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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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Kingdome The Citizens or which comprehendeth all the common people Or your Peeres and such as either are persons of Title or aspire to be It shall be good discretion prudence to procure to content the people especially in a Kings first entrance into his raigne in that which is reasonable and honest And if their demaunds shall be otherwise to dissemble with them and to take time to consider of it and so by little and litle let their blood goe cooling This was the Counsayle of your olde Counsailours Which had it beene followed by that young King Rehoboam his people had not rebelled against him 3 King 11. nor hee in the beginning of his Empire before he was scarce warme in his throne haue lost ten Tribes of the Twelue The Common people are alwayes grumbling and complayning and ready to runne into rebellion as being fearelesse in regard of their multitude and carelesse for that they haue little or nothing to loose The Minor Plinie after that hee had made a large Catalogue of the naturall vertues of the Emperour Traiane after that he had shewen what great account he made of the Common people he sayth Let not a Prince deceiue himselfe in thinking that hee is not to make any reckoning of the common people for without them he cannot sustaine nor defend his Empyre And in vaine shall hee procure other helpe for that were to seeke to liue with a head without a body which besides that it were monstrous it must needes toter and tumble downe with it's owne weight because it hath nothing to beare it vp And if Kings will needes know what kinde of thing the Common people is and what able to doe vpon all changes and alterations let them take into their consideration that which passed at the arraignment and death of our Sauiour Christ where there was not that Rule of reason of State in the vilest manner which was not then practized And the first stone that the Princes of the Scribes and Pharisees moued against him was the people for they knew well enough that without them they could not awe and feare Pilate nor moue him by their accusations and false witnesses to condemne him In the next place they had recourse to the particular conueniency of the Iudge that he should not be a friend vnto Caesar but should loose his loue if vpon this occasion the people should rise and rebell by which tricke they inclined him to their partie and wrought him to preferre his priuate Interest before publicke Iustice and his owne preseruation before that which was both honest and reasonable Againe it is more secure to procure the fauour and loue of the people and more easie to effect his purpose by them More secure because without their loue and assistance no alteration in the state can take effect This their loue doth vphold Kings and gets them the opinion of good and vertuous Princes This qualifieth all wrongs or makes the offenders pay soundly for them against whom none dare seeme to be singular Lastly for that the common people hauing onely respect to their particular profit their own priuate Interest cannot desire nor pretend that which your greater Peeres and principall men of the State do who alwayes out of their ambition aspire to more and stand beating their braines how they may compasse that which their imagination tells them they want And by so much the more doth this their Ambition increase in how much the greater place they are and in a neere possibilitie of that which they desire I sayd before more easie because the people content themselues with aequalitie and this likewise makes well for Kings with the administration of Iustice with common ease and rest with plenty and with the mildenesse gentlenesse and peaceablenesse of him that ruleth ouer them Now that Kings may procure this popular loue it is fit they should make choyse of such Ministers as are well beloued of the people that will heare them with patience comfort and hearten them vp that they may the more willingly beare the burthens that are laid vpon them the Tributes Taxes and troubles of the Kingdome which in the end must light all vpon them For it is not to be doubted and experience teacheth the truth of it That the Ministers and seruants of a Prince make him either beloued or hated And all their defects or Vertues turne to his hurt or profit And let not Kings make slight reckoning thereof nor let them colour it ouer with Reasons of State For he that once begins to be ha●ed out of an ill conceiued opinion they charge him withall that is either well or ill done For there is nothing be it neuer so good which being ill interpreted may not change it's first qualitie in the eyes of men who iudge things by apparences Which is another principall cause why Princes ought to procure the loue of the people For in conclusion most certaine it is that the Common people is not onely the Iudge of Kings but is their Attourny also whose censure none of them can escape And is that Minister which God makes choyse of for to punish them in their name and fame which is the greatest of all Temporall punishments Suting with that which we sayd heeretofore of the voyce of the people that it is the voyce of God For his diuine Maiestie vseth this as a meanes to torment those who haue no other superiour vpon earth And therefore it behoueth them to preuent this mischiefe and to winne vnto them the peoples affection by as many wayes as possibly they can deuise as by their owne proper person with some with other some by their fauourites and familiar friends and with all by their Ministers For there is not such a Tully nor Demosthenes withall their eloquence for to prayse or disprayse the Actions of a King either to salue or condemne them as is the peoples loue or hatred A great cause likewise of procuring this loue and to winne the hearts of the people to giue them all good content will be if Kings would be but pleased who are Lords of many Kingdomes and Prouinces to haue neere about them naturall Ministers and Counsaylours of all the sayd seuerall Kingdomes and Prouinces For Common-wealths kingdomes risent it exceedingly to see themselues cast out of administration and gouernment when they doe not see at the Kings elbow or in his Counsell any one of their own nation and countrie conceiuing that they doe either basely esteeme of them or that they dare not trust them Whence the one ingendreth hatred and the other desireth libertie Let a King therefore consider with himselfe that hee is a publicke person and that he ought not to make himselfe particular that he is a naturall Citizen of all his Kingdomes and Prouinces and therefore ought not willingly to make himselfe a stranger to any one of them That he is a father to them all therfore must not shew himself a Step-father to
couetousnesse they in no manner of wise discharge their Consciences in making such remitments and references but ought rather to reserue the dispatch therof vnto themselues or to remit them to such Ministers that are able to giue good satisfaction therein and of whose goodnesse and sufficiencie the world rendreth publicke Testimony In a word I am of opinion that to remit businesses is a matter of necessity in regard of the shortnesse of our vnderstanding which is imbroiled and mightily hindred with this multiplicitie of affayres and oftentimes choaked and stifled and made defectiue in those matters that are most necessary And as for our bodily strength the force thereof is so small and so weake that we had neede to preserue the same by easing it of that burthen which is too heauy for it to beare Yet withall there must a great care be had that these remitments be not made meerely that the King might liue at ease and be idle but because weighty businesses and such as haue neede of new Examination and new diligencies doe require it or because the King as already hath beene sayd may haue some lawfull impediment Let Kings haue recourse vnto God and he will illighten them and their faces shall not suffer confusion Psal 2.10 nor their Kingdomes see alterations ruines nor destructions Erudimini qui iudicatis terram Be wise therefore yee Kings be learned yee Iudges of the earth CHAP. XVI Of the Sence of the sight That is Of those businesses which Kings ought to reserue for their own view and dispatch with their owne hands ARistotle saith that the soule is Arist 3. de anim Text. 37. l●ct 13. D. Tho. Vniuersae creaturae homo est praestantissimus vt inter membra oculus D. Chrys in Hom. 15. in Ioan Quodam modo dum omnia in a manner all things in regard of the Vnderstanding which in it comprehendeth all whatsoeuer And the same may likewise be said of the sence of the sight wherin is cyphred the greatnesse of the Vniuerse for therein is inclosed all whatsoeuer is visible in the world as the Heauens the Earth Elements Birdes Plants Beastes c. And all that be it more or lesse enters into our Soule by this doore It is the most principal part of the head the most artificiall the most excellent and most precious of all other the Sences because it 's action is more liuely and spirit-full and giues vs more to know and vnderstand the differences of things By the eyes are manifested a great part of the affections and passions of the Minde In oculis animus inhabitat The mindes habitation saith Pliny is in the eyes In them is seated Clemencie Mercy Anger Hatred Loue Sorow Ioy and the like Ex visu Plin. lib. 11. c. 31. Eccl. 19.26 cognoscitur vir We may know a man by his lookes As whether he be wise or foolish simple or malitious c. These are those windowes by which the light entreth into the Vnderstanding and which shew the good or bad disposition both of body and Soule And there are not some wanting who affirme that they are the first which God and Nature delineate and paint forth in that tender paste and soft dough of the Creature as being the most principall the most beautifull and the most delicate And therefore that Diuine Artizan did place a greater gard about that for it's safetie then about all the rest And therfore Aristotle saith That we make more reckoning of this sence then of all the other It 's Site or place which is the highest and most eminent in the head doth declare it's greater dignitie and is in man as is the Sunne and Moone in the world Quod sol Ambr lib. 6. Exam. luna in Coelo hoc sunt oculi in homine saith S. Ambrose The vse of the sight is two-fold One materiall and grosse which only attendeth things as they thus materially represent themselues without making any farther discourse or Consideration And this kind of seeing is common to all creatures both rationall and irrationall indewed with or without reason The other is more eleuated and more spirituall and flies a higher pitch as when it discernes things with Aduice and discourse and when it perceiues what that is that it sees and this appertaineth onely vnto Man But in Kings and those that are good Gouernours the consideration thereof must extend it selfe a great deale farther As to treate of the remedy which those things require and stand in neede of which they haue seene But not like those Kings that visited holy Iob who although they saw him and were seuen dayes with him yet did they not see what they saw My meaning is That albeit they did see the great affliction and extreme miserie wherein poore Iob was their eyes passed it slightly ouer they did not dwell vpon it nor tooke any course to giue him remedie And when this is not done their seeing is no seeing but are like vnto those spoken of by the Psalmist That haue eyes and see not Dull Idolls To this purpose there is a prety place in the first of the Machabees where after the Author hath made report of the great wickednesse and Tyrannies which that accursed King Antiochus and his Ministers exercised in Ierusalem and in other Cities and Townes of the Kingdome of Iudaea of that great Captaine Mattathias and his fiue Sonnes hee speaketh thus Hi vederunt mala quae fiebant in populo Iuda in Ierusalem which the vulgar renders thus Now when they saw the blasphemies 1. Mac. 2.6 which were committed in Iuda and Ierusalem These saith he saw the euills that were committed in Ierusalem And my thinkes here must the question be asked Why all they of that Common-wealth suffering so many oppressions and so many afflictions in their Houses in their own Persons those of their children onely Mattathias and his Sonnes are here said to haue seene these euills and these blasphemies The answer hereunto makes notably for our purpose because it expresseth that which we go inforcing To wit That to see businesses is truely and properly to vnderstand them and to put our helping hand vnto them And because Mattathias and his Sonnes were the onely men that were sensible of the hard measure they receiued and the first that rose vp and opposed themselues against the furie of the Tyrant for the remedying their so many and so great Calamities that sacred Historian saith That they onely had eyes and saw the affliction of Gods people This kinde of sight best be fitteth Kings as they are heads of their Kingdomes and Common-wealthes and it is likewise necessary that they haue their sight Large Cleare and Sharpe that they may reach to see euen those things that are most secret and most remote as doth that princely birde the Eagle which houering aloft in the ayre descryes the fishes that are in the deepe Or be like vnto that Maiesticall Creature the Lyon who
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
the clattering of armour and taking pleasure in the sound of musicke in putting off harnesse and putting on silkes in changing a field-Tent for a soft bed and forsaking the conuersation of soldiars and Captaines to follow the companie of women they stuck a naile in the wheele of their fortunes These are examples that cannot be excepted against But much lesse that which followes of King Salomon whose pompe musick dancings feastings huntings dainties delights and passe-times were such as he himselfe inspired by the Holy Ghost reckons vp Now that which he got by all these what was it Onely this that these Vices and wanton delights made him forget himselfe and to blot out all the good of his felicitie and that good correspondence which hee held with God and in such sor● did turne his braines that hee came to committ idolatrie and to call his saluation in question And therefore let euery one command his flesh as hee would command his slaue lest it make him a slaue For to him that yeelds himselfe thereunto it is a fierce to him that feares it a cruell and to him that deliuers the keyes of his libertie vp vnto him a dominering Tyrant which like a haltred beast it hales after him There are two remedies found for the curing of so many dammages and disorders as we perceiue to be in this sense of Touching and that of the Tast One generall for all which is Temperance whereof wee will treate by and by The other more particular drawne from the example of Kings whereof we will discourse hereafter §. I. Of Temperance THe Office of Temperance is to keepe a man from flying out and to make him not to incline to a little more or a little lesse but to liue alwayes in very good Order not exceeding in any thing the bounds of Reason Cicero lib. 2. de sin Aug. lib. de moribus Est moderatio Cupiditatum rationi obediens It consisteth in a certaine moderation and mediocritie in pleasures and delights from which a Temperate man abstaineth refrayning from superfluities and excesses vsing things according to necessitie and not according to his appetite And it is that rule and Compasse which doth mete and measure out the desires of man that they may not passe from their point and Center not suffring the heart like the Rauen to flesh it selfe on the dead flesh of sensuall delights Dionis S. Dionisius saith That it serueth to incline a Man to all good according to the rule of reason as well in that which appertaineth to the sense of Touching as of the Taste that it may not like an vnbridled colte breake out into those two vnruly appetites whose operations are so furious and vehement that in earth water and ayre they leaue nothing safe and secure and therefore had neede of this great vertue to restraine their disorders and concupiscences These are those that make the cruellest warre against both body and soule and this is that which bridleth tempreth and moderateth her in her Excesses S. Prosper lib. 3. de vita Contemp. cap 19. Temperantia saith Prosperus temperantem facit abstinentem parcum sobrium moderatum pudicum tacitum serium verecundum Temperance makes a man temperate abstemious sparing sober moderate modest silent serious yet shamefac't It is a Vertue worthy Kings and Princes and much commended by the Saints and many are those Vertues which accompany it As modestie shamefastnesse chastitie abstinence faire and comely behauiour moderation sobrietie grauitie and humilitie Aristotle calls it Arist 6. Ethic. cap 5. 6. Conseruatricem prudentiae sapientiae the Conservresse of prudence and wisedome For intemperance in eating and drinking or in any other kinde of delight doth ouerthrow the braine dull the vnderstanding darken the iudgement blunt the best and sharpest wit and makes man as it were a beast as is to be seene by experience Quotidiano experimento probatur saith Pope Leo potus satietate S. Leo. Serm. de Ieiun aciem mentis obtundi vigorem cordis hebetari It is made good by daily experience that facietie of drinke dulleth the edge of the minde and blunteth the vigour of the heart Temperance likewise preserueth the health and makes mans life more long more sound and more pleasing For to be Princes and Monarkes and Lords of all the world and whatsoeuer therein is is not sufficient to content them if they want their health which is of more worth then all the world besides Melior est pauper sanus Eccl. 30.14 fortis viribus quam diues imbecillis corpus validum quàm census immensus Better is the poore being sound and strong of Constitution then a rich man that is afflicted in his body Health and good state of body are aboue all gold and a strong body aboue infinite wealth In distempering the humours the Lotts of mens Estates are changed The sicke man be hee neuer so great a Lord would be content to change States to haue a poore plough-mans health To what vse serue Kingdomes Signories and great treasures if day and night a King leade a more miserable life then a day-Labourer To what vse serue his rich bed and downe pillowes if he can take no rest in them To what vse serue his delicate Cates and dainty dishes if hee no sooner sees them but loaths them To what vse serue his rich and pretious wines if he must be driuen to drinke Barly-water Or what guste and content can hee take in any thing whose taste is as bitter as gall Or how can he haue contentment in these outward things that hath it not within himselfe Iulius Caesar wearyed out with his want of health did hate and abhorre his life For as the wise man saith Melior est mors quàm vita amara Better is Death then a bitter life A sicke life is no life nor is there any happinesse where health is wanting And all things without it are as nothing For to liue without paine is more to be prized then all And this doth Temperance effect This preserued Marcus Valerius more then a hundred yeares sound in iudgement and strong in body And by this Socrates liued all his life time free from sicknesses and diseases It was the saying of the elder Cate that hee gouerned his house increased his wealth preserued his health and in larged his life by Temperance In multis escis erit infirmitas saith Ecclesiasticus Qui autem abstinens est adijciet vitam Exceste of meates bringeth sicknesse By surfeiting haue many perished but hee that taketh heede prolongeth his life King Māsinoja was wonderfull temperate his fare was ordinary and with out curiositie which made him liue so sound and so healthy that at 87. yeares of age hee begat a Sonne and at 94. wanne a battaile wherein he shewed himselfe a very good Soldiar but a better Captaine And therefore let those dis-deceiue themselues and acknowledge their errour who thinke they shall preserue their life
by faring deliciously Pliny saith of grasse Plin. That Quanto peius tractatur tanto prouenit melius The worse it is vsed the better it proues As with it so is it with man Homo sicut faenum Man is but as grasse or as the flower of the field Which is no sooner vp but is cut downe no sooner flourisheth but it fadeth and all it's beautie no sooner appeareth but it perisheth and withereth away and is no more to be seene And the more wee make of much our selues the lesse while we liue We are alwayes crazy soone downe but not so soone vp Quickly fall into a disease but long ere we can get out of it Loosing our strength before we come to it and waxing olde before euer wee be aware of it But if a man will lay aside this Cockering and pampering vp of himselfe and habituate himselfe to labour and trauaile he shall passe his life the better For health neuer dwells with delights nor strength ioyne hands with choice fare Nor shall hee euer doe any famous Acts and worthy renowne that feares to take paines and is willing to take his ease The Emperour Hadrian was singular herein Frigora enim tempestates ita patienter tulit vt nunquam caput tegeret Hee did indure colds and all kinde of fowle weather with that patience that hee neuer put on his hatt but alwayes went bare-headed And Alexander the Great would tell his Soldiers that it was for lazy Companions and effeminate fellowes to apply themselues to the pleasures and contentments of this life but for Noble hearts and generous spirits to accustome themselues to labour and to take paines In a word Temperance is a vertue very necessarie for all estates it will sute well with all but more particularly with Kings and Princes and great persons because it is in it selfe a vertue so gentleman-like so worthy Noble persons and so proper for royall Maiestie As likewise for that they liue as they doe amidst so many regalos and delights so many curious meates and a thousand other occasions whereby if they doe not arme themselues with this vertue not onely their liues but their soules are like to incurre the great danger For like theeues in a mans owne house or close traitours lurking in secret corners some while one some while another are neuer from their elbow till they deliuer them ouer into the hands of death or at least hoxe their courage and cut off their health Which in good Kings so much importeth and which all men desire may be long and prosperous The want whereof in a particular person importeth little but in them it mattereth much in regard of the great losse which the Common-wealth thereby receiueth For on their welfare dependeth the generall comfort and gouernment of the whole kingdome which when it is wanting in them that want is common to all Let then the conclusion of this discourse be That Kings ought to keepe an orderly and temperate diet hauing more regard to the law of Nature and vnto Christian reason then to their greatnes of state and Maiestie of Empire And to carry themselues amidst so many occasions of pleasures and delights with that modestie and moderation as if they were without them if they haue a minde to preserue their bodies and their soules healths and to giue vnto all a good example which is another as already hath beene said so powerfull a remedy for to perswade other Princes and Potentates of his kingdome to the embracing of this vertue And besides that obseruation of Hipocrates Quod plures cecîdit gula quam gladius That surfeiting hath killed more then the sword Let those that place all their care in these their delights and pleasures consider that saying of Cato That our much carefulnesse in this causeth much forgetfulnesse of God And there are some that count it an honour and reputation vnto them to eate and to drinke though Sanitas est animae corporis sobrius potus and because they are great in estate they will also be great feeders Which indeed is not Greatnesse nor Lordlinesse but great basenesse and vnbeseeming their authoritie to suffer themselues to be giuen to gluttony and to the excesse of eating and drinking Saint Bernard did blesse himselfe and much wonder at so much time and wealth as herein was spent and at so many Cookes and other Officers herein employed And that he should be the most commended and best rewarded that could inuent any other new kinde of choice dish then had by gluttonies curious enquiry been as yet found out And all to giue gust to the Gust and to please the palate with the losse of their honour the wasting of their wealth and to their great hurt both of bodies and soules But these must I inroll in the list of vnfortunate persons Eccl. 10.17 and account that kingdome happy as the wise man saith where the King and his Peeres liue soberly and temperately Beata terra cuius Rex nobilis est cuius Principes vescuntur in tempore suo ad reficiendum non luxuriandum Blessed art thou O Land when thy King is the sonne of Nobles and thy Princes eate in due season for strength and not for drunkennesse §. II. Of another remedie against excesses and superfluities depending on the example of Kings A King being as hath beene said the soule and heart of a kingdome and like another Sunne which with its light and motion affoords light and health to the world being the true picture and liuely Image of God vpon earth and he that is most being iust like vnto him hath a great and precise obligation lying vpon him both by his life and example to giue life vnto his kingdome and to set himselfe as a patterne before his subiects that and they being that mysticall bodie whereof he is the head And see what dependencie the members in mans bodie haue on the head the same or little lesse haue subiects on their Kings And if that be sound and good it is well with all the members but if ill affected all of them suffer with it The Prouerbe saith Cum caput dolet catera membra dolent When the head aketh the rest of the members ake with it And as it is so true as nothing more so is it more in Common-wealths then mens bodies For as the humours of these are in or out of order according to those which the head communicateth vnto them So likewise the composition of a whole kingdome dependeth on the good or ill composition of their King and Head Whence it followeth that the same necessitie which a body hath of a good head the very selfesame hath a kingdome of a good King being that he as hee is King as already hath beene deliuered doth therein supply the Office of the Head And therefore it was well said of Plato That the inclining of a King to good or ill is the inclining of the whole kingdome according to his scale
the face to deny him any thing that hee was willing either to aske or take whilst like the vnthankfull yuie he went sucking away all the iuyce and sappe of the tree all that good Kings wealth and substance his being his authoritie and little lesse then his kingdome And lost by this meanes so much of his authoritie that some of the Grandes of the kingdome and the Infantes his brethren and the Kings of Aragon and Nauarre betooke them to their Armes and made warre against him he seeing himselfe vpon some occasions disobeyed by his sonne and Prince and forsaken of his wife and Queene Whereupon grew many ciuill broyles and all vnder the title and pretext of recouering their libertie and of pulling their neckes from vnder the yoke of that slauery and subiection wherein they were rendering that reason in their excuse which all the whole kingdome could but take notice of That all businesses past through his Fauourites hands and that the King did not negociate in his owne person The prosecution whereof I remit to those Histories that make mention thereof And it cannot bee denyed that this Fauourite notwithstanding had many good things in him that might very well deserue his Kings loue for he had serued him valiantly in great and vrgent occasions and had put his person and life in perill for his sake But as his priuacie and fauour went increasing so with it increased his ambition and couetousnesse and that in that high degree that he grew hatefull to the whole kingdome and in the end no lesse odious to the King himselfe who comming at length vnto himselfe fell into the account of those damages and losses which he had receiued in his kingdome both in his reputation and authoritie by putting the reines wholly into his hands taking thereby too much libertie to himselfe and ruling the State as he listed The Grandes represented to his Maiestie the abuses that insued thereupon as the ingrossing of the greater Offices and selling of the lesser and ouerswaying the Courts of Iustice And vsing many other effectuall perswasions grounded vpon other iust complaints proposing for remedie and redresse thereof the interest profit that might accrew vnto him by calling him to account and that he might thereby get into his hands an infinite deale of treasure the King liked very well of their propositions and admitting their reasons he fell off from his Fauourite waging warre against him with his owne money wherewith hee thought if neede should serue to sustaine and vphold himselfe This slippery footing haue all those things which haue not their hold-fast in God For they turne to the hurt of those that put their trust in them And it is his mercie to mankinde that they should pay for it in this life howsoeuer they speed in the life to come which we will leaue to Gods iustice and the strict account that will be taken of them In conclusion this great Fauourite dyed being fallen from his priuacie with his Prince depriued of all that wealth and treasure which he had so greedily scraped together ending his life with a great deale of sorrow and discontent and to the great reioycing of his opposites Though this did not serue for a warning to those that came after him but without feare of the like terrible and desperate falls they ranne themselues out of breath in the pursuite of the like priuacie Ioh. 3.29 Saint Iohn Baptist we know was Christs great Fauourite and the Gospell stiles him to be Amicus Sponsi the friend of the Bridegroome But his great goodnesse and holinesse of life did the more gloriously shew it selfe in this that by how much the more Christ did in-greaten and authorize him by so much the more did hee lessen and humiliate himselfe and laboured by all possible meanes by diminishing his owne to increase the authoritie and credit of his Lord and Master saying Illum oportet crescere Ioh. 3.30 me autem minui He must increase but I must decrease And this is that glasse wherein the Fauourites of Kings are to looke taking into their consideration that by how much the more they seeke to greaten themselues in making ostentation of their power and authoritie by so much the more they lessen and dis-authorise that of their Kings with whom is so dangerous any whatsoeuer shew or shadow of equalitie or competition that euen in the highest top of priuacie the more certaine and lesse reparable vsually is the fall How iocond and how well contented went Haman out of the palace when Queene Esther inuited him to dine with the King and her selfe When loe the very next day after they draggd him from that banquet and royall Table to the gallowes And therefore let no man trust or relye on the fauour of Kings be he neuer so rich or neuer so fortunate for in them it is ordinarily seene that all these faire shewes are commonly conuerted into manifest demonstrations of hatred Out of all this that hitherto hath beene said let Fauourites make vnto themselues this vse and instruction to know the danger and slipperinesse of the place wherein they stand euen then when they finde themselues most of all inthronized For most true is that saying of Fulmen petit culmen The highest Towers and the highest hills are most of all subiect to Iones thunder-bolts and lightning And let Kings likewise take this into their consideration by way of aduice That when they shall haue found their Fauourites to be furnished with those qualities before specified and that they are such that thereby they may merit their grace and fauour and so great both place and part in their heart it stands with very good reason that they shou d bee honoured by them with particular mercedes and fauours because they helpe them to beare the burthen of their cares and are exposed to great dangers and greater enuyings as it happened to that great Fauourite of the King of Persia whom the Princes of his kingdome did pretend to remoue from the Kings elbow and to put him in the denne amidst the Lions that by them hee might be there rent in peeces Whereof no other cause could be found against him but his Kings fauour bearing enuie to his priuacie that common Moath to high places from which none be he neuer so good neuer so honest can escape For it is very naturall in men to risent that hee should out-strip them who but yesterday was their fellow and companion They hold that honour for an iniurie that is done to their equall and thinke themselues go backward and loose of their authoritie and reputation if another bee preferred before them Which is such an offence that God presently takes notice of it and passeth it not ouer without punishment For this priuacie with Kings is a thing of his disposing and for such ends as hee pretends and there is not any Subiect that rises to such great place but that he must passe through the weights and
to vnderstand the place and Office which euery Member is to hold in the Common-wealth All the Members of the body saith he haue their particular Office but the Occupations and functions of euery one of them are diuerse and different The most important and of greatest Excellencie are those of the Head which is the superiour part of the bodie In which the Soule doth exercise her principall operations as those of the Vnderstanding and Will Arist Aly. lib. 3. de Anima the instruments whereof haue their habitation in the head There is seated the Sensus Communis or Common sense so called because it 's knowledge is common to all those obiects of the exteriour or outward sences There likewise is the Imaginatiue the Estimatiue the Phantasie and the Reminiscentia Corporall faculties which serue to those that are Spirituall as are the Vnderstanding and the Will In the Head are likewise placed the exteriour sences As Seeing Hearing Smelling Tasting Touching and other faculties and vertues wherewith the life of man is sustained and gouerned And therfore S. Ambrose calls it Imperialem Aulam the Imperiall Court because therein resides the Imperiall power or that Empresse the Will which ruleth and Commandeth all those powers and faculties as being obedient and subiect vnto her And wee may also stile it Regalem Aulam the Princes Pallace for therein abideth assisted by it's operations the Vnderstanding as a King in his Court. For if the Will bee tearmed an Empresse of it's Empire and rule The Vnderstanding is called a King because it directeth and gouerneth in Man and vnto Man all his operations Lactan. Firm. Lib. de Opificio Dei cap. 12. Heb. 1. c. 6.7 guiding them to their due and fit ends Lactantius contrary vnto Galen sayth of the Head that it is the first member that is formed in Man and hath the Primacie ouer all the rest And is for this cause called Caput which is the same with Principium as some Doctors doe expound it And in the Spanish tongue they call the first lines of a Processe Cabeca de Processo the head of the Processe or the beginning of it And it carryes the same signification in the Latin In capite libri scriptum est de me M. Varro Rob. Steph. in Thesau 1. Plato in Tim. id est in principio Libri And for this we haue not onely Varro's but also Robertus Stephanus his Confirmation Caput dicitur quod inde initium capiant Sensus It is called Head because from thence the sences haue their Head and Beginning As also for that the Head is the Well-head of Mans life From it haue their originall and in it do all the Sences liue It Sees Heares Smells and Tastes not onely for it selfe but for the whole body that is for the good and benefit of all the members and parts of the body Hence it followeth that the Institution of the State-royall or of a King which is represented in the Head was not ordained onely for the Kings owne vse and profit but for the generall well-fare of his Kingdome And therefore hee ought to See Heare Taste and vnderstand not only by him selfe or for himselfe but by all and for all He ought not onely to haue an eye to his important affayres but likewise to the good of his Subiects Being that for them and not for himselfe onely a King was borne to the World Seneca lib. de Clem. Aduerte saith Seneca to the Emperor Nero rempublicam non esse tuam sed te reipublicae Consider that the Common-wealth is not thine but thou the Common-wealths Those first men who leauing solitude assembled themselues to liue in a Community knew full well that naturally euery one careth for himselfe and his owne people but no man that taketh care for all in generall And therefore they did agree amongst themselues to choose one of more especiall valour and worth to whom all might haue recourse And that he who among them all should be most renowned for his vertue prudence and fortitude should preside ouer all the rest and should rule and gouerne them that he should be watchfull ouer all of them that he should be solicitous of the common good and profit of them all and to be as carefull of them as a father would be of his children or a Shepheard of his sheepe And weighing with themselues that such a kinde of Man as this ought to be imploying himselfe not in his owne but other mens businesses could not be able to maintaine himselfe and his familie for then all did eate of the labour of their owne hands and the sweate of their browes they did ioyntly resolue to finde his house and to sustaine and maintaine him Regall power was first ordayned for the ease of the people that hee might not be withdrawen by other by businesses but apply himselfe wholy to those of the Common good and to publicke gouernment For this end were they established This was the beginning that Kings had and it ought to be the care of a good King to care more for the publike then his owne particular good All his Greatnesse is at the cost of a great deale of care trouble vexation and inquietude both of Soule and Body He is wearinesse to himselfe to others he is their ease their sustenance and their defence Like vnto your fayrest flowers and fruits which although they beautifie the tree they are not so much for it or for it's owne respect as for others Let not any Man thinke that all the good doth consist in the beauty and brauery wherewith the flower doth flourish and in the goodly shew wherewith the Great ones of the world doe gallant it your powerfull Kings and Princes are flowers but flowers which fade and wither wast their life to preserue others drawing care vpon themselues and affording comfort vnto others others more inioying the fruit then they themselues For as Philon Iudaeus saith A King to his Kingdome is that which a wise man to the ignorant a sheepheard to his sheepe a father to his children light vnto darkenesse and that which God heere on earth is to all his creatures For this Title he gaue vnto Moses when he made him King and Ruler ouer his people Signifying vnto him that he was to be as God the common father of them all Seneca lib. de Consolat ad Polib c. 26. For to all this doth the Office and dignitie of a King oblige him Omnium domos illius vigilantia defendit omnium otium illius labor omnium delitias illius industria omnium vacationem illius occupatio His subiects houses are guarded and secured by his Vigilancie their ease procured by his labour their delights inioyed by his industry and their merry vacations by his painefull imployments And therfore the Prophet Samuell sayd vnto king Saul anon after he was annointed King ouer Israel declaring vnto him the obligations of his Office Behold Saul now that God hath annointed
vel ab humili persona That he willingly submitted himselfe to be admonished and reproued of the meanest person It is proper to gentile brests generous hearts to listen with delight to the good reasons Counsailes of others though they be inferiour in qualitie vnto them for sometimes a poore man hits right when a rich man misses the marke And a Country Clowne may aduise that which a king knowes not of And if he do perswade himselfe that he knoweth all and vnderstandeth all and that his opinion alone is the certainest surest he but shuts the doore to the discouery of his errour One of the two things saith Hesiod which euery man of reason wisdome and vnderstanding that shall be sufficient to gouerne that which shall be committed to his charge ought to haue is a great blandure smoothnesse and softnesse of heart to follow the opinion aduise and Counsaile of those that are the wisest and know most This blandure and docilitie is likewise a part of Prudence and we shall finde it set downe in expresse words in those two Petitions which Salomon made vnto God For in the second of the Chron. 2. Chron. 2.10 It is written that he sayd Da mihi sapientiam Giue me wisedome And in the first of the Kings Dabis ergo seruo tuo cor docile 1. Kings 3.9 Giue therefore thy seruant an Vnderstanding heart Vnderstanding for to know and an obedient heart for to heare the Aduise of others But this second part of being obedient to other mens opinions is vnprofitable for gouernment without the first which is prudence and wisedome for to choose and know the best For by following bad Counsaile he shall erre as much as if he followed his owne proper errour and sometimes more And I should hold it the lesse euill that a king were not ouerwise if presuming that he is he should relie too much vpon himself scorne to take counsaile then if he were lesse wise but knew how to benefit himselfe and make good vse of the Aduise of prudent and wise Counsailours Aug. lib. 14. de Ciuit. Dei cap. 13. A Prince of a docile and ingenious disposition is well disposed to intertaine all good Counsaile and doctrine He easily learneth the languages of all those nations which are vnder his Empire doth all things with as much facilitie as if he had beene bred vp in euery one of them And therefore sayd Herodotus Omnia sapientibus facilia To the wise all things are easie And therefore your wise men giue the first place vnto that man who of himselfe knowes that which is fitting And the second to him that knowes how to follow good Counsaile But he that neither is wise nor will be ruled by the wise they know not in what forme to place him Plato in Thim nor what name to giue him Plato calls them Children and further saith That such men as are not wise though they be neuer so aged are still Children And Seneca proueth that they begin euery day to liue because they vnderstand no more then the child that is new borne And Strabo is of the same minde Strabo in Geo. lib. 1. Omnes Idiotae doctrinarum expertes quodammodo pueri sunt appellandi All Idiots and illiterate persons are after a sort to be called Children And because in the Chapters that are to follow by and by we are to treate more at large of this matter I conclude this with saying That Kings for to hit the nayle on the head not to faile in the carriage of their businesses must alwaies take coūsaile of wisemen such as are of knowne vertue experience and not giue credit vnto any that prate talke with a great deale of liberty licence of those things they vnderstand not as if they were graduated in thē from their Mothers wombe And only for a more happy in shew than prudent wit Lest that happen vnto them which befell king Ahab who admitted to his Councell a false Prophet that made great oftentation of that spirit which hee had not Hee put the gouernment into his hands all was gouerned by his Counsaile And because he did not speake by the spirit of God nor hee himselfe well vnderstood what he said businesses wēt amisse the kingdome suffered it cost the king his life It passeth so sometimes that Kings put the gouernment into those mens hands which are lame neither know nor can command They require their voice who haue nothing but a voice empty barrels that sound loud but haue no fulnesse craue advice of those that are least able to giue it them And if they thēselues pay not for their folly yet at lest the kingdome suffers for it And therfore we are not more to desire any thing of God for the good gouernmēt conseruation augmētation of Kings kingdomes than that he will be pleased to furnish them with good wise prudent Counsailours such as are sound at the heart cleane from corruption blamelesse in their conuersation For such as these will serue thē in stead of Eyes vnderstanding both wherewith they may see vnderstand all that passeth in their kingdomes O how without eyes how blind is that king who hath imprudent couetous ill inclined Ministers And if he will conserue himselfe his kingdome well he ought not so much to flye from those Physitians who either out of ignorance or particular hatred approue consent to his eating of such meats as are hurtfull contrary to his health as from ignorant Counsailours who either out of Adulation or for their particular Interest make all that lawfull which his free and absolute will shall lead him vnto For such Eare-wiggs as these will quickly spoyle the prosperitie of the kingdome ouerthrow the life of the King and prouoke the patience of the Subiect CHAP. VII A Prosecution of the former discourse shewing how Kings are to take Counsaile and what signes they are to marke and obserue for their better knowledge IT is a Prouerbe much celebrated amongst the Grecians that Consiliū est res sacra Counsaile is a sacred thing And as D. Thomas declares it it is a light wherwith the holy Ghost illightneth the vnderstanding to chuse the best Others say That it is a science which doth weigh consider How When things are to be done that they may succeed well Aristotle saith Arist Ethic. lib. 6. That it is a well-weighed and considered reason whether such a thing shall be done or not done And the Law de la Partida That it is good Aduice which a Man takes vpon things that are doubtfull Ley. 1. 2. Tit. 21. p. 1. that they may succeede well And indeed Counsaile is in all things exceeding necessary For without it can we neyther treate of peace nor war Consilijs tractanda sunt bella Euery purpose is established by Counsell and with good aduise make war It is the saying of the
vphodeth Kingdomes without which they cannot long last and continue For God will most iustly punish them by taking those from them which they haue if they dissimulate iniustices and if they suffer themselues to be carryed away contrary to all right and reason and permit notorious faults to passe without punishment Other faults are not so much risented in Kings and Kingdomes are content to tolerate them be they neuer so great But should they haue neuer so many other good partes if they be faulty in this which is of so great importance they shall presently see and perceiue a publicke face of sorrow and a generall discontent in all their subiects And God oftentimes makes it a meanes for the punishment and amendment of Kings and Kingdomes It is the saying of Iesus the sonne of Syrach That by Counsaile Eccl. 10.8 and Iustice Kingdomes are maintained And for default thereof Scepters and Crownes are lost and Kingdomes transferred from one people to another And those brought to serue which were borne to command But the King that administreth Iustice without respect of persons shall haue his succession perpetuall for that is the very ground and foundation of a Throne royall Prou. 25.5 Aufer impietatem de vultu regis et firmahitur Iustitia thronus eius Take away the wicked from the King and his throne shall be established in righteousnes That is His Issue his House and his Kingdome Iustice is that which foundeth Kingdomes which enlargeth them and conserueth them That which establisheth peace and resisteth warre Without it there is neither King nor Kingdome nor Common-wealthe nor Citie nor any other Communitie which can be conserued And all whatsoeuer that haue beene ruined and destroyed hath beene for want of Iustice For this cause the Kings of Egypt and in imi●●tion of them some others did which all good Kings ought to do sweare their Presidents Ministers and Magistrates that they should not obay their mandatums nor execute their orders and decrees if they found in them that they commanded any thing contrary vnto Iustice and the Lawes of the Kingdome Philip the Faire King of France and his successor Charles the seuenth enacted a Law that the Iudges should make no reckoning of the Kings Letters nor those his royall scedules vnlesse they seemed vnto them to be iust and lawfull The Catholike Kings Don Fernando and Donna Isabella and their Nephew Charles the fift by their well ordained Lawes Magistracies and Tribunals of so much power and authoritie exceeded all before them that fauoured Iustice Which were augmented and inlarged by King Philip the second who was more particularly zealous of Iustice And his sonne King Philip the third was a great fauourer and louer of Iustice and obseruer of the Lawes submitting vnto them his person and his goods Who might very well say that which the Emperour Traiane said conferring great power on his Gouernour in Rome Thou shalt vse this sword in our name and for Vs as long as we shall command that which is iust and against vs if we shall command the contrarie For it is alwayes to be presumed of the Intention of Kings that they euermore command Iustice to be done but neuer the contrary though it make against themselues Dauid gaue thankes vnto God that hee had set him in the way of Iustice that is That he had giuen him an vpright heart and informed his vnderstanding with so right a rule that it inclined his disposition to doe iustice though it were against himselfe The cause saith Diuus Thomas why God for so many yeares did inlarge the Empire and Monarchie of the Romanes with so much power so much treasure and so many great victories was for that their rectitude and iustice which they obserued towards all But in that instant that they fell from this their Empire likewise began to fall Of these Examples all Histories both humane and diuine are very full yet all will not serue the turne they doe little or no good Let Gods mercie supply this defect and worke this good And let not the poore bee discouraged and disheartened but let them comfort and cheere vp themselues with this that their righteousnesse and their patience shall not perish for euer God hath spoke the word and he will keepe it Psal 10.17.18.20 The poore saith the Psalmist shall not alwayes be forgotten nor shall the hope of the afflicted perish for euer For he will take the matter into his owne hands and will breake the arme of the wicked and malitious and will helpe the fatherlesse and poore vnto their right that the man of earth bee no more exalted against them Woe vnto those that are rulers of the people Woe vnto those that are vniust Kings Which make Lawes like Spiders cobwebbs whereinto little starueling flies fall and die but your fat Bulls of Basan breake through and beare them away in triumph on their hornes But that wee may touch no more vpon this string we will here holde our hand and and goe on in treating of Iustice and it's parts A matter no lesse profitable then necessary for Kings and their Ministers CHAP. XXI Of the Parts of Iustice in common and in particular of Iustice commutatiue D. Tho. 1. p q. 21 artic 1 ● 2 q. 61. art 3 ●o●o de Iustitia iust lib. 3. Arist 5. Ethic. cap. 2.1 Mat. 5.20 6. 1. TO the end that we may proceede with more distinction and clearenesse in this Chapter we are to presuppose with Diuus Thomas and others that Iustice may be sayd to be in Common two manner of wayes First of all vnder this generall name of Iustice is comprehended all kinde of vertue thereof in this sense saith the Philosopher that Iustitia est omnis virtus Iustice includeth in it selfe all sortes of vertues whatsoeuer so that a iust Man and a vertuous man is all one And in this sense Christ conceiu'd it when he said Nisi abundauerit Iustitia Except your righteousnesse exceede c. And in another place Attendite ne iustitiam vestram faciatis coram hominibus Take heede that yee doe not boast your righteousnesse before men to be seene of them Of iustice considered thus in the generall we will not now treate of in this place for in rigour and strictnesse this is not true iustice though it haue some similitude therewith Now Iustice is taken after another manner for a particular virtue To wit that which is one of the foure Cardinall vertues which hath for it's obiect and end as we shall tell you by and by to giue vnto euery man that which is his right and his due Of this which is properly Iustice do we here meane to treate of whose Excellencies all bookes are full and whereof the Ancients said That it is a celestiall and diuine vertue seated by God in the mindes of men Vlpian saith That it is Constans et perpetua voluntas quae tribuit cuique suum A constant and perpetuall Will
Confection for prudence without a sound and harmelesse Intention is but meere craft and subtletie as Aristotle sayth and produceth nothing but trickes and deuises to delude and deceiue And a plaine and sincere intention deuoyd of prudence doth but deceiue and damnifie a mans selfe I meane particular persons For in Kings this want of warinesse and prudent sagacitie will procure greater hurt to the generall affayres of the Common-wealth Too notorious and well knowen is that sentence of the glorious S. Ierome Sancta rusticitas solum sibi prodest Holy plainenesse and simplicitie doth onely profit a mans selfe That is some particular person But Kings besides their good intention and sinceritie of minde must haue prudence sagacitie for to resist the plots and traps of the ambitious who still lye in wayte watching a fit occasion for to deceiue them vnlesse they be minded to loose their reputation their authoritie and their Kingdome all at once This is not a Prognostication broached out of mine owne braine but vented by the holy ghost That an imprudent King Eccl. 10.3 shall ruine a Kingdome Rex insipiens perdet populum suum An vnwise King destroyeth his people The Prophet Esay after he had made a recapitulation of the graces and gifts of wisedome vnderstanding counsayle might knowledge and diuerse other wherewith the holy-Ghost was to adorne the person of our Sauiour Christ that King of Kings and liuely patterne and true example of all good Kings Esay 11.3 sayth Et replebit eum spiritus timoris Domini And the spirit of the feare of the Lord shall rest vpon him Now the Hebrew Rabins whom Paguinus and Vatablus follow reade Olfactio odoratus eius erit cum timore Domini Ita Isido Cla●●us The pleasant sent of his sweete odour shall be with the feare of the Lord. That is to say Together with the feare of the Lord and all other vertues hee shall haue an admirable vnderstanding and a dainty delicate iudgement Odorari faciam eum I will make him to sent and winde out So that hee shall nose out any thing whatsoeuer though neuer so farre off and without seeing or hearing them be they neuer so secret and hid shall make a right and true iudgement of things By this quicknesse of sent they vnderstand that nimblenesse of apprehension sharpenesse of vnderstanding and sagacitie which a King ought to haue borowing the Metaphore from your Line-hound or blood-hound who running vpon the sent and nosing the footing of what he is put vpon discouers the game he pursues be it in the thickest brakes and closest bushes in the Forrest Hee must be so subtill and so quicke of sent that nothing must escape his knowledge nothing be hidden from his vnderstanding he must like a Surgeon search into the depth of the wound there is no mysterie so secret which hee must not pry and diue into he must nose from a farre the impstoures artifices fraudulent dealings and cunning disguises of those that go about to deceiue him When wee will signifie such a mans trace or which way hee tends Wee vsually say Ya yo avia olido algo desso Now I begin to smell his drift I haue an inckling what hee intends But Kings must haue more then an Inckling they must haue a full knowledge of all There must not be that thing in the world which mainely concernes them and their Kingdomes which they must not winde and sift out And from that high place wherein they are seated they are like sentinalls in a watch-Tower to see and make discouery of all the cunning practises and diuelish plots deuised against them and of the slye and subtile carriage of such crafty and double-dealing men with whom they treate be they Naturells or Strangers For as it is in the Prouerb La nistad del anno viuen con arte y enganno y la otra parte con enganno y arte One halfe part of the yeare they liue by arte and deceit The other halfe part by deceit and arte And because these workers of mischiefe arme themselues with the more care and lye in closer ambush against Kings and their great Estates it is necessary that they likewise should stand vpon their guard and be very vigilant and circumspect not only for to discouer their proiects and to defend themselues from their designes but to take them in the manner Or as it is in the Spanish prouerb Cogerles con el hurtoen las manos Whilest the theft is yet in their hands to lay hold on them One of the greatest Attributes and noblest Titles which holy Iob giueth vnto God is that where he sayes Apprehendit sapientes in astutia eorum Iob. 5.12 That hee taketh the wise in their owne craftinesse He well vnderstands vpon what point insist the Sophistries and fallacies of the wise men of this world and at what marke their Counsailes ayme Iob. 12. Et consilia prauorum dissipat He disappointeth the deuises of the crafty and scattreth the Counsayles of the wicked Rex qui sedet in solio dissipat omne malum intuitu suo And what they haue forged in their hearts hee hammereth in that sort that they shall not fulfill their desires Cogitationes malignorum The cogitations of the wicked So sayth another letter Hee calls them Malignos that are men of a noble heart That haue a thousand turnings and windings Another Letter hath Versutorum Variable oft changing subtile shifting being all of them true Epithetes of a double disposed and crafty generation Ne possint implere manus eorum Ibi. quod coeperunt That their hands cannot performe their enterprise nor make an end of the web which they haue begun to weaue but their Counsell is carryed headlong meeting with darkenesse in the day time being taken in their owne net as Absalon was with his owne hayre neuer being able to set the same foote forward againe Christ calls these kinde of men Foxes which neuer goe on in a straight and direct way but crossing from one side to another and making many doubles as he doth that hath doubling thoughts and playes with the Foxe Wyly beguile yee And by this beast did the Egyptians signifie that man which vseth double dealing and i● his words and workes is nothing but impostures tricks and deuices Vae duplici corde Eccl. 2.12 labijs scolestis terram ●●gredienti d●aebus vijs Woe to the double heart to deceitfull lips and to the sinner that goeth two wayes To deale with these men will be required a great deale of prudence and sagacitie a Countermine must be made and a pit digg'd whereinto they may fall that like silk-wormes they might be wrapped and inuolued in the same bottome that themselues haue wrought to their vtter vndoing Prou. 11.6 In insidijs fuis ●●p●●●ur iniqui saith the wise man The transgressours shall be taken in their owne naughtinesse Their plots and proiects shall make for their finall perdition When the
dangerous deuises that are bred in their mindes and in their time breake out I would haue this imitation to bee the remedie for this so great an ill for neither penalties nor feare of punishment will doe any good vpon them For hee that will not forbeare to sinne for feare of Gods Law will hardly refraine from mans Let Kings therefore say and doe those things that they would haue their Subiects say and doe And let their fauourites and those that are nearest about them runne the like course and let it extend to the better sort and those that are of ranke and qualitie for by this meane it will descend to those likewise that are of meaner condition and then shall they see how much more good it will worke then either lawes or punishment And this is the more naturall of the two for the one is founded vpon imitation and the other grounded vpon feare And men doe more easily imitate those better things which they see actually put in execution then depart from those worser things which they either heare or know to be prohibited And when they shall see that their superiours and those that are in place and authoritie command one thing and doe another they neither dread their threatnings nor obey their commandements For perceiuing that they doe but imitate their actions they perswade themselues that none can without blushing punish the same sinne in them Salust did aduise Caesar in the entrance to his Empire that if he would order his commonwealth aright he should first of all begin with reformation in himselfe and his as Pliny saith Vita Principis censura est eaque perpetua ad hanc dirigimur Plin. Jun. lib. Epist ad semp Rufum ad hanc conuertimur The life of a Prince is a perpetuall censure and according thereunto doe we guide and gouerne our selues And let it not seeme vnto any that this remedie of the imitation of Kings is slow and long and will aske a great deale of time for where there is met together as it were in it's center whatsoeuer may corrupt and hurt that which is capable of being corrupted when as neither Kings nor their Lawes are able to hinder it in vaine is it indeuoured or to be imagined that that may bee cured in a few yeares which hath layen sicke so many But till such time as men grow vp like new plants and haue accustomed themselues to vertue to the end that through the tendernesse of their youth they may not grow awry Being therein likewise holpen by the example of their betters for there is not any Artifice so powerfull and effectuall as that of imitation which I now speake of for it being a cure so conformable vnto nature it will worke by degrees whereof we shall not know the benefit till we haue enioyed it And because there are both diseased persons Chrysost hom 19. in Gen. and diseases as Saint Chrysostome hath obserued which are neither remedied by sweet potions nor purged away by bitter pills A maine reason whereof is because they themselues are not willing to be cured nor will admit of the example of Kings nor the feare of their Lawes it is fit this other remedie should be vsed of punishment and chastisement without dissimulation For many times the motiue of sinning is the facilitie of forgiuing And it is a knowne case that people by punishment become obedient but by pardoning proud and insolent The ill and vicious are so possessed and inabled in their vices by their long continuance that if Kings should not shew some mettall and courage they would possesse the world and carry all things away before them in that violent manner that the good should not be able to liue amongst thē Bald. in l. Prouinciarum C de ferijs By chastising the bad saith Baldus the good liue in safety And for this cause and not in vaine according to Plato and others were Lawes instituted and regall power the stroke of the sword the discipline of the Clergie and the common hangmans whip all of them as necessary for mans life as those 4. Elements by which we liue breathe Let Kings take this from me and beleeue it That that commonwealth is in great danger where the Kings reputation goes decaying and the force of Iustice looseth it's strength For thereby vices assume licence vnto themselues and their owners perseuere and go on in them Here a remisse Prince is a sharpe sword and doth neuer more grieuously punish then when hee doth most pardon Punishment and chastisement onely offend the delinquent but remission la ley al Rey y la Grey the Law King and people By remission Lawes and Kings grow in contempt and the whole commonwealth infected Whereas by chastisement the Law is obeyed and kept the King feared and honoured and the kingdome maintained in peace and iustice I doe not treat here of those cruell and rigorous punishments which some seuere Iudges inflict for remedies and cures of so much rigour are violent and do sooner kill and make an end of their Subiects then heale and recouer them by little and little Wherefore in point of correction a commonwealth must vse a great deale of caution and prudence And for that hee who pretends by maine strength to resist the furious current of a swift riuer or by roughnesse to tame a head-strong horse shall shew himselfe as insolent as impertinent rigour with gentlenesse and iustice with mercie will doe well which if they go not hand in hand and kisse each other they are both but the occasion of greater corruption For it is an erronious discourse in those that thinke that publike conseruation consisteth in the execution of cruell chastisements and sharpe and rigorous sentences bee they of death or otherwise For these doe rather dispeople and desolate then correct and amend a kingdome And as it is a signe of bad Physitians or of a corrupt and infectious aire to see many fall sicke and dye so likewise is it of carelesse Ministers and ill preuention and of a contagious corruption of vices and euill manners when there are many criminall iudgements many punishments and cruell chastisements And who is he that knowes the principall cause thereof it may bee this or it may bee that or all together howsoeuer I am sure it is all ill And in a word so great so vniuersall and so pernicious an ill that if Christian Kings carry not a very watchfull eye ouer their Subiects manners in not suffering them to flie out they shall not when they would be able to refraine them and remedie what is amisse for euill custome being once habituated according vnto Galen and others is an acquired nature and engendreth an habite which being mans naturall inclination carries him along after it and so great is his inclination to delights and so many the prouocations and ill examples which draw him thereunto and poure oyle as it were vpon that fire that if there be not the
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
And it is our dayly experience to see persons that haue beene highly and richly gratified and extraordinarily well rewarded to haue proud very vnthankfull For this fault great benefits haue with them and such as are dis-equall to the deserts of those persons that receiue them that they are not thankfully accepted of And those that are benefitted to the end that they may not bewray this their imperfection being such as it is no lesse then so great a sinne as ingratitude they soone learne to forget them but those that are conferred on others neuer slip out of their remembrance In a word of all that that is begg'd and of all them that begg few there are that forbeare to goe this way In confirmation whereof we may alleadge heere that question which Christ made to one of those ten Leapers which hee healed shewing himselfe not halfe well pleased with the rest of his fellowes Nonne decem mundati sunt Et nouem vbi sunt Non est inuentus qui rediret daret gloriam Deo nisi hic Alienigena Luke 17.17 Are there not ten cleansed But where are the nine There is none found that returned to giue God prayse saue this stranger In Kings Pallaces your strangers and those that are newly come to Court are your onely thankfull men For those that are well acquainted with the Court familiarly attend the person of the King and are still assistent vnto him vpon all occasion neuer acknowledge the fauours that are done them bee they neuer so great They are alwayes crauing but are neuer satisfied they swallow downe whole riuers and wonder not at it they thinke all Iordan is too little for them and that they shall no soner open their mouth but they must presently sup it vp And the reason hereof is because they verily perswade themselues that all whatsoeuer you giue them be it neuer so much is due vnto them for their seruices and their dayly Assistencies I therefore say and therein say but the truth That one of the greatest happinesses that can befall Kings is to be serued by noble persons and men of honour gente granada as the Spaniards tearme them iolly strong lusty people proper comely men and persons of best and most account both for riches and honour But this is the mischeife of it that this golde which should make such a glorious shew in Court and shine both in honour and goodnesse is canckred and rusted by Auarice and Ambition which eates into all mens mindes and wholly possesseth them So that from the highest to the lowest they are all well read in the Schoole of Couetousnesse Dissimulation and deceit And your Priests and those that weare Miters on their heads are not in this kinde the meanest Schollers amongst them All complaine they are not rewarded that they haue nothing giuen them if they haue any thing giuen them they thinke it is all too litle And betwixt this their complayning their thankefull acceptance there is set vp such a strong partition that it neither suffereth them to acknowledge a benefit nor to intertaine it with that thankfullnesse as they ought All now a dayes attend their own interest and not their kings seruice Who may say that of them which God spake by Malachie Malach. 1.10 Who is there euen among you that would shut the doores of my house or kindle but a coale on mine Altar in vaine Not one I assure you but will be well payd for his paines There is not that Sexton that Cloyster Cleanser nor scullion of the Kitchen but will haue good wages other ayudes de costa or by-helps This great traine saith Seneca of seruants and Attendants seeke not so much after a Master as Money a friend as a fortune Miserable is the condition of kings whom none loue for themselues but for their owne ends and the good they expect from them so that this their priuate interest fayling them their seruices faile with it likewise faileth so says S. Isidore that loue Loyalty which is due vnto them Non sunt fideles quos munus non gratia copulat nam citò deserunt nisi semper accipiant Those whom Lucre not Loue linketh cannot bee faithfull For vnlesse they be still on the taking hand they vanish and are quickly gone Yet is it not my intent and purpose in that which I haue sayd to condemne those who demaund their pay and satisfaction for their seruices to relieue their necessities For therein they doe but vse that lawfull course which is appointed for them by way of petition Howbeit Aristotle Plato and other Philosophers would haue subiects to be solicitous not in sueing but in seruing And I farther affirme that Princes are to take it to their charge to content those that haue done them good seruice it being the principall Office of distributiue Iustice carefully vigilantly to distribute riches and honours to those that haue deserued them And this vndoubtedly is one of the most effectuall meanes for the good gouernment of a Common-wealth For as those three diuine vertues Faith Hope and Loue are increased and augmented by praying vnto God so on the contrarie are they lessned and diminished by sueing vnto Men. For when subiects serue and not sueing obtaine that which they deserue humane Faith Hope and Loue is augmented in them because thereby they are taught to rely on the vertue and wisedome of their Soueraigne who applyes himselfe to euery mans meritts and the iustnesse and vprightnesse of his cause For which cause they will loue him much but much more when he giues without being importuned with petitions And it seemeeth vnto them that hee giues not more willingly then he doth wisely in applying himselfe onely to reason and Iustice and not to the importunate Petitions of Pretenders And therefore Kings are not to content themselues onely with paying that which they owe and to doe mercedes and fauours to them that serue them but that these should likewise goe accompanied with Loue and Good Will for with remuneration are the seruices requited and with Loue are they obliged to doe them still more and better seruice In that Case which the Scripture recounteth of King Assuerus who one night being not able to sleep and take his rest commanded Lights to be brought in and some that were about him to take that booke and read vnto him wherein were written the notable things that past in his raigne and amongst the rest there was mention made of a great peece of seruice which Mardochee did him freeing him from that death which two of his Eunuches had plotted against him by discouering this their treason demanded of those there present What honour and dignitie hath beene giuen to Mordochee for this his fidelitie towards me and the good seruice he hath done mee And the Kings seruants that ministred vnto him sayd There is nothing done for him Whereupon he presently bestowed vpon him such great honors and dignities that vnlesse he