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B00232 Christian policie: or The christian common-wealth. Published for the good of Kings, and Princes, and such as are in authoritie vnder them, and trusted with state affaires. / Written in Spanish, and translated into English..; República y policía christiana. English. 1632 Juan de Santa María, fray, d. 1622.; Blount, Edward, fl. 1588-1632.; Mabbe, James, 1572-1642? 1632 (1632) STC 14830.7; ESTC S1255 347,168 505

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be and of neuer so good and approued iudgement should not be admitted to the Counsell Table till he were past 50. yeares of Age who being adorned with Vertue and experience might assure them that hee would keepe a Decorum in all his Actions and performe his dutie in euery respect Heraclides in Politicis Senec. Epist 60. Bald. in cap. 1. de renun Lex erat sayth Heraclides ne quis natus infrà quinquaginta vel magistratum gerat vel Legationem obiret In fine for Councell Seneca and Baldus affirme That the very shadow of an old man is better then the eloquence of a young man But because good Counsailes are not in our hands but in Gods hands who Psal 33.10 as Dauid saith Dissipat consilia gentium reprobat consilia principum The Lord bringeth the Counsaile of the Heathen to nought hee maketh the deuises of Princes of none effect Prou. 21.30 And the wisest of Kings tells vs. Non est sapientia non est prudentia non est consilium contra Dominum There is no Wisedome no vnderstanding no Counsell against the Lord. And in humane things there are so many Contingencies that mans wisedome is not alwaies sufficient to determine the best nor to hit aright in his Counsailes vnlesse the Holy Ghost be interuenient interpose it selfe and assist in them For let Priuie-Counsellours beate out their braines with plodding and plotting let them be neuer so vigilant neuer so studious they shall erre in their ayme and shoote beside the burt if hee direct not the arrow of their Councell and wisedome if he do not in Secret illighten their hearts illuminate their vnderstanding and dictate vnto them what they are to doe Which is done by the infusiue gift of the Holy Spirit co-operating in vs which is a diuine impulsion which doth eleuate raise vp our vnderstanding to hit the white and to choose that according to the rule the Diuine Law which is fit to be followed as also to be a voided And this is the gift of Councell giuen by God vnto his friends and such as serue him truly to the end that by his helpe they may light aright vpon that which of themselues they could neuer come neere And he that is not Gods friend nor studies by his Actions to be so let him shake hands with the Holy Ghost let him bid this blessed Spirit farewell this diuine gift Greg. Nyss lib. de lib. arbitrie which is the best saith Nissenus and the most perfect that is in Man so that for to giue Counsaile and Aduice yeares experience and gray hayres suffice not vnlesse his soule be as white as his head and his conscience be pure and cleane from corruption Cani enim sunt sensus hominis The good abilities Galen decognosc curand animi morbis cap. 3. and wise apprehensions of man are those true siluer haires those hoary locks which countenance him and adde authoritie vnto him and not those snowie flakes nor hoare-frost that lies vpon his bearde Aetas Senectutis Vita immaculata Wisd 4.9 Wisedome is the gray hayre vnto men and an vnspotted life is old age So the wiseman renders it of vertuous olde men Galen saith that they haue the facultie of aduising and that of them wee must aske Counsaile God Commanded Moses that he should make choise of the Elders of Israel to gouerne his people De senibus Israel quòs tu nosti Numb 11.16 quod senes populi sint Gather vnto me 70. men of the Elders of Israel whom thou knowest to be the Elders of the people Hoary-headed men accompanied with much vertue an approued life soundnesse of Religion and much prudence are those that are worthy to giue Counsaile and those which Kings are to make choyse of for their seruice The Emperour Charles the fift sayd it was fit that Princes should be serued by men that were learned and vertuous and that the Counsaile and companie of those which were not so were very preiudiciall and hurtfull Counsailours likewise must be of that greatnesse of courage and magnanimitie as may correspond with the Dignitie royall For Kings that haue not had in themselues any great courage haue still honoured noble-minded Counsailours whereas the contrary haue bin disgraced and degraded of their honours by Kings that were naturally magnanimous For it is the condition of cowardly hearts and of base Counsailours en cuerpo y alma as they say in body and soule to propose vnto their Kings base and vnworthy meanes for the remedying of some mischiefes whereon others follow that are farre greater And let them not perswade them that this Age is barraine of vertuous dispositions and Noble mindes which produceth as well as former times whatsoeuer is necessary and needefull for them For the diuine prudence to which particularly appertaineth the conseruation of kingdoms is neuer drawen dry neuer waxes weary And if such men are wanting and appeare not to the eye of the world it is because they are not sought after or not admitted to Councell for the chastisement and punishment of our great and heinous sinnes Besides this one benefit Kings haue aboue others that all good men would be glad to serue them and many do sue and seeke after them and offer their seruice vnto them So that they haue store of choise and may easily make good election if therein they will strip and cleanse themselues of their affections and passions which Eclipse and darken the true iudgement of man And these that I now speake of when they haue found them and made choise of them to be of their Councell let them loue them honour them and trust them And as they shall receiue ease and honour by their good Aduise So let them reward them and conceiue of them as king Alexander did of his Master and Counsellour Aristotle of whom he said that he ought no lesse respect vnto him then vnto his owne father For from his father he had his life his honour and his kingdome but from Aristotle his Instructions Counsailes and directions how he should order himselfe in all his affaires And Scipio doth attribute all the honour of his Victories to his faithfull friend and Counsellour Laelius And Cicero to the Philosopher Publius Cicero lib. 4. epist fam epist vltima for those notable things of his gouernment which he performed in his Consullship so that good and faithfull Counsailours are of great honour profit and ease vnto Kings But let Kings take heede least they strike a feare into their Counselours through their absolute and free condition and make them to withdraw themselues from aduising them what is fitting by seeing them so wedded to their owne opinion and to excuse themselues from giuing Counsaile for that they are dis-heartned discountenanced by them for deliuering their mindes freely for their profit honour Of the Emperour Adrian it is storyed that hee had so noble a condition Vt libenter patiebatur admoneri corrigi
that their King and Master cannot liue and subsist without the assistance of their wit and that there is not that fault they commit but must be forgiuen them out of the necessitie of their seruice Forgetting in the meane while that their King may imagine them to bee dead and how that in such a case though it grieue him yet must hee prouide himselfe of others Let Kings therefore bee beaten from this their errour for he that shall otherwise aduise them and seeke to be the onely man in their fauour and seruice and take vnto himselfe both the right side and the left thrusting all others from thence and gouerning both high and low letting nothing escape his fingers which hee pretendeth out of the necessary vse of his person and so absolutely to become Master of their wills and to haue that hand ouer their Kings that they must not looke vpon any but with their Fauorites eyes such a Fauourite I say pretends to tyrannize a kingdome and by little and little will go crushing the Princes of the bloud the ancient Nobilitie and such as are of power to stand in their way thrusting this man out of Court to day and that other to morrow that hee alone may rule all without any contradiction or opposition in the world Let euery man say or thinke as they list for mine owne part I am perswaded that this is his maine end and drift And the cause thereof is his feare of falling knowing besides his owne consciousnes that there are not onely one or two but many in Court that are able to supply his place and farre better deseruing then himselfe Your Alchymists make gold But how Onely in the colour they will not let it come to the Touch nor any other reall Essay neither will they endure to haue it compared with any other minerall gold for feare lest it should bee discouered that theirs hath no more but a bare shew and apparence Let Princes therefore assure themselues that those Fauourites are but Alchimists that will not admit of any other companie as being priuie to themselues that their vnderstanding is not such pure gold that it can abide the Touch nor any reall Essay But say it should passe for currant and that their mindes were all made of pure gold me thinkes they should aduise and consider with themselues that those that are ingenious and wise men will therefore the rather desire that there should be many for by comparing the one with the other the true light shineth the more and makes it selfe knowne whether it be so or no. And onely your fooles and such as are vnworthy of that they possesse are iealous of that good which they feare to loose when by comparing they shall come to be knowne God did not in vaine place so many members in mans bodie and most of them double had it not beene thereby to teach vs that many are needfull in humane actions and that one is not able to doe all without an infinite deale of toyle extraordinary spending of his spirits and the sudden wasting and consuming of his body And here will suite very well to this our purpose that which Tiberius affirmed when feigning not to bee willing to accept of the Empire hee said going about the bush to discouer the mindes of the Romane Nobilitie and Senate that he alone of himselfe was not sufficient nor yet with the helpe of another for so great a gouernment Whereupon Salustius Crispus taking his Qu a great Fauourite of his starts mee vp and makes me a long Harenga or artificiall oration shewing that Signiorie and Empire could not well consist without being conferred vpon one particular person which is the maine foundation and ground-worke of the good and safetie of a Monarchicall gouernment and that therein himselfe if no body else would take the paines would bee as it were another Ioseph his faithfull Vice gerent lest the resolution of things depending on the will of many it might cause a distraction in businesses either by way of competition or of passion In conclusion after Tiberius had heard this and had throughly sounded their mindes he tooke occasion to tell them That in such a Citie as Rome was sustained and vpheld by so many and such illustrious persons it was not fit that the businesses of State should be remitted to one man alone for many would much more easily execute the offices and affaires of the commonwealth by a fellow-bearing of the burthen For as vnitie in some degrees is both profitable and pleasing so in other some it is hatefull and preiudiciall And therefore out of this consideration I say That a King as the supreme person and principall Head of a kingdome ought to be one alone For the couetousnesse of ruling being insatiable and the nature of power incommunicable it is not possible that two Princes of equall authoritie should continue any long time but both of them suffer in the end or at least the businesses that are committed to their charge But for Fauourites there may bee two or three or more the vnitie remaining reserued for the greater and supremer person And likewise this pluralitie will not be much amisse for if any one of them shall by some accident faile there be others whom the King knoweth and they know him that are fit for his seruice and that haue good experience and knowledge of businesses and all such matters as are current and passable in the commonwealth without being driuen to seeke out new Ministers or to instruct them what to doe in a time of necessitie when things go not well but stand in ill Tearmes laying otherwise hold on the first that offer themselues vnto them to the ouerthrowing of the businesses in hand and the proper hurt and dammage of their Lord and Master at whose cost and by meere erring in great matters they must come to get their learning Let Kings a Gods name reserue for themselues those businesses that are of greatest importance for in this likewise must there bee a setled course and order as is in all well gouerned kingdomes Referring as we said before to the ordinary Councells and Tribunalls ordinary businesses consulting with their Kings those that are of most importance And these Kings by themselues as before mentioned ought to dispatch if therein they be not hindered by default of their health and not to remit and referre them to their Fauourites who in matter of Iustice were it but distributiue should haue no kinde of power For thereby they oppresse those Tribunalls and seates of iustice together with their Ministers and Officers who for that they know they must haue much dependancy on the Fauourite if he shall haue a hand in Courts of Iustice and distribution of Offices cannot but remaine much oppressed and debarred of their libertie and the more if they haue any pretension for their owne interest or increasing of their estate and honour And the reason of all this will plainly appeare if wee
estate and complexion of the man and according thereunto to make vse thereof and of it's vertue And therefore hee that hath by his Kings fauour the supreme disposall of all let him consider and know either by himselfe or by others that are his confident friends being as free as free may bee from naturall affections the dispositions and inclinations of men and together with this the qualitie of the offices and persons which are to gouerne and bee gouerned and let him imply euery one in that for which hee shall bee found fit and good And keeping this course he shall cumply with his owne inclination and naturall desires And shall therein do his King and countrey good seruice But for a conclusion and vpshot of all that is past let those aduertisements serue which follow in the subsequent Chapter CHAP. XXXVII The Conclusion of the former Discourse with some Aduertisements for Kings and Fauourites ALL those that write of the qualities of a good Prince doe agree in this that he ought to haue his will free independent subiect onely to God and his diuine Law without subiecting or submitting it to any other loue For it booteth little that he be Lord of many kingdomes if he be a slaue to that which hee extremely loueth That he ought to bee of a good courage and of a sound and setled iungement not suffering a superiour or equall in his gouernment For as wee said in the beginning of this Discourse kingdomes are by so much the more sustained and augmented by how much the more neare they approach to the gouernment of one Whereas on the contrary they runne much hazard when the reynes of the Empire are diuided and put into seuerall hands The Romanes neuer enioyed so much peace and plenty as after that Augustus Caesar was declared sole Lord of the Empire without dependance on any other Which aduise amongst many other good instructions the Emperour Charles the fifth gaue likewise vnto the King his Sonne to wit That he should be a very precise louer of Truth That hee should not giue himselfe ouer vnto Idlenesse And that he should alwayes shew himselfe a free and independant King not onely in apparence but in substance For it is very proper vnto Kings to rule not to be ruled And to administer their kingdomes themselues by their owne will and not by anothers For he will not be said to be a King who being to command and correct all should easily suffer himselfe to be led away and gouerned by others And therefore it is fit that hee should alwayes stand vpon his owne bottome and in none of his actions expresse himselfe to depend on the aide and opinion of others For this were to acknowledge a Superiour or a Companion in gouernment and to discouer his owne weaknesse Infirma enim est potentia saith Patritius quae alienis viribus nititur Patri to 2. li. 21. Tit. 3. That 's but a poore power that must bee vnder-propt by the strength of others In stead whereof I would haue him to sit in Councell and to treate and communicate businesses with such persons to whom it appertaineth as heretofore I said Saying onely now That that King is in a miserable and lamentable case that must depend on anothers helpe Vpon a certaine occasion Alexander the Great said Se malle mori quam regnare rogando That he had rather die then raigne by supplicating and intreating And no otherwise doth that King raigne who shewes himselfe a Coward and suffers the excellencie of his courage to bee ouerwhelmed and carried away with the current of hard and difficult things which many times offer themselues leauing the resolution of all to the mercie and fauour of others by whose helping hand it seemeth that he liueth and raigneth This said the Emperour Vespasian is to dye standing And as that King is dead which leaues that to another which hee can doe himselfe and which doth properly appertaine vnto his office and as he shall not truly cumply with his obligation if he should go about to draw solely to himselfe the gouernment of his whole kingdome much lesse in like manner shall he cumply therewith if hee should cast off all care from himselfe and relye wholly vpon others For Extreames in all things are ill And an extreme thing it were that hee should take vpon himselfe the whole weight and burthen of businesses and to haue all things passe through his owne hands it being likewise no lesse if he should shift off all from his owne shoulders and put his hand to nothing as did Vitellius and Iouinianus who did in such sort dis-loade themselues of their offices and ridde their hands of all matter of gouernment that all was ordered and gouerned by other mens arbitrement and none of theirs Of the former it is reported that he forgot that hee was Emperour And of the other that hee intended nothing but eating and drinking gaming and whoring So that both of them came to such miserable ends as their retchlesse and carelesse kinde of liuing had deserued Childericke King of France and third of that name is and not without iust cause condemned by the writers of those times for that hee did wholly quit himselfe of businesses and led so idle and vnprofitable a life that he tooke care of nothing recommending all to his great Fauourite Pipine who did rule and gouerne him as hee listed And there was not any meeting or conuersation throughout the kingdome wherein men did not mutter and murmure at it For their nimble and actiue nature could by no meanes indure that their King should be but the shadow of a King and stand for a Cypher sheltering himselfe vnder the shade of another Which could not choose considering how vsuall a thing it is but put spirit into Pipine and adde mettall to his power For it is very proper to the condition of men the more high they are in place and dignitie to desire the more honour and the more wealth There are but few of your great and powerfull persons which are not hydropicall and doe not thirst after new honours and new aduancements And some haue proceeded so farre in their pretensions that they haue presumed as this Fauourite did to quit the King of his Crowne Willingly hearkening vnto those flatterers about him which did whisper this in his eare and egge him on vnto it It likewise began to bee treated of amongst the great Lords of that kingdome How much better command and rule were in one Head then in two And how that all kingdomes had euermore a desire to haue but one Prince And that all prudent and wise men haue in reason of State held this gouernment to be the best and surest and that it was not fit that the vniforme body of a commonwealth or kingdome should bee subiect and obedient to two Heads To wit that one should enioy the name and title of King and the other possesse the power And that it were
Question which is disputed and doubted of by some and may likewise serue for an Auiso vnto Kings whether it be better that the great Lords should be farre off from them or neare about them The Emperour Charles the fifth of famous memory amongst other Aduertisements which hee gaue to his sonne Philip one was That he should not let the great offices of the kingdome nor places of great command rest any long time in one mans hands nor should put his Grandes and great Lords into them but Gentlemen of good qualitie such as were creatures of his owne making And as for his Grandes hee should honour them with some places and offices neare about his person which would be a greater grace both to himselfe and his Court. Others are of a quite contrary opinion and alledge reasons for the maintenance thereof Great men they say if they be not like those little ones which Christ speaketh of are ordinarily of an extraordinary spirit and endeauour all they can increase of honour till they come to occupie the highest place And then will it bee seene of what little esteeme are those great fauours which they haue already receiued There is not that friendship that kindred nor any other bond be it neuer so strong which is not broken through the greedy ambition of ascending to some higher throne For to bee a King saith Euripides all Law is broken For this Appetite is of that force and strength that it breaketh all Lawes both Diuine and Humane For proofe whereof they cite many examples which I purposely omit that I may not offend and tire out the Reader All of them admonishing Kings that they should throughly weigh and consider where and in what places they put them For if they be neare about their royall person it is the torment of Tantalus vnto them to see the warre and the fruit so neare their mouth that greatnesse and power I meane and not to enioy it Which will but prouoke a more hungry appetite in those which doe not possesse it and will breake through hedge and ditch and runne as they say through fire and water transported with this so faire and beautifull a prize as is set before their eyes neuer being at quiet till they come to enioy it For there is not that loue to any thing here vpon earth which doth so much alter suspend and seaze on the minde and heart of man as that of ruling and commanding and to grow great therein And when they see things succeed not according to their minde yet at least in satisfaction of their enuie they will be well content that the waters should be troubled and the world be turned topsie-turuy taking pleasure therein though it be to their owne hurt And what King can secure himselfe that such ambitious persons being neare about him will not at one time or other attempt their ends For greatnesse say they after that it is once possessed quits the memory of the meanes whereby it came to bee so great and findes a thousand excuses for it's weaknesse in offending And the rather for that ill vse hath taught all men this lesson That the reputation of an honest man is not to be preferred before his proper profit and greatnesse Lastly they say That he that ouercommeth and makes good his clayme by his sword needeth not to study excuses and to make Apologies let those doe that that haue the worst end of the staffe and stand at the mercy of the Conquerour In conclusion they resolue this question thus That it is very fit that your great Noble-men should rather liue farre from Court then neare about their King For all of them will be of good vse for the gouernment of Prouinces and Armies whereby both the one and the other will be secured And when they cannot content them in all that they would haue they may entertaine them with these which will be a good meanes to diuert their thoughts and to bridle those Prouinces that are committed to their charge with whom the Maiestie and greatnesse of their Gouernours will be able to doe much And there they are not of that danger For in kingdomes by succession and well setled and where there is no colour of wresting the Scepter out of the bloud-royall there is no feare of trusting the Grandes and great Noblemen with these kinde of Gouernments but it is rather requisite that it should be so For like vnto starres in heauen and their influences on earth they serue for ornament and conuersation in those kingdomes and Prouinces wherein there are ancient and noble Houses for which they are to seeke out men of Noble bloud and good qualitie and of knowne greatnesse to bee conuersant amongst them For the Nobilitie of those kingdomes and Prouinces will thinke themselues not well dealt withall if they shall haue but an ordinary man set ouer them to be their Gouernour be he neuer so wise or neuer so valiant For being that they are to attend all at the gates of him that holdeth that place they may esteeme it as an iniurie to see themselues obliged to acknowledge homage vnto him whom out of that place they would sence vouchsafe him their companie Besides that greatnesse and largenesse of minde and heart that knowes not how to shrinke or be deiected with aduerse fortune a thing so necessary in him that gouernes will sooner bee found in these then men of meaner ranke For as Saint Ierome saith hee that owes much to his bloud and familie will alwayes beare that obligation about him and neuer faile therein Againe he that is borne to command will be lesse insolent in his gouernment as hauing that noble qualitie from his cradle And the people on the other side will more willingly obey him whom they haue alwayes knowne to haue liued in honour and greatnesse And his example will bee of greater importance to reforme the disorders and abuses that shall there be offered Ouer and aboue they further adde That your Grandes and great Noblemen may and haue obligation to content themselues with their present estate if they will but weigh the difference of that it was with that which it is now did not men that are now in honour grow forgetfull of their former meane condition That grieuing them more which falls short of their desire then that doth please and content them which fortune hath with so liberall a hand bestowed on them For no man rests contented with his present estate and condition nor doe we esteeme that so much which wee possesse as the lacke of that we desire doth torment vs. And therefore doe they say that they are not so good to be about Kings and more particularly those which are so qualified for they are like a ling●ing kinde of Caleature or aguish Feuer which makes an end of vs before we are a ware of it working it's effect before wee can looke into the cause Or like vnto the hand in a Clocke or Dyall which tells
Kings Paragraph 1 Of the Magnanimitie of minde which Kings ought to haue Paragraphe 2. Of the blandure gentlenesse and loue which Kings ought to haue Parag. 3. That it much importeth Kings to haue the good Loue and affection of their Subiects Parag. 4. Of sagacitie sharpnesse of wit and quicknesse of apprehension which Kings ought to haue Parag. 5. Of the Discretion which Kings ought to haue Chap. 27. Of the sense of Tasting and of the vertue of Temperance and how well it befitteth Kings Chap. 28. When and at what time sports and pastimes are worthiest reprehension in Kings Parag. 1. Of the Language and Truth which Kings and wherewith Kings are to treate and to be treated Parag. 2. That Kings ought to keepe their Faith and Word Parag. 3. Of that secrecie which Kings and their Ministers ought to keepe Parag. 4. Of Flatterers and their flatteries Chap. 29. Of the sense of Touching Parag. 1 Of Temperance Parag. 2 Of another remedie against Excesses and superfluities depending on the example of Kings Chap. 30. Whether it be fit for Kings to haue Fauourites Chap. 31. Of another sort of Fauourites Chap. 32 Whether it bee fit for Kings to haue any more then one Fauourite Chap. 33 Of the Conditions and Qualities of Fauourites Chap. 34 How Kings ought to carry themselues towards their Fauourites Chap. 35 Whether the Kinsfolke and Friends of Fauourites are to be excluded from Offices Chap. 36 The Conclusion of the former Discourse with some Aduertisements for Kings and Fauourites Chap. 37 Aduertisements for Fauourites and Councellours of State SAP 6. v. 10. Ad vos O Reges sunt hi Sermones mei vt discatis sapientiam non excidatis Qui enim custodierint iusta iustè iustificabuntur qui didicerint iusta invenient quid respondeant VVISDOM 6. v. 10. Vnto you therefore o Kings doe I speake that yee may learne VVisedome and not goe amisse For they that keepe holinesse holily shall be holy and they that are learned there shall finde defence CHAP. 1. Wherein it is breifly treated what is comprehended in this Word Republicke together with it's Definition MAny and those of the grauest sorte that haue beene well versed in all kinde of Learning haue written of a Republicke or Common-wealth And haue diuided and sub-diuided it into many and sundry species and defined it after diuerse and different maners A prolixe and tedious businesse and full of difficulties and farre wide of my intension which is in few both words and reasons to describe a mysticall body with it's Head and principall members and the peculiar Offices belonging to euery one of them leauing to such as shall take pleasure therein the multitude of vnprofitable Questions the ornament of humane Eloquence and the Magazine of prophane histories being of little truth lesse efficacie And taking thence my beginning whence all begin Arist lib. 3. Polit. cap 1. lib. 4. cap. 1. To wit from the definition or Description I say with Aristotle and Plato That a Common-wealth is no other thing saue an Order of Citizens and Cities in which and amongst whom nothing is wanting that is necessary and needefull for the life of Man It is a iust gouernment and disposition of many families and of a Communitie amongst them with a superiour authoritie ouer them And it is a Congregation of many people vnited together fraternized with certaine Lawes and rules of gouernment And because I will not loose time in things not necessarie I omit that gouernment which the Greekes call Aristocratia which is the gouernment of the Nobility as it is with the Signorie of Venice And your Democratia which is popular and consistes of the Many as that of Genoa and the Cantons of the Switz Which though approued by many haue their inconueniences and those no small ones For the Nobilitie and powerfull persons if they not perseuere in the obseruance of the Lawes of good gouernment they presently grow to be couetous and are much subiect to Ambition And because they are but a few they feare the multitude and for to conserue themselues exercise cruelty whereby in the ende it turnes to a Tyrannie For as Mecoenas saith The state of a few Lords is the state of a few Tyrants And he that is the most powerfull the most ambitious and best be friended and respected of the people vpon the least dissension ioynes with the multitude which being it is naturally enuious mutable and a friend to innouation will with a great deale of facilitie ouerthrow the Common-wealth And say the Nobles do not side but agree amongst themselues yet cannot they but liue in feare of the infidelitie of the Vulgar for ordinarily those that haue a hand in the gouernment are more enuied then those that haue none at al. Besides it is a weake kind of gouernment nor is it possible that these few Lords can in large conquer conserue a great Empire as can a King or a Monarke because the forces are lesse vnited in them then in him And the people which is little interessed hath no share or part in those honourable places carry a Capital hatred to your great persons and are hardly drawn to such liberall Contributions as may sustaine a War and subdue kingdomes Your popular Estate in falling from that equality which it pretendeth is easily conuerted into a licentious libertie or rather loosenesse pulling down some setting vp others and is much subiect to Alterations through it's inconstancie weake head-pieces of the Popular For as Tully saith the sea hath not so many stormes perills tempestes as hath this kind of Cōmonwealth And of force euery one attending his owne proper good and priuate interest it must runne vpon one of these two rockes Either on the Tyrannie of him that is the strongest and vpheld by the fauour of the Maior part liftes vp himselfe aboue them all Or on the Plebeian gouernment then which none can be worse for all then falls into the hands of ignorant people who put ordinary people into the highest places of honour and command without any distinction or reckoning of rich noble wise or vertuous What good Counsaile or sound Aduise can all the Communaltie giue put all their braines together in a doubtfull case or businesse of importance Eccl. 7.27 when as Salomon saith there is scarce one to be found of a thousand of abilitie and sufficiencie in this kinde But put case that such a one may happily be found amongst them how shall he be heard with silence What patience will their eares lend him What secrecie will be had in that which is treated be it of Peace or War that it be not divulged before it 's due execution your Tumultes and seditions shall be more ordinary and greater then in other states because your meaner sorte of people are gouerned more by their owne vnruly appetites and womanish longings then by reason and discretion And your base and cruell Vulgar which vpon the least
receiue good Counsaile that they dissemble as much as they can their particular good will and liking in the businesse proposed But that which is heere of greater consideration is the vertue fidelitie and truth of a Counsailour a minde without passion disinteressed and pure For it oftentimes hapneth that he that craueth Counsaile hath not his intention so sound as is requisite nor his iudgement so strong as to reduce him into the right way and being set in it to follow the best But to grow to a Conclusion that cannot faile which Truth it selfe our Sauiour Christ said in his Gospell A good tree cannot bring forth had fruit nor a bad tree good And the badge or cognisance of good or bad Counsaile shall doubtlesse be the goodnesse or badnesse the wisedome or ignorance of the Counsailour And therefore I importunately presse that it mainly importeth a Prince to beware of whom he taketh Counsaile For by how much the more profitable is a wise vpright Counsailour by so much the more preiudiciall is he that is vniust and vnstreight And therefore the Holy Ghost saith Tob. 4.19 Consilum semper à sapiente perquire Aske Counsaile alwaies of the wise And in another place Eccl. 6.6 Pacifici sint tibi multi Consiliarius sit tibi vnus de mille Amongst a 1000. Men scarce will there be found one that is fit to giue Counsaile For some want wisedome prudence other some purenesse and cleannesse of heart and a third sort are so ouerswaied with passion that they do not simply sincerely perswade the truth A cleare Example wherof we haue in King Rehoboam the sonne and successour of King Salomon who though he succeeded his father in so rich a Kingdome and so inured to peace and obedience to their King yet notwithstanding was in an instant vndone vtterly lost by bad both Counsaile and Counsailours For good Counsellours are the life and soule of a Kingdome And when it is not vnderpropped with such like a body without a soule it presently sinkes falls from it's state wherin it stood And therefore the holy King sayd Psal 101.6 Oculi mei ad fideles terrae vt sedeant m●cum Ambulans in via immaculata hic mihi ministrabit Non habitabit in medio domus meae qui facit superbiam qui loquitur iniqua non direxit in conspectu oculorum meorum Mine eyes shall be vpon the faithfull of the Land that they may dwell with me Hee that walketh in a perfect way hee shall serue me Hee that worketh deceit shall not dwell in my house hee that telleth lyes shall not tarry in my sight And in this particular Kings ought to be very wary and circumspect In the next Chapter we will treate of the Care which they are to take in choosing their Counsellours of State for the errour in this one is the fountaine of all errours and the totall Perdition of Kings and kingdomes CHAP. VIII Of the Diligences which Kings are to vse in the Election of their Ministers and Counsellours IT is a question that hath beene much sifted and winowed amongst your Morall Philosophers as also your Diuines whether Election be formally a worke of the Vnderstanding or the Will Gregory Nyssenus saith That it is composed of both partes To wit of the Act of the Will and of the Vnderstanding And hee said well For therein is required both a fullnesse of Knowledge and a freenesse of Will And it is the Doctrine of Diuus Thomas who saith That it is not of the will alone but also of the Vnderstanding because the electiue Act of the Will conference consultation Iudgement is to precede which is the proper Act of the Vnderstanding But the mischiefe of it is That in Elections wee many times see the contrary and what a strange diuorcement and seperation there is heerein from this true Philosophie For that which now a dayes most of all discouers it selfe in these Elections is our proper gust will and affection And therefore to remedy so great a malady it shall be requisite that the Prince who desireth to tread sure to hit the marke he aymes at and to please God in those whom he electeth and calleth to his Counsell that hee follow the Example of our Sauiour Christ written for our instruction by the Euangelists S. Mathew and S. Luke who recounting the Election of S. Peter and of S. Andrew Mat. 4. Luk. 4. 5. and other the Apostles as his principall Ministers there preceded a long and prolixe Oration or prayer full of feruour of zeale and of the Spirit and retyred himselfe into the desart and there fasted 40. dayes Luk. 6.12 Et erat pernoctans in Oratione Dei And continued all night in prayer vnto God Which as S. Ambrose and other fathers haue well obserued Christ did not doe that hee had any neede of these Dispositions and Preambles for to iumpe right in that Election but to teach kings and all other Princes that if they will hit right in their Elections they are to vse the like Diligences They are by good and pious workes to procure this fauour at Gods hands and to direct all their actions to this end Nor would hee that this Election should be left wholly to the declaration of those Saints for our Sauiour did declare himselfe more particularly in the 10. of S. Luke Luk. 10.2 Where speaking with the 70 Disciples which had nominated them he sayd vnto them Messis quidem multa operarij autem pauci rogate ergo Dominum Messis vt mittat operarios in messem suam The Haruest truly is great but the Labourers are few Pray yee therefore the Lord of the Haruest that hee would send forth Labourers into his Haruest And though in those former times these words were very seasonable yet now in this present age it 's necessitie is better knowne as likewise the truth thereof For the Haruests being so many and so great I meane so great and so many the varietie and multitude of important businesses for the welfare of the Common-wealth the Labourers are very few But to expresse my self a little more fully I say That very few are they that enter or seeke to enter into Offices for to labour and paines but for to liue at their pleasure to heape vp riches that they may increase the more in ambition and more freely take their ease The remedie of this consisteth in that which our Sauiour Christ commandeth vs To wit That we indefatigably pray vnto him that he will be pleased to send forth faithfull Ministers and good Labourers into his Common-wealth Ministers of knowen trust zeale vertue to whom may sute the name of Counsellours and not of Babblers of worthy men not of wordly men And kings to whom properly this Office of Election doth belong must put the more force insist the more in this prayer begging that which the wisest of Kings Salomon petitioned of God Da mihi
sedium tuarum assistricem sapientiam vt mecum fit Wised 9.10 mecum laboret vt sciam quid sit acceptum coram te omni tempore O God of my fathers send me wisedome out of thy holy heauens and from the Throne of thy Glory that being present shee may labour with me that I may know what is pleasant vnto thee c. This wise and discreete king was not contented with that guide and light which humane wisedome might afford him but had recourse by prayer to that diuine Light and Wisedome which is that that guideth Kings without stumbling or feare of falling into errour For as Wisdome saith of her selfe Per me reges regnant c Prou. 8.15 By me Kings reigne and Princes decree Iustice As if shee should haue sayd By the hand and Light which I reach forth vnto Kings they goe rightly on in their iudgements and their Elections so that they reigne and conserue themselues in quiet possession of their Kingdomes The drift of my discourse is this That when a King shall come to elect and make choise of his Ministers his first care must be to pray heartily vnto God that hee will direct this his choise and election And so much the more diligence hee ought to vse therein by how much of more importance and of greater qualitie the Minister shall be that is to be imployed After Prayer which is diuine other humane diligences are to bee followed Whereof the chiefest is that the Prince informe himselfe of the good sufficiency the honest life and faire carriage of those whom hee is to choose And that heerein he may not be deceiued it is necessary that with Christ he goe vp vnto the Mount That is To eleuate his Consideration vnto God and to auoide vulgar opinions To strip himselfe of passion and not to strike hands with those that are not Gods friends To forget all kindred and Alliance Not to take in the infectious Ayre of fond affection Not to apply himselfe to that which the importunat intercessions and requests of a fauourite or kinsman shall seeke to draw from him for their priuate benefit Nor to hearken to the negotiation of cunning and subtile pretenders but onely to the good of the Common-wealth and the quicke dispatch of businesses and other the like offices that are to be exercised by men of their place And albeit it was my purpose not to serue my selfe in this discourse but with the Testimonies and Examples of holy Scripture and the Doctors that are Expositors thereupon Yet can I not omit to exemplifie heere in one of King Don Philip the second of this name whose soule doth rest in peace being that for his great prudence and zeale to Iustice and for his good gouernement all the Kings of the world may acknowledge him their Master The case is this A President of his time hauing proposed a Person for a place relating vnto him the qualities which concurred in him for the meriting thereof hee farther added That the Lady Infanta did much desire this prouision should bee made him Heereunto his Maiestie with a great deale of iudgement and grauitie made answer Y mi hija que sabe desso What Has my Daughter a hand in this Can she iudge of his worth Giuing his President by this his Answer to vnderstand that he should not haue alleaged vnto him that for to make a good election which should passe the bounds of the consideration of those parts and qualities wherewith hee was to be furnished were his pretension neuer so much fauoured by the mediation and intercession of great persons And heereunto I farther adde that a king should in no hand content himselfe with the bare knowledge of those onely whom he knowes by fight and walke dayly vp and downe in his Court but that hee should take leysure to informe himselfe of as many as hee can and to follow the ancient custome in giuing order to his Generalls vice-Vice-kings Prelates and Gouernours of euery Prouince to giue him information of the best and sufficientst subiects that are in their Gouernment and that after due consultation had with them they should nominate three or foure vnto him that from amongst many good hee might choose the best And the rest to bee listed and taken notice of that vpon occasion they might receiue imployment From whence likewise this good will arise that All in all partes great and small will study the Science and Arte of good gouernment fly Vice and follow Vertue that they may in their due time be numbered amongst the Chosen Let a King goe Con su spassos contados as they say with a slow foote in those Elections which he is to make giuing way vnto Time and to information Which hee ought willingly to heare neither in all giuing credit to all nor being as many are too incredulous Let him remit things to Tryall and Examination it being a thing needefull for him so to doe For if it be not wisedome to lend a facile eare to all that we heare for the wise man saith Qui citò credit leuis est corde So likewise doth it betoken little prudence to liue alwaies suspicious and distrustfull Something must be left to Experience But to come to the qualifying of persons if the one's qualities be of ten the other of nine quilates and all of them necessarie for the Office of a Counsellour the first ought to be preferred though the other out strip him in Estate in fauour in riches and greatnesse For in that Ministry there ought respect to be had onely to the aduantages of sufficiencie and not of power Nor seruices albeit two be equall in sufficiencie must loose their place and right But that hee who hath done the greater seruices for his King and Countrie ought to bee preferred before the other Now there is this difference amongst many others betwixt a good Prince and him that is not so that a good Prince conferrs his Offices according to the sufficiencie and vertue of the Minister he maketh choise of the other vpon fauour and humane respects vsing therein his power but not attending distributiue Iustice which rewardeth euery one according to his deserts without respect either vnto persons or particular intents CHAP. IX Of the Qualities which Kings are to consider in those whom they are to make choise of for Ministers and Counsellours WE may very well answer that which is heere questioned with that which is recounted in the 18. Chapter of Exodus where it is said That Iethro seeing his son in law Moses wearyed and tyred out in the gouernment of that great body of Gods people and that it was more then one mans worke to giue sufficient dispatch to so many businesses did aduise him to choose but a certaine number of Ministers and Counsellours that might helpe to ease him of that burthen which was too heauy for his shoulders Exod. 18. 18. Vltra vires tuas est negotium solus illud non poteris
Councels wherin vsually there are many which scarce know the first Principles of that wherof they are to treate must be guided directed by those which are taken out of that Councell which is acquainted with these kind of businesses Or if they will not confesse this by their ignorance and by their Competition they deferre at least if not vtterly ouerthrow the resolution that should be taken in the businesse For being as they are composed of different Tribunalls they neither loue nor trust one another neither know they how to yeeld each to other but grow stiffe obstinate and attend onely to shew their wit learning vpon those that are vnuerst in those affaires Whilest in the meane while it succeedeth with mens businesses as it doth with those diseases and sicknesses which are discust and debated by many Physitians who whilst they are diuided in opinion and one would haue this and another that the time of the cure is past Fiftly for the credit and authoritie of the King as also of the Councels themselues for when that which belongs to these Counsailours and their President is taken out of their hands by artifice and cunning and is recommended to others in no hand can be excused the note and suspition that either the King hath erred in the Election which he made of these his Counsellours or that they do not do their duty because that which did properly appertaine vnto them is taken from them and put ouer to others And as it should be a fault in a Prince not to trust his Ministers if they deserue to be trusted so is it likewise if they dismerit that trust to continue them in that place And therefore that Minister from whom there can be had no good satisfaction let him be put out of his Office For to keepe him in it argues either weaknesse in a Prince or an euill Conscience Sixtly That that may not by your Discoursists and Wits as they call them whereof Kings Courts are full diuine afore hand what is treated in those Iuntas which are no sooner had but the end of them is knowne a thing which cannot but be of infinite inconuenience for all affaires and more particularly in those which as they are of more importance so doe they require more reseruednesse Seuenthly because Ministers may haue time and place for to heare Negotiants which they cannot haue nor be able to remedy matters nor to vnderstand them vnlesse they may haue the hearing of them And though this complaint be without fault on the Counsailours part I am sure it is not without punishment of those that are to negociate with them And lastly because it is a great errour and intolerable burthen to tye two or three to the dispatch of many businesses of peace and of warre of the Exchequer of the state and of diuers other things which dayly offer themselues for as experience teacheth reason requireth and inconuenience proclaimes it it is impossible to giue a good issue and dispatch to all nay scarce to the least part of businesses For a man is not made of brasse that hee should be able to indure the trouble of so many Iuntas at least his spirits will be so spent that he will be able to doe little seruice in those that are last treated Counsailours know not like Angels Diuino intuitu but as Men by way of discourse and in this they are tyred out and ouer-wrought and it is not possible that at the latter end of the day they should be so quicke and nimble as at the first hower after they haue taken paines all the day long For this vertue is granted to spirits which know and comprehend things without measure or wearisomnesse Ma●s vnderstanding is finite and hee said not ill that said The sence which is occupied in many things is weakened by euery one of them And in that repartment and diuision which that Euangelicall father of his familie made of the Talents amongst his seruants he gaue vnto euery one of them Secundum propriam virtutem He measured their abilities and conformable thereunto imposed a charge vpon them How many doe groane vnder the burthen of those offices which they beare without being able to vndergoe them yet will not they leaue these because their ambition does not leaue them But rather applying themselues to the gust and Palate of their King and out of a disordinate desire they haue to grow still greater and greater they are well content with loade vpon loade and neuer cry Ho because they neuer thinke they haue enough And so not complying as indeed they cannot with their obligation businesses are retarded and goe not on in that good way as they should and both they themselues and they that put them into these places liue with little or no securitie of conscience But if it be the Kings will and pleasure and that hee thinke it fit for his greater satisfaction that some one particular man that is eminent in the profession of that businesse which is to be treated shall treate thereof and shall see and peruse it a gods name if he will haue it so let his will be fulfilled yet with all let his Maiestie take his opinion as of a particular person and hauing receiued it let it be disputed discussed and debated by the body of the Councell such as haue beene beaten in these kinde of businesses and are throughly acquainted with these matters for by this meanes that which is pretended shall the better be effected and many the fore-mentioned inconueniences be excused Amongst those Ancient Romans when that Common-wealth was sole Mistris of all the world and when it was likewise vnder the Empire and Command of one onely Monarke we neuer read that it euer admitted of more then the Ordinary Councells for the dispatch of businesses Augustus Caesar a Prince of excellent prudence and his great Minion Mecaenas in matter of Counsaile can sufficiently confirme this Doctrine being that he himselfe was one of those that treated businesses in the ordinary Councells And he had a respect and consideration thereunto in that extraordinary cause of Piso touching the death of Germanicus Corn. Tacit. wherein the iudgement of the people and the Senate was so much interessed Tiberius the Emperour who was one of the subtilest and craftiest Princes that euer the Roman Empire knew would not for all his great strength of wit cunning dissimulation wherein he was his Arts-Master venter vpon any innouation farther then this to passe ouer his opinion to this or that other Councell but neuer appointed any particular Iunta for the same as one who knew very well that onely in so doing he should haue but laded his own shoulders with the weightinesse of the Case and the successe of the Cause Onely your Iuntas are to be vsed vpon some great and extraordinary occasion and not vpon euery trifling businesse as is now and hath these many yeares beene in vse much more time being
the Camera shall haue propounded the same and deliuered their opinions in the presence of their King And questionlesse they that by this meanes should be prouided for would esteeme in more and treat with more punctuality and truth the things appertaining to his Office considering that the King himselfe taketh particular knowledge of them For as we said before it is very meete and conuenient that Kings should know and communicate with if not all yet at least those who are to be placed in your greater kinde of Offices and dignities And amongst all other businesses this is that which with most reason doth require the Kings eyes and presence his remembrance and mature Counsaile For such are the Citizens as are their Gouernours and the Parishioners as their Pastors And though this perhaps cannot be performed so punctually and precisely as were to be wished yet at least it will be needfull that those persons of whom they take testimonie and receiue information in so graue and weighty a busines should be of that prudence learning and authoritie and so beyond all exception that the world which is apt to take exceptions may be perswaded that the Election could not but be passing good being that it past through such iudicious mens hands For whatsoeuer shall come forth decreed by them it is not fitting that it should bee subiect to their censures who either haue not the said qualities or are much inferiour in them or faile in their zeale to God or their Loyaltie and Loue to their King being Narcissus-like inamoured with their owne shadow and led away with the blindnesse of their passion Woe be vnto that Common-wealth King and Kingdome where one out of blindnesse or selfe willfull-nesse shall vndoe that which other men haue done with many and those the clearest eyes For as the Wise man saith Vnus aedificans vnus destruens Eccl. 34.24 quid prodest illis nisi labor When one buildeth and another breaketh downe what profit haue they then but labour CHAP. XVII Hee prosecuteth the same matter and shewes how Kings ought to carry themselues towards those that finde themselues aggrieued HAuing spoken of some Cases reserued for Kings and such as require their sight and presence it here now offers it selfe in this place to know how a King ought to carry himselfe towards those that finde themselues iniuryed and aggreiued And in the opinion of vnderstanding people it seemeth that nothing is more properly his then to quit wrongs and remooue iniuries For if we shall but consider that first beginning which Kings had that which the Ancient said of them and that which the holy Scripture teacheth vs wee shall finde that this Occupation is very properly theirs and that this Care appertaines of right to their greatnesse That most wise King Salomon in the fourth of Ecclesiastes saith That when he saw the teares of the Innocent and the wrongs they receiued and no body to helpe them or to speake so much as a good word for them it seemed a thing more terrible vnto him then to dye or neuer to haue beene borne Eccl. 4.1 Vidi calumnias quae sub caelo geruntur lachrymas innocentium neminem Consolatorum neque posse resistere eorum violentiae cunctorum auxilio destitutos laudaui magis mortuos quàm vinentes foeliciorem vtroque iudicaui qui nec dum natus est I turned and considered all the oppressions that are wrought vnder the sunne And behold the teares of the oppressed and none comforteth them And loe the strength is of the hand of them that oppresse them and none comforteth them Wherefore I praised the dead which now are dead aboue the liuing which are yet aliue And I count him better then them both which hath not yet beene And not onely King Salomon but euen God himselfe was so highly offended with those wrongs and oppressions which the children of Israel suffred in Egypt that he thought it a thing worthy his presence and his comming downe from heauen to see the same with his own eyes Vidi afflictionem populi mei in Egypto Exod. 3.7.8 clamorem eius audiui propter duritiem eorum qui praesunt operibus et sciens dolorem eius descendi vt liberem eum I haue seene the trouble of my people which are in Egypt and haue heard their crie because of their Taske-Masters And for I know their sorrowes therefore I am come downe to deliuer them c. Teaching Kings That in matter of grieuances and oppression of the Innocent they are not content to themselues with remitting them ouer vnto others but to looke thereunto themselues And if need were to come from forth their princely pallaces and to forgoe for a while their pleasures and their ease till they haue reformed what is amisse The first words the diuine Scripture storieth which the first King whom God chose for his people said were these 1. Sam. 11.5 Quid habet populus quod plorat What ayleth this people that they weepe Who no soner saw himselfe Crowned King and put by Gods hand into the possession of that kingdom but applying himselfe to that which he ought first of all to doe as one of the mainest points of his dutie he hearkned vnto the cryes of the people who were oppressed by the Philistims and with great speede and feruent zeale did roundly set himselfe to the redressing of that oppression And I verily perswade my selfe that all good Kings would doe the like if they should see their subiects ready to fall into their enemies hands with whom they wage open warre But from those more close and secret enemies which are together with vs subiects Citizens neighbours Countrymen and Ministers of the same Kings and of whom there is held so much trust and confidence who goes about to free the wronged What reparation is there for receiued iniuries Are they not much greater then those that the Philistims offered to Gods people and more remedilesse As for professed Enemies against them we may make open resistance and euery man that is not vnnaturall or a Traytour to his Country will put to his helping hand and seeke to repell force by force reuenge the wrongs that are done them But for these our domestick enemies these our home-borne foes feigned friends who vnder the shew of friendship and vnder cloake and colour of being the Kings Ministers oppresse the poore and such as haue little power to oppose their greatnesse who shall be able to resist them If he that suffers shall pretend to doe it doth he not put himselfe in manifest danger of suffring much more if not of loosing all that hee hath And it is worthy your consideration that in those words related in Exodus it is not said that God went down to see and remedy the wrongs which that Tyrant king Pharaoh did vnto the children of Israel but that which was offred them by his chiefe Ministers Propter duritiem eorum qui
crooked and to falsifie the tongue and beame of the ballance To wit Hatred Fauour Feare and Interest Now Iustice is diuided into two parts which are the honour of God and the loue of our neighbour Aristotle did likewise consider two other parts of Iustice One common which is ordayned for the Common-wealth and the other particular which is instituted for our neighbour Which by another name they call Equitie which man vsing with reason deales so with others as he would be dealt withall himselfe vpon the Common which imbraceth includeth all the rest Patri de Reg. lib. 8. Tit. 2. Patritius founded his Common-wealth And Plato his vpon the particular Others diuide it into foure parts or species into Diuine Naturall Ciuill and Iudiciall Which the Schoolemen do define and declare at large vnto whom I remit the Reader But laying aside these diuisions Scolastici cum D. Tho. 2.2 q 80 art 1. which make not for our purpose the most proper and essentiall diuision of Iustice is into Commutatiue and Distributiue Which as Diuus Thomas saith are the partes Subiectiuae or subiectiue parts of this Iustice that is to say it 's essential Species And therfore we will treate of these two and that very briefly And first in the first place of the Commutatiue and in the second of the distributiue Iustice Commutatiue Contractiue or Venditiue for all these names your Authors giue it for the matter of Commutations Arist 10. Met Tit. 18. Contracts and Sales wherein it is exercised is considered betwixt two party and party which are a part of that whole body of the Common-wealth which giue and take betweene themselues by way of Contract or Sale It 's end and obiect is equalitie and proportion betweene that which is giuen and that which is receiued without respect vnto the persons which buy and sell but to that which is contracted solde or commutated that there may be an equalitie and proportion had betwixt that which is giuen and taken And when in this there is a defection it is contrary to Commutatiue Iustice The distributiue is considered betweene the whole and it's parts The. Medium of this Vertue doth not consist in the equaltie of thing to thing but of the things to the persons for as one person surpasseth another so the thing which is giuen to such a person exceedeth that part which is giuen to another person So that there is an equalitie of proportion betweene that which is more and that which is lesse but not an equalitie of quantitie to wit So much to the one as to the other For those which in a Common-wealth are not equall in dignitie and desert ought not equally to enioy the Common goods thereof when they are reparted and diuided by the hand of distributiue Iustice As we shall shew you by and by when we come to speake of the Commutatiue which treates of equalizing and according that which mens disordinate appetites and boundlesse couetousnesse doth disconcerte and put out of order euery one being desirous to vsurpe that for himselfe which of right appertaines and belongs to another whence arise your cosenages and deceits in humane Contracts and whence doe resulte those contentions dissensions and sutes in Law And to occurre and meete with these inconueniences from the Alcalde of the poorest Village to the highest and supremest Tribunall those pretenders may appeale if they cannot obtaine Iustice in those inferiour Courts And therefore in Castile in the Counsell Royal it is called by way of excellencie Conscio de Iusticia The Counsel of Iustice And in all well ordred Monarchies and Common-wealths Exod. 18. Deut. 1. there is euermore carefull prouision made for this necessitie dispersing in diuers Tribunalls the fittest men for administring Iustice as we haue formerly related of that great Law-giuer Moses And in the second booke of the Chro. it is said of King Iehosaphat that he appointed Audiences and Tribunalls in all the principall Cities of his kingdome and those euer at their very gates and entrance that the Negociants and suitors might the more easily meete with the Ministers of Iustice for this is the chiefest prouision which a King should make for kis Kingdome indearing to them all the faithfull administration thereof and that with such graue words and such effectuall reasons that they deserue to be written in golden Letters vpon all the seates Tribunalls of your Iudges 2 Chron. 19.6 Videte quid faciatis non enim hominis exercetis iudicium sed Domini Et quodcunque iudicaueritis in vos redundabit Sit timor domini vobiscum cum diligentia cuncta facite non est enim apud dominum deum nostrum iniquitas nec personarum acceptio nec cupido munerum Take heede what ye doe for yee execute not the iudgement of man but of the Lord and he will be with yee in the cause and iudgement Wherefore now let the feare of the Lord be vpon yee Take heede and doe it for there is no iniquitie with the Lord our God neither respect of persons nor receiuing of reward The first thing that he admonisheth them of is Videte quid faciatis Take heede what yee doe Looke well about yee and haue an eye to what ye doe Heare see and consider take time and leysure be not ouer-hasty in sentencing a sute till yee haue studied the case well and throughly and are able as well to satisfie others as your selues Vsing that care and circumspection Iob. 29.16 as did that iust man Iob. Causam quam nesciebam diligentissime inuestigabam When I knew not the cause I sought it out diligently As if his life had lyen vpon it Alciat saith That the Tribunes had at the gates of their houses the Image of a King sitting in his throane hauing hands but no eyes And certaine Statuas about him seeming to be Iudges hauing eyes but no hands Whereby they declared the Office of a King and the duty of Iudges painting him with hands and them without them but with as many eyes as that fabulous Argos had or like vnto those Mysticall beastes Apoc. 4.7 which Saint Iohn saw full of eyes within and on euery side To shew that they should study see and examine causes and all whatsoeuer passeth in the Common-wealth and to informe the King thereof who is to haue hands and Armes courage and power for execution Againe that good King puts them in minde that it is not mans but Gods Office that they take in hand whose proper Office is to iudge And therefore in the Scripture your Iudges are called Gods And since that they are his Lieuetenants let them labour for to doe Iustice as God himselfe doth For I must be so bold as to tell them that there is a reuiewing of the businesse and a place of Appealing in the supreame Counsell of his diuine Iustice And there the Party pretending doth not deposite his thousand and fiue hundred ducats but the Iudge who lyes
autoritie and Signorie and did so farre prouoke Gods anger against it that hee commanded it to bee hewen down that being layd leuell with the earth it might acknowledge how much limited and how short was it's power Sithence therfore that it is not possible for Kings to vse much liberalitie and bounty towards all there is a great deale of reason why they should forbeare voluntary Donatiues for to discharge obligatory paiments whereunto in rigour of Iustice he is strictly bound Iames. 5.4 The Apostle Saint Iames saith That the debtes which are due vnto them that haue done seruice cry vnto God and that the teares of the poore ascend vp vnto Heauen to the end that from thence may come forth a writ of Execution against those that haue beene the cause thereof And your Catholike and Christian King are not to place their greatnesse and authoritie on that as did your Heathen Kings and those that were without the light of faith Who pretended nothing else in their gifts and fauours but vaine-glory and the idle applause of the world According to that saying of our Sauiour Iesus Christ Luk. 22.25 Reges gentium dominantur●orum quipotestatem habent super eos benefici vocantur The Kings of the Gentiles raigne ouer them and they that beare rule ouer them are called Bountifull True authoritie and Greatnesse doth not consist in Magnificencies and Prodigalities which are not regular and ruled by reason Which requireth to cumply first with what is due and that neither Kings nor their subiects should thrust themselues in● necessity and want to satisfie the ambition and couetousnesse of those who as Salomon sayth like vnto Horse-leaches Prou. 30.15 Semper dicunt Affer Affer still cry Giue Giue That which distributiue Iustice requireth is That Kings should repart the common goods of the Republicke conformeable to the meritts and seruices of euery one preferring alwayes the publicke before any particular good and ioyntly with this that they goe clinching the hand for a while that they may afterwards stretch it out more at large when it shall be fitting for them so to doe And this is Liberalitie that vertuous and noble Meane betweene those vicious Extreames Auarice and Prodigalitie When our Sauiour Christ had sufficiently fed that great multitude which followed him into the desert they no sooner found themselues full but they presently resolued amongst themselues to make him their king And this their determination grew from two things which they saw to bee in him The one his noble disposition in affording them such free and plentifull intertainment The other for his great prudence and good gouerment in giuing order that the peeces of bread and other the fragments that were left Iohn 6.13 should be gathered vp Colligite qu● superouerunt fragmeta ne pereant Gather vp the broaken meate which remayneth that nothing be lost Nor did he doe this that he had neede to set it vp or keep it to serue at some othere time vpon the like occasion for he could as often as he would haue made bread of stones but to instruct and teach Kings to knowe both to spend and saue to giue and hoord vp where how and when it is fitting in regard that their power is limited Moreouer Kings are to consider that they who at one clap receiue much from them grow so fat and pursie that they are not able to serue and follow them as they were wont and sometimes they retire themselues and nere returne againe to see either King or Court vnlesse meere Couetousnesse and greedinesse of gaine draw them thither to beg more and more Gen. 8.7 to cramme their purses Being like vnto that Crowe which Noah sent out of the Arke who as soone as he had found firme footing and whereon to feede his fill neuer came back again Kings Palaces are like Noahs Arke where there is a great diuersitie in the Conditions of men and generally you shall meete there with more Crowes then Doues And here I will with your good leaue take a little libertie to diuert my selfe from the Testimonies of Holy Scripture to those of Great Kings and Monarckes some of one nation and some of another And the first that I shall begin withall shall be king Don Alonso of Sicily who walking along by the Sea-side caused many gobbets of flesh some great and some small mingled one amongst another to be brought vnto him and still as the Crowes which were many came about him to some hee threw out the lesser to other the larger morsells Those that went away with the great gobbets came no more in sight but fled their way but those that had but a small pittance and were not so full gorged they followed the King whether so euer he went and neuer forsooke him Who tolde those that were then about him In this my Masters yee may see how much it importeth Kings to distribute their fauours with moderation and temper Philip King of Macedon did much reprehend his sonne Alexander for being too lauish of his fauours and too excessiue in his giftes Telling him that thereby hee peruerted the mindes of those that were to serue him who in stead of seruing him with that loue loyalty which in duty they were bound vnto they would now onely serue him for their owne particular interest and proper commoditie making by this meanes affection and fidelitie become a kinde of trading and merchandizing And certainely so it is that when mens mindes make interest their Aime and daily to get more and more they become saleable and tender their seruice to those that wil giue them most And they which doe thus accustome themselues to craue and take the loue of friendship and that thankefull acknowledgement which is due to the Doner is turned into interessed Loue which is called by the name of Concupisence And are as the Comicke Poet saith like vnto those lewd huswifes which Amore carent munus amantis amant Loue not so much the man as his money nor his person as his purse You shall seldome see a man that is as they say a Pediguenno a crauing Companion one that is still begging one thing or other that hath not some touch of Couetousnesse and some tincture more or lesse of vnthankefullnesse For in regard that these men loue themselues and their owne interest so well they haue not one drop of loue left for others and if any doe remaine they conferre it on a third person through whose hands that which they pretend is to passe And the King and Prince to whom all is due rest depriued of two things that are the most substantiall and of most importance for the conseruation perpetuation and augmentation of his Kingdome which are their subiects Loue and Thankes For the truest kinde of Raigning and the likest to Gods kingdome is to gaine the heartes of their subiects and to make themselues as much as in them lyes Lordes and Masters of their good Wills
should haue giuen him his kingdome he could not well haue giuen him more Thus was this good seruant rewarded honoured and graced by his Lord and Master who without being importuned gratiously called his good seruices to remembrance and honoured him aboue all the Princes of his Kingdome And I could wish that all that are rewarded by their Kings might receiue their recompence vpon the like good tearmes of Reason and Iustice But now a dayes poore and slender seruices the more is the pitie finde copious and plentifull rewards and those ordinarily accompanied with ingratitude A thing which Nature it selfe abhorreth And which tyes Gods hands from giuing who is so liberall and so rich and dryes vp that ouerflowing fountaine of his boundlesse mercies from affording vs any farther fauour or Comfort CHAP. XXIIII Of the repartment and Diuision which is to be vsed in the Conferring of Offices And of the knowledge of such persons as ought to bee nominated for the sayd Offices Arist lib. 8 ●th cap. 10. LEt vs consider a King saith the Philosopher in his Kingdome as we would a father of many children in his familie Societas enim Patris ad filios Regni prae se fert effigiem The societie of a father towards his children represents the true forme of a kingdome Let any man compare the power royall to what hee will and according to Aristotles opinion hee shall finde no one thing that doth fit so well with it or giues it so much fullnesse as the Title of father who day and night beates his braines and imployes all his whole study on that which is most fitting for his children regarding more the good which hee may bee able to doe them then any profit that he expects to receiue from them How many times whilest his children are a bed and a sleepe doth the father lye awake casting and deuising with himselfe how he may mantayne them and better them in their Estate What a deale of care doth hee take to get his daughter a good Husband who is dearer vnto him then himselfe Great is his care but much more ought the care of a king to bee in giuing to their kingdome good faithfull and diligent Ministers to the end that they may doe all possible diligences as hath beene sayd heeretofore fixing alwayes their eyes on the Common good and directing likewise their owne particular in the same way That which I would say to expresse it in plainer termes is this That they are not to subiect the Offices to the commoditie of the men but to seeke out men that are fit and sufficient for them When Saul was resolued to recommend vnto Dauid that Duell or single Combat against the Gyant Goliah the better to accommodate him as also therein to honour him the more hee put his owne rayment vpon him and an helment of brasse vpon his head and a brigandine and all the rest of his owne compleat Armour but Dauid who was a man of little stature and not accustomed to be shut vp in harnesse found the weight thereof to be too heauie for him and very troublesome to his body yet notwithstanding to obey the Kings Command and that hee might not seeme to reiect the honour the king was pleased to doe him hee was willing to make tryall Si armatus posset incedere Whether hee could goe in it or no for he had neuer proued it But when hee found hee could hardly goe in it and that he had not the free libertie and command of his body hee sayd vnto the King 1. Kings 17.29 Non possum sic incedere quia non vsum habeo I cannot goe with these for I am not accumstomed And therefore rather made choyse to betake himselfe to his sheepheards staffe his stones and his sling which he knew well how to vse then to put on the Kings royall rayment together with his rich Armour and afterward to giue an ill account of what was committed vnto him But where shall you meete with the man in these dayes that is like vnto Dauid Nor is it fit for Kings in this particular to imitate Saul for we dayly see notable Losses in matters of Warre and Peace by accommodating and honouring such persons with Offices as had neuer beene trayned vp in them wanting that sufficiencie of knowledge which is fitting for the administration of them As for your Prebends and other Ecclesiasticall Dignities whose nomination appertaineth vnto Kings they had neede take the greater care therein by so much the more by how much spirituall things are of more importance then Temporall Your ancient Canons and Councells will bee your direction in this case and teach yee what yee are to doe and doe inforce it with such weighty and effectuall reasons that they are worthy to be read and considered by Kings when they make the like Elections or Nominations to the end that they may not erre therein And heere will I bring to their remembrance that which God did when that famous and ancient Tabernacle was to be built Exod. 31.4 which was to be a figure of his holy Church Who as the Scripture tells vs nominated Bezaleel a curious workeman in all manner of workemanship whom he filled with his holy Spirit and indewed him with wisedome and knowledge from heauen that hee might finish that worke and bring it to perfection God himselfe hauing drawen the plot and being the chiefe and principall Contriuer thereof And if for that dead Edifice for which humane skill and dexteritie might seeme to haue beene sufficient there was made choice of a man of such singular wisedome and such admirable partes as is there mentioned in Exodus for the gouernment of a kingdome for the ordring of a Common-wealth for to put euery thing in it's right place and to administer Iustice equally to all giuing euery one that which is his things all of them of such great importance and which doe so much beautifie and grace this mysticall body of the Church what ministers will it bee necessary that Kings should seeke out and inquire after Namely Men that are full of the spirit of God wise vnderstanding men good Christians and adorned with all manner of Vertues And if they will not beleeue me let them looke vpon that first Election which the Apostles made when Iudas turned Apostata despayr'd and hung himselfe In which Election they made choyse of Saint Mathias a man well knowen as one that had beene bred vp amongst them and from whom they had receiued very good satisfaction Oportet ex his viris Act. 1.21 qui nobiscum sunt congregati in omni tempore quo dominus c. Testem resurrectionis eius nobiscum fieri vnum ex istis Wherefore of these men which haue accompanied with vs all the time that the Lord Iesus was conuersant amongst vs c. Must one of them be made a Witnesse with vs of his Resurrection I say that when Kings finde sufficient partes and aduantagious abilities
22. Aug. lib. 5. de Ciuit. cap. 24. Isid lib. 3. Sent. cap. 52. S. Th. 2. 2. q. 137 art 2. ad 2. what remedy in this case is to be vsed Saint Ierom and Saint Austen are of opinion that a King by his owne person is to punish and premiate to execute chasticement with iustice and to mitigate it with mercy Nor is it vnworthy our consideration nor lyable to inconueniencie that a King should represent two persons so contrary in shew as iudging with Iustice and Mercie For two vertues cannot bee contrary And as the Saints and holy Doctors say and they are in the right Mercie doth not hinder the execution of Iustice but it moderateth the crueltie of the punishment And it is very necessary in a good Iudge that hee should haue a true and faithfull paire of balance in his hands and in either scale to put rigor and equitie that hee may know how to correct the one by the other The Kings of Portugall especially Don Iuan the third did vse to iudge Capitall crimes accompanied with his Councell and were alway accounted fathers of the people because with them Iustice and Mercie walked hand in hand shewing themselues iust in punishing the fault and mercifull in mitigating the punishment By which meanes they were of all both feared and beloued And let not Kings perswade themselues that this doth lessen their authoritie and take of from their greatnesse but giues an addition and the oftner they sit in iudgement they shall doe God the more seruice and the Kingdome more good And in conscience the surest and safest course for that reciprocall obligation which is between the King and his subiects For they owe obedience seruice and acknowledgement to him as their Lord and Master And he vnto them Iustice Defence and Protection For to this end and purpose doe they pay him so many great Tributes and Taxes Nor is it enough for him to doe it by others but he must also doe it by himselfe For neither that great Gouernor of Gods people Moses nor any other after him is in all the whole body of the Bible to be found that euer yet condemned the occupation of iudging the people to bee vnworthy royall Maiestie nor contrarie to the reputation of a King I know no other preiudice in it saue that it is impossible for one sole man to vndergoe so great a taske And this impossibilitie ariseth from the multitude of subiects and in that case they aduise That a King should not wholly take away his hand from the doing of Iustice but that the lesser and more ordinary businesses hee should remit and referr them to different Ministers and the weightier causes take to his owne charge and be present in person when they come to be sit vpon and determined as formerly haue done the wisest and greatest Monarkes that euer were in the world Who did euer equall King Salomon in wisedome greatnesse and Maiestie yet did hee hold it no disgrace vnto him to humble himselfe to heare suitors iudge their causes and to doe them Iustice The Kings of the Hebrew people were called Iudges because they did glorie in nothing so much as to heare and iudge the people And in all Nations this hath alwayes beene the principall Office appertaining vnto Kings And the Holy Ghost saith That the King Prou. 29.14 that faithfully iudgeth the poore his throne shall be established for euer §. III. That it much importeth Kings to haue the good Loue and affection of their Subiects KIngs as already hath beene sayd are the Heads of their Kingdomes Their Estates serue them as Members Without which it is impossible they should be that which their name speakes them And therefore it is not onely conuenient but necessarie that they should seeke to gaine the good wills of all suting themselues though they force their owne to the nature of their subiects and beholding them as if they were his children Which is the best course to keepe them well affected and contented and to be beloued and obayed by them Which they may easily doe if they will but thinke themselues that they are sheepheards and fathers of those people which God hath recommended vnto them easing them of those wrongs and grieuances which they vniustly suffer laying no more vpon them then they are able to beare suffring them when reason shall require to take their ease and their quiet and helping to sustaine them when they grow poore and are decayd Plato tells vs That for a Prince to be good and to be beloued of all hee must bestow all his loue and his whole heart vpon the Common-wealth his will on the Gods his secret on his friends and his Time on businesses For by thus reparting himselfe with all he shall haue a part in all by all of them comming to vnite themselues with him Onely in this good Correspondency of Loue betweene Kings and their subiects wise Periander placeth all the safetie and good fortune of Kings and Kingdomes Agesilaus King of Lacedaemon was once askt the question How a King might liue secure For that it is oftentimes seene that neither multitude of seruants nor a guard of Halbardiers can defend them from violence To which demand hee returned this answer Si suis populis ita imperet vt parentes filijs If he so rule ouer his people as a father doth ouer his children The King that loueth his subiects and is againe beloued by them neede no guarde they are his guard For Loue where it is true and faithfull plainesheth the knottiest peece of timber smootheth the roughest and most vnhewen disposition and makes all faire safe and peaceable It is a most strong wall and more durable yea then Kings themselues With this no difficulty can offer it selfe vnto them which they may not ouercome no danger whose impetuousnesse they may not oppose no command which they will not obay For as Kings desire no more of their subiects but to be well serued by them so subiects pretend nothing from their Kings but to be beloued by them And indeede the one dependeth on the other For if a King loue not his subiects he shall neither be well serued beloued nor obayed by them And as little if he loue himselfe too much For the more care he takes of himselfe and attends his owne particular so much the more his subiects loue departs from him For the harmonie of a Common-wealth consisteth in that all should liue by the Kings fauour and they by their subiects loue For they ought to be vigilant in all that belongs to their seruice and Kings most watchfull in that which concernes their generall good So that none is to haue lesse part in the King then the King himselfe And because it is impossible to content all by reason not onely of their different but contrary natures it is necessary at least to content the most There are two differences of States or two sorts of people to be considered in a
man iust Wisedome makes a man wise And so in the rest Yet if the vse of discretion be wanting to any one of these they loose their Punctum medium wherein they consist and light vpon the extreames So the Liberall turnes Prodigall the Valiant foole-hardy The wise imprudent and the Iust iniurious Ber. in Cant. Ser. 49. Discretio sayth S. Bernard omni virtuti ordinem ponit Discretion is the rule by which euery vertue is directed And in matter of Counsell the Vote of discretion strikes a great stroake for it distinguisheth falsehood from truth things certaine from things doubtfull and from amidst what is ill maketh choice of that which is good It qualifieth all things and puts them in their punto and proper being And the Philosopher saith That it is a vertue proper vnto Kings Princes and Gouernours Arist 3. Polit c. 3. to whom by office it belongs to intermeddle haue a hand in such a world of businesses as require their direction and discretion wherewithall they must helpe themselues for the better disposing and ordering to a good end the affaires of the Common-wealth It is a neere neighbour vnto prudence and bordereth much vpon her these vertues as we said before being so inchained and interlinked one with another that wee cannot touch one peece without trenching vpon the other And are both so necessarie that though I should say neuer so much of them I could not out-speake them But to come to the point Let the first point of aduise and discretion in a King be not to trust so much to his owne wisedome and discretion as to forbeare out of a presumption of his owne sufficiencie to treate and consult businesses with persons of prudence and vnderstanding For being that so many and so various are the cases which daily offer themselues vnto Kings and so graue and weightie the businesses whereof they treate they must bee canuased to and fro and well and throughly debated for the better ordering and setling of them making former errours to serue as Land-markes for the auoyding of those to come And like a wise and experienced Physitian let him apply that medicine there and in that case where for want thereof hee had formerly erred Out of ignorance to draw knowledge out of errours certainties out of bad successes Arist lib. 2. Rhetor. c. 9. future warnings is admirable discretion Ex praeteritis conjicientes iudicamus sayth Aristotle By coniecturing of things past wee come to make our iudgement of things to come And it is a verie good course to diuine by that which is past and in Kings exceeding necessarie to draw experience from sometimes for other some And to beware as they say not one●y by other mens harmes but likewise by their owne For let a man bee neuer so warie neuer so circumspect and let him watch and looke about as if his life lay on it hee must eyther fall or hath fallen at some one time or other or hath err'd in this or that particular whereby his designes haue beene frustrated or hath seene or read the downe-fals of others And therefore shall he shew himselfe verie discreet if hee shall gather a Doctrine out of these and make such good vse of them that they may serue vnto him for a warning Castigasti me Domin●● eruditus sum O Lord thou hast chastised mee and aster that Ier. 31.18 I was instructed For as it is in the Prouerbe De los escarmentados salen los arteros No men are more their Craft-Masters than thoe that haue beene most bitten Nor is it much that a man of reason and vnderstanding discoursing with himselfe of forepassed passages should benefit himselfe by comparing cases past with cases present and by experience and knowledge of those which heretofore haue beene remedilesse hee may apply remedie to those which threaten future mischiefe Sithence that brute beasts as it is obserued Isidor lib. 4. Epist Polyb. by S. Isidore and Polybius who haue no discourse but onely a naturall instinct leading them to their conseruation make vse of the like kinde of Accidents not onely when they themselues fall into some quag-mire or otherwise haue runne the danger of this baite or that net but euen then also when they see others fall before them they hang an arse and will not easily suffer themselues to bee drawne into the like danger but hold that place euer after in suspition where they haue seene their fellowes indangered and shunne all that they can that hole or bog whereinto they haue once either fallen or beene myred And shall not men of vnderstanding and good discourse which heare and see what other men suffer as likewise the great hurt which they themselues haue receiued by the like cause shall not they I say grow wise by other mens harmes and their owne shall not they seeke to shunne and auoyd as much as in them lies the like inconueniences but that some pleasing thing shall bee no sooner propounded vnto them but forthwith they will suffer themselues to fall into the pit and to be taken in the snare that lyes before them and will not offer to fly therfro nor forbeare to eate of that deceiuing foode whereunto they are inuited and know for certaine that neuer any did come off with safety He that by the forepassed Accidents and falls of others or of himselfe doth not take aduise and warning the name of beast nay of a senselesse creature will better befit him then of a discreete and well-aduised man This is that complaint which Moses made of that foolish people Vtinam saperent intelligerent ac nouissima prouiderent Would to God that they would call to minde and make vse of the so many and various successes which they haue seene and past through and that quoting the present with the past they would be prouident in that which is to come especially since the wise man sayth That the thing that hath beene Eccl. 1.9 is that which shall be and that which is done is that which shall be done and that there is no new thing vnder the Sunne Let the conclusion therefore of this discourse be first That it is not heere required of a discreete King that he should beare about him in his sleeue good lucke and drawe out when he lifteth a faire lot and a certaine and happy successe in all his businesses for this is only and wholy in Gods hands and not in his And therefore to require any such thing of him were great indiscretion but that hee should enter into them if time will giue him leaue with sound aduise and mature deliberation and to intertaine them till hee be able to bring his purposes to passe And si fit periculum in mora If there be danger in delay and that they will not suffer the deferring let him call to minde the successe of former businesses and let him well consider with himselfe what in like cases hath vsually succeeded and accordingly
men for a man to liue all his life time according to the sauour and guste of his palate Consuetudinem nullam peiorem esse quàm vt semper vinat quis ad voluptatem There is not any custome so bad as that of a mans liuing according to his owne pleasure Such men are rather to be pittied then enuied for there is not that h●●res of their contents and delightes which doth not pay it's tribute of teares and sorrow Onely for to please and satisfie this sense and to recreate that of the sight haue so many Artes beene inuented so many sorts of Trades and Trades-men set a worke so much varietie of fashions and costly cloathes such a world of curious Silkes Lawnes Cambricks and Hollands such large beds rich bedding sumptuous bed-steds so sensuall and so ouer nice and dainty that it may well be questioned whether is greater the costlinesse or the curiositie the richnesse or the ryot occasioned by them Nor which is the miserie of it is it yet known whether or how farre this Humour will extend it selfe But sure I am that thereby houses are disordred much monyes consumed ancient Inheritances solde away and a thousand other inconueniences introduced And to say the truth this sense hath not neede of so much nicetie but abuse hath now brought it to that passe that it hath no sooner a liking to a thing but it greedily runn's after it as a beast that is put into a fresh ground runnes vp and downe smelling out the choice grasse and will not bite but at the sweetest But he that doth Regalor and pamper vp this sense most doth most of all make it his enemie Which will neuer giue him ouer till it haue vndone him This is so large a Theame and so copious a subiect that if I should heere write and set downe all that which in this kinde would fairly offer it selfe I must be driuen much to inlarge my pen. But it is not my Intent to set my cloath on the Tenters nor in this little Loome to weaue large Histories and long discourses but onely to giue a short touch and away of the effects which this sence causeth and of the miseries and misfortunes which are incident to Touching and that all the worke paines which it does and takes for it's friends and best well-wishers is not so freely bestow'd nor that good assurance giuen thereof but that this it 's momentary pleasure makes quick payment in groanes in diseases and in Temporall and Eternall Death The condition of the obligation being drawen and signed by no worse a Scriuener then Saint Paul Rom. 8.13 Si enim secundum carnem vixeritis moricimui For if yee liue after the flesh yee shall dye Wee haue examples of Kings good store and of ancient and moderne Kingdomes forraine and domestick The first shall be of Charles the 8. King of France in whom voluptuousnesse and delights wrought so great an alteration in that his most fortunate and happy entrance which hee made into Italy where without putting hand to his sword hee became Master of all the whole Kingdome of Naples and did so amuze and affright all the World that the Great Turke was afraid of being ouer-runne by him and many of his Commaunders which had the keeping of his Fortes on that Coast forsooke them and fled And if that King had but well followed that Enterprize hee had beene Lord of all Greece But being a young Gentileman hee suffered himselfe to be ouercome by the Dainties and Delicacies of that Countrie spending his Time in delightes banquets shewes maskings dancings and feastings So that hee who had so soone ●●ed the world with feare was as soone ouercome by yeelding to the pleasure of this sense For hee and his did so glut themselues with the fruites of that Country and so followed the delights of the flesh that hauing entred victorious they became subiect and were subdued by that now and loathsome disease which possesseth the whole body and to dissemble it's name they call it Corrimiento which in plaine English is the French Pocks There and then it was where and when it first began to rage and from thence spred it selfe hither and thither and now is so generally knowen in all parts of the world and which by Touching one●y cleaues close vnto man And this had it's 〈◊〉 land beginning in carnall delight as it was resolued in a Consultation of Physitians which King Don Alonso called together in Toledo which is another notable Example who hauing wonne that Citie from the ●owes and many other places Don Alons the sixt of Castile and Leons Vide Fernan Perez lib. 2. Tit. 4. cap. 5. ioyning themselues in the victorie layd aside their Armes and gaue themselues in that manner to their pleasures and delights that within a few dayes they were growen so lazye and so weake that they were not able to fight nor to beare armes against the enemie and being forced to take them vp in a certaine skirmish which they had neere vnto Veles they were ouerthrowen and shamefully put to flight leauing dead in the place the sonne of their King Who being very sensible of this so great an infamie consulted his Physicians what should be the cause of this so great a weakenesse both in the strength and courage of his soldiars who in the first incounter hauing shew'd themselues as fierce as Lyons in this last conflict seemed as fearefull as Hares Who answered him with that will ●h● Pliny speakes of the Romans Plin. nat Hist lib. 2. cap. 3. who fell from their ancient greatnesse because in their meate drinke and apparell and in the delicacies of their bathes and companie keeping with women they exceeded all those whom before they had ouercome And therefore Vincendo victi sumus Wee are ouercome by ouercoming And thereupon that good King forthwith commanded the oathes to be destroyed together with the houses of pleasure gardens and other the like places of recreasion wherewith that dammage was in part repayred In these two things daintinesse in diet and wantoning with women the Diuell imploies his utmost strength and force that hee may quit those of it and vtterly dis-inable them that giue themselues thereunto And this was that Counsaile and Aduice which that member of Satan and false Prophet Balaam gaue to the King of Moab That in those places through which the children of Israel were to passe hee should appoint certaine of his fayrest women to be there in readinesse to receiue and intertaine them to cherish and make much of them and to inuite them to eate and drinke with them as the onely meanes to draw them on to their destruction as it afterwards fell out Num. 25.1 This is pointed at in Numbers but set forth more at large in Iosephus Ioseph de Antiq. lib. 4. cap. 5. Where it is added That those are not to be feared which giue themselues to the like gustes and delights for in waxing weary of
feare and fore-runners likewise of the ruine and perdition of any Monarchy whatsoeuer as they haue beene heretofore of others that haue been ouerthrowne by the like meanes But to conclude with this sense and to shut vp the doore likewise to all the rest wee are to presuppose that which is very common both in diuine and humane Letters That by the hands wherein particularly consists the Touching are vnderstood workes because they are the Instruments by which they are done Moses deliuering vnto vs that the Hebrewes did see the wonders which God had wrought in their fauour saith Viderunt manum magnam quam exercuerat Dominus Exod. 14.31 They saw that great worke which the originall renders that great hand which the Lord exercised vpon the Aegyptians And besides this Pier. lib. 35. Tit. Opus it hath another signification as is obserued by Pierius Valerianus an open hand being the Symbole of eloquence expressing that efficacy and perswasiue power that lies in well couched words Works and words being both very necessary in Kings Execution in the one and Elocution in the other And because all Princes cannot performe these offices of doing and saying by themselues they must haue another tongue and other hands by which they must speake and doe and the tongue whereby they must speake and the hands whereby they must touch and handle all things for their owne are not able to doe it must bee their fauourites Policratus in his booke directed to Traiane saith That your great Lords in Court and Kings fauourites are the hands of the kingdome And as in mans body they are naturally disposed and ready prepared for to succour and assist all the other members so they should be at hand for to helpe and relieue all the necessities of the kingdome and to be the formost in all dangers and a thousand other occasions that will offer themselues which neither are nor can bee wanting to Kings and kingdomes And therefore the Philosopher said of the hands that they are the Instrument of Instruments For without them nothing can be done neither can Kings of themselues do all They haue need of their Ministers and Fauourites which are their feet and their hands In the subsequent Chapters we shall discourse somewhat a little of them God grant that little or somewhat what ere it bee may worke some good And first of all we will treate whether it be fitting to haue Fauourites CHAP. XXXI Whether it be fit for Kings to haue Fauourites FAuourites being as they are the workmanship of Kings receiuing their forme and fashion from their good liking which creatures of their making wee haue mentioned in the former Chapter We shall handsomely fall here vpon that which in this is put to the question Nor is the answer thereunto very easie For a Fauourite being of the same nature as a particular friend and friendship being to bee inter aequales betweene those that are of equall condition it seemeth that those that are Subiects and seruants to their King and Master can not hold it with him whom they are to behold and treate with with a great deale of reuerence respecting alwayes his royall Maiestie which according to that other Poet No cabe en vn saco con el Amor is not in one and the same sacke with loue And without loue there is no friendship True it is that Aristotle and some other Philosophers affirme that this difference may easily bee reconciled forasmuch as hee that is in the higher and more eminent place may stoope so low and fashion himselfe in that euen measure to his Inferiour that they may both remaine vpon equall tearmes But this can hardly square and suite well with Kings towards their Fauourites For as it were an indecorum and vnseemely thing in a humane bodie that the head should abase it selfe and become equall with the shoulder so were it prodigious and monstrous that Kings which are Heads and hold that Soueraigntie which God hath giuen them should stoope so low to their Subiects that the eminencie should not appeare which they haue ouer them And that other meanes which may be vsed in raysing a subiect or Fauorite to that hight that hee may be equall with his King bringeth with that a great inconuenience For a Crowne Scepter royall cannot endure any fellowship with equality And therefore these two meanes may pare and fit well with friends that hauing professed friendship when their estates were equall the one growes inferiour to the other eyther good fortune or good diligence hauing preferred his fellow and friend But with Kings there cannot be held this correspondency and equality And it is King Salomons counsaill who saith That it is not fitting for any man to entertaine friendship and communication with those that are too mighty Ditiori te ne socius fueris Quid communicabit cacabus ad ollam Quando enim se colliserint confringetur Haue no fellowship with one that is mightier and richer then thy selfe For how agree the Kettle and the earthen Pot together For if the one bee smitten against the other it shall be broken And againe if you will but diligently obserue the sacred history of the Kings which were ouer Gods people you shall there finde little mention of Fauorites On the other side it will likewise seeme vnreasonable that kings should be debarr'd that without which to all mens seeming mans life cannot bee well past ouer Nemo sine amicis spectet vinere said the said Philosopher Let no man looke to liue without friends And the holy Scriptures are full of the commoditie and benefit which faithfull friends afford being as necessary for the life of man as fire and water and for no estate so important as for that of Kings who for that they haue so many so weighty and so secret businesses their estate were intollerable and more then they were able to beare if they might not haue the libertie of hauing friends with whom they might communicate and by whom they might receiue some ease of those troubles and care which great offices ordinarily bring with them Now for to giue satisfaction vnto that which is here pretended to be auerred we are to consider That Aristotle and other both Philosophers and Diuines teach which is no more then what experience plainly prooues vnto vs That there are two sorts of Loue or friendship The one Interessall or cum foenore whose end is its proper profit The other hath with it a more gentile noble intent which is to loue and wish well to that which deserueth to bee beloued and this is called Amor amicitiae the loue of friendship The other Amor concupiscentiae the loue of concupiscence And with very good reason for that therein there is not to be found the face of true friendship From these two Loues as from two diuerse rootes spring forth two different sorts of Fauorites The one who for their great parts and quailties haue deserued to carry after
of God and his great power this was one worthy the obseruation and well befitting the subiect we haue in hand 1. King 2.8 Dominus suscitat de puluere egenum de stercore eleuat panperem vt sedeat cum Principibus solium gloriae teneat The Lord raiseth the poore out of the dust and lifteth vp the begger from the dunghill to set him among Princes and to make them inherit the throne of glory The like note sings that Kingly Prophet Dauid Suscitans à terra inopem Psal 113.7 vt collocet eum cum Principibus populi sui He raiseth vp the poore out of the dust and lifteth the needy out of the dunghill And King Salomon his sonne seconds this of his father in this short Antheme Seruus sapiens dominabitur filijs stultu A wise seruant shall haue rule ouer a sonne that causeth shame Prou. 17.2 So great is the force of wisedome and discretion that it doth not onely exalt and raise to greatnesse men that are free borne though in a poore meane cottage but brings euen the basest slaues to bee Lords ouer their owne Masters A certaine Philosopher being taken captiue was brought forth into the open Market to bee sold and they that were to buy him demanded of him what hee could doe He told them That the best thing that he was skild in was to command his Masters In many places of Scripture is repeated and confirmed the Testimonie of King Salomons great power and wisedome And amongst other things which are mentioned of the Maiestie of his house and Court it is said That therein he had a great many Princes whose names are registred in the third booke of the Kings And amongst them there is but one onely that is made remarkable by the name and title of the Kings Fauourite and friend Zabud filius Nathan amicus Regis And Zabud the sonne of Nathan was principall Officer and the Kings friend Some Translations in the place of principall Officer put Priest And these two titles of Priest and the Kings friend are therefore thus ioyned together that they may giue vs to vnderstand that the friendship and affection towards a Fauourite should take it's growth from that learning and vertue which is annexed to the state and condition of the Priest And in the first booke of the Chronicles in that Catalogue which is there made of those which bare principall offices in King Dauids Court it is onely said of Hushai the Archite that hee was the Kings companion And in the second booke of the Kings are set downe at large the great and many reasons why Hushai on his part might well deserue this Title Our Sauiour Christ likewise seemed to make shew of his more particular affection to Peter Iohn and Iames making choice of them from among the twelue to retire himselfe in priuate with them and to make them witnesses of his glorious transfiguration and afterwards of diuers other particular things Whence it seemeth that they might haue the name of Fauourites but not without great grounds and those extraordinary vertues wherein they out-shined others Howbeit the choise and election of this supreme King is not to bee ruled and measured out by that of the Kings of this world for they can not by the alone power of their loue better men nor affoord them necessary parts whereby to merit to bee their friends But this true King and Lord of all in placing his good will and affection on those whom hee is pleased to make choice of for his friends doth likewise indow and adorne them with strong abilities whereby to bee accounted worthy of his friendship and fauour Whereas with the Fauourites of the Kings of this world it fareth cleane contrary For those which before they were Fauourites were good and honest by their priuacie and great power with their King haue come to be starke nought and the more footing they haue in the Kings friendship they are vsually the lesse worthy of it Whereof we shall more in the Chapter following CHAP. XXXII Of another sort of Fauourites THose most learned bookes which the glorious Saint Austen writ De Ciuitate Dei lay before vs two sorts of loue That loue which man beareth vnto God euen to the contemning and despising of himselfe And from this is the constitution and fabricke of that holy Citie of Ierusalem vnder which name is vnderstood the good concord and agreement of the Christian Church and commonwealth as also of all Christian soules The other loue is that which euery one beareth to himselfe in that high manner and excesse that it reacheth euen to the contemning and despising of God And from this is built that City of Babylon which is as much to say as Confusion signifieth that which euery sinner hath within himself as also that which is in ill ordered commonwealths And therefore as wee said in the former Chapter that from those two Loues of friendship and concupiscence did issue forth two sorts of Fauourites The one good and profitable the other bad and couetous So considering Loue not in respect of outward things but in respect of it selfe it differenceth the vse of Fauourites according to the different meanes and ends wherewith and for which they are made choice of And the vse likewise which they make thereof when they see they are thus aduanced and receiued into fauour The meanes haue the denomination of their goodnesse or badnesse from their end Whence it followeth that when Kings shall make choice of their Fauorites by good meanes not out of a selfe-humour or womanish kinde of longing nor for to please his owne proper affection but that they may comply the better with those obligations which they haue to the good dispatch of businesses and to haue one to helpe them to beare the burthen that lies vpon them As this end is good so of force must the meanes likewise bee For to obtaine good ends bad meanes are not taken And therefore Kings shall doe well in taking such Fauourites vnto them as shall bee sollicitous and carefull in the dispatching of businesses faithfull in their seruices and endowed with such parts afore specified as were those Fauourites recommended vnto you in the former Chapter For Ioseph as we told you grew in fauour with King Pharaoh for his great wisedome and for his supernaturall knowledge of things to come and reuealing such secret mysteries as other his Ministers could not tell what to make of them The like befell Daniel with the Caldean and Macedonian Kings for before euer he became a Fauourite they saw his great wisedome and constancie in the true seruice of his God his singular prudence and those other his good gifts which are recorded in the booke of his prophesies The extraordinary graces of Peter Iohn and Iames who is he that is ignorant of them Being that the Euangelists say of Saint Peter that his extraordinary loue was examined and proued in those so often repeated
are precisely necessarie in a Fauourite And first I will set downe the first First of all then he must loue his King truly and must not suffer himselfe to be ouercome by couetousnesse and his owne priuate interest In the first particular all doe agree with Aristotle and Plato For no man can more faithfully giue counsell then hee that loues his King more then his gifts Which of all other is the most necessary to make one man trust another and to beleeue that which hee saith For who will not credit that man whom he knowes loues him and in all that he can seekes to procure his good without any respect to his owne particular interest He saith Saint Gregory that is fit to be a Fauourite must haue a loue that is full and dis-interessed Nullus fidelior tibi ad consulendum esse potest Gregor ex regist li. 1 Epist cap. 33. quam qui non tua sed te diligit No man can be more faithfull in aduising thee then he that loues not thine but thee This qualitie of Loue and friendship Nazianzene likewise handleth Part. 2. Tit. 9. L. 5. And a certaine Law of the Partida maketh mention thereof saying Que los que han de aconseiar los Reyes han de ser amigos bien entendidos y de buen seso That those that are to counsell Kings must bee friends that haue beene throughly knowne and tried and that are of good vnderstanding and iudgement Salomon saith That hee is a true Fauourite indeed that studies to walke in cleannesse of heart and purenesse of tongue that is to say when hee shall place all his care in seruing his King with Loue and informing him nothing but what is truth and desiring him to walke in that way which shall make most for Gods seruice and the good of the kingdome Qualities sufficient for Fauourites to insinuate themselues into the grace and fauour of good Princes Saint Iohn in the Apocalypse sets before vs though somewhat darkly shadowed a picture of good Fauourites and Councellers Which were certaine old men clothed in white wearing Crownes on their heads To bee somewhat ancient and well stricken in yeares was a qualitie wont to be required in those that were to aduise Kings and giue them good counsell in regard of their great experience and mature iudgement which commonly accompanies such kinde of men And they are said to be clothed in white because this colour signifies a pure heart and a cleare conscience wherewith they ought to bee as it were apparrelled and adorned How can he giue good counsell that is not clothed in white That hath not Cor candidum a white and vpright heart pure and cleane from those affections and passions that may smutt and sullye it And it is there likewise set downe that euery one of them had like a King a Crowne vpon his head To giue vs thereby to vnderstand that hee that is to giue counsell vnto Kings for the maintaining and vpholding of a kingdome and to remedy what is therein amisse may in some sort conceit himselfe to be a King my meaning is that he is to giue counsell as if hee himselfe were the King and to aduise for him as he would for himselfe were he in his place And that hee is to giue his vote and opinion as if the kingdome were his And to be so free from expecting or respecting his owne particular interest as if he were King himselfe Who neither expecteth nor pretendeth any merced or reward nor any addition of honour or otherwise in his kingdome for that hee hath already attained to the highest and supremest dignitie which is the Crowne In like manner Kings Fauourites and Counsellours should liue as free from pretensions as if hauing already got the Crowne they had nothing more to pretend Whose breast and bosome must be as white and as pure as whitenesse it selfe And will be the better able to iudge betwixt white and blacke right and wrong by reason of their many yeares and long experience This kinde of seruants and friends which must be the life and soule of their actions let Kings bee very carefull how they make choice of them and receiue them into fauour For there is not any one thing that doth so much manifest a Kings minde as the election which he makes of his Fauourites and Councellours of State For by them is his naturall inclination as well knowne as in a workeman by his manufactures is discouered the Art and Trade whereunto hee is most inclined And therefore I shall make bold to aduise Kings that they make such their Fauourites that are men of worth wise prudent dis-interessed and of a noble and generous disposition For by their choice men make iudgement of their King accordingly And likewise when the Kings grace and fauour shall fall vpon good Subiects his owne glory will be the greater Let Kings laying aside all affection choose such as are men of knowledge and experience and that are powerfull in perswading and disswading That know how to go in and out with good satisfaction amidst those so many so diuers and such important businesses as daily offer themselues and to giue good subtill and graue answers both by word of mouth and by writing to such Ambassadours and other great persons that shall come to treate and negociate with them That haue seene and read much and haue a generall knowledge in all things but more particularly in the countries and Prouinces that are vnder their Kings command That know what forces they are able to make and to vnderstand the strength as well of their friends as of their foes Let them be of a franke and liberall minde For this vertue the common people much loue and affect and are wonderfully well satisfied therewith And on the contrary couetousnesse is much hated and abhorred by them Let them I say bee bountifull and desirous to doe good to all in common and to euery one in particular In a word let them be men well knowne to be faithfull and trusty and such as loue their Kings so well as that they will preferre their authoritie and reputation before their owne and studie and endeuour in all and aboue all what may make most for their good and aduantage That they be wise discreet experienced patient without passion disinteressed and more zealous of the publike good then of their priuate profit For if they shall regard their owne interest and proper commoditie they are neither good for the seruice of their Kings nor for the gouernment of the commonwealth For in going about to measure out their priuacie by the yard of their particular profit they will make merchandise of all and their doing good to others shall bee for the benefiting of themselues Nothing comming vnder their hands whereof that they may not be accounted bad Cookes they will not licke their owne fingers The clingenst and strongest affection is that of couetousnesse it is like the headach which hindereth
are fastened to be melted by that very Sunne that gaue them their first warmth and light and by their fall to be left an example to the world to terrifie others And in case for some especiall respect Kings shall resolue with themselues that all the beames of their greatnesse shall illighten and giue life to one particular person let the foundation of their fauours bee layed vpon those qualities desarts and seruices which ought to concurre on those persons on whom they purpose thus to particularize Kings likewise are to consider the Petitions of those that sue vnto them which is my second obseruation and taught by Christ himselfe Mark 10.38 Potestis bibere calecem quem ego bihiturus sum Can ye drinke of the cup that I drinke of Iudging by himselfe in this demand which hee makes to these his Fauourites who so rashly and vnaduisedly came vnto him to petition him for the two principall places that for to possesse them they should haue all sufficient and requisite necessaries vpon which point Christ examines them and the like examination ought Kings to make of those qualities specified by vs touching both Pretenders and Fauourites The third thing which I recommend to your consideration and which Christ teacheth Kings is the great caution and warinesse which they are to vse in not being too facile in granting all that their Fauourites shall require of them Which is to bee gathered out of the last words of this his answer Non est meum dare vobis It is not mine to giue Which to my seeming soundeth thus It will not stand with my truth and iustice to giue for kindreds-sake or other humane respects that which my eternall Father hath prepared for those which deserue best Kings ought to bee very circumspect in promising and not ouer easie in granting for if he shall be facile in granting what others shall desire hee may haue cause to repent himselfe and if he promiseth hee looseth his liberty A great gentleman of qualitie whom King Philip the second much fauoured for his worthy parts and great abilities talking one day with him and walking a good while with his Maiestie after that hee had discoursed with him of diuers things to the Kings so great good content and liking that hee thought with himselfe that there was now a faire occasion offered vnto him to propound vnto him as he did a businesse of his owne He told a friend of his anon after that hee came from him that is that very instant he proposed it he cast such a strange an dainster● looke towards him as if hee had neuer seene him before Which was no want of affection in the King towards him for hee had had many sufficient testimonie● thereof but because it was fitting for so wise and prudent a King to haue that circumspection lest this his affection might minister occasion vnto him to call his discretion in question in granting or not granting that which either is not or at least shall seeme vnto him not to be conuenient for him For Kings must haue recourse to these two things To haue a good and safe conscience with God and intire authoritie and good opinion with men For with none doth that holy and prudent counsell of Saint Paul suite more properly then with them 2. Cor. 8.21 Prouidemus bona non solum coram Deo sed etiam coram hominibus Prouiding for honest things not onely in the sight of the Lord but in the sight of men Which cannot be when as Fauourites either doe all what they list of themselues or get their Kings to doe it for them When the Sensitiue appetite effecteth whatsoeuer it affecteth the vnderstanding which is the soules king remaines oppressed and disgraced and with that foule note which the kingly Prophet Dauid giues it Homo cum in honore esset non intellexit Psal 49.12 comparatus est inmentis insipientibus similis factus est illis Man being in honour hath no vnderstanding he is like the beasts that perish And therefore when Kings out of their particular affection or for the auoiding of trouble and the fulier inioying of their case and pleasure shall giue absolute power to their Fauourites to doe and vndoe as they please presently one blot or other which they will hardly euer get out will bee laid vpon their royall persons Nor need wee herd to relate the hurt which comes thereby and the occasion which it giues vnto the Subiects neither to thinke nor speake of their Princes with that respect which is fitting especially when the Fauourites are none of those which helpe to beare the weight and burthen of businesses but shake them off from their owne shoulders and lay them vpon other that are fitted to their hand and of whom they rest well assured that they will doe nothing but what they will haue them to doe working their will and pleasure in all that they are able And this is not that which Kings and Common wealths need but it much importeth that their Fauourites should bee of that good and quicke dispatch in businesses that all the people might loue them for it for from the contrary great inconueniences are wont to arise When the Shechemites were so vnmannerly and vnciuill in their language against their King Abimilech amongst other things which they vttered and alledged against him they said this in scorne of him Nunquid non est filius Ierobael Iud 9 28. constituit Principem Zabul sernum suam super viros Hemor patris Sichem cur ergo seruiemus ei Who is Abimelech that we should serue him Is not he the sonne of Ierubbaal and Zebul his Officer why should wee serue him c. They tooke it very ill that the King should raise his seruant Zabul to that heighth of honour and greatnesse that he should be made Prince as it were ouer all the people of Hemor and Sichem And howbeit the naturall obligation which Subiects owe to their Kings is so great that they are bound to obey them in all that which is not against God And that it is a token of great noblenes to suffer with a good courage whatsoeuer burthens be they neuer so heauy which they lay vpon them yet notwithstanding they haue no such obligation to their Fauorites For they may for their pleasure or their profit substitute other their Fauourites and oblige the people that they either negociate with or buy out their negociation of them The History of King Don I●●n the second of Castile doth affoord sufficient examples of the great persecutions that followed by letting that his Fauourite haue so great a hand in businesses For the people seeing their King so led by the nose as it were and to yeeld to all that he would haue him doe were verily perswaded that he was bewitch't for he had such power ouer the will vnderstanding of the King that he neither vnderstood what he gaue not knew not how or at least had not
better that all should obey one that had wisedome and experience and that had beene bred vp in businesses and the mannaging of State-affaires whereby to gouerne them in peace and Iustice And sithence that in Pipine these qualities did concurre and that on him all the businesses of importance did depend it were good that hee should bee their King and that Childericke should take his ease and pleasure Hereupon they treated with Pipine who though hee gaue eare vnto what they said yet would not rashly aduenture himselfe to accept of the Crowne vnlesse Pope Zacharias might first be consulted therein Whereupon they sent their Embassadours who had instruction to render such reasons to the Pope that might moue him to approue thereof and iudging Childericke to bee vnfit for the gouernment might absolue the French of their oath which they had taken and that obedience which they ought to their King and that he should depriue him of the kingdome and further declare That since Pipine did rule and command all and had so many good indowments that hee might likewise be inuested with the title of King And the Archbishop of Maguncia was the man that was nominated to set the Crowne on his head and to declare him to bee King of all France Being thus back't they summoned a Parliament degraded the poore seely king and thrust him into a Monastery and Pipine was sworne and proclaimed King of those so many kingdomes and Signories as were then subiect to the Crowne of France There remaineth testimony hereof in the Decretals C. Alius 16. q. Hence had it's first beginning and that hand and power giuen vnto Popes in so great a businesse as the setting vp and pulling downe of Kings and which is more of creating new Emperours and depriuing the old ones of their Empire Whereof there are many examples And that which this Pope did with that King who had no more then that vmbratill and apparent power other Popes afterwards did the like with Henries and Fredericks and other Tyrants of great puisance and power The one offend in the more the other in the lesse The one out of the ambition that they haue to bee Kings that they may command and doe all loose all and so go to hell And the other go the same way for that they will not bee as they should be Kings but giue themselues wholly vnto idlenesse It was the Emperour Galba's vtter ouerthrow that he had put the whole gouernment into onely three mens hands which he brought along with him possessing them with so much power that hee was not Master of himselfe depending still vpon their wil and through that great authoritie which they had they ouerthrew all whatsoeuer their King did ordaine thrusting their armes as we say vp to the elbowes in all affaires and making vse of their present fortune And for that this vnfortunate Emperour could take notice of no more then what hee had from them for none without their permission could or see or speake with him they made him to do that which that other Potter did who going about to make a pot to boyle meate in made a Iarre to put drinke in And he thinking to substitute Iudges that should administer Iustice appointed theeues in their place which robbed the Commonwealth All which was imputed vnto him And for that Vanity is the mother of so many vices all this their great fauour serued to no other vse but to cause their Soueraigne to commit many actions of iniustice and indiscretion and of vnheard of and vnthought of wrongs violently breaking through the ordinary course of Iustice By which exorbitant proceedings this imprudent Emperour grew to be hated and abhorred of all and not being able longer to beare with him they depriued him at once of his life and Empire And these kinde of Caterpillars said the Emperour Sigismund make those Kings vnfortunate Aeneas Siluester de doct Sigismund that put their affiance in them At this carelesse ward liued at first Agesilaus King of the Lacedemonians though afterwards like a wise Prince hee did rectifie this errour And the case was this Hee let his friend and Fauourite Lisander carry a great hand ouer him and did honour him in all that he could expressing alwayes much loue vnto him Lysander puft vp herewith tooke great state vpon him being attended with a great traine and manifesting in his very gate a kinde of extraordinary grauitie and Maiestie and all did so farre forth serue and obey him that it seemed he had vsurped the dignitie royall and the Empire leauing good honest Agesilaus onely the bare Titulary name of King Which his Maiestie taking into his consideration to the end that the people might not say that hee raigned by Lysanders helpe he withdrew the dispatch of businesses from forth his hands and would not remit any thing vnto him and if he spake to him touching this or that businesse he made as if he did not heare him or not well vnderstand him dispatching all himselfe to the good contentment of his Subiects Hereupon Lysander began to cast vp his accounts with himselfe and forbore from that time forward to conferre fauours or to promise Offices and told such suiters as came vnto h●m that they should go themselues to petition the King and would by no meanes permit that they should accompany him to Court as before And yet notwithstanding all this he assisted very carefully in all such seruices as were by his Maiesty recommended vnto him without any the least shew of discontentment Within a while after occasion was offered vnto him to speake with the King and talking with him hee told him O King how well hast thou learned to make thy friends lesse yes quoth the King when they will make themselues too great The King played his part well so did the Fauourite and all ought to doe the like Kings must bore a hole in that ship with their owne hand to stop it's course when it hoyseth it's sayles too high and goes with too still a gale For the taking notice of their Fauourites ambition is that ballast which doth secure them against those their windes and puffes of vanitie Let then the first aduice and which is of greatest importance for Kings and Christian kingdomes bee that which amongst other the Catholicke King of Spaine and Emperour Charles the fifth left vnto his sonne King Philip the second wherein with many indeared and effectuall words he recommends vnto him the obseruing augmenting and defending of the Christian faith in all his kingdomes States and Signiories seuerely punishing with all rigour and iustice without exception of persons all such as should bee either suspected or found culpable in points of Heresies Errours and depraued Sects contrary to the Catholicke faith For therein consisteth all our good words all of them worthie consideration and worthy so Catholicke a Prince esteemed approued and perpetually obserued by his most happie sonne howbeit to his great cost As one that
to the Law yet is hee lyable to the rules of reason This pious Emperour goes on and willeth his sonne that he should strictly recommend to his Vice-roys charge the protecting sheltring and relieuing of the poore the defending of the fatherlesse and widow and those that are destitute of friends and haue none to helpe them Whom some that are in place and authoritie are wont and I feare is too ordinary amongst them to disfauour and disesteeme them making little or no reckoning at all of them Being ignorant how vile and base a thing it is and how heroycall the contrary and how much in imitation of God to put forth a charitable and pitifull hand to him that is brought low and fallen into miserie assisting him in his afflictions and troubles freeing him from wrongs and iniuries whose shield and buckler he that gouernes ought to be And he closes vp this aduertisement with wishing him to be very carefull that his Viceroys and Gouernours exercise their offices as they ought and not to exceed the instructions that are giuen them nor to vsurpe beyond their authoritie giuing them this prouiso that in doing the contrary he shall thinke that he is ill serued by them and that hee giue order to haue it remedied and amended by his displeasure and their punishment And howbeit it be true that he ought not to giue credit to all the complaints which are made against such his Ministers which are seldome wanting yet in no hand that he should refuse to heare them and vnderstand them in forming himselfe fully of the truth For the not doing of it will but minister occasion vnto them to be more absolute and to the Subiects to grow desperate seeing themselues oppressed by iniustice and vnconscionable dealing Likewise when Kings send an Embassadour to another Prince they must looke well into the qualitie of the person whom they send For in such an Embassage he doth not onely treate of the businesses for which hee goes but likewise of the honour and authoritie of the King which sends him And therefore it is necessary that the persons that are nominated and declared to go on Embassage haue many of those qualities which we haue mentioned in Vice-roys and Councellours of State For if they shall not fill that place with the greatnesse of their good abilities it will be a great lessening to the credit and reputation of the King and the businesses will receiue much hinderance if not vtterly bee ouerthrowne The Romanes did make a mocke of the Teutones counting them no better then fooles for sending an Embassadour vnto them that was a block-head and of little or no experience Kings and great Princes all that from which glory and greatnesse resulteth vnto them they ought to doe it without any the least shew of vanitie accompanying it with such circumstances and consequencies that it may seeme onely to bee done for the common good the exaltation of the Commonwealth and the reputation of their Crowne In all times and places they must represent much authoritie grauitie and Maiestie in their persons and in their Treaties mixing it with affabilitie and courtesie To the end that by the one they may cause feare and respect and by the other quit and remoue that feare It is reported of Octauian the Emperour that all the Embassadours that appeared in his presence stood astonished betwixt feare and admiration but no sooner spake he vnto them but they were wonderfully taken with his words and did not then so much feare as affect him For albeit the Maiestie where with hee receiued them was exceeding great yet was his carriage towards them very affable and very courteous In these two vertues did excell that Catholicke King of Spaine Don Philip the second whom for the representing of Maiestie and regall authoritie none did excell and few equall And in the carriage and composition of his person there was no defect to bee found Vpon any accident that befell him were it good or bad fortunate or vnfortunate there was neuer any man that could perceiue in him so much as a discomposed countenance or any other the least alteration And hee may be truly said to be a man who is not proud in prosperitie nor impatient in aduersitie For it is a great signe of Noblenesse and the vndoubted marke of a royall minde and Princely courage not to loose himselfe in his aduerser fortunes but to shew himselfe constant against fortune and to raise vp his spirits as this King did being neuer deiected with any outward Crosse or misfortune tha befell him He did neuer being therein like vnto to Xenophous Cyrus shew an ill countenance or speake an ill word vnto any man Hee was not so affable and familiar with his Fauourites that any of them all durst presume to petition him in any thing that was vniust nor yet so austere and seuere towards others as to make them to forbeare to preferre a iust suite vnto him To his owne Subiects he was kinde to strangers noble but withall reseruing still his authoritie and greatnesse For Kings ought not to bee so harsh and intractable as to make themselues to bee abhorred nor so kinde and courteous as to cause themselues to be contemned Indeauouring all they can not to fall into the extreames by shewing too much loue to some and little or none at all to other some For too much seueritie ingendreth hatred and too much familiaritie breedeth contempt Let them generally beare themselues in that respectiue manner towards all that they honour the better loue the meaner sort and despise not the rest but as farre as they are able extend their grace and fauour vnto all For that being but little which they haue to giue in comparison of the many that are sutors and the great rewards which they pretend they rest better satisfied with those good words and mannerly answers that are giuen them then with those fauours that are done them For the generous hearts modest countenances and ingenious dispositions of those noble spirits which follow Princes Courts much more risent the disfauour that is done them in receiuing courtesies with disgrace then if they were denyed them And therefore it is good wholesome counsell and much importing Kings to returne a faire and equall answer vnto all according to each mans qualitie and merit and that they carry the same euen hand in the conferting of their fauours and in the manifestation of their loue And if they shall in a more particular manner expresse the same to some one particular person let him likewise more particularly deserue it For neuer shall that loue be stedfast where deserts are wanting in the partie beloued I shall likewise aduertise Kings that they doe not make such vse of this their great both office and power as to assume vnto themselues to be absolute and to cumply in all things with their affections and desires nor to exercise any other personall passion For the vse and custome of absolute power
Seneshalls or Lord high Stewards of the Kings House Who were such absolute Lords and of that vnlimited power that they ruled the roste and did what they list leauing the poore seely King nothing saue onely the bare Title who sitting in a Chaire with his Perriwigge and his long beard represented the person of a King making the world beleeue that hee gaue Audience to all Ambassadours that came from forraigne parts and gaue them their answers and dispatches when they were to returne But in very truth he sayd no more vnto them saue what hee had beene taught or had by writing beene powred into him making shew as if all this had beene done out of his owne Head So that these kinde of Kings had nothing of the Power-Royall but the vnprofitable name of King and inutile throne of State and a personated Maiestie that lay open to nothing but scorne and derision For the true kings and those that commanded all were those their Minions and Fauorites who oppressed the other by their potencie and kept them in awe Of a King of Samaria God sayd That hee was no more but paululum spumae a froathy bubble Which being beheld a far off seemeth to be something but when you draw neere and touch it it is nothing Simia in tecto Rex fatuus in solio suo He is like vnto an Ape on the house-toppe who vsing the apparances and gestures of a man is taken for such a one by them that know him not Iust so is a foolish King vpon his Throne your Ape likewise serueth to entertaine children and to make them sport And a King causeth laughter in those who behold him stript of the actions of a King without authoritie and without gouernment A King appareled in Purple and sitting with great Maiestie in his Throne answereable to his greatnesse seemeth in shew graue seuere and terrible but in effect nothing Like vnto the Picture of that Grecians limming which being placed on high and beheld from a farre seemed to be a very good Peece But when you came neerer vnto it and viewed it well it was full of Blots and Blurs and very course stuffe A King vnder his Canopie or Princely Pall expresseth a great deale of outward State and Maiestie but himselfe being narrowly lookt into is no better then the blurred Character of a King Simulachra gentium Dauid calleth those Kings that are Kings onely in name Or as the Hebrew renders it Imago fictilis contrita An image of crack't earth which leaketh in a thousand places A vaine Idoll which representeth much yet is no other then a false and lying shadow And that name doth very well sute with them which Eliphas falsly put vpon Iob Iob. 4.19 who being so good and so iust a man did mocke at him vpbrayding him that his foundation was in the dust that he was not a man of any solid and sound iudgement but onely had some certaine exteriour apparences calling him Mimicoleon which is a kinde of creature which in Latin they call Formicaleo Because it hath a monstrous kinde of Composture in the one halfe part of the body representing a fierce Lyon which was alwayes the Hierogliffe of a King and in the other halfe an Ante or Pismire which signifieth a weake thing and without any substance Authoritie Name Throne and Maiestie doth well become Lyons and powerfull Princes And hitherto it is well But when we looke on the other halfe and see the being and substance of a Pismire that goes hard There haue beene Kings who with their very name onely haue strooke the world into a feare and terrour But they themselues had no substance in them and were in their Kingdome no better then Ants and Pismires Great in name and Office but poore in action Let euery King then acknowledge himselfe to be an Officer and not onely to bee a priuate but a publicke Officer and a superintendent in all Offices whatsoeuer For in all hee is bound both to speake and doe S Austen and D. Thomas expounding that place of Saint Paul Aug. D. Tho. in Epis. 1. ad Tim. 3. which treates of Episcopall Dignitie say That the Latin word Episcopus is compounded in the Greeke of two words being in signification the same with Superintendens The name of Bishop of King and of whatsoeuer other superior is a name that comprehendeth Superintendencie and assistance in all Offices This the royall Scepter signifieth exercised by Kings in their publicke acts a Ceremonie vsed by the Aegyptians but borrowed from the Hebrews who for to expresse the obligation of a good King did paint an open eye placed alofte vpon the top of a rod in forme of a Scepter signifying in the one the great power that a King hath and the prouidence and vigilancie which hee is to haue In the other that he doe not onely content himselfe in possessing this supreme power and in holding this high and eminent place and so lye downe and sleepe and take his ease as if there were no more to bee done but hee must bee the first in gouernment the first in Councell and all in all Offices hauing a watchfull eye in viewing and reuiewing how euery publicke Minister performes his duty In signification whereof Ieremie saw the like rod Ier. 1. v. 12. when God asking him what hee saw hee sayd Virgam Vigilantem ego video Well hast thou seene and verily I say vnto thee That I who am the head will watch ouer my body I that am the shepheard will watch ouer my sheepe And I that am a King and Monarke will watch without wearinesse ouer all my Inferiours The Chalde translates it Regem festinantem a King that goes in hast For though hee haue eyes and see yet if he betake him to his ease be lull'd asleepe with his delightes and pleasures and doth not bestirre himselfe visiting this and that other place and seeke to see and know all the good and euill which passeth in his Kingdome hee is as if hee were not Let him bethinke himselfe that he is a Head and the Head of a Lyon which sleepes with his eyes open That he is that rodde which hath eyes and watcheth Let him therefore open his eyes and not sleepe trusting to those that perhaps are blinde or like Moles haue no eyes at all or if they haue any vse them no farther then for their own priuate profit And therein they are quicke sighted These haue the eyes of the Kyte and other your birdes of rapine but it were better that they had no eyes at all then haue them all for themselues CHAP. IIII. Of the Office of Kings HAuing proued that the name of King is not of Dignitie onely but likewise of Occupation and Office it is fit that we should now treate of the qualities and partes thereof For the better vnderstanding whereof wee must follow the Metaphor or resemblance of Mans body whereof the Apostle S. Paul made vse thereby to giue vs
that hath any other beginning of birth For all men haue one entrance vnto life and the like going out We come all into the world with our bare skins on our backs and as naked of knowledge as cloathes being subiect in the rest to industrie instruction and others counsaile and aduice which is that which supplieth the defects of nature Rationall soules are all of them equall and alike in their creation and essentiall perfection though they differently discouer themselues in some bodies more then in other some in regard of the better or not so good disposition of the Organs and by consequence their vnderstandings come to be differenced and the conceipts of the one to bee of a higher straine then the other A man shall see more clearely through a Christall glasse then that which is of a thicker and grosser mettall Our body is nothing else but a glasse nor haue all bodies this good disposition Nor haue Kings ioyntly with their power the selfe same measure in their vnderstanding wisedome and prudence But say they had it will be no hurt to them but a great deale of good and aduantage to heare and take aduice For audiens sapiens sapientio rerit Prou. 19.20 A wise man by hearing will be made the wiser Audi consilium vt sis sapiens in nouissimis tuis Heare counsaile and receiue instruction that thou mayst be wise in the latter end And neuer in hard and difficult businesses should any man be he neuer so wise refuse to take aduise And besides it sauours of much wisedome not to doe any thing without it Qui agunt omnia in Consilio reguntur sapientia Prou. 13.10 With the well aduised saith the holy Ghost is wisedome And there is no man so wise that is wise in all things The best and skilfullest Physitian in the world knowes not how to cure himselfe neither will he trust only to his own opinion but calleth another vnto him aduiseth with him takes his Counsaile and puts himselfe vnder his cure Eurigius king of the Gothes said in the Toletane Councell Concil Tol. That euen those workes which in themselues were very good and did much import the Common-wealth wereby no means to be done or put in execution without the Counsaile of those that were good Ministers and well affected to the State vpon paine not onely of losse of discretion but to be condemned as the onely ouerthrowers of the Action Things being so various and so many and weighty the businesses as are those which come vnder the hands of Kings and craue their care to bee treated of the successe of them must needes run a great deale of danger when there precedeth not some diligent and mature Counsaile Kings I assure you had neede haue good both Counsailours and Counsaile hauing so many eyes as they haue vpon them some of iealousie and some of enuie so many that goe about to deceiue and doe deceiue them and many that doe not loue them as they ought I say they had neede of good both Counsailours and Counsaile and such a Councell as is more close and priuate as that of the Councell of State and sometimes and in some cases with a little more restriction and reseruednesse making choise of one two or more of their faithfullest and sufficientest Counsellours with whom they may freely Communicate their greater and lesser affaires and be resolued by them in matters of greater moment and such as importe their own proper preseruation and the augmentation of their Kingdome such as the Historians of Augustus paint forth vnto vs which kinde of course the Princes before and since his time haue taken and now at this present doe From the poorest Plowman to the Potent'st Prince from the meanest Shepheard to the mightiest Monarke there is a necessitie of this Counsaile And in effect euery one as hee can comformable to his Estate and calling must Consult with his Wife his Sonne his Friend or himselfe if his fortune afford him not a Companion whom he may trust or make his Confident How much doth it concerne Kings who possessing such great Estates and being subiect to so many Accidents haue need of a more perfect and Complete Councel And not any thing so much importeth them for the conseruation and augmentation of their Kingdomes as to haue about them iust prudent dis-interessed persons to aduise them with a great deale of faithfullnesse and loue and with free libertie of Language to represent the truth of that which to them and their Common-wealth is most fitting and conuenient Who for this purpose Plut. in P. Aemil Arist c. ● Mag. moral are as necessarie as great treasures and mighty Armies That holy King Dauid was more a fraid of the aduise of one wise Counsellour which his son Absolon had with him then of all the Men of Warre that followed him and his fortunes Plutarke and Aristole floute at Fortune in businesses that succeede well when men doe gouerne themselues by good Counsell And for this cause they stiled Counsaile the eye of those things that are to come because of its foresight And for that wee haue treated heeretofore of the qualities of all sortes of Counsailours I now say That with much deliberation and aduise Kings are to make choise of those persons which are to aduise and Counsaile them For from their hitting or missing the marke resulteth the vniuersall good or ill of the whole Kingdome It is the common receiued opinion That the maturest and soundest Counsaile is to be found in those men that are growne wise by their Age and experience which is the naturall Daughter of Time and the Mother of good Counsaile Tempus enim multam variam doctrinam parit Eurip. lib. 12. It is Euripides his saying Suting with that of Iob In antiquis est sapientia in multo tempore prudentia Seniore in Prouinciae congrega eos interroga facilius namque inuenitur quod a pluribus Senioribus quaeritur In the ancient is wisedome and in much time prudence Long time is a great Master which doth graduate men in the knowledge of things and makes them wary prudent and circumspect which is much if not wholly wanting in young men And therefore Aristotle saith of them that they are not good for Counsaile because Wit more then Wisedome in them hath it's force and Vigour Et tenero tractari pectore nescit saith Claudian And S. Ierome is of the minde that young Witts cannot weild weighty matters And that their Counsailes are rash and dangerous like vnto that they gaue King Rehoboam S. Aug. ad fratres in erem Ser. 14. By whose inconsiderate aduise hee lost his Kingdome The same course hauing cost others as deare as is proued vnto vs out of S. Austen And therefore the Grecians Romans Lacedemonians Carthaginians and other Common-wealthes which were good obseruers of their Lawes and Customes did ordaine That a young man how wise so euer hee might seeme to
saue of a poore shadow to be thus mis-led Librorum numero circumstante The President before specified had a great many of bookes about him To shew how much it importeth that Iudges and Presidents bee Learned and well read in the bookes of their facultie Epiphanius saith That hee saw a Statua of Truth which in it's forehead had two letters the first and the last of the Greeke Alphabet in it's mouth other two and other two in it's brest and so through all the parts of it's body to it 's very feete So that this was all enamelled with Letters as the other was rounded with bookes Thereby giuing vs to vnderstand that that Man which is truly the man he ought to be and is to aduise and gouerne others his head hands and feete must be stucke full of Letters He must be learned from the sole of the foote to the Crowne of the head full of Letters hee must bee for in the discourses of the Vnderstanding in the working of the hands and in the moouing of the feete wee may easily guesse whether a man be wise or no Whether he hath studied or doth studie For though a man be neuer so wise neuer so learned hee still forgetteth somewhat So that it is not enough for him to haue studyed but it is requisit that he still continue his study that hee may repayre with that which he learneth the losse of that which hee forgetteth As in a naturall body that by dayly eating and drinking is restored which is by our naturall heate consumed Et oculis esset subclausis His eyes which are the windowes by which Passion enters vnto the soule were shut Because hee should not be led away with the respect to those about him For hee must not haue an eye and respect to the Estate and condition of persons to doe more fauour when it comes to point of Iustice to one then another And for this reason the sayd Aegyptians did ordinarily paint Iustice without a Head The Head is the common seate of all the Sences signifying thereby that by no one sence a Iudge should open a doore to Passion but that he should place them all in heauen without respect to any thing vpon earth And this is not to respect persons but Iustice Plut. lib. 1. Stobaeus Serus 46. Plutarke in his Moralls reporteth of the Thebans That in their Courts of Iustice they had the Pictures drawne of certaine reuerend olde men sitting in their due order and in the midst the President all of them without hands and their eyes fixed on heauen To intimate that they should alwaies stand in the presence of the Lord from whence is to come that Light which is to cleare the eyes of their intentions avoyding to cast them downe towards the ground that the Vapour of humane respects which is raysed from thence may not cloude and darken the sight of their vnderstanding They must be olde and wise because they are to iudge with mature Counsaile which accompanyeth that age And as it is ordred by their Lawes they must haue neither eyes to see nor hands to receiue bribes And if they would cut off their wiues hands too the cause would be the better iustified For in them your bribes finde an open gate and are so easie to be knowne in this kind of trading that there are few or none but take notice of it They haue the slight of hand and like Gypsies haue a fine facilitie in deceiuing and not hard to be wrought vpon to gaine by this vngodly course And looke what businesse they labour to effect they are vsually the least iustifiable And if they are disposed to fauour this man or that cause and will but set their friends and wits roundly to worke and doe their best they will shrewdly put a Iudge to his shiftes and driue him to that streight that Iustice shall hardly escape a fall I would haue iudges therefore with their hands off and their eyes out least that befall them which did a couple of their place and qualitie who came to see the Processe of a famous but false and loose woman who perceiuing that the reasons of the Relator did worke little vpon them appealed para vista de ojos that shee might appeare face to face and in her information when shee came Ore tenus shee cunningly discouered her beautie by a carelesse letting fall of her mantle and so bewitched them therewith that allowing for good those powerfull witnesses of her eyes and face they released her and gaue her for free But to say the truth it was her loosenesse that freed her and their lightnesse that condemned them making that fault light which before weighed heauie And how shal he freely administer Iustice who hath his heart captiuated and in the power of him and her that can turne and winde him which way they list and wrest him from goodnesse More Iudges haue bin vndone by Lightnesse then by Cruelty The one begetteth feare the other contempt And by the way let them take this lesson a long with them that not onely in reality of truth they conserue their credit without spot but likewise in apparance procure to giue such good Examples that the world may not iustly charge them no not with so much as a discomposed looke neither in the open streete nor Court of Iustice for euery bend from their brow or euery smile from their countenance is the Common peoples Almanack wher-by they make coniecture whether it is like to be faire or fowle weather reading in the face fauour to one and rigour to another Wherefore as their place is great so is their perill The way is slippery wherein they tread and therfore had need looke well to their feete Woe be vnto that Iudge which seeth and seeth not sees the best and followes the worst suffering his reason to be subdued by passion and himselfe by one poore slender haire of a handsome woman to be led by the nose whether shee will leade him For a good face is a tacite kinde of recommendation a faire superscription and a silent deceit which troubles the clearenesse of the minde making white appeare to be blacke and what is iust Exod. 23.8 Leuit. 19.15 to be vniust which was the cause why God commanded the Iudges of Israel that they should remoue their eies from the persons of those that were brought before them and place them wholly on the matter which they were to iudge And for the same reason did the Iudges of Areopagus heare all sortes of causes were they ciuill or criminall in the darke by putting out the Candles And your Athenians did sentence their sutes behind certaine Curtaines which might hinder their sight The Lacedemonians they were a little stricter laced for they did not onely deny eyes to those that went to Law and sued in their courtes but also debard them of eares and because they would prohibit them the power of informing the iustnesse of their cause but
the more licence of offending and open mercie proclaimed Crueltie Let the end of this discourse be that the Councells and Counsellers being seated and setled in the forme aforesaid the King likewise apply himselfe to treat truth with them and to deale plainely with them in whatsoeuer businesses shall offer themselues to be debated of And let him not perswade himselfe that there are too few of euery Councell for if they be chosen and selected men few will suffice and many serue to no other end but to trouble each other and to delay businesses For howbeit it be true that it is euermore good to heare the opinions of all for to ventilate and sifte out a cause throughly yet the determination ought to passe through the hands of a few but withall good and experienced persons that they may not erre in their sentence Of the Emperour Alexander Seuerus who was a man of singular wisdome it is reported that for the resolution of those businesses which he vndertooke he called onely vnto him such Counsellours to whom such businesse did more properly appertaine and had most knowledge and experience in that Aelius Lampr. in vita Alexan. Se ueri which was to be treated Vndè si de Iure tractaretur solos doctos in consilum adhibebat Si verò de re militari milites veteres senes ac bene meritos locorum peritos c. So that if it were a Law-businesse he onely called the Learned in the Lawes to Councell if of warfare olde beaten Soldiers aged and well-deseruing Captaines and of approued experience in their place And so in the rest Arist lib. 8. Polit. cap. 6. For as the Philosopher saith Impossibile est vel certè admodum difficile vt qui ipsa opera non tractat peritè valeat iudicare It is impossible or at least certainly very hard for to iudge iudiciously of those things wherein a man was neuer yet imployd But that which hath beene a mans Office and continuall Exercise in this he must needs be wise and cannot choose but speake well to the point Quilibet ad ea idoneus est Plato lib 21. de fortitud in quibus sapit saith Plato Some there are that are wise but like the Troians too late They know what is to be done but are too long in doing it and therefore it is necessary to adde hands to Counsell and force to wisedome yet still allowing the Councell so much time as things may come to their true ripenesse and maturitie For as it is in the Prouerbe Harto prestò se haze lo que bien se haze That is quickely done that is well done And very necessary is that pause and breathing wherewith Kings goe ripening great businesses And exceeding fit it is that they should goe soberly to worke take time and leasure inough and that in their consultations they should vse feete of leade but in the execution of them hands of steele Which being once well grounded and both the Conueniences and Inconueniences throughly weighed though in these great and weighty affaires there are neuer some wanting that will follow that part which hath least ground for it and yet perswade themselues that they onely are in the right and that all the reason in the world is on their side let them goe roundly to worke and after a concluded consultation let them shew themselues constant in the execution thereof For as another Philosopher said Cunctanter aggrediendum est negotium verùm in suscepto Diog. Lacre constanter perseuerandum A maine businesse must haue a slow motion but when the wheeles are once set a going they must neuer stand still till it haue finished it's intended worke And the Prophet Esay Isay 11.2 ioyned the spirit of fortitude to that of Councell For Counsaile little auaileth that is deuoid of force and strength to execute Vile est Consilium saith Pope Gregory cui robur fortitudinis deest That Counsaile is vile and base that wants true mettall Let Counsell I say be slow sauour of the lamp but let the Execution be quicke as lightening For as mortall are those wounds those diseases to which remedy is giuen too late as those to whom none is giuen at all To what end therefore I pray serue your Iuntas vpon Iuntas reference vpon reference your long and large Consultations your viewings and reuiewings if after all this great adoe all is roll'd and shut vp in paper Whereas in all reason nay and right too how much the more time there hath beene spent in consulting so much the more speede and force ought to be vsed in Executing For on good Counsaile and quicke Execution consist your good ends and all prosperous successe CHAP. XIIII It is demanded by way of Question Whether Kings ought inuiolably to obserue the foresaid Order ARt is Natures Ape and imitates her all she can And by so much the more perfect an Artificer and more cunning workeman is he accounted who shall seeme to come neerest in his worke to that great Master and Maker of Nature and whatsoeuer is naturall wherein as hath already beene sayd is conserued and kept that firme and constant Law and first commandement which he imposed vpon all things in the beginning of their creation Who likewise hath and doth still keepe a wonderfull correspondency in those very things conseruing them in their operations working and operating continually by their meanes and helpe and honouring them with the name and essence of secundary Causes though he himselfe be the primary naturall cause in that working So that the fire hath alwaies perfourmed that Office wherin God placed it to wit To burne or heate And when he hath beene pleased to worke these effects he hath made vse of them for that purpose as well vpon occasion of his wrath and chasticement as of his loue and cherishment When he was willing to destroy and consume those Cities of Sodom and Gomorrah Gen. 19.24 he did not make vse of water but of fire which he sent among them to execute his iudgement vpon that occasion And for to Regular and make much of that Mirrour of patience Iob and to exercise him in that vertue Ignis cecidit è caelo tactas oues puerosque consumpsit The fire of God is fallen from heauen Iob. 1.16 and hath burnt vp the sheepe and the seruants c. For to throw downe the house and at one blow to kill all his children that were met together to make merry he made vse of the Winde For to drowne the world he serued himselfe with the water and in the desert he drew water out of the Rocke to quench the thirst of his people and to preserue them from perishing So that Life Death and Health which God can giue solely of himselfe yet will he haue it be wrought by the helpe and meanes of those secundary naturall Causes And euen at the day of iudgement he will make vse of all these for
variety and difference of things they ought to remit some nay many of them to persons deputed for their ease and discharge of their Consciences Let a King examine those businesses which are fit to bee reserued for himselfe And those that hee cannot let him remit them vnto others because of himselfe hee is not able to dispatch all of them And in fauour of this Doctrine wee haue Iethro's Counsaile to his sonne in Law Moses Who seeing him so ouer-imployed in the businesses of his people to his intolerable trouble said vnto him Stulto labore consumeris Exod. 18.18 elige tibi Viros c. Thou wearyest thy selfe greatly and this people that is with thee prouide thee men c. I neede not repeate all vnto you hauing spoken thereof largely heretofore I shall now therefore represent vnto you That there are two kinds of Remitting The one for to vnloade himselfe of that charge and trouble that hee may liue himselfe at ease and out of his authoritie lay the burthen vpon others and command them to end such or such a businesse Which is now too commonly vsed and practised For euerie on as much as in him lyes striues to bee superiour in this kind Taking that to himselfe which is most pleasing and easiest for him remitting the hardest and harshest to other mens hands And hence it happeneth that from thc first remitting the King makes your poore Negociants like so many Tennis-balls are tost from one to another Nay their fortune is farre worse for the Ball which is racketed by the one Player the other with great nimblenesse and care runnes forth to receiue it But the poore Negociant who in these Remitments serues in stead of the Ball they doe not onely not receiue him readily but shut the doore vpon him obliging him to solicite his entrance one while by fauour another while by giftes And although this bee too vsuall a practice in all Tribunalls and with all Iudges and vpon all differences of businesses yet is it there most practised where matters of goods and Titles of Lands are treated wherein the Pretenders doe not onely sweate and take a great deale of paines but are forced to pay as much for the dispatch of tenne thousand Marauedies as if they were so many Ducats And this may be confirmed with the example of a poore honest widdow who as it is well knowne spent much time and that little money which shee had in Negociating the dispatch of a small debt And when after a long and tedious suite shee had at last got an order against her Aduersarie yet was shee neuer the neerer getting of her money for that it was ordered in Court that shee should bee payd out of such Rents which vpon some pre-morgage or some other cunning Conveyance could not bee recouered These remittings I doe not finde how they can be defended or salued in the Sacred Scripture But there are many reasons for the condemning of them and for the obliging of kings to limit and remedie them The other kinde of remitting is When eyther the order and qualitie of the businesse or the lawfull Impediment of him that remitteth doth so require it For which wee haue our Sauiour CHRISTS warrant in that admirable conuersion of the blessed Apostle Saint Paul For albeit hee himselfe by his powerfull hand threw him downe from off his Horse and made him so farre forth to yeeld himselfe his that hee vttered these words so full of submission Domine Act. 9.6 quid me vis facere Lord what wilt thou that I doe Yet did hee not then giue him a present absolute Dispatch but remitted him ouer to another Disciple which was named Ananias It being held fit it should bee so for those reasons which are rendred by the Saints and holy Fathers The like course hee tooke with Cornelius the Centurion in that great businesse of his Saluation Act. 10 5. putting him ouer to Saint Peter Luk. 17.12 And when he saw the Petition of those tenne Lepers who besought him that hee would make them whole howbeit hee granted them their request for the recouerie of their health yet did he remit them ouer to the Priests and Commanded them to present themselues before them because in those kinde of infirmities Leuit. 13. they were to be Arbitrary Iudges what was to be done in that case And to the Disciples of Iohn Baptist which he sent vnto him when he was in prison to the end that they might informe themselues who he was and whether it was he that should come or were to looke for another He remitted them backe to their Master with this Answer Ite renunciate Ioanni quae audistis vidistis Goe and shew Iohn what things yee heare and see As if he should haue said Mat. 11.4 For as much as Iohn is my Voice by him is the truth to be declared which you seeke after touching the Diuinitie of my Person All these Remittings were plaine and dispatched without reply And those doubtlesse condemned which are now daily vsed passing things ouer from one to another as if men were to deale with children who asking a companie of them that are playing together Is your Mother at home All make answer This boy can tell you or that other boy can tell you So that many mens liues are ended before their businesses can be ended Their suites growing older then them selues wasting both their wealth and their persons to no purpose It is recounted in the Acts of the Apostles Act. 6.2 That they being so busily imployed in the Preaching of the Gospell that they could not ioyntly with it attend those workes of Charitie and Almes-deedes which were exercised in the Primitiue Church by feeding those that were conuerted they did remit the care thereof to seuen Deacons chosen out from amongst them all for that Ministrie And heere is to be considered a point of Doctrine of great importance That the Apostles as there it is mentioned albeit they saw what a great charge they had and how much trouble with daily Preaching and continuall Praying they did neither omit nor remit this businesse but were wonderfull carefull that those to whom this care was remitted should be persons of great approbation and fulfilled with the Holy Ghost and with wisdome as were S. Steuen and others which were elected and ioyned in Commission with him Considerate ergo fratres viros ex vobis boni testimonij Septem plenos Spiritu Sancto sapientia quos constituamus super hoc opus c. Wherefore brethren Looke you out among you seuen men of honest report and full of the Holy Ghost and of wisdome which we appoint to this businesse Which is a Lesson for Kings that when they vnderstand that the persons to whom they vse to remit businesses are not such as they ought to be either for their want of wisdome or experience in those things or that their minde is not cleare and free from passion
Their Vare or rod of Iustice must not be too short for some too long for other some Let Right strike the stroake let no man be deny'd Iustice For this is to be Kings and Iudges this to be common fathers to all poore and rich great small meane and mighty Deut. 1.16 Audite illos saith God et quod iustum est iudicate siue Ciuis ille sit siue perigrinus nulla erit distantia per sonarum ita paruum audietis vt magnum nec accipietis cuiusquam personam quia dei iudicium est Heare the controuersies betweene your brethren and iudge righteously betweene euery man and his brother and the stranger that is with him Yee shall haue no respect of 〈◊〉 in iudgement but shall heare the small as well as the great ye shall not feare the face of man for the Iudgement is Gods CHAP. XXII Of Iustice Distributiue IT appertayneth to distributiue Iustice as we told you in the former Chapter to repart and deuide in a conuenient and fitting manner the goods the honours dignities and Offices of the Common-wealth For as Dionysius saith Bonum est diffusinum Good is a diffusiue kinde of thing it is a scatterer and of it selfe a spreader of it selfe And by how much the greater the good is by so much with the greater force doth it communicate it selfe And hence doth it come to passe that God is so liberall and so exceeding bountifull as he is that I may not say prodigall with men by communicating himselfe vnto them by all possible meanes euen to the communicating of himselfe by that most excellent and highest kinde of manner that he could possible deuise which was by giuing himselfe to himselfe and by submitting himselfe so low as to become true man that man might be exalted so high as to be made equall with God by that ineffable and diuine vnion which the Diuines call Hypostaticall So that you see that Good in its owne condition nature hath this propertie with it to be communicable by so much the more by how much the more great it is And herein kings ought to be like vnto God whose place they supply here on earth for certainly by so much the more properly shall they participate of good Kings by how much the more they shall haue of this 〈…〉 qualitie And so much the neerer shall they resemble God with by how much the more liberalitie they shall repart and diffuse these outward goods whose distribution appertaineth vnto them And ●o him cannot the name of King truely sute who hath not alwayes a willing minde and as it were a longing desire to communicate himselfe Now for to temper and moderate this generall longing and inflamed desire this so naturall and proper and appetite of bestowing and diuiding the riches and common goods of the Common-wealth this part of Iustice which they call Distributiue was held the most necessary Which Aristotle says either is or ought to be in a King as in such a Lordly subiect and person to whom this repartition and communication properly belongeth Wherein aboue all other things Kings ought to vse most circumspection prudence and care for that therein they vsually suffer most cosenage and deceit For in regard that to giue is in it selfe so pleasing and delightfull a thing and so properly appertaining to their greatnesse and State they doe easily let loose the reines to this noble desire and send giftes this way and that way in such poste haste that within a few dayes they run themselues out of all and draw dry not onely the Kings particular wealth and treasure but the riches of the whole kingdome were they neuer so great So that what is done in this kinde with so much content and pleasure ought to be done but now and then for such great courtesies and extraordinary kindnesses must not be made too common for feare of drawing on a dis-esteeme of them nor done but in their due time and season not vnaduisedly beforehand and vpon no merit or desert but when others want and necessitie and his owne honour and noblenesse shall oblige him to expresse his bounty And in good sooth there is not any Moathe which doth so consume nor any Caterpiller or Grasse-hopper that doth so crop and destroy the power of well doing and the vertue of Liberalitie as the loose hand that can hold nothing and in a lauish and disproportionable manner scatters it's Donatiues with so vnequall a distribution that the dignitie of the gift is drowned in the indiscretion of the giuer And therefore as it is in the Spanish Prouerb which speakes very well to this purpose Par● dar y tener seso es menester A very good braine it will craue to know when to spend when to saue Yet mistake me not I beseech you for it is no pa●● of my me●ning no● did it euer come within my thought or desire to perswade Kings to be close fisted and couetous a Vice to be hated and abhorred in all men but in them much more That which I say it That to the end that may not be wanting vnto Kings which doth so much importe them and is so proper vnto them as to giue rewards and bestow f● it is fit that they should doe these things so that they may be able to doe them often And according to the olde saying To giue so at one time as we may giue a● another Your Trees in holy Scripture are sometimes taken for the Hieroglyffe or Embleme of Kings for that they are in some things like vnto them Wherof we shall speak hereafter But that which makes now for our present purpose is That the tree shewing such a la●genes spreadingnes and bountifullnesse in discouering it a fruit through it's boughes and branches and it 's inuiting vs and presenting it's prouision vnto vs first in the flower and blossome to the end wee may come to gather that fruit which yeerely it bringeth forth in its due time and season and yet notwithstanding hideth and concealeth it's rootes all that it can because there lyes that fountaine from whence all this good doth spring As also for that if in that part it should suffer any hurt or detriment all the rest would cease nor would it flourish and fructifie any more And I am of opinion that 〈◊〉 Kings cannot content themselues with conferring of fauors and bestowing of gifts out of those fruites and 〈◊〉 ●s Which shall arise out of their yearely reuenewes but that the very rents rayzes Rayz is properly the roote of a tree or any other plant Metophorictlly Rayzes are inheritances or possessions in lands houses or immouable goods because these cannot be rooted out nor remoued from place to place as your moueable goods may be Bien● rayzes del Reyno is Crowne Land which neither can nor ought to be alienated Conarr verb. Rayzes b. Iuro reales is a certaine royall rent raised throughout a whole Kingdome so called à Iure for the
of life But when this rigour and strictnesse is obserued of not giuing to him that asketh not though hee merit and deserue the same it seemeth to be made a meritorious cause to sue and to negociate and occasion giuen that more care should be placed in this then in deseruing well whereby mens mindes and courages haue their edge abated and are dishartened For to aske when it is nor for the end aforesayd it draweth on this inconuenience with it Which is Aristotles opinion and is made good in all true reason of Morall Philosophy The Apostle S. Paul quoteth a sentence which our Sauiour Christ vsed often to repeate Beatius est magis dare quam accipere Farre more excellent and more prayse-worthy is it to giue then to take And if not to take be so good a thing much better shall it be not to aske for that this is the ordinary meanes to the other And herein did the Saints of God glorie much and Saint Paul saith of himselfe That he would rather liue by the labour of his hands then be importunate in crauing And that great Prophet Samuel that which he did most prize and iustifie himselfe of before the people was that hee had faithfully performed his function without crauing or taking any thing There was a time wherein the Romane Senate did ordaine that the Consullship and other the chiefe Magistracies should not be giuen to any saue such as sued for them This Law at first was good for then none durst presume to sue for them but those who in the peoples opinion did well deserue them and tooke it for a great affront that they should receiue a deniall So that by this meanes euery one did labour by his noble Actions to deserue that Dignitie as also that all the people might thinke him worthy thereof Afterwards this proued to be a very pernicious Law for not those who by their vertues and heroicall Acts did deserue this Honour but those that were the most powerfull did sue for it whilest others for feare of these durst not shew themselues in the busines and so were vtterly excluded from those honourable Offices This inconuenience was taken notice of and Publicola the Consull made a Law vpon paine of death wherewith he was to be punished who without approbation from the people of Rome should sue for any of the said Offices And likewise for the curbing of this Vice was the Calphurnian Law enacted But now for our sinnes hath crept in amongst vs that Greekish infection wherof I Socrates saith Is●●r●t de pace that Ambition at that time was growen to that extreamitie and to that hight that in stead of putting ambitious pretenders to death those honourable places were not bestowed but vpon those which did shame-fully sue for them and could best negociate by their power purse or friends which is was and will be an occasion in all times and places that with scandalous corruption and Simoniacall trading Offices and Benefices shall be giuen and solde to him that will giue most Not the better person but the better purse shall carry it The inconueniences that follow the so much fauouring of suitors and being vn-mindfull of those who tend nothing else but to serue and deserue well are very great and not vnknowen to all those that are Statists and good Common-wealths men And if the shortnesse which I desire to obserue in this Discourse did not hinder mee a large field would here discouer it selfe vnto me wherein to enter and expatiate my selfe and might take occasion to treate of the false hoods shiftes deceits and iniustices which are dayly vsed in such like pretensions and petitions which haue beene the cause of the destruction and ruine not only of particular Common wealthes but of whole Kingdomes And this which I speake is of so much truth that some of the Hebrew Doctors hold for certaine that the Monarchie of the House royall of Dauid was ouerthrowne by giuing credit to the malice and deceit of a couetous pretender and that of twelue Prouinces which his heyres possessed of those twelue Tribes two onely remayned intire vnto him The case was this King Dauid 2 Sam. 9.6 hauing in performance of that oath and promise which he had made vnto Ionathan giuen vnto his sonne Mephibosheth all those heredements messuage and goods which were King Sauls And commanding Ziba that hee and his sonnes and his seruants should serue him and till his land for him and bring him in foode to eate there entred into Ziba's minde a diuelish pretension 2. Sam. 16.3 to beg all Mephibosheths estate for himselfe And thereupon tooke hold of such an occasion as seemed fittest vnto him to worke this his treacherie and deceite When King Dauid fled from his sonne Absalon to the mountaines Ziba the seruant of Mephibosheth met him with a couple of Asses sadled and vpon them two hundred cakes of bread and an hundred bunches of Raysons and an hundred of dryed Figgs and a bottle of Wine and other the like commodities for the refreshing of Dauid and his followers And hauing a Lye ready at hand which he had thought on before hee castes himselfe downe at the Kings feete and telling him a thousand leasings raised false witnesse against Mephibosheth informing his Maiestie that Mephibosheth was in Ierusalem and tolde him This day shall the house of Israel restore mee the Kingdome of my father Is it euen so sayd the King Behold Thine are all that pertained vnto Mephibosheth And truly this businesse was strangely carryed For notable was the facilitie where-with the King gaue credit to the calumniation of this pretender and the remissenesse which he shew'd in punishing so loud a lye and so great a treason when the truth of the matter and the innocencie of Mephibosheth was afterwards made knowne vnto him And that which I conceiue concerning this point is That the cause why hee did not punish this so fowle a treacherie was Either for that he was conscious to himselfe of the fault which he had committed in hauing giuen such easie beliefe there vnto or for that the rootes of this suspicion and iealousie did remaine still deepely grounded in his heart For the calumnies and cautelous suggestions of Pretenders carry this mischiefe still with them that they pierce euen to the very heart and are hardly remooued from the minde of him that giues eare vnto them Prou. 26.22 Verba susurronis quasi simplic●● ipsa perueniunt ad intima cordis The words of a Tale-bearer are as flatterings and they goe downe into the bowells of the belly And therefore the Holy Ghost adviseth vs that when such men come to speake with vs in secret and to whisper things in our eare that wee should not hearken vnto them Ibi. 25. Quando submiserit vocem suam ne credideris ei quoniam septem nequitia sunt in corde illius Though hee speakes fauourably beleeue him not for there are seuen abhominations in his heart Which
the Lord of Hosts In the book of the Prouerbs God sheweth the like risentment in these words Quia vocaui et renuistis Prou. 1.24 extendi manum meam et non fuit qui aspiceret despexistis omne consilium meum et increpationes meas neglexistis ego quoque in interitu vestro ridebo et subsannabo cum vobis id quod timebat is aduenerit Because I haue called and yee refused I also stretched out my hand and no man regarded But yee haue set at nought all my Counsayle and would none of my reproofe I also will laugh at your calamitie I will mock when your feare commeth Those whom neither faire words kind vsage louing inspirations nor the powerful hand of God stretched out to punishment cannot worke vpon nor moue to mourne nor to leaue off their sports and pleasures their discomposed mirth laughter the Lord saith that this their disrespectfullnesse of him and shamelessenes of their sins shal neuer be forgiuen them And in stead of mourning and grieuing for them hee will laugh them to scorne and make a mocke of them when he shall see them fallen into the anguishment and vexation of their perdition because they would not correspond with his gentle admonitions nor be reclaymed by those his fatherly chasticements which were for the calling of them home and to make them to returne from their euill waies And if besides all that hitherto hath been sayd wee shall but consider how deceitfull and vaine are these pastimes and delights we shall therewith likewise see what little reason Kings and men that are or at least ought to be in regard of the grauitie and greatnesse of their places of a constant and settled disposition to be carryed away with such idle toyes which presently dis-appeare and do not only not giue that fullnesse satisfaction which they promise but rather as vicious thirst hunger which ariseth from a corrupt and euil humour increaseth the more the more we either eate or drinke so these temporall delights the more we vse them the more in seeking after them doe we finde our selues mocked and deluded and the lesse satisfied Let vs conclude this point with the testimonie of our Sauiour Iesus Christ and of that most wise King Salomon and of Saint Gregorie the Great who citing both the other speakes thus Voluptatum nos fallacia nulla decipiat nulla vana laetitia seducat in proximo namque est Iudex qui dixit Vae vobis qui ridetis nunc quia lugebitis et flebitis Hinc enim Salomon ait Risus dolore miscebitur et extrema gaudijs luctus occupat Hinc iterum dicit Risum reputaui errorem et gaudio dixi Quid frustrà deciperis Hinc rursus ait Greg. Hom. 10. Cor sapientium vbi tristitia est et cor stultorum vbi laetitia Let not the falsehood of pleasures deceiue vs nor vaine ioy seduce vs For there is a Iudge at hand that pronounceth this wofull sentence Luk. 6.25 Woe vnto you that laugh now for yee shall mourne and weepe And hence is it that Salomon sayth Prou 14.13 Euen in laughter the heart is sorrowfull and the end of that mirth is heauinesse Hence againe Eccl. 2.2 hee that saith I sayd of laughter it is mad And of mirth Eccl. 7.4 what doth it And that hee sayth yet once againe The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning but the heart of fooles is in the house of mirth But continuing our discourse concerning Kings and things so generally receiued and intertained as sports pastimes and temporall delights rigorous is that qualification which the greatest and most approued qualifiers of Heauen and earth haue left firmed signed vnto vs with their owne handes and names That mirrour of Wisdome King Salomon or to say better the Holy Ghost speaking by him Our Sauiour Iesus Christ the true wisedom of his father and that great Bishop and Doctor of the Church S. Gregorie plainely tell vs That those delights and merriments which are so well receiued in the world are but lyes and mocks and prognostications of euils to come and that they haue their reception and residence in the hearts of fooles and that they remaine banished from those that are truly wise These Authenticall persons haue sayd it and all the Saints of God haue confirmed the same both by example and doctrine And I whilest I am now writing of this subiect though the meanest of a thousand am verily perswaded that my pen cannot doe better seruice then to iustifie Gods cause and to make the faults of Kings the more without excuse and to let the mighty know that they shall be mightily punished And since that I cannot take away the vse of these things giue me leaue to aduise you of the abuse and if it shall not be of force to worke an amendment yet let it so farre preuaile with you as to put you out of your error And to take it into your consideration that in the way to Heauen you are to meete and incounter with many dangers and that the Diuell is wonderfull busie and carefull in setting of his gynn's and his snares without our laying in the way these new stumbling blocks to breake our own necks and to make the way more dangerous and to adde new occasions of sinning whereby to put the businesse of our Saluation in the more contingencie and hazard Here might I take occasion to say something of that Temperance which should temper and moderate the excesses of the tast Whereof we will speake when we come to treate of the sence of Touching And now let vs passe to another Ministrie which likewise belongs vnto the Tast from the Office and function of the Tongue it being one of it's principall properties to speake deuided by these insuing Paragrahpes §. I. Of the Language and Truth which Kings and wherewith Kings are to treate and to be treated with THe braine as Minister to all the rest of the sences sends to the Tongue two sorts of members the one soft and smooth for to tast our meates withall and to know and distinguish as already hath beene sayd the seuerall sorts of sauours and relishes which the Taste intertaineth The other somewhat more stiffe and strong for to turne and winde the tongue and to moue it with that nimble motion as wee see as likewise to hold backe the spring and to restraine and lock it fast when it is not fitting for the tongue to speake This is the Master-key as we may tearme it and the ordinary Mistresse of Nature which by the helpe of one onely Instrument performeth diuerse Offices As of the Ayre to refrigerate and coole the heart to refresh and comfort it and to make it breathe the better and with the more ease and likewise to forme our words for without it it is as impossible to speake as without breath to winde a Horne or blow to play vpon the Fife The
a wise man which receiueth instruction from the Lord when he ought to speake And the Scripture saith Vir sapiens tacebit vsque ad tempus A wise man will holde his peace till hee see his time Nay Christ himselfe that King of Kings saith of himselfe by the Prophet Esay Isay 50.4 that his eternall Father gaue him an exceeding wise and prudent tongue Dedit mihi Dominus linguam eruditam The Lord God hath giuen me a learned tongue Or as the Hebrew renders it Eruditiorum The tongue of the learned Not an ordinary tongue but such a Tongue wherin was to be found the wisedome and prudence of all the wise men of the world and from whence all might learne Vt sciam sustentare eum qui lapsus est verbo That I may know how to vphold him that hath slipt in his word Or as the 70. translate it Vt sciam quando oporteat loqui verbum That I should know how to speake a word in season to him that is weary So that a wise discreete and prudent Tongue and such a one as is giuen by God is that which knowes when to speake and when to hold it's peace Teaching Kings who are in a manner Gods at least Gods Liuetenants should in this particular imitate him That they should haue a wise Tongue to know when to open the doore of the lips and when to shut them what to vtter and what to conceale For this is the Learning and wisedome of the Tongue either to speake or be silent as shall fute best with time and occasion Tempus tacendi tempus loquendi It is Salomons Eccl. 3.7 A time to keepe silence and a time to speake And in Kings this is so much the more important by how much the more graue and weighty are those businesses which are treated with them For it doth not onely benefit them in not hauing their purposes preuented not their designes ouerthrowne but likewise winn's them much authoritie and credit For the world will stand as it were astonished and amazed and men will wonder at that which they both doe and say and out of euery kinde of gesture or word of theirs will make a Mystery deliuer their iudgements and draw thence a thousand discourses all which are but cranes and pullyes to make them mount higher in opinion and reputation Likewise when Ministers shall take notice that their King knowes how to heare and how to hold his peace and in it's due time to execute his intentions they liue in a great deale the more awe and feare lest such and such things wherein they doe amisse might come to his knowledge And when they see that he knowes how to conceale a secret till it 's fit time and season it keepes them within their Compasse and is the only bridle that restraines them from doing ill either by way of oppression whereunto great Ministers are too much subiect or otherwise And therefore it shall much concerne a King not onely to be secret in those things which might cause some inconuenience if he should speake of them and make them knowen but also in those things which bring no profit by their publication For if they shall once perceiue that their King cannot conceale what is deliuered vnto him vnder the seale of silence in preiudice of this or that particular party no man will date to informe and aduise him of that which may redound to Gods seruice and the good of the Common-wealth And so like bad gamesters they will for want of keeping close their cardes let their contrary winne the game by discouering their hand A Kings heart should be so deepe and profound that none should be able to pry into it not to know what is hidden there And therefore he must haue such a secret heart as S. Austen speakes of August Psal 63. ver 7. Coraltum That is Cor secretum or as others reade it profundum an inscrutable heart or so deepe that none shall be able to diue into it And some compare a kings heart vnto punctum a little point or pricke which to diuide or to draw any thing out of it is if not impossible at least very difficult The heart of a king must be closed and shut vp like this punctum whence there shal be an impossibility or at least a great deale of difficulty Prou. 21.1 in extracting any one word or secret recōmended vnto him Salomon sayth That the hearts of Kings are in the hands of God and are guided directed by him And that therfore their secretes mysteries are not to be divulged and made common no not to his neerest Minions and Fauourites when at most but to some one particular priuado and that vpon very good iust cause Our Sauiour Christ once vpon necessary occasiō discouered a secret to his great Priuado or fauourite S. Iohn but it was with these circumstances That hee told it him in his eare forbidding him to speake therof vnto any And because neither by signes or any other outward demonstration he might make it knowen he bound vp all his senses in a deepe and profound sleepe to the end that by none of them he might expresse that which it behooued him to conceale Great is the importancie of secrecie the authoritie which it giues to the iudgements motiues of those that gouerne For if all might know the causes which moue a Prince to make this or that prouision to giue this this or iudgement to pardon or to punish to craue or to giue many censures wold passe vpō it it might cause many scandalls alterations in a Cōmon wealth And therfore it much concerneth so supreme a Maiesty not to suffer the secret which is shut vp in his bosome to be published to the world And in some cases it may come to be a mortal sin when such things as are aduertised a king such Memorials as are giuen him firmed signed with this or that mans hand he shal shew them to the parties whom they touch and concerne be they Ministers or fauourites in regard of the great hurt opposition and dissention which there-fro may arise But hee may doe this in case it may well sort with the secret it selfe to take out the pithe and substance of it and without shewing any firme or vttring any word whereby the Author may be knowen and shew it to the Delinquent if so he thinke fit for his correction and amendment And when hee findes that to be true which hath beene told him and that it cannot be denyed let him apply a due and fitting remedy For many times Dissimulation in the Prince not seeming to take notice of a fault causeth but the more dissolutenesse in the subiect This is so farre forth as concerneth Kings Caelius Lib. 13. Lectio antiq c. 5. for whom may suffice that aduice of Caelius Rodiginus who tells them more at large how considerate they ought to be in this particular For many
the free vse of mans faculties and senses not suffering him to doe any thing that is good And though it bee true that there are other vices of greater offence to God and more hurtfull to a mans neighbour yet this hath I know not what mischiefe in it and more particularly in publike persons which doth shew it selfe more openly then all the rest and doth breede and nourish other sinnes as the roote doth the tree Radix omnium malorum cupiditas Quidam appetentes 1. Tim. 6. errauerunt à fide Couetousnesse of money is the roote of all euill Which while some lusted after they erred from the faith and tangled themselues with many sorrowes Ex auaritia profecto saith Saint Ambrose septem nequitiae procreantur Ambr. in Apelog cap. 4. scilicet Proditio fraus fallacia periurium inquietudo violentia contra misericordiam obduratio There are seuen kinde of sinnes that proceed from couetousnesse viz. Treason Fraud deceit Periury Inquietude Violence and which shuts the doore to all pitie and compassion Hardnesse of heart Vpon this foundation of couetousnesse is built whatsoeuer tyrannicall imagination and many through it haue and doe daily loose the faith and that loyaltie which is due vnto God and their Kings Auri cupiditas saith the same Saint materia est perfidiae The loue of gold is the cause of the losse of faith When this pulls a Fauourite it easily drawes him aside and carries him headlong to all these vices for it is of more force then the Load-stone and drawes him more after them then that doth the iron And is holpen on the more by the winde of vanitie and ambition The Philosopher Heraclitus saith That those that serue Vanity and Couetousnesse suddenly depart from Truth and Iustice and hold that onely for iust and most right which is directed aright to their owne priuate interest And this onely doe they make their aime in all whatsoeuer they aduise their King as was to be seene in that so often repeated case of King Assuerus with his great Fauourite Aman of whom hee demanded what grace and fauour should bee showne to that Subiect whom for his good seruices hee desired to honour Whereupon the winde of vaine-glory working in the head of him and thinking this could be no man but himselfe shewed himselfe very magnificent and liberall in ordaining the honours and fauours that were to be done vnto him The vaine conceit of a couetous man cuts out for himselfe large thongs out of another mans leather And when hee growes a little warme in the King his Masters bosome poore snake as hee was with a false and feigned loue hee goes hunting after his commoditie and this failing his loue also faileth For his heart stretcheth it selfe no farther to loue then what his hands can come to take hold on Elpan comido y la compania desecha saith the Prouerbe No longer Cake no longer company Of such friends as these the Prophet Michah bids vs beware For no friend Micah 7.6 Arist lib. 8. Ethic. cap. 4. that seeketh his owne gaine can euer according vnto Aristotle be faithfull and loyall to his King Let Kings I say consider once againe and haue an especiall care that those Fauourites whom hee maketh choice of for his friends be out of his owne proper election and approued by his owne minde and by the opinion and fame of their vertue and not intertaining them at any time by the sole intercession of others especially such as are great and powerfull nor let them suffer themselues to be carried away with the secret considerations of those familiar and particular persons which are about them nor by the insinuating and soothing perswasions of your flatterers and Sycophants Who as they are men worke vpon discourse and corporall meanes altogether framing them in order to their owne ends Let them not giue beliefe and credit vnto them but to the common fame and good report that goes of them and thereon let them place their eares and their vnderstanding For as Tacitus saith that is it which vsually makes the best choice For it is not to bee doubted but that concerning such a ones vertues or goodnesse we ought rather to giue credit to the generall report then to the voices of one or two For one may easily bee deceiued and deceiue others by his tricks and his particular interest but neuer yet could one deceiue all nor is it possible that all should in that their approbation deceiue another As for those other seruants which are to attend and waight vpon the Kings person more for dignitie of place and for outward apparence and ostentation of greatnesse then for vse and conueniencie which likewise in their kinde are very necessarie let Kings a Gods name receiue them into their seruice either vpon the intercession of others or out of other particular respects For in this there is little hazard and may easily chop and change them if they proue not good and fit for their turne But in the choice of the former a great deale of care must be taken for the chopping and changing of them is very dangerous and vnlesse there be very great cause for the doing of it it breeds an opinion of inconstancie which as it cannot but be hurtfull vnto all so is it of great dishonour vnto Kings much weakening their authoritie But say there be iust cause of remouing them why it is but as a Vomite which howbeit it be true that it remoueth the malignant humour and expells it from the stomacke yet withall it carries the good likewise away with it and makes an end of that Subiect it works vpon if it be too often vsed For our horses wee seeke bits and bridles wherewith to make them to go well and handsomely and if with those they do not raigne and carry themselues according to our mind we take others and when we finde once that they are fitted as wee would haue them we neuer chop nor change but still vse the same In like manner it is not good to chop and change either Fauourites or priuie Councellours too often but to seeke out such as are fit for their turne and to carry such a hand ouer them as to bridle their insolencie and to reyne them in hard if they finde them head-strong For being that they are those horses which guide the chariot of a Monarchie if they bee not well bridled of a gentle and tender mouth and an easie reyne they will play the iades and breake both their owne neckes and their Masters In a word euery King hath or at least representeth two persons one publike the other priuate And therefore his actions ought likewise to be of two qualities In those that are particular let them proceed therein as they will themselues according to their owne guste and pleasure but in those that are publike as shall make most for the publike good Hauing still an eye to it's conseruation and augmentation and to the common
conserue the faith it is likewise requisite that there be great care had in procuring that the commonwealth be purged and cleansed of it's vices and sinnes For as the Apostle Saint Paul saith when vices grow to that head and ranknesse that they come to make men to be of a bad and corrupt conscience they go disposing such to suffer shipwracke in the faith as it hath happened in these our times in many parts of Europe The second aduice that I shall giue vnto Kings is that they carry themselues so in the dispatch of businesses that notice may not bee taken that they are dispatched by any other arbitrement but their owne For most certaine it is that if it come to be knowne that all the Orders that come forth passe through the Fauourites hands and as hee shall giue direction they loose much of their force and efficacie and the King much of his reputation and credit His subiects will grow to contemne him and strangers will make little reckoning of him and many other mischiefes will ensue thereupon Amongst the Romanes it was held for a great affront and dishonour that the Emperour should dispatch as they say porcarta-pacio by a note booke or some penn'd thing for him or like some young practitioner in physicke by his Maisters Recipes And therefore in those generall processions which they made they besought God that hee would not punish them by giuing them Princes which had need to be ruled and guided by Gouernours and Tutors For they knew well enough that when God is angry offended with the sinnes of the people he punisheth them by sending them Princes without knowledge and wisedome that are not able to gouerne of themselues but to doe as others shall aduise them Wherein they did confesse and acknowledge That to be a King consisteth in being knowne and reuerenced of all to be an independant Lord not relying vpon any other whose Mandates and Decrees all should subscribe vnto and obey whom all should seeke vnto with whom all should negociate that are pretenders from whose liberalitie resolution and will they onely should acknowledge all the graces and fauours that are done them and from no other hand For if they should giue way thereunto their Subiects will bee induced easily to beleeue that together with this they will giue away their greatnesse and minister occasion to loose that common loue and respect which solely and properly is due vnto them For Subiects vsually honour no other Sunne but that from which they receiue their light They naturally abhorre that man that does them hurt and loue that person who does them good bee he what hee will be good or bad all is one They call God Optimum maximum because he both doth and is able to do them good And he himselfe doth glory therein as being vnwilling that men should acknowledge the good they receiue from any other What wisedome then can there bee in that King that shall suffer a Fauourite to haue all the thankes and all the honour and glory of those fauours and rewards whereof he is the owner and donor Reseruing for himselfe nothing but the scorne and contempt of his Subiects then the which there is no miserie can be greater God forbid that Kings should permit any such lessening of their power and authoritie which is the necessariest thing that can bee for the conseruation of their estates and kingdomes Likewise in regard of their owne proper particular it will be a very good lesson for them for if their subiects are beholding for the good they receiue vnto another they will loue him more then them and when occasion shall serue will not sticke to shew it though it bee to their owne hurt Examples hereof there are good store amongst those ancient Kings and kingdomes of elder times that by this meanes haue beene ouerthrowne and brought to ruine We finde it storied that the Emperour Claudius at the intercession and instance of Agrippina made such a one Generall of his Army Cornelius Tacitus toucheth vpon this Mysterie and saith of him that hee was a man of much fame and renowne and very expert in militarie discipline yet knowing very well withall by whose good will and furtherance that command was conferred vpon him he could not when occasion should offer bee behinde hand for so great an honour done vnto him but recompence it to the vtmost of his power Such great places of imployment ought to be bestowed by no hand but by Kings and that immediately lest another may go away with the thankes And he shall doe well if hee take the like course in all other Offices that are in his gift for if it were possible it is fit that all should stand bound and obliged to him Let Kings likewise bee aduised that they carry a watchfull eye ouer those that are ambitious which are either so naturally or by conuersing and communicating with others are made so for this is an infectious disease and the more the more it taketh hold on great persons and men of an extraordinary spirit for they are as dangerous as theeues where there is store of treasure to bee had For questionlesse such kinde of men do vsually labour to increase their estate For it is very naturall to this passion as to those other affections neuer to giue ouer till they come to the end and full satisfaction of that which their appetite or desire representeth vnto them neither the Law of God nor of thankfulnesse sufficing to moderate their mindes and to keepe them within the due and lawfull bounds of their dutie In that houre and in that very instant of their rising nay before they come to that greatnesse there is little trust to be giuen vnto them for nothing workes vpon them but their proper honour and profit And all the rest they esteeme as nothing in comparison of bettring their owne fortune But if of necessitie some must bee raised to honour Arist lib 5. pelit c. 11. Si quem extollere oporteat saith the Philosopher non tamen eum qui fit moribus andax Nam huiusmodi homines aptissimi sunt ad inuadendum circa res omnes Let them not be of base and meane condition nor such as are naturally proud and haughty for being vainely transported with their fauour and priuacie they thinke with themselues that they haue already clapt a nayle in fortunes wheele and that they cannot fall from the top of their felicitie And being thus blinded with their ambition there is not any thing which they dare not aduenture on Let Kings therefore well weigh and consider with themselues what manner of men they put into great places and neare about their persons that they may relye more on the goodnesse of their nature and disposition then on the Law of obligation and thankfulnesse for these are but weake bonds and easily broken And because I know not whether I shall hereafter come to light vpon the like occasion I will here propose that
because in it's administration it is an Office so full of difficulties the Apostle S. Paul admonisheth all the faithfull that they alwayes make earnest Prayers for them which is still vsed to this day in all your Catholike Churches Moreouer that the name of a King is the name of an Office Refran El beneficio se da por el oficio it is confirmed by that common saying Beneficium datur propter Officium And therefore Kings being so greatly benefitted not onely by those great Tributes which are giuen them by the Common-wealth but likewise by those which they receiue from the Benefices and Rents of the Church it is an vndoubted truth that they haue an Office and of Offices the greatest and for this cause the whole Kingdome doth so freely and liberally contribute vnto them Which is specified by S. Paul in a Letter of his which hee wrote vnto the Romans Rom. 13.6 Ideò tributa praestatis c. For this cause pay you Tribute also For they are Gods Ministers attending continually vpon this very thing c. Kingdomes doe not pay their taxes idly and in vaine So many sessements so many Subsedies so many impositions so many great rentes so much authoritie so high a Title and so great a Dignitie is not giuen without charge and trouble In vaine should they haue the name of Kings if they had not whom to rule and gouerne And therefore this obligation lyes vpon them In multitudine populi dignitas regis The honour of a King is in the multitude of his People So great a dignitie so great reuenewes such a deale of Greatnesse Maiestie and Honour with a perpetuall Cense and rate vpon his Subiects Lands and Goods binde him to rule and gouerne his States conseruing them by Peace and Iustice Let Kings therefore know that they are to serue their kingdomes being they are so well payd for their paines and that they beare an Office which tyes them necessarily to this trouble Rom. 12.8 Qui praeest in solicitudine saith S. Paul He that ruleth with diligence This is the Title and name of King and of him that gouernes Not of him that goes before others onely in his Honour and his pleasure but of him that excells others in his solicitude and his care Let them not thinke that they are Kings onely in name and representation and that they are not bound to any more but to bee adored and reuerenced and to represent the person royall with a good grace and to carry themselues with a soueraigne kind of State and Maiestie like some of those Kings of the Medes and Persians which were no more then meere shadowes of Kings so wholy neglectfull were they of their office as if they had beene no such manner of Men. There is not any thing more dead and of lesse substance then the image of a shadow which neither waggs arme nor head but at the Motion of that which causeth it Exod. 20. God Commanded his people that they should not make any grauen Image nor any feigned Pictures or counterfeit paintings which shew a hand where there is none discouer a face where there is none and represent a body where there is none expressing therein actions to the life as if the Image or Picture did see and speake For God is no friend of feigned figures of painted men nor of Kings that are onely so in shape and proportion being in fashion like vnto those Psal 135. 16. of whom Dauid sayd Os habent non loquuntur oculos habent non videbunt c. They haue mouths but speake not eyes haue they but they see not They haue eares but heare not and hands haue they but handle not And to what vse I pray serues all this They are no more then meere Idolls of Stone which haue no more in them of Kings but onely an externall representation To be all name and authoritie and to be Men in nothing else doe not sute well together Woe to the Idoll Shepheard saith Zacharie that leaueth the flocke Zach. 11.17 The sword shall be vpon his arme and vpon his right eye His arme shall be cleane dryed vp and his right eye shall be vtterly darkeneds it is written in the Reuelation Nomen habes quod viuas Apoc. 3.1 mortuus es Thou hast a name that thou liuest and art dead The names which God setteth vpon Kings are like vnto the Title of a Booke which in few words containeth all that is therein This name of King is giuen by God vnto Kings and therein includeth all that which this their Office tyes them to doe And if their workes and actions doe not answer with their name and Title it is as if one should say yea with his Mouth and by making Signes say no with his head What a iest and mockerie is this How shall such a one bee truely vnderstood It were Cosenage and deceit in that Golde beater who writes vpon his Signe Heere is fine gold to be sold when indeed it is but Orpine and base gold for Painters The name of King is not an Attribute of Idlenesse A person regall must haue reall performance As his name soundeth so let him serue in his place it is the people that proclaime the King but it is the King that must proclaime his loue to the people Hee that hath the name of ruling and gouerning a Gods name let him rule and gouerne They are not to be Reyes de anillo as it is in the Prouerb that is to say nominall Kings only praeter nomen nihil hauing nothing else in them In France there was a time when their kings had nothing but the bare name of Kings their Liuetenants Generall gouerning and Commanding all whilest they like so many beastes did busie themselues in nothing else but following the delights and pleasures of Gluttonie and Wantonnesse And because it might be known and appeare to the people that they were aliue for they neuer came abroad once a yeare they made shew of themselues on the first day of May in the Market-place of Paris sitting in a chaire of State on a throne royall like your kings amongst your Stage-players and there in reuerence they bowed their bodies vnto them and presented them with giftes and they againe conferred some fauours on such as they though fit And because you may see the miserie whereunto they were brought Eynardus in the beginning of that Historie which he writes of the life of Charles the Great says That those Kings in those dayes had no valour in them in the world made no shew of Noblenesse nor gaue so much as a tast of any inclination thereunto but had onely the empty and naked name of King For in very deede they were not Kings nor had actually and effectually any hand in the gouernment of the State or the wealth and riches of the Kingdome for they were wholly possessed by the Praesecti Palatij whom they called
approbation of the people And those qualities which formerly wee required in Councellers of State wee here likewise conclude that all of them are necessary for Fauourites And if Kings peraduenture in regard of humane imperfection cannot meete with men so perfect let them bee as absolute as they can possibly light vpon at least let them haue these two qualities of loue and an vnspotted life And let not Kings content themselues that they haue them in a mediocritie but in all perfection For without these two there are not any Statuae● so vnprofitable as are such men being not good enough to be staues or to serue in the basest and vilest offices about a house much more vnworthy to be Fauourites and priuie Councellours And because the heart of man which God hath hid out of sight to the end that he might reserue it to bee the seate and mansion of his loue is hard to bee knowne and the thoughts thereof very secret and hid for that by one and the same instruments it worketh and expresseth it's conceits be they false or be they true it is necessary that by some meanes the truth or deceit of it's words may be knowne for to difference thereby the true loue from the false Amongst other signes and coniectures whereof Kings may make vse for to know the minde of those that are to hold so great and neare a place about their persons and to treate and communicate with them as it were the secrets of their soules let them consider and obserue very well in what kinde of manner they do proceed and haue proceeded with those with whom they haue formerly held friendship and to whom they stand indebted and obliged for curtesies already done if they shall see they carry themselues well towards them and performe all offices of true loue and friendship then may they be induced to beleeue that shewing themselues louing and thankfull to others they will be so towards them And he that loueth not him whom hee ought to loue out of this or that other respect will not loue his King do he neuer so much for him For this difference of more or lesse altereth not the substance nor condition The true loue of Fauourites they being such as they ought to be consisteth as we said already in louing their King dis-interessedly and to aduertise him of all that which is fitting and conuenient for him and that all or the most desire that in their workes and actions for their greater perfection there should be credit and estimation And lastly of all that which according to the more common opinion requireth reformation and amendment for onely the workes of the most high can be wholly inculpable And of that which may in some sort withdraw his Subiects loue from him and aduising him thereof worke so with him for to gratifie them in this or that publike benefit whereby to wedge the peoples loue the faster vnto their Prince and Soueraigne But false and feigned loue that runnes a contrarie course it alwayes hunts after it's owne commoditie it commendeth all whatsoeuer his Prince doth he excuseth it in his presence and qualifies it for good iust and conuenient Which being no other but a tricke of Court-cunning and though they may well march vnder the standard of vnknowne enemies yet are they esteemed and rewarded as friends And notwithstanding all this their Kings backe is no sooner turned but they murmure at him or set others a worke to doe it for them Complaining that in regard of the naturall ill disposition of Kings and great Princes cares facile enough to heare smooth flatteries but too harsh and hard to hearken to the truth they dare not for their liues tell it him nor aduenture to giue him the least distaste though it concerne him neuer so neare and that they plainly see the not doing of it cannot but redound much to his hurt And the true reason thereof is for that the former loue more the person of their Prince then his fortune and let him take it ill or well all 's one they will treate truth especially in those things that may concerne his safetie or the good and quiet of his kingdome and their good minde true heart and plaine-honest meaning make them bold to speake without fearing to offend in that their good aduice which they shall giue him But this second sort of Fauourites loue not his person but his fortune And these for their owne proper interest and that they may not hazard their hopes dare not speake the truth though they see the danger before their eyes as persons that would easily alter their faith and loyaltie and take part with him whose sword is strongest and therefore care not though their King fall so as they may stand And of such it may bee suspected that they desire a change like those which in gaming liue by Baratos who for their owne benefit would haue fortune turne from the one to the other their good wishes no longer following their first man as not hoping to haue any more from him then what they haue already receiued not caring to see them blowne vp one after another so as they may get by the bargaine And most certaine it is that those who so much loue themselues and their owne proper interest there is no trusting of them for they haue no loue left either for their owne Lord and Master or any body else For such base soules and vngenerate spirits drowned and swallowed vp in those muddy materialls of Interest and Auarice cannot loue any other thing with excellencie and in a noble fashion And therefore it importeth much that Fauourites bee dis roabed and stript quite and cleane of all that which goes vnder the name of proper or selfe-loue priuate interest vsefull friendship faction or kindred and that they should bee clothed with a wise and discreet kinde of goodnesse which nor knowes nor can nor will fauour ought but vertue and Iustice and that which is good and honest It is likewise spoken by way of Prouerbe Quien ama à su Rey ama à su grey He that loues his King loues his flocke And he that is in the place of a Fauourite and so neare about his Kings person ought to bee as a common father to all his Subiects treating them as if they were his children and procuring that not any one of them may depart discontented from his presence which would be the the onely Load-stone to draw all their loue and affection towards him So did that great Fauourite of the King of Syria Naaman whom all the people with a full and open mouth called Father corresponding with him in the loue of so many sonnes or children For those that are seated in so high a place haue great cause for many reasons to procure publike loue and together with the grace of their Prince to haue the good wills and affections of the people for this makes the other to be more durable and firme For this
is the naturall miserie of great and powerfull persons that Enuie and Greatnesse go alwayes hand in hand the one still accompanying the other And there is not any poyson like vnto it which moues and stirres vp such violent pangs and passions in the stomacke and more especially if it worke vpon the priuacie and inwardnesse of Fauourites with their Kings as if that it selfe were not a true and sufficient strong poyson Seeing that it is held for certaine that one word of a King nay which is more one angry looke or bended brow hath sent many a Fauourite to his graue For as Salomon saith the life of the Subiect depends on the countenance of the King And if we will not beleeue him let vs see and obserue how many Fauourites escape which doe not dye of that wound or the feare thereof and more particularly with those Kings which are of that condition as one said that there is not two fingers breadth betweene their smile and their sword to the end that this their priuacie might bee had in the lesse esteeme For your best Fauourites are but like your better sort of fruits which are soonest subiect to be worme-eaten For Enuie is a very worme and hath the same qualities as a worme hath and spreads it selfe so farre that it extends it selfe euen to those that haue beene benefited by the Fauourite the couetousnesse and risentment of that which they doe not receiue working more vpon them then the Law of thankfulnesse or of a gratefull acknowledgement for that which they haue receiued So that wee may say That few are they who loue those from whose hand they haue receiued some good because it was no greater And those that haue receiued none that they are therein iniured and wronged So that to qualifie and temper this inconuenience it shall be wisedome in Fauourites and it will concerne them to vse all the meanes they can deuise to effect it to procure to bee wellbeloued And no lesse in Kings to seeke out such as are modest louing affable vertuous honest well beloued and of a gratefull and thankfull disposition CHAP. XXXV How Kings ought to carry themselues towards their Fauourites FOr to resolue this Question and to giue satisfaction to that which is here proposed in this Chapter it being a matter of so tender and dangerous a touch I will first lay for my foundation a true point of doctrine in naturall Philosophie celebrated with that sentence of the glorious Saint Austen Amor meus pondus meum illo feror quocunque feror The plummet which peaseth man and the wings wherewith the heart makes it's flight is loue which doth leade the dance to all the other passions of the soule And as those that saile in a deepe sea with full sailes runne on their course without any danger but when they draw neare the shore they take them downe and ruffle them that they may not runne their ship vpon some shelfe or split it selfe against some rocke so likewise when the heart is lifted vp vnto the loue of God which is infinite goodnesse it may without perill plough the seas of this world and with full sayles cut the Maine without danger of shelues quick-sands or rockes For according to that saying of the glorious Saint Bernard as the cause of our louing God is God himselfe so the measure of louing him is to loue him without measure Causa diligendi Deum Deus est modus dilectionis fine modo diligere As the cause of our loue is infinite so must it be without taxe or limitation wherein there can be no excesse But when the heart drawes but little water and touches too close vpon these things of the earth which haue their goodnesse much limited it will be high time and very fit and conuenient to strike the sayles of our loue and to go on with a great deale of caution and consideration lest this our vessell should sticke in the sands neuer to bee gotten out againe or fall vpon some rocke or other of vnaduisednesse and indiscretion And this is so certaine a truth that albeit the loue to our parents be so naturall and obligatory and so giuen vs in charge by God with the promises of so many blessings on those children which shall cumply with this loue and with so many threatnings on those that shall faile therein yet notwithstanding God himselfe will that therein there should be a limitation and moderation Mat. 10.37 Qui amat patrem aut matrem plus quam me non est me diguus He that loueth father or mother more then me is not worthy of me And the common old Adage saith That friendship must go no further then vsque ad aras and stop there And howbeit some would haue the limit which is here put to loue to be Death I say that it's limit is Reason and obedience to Gods Commandements For when our Loue shall come to encounter with them it is to make a stand and go no further Our second ground or foundation whereon we shall build is this That in Kings next vnto the loue of God and his Christian Religion no loue ought to be like vnto that which they ought to beare vnto their kingdomes and common-wealths for the end for which Kings were first instituted and ordained was the common good of their kingdomes And as children haue a naturall obligation to loue their parents because from them they haue receiued their naturall being so Kings owe the like to their kingdomes and Commonwealths because next vnder God they gaue them their being of Kings and that power and authoritie whereby they were to protect defend and augment them Vpon these grounds and foundations must that loue and friendship be laid which is to be held with Fauourites Louing them and giuing them power and authoritie conformable to that which for this end shall be thought most conuenient Senec. lib. 1. Epist 3. For albeit they as Seneca saith keepe the key of their Kings heart and in matters of secresie and benefits are preferred before the rest yet this must be done with a Christian kinde of prudence and discretion Hauing euermore an especiall care that the force of his loue be not so violent and so boundlesse that to giue content to one sole Fauourite hee discontent all the rest of his Subiects and to shew himselfe faithfull and true vnto him breake that faith and truth which he owes vnto God and his diuine Law And that he proceed likewise therein with that freedome and libertie that his Loue may not passe the bounds of reason nor bee like some ships that are runne on ground so surely setled that he cannot get off when hee will and to turne that loue into hatred and a full determination and resolution of punishment when the faults of a Fauourite shall deserue his iust displeasure Non habitabit in medio domus meae Psal 101.7 qui facit superbiam c. Whoso hath a proud looke and an