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A05099 The second part of the French academie VVherein, as it were by a naturall historie of the bodie and soule of man, the creation, matter, composition, forme, nature, profite and vse of all the partes of the frame of man are handled, with the naturall causes of all affections, vertues and vices, and chiefly the nature, powers, workes and immortalitie of the soule. By Peter de la Primaudaye Esquier, Lord of the same place and of Barre. And translated out of the second edition, which was reuiewed and augmented by the author.; Academie françoise. Part 2. English La Primaudaye, Pierre de, b. ca. 1545.; Bowes, Thomas, fl. 1586. 1594 (1594) STC 15238; ESTC S108297 614,127 592

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of their places in mans body I meane in the whole masse and distribution of the blood and in the coniunction they haue together euen as the elements haue their places each after other For as the fire of it owne nature is light and therefore laboureth alwayes to ascend vpward to attaine to his naturall place so the cholerike humour which agreeth with the nature thereof occupieth the highest place among the humours mingled with the blood as we may perceiue by that that hath beene already spoken of the floure and skimme of blood according to that comparison which wee made betwixt blood and wine The like may be saide of the rest For as the aire is lightest next to the fire and the neerest element vnto it and to the rest of the celestiall fires so the blood properly so called keepeth the place of the aire among the humours of the body For it is not so light as the fire nor so heauie as the water or the earth And so consequently the flegmatike and melancholike humours occupy the lower places according to their degrees as the water and the earth doe in this great world For this cause all these humours besides their common offices and effects haue others more speciall agreeable to their nature as God willing we wil declare heereafter And namely the flegmatike humour that holdeth of the nature of the water is to be considered of For as in this great visible world there are waters both aboue and beneath I meane those that are contained and retained within the clouds in the ayre those that are in the sea in riuers kept within their bounds assigned them for their course so the like is to be foūd in the litle world which is mā Nowe hitherto haue wee learned howe the water and the other humours are carried with the blood throughout the body aswell vpwarde as downewarde by meanes of the veines which water all the partes of it howe high or lowe soeuer they be and therewithall carrie vnto them their foode and nourishement And this agreeth fitly to the woonderfull worke of GODS prouidence in nature which of the vapours arising out of the earth gathereth the cloudes together and these like to sponges sucke vp vapours from the waters of which themselues are engendered and which afterward they cary about as it were in chariots to distribute them into all quarters of the worlde according as it shall please God to dispose of them by sending his blessing vpon the earth by the meanes of raine wherewith being watred it nourisheth all those herbs trees plantes and fruites which it bringeth foorth not onely for the sustenance of men but also of beasts Let vs then imagine before vs a garden wherein is infinite varietie of trees and plantes of all sortes and that this garden is watred either by raine from heauen or by pipes and conduites whereby the water is brought thither and dispersed in all places thereof We shall see that in this great diuersitie of nature there is but one and the same nourishment for them all and but one place And albeeit the liquor that affoordeth this nourishment to so many sorts of plants be but one neuerthelesse it is conuerted into the nature of all those things which it nourisheth so that the nature of it is changed according to the distinct propertie of each of them For there are plants and herbes of all qualities and of all tastes and colours Some are hote others colde some drie others moist either in the first or second or third or fourth degree or else are tempered and intermingled according to their seuerall natures As for their tastes some are sweet others sharpe or bitter or of no certaine taste In a worde there are of all kindes of tastes both simple and compound And yet the humour or liquor is but one that receiueth all these qualities as in wormwood it becommeth bitter and in the Vine or Figge-tree sweete And if the herbes bee either for food or for physicke or of a poysonfull nature the same may be saide of the humour that nourisheth them The like is seene also in colours Neither doe wee obserue all this by experience onely in some great diuersitie of trees and of all sortes of plantes but euen in eche of them seuerally For I pray you what difference is there in euery herbe or in euery seuerall tree I meane betweene the roote and the stalke the body and the branches the boughes and the leaues the floures seedes and fruites And yet all these sundry partes receiue nourishment from one Mother and from one and the same substance and liquor Moreouer we see that as man and all other liuing creatures haue their heart in the midst of their bodies which is the fountaine of life so all trees herbes and plantes haue their heart in the middest of them according to their nature without which they could not liue For we call their heart the inwarde part within which their pith remaineth which is vnto them as the heart is to liuing and sensible creaatures Whereupon we haue further to note in regard of those herbes that haue weak stalks especially hollow ones or such as haue strawes insteede of stalkes that the prouidence of God hath giuen vnto them knots seuered as it were into sundry smal knees which are vnto thē in place of their stomack and of other nutritiue members to reteine their nourishment the longer to concoct it the better as also to strengthē them thereby And this we may euidently see in all sorts of corne and pulse Euen so doth nature or rather the prince therof worke in a mans body which is as it were a garden that hath a soule Wherein the Creator of this whole frame sheweth himselfe no lesse wonderful nay rather much more then in this great garden of the whole earth and of the great world of both which he is the Gardener that watreth them to nourish all the fruits they bring forth to cause them to grow For frō whence proceed or are nourished the bones gristles ligamēts sinews arteries veines flesh kernels fatte together with all the other partes of which the body is compounded May not the like be saide of the eyes of their coats and humors of the eares nose tongue teeth belly stomack guts liuer spleene kidneies of all the other bowls and inward parts And if we come to the hands and feet and to the other outward members to al the other parts called Instrumentall distinguished according to their office we shall finde that onely through the alteration of their foode into liquor they all receiue such nourishment as is proper to eche of them Yet notwithstanding one and the same sustenance is offered to so many sundry members beeing made familiar and of the same nature with that part vnto which it is ioyned For if it goe to the eyes it becommeth of the same temperament that the nerues and spirites
his strength and power so that he is as a bodie whose bones are wholy broken and shiuered And when the Scripture woulde signifie the contrarie it saieth that their bones runne full of marrow and that they flourish like an hearb Nowe if we take the whole legge namely from the huckle bone vnto the endes of the toes it hath three great partes answerable to the three partes of the whole arme which part of the body reacheth from the shoulders vnto the endes of the fingers In the first place is the foote which is the nethermost part of the whole legge and it consisteth of three partes which also are answerable to the three partes of the hand The first is the heele which by a ioynt and conuenient knitting together vniteth the foote to that parte of the legge which reacheth from thence vp to the knee or gartering place The second is the sole and as it were the back● of the foote being long large and hollow in the middest to the ende it might be more fit to stand fast and to walke vpon The toes are the third part of the foote being set and placed in such wise as is most conuenient for that duetie of the foote For they differ much from the fingers not onelie in length but also in situation because the office of the hand and the foote is not all one Therefore as the fingers are longer then the toes so the thumbs are otherwise placed then the great toes For if the great toe were placed as the thumbe is it woulde hinder the foote in steade of helping it and the like may bee saide of the other toes The two other partes of the legge are first that which is from the knee to the foote which is commonly called the legge for want of an other proper name in our tongue next the thigh which is from the huckle bone vnto the knee And as this hath his ioynt and band to fasten him to the knee so the other by the like meanes is ioyned to the foote Therefore both the foote and the whole legge haue their necessary motions through the helpe of the sinewes and muscles as well to stretch it selfe out as to bowe and bend forward and backeward vpward and downeward as also to turne it selfe on the right hand and on the left and round about both to set forward and to retire to ascend and to descend and for all the motions that are meete and conuenient both for this member and for all the partes of it Thus much for the lowest foundation of the frame of mans body and for the pillers that holde it vp Nowe wee must consider of the other outward partes the armes and the hands As God hath giuen to man two legges and two feete to holde him vp and to carry him whithersoeuer hee woulde goe so hee hath giuen him two armes and two handes to dispatch all businesse which hee thinketh good Therefore the hand is rightly called by Aristotle ●he instrument of the instruments For there is no member in all the body nor instrument whatsoeuer that maketh moe or more sundry workes This instrument maketh all other instruments and setteth them a worke as wee see by experience And because man onely of all other liuing creatures is capable of Artes and knoweth how to vse them therefore hath God giuen to him onely this instrument to exercise them We see also that there is no worke which he cannot doe with his hands And what worke of God is there which hee doth not counterfaite as if he were some litle god vpon earth that had vndertaken to make an other visible worlde within this worlde created by God For if wee consider the Sciences and A●tes of men and those excellent woorkes which they make by the meanes of their handes who will not be rauished with admiration That sentence of Anaxagoras may well be approoued wherein hee saieth that the hand is the cause of knowledge and wisedome although Plutarch doeth learnedly vnderstand experience by the hand For if it did not frame letters and figures nor made instruments requisite and necessary for all Sciences and Artes they could not in any wise be either taught or learned Therefore considering well that which we say man may bee called a second Creatour who taking patterne by the worke of God in the creation of the worlde hath endeuoured to make woorkes answerable vnto those which God hath giuen him in the worlde for a pattetne to imitate But there is great difference betwixt the workes of man and the workes of God especially in three pointes namely in the matter in the forme and in the life of them together with all those thinges which it bringeth with it For first man can not worke without matter which he cannot find in himselfe as God who made all things of nothing and made that to be which was not But man dealeth contrarily For hee can make nothing of nothing but must of necessitie haue matter meete for the worke he taketh in hand vnto which he is able to adde the forme onely And yet hee cannot giue it any fashion except hee first had the patterne thereof in the wo●kes of God For although he can make very strange figures and such as the very like hath not beene seene in all nature nor amongst all the creatures yet hee cannot pourtraite any so new or so strange whereof he had not before some resemblance in the workes of God in sundrie creatures For hee taketh diuers pieces of many sundry figures with which afterward heaped together hee counterfaiteth one altogether newe and strange As for example neuer man sawe a mountaine all of golde yet a man may imagine one in his mind and frame an image thereof in his imagination For albeit he neuer sawe such a mountaine yet because hee hath seene both mountaines and also golde by ioyning these two together which hee knoweth he can frame the image of such a mountaine in his minde and then hauing in this sorte formed and conceiued it hee can counterfaite it with his hand But as God taketh not the matter of his woorkes without himselfe and without the treasures of his infinite power so hee needeth not to seeke else where for formes and patterns then in the treasures of his eternall wisedome and infinite knowledge Againe there is this besides which is chiefest of all that hee is able to giue not onely being but also life sense and motion to his workes yea such nature and properties as pleaseth him which man can not doe For hee can not change the nature of that matter vpon which hee worketh but it must st●ll continue the same in nature and disposition And although hee can drawe sundry effectes from those matters about which hee is occupyed according as hee may mingle and compound them together neuerthelesse hee altereth not their nature but they retaine it still according to their portion euerie one in his place Neither can hee giue to the
best of his woorkes so much life as is in a reddish or in any other lesser hearb or plant nor so much motion sense and industry as a Flie or an Aut hath or the least worme in the earth Nowe to proceede in beholding the vse of the hand wee must vnderstand that God gaue vnto men armes and handes chiefly to helpe one another more then with any other member of their body in so much that they ought to referre al their works artes and exercises to common benefite and profite But it is farre otherwise For there is no member whatsoeuer with which they hurt one ano●her more so that their hands are more dangerous without al comparison then the pawes of all sauage beasts For those beasts that are most cruell spare the blood of their kinde but men delight to imbrew their handes in mans blood yea in the blood of their nearest kindred There are some also who shamefully abuse their handes in causing them to serue for diuinations from whence the Arte of Palmestrie proceeded which is full of superstition and of fooleries well woorthy to bee laughed at and such are all the other kindes of diuinations inuented by the vanity of mans braine They that would seeme to alleadge some shewe and likelihoode of foundation for it say that nature hath imprinted in the lines of the handes woonderfull significations of the temperature and disposition of the whole bodie Therefore they call the long line in the middest of the hand the line of life and say that they who haue it whole throughout are long liued But suppose this were so yet what probabilitie is there for any to seeke in the lines of the hand for the knowledge and signification of all thinges that shall befall men and to foretell them as they say their good and ill fortune For although it were so that by looking vpon the handes a man might in some sorte iudge of the temperature and disposition of the body yet what reason is there to extend this consideration to the foretelling of all thinges as if God or nature as they speake had set markes in the handes so that a man might knowe I say not by the Science but by the vanitie of Chiromancie whatsoeuer good or euill shall come vnto men For they that deale with this kinde of diuination doe not only foretel whereunto the body may be disposed according to the temperature therof as a Physicion may iudge of the sicknes or soundnes of the body by those tokens which he seeth therein folowing his Arte but they go a great deale further For they take vpon them to foretel al good ill aduentures namely whether a man shal be rich or poore married or no whether he shal haue many wiues what they shal be whether maidens or widows whether rich or poore with such other toyes and olde wiues tales whereof their Bookes of Palmestrie are ful They therefore are very fooles that giue credite to such praedictions But Christians haue a true and sure kinde of Chiromancie which they may vse For if men consider onely their handes with what workemanship they are made for how many vses they may serue and howe profitable and necessary they are for them they shall finde in them an infinite number of markes to make them good diuiners yea it will teach them to diuine that of necessitie there was a God and a Creatour who was the workemaster that made that worke and those so excellent instrumentes whose vse and commoditie can not sufficiently bee conceiued For although wee had neuer heard of God or of his prouidence this onely consideration ought to bee sufficient to teach vs to seeke him and to holde vp towardes him those handes which hee hath giuen vs. If therefore by the contemplation of our handes and by those markes of the power wisedome goodnesse and prouidence of God which are imprinted in them wee can learne such a Science and Arte of Diuination as will the better induce vs to glorifie God in the workmanship of our bodies then doe wee profite greatly therein And this wee ought to doe not onely by the contemplation of our handes but also of all the residue of the members and parts of our body euen vnto our very haires and nailes For wee haue not so many Preachers onelie of his glorie and magnificence in our bodies as wee haue members but also as there are haires in the head For there is nothing no not so much as a little haire as wee shall see heereafter whereby God doeth not testifie his diuine prouidence Wherefore if wee shoulde by peece-meale lay open onely those principall things which are to be considered in all the partes of the arme and hand and those testimonies of the great prouidence of God that may be found and noted in them a whole day would not suffice although we did onely behold the great workemanship that is I say not in the whole hand but in one finger thereof For it is an instrument which God hath giuen onely to man to touch and to take with to gripe and to vse in his owne behalfe in steade of all kinde of defensiue weapons In this respect he made it of such a fashion that he can lay hold of and apprehend all things either great or small of what forme or figure soeuer they be whether round square or otherwise And therefore it was requisit that the fingers of the hand should be vnequal that they should be placed and disposed as they are thereby the better to gripe and to lay holde of all thinges For albeit some of them be longer then others yet when we close our hand and gripe anything they are all equall And as God hath giuen to man a mind capable of vnderstanding knowledge so also he hath adorned him with this excellent instrument which is so necessary for all Artes that without this those other would remaine idle In a word it is an instrument which man could not want neither in peace nor warre Neither is there any thing to be found therein which doth not serue very fitly for al dueties of the hand as also nothing is wanting that is necessary The very nailes haue two excellent properties the one is that they serue for a couering and an ornament to the ends of the fingers the other that they help to take hold of and to gather litle and hard things For this cause also they are so conuenient both for matter and forme and so fitly fastned and set in their places as better could not be deuised But let vs consider of the whole arme or hand to see the composition and diuision thereof As we said before of the legge so there is in the whole arme three great and principall partes taking all that member which is from the shoulders vnto the endes of the fingers The first is the hand which likewise hath three chiefe partes namely that which is ioyned with the lower
the light and the images of those things that by the light are disclosed vnto it Therfore it hath behind it that which resembleth molten glasse or the white of an egge which is not altogether so soft and liquide as the other before that resembleth water Thus hath God disposed them according to that naturall cōueniency which is betweeue them that they might be so knit one to another as is meetest both for them and their vses And being all ioyned together they serue to fill vp that hollow place within which the eyes are inclosed so also the other partes and namely the fat whereof they are well prouided serueth not onely to fill vp voyde roome but also is appointed to this end that the eyes might rest them more at ease and be moystened the better In all which things great wonders of Gods prouidence appeare most cleerely namely in this that the humors are so distinguished euery on keeping his place without mixture or confusion as also in this that the christalline humour which is partaker of light and which ought to receiue it is so well compassed about and fortified on all sides For this cause it is more firme then the other that it might both keepe and distribute better the light which it receiueth and also preserue it selfe and helpe the other humors that are ioyned vnto it which being as it were Nurses vnto it doe in like manner helpe it againe Moreouer wee are greatly to maruaile at the prouidence of God in considering the coates and skinnes of the eyes their forme and motions their diuers colours and the sinewes whereby they receiue sight the discourse of which matters I lay vpon thee ARAM. Of the tunicles and skinnes of the eyes of their forme and motions of their sundrie colours of the sinewes whereby they receiue sight and of other partes about the eyes Chap. 11. ARAM. If we would stand to consider of all those things that are worthy of admiration but in one eye onely aswell in respect of the matter as of the forme and meanes whereby they receiue the vertue of seeing and performe their duetie as the Phisicions she we these things in an Anatomi● a man might make a very great booke thereof as likewise of all the other members For there is no member so little wherein there is not most exquisite arte and wherein a man may not see maruellous workes of Gods prouidence so that I shoulde bee wonderfully abashed to see any Phisition proue an Atheist if he haue neuer so litle knowledge of the nature of mans bodie and of the composition and Anatomie of the partes of it were it not that God punished them with the like iudgement that he hath done other great Philosophers whome he casteth into a reprobate sence because through pride and ingratitude they abuse that knowledge of naturall things which he hath giuen them Let vs learne therefore to know the Creator by the knowledge of the creatures and let vs look vpon the workmaster in the excellencie of his works And now to this end according to out intent let vs with the eyes of the minde behold the eyes of the body seeing they looking vpon all things yet cannot see themselues Nowe as we haue perceiued that God hath disposed the matter and humors of the eyes according to that office whereunto he hath assigned them so he hath appointed tunicles or coates which are little skins in which they are contained as it were in their vessels and compassed about with them as it were with litle bands to keepe them vnited and close together and to preserue them that they mooue not forth and runne out and withall to bee vnto them a sure defence These skinnes according to their offices and vses are disposed one after another and interlaced between the humors of the eyes according to that agreement of nature which they haue both amongest themselues as also with those humors which they serue and which in like sort serueth them to the end that neither the one nor the other should easily receiue hurt And amongst those fiue seuerall tunicles which there are of them according as the Phisicions and Anatomists distinguish them one is very slender like to a smal spiders web or to a very litle fine white skinne that is betweene the partes of an onion Then there is another that is like to a litle threede and the third resembleth in colour the stone of a redde grape I meane the outward side of it They are named by the Grecians and Latines according to the similitudes and likenesse of those things which they resemble But the chiefest strongest and hardest of them is like to a flender and cleere horne I meane that horne whereof Lanterns are made but that it is not so hard and thick by a great deale and by reason of the similitude which it hath with horne it is called by the same name This hath God created in this sort both that it might bee a stronger defence to all the humors of the eyes and also that it might serue for the light which they are to receiue through which it shineth as the light that is in a Lanterne besides the horne of which it is made There is yet another white skinne which serueth to keepe in the whole eye vnto the head in the place assigned for it and this is the first as that like the spiders webbe is the last and then the other are placed betweene these in the same order that I haue named Heerein appeareth the woorke of God namely his prouidence is to be well marked in this that he hath not placed the eyes so farre out in the face and head as hee hath done the nose eares and lippes but more inward as it were in holes and litle dennes by reason of the humors whereof they are compounded to keepe them so much the more fast and close together because they are liquide Therefore they are shut vp in their holes as the water of a Well is in that place where it is gathered together For this cause the Hebrewes often vse the solfesame word to signifie both the eyes and fountains Next God hath created thē of a round forme both because it is the fairest most seemly and most perfect as also because it is most moueable and easiest to turne and returne on euery side as the office of the eye requireth For seeing they are giuen to man and to al creatures for the direction of the whole bodie and of all the members thereof they ought not to be so fastened in the place where they are that they can neuer looke but one way nor stirre themselues on any side Therefore God hath appointed to euery eye seuen muscles both to keepe them firme and steady as also to cause them to remooue and turne vpward and down ward on the right hand on the left crosse-wise and round And as the round forme is most perfect so it is most fit for
hath not giuen it to any of them but to him only by that he hath put a difference betweene him the beasts as also by reason and vnderstanding whereof he hath made him partaker in respect wherof he hath giuen him speech which is as naturall vnto him as reason which is the spring head thereof and from whence it proceedeth as a riuerfrom his fountaine For how could men make known their counsailes thoughts without speech And what good should they receiue by that sense vnderstanding which God hath giuen them more thē to beasts if they had no more speech then they haue wherby to make it known And to what purpose would speech serue them if they knew not what to say And what should they haue to speake if they had no more vnderstāding reason then other liuing creatures haue Were it not sufficient then to haue a cōfused voice only as they haue Therfore also we see how God hath ioined these twothings together graunting speech vnto man because hee hath created him pa●taker of reason and vnderstanding And hauing depriued beasts of the one hee hath also depriued them of the other so that they are partakers neither of reason nor speech For this cause Ecclesiasticus hath ioyned these things together saying That God hath giuen to men counsell and tongue and eyes eares and an heart to vnderstand and sixtly he gaue them a spirite and seuenthly he gaue them speech to declare his woorkes Hee filled them with knowledge of vnderstanding and shewed them good and euill Whereby he teacheth vs plainly what is the right true vse of speech to what end it is giuen to man and from whence it springeth For he placeth counsell in the first place and next the tongue Againe after the heart and spirite he placeth speech that we might know who is their messenger Whereupon we may conclude that the one is giuen for the other and both to glorifie God by shewing foorth his works and marueilous actes To which effect Basil the great saith very well that God hath created vs and graunted vs the vse of speech to the end we might haue the ability and meanes to lay open one to another the counsels and thoughtes of our heartes and to distribute amongst vs that which is in euery one by reason of that communicable nature in which we are created For the heart ought to bee in man as a secrete treasurie or as a larder or pantry in a house out of which all things necessary for the vse thereof and for the maintenaunce of the whole familie are dayly taken The heart also is like to a seller or garner wherein counsels and thoughts are locked and closed vp and the tongue is like to the steward who draweth out and dispenseth whatsoeuer is to bee distributed For as wee saide in the beginning of our speech our soule vseth thoughts and discourses which cannot bee declared so long as it is inclosed in this tabernacle of flesh without speech wordes and names by meanes of which she bringeth foorth and publisheth that which was inclosed and hidden in the secrete closet of her vnderstanding And so wee say that there are two kindes of speech in man one internall and of the minde the other externall which is pronounced and is the messenger of the internall that speaketh in the heart Therefore that which is framed in voyce pronounced in speech and brought into vse is as a riuer sent from the thought with the voyce as from his fountaine For before the thought can vtter any outward speech by meanes of the voyce first the minde must receiue the images of things presented vnto it by the corporall senses And then hauing receiued them by the imaginatiue vertue that is in it reason must discourse to knowe and to consider of them well and to separate or ioyne things according to that agreement or difference that concorde or discord which they may haue amongst them Next it is necessary that iudgement should follow this discourse to make choise of and to followe that which it shall iudge to be meete and conuenient and to reiect and shunne the contrary Lastly all must be vttered by significations apt and conuenient for euery thing so that when the minde hath giuen ouer to the office of the vocall instruments that which it hath comprised and resolued vpon in manner aforesaid the same is manifestly declared outwardly by the aire framed into voyce I meane by the moouing of the articulate and distinct voice whereas before it was hid and couered Now when this voice and speach is pronounced with the mouth as it is inuisible to the eyes so it hath no body whereby the hands may take hold of it but is insensible to all the senses except the hearing which neuerthelesse cannot lay hold of it or keepe it fast as it were with griping hands but entring in of it selfe it is so long detained there whilest the sound reboundeth in the eares and then vanisheth away suddenly But albeit the sound and the voyce passeth so sodainely as if presently it flew away hauing respect to the outward speech neuerthelesse the internall speach remaineth not onely in the spirite heart and thought that ingendred it not being in any sort diuided cut off or seperated but also it filleth all the hearers by reason of the agreement that is betweene the spirites and mindes of men and the speach that is bred there and because it differeth not much from the minde and from the thought where it first beganne and was bred And thus the thoughtes and counsailes of the minde and spirite are discouered and manifested by speach So that al voice is not speach For the name of voyce generally taken comprehendeth all sounds and things which bring any noise to the eares Neuerthelesse it is more properly and specially attributed to those sounds which all sortes of liuing creatures are able to make with their throat to signifie any thing therby But man onely hath articulate and well distinguished soundes vnto which birdes of all other beastes approch neerest so that euen many of them are taught in some sort to frame mans voyce but it is without vnderstanding And because that instruments of musicke do after a sort imitate the distinct voyce of men wee attribute voyce to them although the sounds which they make be more without iudgement and vnderstanding then that of beasts But in men voyces framed into wordes are signes and significations of the whole soule and minde both generally and specially namely of the fantasie and imagination of reason and iudgement of vnderstanding and memory of will and affections Wherefore it is an easie matter to iudge by his speach howe all these partes are affected namely whether they bee sound or haue any defect in them For if a man be dull witted or haue his fantasie and imagination troubled and his memory slowe and heauy he shall haue much adoe to speake
therefore it tendeth to disliking which is wholly against consent For this cause wee call Opinion a knowledge that moueth vs to encline rather on the one side then on the other in regard of the appearance and shewe of reason that it hath so that wee are not fully resolued therein Nowe albeeit this consent which is called opinion or coniecture bee not altogether so firme as that which wee call beleefe neuerthelesse it differeth from Doubting which is as it were a neuter iudgement hanging betweene consent and his contrary and inclining neither to the one side nor to the other As for that beleefe which is of diuine things there is such a firme consent required therein as that all doubting must be vtterly excluded For faith is not perfect if it doe not allowe for certaine whatsoeuer God hath reuealed vnto men by his worde which is a certaine testimonie of his will And although hee hath giuen vnto vs the same meanes to instruct vs by in these things that he hath done in humane things yet hee goeth further For hee doeth not onely teach vs by experience by reasons and demonstrations which appeare manifestly to-our senses both externall and internall and of which our minde can iudge as well as of humane things but he requireth chiefely of vs that wee shoulde beleeue his testimony and those witnesses which he sendeth vnto vs and that wee shoulde content our selues with his authoritie And because heauenly things surpasse the capacitie of our vnderstandings God maketh them capable by the light of faith which is a supernaturall and diuine light whereby wee see that in God which we cannot beholde in all the creatures and which our humane reason cannot naturally comprehend Now as much as this light is more certaine then all other naturall light either externall of the eyes of the body or internall in respect of the eyes of the soule and minde so much more certaine is our sight and knowledge of that which wee see and knowe by meanes of that light For this cause when our vnderstandings are lightned with this light wee beleeue more firmely that which it manifesteth vnto vs I say not onely then that whereunto wee may bee perswaded by all the humane reasons which can be alleadged but also then that which we see with our owne eyes and heare with our eares and touch with our hands For these externall senses and those internall senses also whose messengers the other are are not so certaine witnesses to our spirite as the senses of faith which are more then humane For they are heauenly Wherefore shee hath eies whereby she seeth diuinely and not humanely which can neuer be deceiued as the eyes of the body may The like wee may say of her eares and of her handes For there is no sense so certaine as all hers are because she receiueth them diuinely by the spirit Therfore as she hath not in her any imagination or fantasie that can deceiue her so she can neuer faile either in her discourses or in her iudgements whereupon shee resolueth because she is alwayes guided in them by the holy spirite whome she followeth for her rule in all things and who assureth her by his testimony as if she bare the markes and seales imprinted in her selfe and in their mindes and hearts in whome shee dwelleth Heereof it is that Saint Paul so often saieth that God hath sealed vs by his holy Spirite speaking as it were of a seale imprinted in our hearts and mindes and as of an earnest and gage which God hath giuen vs for the best and most certaine assurance that can bee No maruell therefore if the children of God endewed with this true faith become so resolute so firme and constant that no authoritie power wisedome force eloquence no humane reasons nor any thing that men or deuils can imagine think say or doe is able to make them to change their mindes whereof we haue most euident examples especially in the person of all the Martyres who could neuer by any violence in the world be ouercome but their faith hath euermore gotten the victory and triumphed ouer all their enemies And by this wee may assuredly knowe that it is better grounded then vpon all the reasons and perswasions of men that may be Therefore it is not without cause that S. Paul calleth it the gift of God neither is it without great reason commended so much in the Epistle to the Hebrewes For being come to that point that it hath such an illumination as to accompt all that God reuealeth in his worde to bee more certaine then any thing that wee either see with our eies or touch with our hands hereof to haue a true sense and feeling of the testimony of the holy spirit then doth it exclude al doubting which is contrary thereunto and differeth much from that which we hold only in opinion wherein there is as yet no great assurance So that we may conclude hereupon that according as faith is more or lesse in vs wee shall neuer conclude ill nor at any time giue ouer our conclusions For faith neuer concludeth any thing which God hath not before spoken whose word and authoritie is vnto it as in deede it ought to be in steade of all reason For seeing it is that wisedome and trueth which can neuer faile or lie it needeth not to doubt in any respect to conclude alwayes therewith neyther hath it cause at any time afterward to forsake or change the conclusion it hath set downe Wherefore when our faith is shaken and beginneth to alter it is a signe and testimony that it holdeth more of the nature of opinion then of beleefe and that it hath not yet a iudgement throughly resolued in the conclusion which it hath taken So that heere wee may learne what difference there is betwixt beleefe opinion doubting and infidelitie or incredulitie For seeing incredulitie is contrary to beleefe it goeth farther then doubting which concludeth nothing on either side as both beleefe and opinion doe but incredulitie concludeth contrarie to them both For it giueth no consent as beleefe and opinion doe but taketh the cleane contrary and therefore it may well be called dissent or disagreement as being opposite to that consent that is in beleefe Now to end this speech and to take away al doubting that may arise of this word Beleefe or Faith I will only adde this that wee are to know that it is diuersly takē in the holy scripturs For the name which it hath in the Hebrew tongue is taken frō the word whereby they expresse veritie or truth which they also take for constancie assurance The word which the Euangelists and Apostles vse according to the Graecians in whose language they wrote signifieth properly Perswasion And the name vsed by the Latines from whome wee haue taken our Faith signifieth that constancie and trueth which men keepe in their wordes and promises whereupon
treatise of these two affections The end of the seuenth dayes worke THE EIGHT dayes worke Of Iealousie and of the kindes thereof howe it may be either a vice or a vertue howe true zeale true iealousie and indignation proceede of loue of their natures and why these affections are giuen to man Chap. 57. ASER The holy Scripture applying it selfe to the capacitie of mans vnderstanding describeth mens affections oftentimes by those testimonies which their outward members affoorde conuincing them of vices rooted in their heart by the carriage of their eies of their eie-liddes of their forehead and of their whole countenance Which is to this ende chiefly that when they know that men may reade one in anothers face as it were in a Booke that which is couered and hidden in the heart they shoulde perswade themselues that God soundeth and seeth more easily the most secret thoughts of their heartes and that they can hide nothing from him Likewise the holy spirite to condescend to our rudenesse and to teach vs to knowe God by our selues not onely by our soule which we see not but also by our body which wee see speaketh often of his high infinite and incomprehensible maiestie as it were of a man attributing vnto him eies eares a nose a mouth armes legges feete hands a heart and bowelles Moreouer albeit this pure simple and eternal essence be in no wise passionated with affections yet the same heauenly word doth not only attribute vnto him wrath reuenge anger iealousie and other affections but doth oftentimes propound him vnto vs as an yrefull man hauing the face behauiour and whole countenance of one greatly stirred vp to wrath reuenge yea euen to great fury Which is done to this end both that by the knowledge which we may haue of the nature of these affections whereunto wee are enclined and of the effectes which they bring foorth and causes from whence they proceede wee shoulde meditate the same things to bee in God when wee offend him and knowe what rewarde wee are to looke for and also to teach vs that right rule of all our affections which wee haue in his diuine goodnesse Nowe if wee remember what hath beene declared vnto vs of the nature of Loue wee heard that true and pure loue was without iealousie and that this affection sprang of the loue of concupiscence and yet it was tolde vs yesterday that Iealousie was placed amongst the kindes of enuy Let vs then see what this affection is properly and whether all iealousie be vicious I vnderstand by Iealousie a feare which a man hath lest an other whome hee woulde not should enioy something This commeth to passe two wayes namely either because wee our selues woulde enioy it alone or else because we would haue some other to whom we wish the same thing to enioy it alone the reason heereof is because we iudge it hurtfull either to our selues or to those whome wee loue if others should enioy it As if the question were of some honour or of some other good which we would haue to our selues alone or for some one whome wee loue and should be greeued that an other enioyeth it and thereupon enuy him either because wee are afraide hee shall enioy it or because hee enioyeth it already heerein appeareth enuy and euill iealousie which bringeth with it great mischiefes For as Saint Iames saieth From whence are warres and contentions among you are they not hence euen of your lustes that fight in your members yee lust and haue not ye enuy and are iealous or haue indignation and can not obtaine ye fight and warre and g●t nothing Wherefore to auoide this enuy and euill iealousie wee must consider of what nature that Good is which stirreth vs vp to this affection For according to the nature thereof our iealousie may be either a vice or a vertue For if the question be of some Good thing which belongeth in such sort to mee alone or to any other whome I loue that none may enioy it except it be vniustly and to the dishonour of God it is no euill iealousie if I feare lest any shoulde abuse it or bee grieued when it falleth out so If it concerneth some body whome I l●●ue who is abused by another to the displeasure of God and to the dishonour and hurt of the party beloued I haue yet greater occasion to feare to bee greeued and euen to bee iealous both ouer my owne Good and ouer the good of the partie beloued And as I haue iust cause of Iealousie in this case in that thing which properly belongeth vnto mee so also I haue like occasion when an other vniustly enioyeth that Good which belongeth to him whome I loue and of whome I ought to bee carefull and be greeued when any reproch or wrong is offered vnto him As for example seeing the husband hath such an interest in his wife and the wife in her husband as no other eyther may or ought to haue the like both of them haue iust cause to beware that no other haue the fruition heereof but themselues to take the matter heauily if it fall out otherwise and to bee very much offended and full of indignation against him that shoulde attempt any such thing For that can not be done as not without the great dishonour and dammage of the parties so knit together so also not without the great dishonour of GOD whose lawe and couenant is thereby violated On the other side that mutuall loue which ought to be betwixt the husband and the wife doth binde them to desire and to procure the honour and profite eache of other and to keepe backe all dishonour and hurt that may befall them Wherefore both of them haue iust cause to bee offended with those that seeke to procure any blemish in this respect The like may bee saide of fathers mothers and children and of all that haue anie charge ouer others or that are linked together by friendship But on the other side a man must beware that he be not too suspicious and that hee carry not within himselfe matter of Iealousie and so torment himselfe and others without cause as likewise hee must bee very carefull that hee giue no occasion of Iealousie to any other And thus you see howe there may be a good iealousie notwithstanding that in this case it be mingled with loue and anger For Iealousie causeth the party that loueth to be angry with him by whome that thing which hee doeth loue receiueth any dishonour or detriment Therefore this anger commeth of loue which inciteth him to set himselfe against him that offendeth the thing beloued So that these affections are alwayes commendable arising of this cause and being ruled according to that Zeale and Iealousie which the holy Scripture attributeth vnto GOD in regarde of vs. For hee is called a iealous GOD not onely in regard of his honour and glory which hee will not
expulsiue vertue to bee cast out and the rest which is pure to the vertue of distributing after which the vertue of incorporating executeth his office and duetie Thus you see howe all these particular vertues seruing to the generall vertue of nourishing doe their dueties one after another according to that order which nature hath assigned them For except this agreement and order were kept there woulde bee great confusion and the bodie coulde not receiue his due nourishment Therefore doeth one of them attende vpon and helpe another yea all of them tende to one and the same ende by diuers meanes For after the meate is receiued attracted and retained it must bee digested before it bee separated so that the expulsiue vertue is to attende vpon this separation and distinction Neither can the attractiue or drawing vertue doe his office well vnlesse the bodie bee first emptie neither the vertue of concocting or preparing if the bodie bee not purged of the meate receiued before And if any of these vertues doeth not his duetie the residue are made more dull slowe and languishing For there is such agreement betwixt them and they are by such equal proportion tempered throughout the whole bodie that nothing can befall any one of them but the residue will feele it Neither can that which is wanting in one bee supplied by an other For GOD hauing assigned to euerie one his proper office they deale not one in anothers affaires but euery one abideth in his owne office and goeth not beyonde his appoynted boundes and limites as the like is to bee seene in the printing house and amongest them that stampe money For if the Compositor faile in the 〈◊〉 of his letters the Printer that putteth ynke vpon the fourmes doeth not correct the faultes of the Compositor And if the Printer doeth not distribute his ynke well hee that draweth the sheetes from the presse correcteth not his fault For euery one hath his office apart with which onely hee medleth So likewise in Coyne if hee that cutteth prepareth and fineth the mettall faile in his duetie hee that cutteth it in pieces will correct nothing but diuideth it as it is deliuered to him Then hee that maketh it flatte that it may bee fitte for him that stampeth it doeth nothing but that which is committed to his charge and if hee that stampeth it findeth it not so flat or so round as it ought to be yet doeth hee nothing but marke it and so leaueth it as he found it Moreouer wee are to note well howe God giueth vs euen in our nature a goodlie instruction concerning that order and concord that ought to bee amongest vs all by doing euery one his duetie and helping eche other so farre as wee may For wee may learne three principall poyntes in that order which God hath set betweene the vertues of the Vegetatiue soule for the nourishing of the bodie which serue greatly for the preseruation of humane societie First howe euerie one ought to behaue himselfe in his office and not leaue others to performe that woorke which is enioyned him Secondly howe euerie one of vs ought to keepe his ranke and order not making ouer much haste nor beeing too slacke and without anie confusion of offices or vsurping any thing of that which belongeth to others Thirdly the consideration of those inconueniences which may befall euery common-wealth and societie of men if this order bee not well kept and obserued For the like will happen vnto it that doeth to a bodie which is not nourished as it ought to bee and in which the naturall vertues doe not their duetie as I haue declared For from thence proceedeth all the confusion that is in the life of man and all those miseries which wee dayly see therein Concerning the seates of these vertues of the nourishing soule mentioned by vs wee are to knowe that although they bee greater and more apparant in some partes then in others yet they are spredde throughout the whole bodie but after a diuerse manner For in perfect liuing creatures the concoction of the meate is first made in the stomacke that so it may bee prepared for the liuer the seconde is made in the liuer that it may bee turned into blood the thirde is in all the members that it may bee changed into their substance So that there is no ende or stay in the bodie of concocting and consequently of purging the meate and of casting out that which is superfluous For the heate doeth continually warme and as it were seethe the moisture neither is there any meate so pure which hath not alwayes some excrements and superfluities that are to be seperate and eiected Heereof it is that the whole body of liuing creatures is as it were bored through and hath diuers pipes to the ende there might be more open passages for the auoyding of these excrements according to that purging which is done day and night by the partes appointed therevnto as wee haue alreadie touched it speaking of those members whereby such purging is performed after a diuers manner especially when wee spake of the braine Nowe besides that purging which is vnder the armepittes and in the groyne we see howe the thinnest excrements voyde at euery part of the bodie as wee may iudge by that filth which daily is seene in the head handes feete and in all the rest of the body For wee cannot busie our selues so much in washing and cleansing all the partes and members of the bodie but still wee may finde somewhat to wash and to make cleane Therefore wee stande in neede of daily nourishment that whatsoeuer diminisheth continually from vs may from time to time bee restored and made good againe But this vertue of nourishing is the first and simplest of all the naturall vertues of the Vegetatiue soule For there are two others necessary for the life and preseruation of liuing creatures of which we haue already spoken namely the power of augmenting and that other of engendring So that liuing creatures are not onely nourished by that foode which they receiue but they growe bigger and begette their like For there is no liuing creature that hath a bodie but it groweth vp vntill it come to a certaine greatnesse and measure For this cause the vertue of augmenting and growing was added to the nourishing vertue and the vertue of engendering to them both but so as they differ in manie poyntes For first although the vertues of nourishing and of augmenting agree in this that they are both giuen to euerie liuing creature yet they differ heerein that the vertue of nourishing continueth alwayes so long as the creature liueth euen from the beginning of it vnto the end But the vertue of growing greater although it beginne with the other yet hath it a set time limited wherein it staieth and as before the creature waxed bigger and increased in greatnesse and vigour so after it commeth to the appoynted time it beginneth to fall
French Academy as it is diuided into seuerall dayes workes and distinguished by Chapters The first dayes worke Pag. 15 OF the creation of the first man and of the matter whereof the body of man is made Chap. 1. 22 Of the creation of woman Chap. 2. 28 Of the simple or similarie parts of the body namely the bones ligaments gristles sinowes pannicles cords or filaments vaines arteries and flesh Chap. 3. 34 Of the compound parts of the body and first of the feete and legges and of the armes and hands Chap. 4. 41 Of the backbone of the marrow thereof of the ribs and of other bones of mans body Chap. 5. 47 Of the share bone and marrow of the bones of the bones in the head and of the flesh of the muscles and of their office Chap. 6. 52 Of the kernels in the body and of their sundry vses especially of the breasts of women of their beauty and profite in the nourishing of children and of the generation of milke Chap. 7. 57 Of the fatte and skins of mans body and of their vse of the haires thereof Chap. 8. The second dayes worke 62 Of the bodily and external sences especially of touching of their members instruments and offices Chap. 9. 67 Of the eyes and of their excellency profite and vse of the matter and humors whereof they are made Chap. 10. 73 Of the tunicles and skinnes of the eyes of their forme motions of their sundry coulors of the sinewes whereby they receiue sight and of other parts about the eyes Chap. 11. 79 Of the eares and of their composition office and vse Chap. 12. 85 Of the diuers vses of the tongue of the instrumēts necessary both for voyce and speach howe there is a double speach of the forme thereof how the spirite of man is represented thereby Chap. 13. 91 Of the agreement which the instruments of the voyce and speach haue with a payre of Organs what things are to be considered in placing of the lungs next the heart of the pipes and instruments of the voyce Chap. 14. 96 Of the tongue and of the nature and office thereof of the excellency profite of speach which is the art of the tongue what is to bee considered touching the situation thereof in the head and neare the braine Chap. 15. 103 Of the office of the tongue in tasting and in preparing meat for the nourishment of the body of the teeth and of their nature and office of the conduite or pipe that receiueth and swalloweth downe meates Chap. 16. The third dayes worke 108 OF the sence of tast giuen to the palal what tastes are good to nourish the body of the diuersitie of them of hunger and thirst and of their causes Chap. 17. 113 Of helps and creatures meete for the preseruation and nourishment of the body how God prepareth them to serue for that purpose of their vse Chap. 18. 119 Of the nose and of the sence of smelling and of their profit and vse of the composition matter and forme of the nose Chap. 19. 124 Of the vse briefly of all the outward sences of mans body namely in purging the superfluities and ordures of his nose of the diuersity that is in mens faces and of the image of the minde and heart in them Chap. 20. 130 Of the nature faculties and powers of mans soule of the knowledge which we may haue in this life and how excellent necessary it is into what kinds the life and soule are diuided Chap. 21. 136 Of the two natures of which man is compounded how the body is the lodge and instrument of the soule how the soule may be letted from doing her proper actions by the body and be separated from it and yet remaine in her perfection Chap. 22. 142 Of the braine and of the nature therof of the sundry kinds of knowledge that are in man of the similitude that is betweene the actions and workes of the naturall vertues of the soule and of the internall senses Chap. 23. 147 Of the composition of the braine with the members and parts thereof of their offices and that knowledge which ought to content vs touching the principall cause of the vertues and wonderfull powers of the soule Chap. 24. The fourth dayes worke 148 OF the seate of voluntary motion and sense of the office and nature of the common sense of imagination and of fantasie how light and dangerous fantasie is of the power which both good and bad spirits haue to mooue it Chap. 25. 158 Of reason and memorie and of their seate nature office of the agreement which all the senses both external and internall haue one with another and of their vertues Chap. 26. 164 That the internall senses are so distinguished that some of them may bee troubled and hindered and the rest bee safe and whole according as their places and instruments assigned vnto them in the body are sound or perished and of those that are possessed with deuils Chap. 27. 170 Of the reasonable soule and life and of vertue of the vnderstanding and will that are in the soule and of their dignity and excellency Chap. 28. 176 Of the variety and contrarietie that is found in the opinions deliberations counsayles discourses and iugdements of men with the cause thereof and of the good order and ende of all discourses Chap. 29. 182 Of iudgement and of his office after the discourse of reason and how beliefe opinion or doubting followe it of the difference that is betweene them Chap. 30. 187 Of the meanes whereby a man may haue certaine knowledge of those things which hee ought to beleeue and to take for true of the naturall and supernatural light that is in man and how they beare witnesse of the image of God in him Chap. 31. 192 How the vertues and powers of the soule shew themselues by litle and litle and by degrees of contemplation and of the good that is in it of that true and diuine contemplation which wee looke for after this life Chap. 32. The fift dayes worke 198 OF the appetites that are in all liuing creatures and namely in man and of their kinds and particularly of the naturall and sensitiue appetite Chap. 33. 203 Of will and of the diuers significations and vses of these words Reason and Will of the actions freedome and nature thereof of the power which reason may haue ouer her Chap. 34. 208 Of those good things which both men only guided by the light of nature are able to propound to themselues and to follow and they also that are guided by the spirit of God of the power and liberty of the will in her actions both externall and internall Chap. 35. 214 Of the distinction that ought to bee betweene the vnderstanding knowledge and the will and affections in the soule and betweene the scates and instruments which they haue in the body of the agreement that is betweene the heart and the braine Chap. 36. 219 Of the
stay or resting place vntill they be come to those places which God hath appoynted for them Plants cast their rootes downeward and their branches vpward euery one following therein his nature For a plant being to receiue his nourishment from the earth by meanes of his rootes which are vnto it in stead of mouthes and veines to sucke and draw necessary sustenance for the preseruation of it selfe sendeth them alwayes into the ground and disperseth them all about according as they can find nourishment but the stalke stocke branches and boughs which are to be nourished in the ayre alwayes disperse themselues draw and ascend vpward Beasts hauing sense doe much more shewe that liking which they haue to follow their natural inclination For we see that by their proper apprehension and appetite they are driuen hither and thither to seeke and follow after that which they desire and loue being agreeable to their nature and to flie from that which they hate as being contrary thereunto Likewise men who only of all other mortall creatures were by creation made partakers of reason haue their proper motion conuenient to their nature For being created to attaine to that soueraigne and eternall Good which is set before them in the diuine essence they haue receiued from that infinite goodnes power and vertue to wish for that Good with a desire to apply and ioyne themselues thereunto Wherefore all men are naturally pricked and driuen forward with a loue and desire tending to that Good aswell because of that naturall agreement which they haue with the same Idea of Good which is God their soules being of a celestial and immortall essence as also because this Good is of that nature that it ought to be loued of euery nature yea so much the more loued as there is greater measure of reason in the creature to know it But this desire naturally ingrafted in euery mans heart which prouoketh and keepeth men in a loue and liking of euery thing which they thinke meete to content and satisfie them and which they seeke after in diuers things as their affections lead them differeth much from that desire which by heauenly grace is planted a new in those whom God according to his good pleasure and alwaies iust wil hath chosen and elected to euerlasting happinesse and pricked forward guideth and leadeth them to that principall end for which they were created For although the other sort of men being heires of that corruption that hath ouerspread the whole nature of man by the meanes of the sinne of the first father of all be driuen forward in soule and spirit yea many times not thinking thereof to their naturall desire of obtayning that Good yet they seeke it as blind men that goe by groping but cannot find it because the darkenes of error ignorance wherewith their vnderstanding is ouerwhelmed hindreth them from looking directly towards that Good and causeth them to wander out of that only way that could lead them vnto it So that in stead of looking vnto God and to celestiall and heauenly things they stay themselues about earthly corruptible things vnto which the neerer they labor to approch the farther off they are from the end of their wishes desires For this cause the blessed Apostle saith that the natural man perceiueth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neyther can he know them because they are spiritually discerned But they that are illuminated and guided by heauenly and supernaturall light and whose vnderstanding is framed by the spirit of God to receiue It know then how they are carried by their proper motion to the contemplation of the true Good in the enioying whereof they shall once for euer be made partakers of a felicitie which eye neuer saw nor eare heard neither came into mans heart I meane when by dissoluing the mortall tabernacle of this body they shall be clothed with glorious immortalitie and shall see him face to face who is all in all in whome they shall be satisfied according to the doctrine of the Prophet In thy presence is the fulnesse of ioy and at thy right hand there are pleasures for euermore This is that my companions which ought to whet vs on to direct our sight streight to that place whereat wee ought to leuell namely to heauen and not looke to any other thing then to God who is the scope which we desire and shal one day attaine vnto Nowe if wee can not see this white so farre off and much lesse come vnto it without direction GOD is come neare vnto vs in the person of his Sonne Iesus Christ who being the brightnesse of his glory hath left vs his word for a sure guide besides so many testimonies of his prouidence and goodnesse ouer all creatures that wee daily beholde him as it were visible in them For the ruled motions of the heauens the wonderfull workemanship of so many starry tents the connexion agreement force vertue and beauty of the Elements the situation firmnesse spreading of the earth amidst the waters and so many sundry natures and creatures in this whole frame of the worlde al these things I say are so many interpreters to teach vs that God is the efficient cause of them and that he is manifested in them and by them as their final cause But the glasse wherein we may yet better beholde him is man in whome shineth and is imprinted an image of the diuine essence which is not found againe in any visible creature that is reason and vnderstanding wherof by creation he was made partaker aswel as the Angels This is the chiefe and principall work of the creation whereby God meant to giue such a being to his creatures spiritual natures to the end he might communicate his wisdom goodnes with them thereby lead them to eternal felicitie Wherefore if it be good for men to consider the works of God in his creatures and in their nature created by him and that for the reasons and ends declared by vs it is better and more necessary that they should do the same thing in their owne person nature wherein there are almost as many maruailous works of the almighty power of God as ther are in the whole frame besids and in all other creatures Therefore that sentence which saith Knowe thy selfe was not without good reason so much praised and renowmed amongst al the ancient Greeke and Latin Philosophers as that which is worthy to be taken for a heauenly oracle a sentence pronounced by the mouth of God For whosoeuer shall know himselfe well cannot faile to know God his creator and to honour him as he ought if he follow the chiefe end for which man was created as wel as the residue of the creatures Plato in his Phaedrus and in the tenth booke of Lawes searching and inquiring by the meanes of motion what was the substance nature and immortalitie of
the soule attained to the vnderstanding of the diuine essence Aristotle also taking the same way in his 8. booke of naturall Philosophy sheweth that he knew God vnder the name of the first moouer who was perpetual and vnmoueable But we may attaine to the knowledge of God of our selues a great deale better then al the Philosophers could who were ignorant of the true beginning and end of things if we be guided by the word which is the light of the trueth and whereof al the humane philosophy of the wisest that were is but a li●●e shadow Now then if vnder this heauenly guide wee feede our spirites with a doctrine that teacheth man to know himselfe well wee beginne at that science which of all other is most necessary profitable and pleasant I say necessary as that which guideth and leadeth vs as it were by the hand to find out God profitable because it bringeth a maruailous commoditie to this present life both in regarde of bodily health as also of ruling all our actions according to vertue and pleasant because a man may see therein as it were in a sacred temple all the images of the wonderfull workes of the world ACHITOB. I cannot but greatly commend those Philosophers that reprehended and condemned them who spent all their time only in the contemplation of heauen and earth and of the nature of other creatures and in the meane while descended not into themselues to know themselues and their nature but especially their soule For what will it profite a man to take so great paines as to measure the whole world and to compasse on euery side all the elementarie region to knowe the things that are contained in them and their nature and yet in the meane time hee can not measure or knowe himselfe being but alittle handfull of earth For although the knowledge of the rest of the creatures that are in this great visible worlde will greatly helpe to leade him to the knowledge of God the Creatour neuertheless● he shall neuer be able to know him well if withall he know not himselfe Yea these two knowledges are so ioyned togither that it is very hard matter to seuer them For as a man can not know himselfe if he know not God so he cannot know God wel if in like sort he know not himselfe So that I take this for most certain that neither Astronomy Geometry Geography or Cosmography nor any other Mathematical science is so necessary for man as that whereby he may learne to know himselfe wel to measure himselfe wel by the measure of his owne nature that he may thereby know how to contayne himselfe within the limits thereof As for Mathematicians natural Philosophers Phisicions who bestow their trauaile in the knowledge of nature and natural things and in the meane time forget God and themselues whereas they ought to learne both the one and the other by that knowledge that God hath giuen them of his works I say they are not worthy to be taken for naturall Philosophers Phisicions or Mathematicians but rather for blockheaded beasts In my opinion they behaue themselues as if a man should be alwayes occupied in looking vpon his house and handling of his mooueables and houshold stuffe and in the meane time did not put them to those principall and speciall vses for which they ought to serue but were altogether forget full of himselfe of his wife and of his children Moreouer concerning Phisicions if their care to know their own soule with the nature and parts therof be not more to minister that food and phisicke which is necessary for it to liue wel and happily and that for euer then to know the nature of mens bodies that they may cure others it may worthly be said vnto them Phisicion heale thy selfe For if he be worthily derided that taketh in hand the cure of other men and cannot heale himselfe or at the least hath no care to doe it surely that man is well worthy to be had in greater derision that is more carefull not only of his owne but also of other mens bodies then he is of his owne soule whereby he differeth from brute beasts and is made partaker of an immortall nature Wherefore it is very requisite that all students in naturall philosophy should profit so well in the study thereof as to be able to turne it into true naturall diuinity whereby they may learne to know God their creator in that nature which he hath created to this end to make himselfe seene and knowen therein to all men We haue therefore good cause my companions to bestow al possible paines trauaile that we may proceede on in so necessary profitable a knowledge Wherfore we must lay before our eyes two bookes which God hath giuen vnto vs to instruct vs by and to lead vs to the knowledge of himselfe namely the booke of nature and the booke of his word which we must ioyne both together as also that doctrine which is set forth vnto vs in them concerning the knowledge of our selues especially of the soule which is the true man For the first booke would stand vs in small stead without the second as we see it dayly by experience yea euery one of vs hath trial thereof in himselfe Therefore God of his great mercy hath added the second booke vnto the first to supply the want that is in our nature through sinne For if man had not sinned this booke of nature would haue sufficed to haue kept him alwayes in the knowledge contemplation and obedience of God his creator For then he should himselfe haue caried the booke whole and perfect imprinted in his heart and mind neyther should his soule haue needed any teacher to know to selfe but in it selfe it should haue cleerely beheld and contemplated it selfe so long as she preserued ●er first light and aboad in that harmony wherein God had created her But now that she is in the body as it were some excellent picture of Apelles fallen into a sinke of mire couered and compassed about with thicke mists and obscure darknesse it is very needfull that we should haue another new light brought vnto vs from heauen which is not naturall as the first but supernaturall For this cause God hath farther giuen vs this second booke of which I spake euen now by means wherof and by the vertue of his holy spirit hee communicateth vnto vs as much celestiall and heauenly light as is needfull for the knowledge of our selues and of his high Maiestie Being therefore guided by the spirit of God whereby our spirit doth see and contemplate let vs read in these two bookes diligently note in them the parts and powers force and vertue aswell of the body as of the soule of man especially the immortality thereof whereby we shall make the way easie for vs to walke and sport our minds hereafter in the large and goodly fields of the whole world by discoursing of
of the husband ouer his wife of the subiection of the wife towards her husband For the Church was not first but Iesus Christ who is eternall very God and very man neyther was Iesus Christ taken from her but shee from him Therefore that which Adam saide of Euah when God brought her vnto him and when he had seene her after he awoke from sleepe namely This now is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh Saint Paul applieth to Iesus Christ and to his Church because shee is made bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh and partaker of the very nature of Iesus Christ by faith in him and by that vnion coniunction and fellowship which she hath with him whereby shee is conioyned vnto him as his spouse Wherefore the faithfull haue good cause to reioyce knowing that there is the like spirituall vnion coniunction and communication betweene Iesus Christ and them as there is betweene the husband and the wife according to the flesh Nowe as wee haue answered to the friuolous speeches which Atheists commonly make about the creation of the woman so wee will not passe ouer with silence the opinion of naturall Philosophers who say that the male is as it were a perfect man in comparison of the woman and that shee is an imperfect man For they doe teach that nature tendeth alwayes to the greatest perfection that shee can attaine vnto and because the male is more perfect then the female therefore that shee alwayes endeuoureth to bring foorth males But when shee wanteth power and strength to doe that shee woulde she ingendereth females insteade of males Wherevpon it shoulde followe that the generation of the woman as also that of the other females of all liuing creatures is an infirmitie a defect and an imperfection of nature But I woulde gladly demaunde of them whether GOD made an imperfect worke or no when hee created the first woman and whether hee did not create her as perfect in her kinde and in that degree for which hee created her as hee did the man in his Moreouer seeing God is the creatour of nature it is certaine that hee created it perfect in all things belonging vnto it and that hee hath made it subiect to certaine Lawes vnder which it is alwayes guyded by his prouidence as well in the generation of females as of males of the woman as of the man And if some creatures excell others yet that hindereth not why euery one shoulde not bee perfect in his order and nature hauing regarde to their Creatour and to the ende for the which hee created them Wee must not therefore alleadge anie imperfection in the creation of the woman more then in that of the man seeing that if shee had beene created otherwise then shee was shee shoulde not haue beene so perfect in her nature as shee is because shee woulde not so fitly serue that turne for the which shee was created namely to helpe man both in the generation and continuance of his kinde and also in being a succour vnto him in such thinges as belong to his nourishement and in the guiding and gouernement of them Besides is it not sayd as well of the woman as of the man that she was created in the image of GOD as wee haue already heard For Moses after hee had sayde that God created man in his image addeth immediately In the image I say of God created hee him hee created them male and female And as man is the image and glorie of God so the woman is the glorie of the man neyther can the one be bee without the other For as the woman is of the man so the man is by the woman but all thinges are of GOD. Therefore the worde of Building which the Prophet vseth in setting downe the creation of the woman is duely to bee considered in this matter For when hee saieth that God built the woman of Adams ribbe this worde importeth more then if he had simply sayde that he made and formed the woman For thereby hee woulde haue vs knowe the perfection of man and of mankinde in the creation of the woman because without her his building coulde not be finished So that man is as it were the first foundation vpon whom the woman was builded as likewise by generation of children proceeding from them both this building is not onely preserued and continued still but also furthered and augmented Vpon the like reason the worde that signifieth a childe in the Hebrew tongue is taken from a worde that signifieth to build in the same language as in deede children also are the true building of a house But before we enter into any larger discourse of this matter to know the generation and multiplication of mankind I am of opinion that we shal do well to intreat first of the dispositiō of that matter wherof we heard before his body was made as also of the partes thereof For generation respecteth chiefly the third kind of the natural powers faculties of man whose vertue and properties we are not to consider of before we haue beene instructed in all things that concerne the particular composition of mans body and of euery part thereof to this end that we might haue the true knowledge of that lodging which God hath giuen to man to dwell in vpon earth and that step by step wee might come to consider of the host or tenant of this tabernacle namely of the spirite and soule which is truely man Let vs then beginne to take a view of the diuision of the chiefe partes of the body and so handle first the simple or similary partes of which all the rest are compounded This matter subiect I offer to thee ARAM for thy discourse Of the simple or similary partes of the body namely the bones ligaments gristles sinowes pannicles cordes or filaments vaines arteries and flesh Chap. 3. ARAM. If wee take pleasure in beholding materiall frames builded with mens hands especially if they be made by rare workemen and such as excell in their Arte and in viewing attentiuely the goodly workes that are in them we ought to be a great deale more delighted without al comparison in looking vpon the stately edifices builded with the very hand of God and vpon the exquisite and wonderful workes wherewith he hath adorned and set them forth Curiosity causeth many men to wander all their life time in lands and seas vnknowen to feede their mindes with a vaine knowledge of the maners and customs of strangers but very few will be found who haue a care to know themselues In so much that being able to discourse of the situation of diuers regions and of the beauty of those places and fortresses that are therein yet they know not their owne house wherein they alwaies dwel and much lesse themselues namely their soules which are the inhabitants But if we thinke it a shame for a man to bee ignorant of those things that belong or bring
of liuing creatures might not be hindered hee hath not made the ligaments nor the filaments nor the sinewes of any such boisterous or stiffe matter but that the creatures may easily bend euery way whithersoeuer they list to mooue and turne their members Neyther hath hee made them of so tender and soft matter but that they are strong and powerful enough to holde fast all the members within their ioynts to the ende they might not easily become bare and thrust out of their places as also to furnish the creatures with strength and power which consisteth principally in the force and might of these partes It is requisite also that they shoulde be such because they are as it were in continuall labour and sustaine great stresses Wherefore they must needes bee of such matter as will not easily yeelde or weare away or breake in pieces And because all the members and all the ioyntes are not to sustaine labours and brunts alike therefore the Lorde hath very well prouided for that as hee hath done the like also in the composition and distribution of the bones For those members that must sustaine the heauiest burthens and greatest brunts that are to dispatch most laboursome businesse and therefore require the greater strength haue biggest strongest and mightiest bones ligaments and sinewes so that their bulke bignesse breadth and thickenesse are answerable to their necessary vses The lesser members and such as are to vndergoe lesse paine which are ordained to effect more fine and witty workes wherein Arte is more required then force haue also their bones ligaments and sinewes lesser and smaller so that in certaine places there are some bones passing small and sinewes which are onely as it were little threedes Thus much I thought meete for vs to vnderstand concerning the simple parts of the body nowe wee must consider the compound partes and first intreate of the outermost partes and so followe that which wee spake of the foundation of mans building to the ende that by little and little wee may set him vpright and consider him throughly in all his partes Therefore thy speach ACHITOB shall be of the feete and legges and of the armes and handes Of the compound partes of the body and first of the feete and legges and of the armes and hands Chap. 4. ACHITOB. Among the manifolde and great commodities which wee may reape by the diligent consideration of the Anatomy of the body there are two of greatest weight The first is to put vs in minde of our mortalitie in regarde of our bodies to the ende that we should not please ourselues too much in the beautie of them and so waxe prowde and abuse our selues as also that wee should remember all those testimonies which wee haue in the holie Scriptures of the frailtie of man and of his whole nature For when wee see that those partes of the body that are hardest strongest most firme and such as after the death of a man continue longest before they returne into powder and into that first matter out of which they were taken as namely those partes that were propounded vnto vs in the former discourse especially the bones I say when we see that these notwithstanding their hardnesse must in the ende returne to dust as well as the rest what shall wee thinke of the other partes that are softer and more tender and lesse able to resist corruption Therefore the spirite of God doeth so often by his worde call and send vs backe to that instruction which hee giueth vs by the matter whereof hee made and framed our bodies and by the consideration of our owne originall and birth to the ende wee shoulde learne to containe our selues euermore within the compasse of all humilitie and modestie as well towardes him as one towardes an other Hereof it was that Isaiah had commaundement giuen him from the Lorde to crie that all flesh i● grasse and all the grace thereof as the floure of the field Man that is borne of a woman saieth Iob is of short continuance and full of trouble Hee shooteth foorth as a floure and is cut downe hee vanisheth also as a shadow and continueth not Againe for the second point wee are taught to consider and to knowe by that prouidence of God which sheweth it selfe in the composition of the vilest and most earthy partes and in that frame which hee maketh for the building of the whole body howe great and woonderfull it ought to be in the residue namely in the noblest partes thereof especially in the soule if wee could see it with our eyes as wee beholde the body Wherfore that wee may the better knowe the excellent worke of God in this building we must raise it vpright before our eyes to the end wee may behold it on the out-side as it were a frame ready made from the foote to the top and from the foundation to the couering and highest part thereof The whole body of man is commonly diuided into foure principall outward parts which are called compound in respect of the simple partes spoken of before which serue for matter to make them of whereupon afterward they take the name of member according to that forme that is giuen to eche of them These foure principall parts are the head the breast the belly the outward partes namely the armes and handes the legges and feete The head endeth where the necke beginneth The breast comprehendeth that part which we commonly call the breast also the backe the ribs and whatsoeuer else is contained in them from the necke vnto the midriffe which is a skinne that separateth the heart and the lungs on the one side and the inferiour intralles on the other The belly reacheth from thence where the breast endeth vnto the bone aboue the priuie members and neare to the groine The extreme or outward parts are already named by vs and of them our present discourse shall be beginning as it were at the foundation vpon which all the body is laide First therefore wee see how God hath so aptly fashioned the feete that they doe not onelie beare vp al the rest of the body but also carry and recarry it wheresoeuer a man wil. Next the legs are set vpon them as it were the pillers of this whole building being closed in such sorte vnto them as neede requireth to helpe the feete to sustaine and beare vp all the rest of the frame laide vpon them For this cause Salomon calleth them the strong men that stoope in olde age when their vertue and strength faileth them For they bow through weakenes and tremble as the hands do which the same Prophet calleth the keepers of the house Now because the chief strēgth of the body lieth in the bones when the scriptures meane to set forth any violēt griefe as when a man is extremly pressed as it were altogether oppressed they say that his bones are vexed or broken or out of ioynt that is to say all
moyster more hard or softer then others so they haue more or lesse marrowe and some haue none at all because they neede it not Now this marrow whereof we speake nowe differeth from that in the chine-bone which the Arabians call Nucha and is of the nature of the substance of the braine from whence it proceedeth as a riuer from his fountaine for the generation of sinewes to which ende the other marrow is not appoynted of God but onely for the nourishment and preseruation of the bones Seeing then we are come to the braine we must consider with what bones God hath inclosed it on euery side for the defence therof how many in all there are in the head both before and behind on the right side and on the left aboue and beneath of what forme breadth length and hardnes and how they are ioyned one with another by seames and bands and that not without great reason and consideration of the Workmaster which made such an excellent peece of worke For first there are commonly sixe bones which compasse the braine on eche side besides that which is called the Wedge-like bone which is vnder the pallat of the mouth and vnto which all the rest are fastened And because there are many vessels and members in the braine and head God hath made the head of a round figure reaching somewhat in length and bulking out somewhat more both before behinde Now forasmuch as vapours fumes and smokie excrements mount vpward therefore he hath created the head and those bones of the head that are highest not so solide and thicke as the rest to the end the vapours and fumes should not continue inclosed within the braine but might euaporate and so disburthen the brayne otherwise it would be very ill at ease and subiect to many diseases Therefore all of them together are so made one bone that yet they are not all of one and the same piece but ioyned together not by ligaments as many sundrie and seuerall bones are but by such a proper and apt coniunction that there appeareth betweene them as it were a seame made after the manner of a Sawe or Combe as if they were verie finely sewed together And because the bones behinde coulde not haue that helpe of the handes for their defence which the bones before may haue God hath created them more harde and stronger Besides they all are to the brayne and to euery part thereof in stead of an helmet and murrion to defende it on euery side Thus you see the composition of the head touching the bones thereof which is so ioyned to the body by the backebone that nothing but the neck which is the vpper ende of the chine is betweene them For it was necessarily to haue motion both aboue and beneath before and behinde and on both sides which could not haue beene if it had beene fastened to the shoulders without any space betweene which is necessarie also both for breathing for voyce and for manie other purposes that may bee noted heereafter And albeit the necke serued for nothing else but for voyce yet is it so necessarie that without it a man coulde haue no voyce nor any other creature to which it is giuen as appeareth in those that haue no necke For all beastes that want the necke want also the voyce as wee may see both in fishes and in those beastes which the Latins call Insecta animalia the reason is because they haue no necke whereby to ioyne their head with the rest of their bodie but onely as it were a litle threede which holdeth both the one and the other close together Nowe that wee are come to the toppe of the building of mans bodie and haue set him vpright as it were a dryed Anatomie we must come next to the couering of the bones sinewes and other partes mentioned by vs to the ende that after wee haue finished the description of the outwarde partes wee may speake also of those that are within The flesh then is the first garment wherewith the bones are couered and it is properly called by that name which is giuen to that part whereof the Muscles are compounded For some vnder the name of Flesh comprehend the Kernels and the fatte because of the agreement which these partes haue one with another and by reason of their vse For as for the flesh it hath this in common with the Kernels and fatte that it is soft and tender but heerein it differeth from that matter whereof Kernels are made in that the matter of Kernels is more Sponge-like Wee learned before that Flesh is a substance of blood and howe it is made thereof Concerning the Muscles wee vse to call by that name the proper instrument that mooueth voluntarily all the members of the bodie Therefore it is compounded and made of threedes proceeding from the sinewes and of ligaments compassed about with a great deale of flesh insomuch that when the Muscles are taken away from the bodie there remayneth almost nothing but bare bones Their proper place is in all places of the bodie where there are ioyntes and where motion is required For without them the bodie cannot haue that voluntarie motion whereof I spake euen nowe and which is so called because thereby a man may mooue and remooue his members from one place to another as he thinketh good and as hee shall iudge it needefull for himselfe Wherefore we must knowe that the brayne which is the seate of the animall partes and the originall of the all the sinewes and of all motions and sences giuen to the bodie by them is in respect of the whole bodie like to a Waggonner that guydeth his Waggon and the Muscles are like to the bittes and brydles of horses to cause them to retyre or set forwarde as the Waggonner pleaseth eyther to draw them backewarde or to driue them forwarde to pull in or to let loose the bridle The sinewes are as it were the reynes and leathers fastened to the bridles to holde them in or to let them loose and to turne them both on the right hande and on the lefte then those members of the bodie which moue it from one place to another are as it were the horses that are ledde and guided by this meanes and the rest of the bodie is like to the Charet and the burden which it caryeth And for this cause the Muscles are compounded of ligaments sinewes and flesh For as the ligaments serue to knit them together and the sinewes minister sence and motion so the fleshe serueth to the benefite of those litle strings that proceede from the ligaments and sinewes first to nourish them then to holde them vp fostly as if they leaned vpon little cushions and pillowes and lastly to keepe them aswell against the vehemencie of internall heate as against the heate colde and hardnesse that comes from without Likewise the flesh perfourmeth all these thinges vnto the rest of the
the prouidence of God herein that amongst them members giue by him to the body he hath created some of that nature that a man can in no wise liue without them and others so that albeit they be not necessary for life yet he can not liue at his ease and not receiue great hurt if he want them The members of the first sort are the braine the heart the lungs the liuer the splene the stomacke and such like that are the seates of the animal vital and natural vertues without which there could bee no stay of life For after these members are hurt or perished farewell life The other sort are the eies the eares the nose the tongue the feete the hands and such like For although a man loose some one or many of these members yet he doeth not therefore loose his life but hee shall surely feele the detriment which such a losse bringeth vpon him And as wee commonly say that the Oxe knoweth not the valow of his ●orne vntill the haue lost it so wee may with greater reason say that no man knoweth of what valew the partes of his body are vntill he want them or vntill they be so hindered that they cannot fulfill their office Wherefore we ought to pray to God to preserue them for vs whilest wee haue them and giue him thankes because he hath not created vs lame or maimed of any member And when we see any that were borne without them or that haue lost them since wee ought to be so much the more stirred vp to glorifie him acknowledging it to come from his grace in that he hath dealt better with rathe●r with them although we haue deserued no more then they Now because we do not so neither haue this consideration as we ought to giue him thankes and to vse them to his honour and glory therefore he depriueth vs of them many times to punish this ingratitude and to cause vs to know better the valew of these gifts after they are taken from vs and that wee haue lost them seeing we could not knowe it whilest wee had them nor yet him that gaue them vnto vs. And by the same meanes also he would admonish and put vs in minde of the dammage we receiue by the defects of our soule by those which wee feele by experience in our bodies Whereupon wee haue an other goodly point of the prouidence of God to note in that hee hath giuen vs almost all double members without which we could not liue but with great paine and trouble to the end that if we lost one wee might yet vse the other and in some sort supplie the losse of that which is wanting For this cause hee did not create onely one eye or one nosethrill one eare one arme one hand one legge or one foote but twaine This ought to bee well considered that wee might haue the better knowledge of the care that God hath ouer vs seeing hee hath so well prouided for all things that hee will not onely haue vs liue but also furnish vs with all necessary things whereby wee might liue more commodiously more easily and with lesse paine and trouble And when it falleth out that some one of these members or both are wanting God supplieth this defect by maruailous meanes For sometimes wee see that maymed folkes haue done many thinges with their feete or with their necke and head that others could hardly doe with their hands at least wise they haue done things without handes that would seeme altogether incredible to such as haue not seene them And many times wee see dumbe men whose handes stand them in steade both of tongue and eares For by the signes and gestures of their handes they signifie their meaning to others as if they themselues did speake and vnderstand the minde of others that make the like signes Yea there are some that conceiue what others say vnto them onely by seeing them open and mooue their lippes so that we must needs acknowledge it as a miracle of God Now hauing spoken generally of the senses of the body and specially of touching as also of their members and instruments wee must come to their particulars Therefore AMANA thou shalt discourse vnto vs first of the eyes which are as it were the principall windowes of this building which we haue vndertaken to pourtraite and set foorth Of the eyes and of their excellencie profite and vse of the matter and h●nors whereof they are made Chap. 10. AMANA It hath alwayes bin the opinion of the Stoics and Academics that the bodily senses did rather hinder then help to obtaine wisedome that no man could know or vnderstand anything that the senses were feeble and slowe that sensible things were so small that they could not be perceiued or els so subiect to motion that no certainetie coulde be found in them that our life is short and full of opinions and customes that all was compassed about with darkenes and hid and therefore that nothing could be perceiued or vnderstoode so that men were to professe that they woulde affirme or approoue of nothing Plato writeth in many places that wee must beleeue nothing but the vnderstanding which beholdeth that that is simple and vniforme and as it is indeede and that there is no science but only in those reasons discourses which the soule maketh whē it is not troubled with bodily lets as with sight and hearing or with griefe plesure Eusebius disputing against this sheweth that the senses help much towards the obtaining of wisedome that when they are rightly affected and in their naturall habite they neuer deceiue the mind that it ●tentiue But wee shall knowe more at large what their profit is by continuing our discourses of the instruments of the senses Let vs knowe therefore that the eies were giuen of God to men to cause them to see and to be as it were their watch towers fentinels the guides leaders of the whole body as also they are as it were the chiefe windowes of the body or rather of the soule which is lodged within it For it is a most excellent worke of God whether we cōsider the matter wherof they are made how diuerse or agreeable it is to the office that is assigned them or the beauty that is in their forme in the diuersity of their colours or the commodity vse of their motions and howe they are set in their places as it were goodly pretious stones laide in some curious piece of worke how they are inuironed and armed both aboue and beneath on the right hand and on the left with the eye-lids and the eye-browes not onely for their protection and defense but also to adorne and to make them shew more beautifully And surely it is not without cause that God hath put such great excellencie in them and hath created and framed them so artificially For first they are the chiefest members of all the
the ground when wee meete with some great infection shal wee not thinke that God turneth his face from vs when he findeth vs so stinking and infected Contrariwise when wee smell some good sauour it ought to bring into our remembrance the odour of Iesus Christ his sacrifice and of those vertues that are well pleasing and agreeable in the sight of God and stirre vs vp with al indeuour to present him with such smels to the end wee may be of good odour before God and men Which the holy worde will teach vs after hee hath giuen vs a spirituall nose whereby wee may attaine to the right sense and smel of that good odour of Iesus Christ and of the Gospel working in vs the spirit of discretion to discerne truth from lying that our soules may be refreshed as the braine is by those good smels that are brought vnto it by the bodily nose and by the sense of smelling that is therein Nowe therefore being come to the end of this goodly matter of the fiue corporall and externall sense me thinks we should profit much by a briefe collection of their vse and of the commoditie which they bring to men considering also the diuersitie that is in their faces and visages in which these goodly organicall instruments of the senses are planted and how their faces are images and pictures of their heart and mind The discourse of this matter appertainth to thee ACHITOB. Of the vse briefly of all the outward senses for the seruice of man namely in purging the superfluities and ordures of his body of the diuersitie that is in mens faces and of the image of the mind and heart in them Chap. 20. ACHITOB. When wee taste some pleasure by considering the workes of God namely those which wee beare about vs in our nature as indeede such contemplation affoordeth great delight to their soules that are not buried in ignorance we ought to thinke that we haue great occasions and certaine meanes to consider what pleasure and ioy it would be to see and behold the Creator and Workmaster who hath made giuen to man such excellent senses such wonderful vertues faculties what delight ariseth of hearing smelling only some smal odour of tasting a litle of his prouidence wisdome goodnes benignity grace mercy much more whē they are throghly tasted relished of vs. Which may be performed by them that imploy all care and diligence in meditating in his eternall worde and in considering the workes of his Almighty power vntill such time as by the dissolution of this mortall tabernacle of the body they shall haue put on immortalitie to enioy true contemplation that is to beholde him face to face who onely is able to satisfie soule with goodnes and felicitie as the Prophet teacheth vs where he saieth In thy presence is the fulnesse of ioy and at thy right hand there are pleasures for euermore Now then we may know by that which we haue hitherto heard in these our discourses what testimonies God hath plāted of his great prouidence in all the partes of our bodies what care hee hath had and still hath of man and how he hath giuen him as many corporall senses as he needeth for the vse and fruition of all those visible and bodily creatures which he hath created For he hath eies whereby he vseth and enioyeth the light and the pleasure of such diuersitie of colours as may be seene in the world as well naturall as artificiall and compounded with the sundry mixtures of naturall things Then by the eares he hath the vse of al kindes of sounds and principally of speech together with the pleasure of harmonies and melodies consisting in the variety of tunes and songs as well of m●ns voice as of birdes and other creatures and also of instruments of musicke which are so many and of such diuersitie amongst men And by means of the nose and nosethrils he hath the fruition and pleasure of odours and smels so diuers in nature both naturall and artificiall and by means of the mouth tongue and palat he enioyeth and iudgeth of all sorts of tastes which also are very diuers and chiefly of meates and drinkes wherewithal he is nourished For this good God hath appointed a meane for the preseruation of mans life whereunto he hath ioyned pleasure with profite if men know how to vse the same with moderation and measure rather to make supply no necessity then to satisfie pleasures The like may be saide of all the rest of the feelings and touchings of al the bodily members of which there is great variety But hauing spoken sufficiently of the composition of the externall parts of mans body and of the outward members of the natural senses of man and of their vses we ought to consider also what instructions God giueth by them vnto men concerning their infirmitie For although the body of man be so beautifull and excellent outwardly as wee haue declared yet it hath infection within which of necessitie must appeare and breake foorth outwardly that it may be purged and vnburdned For the body cannot reape that profit of the nourishment it receiueth by al the elements and chiefely of that which it eateth and drinketh as that it can cōuert turne al of it into nourishment substance auoyd all those accidents inconueniences whereunto it is subiect by reason of the infirmity of it owne nature Therefore it commeth to passe necessarily that the body is ful of excrements of much superfluitie ordure which would kill it if it were not discharged and deliuered thereof For these excrements woulde be poison vnto it in steade of nourishment Therefore the prouidence of God hath so prouided a remedy for the same that admonishing man of his infirmitie to the end he should alwayes remember that he is created of clay and earth that he shal returne vnto it againe it hath withal ordained the meanes whereby man should be comforted discharged of those excremēts superfluities which might hurt him And for this cause there is no member but hath his proper passages appropriated for purgation seruing in his place yea euen the noblest members For I speake not only of those members which we account most vile abiect shamefull which nature teacheth vs to couer hide being appointed for the voiding of the grosest vilest most filthy excrements but also of those that are the excellentest chiefest in the head face so that there is no part of our body out of which there proceedeth not some infection filthines Insomuch that a man may wel say that our whole body is within as it were a stinking draught or puddle that emptieth it selfe on euery side as it were by sinks gutters For if we cōsider it generally there is no part that is not subiect to sweat which oftentimes sauoureth very strongly and that purgeth not it selfby sweating from that superfluitie which it
fiue They which make fiue sortes distinguish betweene the common sense the imagination and the fantasie making them three and for the fourth they adde Reason or the iudging facultie and for the fift Memorie They that make but three kinds differ not from the other but onely in that they comprehend all the former three vnder the common sense or vnder one of the other twaine whether it be the imagination or the fantasie As for the Sensitiue facultie it comprehendeth the vertues of the fiue corporall senses of which wee haue spoken before As for the Motiue vertue it comprehendeth the moouing of all the outward parts of the body from one place to an other especially of the feete and legges which is to walke and of the handes which is to apprehend and to gripe This moouing is done by the sinewes muscles and filaments as we haue already declared but not without knowledge and will as the other that are more properly called naturall motions of which we may speake in their order And this motion is led by the imagination in regard of beastes but in regard of men by reason But because we haue already handled at large these two last powers of the soule namely the Sensitiue and Motiue when we spake of the externall members of the body we wil now speake especially of the first which comprehendeth the internall senses spoken of by me euen now which answere to the externall senses according to the bond agreement and communication which the body and soule haue together And because wee cannot know the faculties vertues of the soule but only by means of those instruments whereby it worketh as we haue shewed in our former discourses the nature and vse of the externall members and howe the soule is serued by them so now we will do the like by the internall parts to the ende that we may the better knowe the nature of the soule by her operations and instruments as the labourer that worketh by his instruments and frameth those woorkes that are before our eyes For the soule being of a spirituall nature and not bodily we cannot see it in it owne substance and nature nor haue any knowledge thereof but by the effectes by which wee may iudge and conclude of their cause as also by those testimonies of the soule which the Lorde affordeth vs in his worde And although the vnderstanding of man can not attaine to an entire and perfect knowledge of the soule yet that smal knowledge which wee may haue doeth exceedingly profite end delight vs. For seeing it is the most excellent creature that is created vnder the cope of heauen yea more excellent then the heauens themselues or any of the celestiall bodies because the soule only is endued with reason and vnderstanding there is no doubt but the knowledge thereof is more excellent profitable pleasant and necessary yea more worthy admiration then of any other thing whatsoeuer as that which alwaies yeeldeth profit to the greatest things that can be Therfore we ought not to set light by that knowledge of it which wee may attaine vnto For there is in it so great varietie beauty and harmony yea it is so wel adorned and set forth that no heauen nor earth is so wel painted or bedecked with such beautifull liuely and excellent images and pictures as that is On the other side she is the Mistresse and Authour from whence proceedeth the inuention of all Artes and Sciences and of all those wonderfull woorkes that are made throughout the whole course of mans life Therefore no man can beholde her or thinke vpon her without great pleasure and admiration And seeing the fountaine and well-spring of all the good and euill that befalleth vs is in the soule there is nothing more profitable for men then to know it well to the ende they may labour more carefully to keepe this fountaine pure and well purged that all the riuers of their actions and workes may issue and flowe pure and cleane from thence For that man can neuer gouerne his soule wel nor be master of himselfe that doeth not knowe himselfe If wee desire to knowe what workes wee are to looke for of a workeman what hee can doe or what may befall him what hee is good for and for what hee is vnmeete hee must first of all bee knowen what hee is Therefore that sentence of which we haue already spoken that saith Know thy selfe ought heere especially to take place and to bee practised For it is a harder matter to knowe the nature and qualitie of our soule and of our minde the vertues and affections thereof to enquire and consider of it well and to knowe what may be knowen thereof as also the diuerse and holow lurking holes the turnings and windings therein then to know the bones flesh sinews and blood of our bodies with all the matter whereof it is made and all the partes and members thereof Seeing then wee are to make enquirie of the nature and powers of the soule by the effects thereof according as I haue already spoken and seeing the principall effect is the life which it giueth to all liuing creatures let vs first consider of the difference that is betweene the creatures void of life and those that haue life in them Afterward let vs looke into the sundrie sortes of liues that are in liuing creatures as that which will helpe vs well to the vnderstanding of that wee seeke for First then wee must note that all creatures are either spirituall or bodily All they are spirituall creatures that are without bodies and which cannot be perceiued by any bodily sense and such are the Angelles both good and bad and the soules and spirites of men The bodily creatures are all those that are visible and that may bee felt and perceiued by corporall senses amongst which some haue no life and some haue life Againe those creatures that haue no life differ in two respects for some of them haue no naturall motion as stones metalles mineralles and such like creatures Others haue their naturall motion among which some are mutable corruptible and subiect to change others are immutable incorruptible continuing alwaies firme in their estate during the course of this world The water the aire the windes and the fire are creatures hauing motion albeit they haue no life but they are subiect to corruption and so are all the creatures that are compounded of the elements whether they haue life or no. For being made of contrary matters and qualities they corrupt and change not in respect of their first matter and substance which can neuer perish according to the testimony of Philosophers notwithstanding it alter in forme but alwayes returneth to the first nature Stones and metalles albeit they be very hard yet are they not freed from corruption and consuming through vse But the celestiall bodies are of that matter and nature that they mooue continually and yet abide
that the foggy blood may not euaporate and sweate through For this cause it is called the veiny artery because it holdeth of the nature both of an artery and of a veine and hath this office belonging properly vnto it to carry the ayre and the spirit There are also in the heart other small peeces which Anatomists distinguish from it as the two little eares the right and the left which are as it were little doores as there is also in all the pipes thereof which are so small that vnneth may they be discerned by the eyes These doores and pipes that are in them ●erue partly to this ende that when the heart sucketh such blood as is necessary for it selfe the veine wherewith it draweth shoulde not breake through any ouer-great vehement and sodaine attraction and partly that the ayre might enter in more gently and better wrought according as neede requireth For this cause also it is why the heart doeth not drawe the ayre immediately from the mouth both because if this space were not betweene it coulde not drawe so much as it wanteth and so woulde bee choaked as also because it shoulde receiue it in too colde whereupon it woulde be greatly hurt Therefore it hath pipes passages and instruments not onely to bring this ayre vnto it as it is brought to the lungs but also to dispence and prepare it as is most conuenient for it as wee haue learned already by our speach of the rough artery and of other instruments of the voyce and of respiration Out of which wee are to note two goodly points of the prouidence and wisedome whereby hee doeth admonish vs of that moderation which wee ought to keepe in all things and how we ought to behaue our selues not only in one worke but also in all things that wee take in hand For concerning the first GOD hath prouided alwaies throughout the whole worke of mans body in such sort that there should be no violēt thing but hath so wel framed disposed and linked all together that no one part or member shoulde receiue hurt of another but al might help support ech other Therfore if there be any burthen to cary from one to an other God hath so distributed it by little and little and by such conuenient means that no part is pressed teaching vs thereby that he loueth moderation and hateth violence in all things for which cause hee dispenseth all and distributeth drop by drop as it were by destillation And to the end he may conioyne in one things of a contrary nature hee alwayes placeth between two contraries things of a middle disposition which are most apt to tie them together and to keep them Besides we see howe hee hath ordred al the parts of the body so wel that one only member and instrument serueth oftentimes for many offices vses as we haue already touched it Wherin God doth admonish vs further of two things wel worthy the noting The first is that we ought to looke so wel vnto al things that we neither forget nor omit any thing that shal be requisit necessary The other that we should imploy our selues about euery thing that we can and may do according to those gifts and graces which wee haue receiued of God and that we should vse al things to euery such purpose as they will serue and so auoid al vaine and superfluous charges For as it is commonly said nothing is to be done by many things that can be performed by fewer otherwise there will be more hindrance then helpe and greater losse then profit For this cause as God hath not giuen to the body one member lesse then there ought to be so he hath not giuen it one more For if there were either more or lesse it would not only be monstrous but there would be eyther some want or some let hinderance And when as one member is able to satisfy two offices he hath not created many to do it if either profit or necessitie required not the help of many Whereupon gouernours of Common-wealths ought to learne that their people are not to bee burthened with vnprofitable and vnnecessary offices and persons If therefore men woulde learne those lessons that God giueth them in their owne bodies and in the members thereof they woulde alwayes keepe a meane in all things following this heauenly example and neuer offend either with too little or too much But notwithstanding wee haue all Nature to be our Mistres so that shee keepe a schoole within vs and teach vs these things her selfe yet wee profite little thereby Nowe leauing this speach seeing wee haue taken a viewe of the nature of the body and of the naturall motion thereof which is commonly called the Pulse and what vse it hath in this corporall life as also of other things concerning this matter it shall be good for vs nowe to speake of another motion that is in the nature of the soule which serueth not onely for this life but also for the spirituall in respect of which especially it is giuen vnto it an image and representation whereof wee haue had in this motion of which wee haue already spoken It belongeth to thee ARAM to discourse vpon this matter Of the second motion of the heart which belongeth to the affections of the soule and of those that goe before or follow after iudgement of the agreement that is betweene the temperature of the body and the affections of the soule Chap. 39. ARAM. As God is not onely an eternall and infinite essence but also infinitely good and happy so hath hee not rested in giuing vnto his creatures life and beeing as it were imparting to them some part of his being but it hath pleased him also to make them partakers of that Good which is essentiall in him and of his blessednesse and felicitie according as euery one was capable thereof in his kinde For he will not onely haue them to be but also to be well For this cause we see that although men desire much to be and therefore are greatly afraid of death as of an enemy that seeketh to vndoe them yet many times it falleth out so that they desire death to the end they might be no more because they thinke it a greater good or at leastwise a lesse euil to be no more thē to be miserable vnhappy And by this we may knowe that man was not created of God only to be neither was that his principal end but also to be blessed For this cause as God hath giuen to the creatures an inclination to preserue themselues in their life to the end they might be so he hath put into them a natural appetite desire of that which is good to the ende they might be well and that good might be fall them but man specially is thus affected which desire of good is also ioyned with an eschewing of euill For in the pursuite of good his contrary which is
hope maketh not ashamed because the loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs as if he should say that they which stay themselues vpon such a hope shal neuer be ashamed nor deceiued For the expectation thereof is neuer frustrated but it hath alwaies a good a happy issue For when we perceiue that we are deceiued of our hope we are ashamed and confounded But this neuer hapneth to true hope which proceedeth of a sound faith in Iesus Christ by means whereof we haue accesse through him vnto this grace wherein wee stand and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of God as Saint Paul said alitle before Therefore he exhorteth christiās to reioice in hope calleth God the God of Hope praying that he would fil the Romans with al ioy peace in belieuing that they may abound in hope through the power of the holy ghost And in the epistle to the Hebrews hope is compared to a sure and stedfast ancre of the soule For this cause God is so often called in the holy Scriptures the hope and fortresse of his people and of his It is written also that they which hope in the Lord do reioyce For hee that hopeth in him shal be healed and preserued Therefore it is not without cause that the spirite of God so often repeateth vnto vs this sentence Blessed are they that put their trust in the Lord for they shal neuer be confounded It is better to hope in him then to put any confidence in Princes But vnfaithful and wicked men can neuer be partakers of such a Good because they haue no such hope For it is written The expectation of the iust is gladnesse but the hope of the wicked shall perish And againe The hope of the hypocrite shall perish his confidence shal be cut off and his truct shall be as the house of a spider He shall leane vpon his house but it shall not stand he shall holde him fast by it yet shall it not endure But to prosecu●e our matter nowe that wee haue seene the hope of good men together with their ioy let vs consider what remaineth to the wicked of their vaine and false ioy namely Feare which is the second kinde of sorrowe mentioned by vs. Tell vs then AMANA what Feare is with the nature and effectes thereof Of Feare and of the nature and effects thereof towards the body the minde and soule and how it troubleth them of the true harnesse and armour against Feare Chap. 46. AMANA As wicked men can haue no certaine hope of any good they looke for so they neuer haue any true ioy of any present good because they alwayes forsake the true Good and stay in that which is not Good but in their opinion and fantasie neither doe they at any time ref●rre the ende of good things vnto God but looke onely vpon the things themselues Therefore it is neuer in their power to reioice in that ioy which they accompt to be their true ioy but only by offending God as we heard before Which is the cause why they seek after nothing more then to hide themselues to depart from him as much as they can possible so that they would neuer heare any speech of him but desire to bury the remembrance of him for euer because they can heare nothing spoken of him but as of their iudge neither think of him but he awakeneth their cōscience which they labor with might and maine to rocke asleepe Wherein they take a cleane contrary course to that which they ought to follow to obtaine the true Good For seeing God is the soueraigne Good of all creatures what Good can they finde that is greater wherein they can fully reioyce and satisfie themselues Or what other Good dare they promise to themselues to finde without him and when they haue him for their enemy But they are like to drunken men who cannot vnderstand this Diuinitie vntill they haue slept out their wine and are awaked out of their drunkennesse Then shall they knowe what is true and false Ioy what is good and badde Hope when their ioy shall bee turned into sorrowe their expectation and hope into feare and terrour wherewith the wicked shall be continually haunted as the Spirite of God teacheth vs. Nowe as sorrow is a griefe for some euil which a man presently feeleth shutting vp the heart as vnwilling to receiue it so feare is a sorrow which the heart conceiueth of some looked for euill that may come vnto it Therefore it restraineth the heart also and closeth it vp as being desirous to auoide the euill Wee see then that there is the same difference betwixt sorrowe and feare in respect of euill that is betweene Ioy and Hope in regarde of Good So that we may well say that Feare is not onely a fantasie and imagination of euill approching or a perturbation of the soule proceeding from the opinion it hath of some euill to come but it is also a contraction and closing vp of the heart which commeth from that which euery one iudgeth to be euill for himselfe when hee thinketh it is at hand and will light vpon him Therefore first of all it draweth in and shutteth vp the heart and so weakneth the same Whereupon nature being desirous to relieue and succour it sendeth heate vnto it from the vpper partes and if that bee not sufficient shee draweth away that heate also which is in the neather parts By which doing she sodainely calleth backe the blood and spirites vnto the heart and then followeth a generall palenesse and cold in all the outward partes and chiefly in the face with a shiuering throughout the whole body For seeing the first moouing thereof is in the heart the other alwayes followeth so that when the heart trembleth the whole body doth so likewise Whereupon it followeth that by reason of the great beating and panting of the heart the tongue faltereth and the voice is interrupted Yea it commeth to passe sometimes that present death followeth a great and sodaine feare because al the blood retiring to the heart choaketh it and vtterly extinguisheth naturall heate and the spirites so that death must needes ensue thereof Therefore we cannot doubt but that feare hath grea● power ouer all the body and ouer life it selfe For this cause Esaias after he had denounced the iudgement of God against the Babylonians the comming of the Medes and Persians by whome their citie shoulde be taken and themselues slaine saieth thus Therefore shall all handes be weakened and all mens hearts shall melt which is as much to say as that their hearts shall faile them for feare And therefore hee addeth They shal be afraid anguish sorrow shall take them and they shall haue paine as a woman that trauaileth euery one shal be amased at his neighbour their faces shal be like flames of fire But here we
giftes and graces shine For power breedeth reuerence and goodnesse loue Wherfore if we iudge that power and greatnes are ioyned with goodnes and tempered therewithall we shal not onely be moued to reuerence but this reuerence also will engender loue as it is in the hearts of the faithful towards God because that as they consider him almighty and the greatest of all so they behold him most wise and most good But as I haue already touched if we thinke that this greatnesse or power either is or wil be hurtful vnto vs there is another kind of reuerence which only hath feare that breedeth hatred as it is in them that consider the power of God only the rigour of his iudgement not meditating of his clemencie and benignitie Therefore as the great excellency which in all things appeareth in God especially in power wisdome and goodnes induceth vs to reuerence him aright so if we would haue men to honour reuerence vs there must bee excellent vertues in vs in which men may see the image of God to shine that so he may be honoured reuerenced in vs we in him For therein consisteth that true honour that true reuerence which we ought to seek for to desire And although reuerence hath respect principally to the diuine maiestie at the name of which euery knee ought to bow and to those superiorities which are images thereof vnto which they that are of lesse degree estate and condition ought to giue honor seruice neuertheles mutual reuerence is necessary in al true friendship aswel in respect of the party beloued as of him that loueth And indeed we see howe that true friendes reuerence and honour one another and all because of that good opinion which they haue conceiued eche of others desert Concerning this word Honour it is properly a token whereby we testifie that we iudge him to bee endued with vertue whome we honour Wherefore as the consideration of vertue breedeth honour so honour breedeth reuerence and then honour and reuerence breede maiestie which is the highest degree of honour and encreaseth continually according as those vertues and good things excell which induce vs to honour them For if the vertues be meane wee honour them with a more simple honour if greater we adde thereunto reuerence and then maiestie is that honour which can be giuen to the greatest of all And as this affection of honour is in our heart wee shew it foorth by diuers outwarde signes whereby we signifie and testifie that we acknowledge their greatnes and excellencie whom wee honour and that we submit our selues thereunto Therefore the more humble and modest a man is the readier he will be to yeelde reuerence and honour to them vnto whom it is due Contrariwise the more drunken a man is with the loue of himselfe the more he will presume of himselfe and the greater this presumption is in him the lesse wil he desire that another should be more excellent then himselfe and wil be the hardlier perswaded to beleeue it is so Therefore he will hardly yeelde to giue him honour and reuerence But Saint Paul admonisheth the children of God to goe before one another in giuing honour and to be of like affection one towardes another not being high minded neither wise in themselues that is to say arrogant and selfe-weening presuming very much of themselues So that as pride or humilitie aboundeth in vs God our superiours and friendes shal be more or lesse honoured by vs. As for those signes whereby we testifie this honour and reuerence we are to note that they are many according to the diuersities of nations and countries and of their maners Most commonly we vse to bend the knee in testimonie that we abase and submit our selues to those vnto whom we doe this honour Likewise we vncouer the head which is a token of seruitude according to the custome of the Grecians and of the Romanes There are many other such like signes as to rise vp to giue place to accompanie to salute and infinite others which would be too long to rehearse and without profite all which we call bearing of honour and reuerence or yeelding of reuerence Wherefore although God looketh chiefly to that which is within and not to that which is without yet will he haue vs by externall signes to declare that honour which we owe and beare vnto him and by them to yeeld him homage Thus he requireth that we should testifie our faith and our loue towards him by confession of mouth and by all good workes that there may be alwayes an agreement betweene the body and the soule betweene the heart mouth and hands and betweene the workmaster that worketh and his instruments and woorkes to the ende that the one may bee knowen by the other For if the outwarde signes agree not with the heart we make them false witnesses as the tongue is when it lieth For they beare witnesse to that which is not which is right hypocrisie displeasing God and men Therefore we must beware of this vice and take heed that we make no other outward shew then will stande with the affection of the heart Now hauing spoken of honour reuerence and maiestie by reason of that coniunction which they haue with loue as also of fauour and grace it remaineth now that we should speake somewhat of Mercie and compassion seeing that also hath great agreement with loue Mercie then is a griefe conceiued in our heart in respect of some euil which as we thinke is befallen one that hath not deserued it and this we call also pitie and compassion Now because this affection moueth vs to aide succour and to doe good to them that are afflicted as also to pardon such as haue offended vs therefore Mercie is often taken in the holy scriptures for ayde succour fauour grace beneficence good will benefiting friendship benignitie as also for the affection and inclination of the heart to doe good and to succour all them that haue neede of helpe and this proceedeth of charitie Therfore Saint Paul saith He that sheweth mercie let him doe it with cheerefulnesse Let loue be without dissimulation Abhorre that which is euill and cleaue to that which is good Be affectioned to loue one another with brotherly loue not slouthfull to doe seruice feruent in spirite seruing the Lorde distributing to the necessities of the Saintes giuing your selues to hospitalitie Whereby he admonisheth vs that all the succours which we giue to others ought to proceede from a sincere and cheerefull affection of the heart which should prouoke vs to perfourme the same and this cannot be in vs without the affection of pitie of mercie and of compassion In regard whereof the name of almes is taken from a worde which in Greeke signifieth Mercy and therefore also almes signifieth asmuch as mercie or that succour that is done of mercy and compassion wherewith we are affected in respect of
heart and first of Reuenge Crueltie and Rage And because Reuenge is appointed to punish offences and euery vice findeth a Iudge within it selfe wee will speake also of the affection of Shame which commonly followeth euery vile acte It belongeth therefore to thee AMANA to intreate of this matter Of Reuenge Crueltie and Rage and what agreement there is among them what Shame and Blushing is and why God hath placed these affections in man and of the good and euill that is in them Chap. 58. AMANA If euery one might be a Iudge in his owne cause and execute his own decrees the malice of men doth declare sufficiently that there would be no iustice obserued in the world but robbery publikely put in practice insomuch as the strongest would alwayes carry away the spoile For that blind loue which euery one beareth towards himselfe causeth vs that we cannot see clearly either into our owne or or into other mens affaires so that wee are alwayes more ready to doe wrong to others then to depart from anie thing of our owne Euen so if wee might be suffered to reuenge those iniuries which oftentimes without cause wee suppose wee haue receiued it is certaine wee woulde obserue neither measure nor meane but suffering our selues to be guided by the passion of anger and wrath wee would fall into more then brutish crueltie and rage For as God hath reserued vengeance to himselfe and promised to recompense it so no man carrieth that minde to doe it iustly that is in him neither indeede can any because it is the spirite of a man that offereth iniury to an other whereas the body is but the instrument of the minde and as it were a sworde vnto it which the spirite manageth and causeth to cutte Whereupon it followeth that the party offended can not reuenge himselfe of his chiefest and greatest enemy For God onely is able to take vengeance of the soule and to throwe it together with the body into hell fire Moreouer when wee thinke to hurt the body of our enemy which is but the executioner of the euill disposition of his Spirite wee hurt our owne soule making it guiltie of the iudgement of God who forbiddeth vs all reuenge and commaundeth vs to possesse our soules in patience and neuer to requite euill for euill but to waite the Lordes leasure being assuredly perswaded that he will saue and deliuer vs. Nowe looke what the affection receiueth and embraceth the same doeth it desire to returne and send backe againe where it did receiue it whether it be good or euill Therefore as a good affection both wisheth and doeth well to him of whome it receiueth good will and beneficence so a naughty affection desireth to returne euill receiued vnto him of whome it hath receiued it For this cause when the heart is wounded with griefe by any one it desireth to returne the like to him that hath hurt it and to rebite him of whome it is bitten This affection is a desire of reuenge which being put in execution is reuenge accomplished namely when wee cause him that hath offended vs to suffer that punishment which in our iudgement he hath deserued This punishment is to damnifie him eyther in soule or in body or in his goodes yea sometimes by all the meanes that may bee And when power to reuenge is wanting there are some that fall into outrageous speeches into horrible and execrable cursings crying out for vengeance eyther at GODS hand or of some other that can perfourme it Euery offence therefore that ingendereth hatred anger enuy or indignation bringeth with it a desire of reuenge which is to render euill for euil and to requite griefe receiued with the like againe And when the offence is growen to that passe that nothing can asswage the extremitie thereof nor stay it from breaking foorth into reuenge and hurting by all the meanes that may bee then is this Reuenge turned into Rage For a man in such a case is not much vnlike to a madde dogge For because Reuenge can not take that effect which it woulde haue it vexeth and closeth vp as it were the hart bringing great griefe great torment to the whole body so that a man so affected is as if his heart body were ready to burst asunder Nowe when the heart is hardened with Reuenge it is turned into Crueltie which is a priuation of pitie and compassion For when Offence and Anger are set on fire they exclude all good thoughtes out of the minde and perswade to all kinde of Crueltie of which there are three degrees For there are some that procure it who neuerthelesse woulde not execute it themselues There are others that execute it Besides there is a third kinde of Crueltie when wee faile in perfourming our duetie towardes them that are in necessitie whome wee both ought and might helpe and succour whether this come of euill will or through negligence For thereby wee shewe that wee are without pitie and compassion Heereof followeth inhumanitie which is as if wee shoulde lay aside all humane affection and bee transfourmed into brute beasts Therefore wee may well conclude that all priuate Reuenge proceeding of enuy or of hatred or of anger is vicious and forbidden by God who commaundeth vs to render good for euill and not euill for euill For hee hath ordained the meanes whereby hee will haue vengeance execucuted among men Therefore hee hath appointed Magistrates to execute it according to his Lawe and following his ordinaunce not with any euill affection but with iust indignation proceeding from loue and from true zeale of iustice For to punish the wicked is a very acceptable sacrifice so that there be no intermingling of our own passions withall and that wee exercise not our enuies rancours and reuenges vnder the name and title of Iustice and of the glorie of God For if wee doe so wee cease to exercise the punishments and corrections of the Lorde and put our owne in practice Wee must therefore followe his example For hee suffereth not euill to goe vnpunished if men auoide not punishment by his grace and mercie and by those meanes which he hath appointed for the obtaining thereof Therefore it is often saide of the wicked in the Scripture that GOD will returne into their bosome the euill which they haue done and his children and seruantes desire him also to perfourme the same But when hee doeth it hee is not mooued with any euill affection but onely with the loue hee beareth to iustice and vertue and to his children and with pity and compassion towardes them in regarde of the iniuries done vnto them And as himselfe commeth in iudgement to take vengeance so hee woulde haue them that supplie his place among men vnto whome hee hath committed the sworde for the defence of the good and punishment of euill doers to followe his example But whether they doe so or no there is no sinne that can auoide
them that are taken to bee the vilest and basest persons are a great deale more profitable and necessary and so likewise their callings and offices then many others that are in greater reputation and more honourable according to mans iudgement who notwithstanding might more easily be spared then those of whom there is lesse accompt and reckoning made The like may be said of the vse of the members of our bodies and of the necessitie and need which we haue of them that are accompted most vile and abiect which albeit they be lesse honourable then the rest yet are they more necessary for this life of ours then many others that are a great deale more noble and more excellent For wee may liue without eies without eares without handes without feete and without many other goodly members but not without the intralles and bowelles which are but the sinkes and wide-draughts of our bodies although there be but one of them onely wanting For there is not one of them but it is profitable yea necessary for vs insomuch that no other can doe that office which lieth vpon it the Lord hauing so disposed it that euery one of them must discharge his owne office by himselfe Of these intralles and guttes there are sixe in number neere vnto the stomacke namely three small and three great ones being all of a round and hollowe figure according to the greatnesse and thickenesse of euery one of them They are called the instruments of distribution and purgation because they distribute the foode and send foorth the superfluities and excrements Nowe to conteine all these in their place they are couered and wrapped about together with the other entralles of the naturall partes with two coats or couerings namely with that which is called the Kell whereof mention was made in the former discourse and which couereth the bowells stretching it selfe euen to the priuie partes so that it executeth the same office vnto them that it doeth vnto the stomacke as wee were giuen to vnderstand Besides there is an other coate or skinne called Peritone because it is spread round about the lower belly and enuironeth the stomach the bowelles the kall the liuer the splene and the kidneys in a worde it couereth all the members from the midriffe downe to the sharebone The vse of this is great For first it serueth for a couering to couer all the members then it serueth also for the muscles that are laide vpon them Moreouer it causeth the superfluities of drie meates to descend more speedily Fourthly it keepeth the stomacke and bowels that they swell not easily and fiftly it knitteth together and conioyneth all the members within it as we haue seene howe the other partes of the body are separated and clothed with skinnes and membranes For this cause it is framed and fashioned like to an egge and hath his beginning from the ligaments which binde together the turning ioynts of the reines and is knit vnto them So that the vse of it is to tie and knit vnto the backe the members of the inferiour belly Nowe concerning the intralles and bowels although they ●e vnited to the stomacke and so ioyntly followe each other yet they ●iffer in figure in situation and in offices True it is that their substance differeth little from that of the stomach For they are of a certaine whitish flesh hauing no blood in any of them neither is there any other difference but onely in this that the bigger guts are more full and fatte and the smaller are otherwise Againe they haue all this in common together that they are made of two coates which God hath giuen them for the greater preseruation of them and of the life of liuing creatures For oftentimes vlcers and sores breede chiefely when some great inflammation hath gone before so that they putrifie and fret and one of the coats be spoiled Neuerthelesse a man may liue by the other that continueth sound and dischargeth well enough all his dueties Nowe forasmuch as they are instruments appointed for the purging of the body the fibres or little strings both of the inner and vtter coats are all in a manner crosse-wise except some fewe intermingled long-wise to the ende that the purging might be moderated in such sort as that it neither be too much nor too little The three smaller are placed vppermost which because they were made that the meate being turned into liquor might be conueyed through them therefore it was requisite they shoulde be so slender and that chiefely for two causes The first to the ende the passage might bee more easie the other because that in the very passage some concoction is made of the liquor and foode so that they are the sooner warmed by reason of their slender and thinne making Nowe concerning the name and peculiar office of euery one the first is called Duodene because of the length of it which is without any folding or turning It is as it were a part of the stomach hanging downe or as a changing of the stomach into a gut being twelue fingers long whereupon it was so called by the ancient Physicions although nowe there is none found of that length It beginneth at the porter of the stomach and is so seated beside the liuer that looke where that leaueth and the other following called the hungry gut beginneth there is a passage from the bladder of gall to bring the yellow humour thither called choller to the end it might help forward the meate and make cleane the gut The second called the hungry gut is so termed because it holdeth but a litle foode in regard of the other following so that it may be said after a sort to fast whereof there are three causes The first is the great number of Meseraicall veines and arteries which are in greater number about that gut then about the rest Whereupon they sucke out more speedily the liquor and foode which passeth through that then if they were fewer in number The second cause is because the liuer which is neerest to that gut doeth likewise drawe nourishment from it which is sooner done then from the rest that are farther off The third is the falling downe of the chollericke humour into it which intermedleth not it selfe with the liquor and foode but glideth downe by the side of this gut vnto that which is called Colon to the ende it may thrust forward the excrements and purge the humours which it perfourmeth because it is sharpe and biting Now by reason it continually prouoketh this gut to expulsion it falleth out to be more empty then the residue Then followeth the third small intralle called Ileos by the Graecians both because it hath many fouldings as also for the manifolde knitting of it to the Mesenterium from whence sundrie veines come into this The hungry gut and this haue both one office onely heerein they differ that the hungry Gut is sooner sucked then this which
that nothing is so secrete in nature which they knowe not and whereof they are not able to shewe the causes and reasons But experience sheweth vnto vs daily how farre short they are of that which they thinke and in what ignorance the best learned are wrapped at this day For how many things are daily manifested vnto them which the greatest searchers of nature that euer haue beene were ignorant of vnto whome notwithstanding they that nowe liue are but disciples And how many things doe continually come to passe into which the chiefest sharpest sighted and most expert haue no sight at all or very small And among them that suppose they haue good knowledge howe are they deceiued oftentimes Howe many are doubtfull in many thinges whereof they haue but small coniectures whereupon they gesse at all aduenture and as they imagine We may easily iudge hereof by this that continually one reprehendeth correcteth another and that the later writers condemne sundry things in the former But not to seeke afarre off for examples we may see them daily in the science of the Anatomie of mens bodies For there was neuer yet Physicion or Anatomist either olde or newe that attayned to perfect knowledge and coulde render a reason of euerie thing that is but in one bodie notwithstanding that they are continually conuersant in that matter Therefore to leaue vnto God that secrete which is hidden from our vnderstanding let vs consider of that which wee may knowe touching the forme of a childe in the wombe If wee looke narrowely into that order that nature followeth in the framing of man who is the little worlde wee shall finde it like to that which the Authour of nature obserued in the creation of the worlde which Moses calleth the generations of the heauens and of the earth For in the beginning the earth was without forme and voyd and couered with a great gulph of waters so that the earth and waters and matter of all the elements and of all creatures created afterwardes were mingled and confounded together in this great heape Vnto this the Almightie afterwards added a forme and created so manie goodly creatures and of so diuers natures and kindes as are to bee seene in the whole worlde which hee hath adorned with them and endued with so great beautie that it hath receiued the name of that which is as much as Ornament or Order of things well disposed After the same manner doeth nature or rather God by nature woorke in the creation and generation of men For the seede of which they are formed and which is the matter prepared disposed and tempered by the same prouidence of God for the worke he hath in hand receiueth not fashion presently vpon the conception but remaineth for a time without any figure or lineaments or proportion and shewe of a humane body or of any member thereof The naturall Philosophers and Physicions who haue searched most carefully into this woorke and haue had greatest experience they say that there are certaine membranes and skinnes that are wrapped round about the infant in the wombe which some commonly call the Matrix others call the Mother and that within these skinnes which are three in number as some Anatomistes say others but two as it were within certaine bandes the fruite is preserued vntill the birth Wherein wee are to acknowledge the prouidence of GOD who hath so disposed of nature that euen from our mothers wombe shee is in steade of a mother to vs folding vs vp within bandes before shee that hath conceiued vs can perfourme the same But let vs proceede on with our matter so farre foorth as wee haue learned of the fashion of the childe in the discourse of Philosophers and Physicions They say then that after the wombe hath receaued the seedes ioyned together of both which the childe is to bee framed it commeth to passe that the heate of the Matrix warmeth all this matter as it were in a litle fornace and so rayseth a skinne ouer it which beeing as it were rosted by little and little waxeth crustie and harde rounde about the seede This causeth the whole matter to resemble an egge by reason that this skinne compasseth about the seede which boyleth inwardly through the abundance of naturall spirites that are within it This is that skinne which is commonly called the Secundine or After-burthen beeing ioyned on euerie side to the wombe by reason of a great number of Orifices veynes and arteries reaching thereunto to the ende that by them the blood spirites and nourishment shoulde bee conuayed to the infant For as the whole wombe imbraceth the seede so likewise it heateth and nourisheth the same Therefore this skinne that serueth in steade of little bandes hath two vses the first is to take fast holde of the wombe the other to serue for the nourishment of the burthen and of the childe For this cause there are two veynes and two arteries in it besides a passage in the middest which are as it were the rootes of the burthen and make the Nauill This woorke with other circumstances belonging thereunto which wee omitte for breuitie sake is brought to passe the first sixe dayes of the conception After this skinne they that make three speake of a seconde skinne that is in the middest which they saye was created to receiue the vrine of the childe which in the former monethes is voyded by the Nauill and in the latter moneths by the ordinarie passage This voyding place is ordayned to this ende that the vrine might not frette and rent in sunder the tender skinne of the infant who is therefore couered with a thirde skinne next to the other and that is very tender So that the vrine toucheth not the infant but is voyded by the middle way as I haue alreadie declared Thus you see the beginning of the conception before the burthen bee wholly formed like to an infant Whereunto that saying of the Prophet hath relation Thine eyes sayeth hee did see mee when I was without forme for in thy booke were all things written which in continuance were fashioned when there was none of them before Then hee compareth the secrete partes seruing for generation especially the bellie and wombe of the woman vnto the earth and to an obscure secrete and hidde place euen to deepe and darke caues in the ground For as the earth hauing receiued the seede in which is the vigour keepeth cherisheth increaseth the same euen so fareth it with the wombe and with the mother On the other side as these parts are lowest in regard of the trunke of the body and of all the receptacles and vessels thereof so are they very secret and hidden and as it were in the midst and center of the body if the whole be considered together namely the trunke with both endes thereof For this cause the worke that is there wrought by God is so much the more marueilous because euen in
are themselues or what they haue receaued of God except they bee brought backe to that first dust and earth out of which they are taken euen to their first creation and generation Therefore the holy spirite doeth esteeme it a thing not vnworthy his diuine maiestie often to instruct and to admonish vs by his worde and that so plainely and familiarly as no man be hee neuer so skilfull or so ignorant but he may greatly profit in this schoole at leastwise be made altogether inexcusable if he learne not that which the spirit doeth there teach him For concerning them that are most ignorant he speaketh very plainly to be vnderstood of them propounding that vnto them whereof they cannot be ignorant although they woulde at leastwise which they cannot easily know And as for the skilfuller sort who by their knowledge are able to vnderstand more then others they are so much the more guiltie if they will not giue credite to the woorkes of God as they are propounded vnto vs in the holy scriptures For what idole of nature soeuer they frame to themselues yet must they alwayes come to this first beginning of man which is clean contrary to the reason of humane sense and vnderstanding and so giue glory vnto God otherwise the fruite of all their studie will bee nothing els but confusion and ignorance Now the more we consider of the daily generation of men the more like we shall find it in all admiration to their first originall and creation For who coulde euer I say not beleeue but onely thinke or imagine that out of pressed milk and cruds as it were such as the beginning of man seemeth to bee there could proceede any liuing creature at all especially such an image of God as man is And yet we see this daily come to passe Now from whence commeth this milke Wee cannot for shame speake it without blushing So that if the worke and prouidence of God bee woonderfull in the conception and fashioning of man and in the life and preseruation he affoordeth him in his Mothers belly as wee haue shewed heeretofore surely it is no lesse admirable in his natiuitie and birth as we may now vnderstand Wee haue already heard howe by the faculties and powers of the soule and generatiue vertue thereof the seede is retained and preserued and how the child is formed thereof in the wombe Now all this while it is nourished by blood which is drawne vnto it by the veins of the nauill ordained to that end and therfore also the issue of this blood commonly ceasseth in women with childe as that which is then diuided into three partes For the childe draweth the purest thereof to it selfe and is therewithal nourished Secondly the wombe by veins leading directly to the breasts sendeth that part which is lesse pure wherof the milk is prepared that feedeth the child after it is borne The third part which is the worst staieth still in the wombe and so soone as the child is borne it issueth forth also This foode which the childe receiueth thus in the wombe caused Galen to allege an ancient sentence out of Athenaeus saying That the childe receiueth more from the mother then from the father euen as the plants draw more from the earth then they doe from the husbandman For this menstrual blood first encreaseth the seede and after serueth towardes the growth of the members by ministring food vnto them And for this cause this Authour teacheth that naturally the loue of the children is very great towardes their Mothers and so of the Mothers towardes their children as also in respect of the exceeding great mixture of their substaunce But when the childe is nowe encreased and growne so great and strong that he is well able to moue himselfe and to receiue his foode at the mouth as he is waxen greater so he must haue more store of nourishment then he is able to draw in at the nauil Likewise forasmuch as naturall heate is more augmented he had neede of the more aire and to receiue it in by respiration and breathing so farre foorth as is necessary for his refreshing Whereupon the childe stirreth and moueth with greater strength and violence so that it breaketh the skinnes bands wherein it was wrapped and some veines also and so maketh an issue and way for it self as that which cannot any longer be kept in the wombe Now when the child feeleth that aire entring in which it desireth and seeketh for the reason before alleadged it mooueth it selfe towardes the mouth of the wombe which is the most naturall and easie way of birth by reason that it is borne with the head forwarde Nowe so soone as it is come into the light it cryeth as if it did prognosticate and foretell of the miseries of that life into which it is entered The Philosophers and Phisitions referre the cause of this weeping to that motion which driueth it to the birth as also to those handlings and touchings wherewith it is receiued which cannot bee without some sense of griefe conceiued by this litle tender bodie Which body so long as it is in the wombe is bowed round as it were in a lumpe so that the heeles of it ioyne to the buttockes and the handes lay fast holde of the knees towards which it doeth bow downe the head so lowe that the eyes are ioyned to the thumbes as if they were fastened to them and the nose is thrust down betweene the knees Now when it hath attained to the ninth moneth so that it may no longer tarie there for the reasons before mentioned it turneth it selfe in the womb first with the head downeward and stretching out the legges and other members vpward Then when the houre of child-birth approcheth the babe by kicking and turning it selfe more violently maketh many ruptures by litle and litle so that the skinnes wherein both the Vrine and the sweate are contained bursting asunder whole streames gush out which shew that the birth is hard at hand For presently vpon the renting and breach of the After-burthen through the violence of the childe because there is nothing els that holdeth it vp the babe falleth downe euen as an apple or a peare falleth from the tree when it is ripe And as the childe doeth his best to come foorth at that time which God hath prescribed vnto it so the wombe and the mother of the child doe their partes as much as lieth in them to performe by the prouidence of God who hath prouided accordingly For during the space of those nine monethes wherein the childe is contained in the wombe it is shut vp and embraceth the burthen as close as it may And when the time of birth commeth the wombe doeth not onely open it selfe by litle and litle but all the top of it doeth gather it selfe as close together as it can and so thrust the babe towards the mouth of it wherunto also the neighbour parts lend
enioy whatsoeuer GOD hath prepared for it euen that which is most agreeable and proper to the nature thereof Wherefore wee may say that the death of man is a separation or a departure of the soule from the body wherein GOD propoundeth vnto vs a perfect image of our separation and departure from him which commeth by the meanes of sinne For wee see what becommeth of the body when the soule is gone from it and what it is during the time that it is ioyned therewith The difference is very great Let vs then propound our soule as if it were in the place of the bodie and imagine that God were insteade of the soule in it as wee fee the soule is in the body Then let vs consider what might be the estate of the soule both when it is ioyned with GOD and when it is separated from him For there is greater difference betweene the soule separated from GOD then betweene a body separated from his soule Forasmuch as there is no bodie so stincking nor so infected when it is separated from the soule as the soule is when it is separated from GOD if wee will compare spirituall things with corporall things And contrariwise wee may iudge of the estate thereof when it is ioyned with God by the estate of a body ioyned with his soule and by that difference which is betweene a dead body and a quicke Nowe if wee woulde well consider these things and compare the corporall death of the bodie with the spirituall death of the soule wee woulde abhorre sinne in greater measure then wee doe and bee more afraid of it then of anie thing that may come vnto vs. For there is nothing either in heauen or earth that can hurt vs but sinne as in deede nothing can bring dammage to vs but that which can hurt the soule But it is sinne onely that is able to hurt the soule because by it those meanes are taken away from the soule whereby GOD bestoweth spirituall life vpon it Therefore wee ought not to thinke that bodily death can anie way hurt the soule vnlesse it be in regarde of the euill life past It is true that seeing GOD hath created man to bee of such a nature as to be compounded of a bodie and of a soule and that his true and perfect estate consisteth heerein that they shoulde liue vnited and ioyned together it is very like that there is some euil in the seuering of thē asunder especially if any of them corrupt and perish and the euill may seeme to be doubled if both of them should corrupt perish as many epicures and atheists would haue it For if it be euill to haue but halfe a beeing the euill and imperfection is much more not to be at all seeing there is nothing more goodly or more excellent then to haue a beeing And if it be an excellent thing to bee then to bee well is a farre more goodly and excellent thing For therein consisteth the perfection and absolute felicitie of man Nowe there is no sound or perfect estate of anie man but onely that in which and for which GOD created him And although man bee fallen from that estate yet it hath pleased GOD not onely to restore him againe thereunto by his Sonne Iesus Christ but also to make it vnto him more entire and more perfect yea much more sure and stedfast then it was in the beginning For this cause if besides the benefite of creation wee consider also that of regeneration and of the restauration and repairing of man wee shall finde therein ample matter of true and sound consolation against death For wee knowe that this tabernacle of our body which is infirme faulty corruptible fraile and tending to putrifaction shall bee destroyed and as it were pulled downe to the ende that afterwardes it may bee restored vnto a perfect firme incorruptible and celestiall glorie Wee see that by death wee are called backe againe from a miserable exile to the ende that wee may dwell in our countrie euen in our heauenly countrie In a worde wee are assured by death to enioy such a blessed and permanent estate as the like whereof appeareth no where vpon the earth And if the brute beastes euen the insensible creatures as Saint Paul teacheth vs as wood and stone hauing some sence of their vanitie and corruption doe waite for the day of iudgement that they may bee deliuered from the same shall not wee bee very miserable hauing both some light of nature and also boasting that wee are inspired with the spirite of GOD if wee doe not lift vp our eyes aboue this earthly corruption when the question is concerning our beeing Shall wee not contemne and disdaine the vanitie of the worlde to aspire after the good beeing of the immortalitie to come Let vs knowe then that wee can not finde any true and sound consolation without this consideration and hope which is most assured to them that beleeue in Christ Iesus Therefore they that went not beyond the boundes of naturall Philosophie coulde neuer enioy anie true consolation either against the miseries of mans life or against corporall death And although they beleeued that together with the body whatsoeuer is in man was extinguished or otherwise that after the death of the body the soule remained immortall yet notwithstanding some haue done nothing else but mourne and complaine in this life insomuch as they haue laid violent handes as it were vpon Nature reuiling her and calling her the stepmother rather then the mother of mankind others haue doubted of their future estate and condition not being able to learne and knowe whether their soules should liue either in ioy and rest or els in paine torment but only by opinion Of which if we would discourse at large and consider particularly of their reasons we should be confirmed more and more in that true consolation that ought to bee in the heart of euery Christian against the honour of death Therefore I greatly desire ACHITOB to heare thee discoursing vpon this matter Of the chiefe consolations which the wisest amongst the Pagans and Infidels coulde drawe from their humane reason and naturall Philosophie against death of the blasphemies vsed by Atheists and Epicures against God and Nature what Nature is and who they bee that attribute vnto it that which they ought to attribute vnto God Chap. 76. ACHITOB. Trees haue their seasons in which they beginne to budde and afterwards do blossome which blossome in conuenient time taketh the forme and fashion of the fruite and after that it continueth growing vntill it becommeth ripe and beeing come to the greatest maturitie and ripenesse that it can haue it falleth down of it selfe and still consumeth more and more The same may bee saide of leaues But this happeneth not to all nor yet altogether after the self same maner to all those vnto whō it doth happen For some fruits perish euen in the very bud or els
yea they haue some sense and perseuerance of the alteration of seasons according as they fall out by the course of the spheres but yet not by any such knowledge and vnderstanding as is in man Nowe sense and knowledge cannot proceede of the power of the elements but is deriued from some higher thing For it is by meanes of a more celestiall power that beastes are distinguished from plants holding more of the excellencie of their Creatour declaring it a great deale more But man hee mounteth vp much higher For hee ascendeth vp aboue all the heauens euen vnto God and to those spirituall natures by meanes of reason and vnderstanding which make his soule capable of heauenly light and wisedome and of diuine inspirations Whereupon it followeth that the originall and birth of the Soule is celestiall And therefore in this diuersitie of the faculties and powers of the soule and life of man wee must note this that the lower kindes of the soule and life are not the Well-springs and fountaines of the highest as if those powers and faculties did first set these latter awoorking or as if the highest did spring of the basest and receiued their vertues from them but they are onelie certaine aydes and degrees of helpe whereby the highest and chiefest descende and ascende So that the Vegetatiue and nourishing life and vertue is not the originall of the sences and sensitiue vertue but onelie a degree by which the facultie of sense is deriued to the bodie and by little and little ascendeth vp to her powers and offices The like may bee sayde of the vnderstanding and of reason in regarde of the sensitiue facultie For euerie sort and kinde of life and euerie power of the soule hath beginning of it selfe and certaine boundes within which it is conteined Wherein we haue to consider a marueilous woorke and prouidence of GOD in that hee hath ioyned and linked togethet in man things that are so diuers For wee take this as graunted that the soule of man is a spirituall nature and not corporall that it is immortall and created for the contemplation of celestiall and eternall things On the other side wee see howe this so excellent and diuine a nature is ioyned to that part and power that is called Vegetatiue and Nourishing which seemeth rather to bee corporall then spirituall to bee more terrestriall then celestiall and to bee as it were the Kitchen of the bodies of liuing creatures and the Store-house and Originall of their generation So that there is no man of any sounde minde who knowing this marueilous coniunction of nature in thinges so diuers and considering that it cannot come to passe by happe-hazard and at aduenture but hee must needes bee rauished with great admiration and acknowledge an admirable prouidence of God the Creator and Lord of nature But they that are instructed in the holie worde and in the doctrine of the Church haue yet a further consideration of these thinges For they knowe well that albeeit this Kitchin of mans bodie shall haue no necessarie vse in the life to come neuerthelesse God hath established this order and woulde haue it thus ioyned to the soule and spirite to the ende that those beginnings of eternall life and of that true and perpetuall wisedome which hee hath put into vs shoulde bee kindled and inflamed in this mortall life For they shall not shine foorth in anie there who haue not heere had some beginnings but haue suffered those to bee cleane extinguished which they haue receiued of GOD. For this cause doeth the voyce of God and of his heauenly doctrine sounde in mens eares and to these endes hath hee ordayned that gouernement which ought to bee amongest them and hath bounde and fortified it with manie bondes and rampires Wherefore wee stande in neede of doctrine of instruction and discipline vnto which things the consideration of mans nature may greatly helpe vs. For there is no science or humane wisedome howe great soeuer it bee that is able to rehearse and comprehende the great profite which this consideration can affoorde to men euen so farre foorth as they may verie well learne and knowe And of this wee may the better bee resolued if we consider well of that which hath alreadie bene handled yea we may the better iudge hereof if wee perfectly vnderstand that diuision of man made by S. Paul and mentioned by vs in this discourse Therefore AMANA proceede you in the residue of this matter giuing vs first to vnderstand what is the nature and offices of those pure animal cleare and bright spirits which we saide were seruiceable to the soule for all kinde of vnderstanding and knowledge Afterwardes you may more easily instruct vs at large and teach vs what difference there is not onely betweenethe soule and the instruments thereof whereby it worketh but also betweene the instruments themselues and their nature and offices and which of them are nearest or remoued farthest from the soule Of the nature and varietie of the animall spirites and how they are onely instruments of the soule and not the soule it selfe of the nature of those bodies wherein the soule may dwell and worke of the difference that is not onely betweene the soule and the instrumenes by which it woorketh but also betweene the instruments themselues and their natures and offices and which of them are neerest or farthest of of the degrees that are in the vnion and coniunction of the soule with the bodie Chap. 78. AMANA It is requisite that workmen should haue instruments answerable to those works which they are to make and if they haue taken in hand but one single and simple worke they neede but one toole fitte for that purpose as to sawe timber there needeth but a sawe But they that are to make many workes or one woorke that is full of varietie stand in need of many instruments as painters ioyners carpenters masons and such like The same may bee saide of the soule and therefore it hath many members in the body that are giuen vnto it as instruments to serue for those woorkes which it hath outwardly to perfourme Moreouer the soule hath humours to preserue and vphold the members and to keepe them alwayes ready for their worke by those meanes which we haue heard already besides it hath vital spirits of which the animall spirites are bred which serue in steade of a light to garde and conduct it in the actions both of the external and the internall senses And as there is great force in a toole or instrument to cause a good or euil worke so is there in the humors spirites and members of the bodie whereby we are made fitte to exercise and to execute all actions whether they concerne life and sense knowledge and vnderstanding or will and affections For it fareth in this matter as it doeth in the disposition of the aire which the thicker and more obscure it is the lesse cleare will the light
of soule spirite and heart are taken with the causes wherefore Of the diuisions of man made in the holy Scriptures as well in respect of the soule as of the bodie in what significations the names of soule spirit and heart are vsed therein and the causes why of the intire sanctification of man howe the soule is taken for the life and for the members and instruments of nourishment and for nourishment it selfe Chap. 79. ARAM. Forasmuch as God so honoureth our bodies as to call them Temples of his holie spirite I thinke they cannot bee such in deede except they bee wholly dedicated and consecrated vnto him so that wee separate them from all filthinesse and pollution by giuing our selues to all kinde of sanctimonie and honestie of life For then is the body wholly sanctified when all the senses and members applie themselues onely to good and holy woorkes commaunded by God and when they abstaine from the contrarie Whereupon it commeth to passe that the eyes turne aside from beholding all vaine things and take pleasure onely in seeing that which may rauish man with admiration at the excellencie of the woorkes of God and induce him to well-doing The like may bee sayde of soundes of voyces of wordes in regarde of the eares And as for the tongue it is not polluted with vile speeches with lying slandering and blasphemie but prayseth God and rehearseth his works and woonders speaking alwayes with a grace to the edifying of all In like manner the mouth serueth man for the selfe-same vse as the stomacke also and the bellie with all the rest of the members that serue for the nourishing of the bodie are not defiled through gluttonie and drunkennesse So that the bodie liueth not to eate but eateth to liue and to make supplie to those necessities vnto which GOD hath made it subiect Therefore it obserueth sobrietie and is contented to minister to the naturall affections that God may bee serued in this life Neither doeth it abuse the members of generation to whoredome and villanie but conteineth them within their office and lawfull vse And as for the feete and hands with all the rest of the externall members it keepeth them also within the compasse of their duety But seeing the whole body all the members therof take from the soule all their actions and vses they cannot bee sanctified for the seruice of God and of holy things vnlesse the soule be first sanctified which giueth vnto them life motion and sense For this cause Saint Paul speaking of the sanctification which he wisheth to the Thessalonians before hee maketh any mention of that of the bodie hee beginneth with the Spirite and Soule as wee haue alreadie heard Now because the soule hath diuers powers he vseth two wordes the better to note them out especially the chiefest of them For as it hath beene alreadie declared vnto vs albeit the soule hath manie powers and offices in the bodie of man yet there are not so manie soules in the bodie as there are faculties and effectes thereof but one onely soule which doeth all that For this cause the name of soule is diuersly taken in the holy scriptures Sometime it is taken for that spirituall substaunce that is ioyned with the bodie to giue life vnto it and for all the powers thereof and sometime againe for one part of those faculties and powers The like may be sayd of the name of spirite and of heart and that for the same reason Thus doeth the Scripture sometimes diuide the whole man into two partes onelie namelie into bodie and soule as when Iesus Christ sayeth Feare yee not them which kill the bodie but are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and bodie in Hell And often also the same holie worde taketh the one of these two partes for the whole euen in that signification wherein wee take the name Person in our tongue For this cause wee reade so often in the worde All flesh and euerie soule for euery person Also Giue mee the Soules for giue mee the persons And all the Soules of the house for all the persons thereof Nowe because the vnderstanding and the will are the principall faculties and powers of the soule when the Scripture meaneth to set them downe distinctly and to expresse them together with the nature and vertue of the soule it taketh the spirite for the one and the soule for the other namely the spirite for the reason and vnderstanding the soule for the wil affections For otherwise how should euery man be entire soūd vnles his thoughts were pure holy all his affections rightly ruled finally his whole bodie made obedient and seruiceable to euerie good woorke For wee haue hearde alreadie what Lordship is attributed to the reason and to the vnderstanding then howe the will and affections are in the middest to commaund and lastly the bodie to serue and obey So that a man is then altogether pure and sounde when he thinketh nothing in his minde desireth nothing in his heart neither executeth any thing with his members but that which pleaseth God Wee haue a place in Esay which teacheth vs verie clearely that the spirite and soule are so taken and distinguished as wee say The desire of our soule saith he is to thy name and to the remembraunce of thee With my soule haue I desired thee in the night and with my spirite within me will I seeke thee in the morning We see how first he attributeth desire to the soule thereby to declare the affection of the people towardes the Lorde Then hee maketh mention of the remembrance and memorie that hee hath of God which is in the minde So that it seemeth hee comprehendeth the vnderstanding and will in the first verse vnder the name of Soule Afteward in the verse following he distinguisheth them more specialy attributing desire to the soule then watchfulnesse and diligent inquisition to the spirit which is not without thinking and discoursing that appertayne to the minde Wherefore the Prophet minding to signifie how he was wholly addicted to the Lordè with all his senses and vnderstanding and with all his heart and will and that all his affection was towardes him hee vseth this distinction betweene the soule and the spirite Likewise wee finde these two names Soule and Spirite ioyned together in this signification in the Psalmes and I am perswaded that for the same reason the blessed Virgine ioyned them together in her song when she sayd My soule magnifieth the Lord and my spirit reioy●eth in God my Sauiour Nowe as the Scripture vseth this distinction the better to expresse the faculties and powers of the soule so Saint Paul sometimes distinguisheth them into three that they may the better bee knowen as when hee writeth to the Ephesians in these woordes This I say therefore and testifie in the Lorde
which ought to admonish them of that that hath bin set downe to cause them to thinke more diligently therevpō We may say the same of their lust For although it be in the number of those pleasures that are most earthy brutish which the senses themselues both externall and internall ought to be soonest wearie of for the reasons before heard neuertheles they shew plainely how insatiable this appetite is in them in that no kinde of lust can content them insomuch as they are caried headlong there withall euē beyond the bounds of nature within which brute beasts containe themselues And truly all these things ought to driue vs into admiration and cause vs to consider the iust iudgement of God vpon men how he is reuēged of them for dishonoring him their own nature by suffring it to degenerate wax beastlike in forsaking spirituall heauenly diuine things for those are corporall earthly and brutish Therefore God depriueth them of that vnderstanding which he had giuē them that they shoulde torment themselues after such things as vexe their spirite as it were damned soules and that so much the more miserably and with lesse contentation as they enioy more of them For what a torment is ambition and couetousnes and other affections and vices that accompany them And if we speake of lust we see what is the vengeance of God vpon them who going beyond the bounds of nature so dishonor their bodies and their owne nature that there is no essence or nature whatsoeuer vnto which they may be compared For none doe so much peruert their nature as they I meane not beasts only but not the deuilles themselues And although they be so beastlike as to consider no more of the nature and essence of their soule then they doe of beasts yet the very figure of their bodies should make them to thinke that God hath not made it differing from beasts and namely in creating the head and face vpwards but that hee hath also endued them with a soule differing from theirs to the ende it might be correspondent to the body in which it is But it belongeth to thee ASER to prosecute this argument thereby to shew vnto vs the immortalitie of the soule Of the testimonie that men haue of the immortal nature of the soule in their very body by the composition and frame thereof of that which is in the motion and rest of their soule how the creation of the whole world should be vaine how there should be no prouidēce of God no religion no diuine iustice if the soule were mortall of the multitude and qualities of the witnesses that stand for the immortalitie thereof Chap. 93. ASER. That good king Ezechias complaining in his sicknes said Mine habitation is departed and is remooued from me like a sheepeheards tent I haue cut off like aweauer my life This holy man compareth his body and the life of man in it to a tabernacle and lodge or to a tent and pauillion which are no firme lodgings but remoueable and such as may be transported from one place to another as souldiers carry away theirs when they raise their camp to pitch it in some other place And indeed a mans body in this world is as it were a lodging assigned for his soule to abide in a while not to dwell there alwayes as it were in one place For this life is like to a militarie life and as a continuall warfare vntil such time as we depart hence and that God cutteth it off after wee haue finished our appointed dayes as a weauer cutteth off the threedes at the end of his web after it is finished Therefore Saint Peter also calleth his body a tabernacle when he saith I thinke it meete as long as I am in this tabernacle to stirre you vp by putting you in remembrance seeing I knowe that the time is at hand that I must lay downe this tabernacle euen as our Lorde Iesus Christ hath shewed mee Saint Paul also vseth the like manner of speech when hee saieth For wee knowe that if our earthly house of this tabernacle be destroyed we haue a building giuen of God an house not made with hands but eternall in the heauens For therefore we sigh desiring to be clothed with our house which is from heauen And to this agreeth that which is written in the epistle to the Hebrews For here we haue no continuing citie but we seeke one to come Here truely are notable testimonies of the second and eternall life against them that doubt of the immortalitie of the soule But according to that which is giuen vs in charge to discourse of touching this matter wee must bring them other testimonies euen in their bodies seeing their spirit cannot mount vp to celestiall and diuine things We may easily iudge if there be any light of nature remaining in our minde that God would haue vs knowe by the composition and stature of our bodies howe the soule and spirit dwelling within them shoulde be affected and whither it ought to looke For why woulde God lift the head face of men vpwards and not the head of beasts but that hee woulde admonish them thereby that they are of a celestiall nature and that they must alwayes looke not to the earth as beasts do but to heauen as to their natiue country from whence they receiued their Originall in respect of their principall part which al Atheists and Epicures doe renounce And if the body be lifted straight vpward the spirite is much more which ascending by degrees from inferiour things maketh no stay vntill it come to heauenly and diuine things and hauing at length attained vnto them it stayeth there and contenteth it selfe therein In regard whereof as in naturall things we knowe by their moouing and resting which is their naturall place so by the same reason wee may iudge of the naturall place of mans soule which is in perpetuall motion and can finde no rest here below on the earth as the soules of beasts can which because they are altogether earthy and al their natural and proper good comming from no higher place then from the earth their snowts also are continually bending towards it and the more earthy and brutish they are the more downwards do they alwayes bend This we may easily perceiue if we compare not onely the beasts of the earth with birdes which holde more of the nature of the ayre and liue most therein but also if wee compare the beasts of the earth one with an other For albeit all of them haue their snowts inclining towards the earth yet the hogge hath his head more bending downeward then others haue For it is fashioned and bowed after such a fashion that no beast can lesse lift vp the head and stretch it towardes heauen then the hogge neither is any so much troubled as that is when by force it is compelled to looke vpward The same may bee saide
7. What the word 〈◊〉 importeth in the ●●eation of the woman Genes 2. 22. The true ende and vse of knowing th● booke What the simple or similary parts of mans body are Of the bones of mans body Gods prouidence great in the creatiō of the bones A fit similitude Of the ligaments Of the gristles Of the sinews Of pannicles and ●ilaments Of the veine● Of the arteri● Of the flesh The bones most earthy of all the parts A double vse of Anatomy Esay 40. 6. Iob 14. 1 2. Foure principall parts of the body Of the midriffe Eccles. 12. 3. Psal. 6. 2. and 22. 14. isay 38. 13. Iob 21. 24. Esay 66. 14. Three parts of the legge Of the armes and handes The agreement and difference betweene the workes of God and the workes of man Psal 33. 9. rom 4 17. All handy workes ought to tend to common profite Of the Arte of Palmestrie Of the Palmestry of Christians The vse of the hand The properties of the nayles Of the three partes of the whole arme Three parts of the hand Of the backe-bone Eccles. 12. 6. Of the holy bone Of the marow of the chine Eccles. 12. Of the skinne of the braine called the golden Ewer Of the ribbes The keyes of the throate Of the workemanship of the ribbes and of other bones How many false ribbes there are 2. Sam. 2. 23. 3. 27. Psal 139. 14. Why the belly is not enuironed with bones Of the Share bone or tayl●bone Of the buttocke bones Of the marow Iob 21. 24. Nucha Of the bones of the head Of the necke and vse thereof Of the flesh Of the muscles What voluntary motion is A comparison betwixt the body and a chariot The differences of flesh Diuers vses of the flesh Two kindes of Kernels in the bodie The least part in man full of admiration and very profitable Of the pappes of their situation and vse The difference betweene the care of men and beasts ouer their litle ones A good lesson for children Of the forme of the pappes Psal. 8. 2. How children ●resed in their mothers belly How and whereof milke is made How the milke is wrought and whited Whereof womans milke is made How and where an infant receiueth breath and foode in the wombe A similitude The vses of fatte in the body Three skinnes of the body The first skinne hath no feeling no● blood Of membran●● and tunicles Of the haires Good lessons for the gray headed Eccles 12. 5. Prou. 20. 29. Leuit. 19 32. Of the beard Esay 15. 2. 2. Sam. 10. 4. Of womens haire 1. Cor. 11. 5 6. Vers. 1● 14 15 The schoole of Nature is the schoole of God Wherein true 〈◊〉 consisteth Of the beautie that is in the face A good instruction for euery one Fiue corporall senses Foure things required in bodily senses Of the sense of touching No body can live without some sense of touching Some members of the body absolutely nec●●●tie to life A prouerbe An other point of Gods 〈◊〉 The hands sometimes stand in st●ade of the tongue and cares The opinion of the Stoics and Academics In Phad in 〈◊〉 14. de ●rap●● Euang. c. ● Of the eyes and of their vse The eyes draw neerest to the nature of the soule Sight is our first mistresse O● spirituall eyes spirituall light 〈◊〉 the light 〈◊〉 1. Tim. 6. 16. The difference betwixt the sight of men and of beasts Of colours and of their nature varietie and vse All compound colours made of blacke and white mingled Nothing seene but by colour Of the matter and humours of the eyes Of the Christalline humour How the humor● are placed How Gods prouidence appeareth in the eyes Of the tunicles and skinnes of the eyes Fiue tunicles A testimonie of Gods prouidēce Of the forme of the eye Of the muscles of the eyes Of the visuall sinewes The vse of the kernels neere the eyes Of the cyclids of their haires The vse of the eyebrowes Against the pri●● of women Psal 94. 9. Of the proportiō betweene the heauens and the bead Eccles. 12. 3. The eyes drawe neerest to the nature of fire Psal. 123. 1. Matth. 6. 22. 23. The agreement betweene the eies of the soule and those of the body Iohn 9. 6. The situation of the cares Of their making Of their forme The cares of men and apes only are without mouing Of their vse Of the place of hearing Three small bones in the eares Of two skinnes within the eares What profite and pleasure is receiued by the eares Eccles. 12. 4. How doctrine is learned The benefite of Lectures Prou. 1. 5 6. How hearing is framed in the eares 1. Cor. 15. 33. Esay 6. 9 10. Three vses of the tongue The instruments of the voyce The vse of the wesel of the throte Fiue instruments requisite to lea●●e the voyce into speech Of the dignitie of speech Ecclus. 17. 5 6. 〈◊〉 sermon Two sortes of speech in man The degrees by which we come to ●●eech What voyce is Speach representeth all the partes of the soule Who is to be accompted eloquent Hebr. 1. 3. Of the image of the heauenly word in the speach of man There must be an harmony betwixt the heart and the tongue Of the nature of the lungs Why the heart and speach must agree together Iob 33. 1 2 3. Iam. 4. 11. psal 12. 2. Matt. 12. 34 35. luk 6. 45. Prouer. 6. 21 23 24. Prouer. 12. 13. Prouer. 29. 11. Of the pipes and instruments of the voyce Of the wind pipe From whence proceedeth the change of voice in sickenes Eccles 12. 4. The Anatomists call it La●inx How the voyce is made great or small A testimony of the prouidence of God Faire Organs within euery man The praise of eloquence The description of the tongue Of spittle and the profite thereof Our speach ought to be vpright The profit of speach Gene. 11. 7. Actes 2. 3 4. A miracle of letters The benefit of letters The difference betweene voyce and speech The vses of Grāmer Logicke and Rhetorike We cānot speake wisely without the knowledge of God and his worde Why the tongue is placed neere the braine 1. Cor. 14 2 14 15. The mistresse of the tongue Iames 3. 6. Why the tongue is so fashioned and fenced on euery side One member may se●ue for many offices Why the mouth is the fittest place for the tongue The officer of the tongue Of the mill of mans body Eccles. 12. 3 4. Of the kitchin of the body God ministreth food to all creatures Of teeth and of theirs diuers kindes The tongue like to a baker Of the Gullet or We●●●●d Of the Epiglt or litle tongue Good lessions for euery one What the palat is Iob 12. 11. 34. 3. Of the prouidēce of God in the varietie of tastes The sence of taste necessary for Physicions Another vse of the spittle How the senses agree with the elements Of heate and humiditie the preseruers of life A comparison betweene
the office of the eyes to the end they may see all things better and comprehend all sorts of shapes better then if they were flat or hollow or square or of some other fashion besides round as a man may iudge by the diuersitie of looking-glasses and of their figures and makings according to the variety of which they represent diuersly those things whose images they receiue Now because man as also all other creatures goe forward and not backward or sidewise therefore God hath not placed the eyes either in the hinder part of the head or on any side thereof but before And although the eyes be moueable and made to turne on euery side yet they neuer turne cleane backward but onely sidewise so farre as they can see and behold well For they haue nothing to looke vpon within the head but only without Therfore they haue this aduantage besides that being set in that place which is assigned vnto them in the head they may turne from one part to another and see not onely on the right hand and on the left but also behinde by that motion which the head hath from his sinewes by meanes of the necke which motion the head should not haue if it were seated vpon the shoulders without a necke and this is another commoditie of the necke whereof we spake not before Nowe before wee goe any further in the discourse of those partes that are about the eyes for their defence preseruation it shal be good for vs to consider here of the goodly painting and varietie of colours that are in them For first wee haue a white colour which couereth the greatest part of the eye next that goodly smal circle which is round about the eye then the apple of the eye which the Hebrews call the daughter of the eye being in the midst of it as it were a little glasse where in a man may alwayes see some image as it were in a glasse when one looketh into it This little circle is called by some a Crowne and by others a Rainebow because of the diuersitie of colours that are seene in it which are not all alike in all men For some haue this circle more black others more gray others more yealow or more redde Moreouer besides the sinewes of those muscles that are giuen to the eyes to moue them euery way eche of them hath one proper vnto it selfe wherby the life and vertue of seeing is communicated vnto it from the braine by meanes of the soule that giueth life to all the bodie Therefore these sinewes differ from all the rest in that they are not solide but hollow within like to little water pipes to carry vnto the eyes the spirites of sight which are as it were a little flame of light whereby they receiue from the brayne life and vertue of seeing Next we are to consider how God hath placed them neere the nose to the end they may purge also by that on eche side aswell as the other humours of the braine Therefore there are kernels hard by them in the head which serue both to moysten and to water them according as they haue neede by reason of their burning nature and perpetuall motion and also to retaine and soke in humours least they should descend and fall downe vpon them too fast and so hurt them Besides this commoditie the nose in his place is vnto both the eyes in steade of bulwarks and so also are the bones which close them in on euery side and the balles of the cheekes which are higher then the holes of the eyne that they also might serue to defend them Moreouer God hath further armed them with eyeliddes which serue them both for ornament and are also in stead of gates vnto them hauing muscles to open and to shut them eyther wholly or in part as neede shall require both for sight for sleeping and waking and for defence And besides the eyebrowes wherwith God hath couered them aboue the liddes there are little haires growing at their brimmes which God hath not giuen in vaine For first they serue to direct the beames of the sight that they may see more directly next they serue for defence against litle flyes against 〈◊〉 mo●tes and other small things that might enter in and trouble them Moreouer they serue for ornament as it were some pretie border round about them And because the haires of the eyeliddes haue an other office then those of the eyebrowes therefore they are otherwise disposed for they are not so thicke nor mingled one within and about another as the hayres of the eyebrowes are but they are raunged and set all in ranke euen orderly one by another And as for the eyebrowes they doe not onely serue to set forth the eyes that their beautie may the better appeare but also to defend them against the raine against the sweate of the head and forehead and other things that might descend and fall vpon them if they had not this to stay thē And to this purpose we see the agreement which they haue with the nose on eche side and how the prouidence of God hath made them like to a halfe circle or a halfe moone or a little arche or els after the fashion of a little penthouse to the end that the sweat and raine might haue an easie course and descent on both sides and not runne into the eyes And because they should not hinder in steade of helping God hath created them of that nature that they growe not like the haire beard or nailes but continue alwayes at one stay What then wil those women say for themselues who take so great paines in twitching and plucking off the haire of their eyebrowes to the end they should not be so thick or great as nature hath made them For they thinke it greater beautie when they are shorter and thinner But in this as in all their paintings and prankings they doe not only lift vp themselues against nature as though they would worke her a spite but also be haue themselues as if of set purpose they meant to reproch God for creating thē as he did Now in speaking of the eyes let vs beware that we be not so blind as that we cannot see that thing by them which they teach vs or take no heede of that which they shew vnto vs. For the consideration of one of them alone or of one eyelid or browlidde onely ought to teach vs to open and to lift them on high that they may search out and contemplate him that created them and hath giuen them vnto vs euen to him who saith I that formed the eye shall I not see Therefore we ought to be afraide least our eyes be giuen vnto vs as Iudges to conuince vs of our ingratitude towards God their and our Creator and to condemne vs. For there are but too many miracles to be seene of his almightie power in their creation too many witnesses of