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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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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
obligation subiects haue to maintaine their Kings In consideration whereof they are bound to administer iustice truly and to keepe them in peace Ib. Verb. Iuro Dan. 4.17 and juros reales shall be giuen away in perpetuitie or for one or two lifes which is a kinde of rooting or gr●bbing vp of the tree the King shall thereby be dis●nabled and depriued for euer of the fruit of those mercedes and fauours which he might from time to time not onely yearely but daily and howerly haue afforded many of his good and well deseruing subiects As did that other who because they should not trouble him with comming vnto him to craue of the fruite of a very good tree which he had in his Garden caused it to bee rooted vp and to be sent amongst them to make their best of it whose fruite had he let the tree stand might haue plea●u●d a many and that many a time and oft whereas 〈◊〉 it could but content a few for the present and peraduenture not so well pleased neither because thereby all 〈◊〉 was taken from them of hauing the like againe Alexander the great who was very liberal in his gifts said once to this purpose I like not that Gardiner that puls vp the trees of his garden by the roote Giuing thereby to vnderstand that a King is a faire beautifull and dainty delicate Garden wherein like so many trees are planted the King● rents and 〈…〉 and whiles the rayzes be ready of them shall 〈◊〉 and whole they may yeelde good store of fruit but if they come once to be rooted vp they presently grow thy and wither away In the fourth Chapter of the Prophesie of D●ie● is set downe that 〈◊〉 wherein the King of Babylon Nabucodon●sor saw that huge high ●ee whose top did reach vp to Heauen and whose boughes did stretch and extend themselues to the vttermost ends of all the earth and so laden with ●ir that there was prouision and sustenance sufficient for all the Men and beasts of the world and was a shadow and shelter vnto all that came vnder it And Daniel by the helpe of the diuine Spirit declaring this dreame told him Arborem quam vidisti tu es Rex The tree that thou sawest is thou O King That tree was an expresse signification of that King and of the Vastnes and greatnesse of his Monarchie and of that which conueneth and is proper to such Monarckes Which is To communicate their fruit to all To sustaine and maintaine their subiects and to hugg and defend them vnder the shadow of their wings And this is said to haue beene and to haue contineued with that Monarke whilest the tree stood whole and sound But the Dreame and it's declaration proceeded farther and Daniel told the King That after he had seene the beautie and greatnesse of that tree he heard likewise a most strong and fearefull voyce from Heauen pronouncing a most heauie and rigorous sentence that the tree should be hewen downe and the boughes lopt off and so wholy and vtterly destroyed that the creatures that came thither and were fed and maintayned by it's fruit fled thence and forsooke it Yet the stump of the rootes thereof was left in the earth and bound about with a bond of brasse and yron c. In this dreame were signified three things declared by the selfe same Prophet with the same Spirit of God First The fall of that King and Kingdome in those lopt boughes and the hewing of it downe and leauing it fruitlesse Secondly That which vsually befalls Kings who not hauing wherewithall to giue all those doe leaue and forsake him which before did follow him Thirdly That when the rootes remaine there is hope that it may be restored and returne to its former greatnesse As was to be seene in this King whom God so seuerely punished for his sinnes For the rootes of the said tree remained still whole and sound and were a most certaine prognostication and assured hope that hee was to be restored to his former Estate So that when in Kingdomes the Rayzes of the rents royall remaine whole and intire though in the giuing away of the fruites there be much bounty and liberalitie vsed those breaches may be made vp againe which are occasioned by so large a hand But when the rayzes are grub'd vp when the roote that should giue sap and life is gone there is not any means of restauration to be made or found though Kings should charge their Kingdomes with neuer such excessiue tributes and draw as they say the very heart blood from forth their subiects bodies In a word therefore there ought to be had in giuing Order Moderation and Temperance For a Prince that giues without these conditions is not Liberall but Prodigall a great scatterer and waster and if not contenting himselfe with the fruites of the tree he will haue a pull at the rootes Lord haue mercy on that Land for it is to be feared that King will turne Destroyer Giuing hath it's times it 's taxe it's ●umes and it 's orderly maner in the doing thereof The excesse whereof doth crosse and contradict distributiue Iustice Wherein is to be considered the kings abilitie then the seruices and merits of the persons and last of all the Distribution it selfe which must be done with discretion and prudence For all must not be throwen vpon one either part or partie nor kings be like riuers which rising out of their bedds breaking forth beyond their bounds vndoe some and enrich others robbing many to raise one God free euery good Common-wealth from such distributions as these which are rather destructions then distributions and actions of Iniustice not of Iustice And God I beseech him so illighten the vnderstanding and heartes of Kings that they may in an orderly kinde of manner conferre their fauours and giue rather reasonable rewards to many then extrauagant ones to a few For the raine doth then most good when all haue the comfort of it But when it powres downe in one place alone that marrs and spoyles all Some grounds for want thereof are parched and dryed vp and other some by too much are ouerflowen and made fruitlesse In like manner a King showring downe all the water of his liberalitie vpon one particular person it cannot but breede a generall discontent and ●anguishment in all the rest of his subiects And more is the hurt which resulteth from those that are offended with the great fauours conferred on others then the good that ariseth from those that are benefited by them For the first neuer forget the wrong they thinke they haue receiued And the second treate of that they haue receiued as of a due debt And all these and a great many more inconueniences grow from the not true obseruing of this distributiue Iustice Let Kings conferre fauours on their publicke Ministers and vpon such persons as haue done them great and notable seruices both in Peace and in Warre for this will be well
much afterwards much too much and more then too much will not satisfie his hungry mawe Infinita enim est et insatiabilis cupiditatis natura Arist 2. Pol. cap. 5. Eccl. 5.10 Infinite saith Aristotle and insatiable is the gut of couetousnesse And the Holy Ghost tells vs Auarus non implebitur pecunia He that loueth siluer shall not be satisfied with siluer nor he that loueth aboundance with increase For it is a kind of salte and brackish water wherewith couetous mans thirst cannot be quenched for when he hath taken this and that other and a world of things he gapes still for more He is better satisfied by denying him that which hee desireth then by giuing him that which he craueth And therefore publicke Ministers if wee will credit Diuinitie should be so noble and so free that they should not onely not be couetous but quite opposite thereunto and to hold a particular hatred and perpetuall enmitie with couetousnesse That they should not onely not receiue giftes and presents but that they should hate and abhorre them and cause those to be informed against that either shall giue a bribe or pretend to giue For most true is that saying of the sonne of Sirack Eccl. 20.29 Munera dona excaecant oculos Iudicum Presents and gifts blind the eyes of wise How sone is a couetous man blinded when he beholdes the baite of his Passion Nor is there any thing more often repeated in sacred and prophane writ then the putting vs in minde of force and efficacie which gifts haue to wrest Iustice and peruert iudgement Moses saith of them That they blinde the eyes of the wise and that they turne and winde the words of good men chopping and changing one for another to serue their purpose Exod. 23.8 Qui quaerit Locupletari peruertit oculum suum The gift blindeth the wise and peruerteth the words of the righteous By which is vnderstood the Intention which is easily wrested when interest puts to a helping hand which is that Loade-stone which drawes the yron after it and causeth them to erre that suffer themselues to be carryed away therewith If a Iudge be couetously giuen he will soone varie his opinion and make no scruple to condemne the poore who hath nothing to giue him and absolue the rich who giues him all that hee hath For mony is an able Aduocate and pleads hard And Iustice sayth Isidore is strangled with gold The times are ill when that which cannot be obtained by Iustice must be procured by Money Fiue hundred yeares and more was Greece gouerned by Lycurgus his Lawes to the great happinesse of the Naturalls of that Countrie and admiration of strangers without the breach of any one Law by meanes whereof that Common-wealth was sustained with admirable peace and Iustice because priuate interest had no power with the Iudges of the Land But when money came to beare sway and that men tooke pleasure therein and made it their happinesse the Common-wealth was made vnhappy and the Lawes and Iustice were trodden vnder foote He saith the wise man that is greedy of gaine troubleth his own house Qui autem odit munera Prou. 15.27 viuet But hee that hateth gifts shall liue And I doe not see how hee can liue who receiuing so much so often and of so many sees himselfe so laden and so inuironed and beset with obligations which are so opposite and contrary one to another I say contrary because the Pretenders are so amongst themselues who aspiring to one and the same thing wherein it is impossible hee should content all of them euery one offereth according to his Talent and the desire hee hath to obtaine his suite And many times though they giue neuer so much they remaine frustrated of their pretension and become enemies to that Minister murmuring and complayning of him and that with a great deale of reason all the dayes of their life Woe vnto the Couetous man who as the Scripture sayth sets his soule to sale Eccl. 10.10 Animam quoque venalem habet It is a most wretched case and a most lamentable miserie that a mans auarice and couetousnesse should be so great that hee should sell his soule for the greedinesse of money Besides there is another great Contradiction from which it is not possible for to free themselues For if they will faithfully performe their Office they cannot fauour any saue him that hath most right and iustice on his side And this they must do gratis and without any other kind of interest then that which the being of a good and faithfull Minister carryes with it Againe if they do not ayde and helpe him who by giftes hath bound them vnto him they fowly and shamefully deceiue both him and themselues and must needes fall into one of these two inconueniences Either to be ingratefull if they doe not doe for him that gaue or vniust If they doe contrarie vnto Iustice So that which way soeuer they receiue a gift they goe away with it with an euill Conscience and in plaine English are theeues by qualification So that great Lawyer Paris de Puteo calls them and sayth Paris de Put. de Sindic c. 2. num 3. That there are more in your publicke Audiences and open Courts then in your Townes and villages And that iust man Iob affirmeth Iob. 12.6 Luc. de Pena in l. Iudices Cod. de Dignitat lib. 12. Isay 1.23 Deut. 27.25 That the Tribunalls of robbers prosper One calls them Vsurers another Pyrates And Lucas de Pena saith That they are farre worse because they rob and steale vnder collour of Law and publicke authoritie In a word God who knowes them better then all the world besides calls them disloyal companions of theeues which desire giftes and loue Retributions And from heauen hee throwes downe his Curse vpon them whereunto on earth all the people say Amen But let them bee called by what name or Title you will let them neuer so much haue the name of iudges their workes will speake what they are If they doe Iustice and iudge according to their iust Lawes then are they Iudges and deserue so to be But if they do the contrary they beare the name of Theeues and are vnworthy that Office There being represented vnto Dauid the rigourous chastisement of these kinde of men hee beggeth thus of God Psal 26.9 Gather not my soule with sinners nor my life with bloody men In whose hands is mischeife and their right hand is full of bribes Let these theeuish hands saith the Emperour Constantine cease at last to steale let them cease I say And if they will not cease and giue ouer stealing let them be cut off and set vpon the gallowes top Neither let Kings cease to make diligent search after them and to execute iustice against them in the most rigorous manner And if they will not amend let them a Gods name be soundly punished For it is a foule and
diuided through diuers parts of the world by seas and enemies in the midst thereof should striue and indeauour by all possible meanes to make himselfe likewise Lord and Master of the sea for thereby shall he come to bee Lord and Master of the Land And an absolute dispenser of those things wherewith we sustaine our selues and liue For by the helpe of Nauigation we passe from one part to another and communicate of what they haue by way of commerce or otherwise And by this meanes is made of many Prouinces and kingdomes yea euen of the whole world one sole Citie and commonwealth This was the counsell of Themistocles and Plutarch makes it good saying Let no man deceiue himselfe in imagining with himselfe that Armies will suffice for to conserue himselfe and to make himselfe Lord of those kingdomes and Prouinces that haue the Sea to friend For if he be not likewise prouided and well furnished with a strong fleete at Sea howbeit hee may with a Land-armie ouercome the naturalls of those kingdomes or Prouinces yet it is impossible for him without the other to make an intire conquest and to go through with that which hee pretendeth That disposeth the Land to his will and giueth Lawes thereunto The Carthaginians saith Polibius were not ignorant of what great consequence this was for all kinde of businesses and therefore aduiseth That that which a Prince ought to procure whereby to come to be a great Monarch is by a strong Nauy to make himselfe Lord of the Sea For there are not any forces that worke such strange and great effects or so much import as these And all your Ancients held it for a Maxime that without the command at Sea there was nothing safe or secure on the Land Archidamus a great Captaine and King of the Lacedemonians was wont to say That those that are to deale with a strong enemie being powerfull at sea need not to put themselues vpon the ficklenesse of fortune but to place all their care in maintaining their Nauie for with this alone will they be able to wearie out the enemie to quit him of the succour of their friends to debarre him of Nauigation and of the commodities thereof and vtterly by this to vndoe him And which may seeme a thing impossible be able to beleaguer and girt in a whole kingdome and to take it forcing it by famine and other wants as if it were onely one single Citie that were besieged For that as Tacitus saith a strong fleete at sea is the Castle and Magasine of victualls And therefore the Empire and Signiorie of the Sea by a powerfull and commanding Nauy is held to bee of much more power and safetie then your Land-armies or Citie-garisons which of force must in the end yeeld vnto him which shall become Master of their ports and thereby hinder them of all commerce and traffique and humane communicat●on And this was the aduice which that great Monarch and Emperour Charles the fifth gaue likewise vnto his sonne to whom hee left so many and such great kingdomes so farre distant and diuided one from another with such large and deepe seas Hee saith he that is or will bee Master of them must haue his fleetes still in a readinesse well fitted and furnished as well with good tall ships well rigg'd and mann'd and all other necessary prouision as with store of Gallies for the safeguard and defence of his subiects as also to resist and offend Turkes Moores and Pyrats because he cannot repose any confidence or assurance in those Leagues and Truces which he shall make with them With this shall hee keepe them all in awe when they shall see his great forces at Sea by which he may as it were in an instant from all parts send succours and reliefe and whatsoeuer else shall bee needfull And it will bee no lesse then a hard rayne and cruell strong curbe for to bridle and restraine the sinister intents and vaine pretensions of such as shall plot strange proiects dangerous designes and scandalous attempts And vtterly to discourage them from vndergoing any enterprise or to vndertake any action of aduenture with hope of recouering such Townes or Prouinces as they haue lost or by landing of their men to encroach vpon new And say they should serue for no other vse saue to hinder the excursions of Pyrats and Sea-rouers in these our seas onely in regard of that it could not choose but bee a matter of mighty consequence and of wonderfull great importance considering the daily incursions losses flaughters the continuall captiuatings and robberies which they vsually commit vpon these our Coasts so that if there were not a fitting preparation and sufficient defence of ships and Gallies it were impossible for vs to occurre against those necessities and to bee prouided against those new and strange accidents which may offer themselues in those Estates kingdomes and Signiories Seas Coasts frontiers ports promontories Castles and forts which we hold in them Which by this our continuall nauigation and prouision of good shipping are well man'd and victualled and sufficiently prouided of armes munition and whatsoeuer else is necessarie in fit and conuenient both time and manner against all occasions Whereby the enemie perceiuing how well they are prouided for them dare not approach those places nor touch vpon them Besides this easie and short aduice there are many other causes that may moue vs not to be wanting herein In a word it will put the enemy into a continuall care and driue him to take a different resolution in those his ill-grounded motiues and pretensions And howbeit it be true that the charge is great so likewise great losses are thereby excused and some such sometimes as can neuer bee repaired So that there is no passing to and fro without nauigation and the vsing and maintaining of these fleetes They are the words of that victorious Emperour which no King for want of experience should dis-esteeme And for the better and fuller prouision in this kinde it is very fit that these Fleetes should haue their particular rent approprietated vnto them and that it should not vpon no occasion whatsoeuer be spent or laid out in any other thing For a set and deputed treasure for this purpose or the like is that which most importeth for the good dispatch of businesses and that they may bee done in their due time and with lesse charge and more profit This course did the Grecians take and after them the Romanes And of Augustus Caesar both Suetonius and Dyon report that he was the first inuenter of a perpetuall militarie treasure raised out of a certaine kind of Tributes which out of his owne curiositie he had sought and found out For Souldiers and warlike prouisions in your great Empires require a particular treasure wherewith to be payed which must not in any hand be otherwise imployed nor go intermixed with those other expences Hauing persons of much experience and honestie appointed for the good
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
giue them iust cause to grieue and complaine that for them onely there is neither King Fauourite nor Minister to haue accesse vnto This Rapsodye and multitude of eares and the difference between the one and the other King Dauid giues vs to vnderstand in that his Audience which he crau'd of God Domine Exaudi orationem meam auribus percipe obsecrationem meam Psal 143.1 Heare my prayer O Lord bow downe thine eare and hearken vnto my supplication He saith Heare me O Lord but how or in what maner With thine eares I beseech thee Tell me thou holy king why dost thou say with thine eares Might not that phrase of speech beene spared Or wouldst thou happely that God should heare thee with his eyes or his mouth No certainly But because it is a vsuall custome with Kings that gouerne great Monarchies who by reason of the varietie and multitude of businesses cannot by themselues giue eare vnto all and informe themselues of the truth to remit part of them to others that they may heare the Parties and informing themselues of the busines may send it afterwards to the Consulta there to be debated One comes with his Memoriall to the King The King wills him to speake vnto the President or to such a Secretary that he may inform But Dauid here saith Remit me not O Lord vnto any other for remissions are remissions the very word telling vs that to remit a busines is to make it remisse and slow and that there is vsed therein so much remission that a mans life is oftentimes ended before his busines Auribus percipe Doe thou thy selfe heare me with thine owne eares without remitting me to the hearing of others But to heare all and in all partes without remission to other mens eares who can doe this saue onely God And for my part I am of opinion that they alluded vnto this who as wee told you painted their God without eares for to giue vs thereby to vnderstand that it is peculiar onely vnto God to heare without eares and to heare all without standing in neede of other Oydos or Oydores For such a necessitie were in God a defect But in Kings it were a defect to doe otherwise for they are notable to heare all of themselues and therfore must of force make vse of other mens eares And therefore as Nature in Mans body hath disposed different Members necessary for it's proper conseruation as the eyes to see the eares to heare the tongue to talke the hands to worke the feete to walke and all of them to assist to the Empire of the soule So in like manner this Mysticall body of the Common-wealth whereof the King is the soule and Head must haue it's members which are those his Ministers which are Subiect to the Empire of their king by whom hee disposeth and executeth all that which doth conuene for it's Gouernment conseruation and augmentation Arist de Anima Aristotle renders the reason why your huge and extraordinary tall men are but weake And as I take it it is this The rationall Soule saith he is solely one indiuisible and of a limited vertue or power and that it cannot attayne to that strength and force as to giue vigour to those partes that are so farre distant and remote in a body beyond measure great Now if the body of this Monarchie be so vaste and exceeding great and goes dayly increasing more and more and that the Soule of the King which is to gouerne it to animate it and to giue it life doth not increase nor is multiplyed nor augmented at least in it's Ministers How is it possible that a King of himselfe alone should bee able to afford assistance to all And to giue life and being to so many partes and members that are set so far assunder so great is the Office of a king especially if he be Master of many Kingdomes that it is too great a Compasse for one mans reach and it is not one man alone that can fill and occupie a whole Kingdome and be present in all it's partnes And therefore of force he must make vse of other folkes helpe and more particularly of those which serue him instead of eares such as are all your superiour Ministers of Counsells These great Officers are called in the Spanish Oydores of Oyr To heare And the eares of the head are called Oydoras of their hearing And your Iudges of the land Oydores Hearers of Mens causes And as they are alike in name so ought they likewise to be alike in Office and to resemble the Originall which it representeth to the life and it 's true nature Now what Office is most proper and most naturall to the eares you will all grant mee that it is to heare alwayes neuer to be shut Your eyes haue their port-cullis which they open or shut as they see cause The mouth hath the like But the eares like bountifull house keepers haue their doores still open and those leafes which they haue on either side are neuer shut neuer so much as once wagge And it is Pliny's obseruation That onely man Plin. natur Hist lib. 2. of all other creatures hath his eares immmobile and with out any the least mouing And Horace holdes it an ill signe to wagg them but a worse to stop them Sicut aspides surdae obturantes aures suas Psal 58.5 Like deafe adders stopping their eares that they may not heare sicut Aspides which are fierce and cruell creatures and of whom it is sayd that they are borne as deafe as a doore naile and to this their naturall deafenes they adde another that is artificiall whereby they grow more deafe by poysoning that part and by winding their tayle close about their head and sometimes laying the one eare close to the ground and stopping the other with the tipp of their tayle that they may stop and damme vp all the wayes by which the Voyce of the Charmer might enter in Vnto whom Dauid compares those who being Oydos del Rey the Kings eares or to speake in the vsuall phrase Oydores del Reyno the Kingdomes eares doe shut and stop their eares that they may not giue due and fitting Audience Being naturally enemies to their owne profession which is to heare seeking out shiftes and tricks that the Cryes and Complaints of the poore may not come to their eares There is not any crueltie comparable to this to see a poore suitor trot vp and downe a moneth or two together labouring to haue Audience and in stead of letting him in hath the doore still shut against him Nature would not allow doores to the eares yet these that are the Common-wealths eares make profit of the doores of their houses and command them to be kept shut your suitors they come and goe but my sennior Oydor my Lord iudge he that should haue his doores open to giue open hearing to all Comers is shut vp in his closet and cannot be spoken withall
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
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
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
not to affoord a good looke on him that shall not imitate and follow his fashion For there is no man such a foole that will loose the fruite of his hope for not apparelling himselfe after this or that manner as he sees the Prince himselfe is contented to go Let Kings amend this fault in themselues and then his Peeres and other their inferiours will not be ashamed to imitate them I pray tell me if men of the baser and meaner condition should onely be those that were vicious in their meate and clothes who would imitate them therein Assuredly none All would be Noblemen or Gentlemen or at least seeme to be so in their fashion and apparrell howbeit they would bee lesse curious and dainty if they saw those that were noble or gentile go onely plaine and handsome That ancient Romane pure neate cleane and comely attire of those who conquered the world did then wholly loose it selfe when your great and Noble persons of that commonwealth left it off For in all things but more especially in those that are vicious men seeke to make a fairer shew then their estate will beare and thereby procure to content and please their Kings vnder whom they liue knowing that there is no intercession or fauour like vnto that as the fimiliancie of manners and the kindred which this doth cause Let Kings by their example cut off the vse of costly clothes and sumptuous banquets and whatsoeuer in that kinde is vicious and superfluous and they shall straightway see how a great part of the greedinesse of gaine and couetousnesse of money will cease and many other euils and mischiefes which proceed from thence which would not be sought after nor esteemed were it not for the execution of the appetite and fulfilling of our pleasures And for this end and purpose money is kept with such great anxietie and trouble but procured and sought after with much more because it is the master and commander of all pleasures and delights whatsoeuer For which we will buy and sell and giue all that we haue The second point concerning vices and sinnes common and publike the hurt that comes thereby is well knowne both to God and man and is harder to be reformed then the former That is moderated either with age or necessitie but this neither necessitie nor time can lessen but with it increaseth and shooteth forth new sprigges and suckers neuer before seene nor vsed in the world against which neither suffice Lawes nor Statutes And that doctrine of Tacitus is now come to bee verified That there is not any greater signe of corruption of manners then multiplicitie of Lawes And we now liue in those dangerous times whereof Saint Paul speaketh and I know not whether I may be so bold as to say That it is likewise an argument or signe that the Subiect is neare it's end or at least daily growes decaying wherein these signes and tokens are to bee seene One disorder begetting another which is the order which Nature keepes with things that are to perish till at last all comes to ruine and this vniuersall fabricke sinkes to the bottome neuer more to be repaired I wot well that whilest there be men there must be vices and sinnes and that few or none will cease to bee that which they are in regard of humane weakenesse and mans propension and inclination to sinne and that there are not any remedies which will serue and turne wholly to cure and cut them off it being a thing impossible for that their beginning and cause doth proceed from Nature it selfe being corrupted That which the worth and wisedome of Kings and their Ministers may be able to effect is That they may daily proue lesse and lesse preiudiciall to the publike and that the dissembling of abuses in the beginning before they take head be not a cause of seeing our selues brought to that estate which Salust writeth Rome was found in in Catilines time there being so good cause for to feare it As also that they will draw after them Gods comminations and chastisements When a kingdome saith hee comes to the corruption of manners that men doe pamper and apparell themselues in curious manner like women and make no reckoning of their honestie but deale therewith as with any other thing that is vendible or set out to sale and that exquisite things for to please the palate are diligently sought after both by sea and land that they betake themselues to their ease and sleepe before the due time of their rest and sleepe be come that after their bellies be as full as euer they can hold they neuer cease crauing and cramming till it be noone that they doe not forbeare from eating and drinking till they be either hungry or thirsty not that they ease themselues out of wearinesse or keepe themselues warme against the extremity of the weather but that they do all these things out of viciousnesse and before there is neede well may that Empire be giuen for lost and that it is drawing neare to its last gaspe For the people thereof when their owne meanes shall faile them for to fulfil their appetites out of a thirsting and greedy desire of these things what mischiefes will not they moue or what villanies will not they attempt For the minde that hath beene ill and long accustomed to delights can hardly be without them And that they may enioy them by hooke or by crooke by one meanes or another though neuer so vniust and vnlawfull they will make a shift to get themselues into money though they spend it afterward idly vainly in that profuse and lauish manner for which they did intend it Let euery good King begge of God and let vs all ioyne in the same prayer that in our times it may not come to these termes and that Kings will striue and studie to quench these sparkes before they breake forth into a flame and to put out the fire whilest it is but newly kindled lest it take hold on the whole building and helpe come too late And because there are so many sortes of vices that it is not possible to procure an vniuersall cure for them all that which is likeliest to doe most good will bee that selfe same medicine mentioned before in dyet and apparrell to wit the good example of Kings and in imitation of them that of the great Lords of the land and those that are nearest in Court about their persons ioyning herewith the feare of their disfauour letting them both see and know that the vicious fall backward and the vertuous come forward in honour and that onely vertue is the true meanes and surest way to bring men to great place and preferrement in the commonwealth Let Kings hate these idle droanes these honey-suckers of other mens labours that liue all vpon the waste and spoile Which kinde of people euen in reason of state are not good for the quiet of a kingdome in regard of the euill cogitations and
them not only the good wills and affections of their equals but euen of Kings themselues And when these abilities are so extraordinary and aduantagious no man can deeme it inconuenient that Kings should more particularly and in a more extraordinary manner apply their affection vnto them Nay it would rather lay a spot and blemish vpon them if notice should be taken that they equally entertaine all or not esteeme and prize them most that merit most to be esteemed For in all good reason there is no greater inequality then to equall all alike Plato said very well That there is not any virtue of that force and efficacie for to catch and steale away mens hearts Nor herein doe we need the testimonies of Philosophers for the holy Ghost saith Vt mors est dilectio loue is strong as death The coales thereof are coales of fire which hath a most vehement flame it beares all away before it And in this its force and strength friendship and loue are much alike And building on this ground I say That very well there may be said to bee friendship betweene a King and a Fauorite for that their soules haue in their birth and beginning or as I may say their first originall equall noblenesse And your noblest friendship proceeds from the soule Very famous and much celebrated was that friendship betwixt Prince Ionathan the onely heire of the kingdome and that worthy noble Dauid And so great was the loue that was betweene them that the sacred Scripture saith 1. Reg. 18.2 That anima Ionathae conglutinata erat animae Dauid dilexit eum Ionathas quasi animam suam The soule of Ionathan was knit with the soule of Dauid and that Ionathan loued him as his owne soule And I further affirme that it is very fit and conuenient that Kings should loue those with aduantage that haue the aduantage of others in vertue wisedome and learning And such should be those that serue and attend the persons of Princes for ordinarily out of that Nursery are these plants your Fauourites drawne When Nabuchadnezzar King of Babilon besieged and tooke by force of armes the Citie of Ierusalem he carried away from thence great spoiles of gold and siluer but that which hee much more prized then all this Treasure were the sonnes of the chiefest Noblemen and such as were lineally descended of the Kings of that kingdome and gaue especiall order that they should choose and cull out those that had the best and ablest parts both of nature and acquisition those that were of the best disposition the most learned and best taught to the end that being accompanied with these good qualities they might merit to attend in the Court and Chamber of the King Dan. 1.3 Et ait Rex Asphenez Praeposito Eunuchorum vt introduceret de filijs Israel de semine Regio Tyrannorum pueros in quibus nulla esset macula decoros forma eruditos omni sapientia cautos scientia doctos disciplina qui possent stare in palatio Regis And the King spake vnto Ashpenez the Master of his Eunuchs that hee should bring certaine of the children of Israel and of the Kings seed and of the Princes Children in whom was no blemish but well-fauoured and skilfull in all wisedome and cunning in knowledge and vnderstanding Science and such as had abilitie in them to stand in the Kings palace And this election fell out so luckily and proued to be of that profit and benefit that amongst those which indewed with these qualities were made choice of for to serue the King there were three of them did excell but one more then all the rest not onely in vertue but in the knowledge likewise of secret businesses and matters of State and gouernment which was Daniel who so well deserued to be a Fauourite to those Kings of Babylon and more especially to Darius that hee did not content himselfe with making him onely a priuie Councellour but the prime man amongst them For hauing set ouer the kingdome an 120. Princes which should bee ouer the whole kingdome and ouer these three Presidents of whom Daniel was first that the Princes might giue account vnto them that the King might haue no damage And as hee was the greatest Subiect and Fauourite in the world so was hee superiour in the vertues and qualities of his person Igitur Daniel superabat omnes Principes satrapas quia Spiritus Domini amplior erat in illo Dan. 6.3 Therefore was Daniel preferred before the Presidents and Princes because an excellent spirit was in him The holy Scripture likewise tells vs that Ioseph was such a Fauourite of King Pharaoh that hee gaue him absolute power ouer all his kingdome and commanded that in publike pompe he should ride in the Kings owne Chariot and in his owne seate and haue a Crier go before to proclaime the fauour that the King was pleased to doe him Dixit quoque Rex Aegypti ad Ioseph Gen. 41.44 Ego sum Pharaoh absque tuo imperio non mouebit quisquam manum aut pedem in omni terra And Pharaoh said vnto Ioseph I am Pharaoh and without thee shall no man lift vp his hand or foot in all the land of Aegypt And well did hee deserue this honour for by his great industrie and wisedome he freed that King and kingdome from that terrible famine besides those many other great and troublesome imployments wherein he was busied for the space of seuen yeares together In the fourth booke of kings we reade that Naaman who was Captaine of the host of the King of Syria was the onely Fauourite of the King Erat vir magnus apud Dominum suum honoratum 4. Reg. 5.1 Hee was a great man with his Master and honourable And rendering the reason of this his great priuacie with his King and the honour he had done him it is there specified Per illum enim dedit dominus salutem Syriae erat enim vir fortis Because by him the Lord had giuen deliuerance vnto Syria and was also a mighty man in valour For all the life and soule that kingdome had came from him God vsing him as his instrument for his puisance and prudence And when Fauourites are of these aduantagtous abilities those reasons and inconueniences doe cease before mentioned touching the disequalitie of Kings with their Inferiours For vertue hath this excellence and preheminence that from the very dust of the earth it doth lift vp men vnto honour and doth raise them to that height that it equalls them and sets them cheeke by iole with the greatest Princes in the world Eccl 11.1 Sapientia humiliati exaltabit caput illius in medio magnatum considere illum faciet Wisedome lifteth vp the head of him that is of low degree and maketh him to sit among great men Anna that was mother to that great Priest and Prophet Samuel amongst other things which shee sung in the praise
managing and ordering of it vsing their best care and helpe that it may bee preserued and continued and that it may not be exhausted and drawne dry And more particularly Kings themselues the Grandes and Peeres of the kingdome as also the commonwealths and your Cities should carefully looke hereunto Being that they do most participate of the profits which issue from a warre And most certaine it is that nothing is more necessarie in a Monarchie then this particular treasure or that causeth more respect in our friends or feare in our enemies Or that with more commoditie and conueniencie puts in execution all plots and proiects in this or that other enterprise of what qualitie or condition soeuer they bee And to this aduice I shall adde that which followeth All wise and prudent Princes in Empires that are runne out to waste and decrease of wealth haue euermore held it for the onely remedie of their reparation and conseruation to excuse vnnecessarie expences And that their Ministers take this businesse into consultation and to cast vp all accounts and to see what the Kings rents and in-comes are for the defraying of the charge he is at and by comparing one with the other and seeing how they will answer each other if they finde the expence to exceed the In-come to cast about which way it may be best spared and to husband the businesse so that there may be some ouerplus still remaining for the publike treasurie For if by disorder ill gouernment the Kings coffers shall come to be emptie it will bee if not impossible at least very hard to fill them againe For if there be daily more spent then is to be or can be had that stocke will in a short time decay and come to nothing as wee see it fareth in euery other humane subiect that hath not fresh supply Which lauish and vnproportionable spending not liuing according to the rate of their rents hath been the vndoing of many particular houses families as also the impouerishing and ouerthrowing of Empires kingdomes And therefore to auoide this inconuenience was that booke of Accounts or Memoriall made which the Ancient called Breuiarium Imperij a briefe abridgement of the Empire which Augustus Caesar left to his successours written with his owne hand wherein was particularly set downe in a true and iust account the full number of all the kingdomes and Prouinces of the whole Romane Empire As likewise the number of all the Citizens and Souldiers which were in euery one of them together with their forces and strength and to what quantitie came all the rents and tributes that hee had what aide-money and other helpes hee receiued from his Confederates and the whole charge he was at As also his Councels ordained by him either for the inlarging or shortning of his hand in these his expences So that hauing still before his eyes the wealth and substance of his Empire he might alwayes see how the world went and how to make his best benefit thereof for the conseruing and vpholding of his Empire Such a Register or rent-roll as this much importeth Kings It is said of that wise and prudent King Don Philip the second that in his time he had such another as was this And the like ought all Kings to haue and at all times but more especially when their power is lessened their rents diminished their forces wasted and those of their enemies augmented For we see the like care to bee taken in particular houses and therefore ought much more to bee looked into in Monarchies which are composed of all those houses and families amongst which that which spends beyond it's meanes consumes it selfe For supposing such ●one hath an 100. V. Ducats of rent or set reuenue and that euery yeare ten thousand more is spent then the rent comes to in a few yeares all will come to nothing and by running still on in debt and taking no course to come out of it by liuing still at the same height he must bee inforced in the end to sell and deliuer ouer the luster maiestie and greatnesse of his house to other families which were before little better then dust taken out of the dunghill And most certaine it is that they that will not cast vp their accounts and looke throughly into their estates and see in what state they are must bee either men that are willing to vndoe themselues and their whole posteritie and must bee either Atheists or almost as bad if not worse meere Epicures who carry in their mouths and in their hearts those words of your vnthristie gallants Comedamus bibamus cras enim moriemur Let vs eate and drinke for to morrow we shall dye Your Atheists they propose an end vnto themselues thinking by this their prodigalitie to procure vnto themselues an immortalitie of fame But these and the like who so inconsiderately runne out of all are carelesse and negligent euen of this taking care onely to eate and to drinke and to feast one another without so much as thinking that there is another world or any honour or fame in this And spending their whole life in belly cheare and bezeling they are neuer satisfied but call in still for more till their crawes be ready to cracke And notwithstanding the excessiue rents which some Kings haue and the great store of treasure that comes to their coffers besides the Tributes Taxes Imposts and Subsedies that are duely payed them they are neuer out of debt the crowne-Crowne-land lying impawned for the payment thereof and that for no small summes of money Ordinary expences are ill husbanded extraordinary worse payed The Cities they are consumed Trading decayed the Subiects out of breath and purse and by hauing too much imposed vpon them are growne like ouer-laboured oxen so poore and so weake that they are no longer able to beare so great a burthen And yet all this to them though the Subiect infinitely suffer is no more then a drop of water throwne into the sea nor makes no more shew Which sea though it swallow vp all the fountaines of the earth all the brookes and all the great and principall riuers and lesser springs and this daily and hourely and at all times yet we see the Sea is neuer a whit the more increased nor growes greater one yeare then another But what should bee the cause of this let your Naturalists and your Kings render such reasons as pleaseth them in their excuse of mine owne part I am of opinion that the Kings Exchequer is not well ordered making him not onely a small but a bad account That there is a great deale of disorder in the laying out of those monies whereof much might bee saued if there were some orderly course taken for the dispending of them and imploying them for their Kings best aduantage And I feare me which I could wish were causelesse that a great part of this water which should come directly to the Kings owne cisterne passeth through
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