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A10746 The pilgrime of Loreto Performing his vow made to the glorious Virgin Mary Mother of God. Conteyning diuers deuout meditations vpon the Christian and Cath. doctrine. By Fa. Lewis Richeome of the Society of Iesus. Written in French, & translated into English by E.W.; Pélerin de Lorète. English Richeome, Louis, 1544-1625.; Walpole, Edward, 1560-1637, attributed name.; E. W. (Edward Worsley), 1605-1676, attributed name.; Weston, Edward, 1566-1635, attributed name. 1629 (1629) STC 21023; ESTC S115933 381,402 480

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Pilgrime of Loreto and the first of his Returne CHAP. I. LAZARVS a man much beloued of God wise and well versed in the learning of Saints and ye● deuour to the glorious Mother of God departed from his Coūtrey in the yeare 1583. to goe see the world in Christian Pilgrimage with a little brother of his called Pauline about 18 yeares of age at his departure himselfe being 24. and a Cousin of theirs called Theodosius of the same age a yong man of rare vertue and excellent conuersation with a faithfull and pietis seruant of their Fathers somewhat elder then they who was called Vincent They had already spent togeather six yeares in the most famous Pilgrimages of Christendome and els where and alwayes with these exercises of deuotion which we haue set downe before in the direction of our Pilgrime still continuing the same though not without difficulty but in the beginning of the seauenth yeare by mischance Pauline was taken prisoner and made slaue to the Barbarians in Alexandria and ●s Lazarus being at Constantinople was ready to send his ransome Pauline made prisoner which he had gotten by meanes of the French Embassadour he vnderstood that he was dead which newes did meruailously afllict him notwithstanding being a Gentleman of great courage vertue he bare it patiently hoping that his death was happy by reason of the piety and deuotion which he had alwayes marked in that youth specially towardes our B. Lady The other three returned towards Frāce came the second time to Loreto for they had beene there at the beginning and still caried themselues as Pilgrimes of Loreto and did their deuotions there certaine dayes not forgeting to pray for the soule of Pauline where also Lazarus caused his funerall to be kept So they parted full of spirituall ioy frō that holy place and came along vntil they were within few dayes iourny of their Fathers house whē good Theodosius was lost frō his cōpany no man knowing what was become of him notwithstāding the enquiry that Lazarus had foure or fiue dayes together caused to be made after him This losse did so much the more grieue him the lesse it was looked for and almost at their home as it were a shipwracke in the mouth of the hauen He offered some vows to God our B. Lady of Loreto for him with a pious resolution continued his way hauing now no companion but Vincent and conceaued a great hope in God by the Protection of the B. Virgin that he would haue a speciall care of her Pilgrimes Now he had changed his name which he had from his infancy which was Aime-dieu and called himselfe Lazarus because he desired not to be knowne but by title of a poore and humble seruant of God which he sought with a Christian magnanimity from his hart and with all auersion and disdayne did eschew the vanity and glory of the world as a plague of al noble actions The first euening therfore of these Ten dayes that I write being at an Hospitall by a forrest before going to bed he tooke for subiect of his morning meditation following The flight of our Sauiour into Aegypt and conferred with his companion Vincent these three pointes following The points of the meditatiō following The first how S. Ioseph a little after the Presentation of our Sauiour to the Temple was aduertised in his sleep by an Angel from God to take the child his mother to fly into Aegypt by reason of the persecution of Herod at hand who already contriued his death The second the B. Virgins abode in Egypt with her Sonne Iesus The third the returne of our Sauiour to Iury and his retyring to Nazareth Meditations vpon the flight of our Sauiour into Aegypt togeather with his glorious Mother and Ioseph CHAP. II. EARLY in the morning an houre before going abroad Lazarus and Vincent entred into the meditation of these points a part by themselues Lazarus spake thus to God and to his soule My Lord and faithfull guide direct if it please thee my affections and actions to thy honour and glory to the profit of thy poore seruant I behold thy deare Sonne made a litle Infant and feeble for me to fly the persecution of of Herod vniust vsurper of the Scepter of the Hebrewes thy children and thy kingdome and to be caried into Egypt in the armes of his diuine mother as the Sunne in the heauē I desire to see the course of this mystery and to profit thereby accomplish my desire seeing thou hast giuen it me and to haue my vnderstanding enlightned with the beames of thy grace well to meditate my Wil heated with the fire of thy loue straitly to imbrace vertue and to walke constantly in the wayes of thy commandements I consider here O my soule the faythfull and sweet Prouidence of this heauenly Father aduertising Ioseph by his Angel to fly and to withdraw his Sōne from the cruelty of the Tyrant for though he were sent and came to dye yet not in that age nor in that sort but in the flowre of his age and by the death of the Crosse would he accomplish our Redemption and bestow on vs in the meane tyme the benefit and vse of his life to instruct vs by the example of his heauenly vertues and wonderfull workes by the doctrine of his holy preachings to shew in his life and death the signes of his infinite loue with most manifest and cleere proofes If he had beene put to death in his cradle men had wanted all those euident testimonies of his Charity so many motiues to belieue in him and to receaue him for the promised Messias This little child then persecuted so soone by the Princes of the world visible and inuisible taketh his way to Aegypt and as weake giueth place to the Tyranny which he could as well haue repressed by resistance as auoid by flying But he would doe what himselfe had before taught his seruants and would by his example shew his disciples what they should do in like case So Iacob left the house of his Father to auoyd the fury of Esau Moyses left the Court of Pharao to escape his hands so little Iosias 4. Reg. 2. the lawfull successour of the Crowne was hidden from the massacre which cruell Athalia made of the Princes of the bloud I see heere that holy Ioseph obeyeth simply without excusing or asking why he The obedience of Ioseph whome he heard to be come to saue the world would not rather saue himselfe staying in Iudaea then by flying into Aegypt It is inough to obey the voice of him that commandeth without searching the secret or reason of the commandement teaching the true seruāts of God to obey their Superiours without pleading or resistance He arose in the night tooke the child with diligence tooke the Mother and went towardes Aegypt by the same desart whereby the Hebrewes passed to Iudaea This tender Virgin bare her little child
soueraigne Maiesty hast thou loued man so as to make thy selfe man to be his Neighbour so happily hast thou made such account of humility as not only to annihilate thy self in ioyning thy selfe in an insoluble bond to so small a creature infinitely distant from thy greatnes but so to subiect thy selfe therunto O B. Virgin I behold thee rauished at euery moment in this chamber of Nazareth when thou sawest this little infant this great God whome thou didst adore to obey honour and serue thee O my soule fixe thy sight vpon this beautiful obiect and kindle the coldenes of thy will by the lightenings of this great wonder and follow with fiery feet the example of such a Lord. It shall not be besides the purpose also to meditate vpon the markable punishments of such as haue beene vngratefull to their Progenitours And so the pilgrime shall passe the day till his retire The ninth Day A Meditation vpon the fifth Commandement Thou shalt not kill CHAP. XXI THE morning meditation shall be vpon the fifth Commandement The preparation ordinary The first preamble shall propose the words of the fifth Commandement THOV SHALT NOT KILL The second shall demand grace well to vnderstand it and effectually to obserue it The first point shall note that as life is the most precious present which man hath and holdeth of his Creatour Life is the goodliest guift of God so to loose it is one of the greatest grieues he can incurre therfore with good reason it is prohibited to assault the life of our Neighbour and heerein shineth the prouidence and iustice of our Creatour prouiding for the safety and security of the principall good of his creature in his family of this world By the same law is forbidden sayth S. Aug. a mans killing of himselfe Aug. l. 1. ciuil c. 20 26. Lib. de poenit c. 13 Lib. 1. con Gaud. c. 30. ep 61. S. Tho. 2. 2. qu. 64. art 5. so much the more detestable by how much a man is neerer neighbour to himselfe then to another and for that he destroyeth himselfe with a double death that is with the temporall death of his body and the euerlasting death of his soule And this sinne is in such sort against nature that there is no creature though neuer so cruell that dareth kill himselfe and therefore the law doth punish with extraordinary ignominy such furious folkes after their death as guilty of an extraordinary crime The second point shall marke that by this commandmēt is also forbidden to hurt strike or otherwise to endomage our Neighbour in body though we kill him not yea euen with our tongue to touch his good name by any iniury or to beare any hatred to him in our hart or desire reuenge and therefore our Sauiour a sage interpreter of his owne law to shew what meeknes is required in his children to obserue this law Matth. 5. sayth VVhosoeuer is angry with his brother shal be guilty of iudgement and who shall speake iniury to his brother shall be guilty of hell fire This is to rule draw the first motions of the soule to meekenes and to barre and banish a farre off the occasions of man-slaughter Matth. 6. to cut vp that vice by the root in another place he forbiddeth reuenge and after him his Apostle S. Paul Heb. 10. and in the prayer himselfe taught and gaue vs for a patterne and modell of all our prayers he put in this clause of pardoning our Neighbour for iniuryes receaued Pardon vs our offences as we pardon them that offend vs. Matth. 6.12 The third point shall be to meditate vpon those killings which are not forbidden as those which the Prince or Magistrate ordayneth according to the lawes against malefactours such as are committed in a lawfull warre or in iust defence of a mans life being vniustly assaulted not otherwise able to saue himselfe The speach shall prayse God in his iustice of this Commandement and his Sonne Iesus in the perfect practise therof and shall beg grace to be able to follow his sweetnes and clmency and shall say All thy lawes O Lord are iustice and mercy Th prayer thou hast giuen life to man a guift worthy of thy goodnes and a law for the safegard thereof thou hast made man sociable and to make him liue peaceably with his Neighbour thou hast prescribed a law of peace and tyest therewith as with a stronge cord his handes and will that he hurt not neyther in hart or deed his Neighbour Thou hast at last sent thy deere Sonne into the world made man among men remayning alwaies God with thee Prince of peace and our true peace who hath honoured this commandement with his rare doctrine Esay 9.4 Eph. 12.14 and by the exploites of his singular sweetnes no man could euer complaine that euer he did him any wrong his hart was full of loue louing all the world friendes and enemies his eye was full of mercy and compassion towards all his handes full of liberality and his doctrine agreable to his actions For he taught his Disciples not to hurt any in word or deed to pardon vnto seauenty tymes seauen that is To par● vnto 70. tymes 7. as often as we shal be offended and neuer leaue pardoning and what he taught he practised vnto death in the greatest conflict of his tormēts and reproches praying his heauenly Father for his very enemyes that crucifyed him The Captaines of this world triūph of killing many enemies in the battel his great triumph hath beene to dye for his enemyes vpon the Crosse and to giue life euerlasting to those that would take it O my Creatour and Redeemer how rich art thou in mercy and clemency O my sweet Iesus powre it to me this spirit of thy sweetnesse and graunt me for thyne own loue that I may exactly keep what thou hast commanded that I may perfectly follow what thou hast taught by word and example and that pardoning all and profitting all I may obtaine thy mercy and at thy great day be partaker of thy glory with thy elect So hauing walked a little and finished his ordinary deuotions he may if he will sing for his spiritual solace the Canticle following A Canticle of the loue of God and our Neighbour O worldly wights who loue this world so deere And prize so high the presents of this life Riches sports pleasures glory and good cheere Alas how can these last where all is briefe You that affect which perish shall And where with eke your selues shall fall All heere below is brittle and doth fade Al 's vaine deceitfull false and variable Loue thy Creatour then who all thinges made And is ' boue all he made most amiable The louely obiect of our hart VVho only doth true blisse impart Loue thou his louely Clemency whose brest Did from eternall times thy soule imbrace Loue him at last who loued thee thus first And shew
Debora Iud 4.13 The valley of Terebinthus where Dauid a child fighting the field for the hoast of the Lord of hoastes 1. Reg. 17 caused the great Giant Goliath to kisse the ground and cut off his head with his owne sword getting the victory which was a notable figure of our redemption Places sanctifyed in the law of Grace The new testament doth also affoard vs many places famous in this fashion The desert wherein S. Iohn who wa● sanctifyed in his mothers wombe passed all his youth in austerity of seuere pennance instructing sinners to purge themselues and those that were good to perfect themselues The other desert where our Sauiour fasted fourty dayes fourty nights Matth. 4. and repelled the Diuell his tempter with confusion that where he filled fiue thousand men with fiue loaues two Fishes Ioan. 6. The mountaine of Thabor where he shewed the glory of his body transfigurated to Moyses Matth. 17 Elias and his three Apostles and the other where he made that worthy sermon cōtayning the eight Beatitudes most of them Paradoxes to the wisedome of the foolish world The mount of Caluary The mountaine of Caluary where fighting in the field of his Crosse he ouercame the tru● Goliath and his troupes giuing him a deadly blow in his forehead with the weapons and stones of his death and humility The parlour of the Eucharist The house wherein he changed water into wine also where he made his last supper with the Paschall Lambe substituting for it the true Lambe in the institution of the Sacrament of his body That where he powred downe that heauenly loue of the Holy Ghost in forme of fiery tongues Of the Holy Ghost and a thousand places more illustrated with some worke of the almighty power wisedome or goodnes Profane writings also haue their places famous in this respect their mountaines of Olympus Parnassus Ossa Pelion and such other bearing the memory of some worke of their pretended Goddes or of some great man in their Law their Lake of Lerna where Hercules killed Hydra dreadfull to the whole countrey of the Argians Strabo 〈◊〉 8. Their denne of Salamine where Euripides wrot his Tragedie and other places which I omit not to be too long in laying forth a verity for the which the testimony of Gentils are too commō and too often giuen in their bookes full of recommendation of such like places But when we shall haue reckoned vp by name the most renowned places of all the world as well out of profane Writers as out of the sacred Scriptures the Chamber of Loreto exceedeth them all in this condition The chāber of Loreto more famous in such mysteries in hauing been the closet where the marriage of the Sonne of God with our humane Nature was celebrated in the B. Virgins womb the most high and mysterious worke that the holy Trinity maker of all thinges did euer accomplish for therein God was made man the Creator a creature the supreme cause an effect the Word flesh the spirit did take a body the first ●s become last and Alpha Omega the incomprehensible is enclosed in the wombe of a Virgin Eternity hath subiected it selfe to tyme the Almighty is become weake the soueraigne wisedome goeth to schoole to learne the souueraigne goodnes doth suffer and contrarywise on the other part Man was made God the Creature Creator flesh was made the word ●he body tooke a spirit the last was made first and Omega Alpha the little became incomprehensible tyme hath passed ●o eternity infirmity became almighty folly supreme wise●ome mortality became to giue life and suffering felicity This is the mystery of mysteries the first foundation of all that the Christian fayth adoreth in the Church of God The Incarnatiō is the ground of al mysteries Christian feasts Natiuity Circumci iō c. The foūdation of that of the Natiuity of the Circumcision of the Passion Resurrection Ascension of the sending of the Holy Ghost of all the feastes of Saints of the B. Virgin his mother his Apostles Martyrs Confessours and Virgins For the Son of God being once made man gaue ground and footing to all these solemnities and without it we had had none al were inclosed in the sacred bosome of this worke and mystery and can there be any thing greater or more admirable May the Creation of a thousand worlds be compared to the maiesty of this exploit And this diuine Chamber hauing beene the House and Closet wherein it was performed doth it not cōprise in it selfe the very maiesty of all the remarkable thinges and places of the old Testament all which did figure and had relation to this Incarnation Hath it not more honour in it then if it had beene a Temple with a thousand altars or an altar or a thousand sacrifices More then the mountaines of Moria Thabor Then the valley of Terebinthus of S. Iohns desert Or finally then all the places in the world honoured with any token or signe of diuinity put togeather O little Chamber more capable at that tyme then the whole world enclosing with thy walles the Virgin that was great with him whome the largenes and capacity of the Heauens could not comprehend a Chamber more rich then all the Princely pallaces that euer ware contayning the endles treasure of felicity a chamber more cleere and bright then the day hauing in thy bosome the glorious morning and true Sunne Thrice honourable for this mystery alone The chāber of the B. Virgin the first chappell of Christians and thrice honourable also for hauing beene the first of all earthly houses erected and dedicated for a Christian Temple by the Apostles where the body of the same Sonne of God was as it is still offered in an vnbloudy sacrifice and Masse was celebrated after the descent of the holy Ghost in that happy infancy of the Church of God made therein a most worthy noble match to that parlour which entertayned our Sauiour when he instituted the sacrament and sacrifice of his B. Body before his Apostles the night before he was deliuered for vs more honourable in this respect then the Temple of Salomon which contained nothing but Altars where the bodyes of dead beastes were sacrificed The holy of holies or the sāctuary of the Temple whereas in this Chappell was also an Altar which caryed the oblation of the body of the sonne of God more worthy also by this honour then the place of the sayd Temple which is called Sancta Sanctorum Holy of Holyes for there was but the materiall arke of the Hebrews whereas this Chappell containeth in verity Iesus Christ the Holy of all Holyes That the House of Loreto is renowned by miracles CHAP. XIX THE seauenth cause that maketh a place venerable The 7. cause of miracles are miracles which either are done or haue beene done thereat which are most certaine testimonies of the presence of God there seeing
tempore Chyrs l. 2. de orando Deo Prayer is a conuersion of the hart of God sayth S. Augustine It is a demand of some good thing sayth S. Basil S. Iohn Damascene comprehending them both sayth Prayer is an eleuation of the spirit vnto God and a demand of things conuenient Prayer sayth S. Gregory N●ssene is a contemplation or talke of the holy soule with God a contemplation of inuisible thinges a certaine fayth and beliefe of things we should desire it is an angelicall state vocation an increase of good and subuersion of euill It is the key of heauen sayth Augustine and the sinnewes of the soule This is sayth S. Chrysostome the instrument that should alwayes be in the Christians hand day and night in the towne and field in prosperity aduersity in peace and warre in health and sicknes and in all thinges It is good reason then to learne the manner of praying well It appeareth by the foresayd definitions that the essence and foundation of true prayer consisteth in the soule that which is made with the mouth and voice only deserueth not the name of prayer It is the language of a Parrot that speaketh it knoweth not what Prayer of the spirit speaketh properly to God and maketh himselfe to be vnderstood as an Angell though the lips stirre not and he cryeth aloud to God in profound silence Exod. 14.15 Moyses moued not his lippes when God sayd vnto him Why cryest thou It was the crye and voice of his prayer which he then made in the closet of his hart The prayer of the mouth is not good except it be caried with the wings of the spirit both togeather make a perfume that pierceth the heauens a sacrifice most acceptable to God and a pregnant request to obtaine whatsoeuer shall be demanded of his Maiesty The inward is the roote and fruit of deuotion the outward is the flowre and budd To doe it well he must learne to meditate well for meditarion and contemplation do illuminate the vnderstanding do heat the wil eleuate the soule to God and ioyneth it to his loue which is the very essence and vigour of prayer Fire is kindled in my meditatiō sayth Dauid that is to say My prayer shall be feruent if I meditate well To meditate Christian-like is to discourse in the vnderstanding of some diuine subiect of the creation of the world of the Natiuity of the Sonne of God of his death of his resurrection of the purity and humility of the B. Virgin Mary of some vertue or vice of death iudgement hell heauen and such like matters This discourse is made in noting the causes The discourse of Prayer and effects and deducing conclusions agreable to the honour of God and our good For example meditating of the creation of the world I obserue that God is the supreme cause of all thinges who hath made all of nothing by his only word that heauen and all the creatures with them are the workes of his power wisedome and bounty heereof I conclude Conclusion of our Prayer that he is almighty hauing brought forth such goodly effects of nothing all wise hauing so diuinely ordered them all good in hauing giuen them all to men againe I conclude that I am bound to feare him as my soueraigne Lord adore him as the supreme wisedome and loue him as the infinite bounty and to serue him with all my hart and with all my forces as my Creatour my King my Maker my Father and my all in all By this discourse my vnderstanding is delighted in the meruailous workes of God my will is warmed in his loue and of them both my soule taketh a tongue to speake vnto him and maketh her prayer adoring his greatnes admyring his wisedome magnifying his bounty casting her selfe into the armes of his holy prouidence declaring her infirmityes offering her abilityes her vowes teares sighes and desires and al that she hath demanding what she hath not perfect humility fortitude patience charity and other vertues and finally drowning her selfe in praying to this supreme Deity as before she did in meditating Contemplation is a regard of the eyes of the soule fastened attentiuely vpon some obiect Definitiō of Contemplation as if after hauing meditated of the creation she should set her eye of her vnderstanding fast and fixed vpon the greatnes of God vpon the beauty of the Heauens or hauing discoursed of the passiō of our Sauiour she behouldeth him present seeth him crucifyed and without any other discourse perseuereth constantly in this spectacle Then the soule doth contemplate vpon her meditation Cōtemplation more thē Meditation so that contemplation is more then meditation and as it were the end thereof and it groweth and springeth vpon it many tymes as the braunch doth vpon the body of the tree or the flowre vpon the branch For the vnderstanding hauing attentiuely and with many reasons to and fro meditated the mystery and gathered diuers lights togeather doth frame vnto her self a cleere knowledge wherof without further discourse one way or other she enioyeth as I may say a vision which approcheth to the knowledge of Angells who vnderstand without discourse although it may so happen The knowledge of Angels that the deuout soule may enter into contemplatiō without any meditation going before according as the diuine wisedome shall affoard her inward obiects after the manner of visions as it did often to the Prophets and his most familiar friends and seruants or els where the party himselfe doth choose some one where he feeleth greatest gust and there stayeth without stirring It may happen also that meditation may follow contemplation as if one hauing attentiuely beheld an obiect doth thereof afterward ground some discourse as Moyses did Exod. 3.3 when hauing seene the visiō of the burning Bush he approched discoursing why it consumed not Heereof we learne the difference betwixt these two actions The difference between contemplation meditation for meditation is lesse cleere lesse sweet and more painefull then contēplation it is as the reading of a booke which must be done sentence after sentence but contemplation is like casting the eyes vpon a picture discerning all at once Meditation is like eating Contemplation like drinking a worke more sweet cooling and more delicate lesse labour and more pleasure then eating is For he that meditateth taketh an antecedent doth behould weigh and consider it as it were shewing the meate with some paine and afterward doth gather conclusiōs one after another as it were swallowing downe of morsells and taketh his pleasure by peeces but he that contemplateth receaueth his obiect without paine swiftly and as it were altogeather as if he tooke a draught of some delicate wine such is Meditation and such is Contemplation All prayer therefore and all eleuation of the spirit for to carry it selfe with a strong and swift flight before the throne of the diuine Maiesty must be carryed by them or by the
it by true vsing of his grace Loue that rare and boundlesse beauty Loue eke thyne owne felicity Thy Neighbours friends and foes must be inclos'd VVithin the boundes of thy vnfeyned loue For this iust Law was framed and compos'd By God that sittes and ruleth from aboue VVho sayth he loues God not his brother Loueth neither th' one nor th' other The mortall race of mortall men we know Of one sole man did their beginning take So all that from this one did spring and grow One houshold only and no more do make Euery of whome by right of kind To fastest loue doth straitly bind Yet straiter is the knot and neerer band VVherewith God bindes vs in his holy house Sweetly vs conioyning with his blessed hand To be all one in his sole Sonne IESVS VVherto in reason all are lead Since all are members of one head Blessed is that soule which this Law keeps And is found faythfull to her spouse aboue VVho daily him doth seeke and neuer sleeps Burning in the flames of his holy loue VVho ' boue all thinges loues God the best And for his sake loues all the rest The After-dinner and Euening of the ninth dayes Iourney Threats and punishments of man 〈…〉 CHAP. XXII IN the After-noone the 〈…〉 make some repetition of what he meditated 〈…〉 setting before his eyes the threates which God 〈…〉 against mankillers also some examples of such as haue from heauen beene discouered and punished for this sinne contrarywise some others of such as haue byn easily pardoned Math. 2● All those that take the sword sayth our Sauiour shall perish by the sword And long before that he sayd VVho so shall spill the bloud of man Gen. 9. his bloud shall be spilled for God hath made man to his Image Cain was accursed for killing his brother Gen. 3. and by his owne mouth he condemned himselfe for well worthy of banishment death Plutar. lib Quae animalia sūt prudentiora for his murder Before Pyrrhus King of Epyrus a dogge discouered the murderers of his Maister who were therefore punished Hesiodus his dogge also discouered them who had killed him The swallowes him that had killed his Father The greatest men haue beene most sweet and courteous Moyses Dauid yea euen among Paynimes Alexander Iulius Caesar and the like Great men gētle and courteous and contrarywise slaues base and cowardly people haue beene fierce and cruell to reuenge Our Sauiour the patterne of all perfect and high vertue was wonderfull in this which he shewed at all occasions where he might make triall but most cleerly in the last distresse of his death and passion when he prayed that diuine prayer for his enemyes who crucifyed him encountring with a singular exploite of clemency the cruelty of his crucifyers Hauing discoursed vpon these examples and the like and sayd his beades or some other prayer to the B. Virgin he shal end his iourney betake him to his lodging The tenth day A Meditation vpon the 6. Commandement Thou shalt not commit Adultery CHAP. XXIII THE sixth Commandement shall be the matter of the tenth dayes Meditation The sixth commādement well placed after forbidding to kill which followeth very fitly after the forbidding of killing for the second and next iniury a second death whereby a man may offend and hurt his owne body or his neighbour is adultery and as by murdering the society of men is iniuried so also by adultery fornication and other such vices of the flesh the cōmon wealth is dishonoured disturbed with confusion of children The preparation and preamble shall be as before the substance of the meditatiō shal consist in these pointes following The first point shall ponder that this precept prohibiteth not only adultery Al impurity forbidden which man or wife committeth but also all kind of impurity all that may cause it as thoughtes words touchings lookes kissings gestures dishonest songs vaine superfluous attire wanton talke dissolute beholding paynting vnchast bookes and such like allurements to this vice Adultery is named as the principal head the other acts as making way thereunto and as complices to the crime How pleasing to God purity of body is The 2. shall be employed to meditate how cleanesse and purity of body is in it self pleasing to God and his Angels It is a vertue wholy heauenly diuine for to liue in flesh and not to sinne with the flesh is to liue in spirit and to be like those heauenly spirits who liue without stayne of flesh The Sonne of God made thereof so great account that he would be borne of a virgin he preached chastity and by all meanes inuited mē thereunto he would haue about his Altars ministers not maried but perpetually chast virgins also in his house as Queens betroathed to his maiesty by vow of virginity barren in body but in soule fertill in all sortes of vertuous workes Finally he hath restrained the mariage of all those that liuing vnder the name of Christians Chastity in euery vocatiō will be maried to one only wife establishing a law of Chastity in all estates and degrees of his houshould The 3. point shall consider how contrariwise Impurity is as pleasing to the Diuell our capitall enemy The sin of the flesh pleasing vnto the Diuel wherfore as it is displeasing to God our Creatour For though this wicked spirit hauing no body cannot directly take any pleasure therein notwithstanding it pleaseth him wonderfully well knowing that it displeaseth God and that aboue all other sinnes it maketh a man forget both heauen and hell for there is none doth so darken the iudgement and vnderstanding of man and take away the tast of heauenly things the feare of hell fire that doth more draw man from heauen and from saluation and that maketh him more carnall more stupide and beastly By meanes wherof this old preuaricator vseth all his craft deuises possible to make men fall thereinto therein to hold and keep them vnto old age yea euen vnto death Against playes wanton bookes To this purpose he inflameth their flesh with extraordinary fire by al sortes of enticements he chafeth them by charmes he proposeth them playes and comedyes which in Threaters may represent vnto them the fond fancies and loues as Painters do in the pictures of Amadis and such other wanton Writers which paint them in the bookes of base soules Against lasciuious Poets vnder the name of Poets who like trumpets of flesh and ignominy blow forth without blushing and with full mouth the shame of their owne others passions and finally he worketh al the wayes to giue the reines and liberty to this Cupid infernal Theon euen vnto the transforming himselfe into man or woman cloathing himselfe with figure and fantasticall body to pollute and defile the bodyes and soules of those whome he would hold fast in the fetters and chaynes of his tyranny thence
it O mortall men whereto leuelleth the sight of your swollen eyes where doe you cast the ancker of your light hopes what get you and to what danger of destruction doe you driue your selues what shall become of riches gathered by theft and iniquity Against worldlinges what shall become of your rapines vsuries what gayne you winning earth and loosing heauen what heape you vp but the treasure of the vengeāce of God See you not hell open to swallow you and eternall death expecting with her lawes gaping to make a prey of your lost soules for euer and euer O sweet Iesus make vs if it may please thee in loue with thy rich pouerty amorous of thy eternall riches and contemners of these earthly treasures Luc. 13.33 and feare full of dreadfull death and pouerty eternall Neuer let it befall vs to cast our handes on other mēs goods but to stretch them out to giue them of our owne and get heauen in giuing earth according to that holy trafike which thou hast taught vs. The After-dinner and Euening of the eleuēth dayes Iourney Diuers Considerations of Auarice punished and Liberality practised by the Saintes CHAP. XXVI IN this second part of the day Diuers punishments of the couetous the Pilgrime shal make some spirituall discourse neere vnto the morning meditation he shall bring into his memory the punishment of theeues rouers church-robbers vsurers and other breakers of this commandement whome the reuenge of God hath already striken he shall remember Achab Iezabel who for taking from their poore subiect his vineyard and life also 3. Reg. 21 19. lost their owne life kingdome from themselues al their posterity of Giezi who was striken with leprosy 4. Reg. 5.27 which did sticke to al his race after him for taking the guifts of Naman against right and the will of his maister Elizeus of one Heliodorus 2. Macha 3.26 who was beaten by armed Angells euen vnto death for stretching his handes to the sacred treasure of our Iudas who for a few pēce became a traytour and sacrilegious homicide of his God himself Act. 1.6 To these and such examples he shall oppose others of the cōtrary vertue In generall the first Christians who brought their goods to the Apostles feete for a present to God and the poore and in especiall of the glorious virgin Act. 4.34 who in the imitation of her sonne lest all hauing her hart treasure in heauen in the land of the lyuing thousandes of other Christiās whereof the Ecclesiasticall histories doe speake And so he shal passe the rest of the day attentiuely beholding heauen as the treasure of immortall riches prepared for those that do holily contemne the transitory and shal in this point end take his nightes rest The twelfth day A Meditation vpon the eight Commandement Thou shalt not beare false witnesse against thy Neighbour CHAP. XXVII THESE former Commandements doe order direct the hart and hand and this following the tongue that we abuse it not against our neighbour nor against our selues by false depositions of good or euill The morning meditatiō shall be thereof beginning as before False witnesse in ● iudgmēt forbiddē The first point shall obserue that by the principall intēt of this precept it is forbidden to beare false witnes in Iudgement against our neighbour which commonly being done by oath carieth an vndoubted credit in that quality if otherwise there be no cause of exception or chalenge And if it be taken falsely It is iniurious to God and pernicious to our Neighbour it is most iniurious to God pernicious to the person of our neighbour for he vseth the name of God in opē Iudgement to testify falshood and is cause that iustice is peruerted that the right of inoncency is ouerborne and the iniquity of the wicked established whosoeuer therefore witnesseth falshood against his neighbour or also against himself as many do vpon the racke or tortour he sinneth against this law in the princiapll point All diffamation forbiddē The second point shall consider that by this commandement is forbidden all sort of diffamation detraction calumniation al euill cariage of our tongue against our neighbour either by word or writing for such offend God greatly who vpon euery occasion or without occasion make sport of other folkes faultes and imperfections forgetting their owne and they more grieuously who impose feyned and false crimes and yet most grieuously of all they that write diffamatory libels for the hurt is more vniuersal the malice more bitter All lying forbiddē The 3. point shall ponder that all kynd of lying is forbidden in the compasse of this Commandement but specially that which is against Religion For this is a great lye that striketh directly at the supreme verity a lye which Dauid detested with a sharp threat of perditiō saying vnto God Thou shalt destroy all those that speake lies Psal 5. such are in the highest degree the Arch-heretiks whome S. Peter calleth Maisters of lying such as heeretofore were Arius Manes and in our time Luther 2. Pet. 3. and Caluin The speach shall demand grace of God well to gouerne our tongue and to auoyd al wordes contrary to verity in these termes My God thou art the supreme verity and all men are subiect to lying as one of thy Prophets writeth Psal 115. Thou hast giuen me a desire of thy truth may it please thee to giue me grace to auoid all lyes not only of false witnesse against my Neighbour or in Religion against the honour and the fayth of thy Church but of all sort or kind whatsoeuer not only in thinges great and important but also in light and little for lying doth dislike thee of what sort soeuer it be made and to what intention soeuer it be spoken and all those that vse it are therein followers of thyne ennemy Sathan the Father of lyes Let my hart be in thy sight right and true and my tongue and handes conformable and agreable with my hart and that thy truth may resound with a sweet accord in my thoughts wordes and workes in all and aboue all to glorify thee The After-dinner and Euening of the twelfth dayes Iourney Of the nature and basenes of lying CHAP. XXVIII IN the Afternoone the Pilgrime if he will not change the matter may ruminate that of the morning What lying is discoursing of the nature of lying and of the diuers sortes thereof He shal consider that that is a lye Putarch de pueror●on educatione where the word agreeth not with the thought the mouth affirming that which the hart denieth a vice directly opposite to God the supreme verity and altogeather base and seruile as comming of dastardy not daring to speake plainely and openly and therefore hatefull worthy of punishment not only in such persons of honour Aug. l. de Mendacio c. 7. 8. but also in slaues sayth
48.13 and made like vnto them yea and worse also The constancy of al creatures to do well but of man For they not only are not idle in that occupation trade thou hast taught them but worke continually according to their law and order and wanting reason do follow reason But my selfe a reasonable creature remaine idle against reason one peece and parte of my life or do workes contrary vnto reason Other creatures haue receaued thy commandement but once to do that which they doe and they haue continually discharged their duty vnto this present But I hauing read and heard thy will a hundred tymes thy promises thy menacings do sleep and slumber notwithstanding wretch and benummed that I am and when I do wake my workes are worse then sleep and idlenes O Maker and Redeemer of man reforme this same man by the same power and mercy wherewith thou hast created redeemed him Giue vnto him giue vnto me O my Lord as to the most weake and needy strength and meanes well and holily to employ what thou hast giuen me that my Vnderstanding Will Memory my whole soule and body may be in perpetuall action to bring forth workes of life to the praise and glory of thy holy name The After-dinner and Euening of the fifteenth dayes Iourney Markeable documents and instructions for Good workes CHAP. XXXV AFTER dinner and at night the Pilgrime shall for his spirituall occupation discourse vpon the most markeable sentences of Scriptures and Saints spoken to shew that ōly fayth sufficeth not for saluatiō The Talents Matth. 25.16 without good workes The parable of the Talents holdeth the first place in this doctriné for thereby our Sauiour doth plainely instruct vs and with authority that we must negociate in the house of God and put the mony of his graces to profit and vsury which to that end he put into our handes with the condition of a good reward if we be diligent and obedient or of punishment and confusion The workeman Matt. ●0 if we be slouthfull Also the parable of the workemen sent to worke in the Farmers vineyard payd at night for their dayes labour Also the counsell which our Sauiour gaue to the young man saying If thou wilt haue life euerlasting keep my Commandements Matt. 19.17 Also those wordes He shall enter into the kingdome of heauen who doth the will of my Father not euery one that sayth Matt. 7.21 Lord Lord. But especially he shall weigh the clause of that generall decree which shall be published at the last day in fauour of good workes against the slouthfull Rom. 2.13 Come my wellbeloued Iac. 1.22 Matt. 25.34 Iac. 2. possesse the kingdome which is prepared for you from the Creation of the world I was hungry and you gaue me to eate c. And thereunto he shall add the plaine saying of S. Iames What shal it profit my brethren if any man sayth he hath fayth without works shall his faith saue him And S. Gregory Nazianzen Doe good workes vpon the ground of thy instructions for fayth without workes is dead Isa 26. as also workes liue not without fayth And Saint Hierome vpon these wordes of Esay 26. Our citty is a fortresse saluation shall there be put for the inward wall and outw●rd By the inward wall sayth he is meant good woorkes and by the other fayth for it is not inough to the outward wall of Fayth vnles this fayth be grounded and sustayned by good workes These workes are Prayer The principall good workes Fasting Almes and other workes of charity which we spake of before in the afternoone of the eight day In these and the like discourses shall the Pilgrime passe the after-dinner thereby stirring himselfe to the loue and practise of Christian workes In the euening either alone or with others he may sing this Canticle that followeth to shut vp the euening with ioy and profit A Canticle of good VVorkes The pious Pilgrime that doth walke Vnto the Chappell of Loret Must worke with hand his soueraignes workes And keep his soule still pure and nett To heare alone and not performe The law of God doth worke no meed To know the way and not to walke Nothing doth our iourney speed The tree that bringeth nothing els But leaues and breathing verdure Is fit for fire and not for fruit And doth greet wrong to nature Our Sauiour chiefe and iustest Iudge The fruitlesse Fig-tree strooke with curse If man in vaine doth wast his dayes Shall he not blame and strike him worse How hoat shall then be his reuenge To those that nothing els doe bring But poisoned grapes and fruites of death Of sinne and shame and els nothing Each thing doth worke and nothing sleepes In Earth in Sea in Heauen aboue Each thing doth moue in his degree Mans end is God to know and loue Then these short dayes of this short life Let be in vertuous workes well spent That last long day shall all workes try VVhen ech shall b' either crown'd or shent And hauing made his particuler prayer to the Blessed Virgin he shall take himselfe to his lodging in good time not to be surprised by night in the fieldes The sixteenth day A Meditation of sinne CHAP. XXXVI THE morning Meditation shall be vpon sinne an actiō opposite to good workes which were the matter of the precedent meditation This order shal make a fit opposition of vertue to vice The opposition of vice to vertue and by setting their faces one against another we may better discerne the beauty of the one to loue it and the foulnes of the other to hate it What sin is The first point shall put the definition of sinne the better to know both the corps and countenance and duly to meditate of the foulnes thereof Sinne sayth S. Ambrose is a straying from the law of God and a disobedience to the heauenly Commandm●nts Ambr. de Poenit c. 8. Aug l. 22. cont Faust c. 27 l 1. cont ep 1. Pe●il 113. By S. Augustin it is What is sayd done or desired against the law of God so that one word spoken one deed done one thought conceaued against the law of God that is against any of his commandements is a sinne great or small mortall or veniall according to the diuers motion of the will sinning either with full consent or by some light motion or suddaine surprise and according to the great or small importance of the thing and other circumstances Of which definitions he shall learne that there is nothing so foule and deformed as sinne For what can be found more monstruous then that which is opposite to the law rule of the highest wisedome beauty and goodnes The second point shall consider two sortes of sinnes Originall and Actuall and this mortall and veniall Originall sinne Aug. ench 164. is that spot which flowed from the sin of Adam wherewith all men are stained in their conception and
plagues to the families of Men and hath marked them all with her infernall brood her malignity was so great and strong that there must be an eternity of punishments to chastice it the infection so deadly that the quickening and life-giuing bloud was necessary to cleanse it O mortall men whereof thinke you when you do the works of death Where is your memory not remembring what is passed Where is your prouidēce not regarding what is to come Where is your hart and wit yielding your loue to so monstrous and detestable an enemy O sweet Iesus made man for my sinnes crucifyed for my sinnes and raised againe for my iustice pardon me my sinnes which were too great to be pardoned were not thy mercy infinit and by the same mercy keep me from offending thee any more giue me tears to bewaile those I haue committed force to forbeare heerafter both which guifts are worthy of thee and both most necessary to me O Blessed Virgin yet againe To the B. Virgin now alwayes be my Aduocate it is the honour of thy sonne that I may obtaine my suite and the saluation of thy poore and deuoted Pilgrime The after-dinner and Euening of the seauenteenth dayes Iourney The effects of S nne and diuers paines CHAP. XXXIX THE rest of the day the Pilgrime shall imploy his houres to ruminate and repeat some particuler effects of sinne the better to know and detest it He shal see how it made the chief Angell so impudent and wicked The first exploit of the diuel that with the first vse of his language he durst accuse his Creatour of enuy and malice in that he had forbidden the tree of knowledge of good and euill to Adam and Eue that they might not be like Gods carrying vnder the colour of this blasphemous calumniation Gen. 3. that poisoned ●art wherewith he stroke to death this poore ill aduised woman and by her her husband Adam by him all mankind he shall cast his eyes vpon the enuy of Cain Gen. 7.21 which made him lift vp his hand to embrew the earth with his brothers bloud to the dissolution of all mortall men togeather buryed in the reuenging waues of the vniuersall Deluge to the pride of the Babylonians b●ilding against heauē to their owne confusion the impurity of the fiue sinning Cittyes drowned in fire and brimstone the auarice of Giezi Gen. 11.4 Gen. 19.25 4. Pe● 50. ●atth 26 Luc. 16.19 and of Iudas to the riot of the rich Glutton and other sinners and sinnes By the view whereof he shall conceaue an immortall hatred and shal firmely purpose to serue God withall his hart for the tyme to come without euer offending him neuer so little willingly and towards night hauing made some particuler prayer to the Blessed Virgin he shall thinke of his lodging The eighteenth day A meditation of Death the first effect of sinne CHAP. XL. To whō the remēbrāce of death is grieuous to whom profitable THERE is nothing more vnpleasant then the memory of death to them that doe not liue well nothing is more profitable to those that desire well to gouerne their actions for to liue and reigne alwayes and therefore the Pilgrime shall help himselfe with the meditation of death very fitly after that of sinne the father of death This meditation shal haue all his whole and entire partes The Prayer preparatory as alwayes before The first Preamble shall represent a man stretched on his bed in the agony of death The second shall demand grace to reape particuler profit of this exercise The first point shall set before myne eyes that decree and sentence of death giuen by the supreme Iudge on the person of our first Father Adam Gen. 3. Thou art dust and to dust thou shalt returne againe and executed on the body of him al that haue come of him except Enoch and Elias who notwithstanding shall dye also in their tyme. And therefore S. Paul sayth It is ordayned for all men once to dye Heb. 9.17 Of this meditation he shall marke that as there is nothing more sure and certaine then Death so also there is nothing more vncertaine then the houre and manner thereof and the estate wherein it shall find the soule Eccles 9. whether in grace or in sinne when it shall dislodge and remoue from her body By which circumstance he must stirre vp himselfe to watch and seeke all the meanes and wayes he can to put himselfe in good order and preparation for feare of being surprised and taken vnawares by reason of such vncertainty The second shall be to consider the accidents that do accompany this last conflict The conflict of death as well in soule as in body the remembrance of thinges passed the feare of that is to come the prickinges of griefs and desires the assaults of the Diuell the fayling of our senses and facultyes the coldnes of our members and the benumming of all partes of the body the dole and extreme anguish in the distresse of death all which thinges foreseene will teach vs what danger it is Math. 25. to deferre our preparation to the concurrence of so many calamityes miseryes and infirmityes and to go buy oyle for our lampes What followeth after death the soule saued o● damned when it will be tyme to enter into the bridegroomes chamber The third point shall meditate what followeth incontinently after death which is the iudgment of the soule either to saluation or damnation for she is eyther placed among the children of God be it by passing by if she need purgation o● presently if she be cleane to enter into heauen reigne there for euer or els carryed away in company of the Diuells to hell there to suffer eternall torments if she left the body seized with any mortall sinne The body in the meane tyme is put into the ground for food to wormes serpents his goods are parted to the liuing who will make merry therewith perhaps will laugh at him for hauing laboured so much for them The speach shall be to Iesus Christ in these wordes O my sweet Redeemer thou hast suffered death to deliuer me from death and hast ouercome death to make me conquerour thereof graunt me by this thy infinit charity and diuine victory the grace to vse and enioy the benefit which thy death hath brought to me and so well to prepare my selfe against this combat of death so valiantly to wrastle with it Psal 115. and so happily to ouercome it that my death may be of those the Prophet speaketh The death of his Saints is precious in the eyes of God and not of those of whome the same Prophet sayth Psal 33. The death of sinners is most miserable Thou saydst sometimes to thy Apostles and Disciples VVatch and stand ready for the Sonne of Man will come at an houre when you thinke not of him And againe Math. 24. 25. VValke
which was made there and els where ouer all the world by the appointement of Augustus Caesar who commanded to be made a generall description ouer all countries The description of the world by Caesar as S. Luke saith ● Cap. 1. He shall then behold the B. Virgin as a Pilgrime walking on foote with her husband light with that precious load which she caried in her wombe burning with loue and charity towards God whome shortly she was to bring forth Secondly he shall draw in his imagination the picture of the place where she was to lye in and be deliuered giuing saluation to the world Our Sauiours Cribbe This place was a desert or forsaken Caue and stable to set beastes in where she was constrayned to lodge not fynding any place in the Inne by reason of the great concourse of people that then repayred thither vpon this imagination he shall demaund of God light well to penetrate the wonders of a Natiuity so admirable in al the circumstances The first point shall be to meditate some figures and prophecies of the birth of our Sauiour Figurs prophecies of the birth of our Sauiour The figures were all the ancient apparitions wherein the Sonne of God shewed himselfe in the forme of man as in Paradise to Adam in Canaan to Abraham and Iacob for he that was borne this midnight was the God who before had spoken to men therefore called Verbum the Word of God and he shewed himselfe to them in humane shape S. Chrys hom 2. Greg. orat 4. de Theo Clem. Ale in exhort ad gentes in paeda cap. 12. but as a passenger not staying in it as it were making a proofe or tryall of that nature which he was once to marry and ioyne by an eternall vnion to his diuinity be borne God and Man to conuerse with men and be to them the Word and interpreter of the mysteries of heauen of the Commandements of his Father And this was in his Natiuity when he shewed himselfe meerly cloathed with our nature performing what he had prophecyed caused to be foretold by his Prophets My delight is to be with the children of men for heere he began to be among the children of men Psalm 8. a true Man already conuersing with them as a little child heere he did first effectuate what I say sayd in his person Isa 52. Behould I that did speake am present and that he sung of the Natiuity Behould a Virgin shall conceaue Isa 7. and bring forth a child And againe A little child is borne to vs Isa 9. Bar. 3. and a sonne is giuen vnto vs. And another And thou Bethleē Ephrata thou art not the least among the principall towns of Iudea for out of thee shall come a Captayne to gouerne my people This therfore is that little Sonne that Prince prophecyed of by these and like passages of Scripture who was borne this night The second point shall consider the circumstances of this Natiuity 1. Circūstance of this meruailous natiuity which being well vnderstood will teach vs a good lesson of the greatnes of God and of the misery of man He was borne as he was conceaued that is miraculously conceaued of a Virgin without man borne of a Virgin without the breach of her Virginity without the panges and throwes or griefe of childbirth which was the effect of the malediction giuen to the first Woman and to all her race So hath the Prophet foretold speaking of this Virgin Before she did labour Isa 66. she was deliuered before the houre of her deliuerance she brought forth a man child Verily a man child hauing nothing effeminate God and man togeather all mighty all wise all good and though the B. Virgin did beare only the body The Virgin verily the Mother of God and not his diuinity which was from all eternity yet was she verily the Mother of God for hauing conceaued that body which was vnited to the diuine person and so brought forth that person euen as other Mothers are mothers of those they beare although the soule is not begotten of them because they ingender that body which is personally vnited to the soule It is therfore a more admirable natiuity Isa 53. then that of al the world in the Creation and so what was sayd of the eternall generation of the Sonne of God VVho shall declare his generation may also be sayd of this temporall Conception and Natiuity He was borne in the sixth age of the world foure thousand yeares or there about after the Creation in the night The circumstāce of the tyme of the sixth age in the hart of Winter when the world was most couered with darkenes and frozen in the filth of all vice and Idolatry when the temporall Kingdome of the Iewes was dismembred and translated to the gouernement of forraine Princes strangers Herod his brethren who deuided it into 4. parts or Tetrachies and made so many particular tyrannies gouerned by the great and soueraine Pagan tyranny of Rome Why Caesar described the world which commanded all and therefore Caesar commanded that description a commandement that carried the signe of soueraignty And these fiue temporal tyranies did in mystery signify the miserable estate of mākind ouerwhelmed oppressed with so many spirituall tyrannies of diuers sinnes which it serued vnder the great and generall tyranny of the diuell who held the world in his dominion as peaceable as Augustus held his Empire At midnight He was borne at midnight in the hart of winter the true sunne of our Night to driue away the deep darknes hard Ice from the harts of men to bring them day and heate them in the loue of heauenly things to bring in the beautifull seasō of the spirituall spring-time of summer and Autumne of sweet smelling flowres of the heauenly heate of the Holy Ghost of the fruit of good workes whereof the world had hitherto beene barren And this is what the Prophet sayd The people that walked in darknes haue seene a great light Isa 9. and light hath risen to them who dwell in the shadow of death He was borne in a stable among beasts Psalm 48.13 to restore man to his old ranke and place who by sinne was cast downe to the basenes of bruit beastes and was made like vnto them The third point of the Meditation Our Sauiour encountreth and ouercometh vices in his Infancy CHAP. XXXIII THE third point shall be to contemplate how this little child beginneth to handle his weapons and to fight for vs betymes euen from his cradle for this being happened not by chance but by his owne prouidence in a stable he bruized in his birth with this onely circumstance the head of the old Serpent which before he had threatned He crushed the pride of the diuell the ancient enemy of our saluation Genes 3. the authour of all our miseries In
he cometh weake out of the wombe of his Mother yet mightily he preserueth the virginity of his Mother he is swadled in poore cloathes but is enlightned with the splendour of heauen In his Circumcision he was reckoned among sinners Phil. 1. but he took a Name aboue al names whereat euery knee should bow in heauen earth and vnder the earth In this apparition and visitation of the Sages he seemed obscure and a poore man among men but he is honoured by the Starres and adored by the Kinges And so in all the rest of his life and especially in his Death wherin we may see a wonderfull weauing togeather in one webbe of thinges contrary and opposite which encounter in this Tragedy The Sonne of God is nayled to a tree as feeble faulty and yet as soueraigne he giueth letters of grace and as an Almighty God of a great thiefe malefactor he maketh a great and holy Confessour he endureth the torments of temporall death and promiseth the Paradise of eternall life men blaspheme him on earth and the starres do moane him in heauen The Iewes more hard then stones haue no compassion of his anguishes but the Rockes rent the Graues opened the Sun darkened to mourne for his death Of al these encounters the deuout soule shall learne the wisedome and power of this Lord hauing giuen vs so goodly instructions to teach vs to admire loue and serue him The third parte of the Meditation Of the Returne of the three Kinges CHAP. XXXVII The prouidence of God towards the Iust Psalm 33.16 THE third point shal containe the Meditation of the Returne of the three Kinges who being from heauen aduertised in their sleep not to returne by Herod tooke another way towardes their country In this aduertisement we must acknowledge and confesse the prouidence of God watching in the protection of them that serue him with a royal mind to deliuer them from danger and conduct them to a sure hauen notwithstanding all the stormes and contrary windes of this boysterous world and her worldlings By the same consideration is discouered the folly of the Tyrant Herod who thought by his craft and subtilty to deceaue not only men 1. Cor. 3.19 but God also and to catch him in the snares of his cruelty but the soueraigne wisedome deluded his folly and calling vnto him in spite of this worldly bloudy King these stranger-Kings to take honour and homage of them signifieth vnto vs that happy prey of soules The Magi the first fruites of our faith S. Leoser 2. de Ep. which in the sight of Sathan signifyed by Herod he did carry with him in the person of these conuerted Kings as the first fruits of our fayth Christian calling gathered out of the haruest of the Gentils And this is that which God before by his Prophet sayd of his Sonne newly borne Call his name Hasten to spoile for before the Child can call Father or Mother the strength of Damascus shall be taken away the spoile of Samaria Isa 8.3 in presence of the King of the Assyrians This is Iesus who not tarying as other men do for age fit to fight hath being but a child gotten the victory this noble spoile and subdued vnto him the force of Damascus and Samaria tho strength of Idolatry and the errours of the Pagan world and this in the sight of the King of Assyria Sathan the king of this world and vpon this consideration the good Pilgrime may say as followeth speaking to himselfe and to his God What sayst thou heere my soule And where shall thy eyes rest in the variety of so many wonders To his soule Wilt thou consider the greatnes or the littlenes of this Child Eyther of thē exceed the conceites of man Wilt thou behould the Maiesty the modesty the ioy of this heauenly Mother holding in her armes this litle-great King whilest the other Kinges did honour and adore with their deuotion and guifts Thyne eyes are dazelled in the light of this Maiesty and cleane lost in the depth of this humility Contemplate the deuotion the piety the submission the bounty of these thinges Thou art not capable to conceaue this do better then and confesse thyne incapacity in all adore this King as well in his littlenes as in his greatnes admire the vertues of his Mother imitate the humility and deuotion of these Kinges and say with an humble and feruent hart O my King and Sauiour gouerne me To God saue me be my guide in my pilgrimage my confort in afflictions my strength in temptations giue me of thy Gold Incense and Myrrh of thy bounty of thy diuinity of thy humanity to make vnto thee a pleasant offering of my presents and to returne by thy direction and vnder thy protection to myne owne country whence my Father and all his posterity were banished With these three Meditations he shall end this day The thirtith day and the ninth and last of his Aboad A Meditation of the Presentation of IESVS in the Temple CHAP. XXXVIII IN this last day of our Pilgrimes aboad he shall prepare himselfe to confesse and receaue happily to end and conclude his nyne dayes of stay there to depart the next morning with the greater light and courage being purged of his sinnes and armed with this pretious food and Viaticum His meditation shall be of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin and of the oblation she made of her deere child in the Temple fourty dayes after that he was borne The Law of Purification Leuit. 1● Luc. 2. At midnight he may briefly remēber the history of this old Ceremony of the ●ews which giueth the groūd to this Christian solemnity and to his meditation The history is that it was cōmanded by an expresse law that the woman who was brought to bed should be vncleane a weeke if she brought forth a sonne and two if a daughter and should remaine sometyme in her house The Sacrifice for Purification Leuit. 12. Luc. 2. before she came into the Temple not touching any thing that was holy to wit fourty dayes for a sonne fourscore for a daughter which dayes being expired she came to the Temple to offer her fruit with a Lambe of one yeare old or a Pigeon or Turtle which were sacrificed the Lambe as an holocaust for thankes-giuing the Pigeon or Turtle for expiation of sinne If the Mother could not haue a Lambe either for the tyme of the yeare or by reason of her pouerty The males consecrated to God she offered two Pigeōs or Turtles to the same effect Moreouer the Male first-borne by right of being the eldest was consecrated to God and pertained vnto him to serue in his house but because God had chosen all the Tribe of Leui for the seruice of his Altars he permitted them of other Tribes to redeeme their first-borne with fiue sicles of siluere and so to be deliuered of that obligation The B.
in her bosome and closed in her armes whome the capacity of the heauens could not comprehend she feareth his danger and relyeth in his prouidence willingly endureth the horrour of the desart and the wearisomnes of the way and gathereth of her paines the ioyes of iust soules in the loue of him who came into the desart of the world to suffer O how gracious a spectacle to heauen is this little company O desart more happy in these three Hebrew Pilgrimes then in that infinite multitude that passed before A desart sanctifyed by these heauenly trauaillers signed and consecrated one day after to be the repaire of sanctity the earthly Paradise of deuotion to thousands of Religious soules who shal there sing the prayses of their Redeemer The desart of Egypt inhabited by Religious A desart more plentifull then all the orchards of Eden then all the Gardens of Aegypt yea then earthly Paradise it selfe for although thy trees be barren thou bearest notwithstanding at this tyme the fruit of life the mother of life and the faithfull spouse of life O Lazarus behould this pretty Pilgrime behould this trauailer and his faithfull Spouse doe them some seruice in the way giue them some fruit some ease or refreshment from thy hands request of the B. Virgin that little load she carryeth in her armes and take him into thyne to ease her but alas thou art not worthy although thou wert yet she would not leaue him This burden though it be more weighty thē the whole world is light vnto her yea giueth her vigour and strength to go the better If she will not gratify thee in this take boughes and shadow this little God who heeretefore shadowed his children in a cloud from the scorching Sunne and enlightened them with a Pillar of fire in the shadowes of night Psalm 77.14 and if thou canst do them no other seruice kisse humbly their shadow kisse the steps of their feet and haue compassion of the payns of this child and confesse thy sinnes to be the cause He entred into Aegypt according to the prophesy which he gaue many ages before Behould God shall ascend vpon a little cloud Isa 19.1 and enter into Aegypt and the Idols of Aegypt shall be troubled at his face This Cloud is the precious humanity of the Sonne of God in the which he is carryed It may be also the glorious Virgin compared to a cloud because she is heauenly and diuine like the humanity of her Sonne without any burden of sinne hauing brought forth her Sonne as the cloud doth the rayne without corruption and carryeth him in Aegypt els where as the cloud carryeth the rayne within her bosome O celestiall cloud O heauenly rayne O diuine child O diuine Mother He entreth into Aegypt whence his Father called him as he foretould by his Prophet I haue called my Sonne out of Aegypt He had called before the Hebrewes his adoptiue sonnes Ose 11. and people out of Aegypt he calleth now his naturall Sonne borne of his owne substance but in another manner Then he called the Hebrews to recall them from a cruell slauery bondage to make them enter into Iudaea now cōtrarywise he calleth this his Sonne from Iudaea to Aegypt to enter there and deliuer the Aegyptian himselfe from a more cruell seruitude to crush their Idols and breake the kingdom of Pharao who oppressed them vnder his tyranny with thousandes of horrible superstitions Arise then O Aegypt receaue with a good entertainement this little Sonne haue no feare of the plagues Exod. 6. 7. c. wherewith the malice of thy Ancestours hath heretofore been pl●ged by him he cōmeth to sanctify thee to saue thee he is a great God but is become a little child affable of easy accesse a King full of sweetnes and mercy receaue him then receaue with good cheere these three Pilgrims the most noble that euer marched vpon thy groūd The Sages of Greece the Platoes Philosophers haue visited Egypt the Aristotles the Gallants of the world the Great Alexanders braue Caesars that haue heeretofore visited thee were nothing but poore wretched slaues of Ambition hauing their soules bound with chaines of iron howsoeuer they seemed gold glittered only in the outward of worldly vanity these heer doe passe the greatnes the brightnes of the glory of a thousand worlds This footman who is called Ioseph bringeth one who is a Virgin and a Mother the greatest Lady of the whole world admired of the Starres and Angells and shall one day be the admiration and refuge of al mortall men And this mother bringeth thee a Sonne who is the Maiesty of the heauēs the King of Angells the Sonne of a Father all mighty all wise all good himselfe as wise as good and as old as his Father in euery thing equall to his Father Creatour of the heauens with th● Father Gouernour of the whole world with the Father and sent by his Father from heauen to redeeme vs here in earth Receaue him then as a Pilgrime seeing Herod chaceth him out of his Countrey and whilest this Tyrant embrueth Iudaea with the bloud of the litle Innocēts make much of this little Innocent father of them all rewarder of their life lost for him make much of his Mother and of his foster-father O my sweet Iesus did it please thee so soone to be chaced out of thy Country and to be a Pilgrime and banished mā to bring me vnto my heauenly coūtry whence my grādfather Adam hath so long been excluded Wouldst thou suffer euen in thy cradle what my sins deserued and what shall I ēdure for thee in my Pilgrimage O mother who hast carryed this prety Pilgrim in a strange coūtry who hast suffered with him nursed weaned him who can conceaue the care the Charity the zeale the diligence the seruices thou didst ēploy in these seauē years thou wert in Aegypt faithfully to nourish bring vp this litle God cloathed in the sackcloth of our mortality The goodly example thou gauest of all vertues to that people blacker in their superstitiō then in their cōplexion O B. Virgin that after thy exāple I might serue my God not now like a Pilgrime suffering in Aegypt but as a Conquerour triūphing in heauen It is I that am in Aegypt this valley of affliction where I haue need of his visit and help and of thyne O fauourable Virgin help thy Pilgrimes and deuotes The seauen yeares of this Pilgrimage being expired Herod in Iudaea being dead and the Lyon of Aegypt being buried the Angell of God aduertiseth Ioseph in his sleep to returne into Palestine The returne of Iesus to Palestine and because Archelaus the sonne of Herod successour both of his crowne and cruelty reigned in Iudaea he retyred himselfe from Galiley vnto the Citty of Nazareth where the little child Father of all ages seauen years old in his humanity was brought vp by his Mother and
among such a company of theeues sauing for the comfort I had to suffer some thing for Iesus Christ who endured death for me betwixt theeues and to consider on the one side the grace God had done me in giuing me the feare loue of his lawes and on the other side the misery of those poore rogues who suffered so much euill at the last to endure the heape of all euils Alas said I within my selfe if thou didst endure but as much for heauen as these do for hell if thou wert as constant to employ thy selfe in good works to passe whole nights in prayer to saue thy selfe and others as these do whole dayes in workes of iniquity and vndertake a thousand paines in discomodities of body and soule to destroy other men themselues O Lord of the whole world I render thee immortall thankes for all benefits bestowed on me of thy infinite bounty and beseech thee by the same bounty to enlarge my hart and to make it more capable of thy heauenly loue to increase the strength of my soule that I may suffer more and with a better courage for the glory of thy name Open the eyes of these poore blynd soules giuing them to see the indignity of their condition and the miserable estat of their soule or els take from them all meanes to do any more harme In these and the like discourses did I passe day and night and learned to make purpose of liuing better of the disdaine I conceaued in the ill life of this people as it happeneth oftentimes that by the contemplation of the foulnes of vice men betake themselues more earnestly to the loue of vertue Now there was amōgst them a certaine yong man called Tristram about 25. years of age born of a good house neighbour to France valiant and expert in armes The conuersion of Tristram and in that respect much esteemed by their Captaine who seemed to haue some particular compassion of my captiuity and came often to visit me asking if I had need of any thing that was in his power he came one day among others and sayd to me in secret Friend Theodosius for now euery body knew my name for that I haue holden you for a man of honour and conscience euer since I first knew you I desire to declare one thing vnto you which is very important but you must sweare secrecy Syr Tristrā sayd I thē if the secret be against God or iustice I pray you tell it me not no saith he the thing that I meane to tell you is iust and the intention good and therefore I wil tel it you Then I promised him on faith of a Christian Pilgrime that I would keepe his secret he said this is the matter They heere haue resolued either to make you follow our manner of life or els to kill you for ransome they looke for none of you All that haue come to see you haue beene so many spies to sound you and see if there were any hope to persuade you wherein they make diuerse and different reportes to our Captaine and therefore looke to your selfe thus much I know because I was at the counsell and deliberation when it was taken When I heard this sectet I doubted whether himselfe also came to sound me and to feele my resolution neither was I deceaued though he did it with a good intention and meaning and therefore I answered him roundly that I was ready rather to dye thē make shipwracke of my conscience yea or of my reputation and honour in imbracing a vocation proper not for Christians but for Tartars or Ethiopians who beleeue neither hel nor heauen and I should make a dolefull reuolution of my Pilgrimage to become of a Pilgrime of Loreto a robber thiefe This answer pleased him much though I did not make it therefore but only to declare vnto him my mynd in respect of God and as a man of honour and an honest man as he esteemed me Continuing his discourse he tolde me Friend Theodosius I would know this of you I greatly commend your courage and am not deceaued in the opinion I haue of your vertue But this is not all I tell you further that I am determined with what hazard soeuer to leaue this Labyrinth into which I was drawne fiue yeares since by the ●●and of some and myne owne folly neitheir can I endure to stay any longer in such a dungeon the very image of hell This is the principall point which I desire you to keep secret and to assist me with your prayers that I may put this proiect in execution and deliuer my selfe from these chaines though for regard of your selfe I aduise you to dissemble a while make no difficulty in leauing your habit and taking another when they shall offer it you for therwith they wil beginne and in the meane time seeke occasion to saue your selfe when it shall be offered which in my opinion will be shortly I shall wa●te from one houre to another with good deuotion to put in execut on my own designes of leauing this lewd execrable life Here also I thoght he dissembled as it were by digression to persuade me to make me by little little to passe by the midst from one extreme to another so I sayd vnto him A strong resolutiō Syr Tristrā I haue told you my resolution there is neither death nor torments that shall make me swarue frō honesty nor to do any thing contrary to the law of God the faith of an honest man for my apparrell it is in their poer to take it away and giue me other such as they please so it be without my fault it is all one to me to be in my shirt or to be clad in sackcloth or silke our Sauiour was spoiled of his cloathes and clad in derision in a royall robe For the rest Syr Tristrā if you speake in good earnest your resolutiō is worthy of a noble courage and you shall haue the honour thereof towards God and man and doubt you not but he who hath opened your eyes to discerne the danger you liue in will also giue you meanes and direction to performe your desire I shall not faile to help you with my poore prayers if they can preuaile any thing with God in any sort wherein my industry may be employed He seeing me speake so frankly and hartily imbraced me and sayd Syr Theodosius I reade in your wordes the sincerity and the magnanimity of your courage and count my selfe happy in the midst of all my misfortunes to haue beene acquainted with you for not onely you haue confirmed me in my designement but also haue giuen me a certaine hope happily to put it in execution by the help of God and of the B. Virgin vnder whose protection you walke her pilgrime and began to weepe then I doubted no more of his vnfaynednes but firmely belieued that he spake from his hart I
that the estate of merchandise which attendeth to the world and hath nothing for her end but wealth is a great stoppe and hindrance to Christian life It is our Sauiour sayth Lazarus who saith it is impossible to serue two maisters and compareth Riches to Thornes Mat. 6.24 but this rule and this Parable do not condemne the estate of Merchants nor riches neither for both before and since the comming of our Sauiour there were many Merchants Math. 13. and rich men too good seruants of God they cōdemne only the folly of those who calling themselues Christians that is seruants of God and disciples of Iesus Christ will also haue the World for their maister obeying and pleasing it who say they serue God and suffer themselues to be carryed away by riches who behold heauen with their left eye and earth with their right who take on both sides and finally who saile to East and West both at once Our Sauiour then sayth not that it is impossible to be a good Christian a good Merchant but only sheweth it to be impossible to set their loue vpon the World and earthly goods and withall worke their saluation which is very true doctrine therfore it is the loue of the world auarice that crosseth Christian vertue not the estate of a Merchāt And in that sense S. Paul sayth They that will become rich fall into temptation 1. Tim. 6. the snares of the Diuell and into many foolish and hurtfull desires which drowne men in destruction and perdition for Couetise is the root of all euill So that if the Merchant driue away all auarice and couetousnes from his shoppe he shall receaue no more impediment of doing well by his estate then the Iudge doth by his office or the Souldier by warre Friend Pilgrime quoth the other Merchant you haue touched the point A man may be a good Christian a good Merchāt both for doubtlesse if the Merchant be not worldly or couetous he may be a good Christian but how many such doe you see In my opinion it is as easy to find a white Crow or a blacke Swan or a Pike without a bone as a Merchant without Couetise Syr quoth Lazarus will you condemne all Merchants of that fault And Syr quoth the Merchant can you name me one Merchant who would not gaine and be richer still Syr replyed Lazarus it is another matter to haue a desire to gaine honestly and make a reasonable profit of ones mony and paines another thing to be couetous for the second cānot stand with a good Christian conscience the first pertaineth to his estate and hindreth not a good Merchant but that he may be a good Christian also For a well ordered desire to get his liuing and to gaine by buying and selling neuer compelleth any man to do any thing against Gods law but auarice will lay his fingers on all and will fill his pouch with all manner of gaine It wil make him corrupt his ware take vsury loue his shop better then the Church his counting-house better then the Altar and a reckoning better then a Masse or a sermon Effects of couetise It will make him loose his soule and heauen rather then his earthly riches It is auarice therfore that alwayes corrupteth the merchant and his estate but not that the estate is contrary to the obseruation of the lawes of God And if there be any difficulty of working saluation in this calling besides auarice it is a common case to all estates for in euery one shall a man meet with difficultyes which may turne him from the way of well doing if he will suffer himselfe to be turned out In being a King a Iudge a Captaine and the like There are the like also in euery age Youth hath her faultes All estats and ages haue their difficultyes and old age hath hers and other ages haue theirs but as for these obstacles we do not condemne all estates ages so must they not make vs condemne the estate of Merchants for these are not impossibilityes to liue well for so all the world must become Religious but matter to merit in euery vocation For the more difficulty there is in any worke so much more is the vertue and reward and glory in ouercoming it No estate without difficulty To thinke we may exercise any estate in this mortall life without difficulty is to imagine a Sea without tempest or a Warre without encounters The Religious themselues who at one blow haue broken the greatest difficultyes casting from them the baggage of the world and haue entrenched themselues within the counsels of our Sauiour out of the wyndes and stormes of this worldly sea are not exempt from all difficultyes for they carry their flesh about them which is a seminary of many troubles and the Diuell goeth euery where Euery man carryeth his Crosse Math. 16.24 Marc. 8.34 who alwayes cutteth worke for our infirmity and euery where ech man carryeth his Crosse for that is a decree pronounced by the mouth of our great Maister It is true that all do not profit thereby because they carry their Crosse ouerthwart without merit as without patience Syr sayth the Merchant if difficulty make merit and glory then our condition and that of worldly men is in better case then the Religious for that we haue more difficulty to be saued without comparison I answere quoth Lazarus that worldly men haue more difficultyes and letres of saluation then Religious yet for al that they haue no more merit but much lesse because they breed the causes of their owne difficulty and fasten the fetters on their owne feet Whereas the Religious do ouercome at one blow all the chiefe difficultyes pulling themselues out of the presse of the world with a resolute mind forsaking all things to submit themselues wholy to the seruice of God which are too great exploites of a noble mind the one of fortitude and the other of Charity and if after they haue lesse difficulty to liue well they misse not therefore of more merit for it is the fruit of their victory and a continuall prayse of vertue to them valiantly to haue passed through the bowells of their enemies and an increase of glory to haue chosen so noble a field to fight in and therein to gaine the crowne of euerlasting glory The excellency of an estate doth not consist in the difficulty but rather in the goodnes and beauty of her actions Wherein cōsisteth the excellency of an estate as in the foundation and of the end thereof as in the crowne Therefore the vocation of Theology is preferred before that of Phisicke because it hath a higher subiect which is God and a more noble end which is the health of the soule wheras Physicke respecteth onely the body and the health thereof though physike perhaps may haue more difficulty then the other Also when the difficulty cometh of the excellency of
of a good man as of the Hermites who in those times lyued in those desarts Also that he assailed our Sauiour where he thought he was weakest by hunger and principally in that he demanded but a small matter The sweet pretences of the Diuell and that as it seemed reasonable to wit to turne stones into bread to help his present necessity So he maketh his hole little to enter in subtilty and with greater ease So for one bit of an Apple he destroyed man so also he asketh at the Witches handes but a haire of their head Genes 3. to tye a knot of friendship betwixt them but one veniall sinne of deuout persons but one litle imperfection of Religious men by such little pathes to draw them at last to destruction And as therefore Queene Semirami● hauing obtayned of her sonne the king of the Assyrians to raigne but one day Dion de rebus perficis tooke from him his crowne and his life euen so this our aduersary if he become maister but once by one mortall sinne depriueth vs at last of the kingdome of heauen Lazarus also learned of our Sauiour how to resist the malice of this enemy Diod. Sicul l. 3. c. vlt. which is in not giuing him any aduantage though neuer so smal but repelling him euery where and in euery thing for such is the aduice of the Apostle saying Giue not place vnto the Diuel Phil. 4. Our Sauiour serued by Angells And so he was sent away with shame he that was tempted by the wicked Angels was at the last serued of the good shewing vs that after the victory we shall be admitted to the table of God filled with delightes and crowned with the garland of glory Thus meditated Lazarus and said vnto our Sauiour O prudent puissant Captaine giue me the grace to vse those weapons wherewith thou hast ouercome to teach vs how we also should ouercome For thy selfe there was no necessity of this triall or victory heauen and earth knew full well that thou with thy Almighty power wast stronge inough to reiect thyne enemy And turning to our B. Lady O vailant warriour saith he who hast in this warre ouercome thy sexe To the B. Virgin and the valour of the most valiant Amazones that euer were who didst first crush the head of our enemy this old serpent take me O heauenly warriour vnto thy protection arme me in the warre of thy Sonne with his weapons and thine direct me in this combat that I may vse myne arme after his and thine example that vnder thy defence I may get the victory and that to him and to thee for the loue of him may redound the glory of my warfare 1. An admirable combat 2. A Pilgrime togeather with Serpents nourished by a stone 3. The foundation of dreames 4. The three bandes of the world 5. How to chuse a Religion 6. The end of worldly ioy CHAP. XII SVCH was the meditation and prayer of Lazarus Theodosius and Vincent held the same points with other veines of deuotion Their prayers ended they tooke a draught of wine and would haue reckoned with their Host but he sayd he would haue none of their siluer himselfe was rather in their debt and so put in their hand the Crowne which the Merchant had left the night before for their supper of which himselfe would take nothing but restored it whole to them as their owne They desired him to bestow it on other Pilgrimes that passed that way or on the poore saying they had God be thanked good prouision thanking him very hartily for his charity they departed very well cōtent and he remained much edified with their piety and deuotion After they had sayd their prayers for their iourney and their beads they began to discourse of their meditation whereupon Lazarus sayd he had had that night a dreame that was all of warre and wild beastes He affirmed moreouer that this tentation was the most liuely and goodly patterne of a combat that could be represented An admirable cōbat as contayning therein the manner well to assault valiantly to resist and ouercome Doe not you marke sayth he how this old Dragon disguiseth himselfe into the forme of a man and of an honest man How craftily he directed his battery The Diuell tēpteth our Sauiour in a holy habit to that place which he thought weakest easiest to enter at assailing hunger with the hooke and enticement of gluttony changing his weapons according to occasions from the desart to the Temple from the Temple to the toppe of the mountaine heere battering with guns of Gormandise there with presumption and after of ambition and auarice and still in euery one shewing himselfe a maligne and impudent assaulter See you on the other side our good Redeemer couered with the cloke of our infirme nature suffering himselfe to be carryed by his enemy to bring him to confusion See you how his great humility quickly pulled out the eyes of pride which appeared by the second assault when Sathan sayd vnto our Sauiour If thou beest the sonne of God cast thy selfe downe Which was the discourse of a distracted spirit ioyning a conclusion of phrensy to an Antecedent of Diuinity for it is as if he had sayd Thou art Almighty do therefore an act of extreme infirmity for that to precipitate himselfe is an act of a base and cowardly hart he should rather haue sayd if thou beest the sonne of God fly vp to heauen or demand some such thing which might haue shewed some worthy proofe of such power and might haue made some reasonable illation And do you not thinke that our Challengers haue been at the schoole of this distracted Skirmisher Against Chalengers when pricked with a point of honour as they cal it but in truth with a point of some phrensy they send letters of defiance to their enemies in these termes If thou beest an honest man come try a sword with me that is come shew a tricke of dastardy and cast thy selfe downe togeather with me into euerlasting death and ignominy And should we not answere to the humming of such a hornet Go thy wayes ill aduised fond fellow because I am an honest man Duellists I detest thy defiance as a summon proceeding out of the mouth of a frantike man or scholler of Sathan and the Diuells disciple not a Christian Caualier Moreouer what shame think you receaued this King of the children of pride when becōming yet in the second encounter more blind and presuming of the victory in the third he was reiected with these byting wordes Get thee gone Sathan pronounced with disdaine and anger of our victorious Sauiour of whome he would haue beene adored on both knees In truth quoth Vincent it was a meruailous combat in euery respect and the victory notable as also these two were the greatest Captains that euer were the one in power and wisedome the other in strength and malice as I
of earth for that her defences are but bottoms and hils of errour and pride The first founder made himself vassall and tributary to a Titant for Selfeloue all the burgesses of that citty are alwayes rebels to God tributary to the Diuell him they haue loued to him they haue bowed their knee though a tyrant of all tyrāts the most cruell that euer was seeke help of him against their God The fundamentall lawes of that Citty are those fiue I touched before the first for each man to loue himself The laws of self-selfe-loue and the world and euery thing for himselfe for the humour of the world worldly men is to affect onely their owne particular profit hauing clean banished out of their hart the loue of God and their neighbour The 2. to haue no Religion to vse and abuse all for their temporall commodity this is to too much verified by the experience of all the children of this world whose common custome is to make Religion a pretext of their designements and to make vse of the name of God for their owne glory very hypocrites and sacrilegious impostors To haue no Religion To authotize vice and disgrace vertue The 3. to cast down vertue and set vice aloft according to this law the world prayseth those that liue in delights as most happy and the pleasures of the body as the ioyes of felicity It cōmendeth the couetous as prudent to aduance further their own affaires It bosteth of the ambitious calling them men of valour and courage and therefore it is that this Citty is filled with the brood of these families To sow discord all great courtiers of Mere-folly The 4. is to loue and sow dissention and to entertaine subiects with false reports calumniations and other malicious meanes thinking that by their discord and debility their estate should be strong and firme And as the Kingdom of God is peace and charity and his spirit is to nourish and mainteine peace so the Kingdome of the Diuell the estat of the world is trouble hatred the spirit of the world is to make discord when there is question to do euill To promise riches The 5. is to entice deceiue men by the promise of riches honours which passe vanish so many abused do perceiue whē they come to dy though late that all they haue gotten is but shadowes dreames Psal 75.6 The rich men saith Dauid haue slept their sleep in the end found nothing in their hands They haue passed this life as a dream resting themselues on the saffran bed of their riches and at the end haue found their braines troubled with fumes their hands empty of good workes their conscience loaden with sinnes These are the lawes of this world and of this Citty And as her lawes are but disorders so is her fayth perfidiousnes her end nothing els but to ruine her acquaintance and to send them to the slaughter that serue her best and are most faithful vnto her will you see this Cast the eyes of your memory vpon the histories of all ages passed how many gallants hath she precipitated into confusion after they had a while runne the race of their vanity in the sight of men How many hath she most miserably strangled that had to her performed most faithfull seruice Was there euer any that more honoured or better serued her then the Assuerus Caesars Alexanders Pompeies Neroes Diocletians Decians and other like Princes and Lords of her Court great admirers of her maiesty sighing seeking nor breathing any thing els but her greatnes hath she not made them all dye death euerlasting Thousands see this at euery moone and euery day but the world is such a cosener that it bereaueth mortall men of their senses and men are so foolish and simple that stil they suffer themselues to be seduced by her gaudies present delights so that they honour and serue her as their soueraigne Lord not able to open their eyes to behold eyther the misfortune of others or their own danger nor their eares to heare the voice of the iustice of God who threatneth them The good mixed with the bad in this world and perseuer in such sort vntill they be ouerwhelmed in the ditches of their enemie without help or hope euer to come out Now God who is our soueraigne King will ruinate this Citty raze it to the ground for he must iudge the world drench the obstinate but because there be diuers of his owne seruāts amongst these sinners as of Lots in Sodome he doth not yet exterminate the world but expecting in fauour of the good and by patience inuiting sinners to pennance in the tyme of mercy not to incurre at the day of iudgement the seuerity and rigour of his eternall iustice This is the Citty of which I told you yesterday out of the which by the grace of God you haue beene long since sequestred and shall be yet more if you be good Pilgrims as I esteeme you Thus did the Hermit expound his Allegory often looking vp to heauen and sighing The Pilgrims heard him with great attention and contentment their way seemed short Lazarus seeing him hold his peace sayd vnto him My reuerend Father you haue set before our eyes a wholsome picture of the Citty of this world and of the vanities of worldly men you haue bound vs in eternall benefit we desire to be bound vnto you also for your praiers and to obtaine for vs of our Lord that as he hath already drawn vs from the snares of this deceifull world so that he would giue vs grace to perseuer vnto the end in his loue and feare He will do it sayth the Hermit do only what is in you walk on euery day from good to better like good Pilgrims be perfect before him and you shall come by Gods grace to your desired country The B. Virgin whome you serue will help you with the assistance of her praiers the holy Apostles our good Fathers the Hermits S. Iohn S. Paul S. Anthony S. Hilarion S. Bruno and others who haue trampled vpon the world with the feet of constancy lyuing in the deserts as Pilgrims vpon the earth will procure you ayd happily to finish your course You haue yet som way to dispatch and some crosses to endure you shall passe not without paine and trauaile but with the profit of your soules As for you Lazarus you shall be lamented of many and your funerals shall be kept before your death and those that shall most mourne for you shall be most comforted in your fortune and that you may the better remember what I haue foretold you keep this and gaue him a litle paper folded like a letter conteining these foure verses At that fayre Day the last which you desire Two dead reuiu'd without death shall ech other see And being seene after their funerals kept Shall to the world
your meditation Nay aske me rather quoth Vincent how goeth my distraction for my meditation hath beene but a continuall Mosaicall worke of peeces of fantasy ill hanging togeather When I would haue though of mount Caluary the montaine Atlas came into my memory when I would haue stuck vpon the straines of our Sauiours tormēts his patience my fancy was caried to the candles of their Sabaoth to other foolish imaginations I wotte not if this trash I carry in my bagge doe worke me this euill for I felt not a long tyme so litle comfort in a meditation specially vpon so worthy a subiect Lazarus comforting him we must not saith he seeke our own ease pleasure in the bitternes of the Passion of Christ I seeke at least quoth Lazarus to be attentiue to that I would meditate I see quoth Theodosius that I was not vagabond all alone were you distracted too sayth Lazarus much more than Vincent I doubt me quoth Theodosius well God pardon vs our faults replyed Lazarus giue vs of his grace I haue had my part of affliction also for I could meditate nothing to the purpose no more than you It is Gods prouidence to let vs see how litle we can performe of our selues without his help to the end to humble vs in the acknowledgment of our nothing but let vs not loose courage for this for if hauing done our diligence to prepare our selues we haue not tasted the sweet hony of deuotion we shall in humbling our selues find the profit of the sowre which is more to be desired for humility is more profitable and necessary to him that praieth and more pleasing vnto God than spirituall sweetnes Humility better thā sweetnes of deuotion and if the Diuell in despit of being driuen away by vs this night will reuenge himselfe by these mystes which he casteth into our fantasies God permitting him for our exercise he shall yet receiue confusion by our patience and profit Discousing in this manner they came vnto the Conuent of Bon-heur about six a clocke in the morning this was a Conuent of Chartherhouse Monks liuing in great austerity and perfection of life straite obseruers of their rules and great louers of hospitality and specially Dom-Prior who was a holy and venerable old man and very deuout to our Lady of Loreto as all that holy Order is This Conuent was situate at the going out of the forrest hauing many litle houses round about it where dwelt such good folke as had dedicated them selues to the seruice of God in that house called Oblati one of these saluted them and said vnto them Messieurs you shall make very glad Dom-Prior al the Religious within by your comming The Pilgrims saluted him againe courteously and entred with him into the Church where they song Prime presently after to celebrate high Masse Dom-Procurator being aduertised of their coming came to entertaine them with a cōtenance full of kindnes and courtesy and brought them to the guests chamber Lazarus deliuered him their letters patents from Loreto which he would not see taking their honest countenance for a sure Patent he imbraced them all three and sayd My deare brethren Father Priour giueth you the good morrow he hath commanded me to come entertayne you you are all three hartily wellcome your coming will bring ioy and good fortune by Gods grace in recompence of the displeasures we haue had these daies passed with theeues and sorcerers Good Father sayth Lazarus Dom Priors charity and yours doth not stay long to shew it selfe in our behalf It is we that come to the Conuent of Bon-heur there to receiue good houre and fortune and comfort in your deuotions we bring nothing but matter of paine but doe theeues and sorcerers trouble you also heere as well as Pilgrims To our great paine answered the Religious they haue robbed our Church and spoiled our fruits and done vs a thousand domages and but yesterday we tooke a man whome we thought to haue beene of that cōpany but we will talke therof afterward now let vs go eate somthing Good Father answered Lazarus we haue no need for we haue not come farre and it is early dayes we pray you permit vs to go pray a litle and heare Masse first of all he vrged them no further thinking they had rather dine at a good houre and hauing laid vp their bags he brought them to a Chappell where they resumed the points of their meditatiō Lazarus went on in this sort My Redeemer and Lord Of the Passion of our Sauiour thou knowest the trouble we endured this Morning restore to vs if it please thee now the ioy of thy saluation I enter into the meditation of thy dolefull Passion and death that great and admirable exploit of thy infinit mercy open to me the gate of thy grace and light that in this act I may see the heauenly signes of thy greatnes I behold the mountaine of Caluary the mount of dead mens sculls the sepulcher of our grandfather old Adam and now the field of thy fight O my Sauiour who art the second Adam without comparison more worthy then the first a montaine made infamous before by the burial of many malefactors there executed Psal 50. S. Amb l. 5 ep 19. S Aug. serm 71. de temp ● to be afterward the house of glory and refuge of deuotiō by thy death couered now with people enraged who persecute thee with their hands and tongues and by all manner of hostility cruelty and blasphemous outrages one day to be the seat of a magnificall Temple where thou shalt be adored I behold thee O sweet Lambe hanging vpon the Crosse betwixt two theeues Alas what parity betwixt innocency and robbery What doth the lambe with the wolues Is it to make of a theefe a faithfull seruitour or of a lambe a wolfe The death of our Sauiour fortold I behold thee now O my Lord and turning the eyes of my memory vpon the ancient mystery of thy house and the old Prophecies of thy great booke I perceiue that long before thou didst giue the figures and newes of this death for gage of thy ancient loue towards the poore family of Adam and for a preparation and disposition By Sacrifices and figures to the perfect beliefe of thy wisedome and bounty all the Sacrifices of the law of nature all those that Moyses vsed in the bodies of beasts did foretell vnto vs that which thou hast offered in this mount on the tree of the Crosse Moyses stretching out his hands acrosse on the toppe of the mountaine Exod. 17. and by secret inspiration furnishing the Hebrewes that were in fight of force succour made a shadow of this truth which thou fulfillest now Esa 53. Thy Prophet fortold that thou shouldest be reckoned amongst theeues thou wert crucifyed betwixt two theeues yet put behind theeues Psal 68. and more vnworthily vsed then they all Dauid complained that they gaue him
gall to eate and vineger to drinke but himselfe neuer receiued such vsage at the Iewes hands but it was thou O sweet Lambe the true Dauid who didst tast the bitternes of this gall the sharpnes of this vineger Our Sauiour tormented ouer all his body The same Prophet sayd that they had numbred his bones of thee he did speake for he beheld with his foreseeing and Propheticall eyes thy precious body stretched out vpon the Crosse with such violēce that men might tell thy bones and there was no part or member in thee which had not his proper torment Thy skinne was torne with the stripes of the roddes thy head crowned with thornes thy feete and hands nayled thine eyes striken with the sight not onely of thine enemies but also of thy friends and namely of thy sorrowfull mother whom I behold at the foote of thy Crosse Our B. Lady at the foote of the Crosse and whome thou seest also striken in her soule with that sword of sorrow which good old Simeon did foretell thou seest her alas with an eye watered with teares and bloud these are the torments of thine eyes Thine eares are beaten with the blasphemies and mockeries of thy persecutors thy hart is afflicted with our afflictions thy backe loaden with the waight of our sinnes and finally Dauid did forsee thee in the light of his spirit which knew things to come he did contemplate thee in this Crosse oppressed with torments and filled with reproaches as a man forlorne without all help or force The reproache of men and the refuse of the people who preferred a murderer and a thiefe before the author of life a man who was thought to be forsaken and abandoned by God there hence it is that thy grand-father wrote that verse which thou camest to pronounce O sweet Redeemer My God my God why hast thou forsaken me wordes that very emphatically doe declare the rigour of thy affliction Deus D●●●meus Psal 21. Math. 27. Marc. 15. and with a diuine eloquence dost represent thee as forsaken of God yet by interrogation without affirming in apparence and outward shew not in truth For God had not forsaken thee yea he hath nothing so deere in heauē or earth as thee his onely Sonne which he testifyed at that time by the dole and mourning of the whole world when he commanded the sunne to eclipse when he made the moone loose her light the earth to tremble the rockes to riue the graues to open in signe of thy griefes and sorrowes and in detestatiō of the malice of thy tormentors Why the death of our Sauiour was so long before figured foretold It was therfore the enormity of thy torments which these words declared and not any forgetfullnes of thy Father Heere suffer me O my sweet Sauiour to aske thee why thou didst cause the tenor and forme of so many torments to be so liuely expressed and fortold and why thou wouldest endure them Hast thou foretold them to proue therby that thou wert God that thy death was not by chance but a voluntary charity a designement of thy wisedome and infinite bounty towards man made long before hand a mercy proiected in the closet and counsell of thy Eternity for who could so particularly foretell so many and so diuers actions happened in this tragedy that knew them not Onely God perceiueth forseeth future things Esa 41.13 And who could know them being so remote and so vnl●kely but only God but thy self to whose eye all things are present And who could haue belieued that thou wouldest loue vs so soone and so happily and wouldest endure so much for vs if thou hadst not giuen vs aduertisement before hand of all that thou didest suffer vpon the Crosse But why wouldest thou endure so much O the Redeemer of my soule yea why wouldst thou suffer death or any paine at all seeing to the Redemption of man it sufficed that thou wert made man Why our Sauiour suffered so much though thou hadst suffered nothing but liued in the glory of a rich King in commanding the whole world and taking homage of all thy creatures which is due vnto thee by al titles of souerainty Why O Lord making thy selfe man wouldest thou abase thy selfe vnder our basenes after thou hadst left all and insteed of riches pleasures and honours didst choose pouerty paine and humility didst lead a life which was no●hing but a continuall pennance thou wouldst besides suffer death the death of the Crosse that is most bitter in griefes and anguishes most cruell in torments most shamefull and ignominious in iniuries a death armed with the fury of all the powers of hell irritated with all the vices conspired together of all notable sinners Kings Princes souldiers Iudges Priests all sorts of people wicked The 1. cause to shew his loue to his Father The 2. to shew his loue to man proper to performe an exploite of enormous cruelty Why O Lord hast thou chosen this thorny way And this field so full of asperities Is it to shew thy exceeding loue to thy Father suffering for him in our behalf whatsouer could be suffered For it is the touchstone of affliction that maketh the sure proofe of firme friendship to any man Or is it moreouer to make man see the treasures of thy charity towards him sparing nothing for his saluation not onely making thy self poore to enrich vs infirme to fortify vs little to exalt vs but also giuing thy life the most precious gift which a man can giue for his friend and vndergoing death with a thousand torments to deliuer vs from eternall death with a plētifull abōdant fine of propitiation paiable to the diuine Iustice and therefore the same Prophet sayd that with our Lord is mercy and with him is found plentifull Redemption Hast thou not suffered so much to make man see the enormity of his sinne Psal 129. which must needs be purged with so precious a life painefull a death The 3. cause to shew the enormity of sinne My sinnes then are they that haue lifted thee vpon the Crosse they haue torne thy skinne they haue crowned thee with thornes they haue nayled thy hands and feete they haue entertained thee with gall and vineger O then my soule sinne no more for thy sinnes are the cause of this parricide bring no more forth the butchers of thy Redeemer after hauing receiued so many signes of his fauour towards thee Finally O gentle Lambe hast thou vndertaken and suffered this painfull and ignominious death To teach thy children how they must suffer 4. To giue vs example to suffer Giuing them an excellent patterne of thy life of thy death to imitate and to suffer for the honour of God and to carry his Crosse For seeing the head captaine is the formost in the fight and assalt seeing the King is the first hath the greatest part in paines and punishmēt
And as the Princes of the Church were visibly present at her departure so we may not doubt but that the most noble troopes of heauen were present also with Iesus comming himselfe Damasc de dorm it Virg. to receiue into his owne hands the soule of his glorious Mother being borne into heauen as the had first receiued him into her bosome being borne man into the world And heere Lazarus as if he had beene present in this noble company and had beheld with his owne eyes this heauenly starre ready to leaue the body and take her slight into heauen made this Apostrophe saying O my good Aduocate O faythfull Aduocate of all mortall men who in verity will call vpon thee I call vnto thee from the bottome of my hart and coniure thee by the great name of him who made thee great that it would please thee to succour thy poore suppliant frō thy throne of glory wherof thou goest now to take possession at the hand of thy Allmighty Sonne Obtayne of him for me O puissant Virgin what I demand of thee not gold nor siluer nor pleasures nor delights not renowne or glory of this life nor any other gift of this mortall world this is not the subiect of my suite O sacred Virgin but a feruent loue to his holy seruice a continuall exercise in his holy loue a resolute courage to suffer for his name a constant perseuerance in good workes vnto the last breath of my lyfe that my death may be of those that are precious in the sight of his Maiesty Diuers Farewells 2. A hunting 3. A supper 4. A knight saued a Priest carying his bowells in his hand 5. A spirituall discourse of hunting 6. Of hauking CHAP. XXIII THVS prayed Lazarus sighing and weeping Theodosius and Vincent ended at the same tyme and with the like affections Straight after they went to bid Tristram good morrow and whilst he made himselfe ready Lazarus got a breakfast ready After Tristram had sayd a few prayers they brake their fast togeather and had quickly done for it was too early to eate much Vincent payd their host for all for euery body Theodosius calling Tristram a part and taking his leaue of him Theodosius farewell I would I had the means quoth he to stay longer with you and to do you some seruice worthy of our friendship but seeing we must part I beseech you for the honour of him who hath called you from the fellowship of so dangerous a company as you were with and from certaine danger of death wherein we found you for the health of your owne soule for the loue and affection you beare me and that I beare vnto you that you will take to hart the execution of you purpose you made to forsake vice and to lead a life worthy of a man of a noble house God hath done you these fauours to giue you more if you vse these well And if you shall abuse them so much more rigorous will he be for your ingratitude how much the more liberall he hath beene to you of his mercy choose now for hereafter some estate or vocation wherein you may serue God and the publike profit there be inough such amongst Christians if you will follow armes you haue a faire field in the warres that are made against the Turke other enemies of God the Christiā faith there you may gaine a goodly crowne of imortality If you will serue God vnder the shadow of a peaceable quiet dwelling and at better wages you may enroll your selfe amongst the children of God in some religious house you know many you may choose the best You go now in Pilgrimage to Loreto aske deuoutly the assistāce of the Lady whom you go to visite that she will obtaine for you of her Sonne aboundant light to see and discerne what shall be most expedient for you and make you to touch and feele the breuity the inconstancy the vanity of this life the deceit of the world and worldly things the basenes of all earthly greatnes and to make you amorous and in loue of heauen This is the farewell which I leaue you for gage of my loue there Theodosius left Tristram answered him in few wordes Tristrā● farewell Most deere friend Theodosius I esteeme the two meetings wherein I met with you amongst the greatest fauours that I haue receiued of the prouidence of God for in the first God hath by you opened the way vnto the liberty of my soule and gaue me courage to vndertake that which hitherto I haue executed In this second meeting he hath by you also deliuered me from the rage of men and beasts hath made me see by your instruction now what is meete for me to do hereafter I promise you my deerest friend that with the grace of him that guideth me I will performe frō point to point the resolution I haue made by your aduice I haue some experience of what is past which is sufficient to harden me against the flattery of the world and make me take part els where I haue begunne to estrange and sequester my selfe from it and to perceiue what od● there is in seruing it him whome I adore I hope to remoue my selfe further from it to the measure of my trauaile and euery day to finde more and more tast and delight in the sweetnes of Vertue 〈◊〉 go ioyfully to Loreto with a firme hope that the B. Virgin will assist me make the bounty of her Sonne fauourable vnto me that I may choose what shall be best for his honour and myne owne saluation I beseech you remember me in your holy prayers as long as I shall be Pilgrime in this world I will carry in my hart the sweet memory of our cordiall and faithfull friendship Hauing sayd thus Theodosius taught him how he should carry himselfe in his pilgrimage how to pray and confesse and to vse other exercises of deuotion which Tristram learned with a wonderfull greedinesse and both beginning to weepe they imbraced ech other Tristram came after to Lazarus thanked him with a great affection for all his courtesies Lazarus agayne confessed himselfe obliged vnto him for his friendship and fauours afforded to his Cousin Theodosius in prison and in recompence thereof promised him all the seruice he could do him in France or els where as occasiō should be offered Tristram thanked him very humbly and made a reciprocall offer wheresoeuer he should meet him then imbraced him and so did Vincent Lazarus put about his necke a payre of beades like a scarfe for a noble chayne and gaue him three crownes the better halfe of their Viaticum Tristram tooke the beades as an honourable present but he refused the mony saying that it appertained not to Pilgrims to giue almes and seeing he was a Pilgrime he would begge At least quoth Lazarus Pilgrims may take it when it is giuen them and therfore you should not refuse it at
of the cleare vision and contemplation of their Creatour the cause of all beauties that are in heauen or earth and infinitly more beautifull then all other beauty put together Of the body He meditated in the second place of the glory which the bodies of the ●ust shall haue after the Resurrectiō which can not otherwise be declared but as the Apostle declareth the whole felicity That the eye hath not seene nor the eare heard nor the hart of man comprehended ● Cor. 2. what God hath prepared for those that loue h m he could say no more then in saying as he did that it is impossible to conceiue that felicty The scripture sayth that the iust shall shine like the sunne and compareth them to eagles Matt. 15. signifying the beauty agility of their body Our Sauiour to whose similitude we shall rise agayne came out of the graue that he rose out subtile impassible such in similitude shall our bodies be in such qualities shining Phil. 3.20 transparēt agile subtile penetrant and immortall heere withall euery particular part of the body shall haue a supernaturall beauty as now it hath a naturall with this difference that then all the body being transparent like christall all parts shall be visible in it as well the inward as the outward the bones the muscles the sinewes the veines the arteries the lungs the liuer the hart all shall be cleansed and cleared from all imperfectiō indewed with their proper beauty in propo●tion clearenes and colour This of Saphire that of Emeraldes one of Carbuncles another of Diamonds and aboue all shall be most adm rable those which haue beene employed in some speciall and peculiar seruice of the diuine Maiesty So the skinne of S. Bartholomew stead off for the faith shall shine with a particular beauty the armes and feete of S. Peter crucifyed the head of S. Paul cut of the tongues of true preachers the hands of Almoners the armes of the true souldiours of Iesus-Christ the eyes of chastity the hayres of virginity nothing shall be without recompence without excellency without particular glory Lazarus was plunged in this meditation and sayd O my soule if thou beest rauished meditating these beauties how great shall thy ioy be in enioying them O Lazarus what doost thou to deserue them What giuest thou to buy them What sufferest thou to gaine this honour And with what pace walkest thou to get the goale of this glory O soules redeemed with the precious bloud of Iesus thinke vpon these honours O Christian Dames who so highly esteeme the beauty of the body that not hauing it you would gladly purchase it with great summes of gold and siluer hauing it do hold it so deere tender it so carefully by art by gold by apparell by chaynes carkenets and iewels your beauty is nothing it is foule and ill fauoured in respect of this and if it were any thing you know well it shall finally perish eyther by some misfortune or by touch of sicknes or by age or surely by death Where is the beauty of Absalō of Lucrece of so many men women admired in the world Loue then the beauty of this Resurrection which shall be proper for euer vnto your bodies and to obtaine it loue now the beauty of your soules O my soule be thou amorous and in loue with this beauty O glorious Virgin O faithfull aduocate aduāced this faire and ioyfull day aboue all the thrones of the heauenly and happy spirits the wonder of all goodly creatures on earth whilst thou wert aliue the wonder of all the creatures in heauen for euer the honour of the triumphant Church the refuge of the militant the comfort of the afflicted the guide of wanderers helpe vs with thy graces and credit with him by whome thou wert this day carryed vp into heauen with the company of all the heauenly hostes Procure o most B. Virgin that we obtaine grace holily to liue vpon earth to the imitation of thy selfe and happily to dye to thy example and one day to enioy eternally the riches of the triumphant Resurrection in the Kingdome of thy Sonne Iesus 1. An exhortation to a sick person in agony of death 2. The affliction of Lazarus 3. His arriuall at his Fathers house 4. His farewell to his Father and to the world CHAP. XXV THVS Lazarus ended his prayer Theodosius and Vincent ended then also and had felt great inward ioy therein The steward came early to their chamber hauing made ready their breakfast but they would eate nothing saying it was to soone They desired him humbly to salute in their behalfe Monsieur the Marquesse the Abbot the Vicount the Baron his children and to assure them that they would pray to God for their prosperity The steward had closely put into Lazarus bagge ten Crownes wrapped in a paper with these words of the Marquesse owne writing Pray to God for the Marques which Lazarus found at night in his fathers house He imbraced the Steward with many thankes after they had sayd their Pilgrims prayers they went out of the Castle and hauing beene a while silent they began to talke Lazarus praised much the prudence and liberality of the Marques and of his brother the sincere and harty loue of his children full of humility and courtesy the true markes of true nobility as contrariwise pride and disdaine is a true token of a base and rude mynd he commended also greatly the modesty diligence of all the officers and seruants and tooke this for a sure signe of the Marquesse his vertue for commonly like maister like men and the subiects doe for the most part frame themselues after the fashions of their Lord. Theodosius sayd that he noted at supper a meruailous contentment of all in the answere that was made to Syre Cime and that he did neuer better perceiue the leuity obstinacy of heresy then in that man who sought nothing but to talke and shew himselfe though he shewed himselfe alwayes void of good learning Pride the Father of heresy Whereupon Lazarus sayd Pride is the Father of heresy and vanity is her Mistresse and therefore you may not meruaile to see an Heretike both proud and vayne togeather Wherefore then quoth Vincent doth not the Marquesse his nephew shew himselfe like his maister Because sayth Lazarus he is not so much an Heretike as bred and brought vp in heresy neuer hauing beene Catholike knowing nothing but what they haue giuen him to vnderstand without contradictiō it is well to be hoped that as he is of a noble tractable nature and of a goodly spirit that as soone as he shall haue free liberty to conferre with some learned man or cast his eyes vpon some learned booke he will discouer the deceits of these impostures which his maister hath commended vnto him for rules and maximes of his Religion will imbrace the truth of the Catholike fayth Surely sayd Vincent I longed much
this is twesday and on Saterday we had newes of your death God giue me grace quoth Lazarus well to dye and well to rise againe This being sayd they returned to the Castle Monsieur caused good almes to be giuen and Lazarus aduised Vincent to giue the steward the ten Crownes in his bagge to giue also in almes to the poore and the remaynder of their Viaticum Open house was kept all that day and the next to all commers they went quickly to supper and al supper time and after also was nothing but questions and answers and admirations About ten a clocke in the night the Pilgrimes tooke their leaue of the old man giuing him the good night and he to them They were brought euery one to their chamber their feet● were washed new chāge of apparell brought them to put on when they rose In the morning all the Pilgrimes made their meditations and communicated without omitting any of their accustomed exerses of deuotion A fortnight passed in diuers recreations namely in recounting the miracles and fauours of the B. Virgin the aduentures and accidents the encounters and dangers of their Pilgrimage in Palestine in Aegypt in Africa in Asia and in Europe since Pauline was prisoner who also related vnto Lazarus and his companions how he fell into the hands of the Saracenes and the manner how God deliuered him and conducted him home Theodosius returned to his Fathers house to take his blessing and after came backe to Lazarus Pauline was alwayes in his feruour of leauing the follies of the world and pressed Lazarus as much as he could to hasten that affaire as also Vincent Lazarus was glad to see all the house in good order and his sister who had beene widdow now three yeares like a good mistresse of the house gouerne the family insteed of her mother departed and in mynd to marry no more and his brother Francis full of prudence and piety honouring and solacing his father as much as could be desired of a Sonne so that he watched nothing but a fit houre to bid his father farewell fynding him one day as he desired he spake to him in this sort Lazarus his farewel to his Father and the World My most honourable Father and Lord by Gods fauour power I am returned from my seauen yeares voyage and vpon the point to beginne another longer then that with your leaue and blessing I beseech you to permit me vpon my departure solemnely to confesse and acknowledge that I am as much bound vnto you as euer was sonne to his father or subiect to his Lord and that I vse this confession to iustify the request I meane to make make it grātable I owe vnto you next to God all that I haue and all that I am for I am your Sonne and you are my Father by which title I owe you all And a Father not such as onely hauing begottē me and giuen me my body as other fathers to leaue me heyre of your earthly possessions The obligation of the Sonne to the Father without taking any care or very small of the saluation of my soule but like a true Father you haue nourished me in my childhood in the feare of God without sparing of any care or temporall meanes haue prouided me of the best and choisest maisters in Christendome hauing learned good literature vntill 18. yeares of age you made me learne to weare handle arm●s after the fashion of our Nobility of France in the best Vniuersities of E●rope After I was sent into Hungary to wars against the Turkes where I cōmanded three yeares with honorable successe of my trauailes contentment of the Captaine in whose cōpany I carried armes being returned from this voiage and no occasion presenting it self vnto me in our France honorable to imploy my desire and calling you were of opinion depriuing your selfe of me for loue of me that I should trauaile into the East that so I might learne vertue in the schoole of the world seeing diuers countries and diuers nations and you did condescend that my brother Pauline should go with me because he desired it and you caused vs to be furnished with honourable prouision of men and horse but I desired you to permit me to go trauaile as a Christian Pilgrime and namely to that noble place of Loreto and that enduring some paine for the loue of God and satisfaction of my sinnes I might winne heauē you praysed mine intention yet notwithstanding you recommended vs to certaine french Gentlemen which were in the East and made vs to take letters of Banke to help vs if we should be in necessity Then I declared vnto you as also did my brother Pauline the desire I had in my soule euer since my youth to leaue the world and to dedicate my selfe to the seruice of God a desire which hath alwayes increased in me and growne so much the more earnest feruent by how much the more clearely I did discouer the vanity of this life in euery vocation and learne that there was nothing stable vnder the heauens nothing more noble or worthy then to seeke euerlasting riches a desire which came not of my self but of God for whome I haue heard you often say that we must leaue Father and Mother and all It came also of you Syr by reason of the good instructiōs which you gaue me and had caused to be giuen me so that for all and euery way I am bound and obliged to you Behold then my request grounded vpon two good titles of the goodnes and will of God and of your vertue and merit towards me and this my desire is that for the honour of God whome your selfe honour aboue all things and for the holy loue you beare vnto me and haue shewed by a thousād benefits that it would please you to take in good part that without any longer delay I may leaue the world to consecrate my selfe to the seruice of him who hath called me to follow him and that giuing me your blessing you would crowne with this benefit all others that hitherto I haue receiued of you all which I will remember whilst my body shall breath and for the which I shall demaund of God with warme teares a recompence worthy of his diuine Maiesty The manner of life which I shall choose shall not make me leaue or forget the loue and respect which I owe vnto you but will make it more solide and firme for the counsels of God which teach vs to follow him neere are not contrary to his law which commaundeth to honour Father and Mother and Religion doth not destroy the law of nature but doth purify confirme and increase it And therefore thogh I should be absent in body yet I shall be alwaies present with you in spirit in what place soeuer the prouidence of God shall let me liue I shall alwayes remaine your most humble Sonne and Seruant and will put you in the