be accounted a mad man an irreligious and profane person seem wise a mad man valiant and the worst of all men good and pious for the Soul and all things about it wherein it is either mortall or conceiveth that it shall attain to immortality accordingly as I have declared unto you shall not onely be esteemed a thing worthy of laughter but also a meer vanity For beleeve me it shall be reckoned a capital offence for him that shall study to be religious there shall new Statutes and Laws be stablished nothing which is religious shall be heard worthy of Heaven or heavenly things or be entertained in the hearts of men there shall be a separation of God which is much to be lamented from the Society of men onely evil angels shall remain mixed with the humanity which shall violently move to all manner of audacious mischiefs stir them up to wars sedition robberies deceit and unto all things contrary to the disposition of the Soul then the Earth shall not stand the Sea shall not be sailed in and in Heaven the course of the Stars and Planets shall cease all divine knowledge shall of necessity be buried in silence the fruits of the earth shall be corrupted neither shall the earth be fruitfull and the air it self shall languish with a sorrowfull countenance these and such like times shall come irreligion and confusion of the world with a senslesnes vacancy of al good things When these things shall happen O Asclepius then that Lord and Father God Almighty Governour onely of the world looking into the manners and voluntary deeds of men after his own will which is his goodnesse punishing vices taking away all errours and corruption and drowning all manner of wickednesse either by an inundation of waters or else consuming them by fire or else by plague and pestilence he will end this world and restore it to its ancient beauty so that the world it self may seem to be admired and honoured and God the Creatour and Restorer of so great a work shall of all men then being be magnified with continuall praises and thanksgivings For this generation of the world and the reformation of all good things and the most holy and religious restitution of nature it self in due time both is and hath been eternall from the beginning for the will of God wants beginning which is the same and continuall in every place Asclep For the nature of God is the counsaile of his will and his excellent goodnesse his counsaile O Trismegistus Trism O Asclepius his will proceeds from his counsaile and his will from his will neither wills he any thing ambitiously which is full of all things and those which he wills he hath but he wills all good things and hath all he wills For he thinks and wills all good things but this is God and the world is the Image of that Good Asclep Good O Trismegistus Trism Good as I shall teach thee O Asclepius for as God is the dispenser and giver of all good things to every Genus
form of his kind yet in the same form of shews they are all unlike one to another as the Genus of men although it be uniform that a man may naturally be known yet all of them are in the same form unlike to themselves for the Species which is divine is in●…orporeal and whatsoever else is comprehended in the soul or mind seeing therefore these two of which the Form consisteth are corporeal and incorporeal it is impossible that every Form should be created or born like one to another the moments of hours and climates differing and being distant but are changed so often as an hour hath minutes in which is that God of all shapes we have spoken of therfore the Species or Form remaineth begetting so often from it self so many and so different shapes as the course of the world hath moments which world is turned by conversion and changes but the Species is neither turned nor changed So the Forms of each kind are permanent and stable but unlike to themselves in the same Form Asclep And the world changeth his Species or Form O Trismegistus Trism Do you perceive therefore O Asclepius that all things are spoken unto thee as to one in a sleep or in a dream For what is the world or of what consisteth it but of all things created Asclep Therefore you mean to speak of the Heaven and of the Earth of the Elements Trismegistus For other things are more frequently changed into Forms the Heaven moystening or drying up cooling or heating bright or lowring In one Form of the Heaven these things are which Forms are altered by the Form also the Earth hath alwayes many alterations of her Form as when it bringeth forth fruits and when it nourisheth her fruits and when it giveth sundry and divers qualities and quantities of all fruits and places and times for the qualities sents relishes and forms of all trees flowers and berries The fire also hath many and divine alterations for the Forms of the Sun and the Moon they are of all shapes for they are as it were our looking-glasses for representation But of these things enough The COMMENTARY This twelfth Chapter declareth that there is no Vacuity or Emptinesse in things that Angels are conversant and dwell with us who in regard of their too much subtilty are not perceived of us that Spirits possesse the purer part of the Air the alone name of a place to be void that it belongs to somewhat which being not understood it cannot be conceived what a place is and that is common to all Relatives He affirmeth an intelligible World with which the sensible World and all things in it are veiled as with a garment seeing who is contained in the intelligible World that the Forms of all kinds whatsoever that are of one shape are unlike and that according to the circles moments and minutes of hours of which he maketh Pantomorphos Lord whom before he affirmed to be God of the Horoscopes but we acknowledge no such God but leave it to the folly and ignorance of the Gentiles if any as yet be so apparantly blind mad and stupified but we according to the saying of St. Paul have but one God the Father in whom are all things and we in him and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things and we by him The Species and Forms that is the Idea's of which there is so much dispute with Plato and the Platonicks the immutable and unchangeable Forms he placeth in Pantomorphos having this name as though he consisted of all shapes and of every Idea from which severall hours and moments every particular Form is diversly shaped but that the rest are mutable as the World the Heaven and the Earth but there are who account Mercurius his Pantamorphos and Plato his Idea to be meer forged things and fictions This is the summe of the twelfth Chapter CHAP. XIII LEt us return again to man and to reason by which divine gift man is called a reasonable creature for those things are lesse to be wondered at albeit they deserve admiration which are only spoken of man But of all wonders this is the greatest wonder that man could find out and supply the divine nature because therefore our forefathers erred much being incredulous about the reason and nature of the Gods and not looking into divine worship and religion they found out an art whereby they might make them gods to which invention they joyned the work of nature and because they could not make souls they called out the souls of Devils or Spirits and put them into their Idols and divine Mysteries by which alone the Idols had power to do either good or hurt For thy Grandfather O Asclepius was the first inventer of Physick to whom a Temple is consecrated in a mountain of Libya or Africa near unto the shoare of Crocodiles in which lieth his body the rest of him or rather the whole of him being his better and Spirituall part is gone back again to Heaven affoording all manner of help and cure to diseased and sick persons now by vertue of his diety as he was wont to give before by art or skill of Physick and Hermes which was the name of my Auncestors doth not he now in his Country reteining that sirname cure all persons that come from all parts to him Also Isis the wife of Osiris being well pleased how much good she hath done and displeased how much evil do we know for it is an easy matter for earthly gods to be displeased seeing that they are made of the same nature that man is whereupon it happened that these holy creatures were called upon and their soules worshipped throughout every City by the Aegyptians who living consecrated them so that they continued in their Lawes and were called by their names for this cause O Asclepius those which seem to some worthy to be worshiped and honoured to others seem otherwise therefore Aegyptian Cities are wont to fall out and warr one with another Asclep And what is the quality or substance O Trismegistus of these earthly Gods Trism It consisteth O Asclepius of herbs of Stones of Spices which have in them a naturall power of divinity and for this cause they are delighted with often sacrifices Hymns praises and most sweet musick resembling an Heavenly harmony that that which is Heavenly may by a Heavenly and frequent use be allured into the Idol and there stay a long time as glad and desirous of humane society so man is the feigner of the gods and you should not suppose the effects of these earthly gods to be casual O Asclepius the Heavenly Gods inhabite the highest heavenly places fulfilling and preserving that order which he hath received But these our Gods regarding peculiarly certain things and foretelling some things by lot and conjecture foreseeing many things and after a manner helping them become as it were by a friendly alliance aiders unto mens affairs The COMMENTARY This Thirteenth Chapter