Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n desire_v speak_v valerius_n 30 3 15.9132 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A03207 The hierarchie of the blessed angells Their names, orders and offices the fall of Lucifer with his angells written by Tho: Heywood Heywood, Thomas, d. 1641.; Cecil, Thomas, fl. 1630, engraver. 1635 (1635) STC 13327; ESTC S122314 484,225 642

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

out of that Desart they fixed their eyes vpon three strange humane shapes of a fearefull and vnmeasurable stature in long loose gownes and habited after the manner of Mourners with blacke and grisly haire hanging ouer their shoulders but of countenance most terrible to behold Who calling and beckoning to them both with voice and gesture and they not daring to approch them they vsed such vndecent skipping and leaping with such brutish and immodest gestures that halfe dead with feare they were inforced to take them to their heeles and runne till at length they light vpon a poore countrey-mans cottage in which they were relieued and comforted Sabellicus deliuereth this discourse The father of Ludovicus Adolisius Lord of Immola not long after his decease appeared to a Secretarie of his in his journey whom he had sent vpon earnest businesse to Ferrara The Spectar or Sylvan Spirit being on horse-backe attyred like an huntsman with an Hawke vpon his fist who saluted him by his name and desired him to entreat his sonne Lodowicke to meet him in that very place the next day at the same houre to whom hee would discouer certaine things of no meane consequence which much concerned him and his estate The Secretarie returning and reuealing this to his Lord at first he would scarse giue credit to his report and jealous withall that it might be some traine laid to intrap his life he sent another in his stead to whom the same Spirit appeared in the shape aforesaid and seemed much to lament his sonnes diffidence to whom if hee had appeared in person hee would haue related strange things which threatned his estate and the means how to preuent them Yet desired him to commend him to his sonne and tel him That after two and twenty yeares one moneth and one day prefixed he should lose the gouernment of that City which he then possessed And so he vanished It happened iust at the same time which the Spectar had predicted notwithstanding his great care and prouidence That Philip Duke of Mediolanum the same night besieged the City and by the helpe of Ice it being then a great frost past the Moat and with ladders scaled the wall surprised the city and tooke Lodowicke prisoner Fincelius remembreth vnto vs That in the yeare 1532 a Nobleman of his country had commanded a countreyman a Tenant of his with whom he was much offended either to bring home to his Mannor house a mighty huge Oke which was newly felld betwixt that and Sun-set or he should forfeit his time and the next day be turned out of his cottage The poore husbandman bringeth his cart to the place but looking vpon the massie timber and finding it a thing vnpossible to be done he sits down wrings his hands and falls into great lamentation When presently appeared before him one of these Spirits in the shape of a laboring man and demanding him the cause of his sorrow he was no sooner resolued but If that be all saith the Diuell follow me and I will saue thee the forfeiture of thy Leafe Which he no sooner said but he tooke the huge Oke boughes branches and all and threw it vpon his shoulder as lightly as if it had beene a burthen of Firres or Broome and bearing it to the house cast it crosse the gate which was the common entrance into the house and there left it The Gentleman returning towards night with his friends from hawking spying the doore barricadoed commanded his seruants to remoue the tree But forcing themselues first to stir it then to hew it with axes and lastly to set it on fire and finding all to be in vaine the master of the Mannor was inforced to haue another doore cut out in the side of his house to let his Ghests in for at the backe gate hee had vowed not to enter hauing before made a rash Oath to the contrarie By the aid of these Spirits as Caspinianus giueth testimonie the Bulgarians gaue the Romans a great ouerthrow in the time of the Emperour Anastasius The like the Huns did to the French King Sigebert defeating him notwithstanding the oddes of his great and puissant Armie Of this kinde those were said to be who when the Poet Simonides was set at a great feast came like two yong men and desired to speake with him at the gate Who rising in haste from the table to know their businesse was no sooner out of the roome but the roofe of the hall fell suddenly and crushed all the rest to pieces he onely by this meanes escaping the ruin Those Spirits which the Greekes cal Paredrij are such as haunt yong men maids and pretend to be greatly in loue with them yet many times to their hurts and dammage Mengius speaketh of a Youth about sixteene yeares of age who was admitted into the Order of Saint Francis whom one of these Spirits did so assiduately haunt that hee scarce could forbeare his company one instant but visibly he appeared to him sometimes like one of the Friers belonging to the house sometimes one of the seruants and sometimes againe he would personate the Gouernour Neither was he onely seene of the Youth himselfe whom he pretended so much to loue but of diuers of the Domesticks also One time the Youth sent this Spirit with a Present of two Fishes vnto a certaine Monke who deliuered them to his own hands and brought him backe a commendatorie answer The same Mengius in the selfe same booke speaketh likewise of a faire yong Virgin that dwelt in a Noblemans house of Bonnonia and this saith he happened in the yere 1579. haunted with the like Spirit who whithersoeuer she went or came stirred not from her but attended on her as her Page or Lackey And if at any time vpon any occasion her Lord or Lady had either chid or strooke her he would reuenge that iniury done to her vpon them with some knauish tricke or other Vpon a time hee pretending to be extremely angry with her catched her by the gowne and tore it from head to heele which shee seeming to take ill at his hands hee in an instant sowed it vp so workeman-like that it was not possible to discerne in what place hee had torne it Againe she being sent downe into the cellar to draw wine he snatcht the candle out of her hand and cast it a great distance from her by which occasion much of the wine was spilt this he confest he did only to be reuenged on them who the same day before threatened her Neither could he by any exorcismes be forced to leaue her company till at length shee was persuaded to eat so often as she was forced to do the necessities of nature and thereby she was deliuered from him Another of these Paredrij haunted a Virgin of the same City who was about the age of fifteene yeares who would doe many trickes in the house sometimes merrily and as often vnhappily
mayst resolue mee how thou shalt be re-created againe Obserue how the Light this day failing shineth againe tomorrow and how the Darknesse by giuing place succeedeth againe in it's vicissitude The Woods are made leauelesse and barren and after grow greene and flourish The Seasons end and then begin the Fruits are first consumed and then repaired most assuredly the Seeds prosper not and bring forth before they are corrupted and dissolued All things by perishing are preserued all things from destruction are regenerated And thou ô Man thinkest thou that the Lord of the Death and the Resurrection will suffer thee therefore to dye that thou shalt altogether perish Rather know That wheresoeuer thou shalt be resolued or what matter soeuer shall destroy exhaust abolish or reduce thee to nothing the same shall yeeld thee vp againe and restore thee For to that God the same nothing belongs who hath all things in his power and prouidence The whole frame of heauen saith Saint Ambrose in Psal. 119 God made and established with one hand but in the creation of Man he vsed both He made not the Heauens to his Similitude but Man He made the Angels to his Ministerie but Man to his Image Saint Augustine super Ioan. Serm. 18. saith One is the life of Beasts another of Men a third of Angels The life of irrational Brutes desireth nothing but what is terrene the life of Angels onely things coelestiall the life of Man hath appetites intermediate betwixt Beasts and Angels If he liueth according to the flesh he leadeth the life of Beasts if according to the Spirit hee associateth himselfe with Angels Hugo in Didasc lib. 1. speaking of the birth of Man saith That all Creatures whatsoeuer Man excepted are bred and born with naturall defences against injuries and discommodities as the Tree is preserued by the Barke the Bird is couered with her Feathers the Fish defended with his Skales the Sheepe clad with his Wooll the Herds and Cattell with their Hides and Haire the Tortoise defended with his Shell and the skin of the Elephant makes him fearelesse of the Dart. Neither is it without cause that when all other Creatures haue their muniments and defences borne with them Man onely is brought into the World naked and altogether vnarmed For behoofull it was that Nature should take care of them who were not able to prouide for themselues But Man borne with Vnderstanding had by his natiue defects the greater occasion offered to seeke out for himselfe that those things which Nature had giuen to other Animals freely he might acquire by his Industry Mans reason appearing more eminent in finding out things of himselfe than if they had freely bin bestowed vpon him by another From which ariseth that Adage Ingeniosa fames omnes excuderit Artes. To the like purpose you may thus read in Chrisostome vpon Mathew God hath created euerie sensible Creature armed and defended some with the swiftnesse of the feet some with clawes some with feathers some with hornes some with shells c. but he hath so disposed of Man by making him weake that he should acknowledge God to be his onely Strength that being compelled by the necessitie of his infirmitie he might still seek vnto his Creator for supply and succour To come to the Ethnycks Solon being asked What Man was made answer Corruption in his birth a Beast in his life and Wormes meat at his death And Silenus being surprised by Mydas and demanded of him What was the best thing which could happen to Man after a long pause and being vrged by the King for an answer burst out into these words The best thing in my opinion that Man could wish for is not to be borne at all And the next thing vnto that is Being borne to be soone dissolued For which answer he was instantly released and set at libertie Phavorinus was wont to say That Men were partly ridiculous partly odious partly miserable The Ridiculous were such as by their boldnesse and audacitie aspired to great things beyond their strength The Odious were such as attained vnto them the Miserable were they who failed in the atchieuing of them Stoeb Serm. 4. King Alphonsus hearing diuers learned men disputing of the miserie of Mans life compared it to a meere Comedie whose last Act concluded with death And saith he no such is held to be a good Poet who doth not wittily and worthily support his Scoenes with applause euen to the last catastrophe Aristotle the Philosopher being demanded What Man was made answer The example of Weakenesse the spoile of Time the sport of Fortune the image of Inconstancie the ballance or scale of Enuy and Instabilitie Stobae Serm. 96. Man saith an other hath not power ouer miseries but miseries ouer him and to the greatest man the greatest mischiefes are incident Cicero saith That to euery man belong two powers a Desire and an Opinion the first bred in the body acciting to pleasure the second bred in the Soule inuiting to goodnesse And that man saith Plato who passeth the first part of his life without something done therein commemorable and praise-worthy ought to haue the remainder of his life taken from him as one vnworthy to liue From the Philosophers we come next to the Poets We reade Homer in his Iliads to this purpose interpreted Quale foliorum genus tale hominum c. As of Leaues is the Creation Such of Man 's the Generation Some are shak'd off by the winde Which strew'd vpon the earth we finde And when the Spring appeares in view Their places are supply'd with new The like of Mankinde we may say Their time fulfil'd they drop away Then they the Earth no sooner strow But others in their places grow Claudian writeth thus Etenim mortalibus ex quo Terra caepta coli nunquam sincera bonorum c. To mortall men by whom the earth began First to be cultur'd there is none that can Say hee 's sincerely happy or that Lot Hath design'd him a temper without spot Him to whom Nature giues an honest face The badnesse of his manners oft disgrace Him whom endowments of the Minde adorne Defects found in the body make a scorne Such as by War their noble fames encrease Haue prov'd a very pestilence in Peace Others whom peacefull bounds could not containe We oft haue knowne great fame by Armes to gaine He that can publique businesse well discharge Suffers his priuat house to rome at large And such as fault can with another finde To view their owne defects seeme dull and blinde He that created all and He alone Distributes all things but not all to one Iacobus Augustus Thuanus in his Title Homo Cinis you may reade thus Disce Homo de tenui Constructus pulvere qua te Edidit in lucem conditione Deus c. Learne ô thou Man from smallest dust translated On what condition God hath thee created Though thou this day in Gold
yeare 1548 the Chancellor caused his Ring in the publique market place to be layd vpon an Anvil and with an iron hammer beaten to pieces Mengius reporteth from the relation of a deare friend of his a man of approued fame and honestie this historie In a certain towne vnder the jurisdiction of the Venetians one of these praestigious Artists whom some call Pythonickes hauing one of these Rings in which he had two familiar Spirits exorcised and bound came to a Predicant or preaching Frier a man of sincere life and conuersation and confessed vnto him that hee was possessed of such an inchanted Ring with such Spirits charmed with whom he had conference at his pleasure But since he considered with himselfe that it was a thing dangerous to his Soule and abhominable both to God and man he desired to be clearely acquit thereof and to that purpose hee came to receiue of him some godly counsell But by no persuasion would the Religious man be induced to haue any speech at all with those euill Spirits to which motion the other had before earnestly solicited him but admonished him to cause his Magicke Ring to be broken that to be done with all speed possible At which words the Familiars were heard as it were to mourne and lament in the Ring and to desire that no such violence might be offered vnto them but rather than so that it would please him to accept of the Ring and keepe it promising to do him all seruice and vassallage of which if he pleased to accept they would in short time make him to be the most famous and admired Predicant in all Italy But he perceiuing the Diuels cunning vnder this colour of courtesie made absolute refusall of their offer and withall conjured them to know the reason why they would so willingly submit themselues to his patronage After many euasiue lies and deceptious answers they plainly confessed vnto him That they had of purpose persuaded the Magition to heare him preach that by that sermon his conscience being pricked and galled he might be weary of the Ring and being refused of the one be accepted of the other by which they hoped in short time so to haue puft him vp with pride and heresie to haue precipitated his soule into certaine and neuer-ending destruction At which the Church-man being zealously inraged with a great hammer broke the Ring almost to dust and in the name of God sent them thence to their own habitations of darknesse or whither it pleased the higher Powers to dispose them Of this kinde doubtlesse was the Ring of Gyges of whom Herodotus maketh mention by vertue of which he had power to walke inuisible who by the murther of his Soueraigne Candaules maried his Queene and so became King of Lydia Such likewise had the Phocensian Tyrant who as Clemens Stromataeus speaketh by a sound which came of it selfe was warned of all times seasonable and vnseasonable in which to mannage his affaires who notwithstanding could not bee forewarned of his pretended death but his Familiar left him in the end suffering him to be slain by the Conspirators Such a Ring likewise had one Hieronimus Chancellor of Mediolanum which after proued to be his vntimely ruine Concerning the mutation or change of Sex which some haue attributed to the fallacies of the Diuell it is manifest that they haue been much deceiued therein since of it many naturall reasons may be giuen as is apparant by many approued histories Phlegon in his booke De Mirabil Longev telleth vs That a virgin of Smyrna called Philotis the same night that she was maried to a yong man those parts which were inuerted and concealed began to appeare and shee rose in the morning of a contrarie sex As likewise That in Laodicea a city of Syria one AEteta after the same manner rose from her husbands side a yong man and after altered her name to AEtetus at the same time when Macrinus was President of Athens and L. Lamia and AElianus Veter were Consuls in Rome In the time that Ferdinand the first was King of Naples one Ludovicus Guarna a citisen of Salern had fiue daughters of which the two eldest were called Francisca and Carola either of which at fifteene yeares of age found such alteration in themselues that they changed their foeminine habits and names also the one being called Franciscus the other Carolus In the reigne of the same King the daughter of one Eubulus being deliuered vnto an husband returned from him altered in her sex sued for her dowerie and recouered it Amatus Lucitanus testifieth that in the town of Erguira distant some nine leagues from Couimbrica there liued a Nobleman who had a daughter named Maria Pachecha who by the like accident prouing to be a yong man changed her habit and called her selfe Manuel Pachecha Who after made a voiage into the Indies and became a valiant souldier attaining to much wealth and honour and returning married a Lady of a noble Family but neuer attained to haue issue but had an effoeminat countenance to his dying day The like Livy remembreth of a woman of Spoleta in the time of the second Punicke war But a story somewhat stranger than these is related by Anthonius Torquinada That not far from the city Beneventum in Spain a Countrey-man of a meane fortune married a wife who because she was barren vsed her very roughly insomuch that shee lead with him a most discontented life Whereupon one day putting on one of her husbands suits to disguise her self from knowledge she stole out of the house to proue a more peaceable fortune elsewhere and hauing been in diuers seruices whether the conceit of her mans habit or whither Nature strangely wrought in her but she found a strange alteration in her selfe insomuch that she who had been a wife now had a great desire to do the office of an husband and married a woman in that place whither she had retyred her selfe Long she kept these things close to her selfe till in the end one of her familiar acquaintance trauelling by chance that way and seeing her to be so like vnto that woman whom hee before knew demanded of her If she were not brother to the wife of such a man who had forsaken his house so many yeares since To whom vpon promise of secrecy she reuealed all according to the circumstances before rehearsed Examples to this purpose are infinite let these suffice for many A strange Tale is that which Phlegon the freed-man of Hadrianus reporteth of which he protests himselfe to haue bin eye witnesse Philemium saith he the daughter of Philostratus and Charitus fell deepely inamoured of a yong man called Machates who at that time ghested in her fathers house Which her parents tooke so ill that they excluded Machates from their family At which she so much grieued that soone after she died and was buried Some six moneths after the yong man returning
to this purpose and by me thus paraphrased Now of the Forrest trees all which are thine Thou Lord hast chosen to thy selfe one Vine And out of all the spacious kingdomes knowne One Piece of earth which thou dost call thine owne Of all the Sommer floures th' earth doth yeeld Pickt out one Lilly ' midst of all thy Field From all the Seas that compasse in the vast And far-spread earth one Riuer tooke thou hast Of all built Cities in thy choise affection Thou of one Sion hast made free election Of all created Fowles swift or slow flighted Thou in one onely Doue hast been delighted Of all the Cattell that the pastures keepe Thou hast appointed to thy selfe one Sheepe Out of all Nations vnder this vast Frame Cull'd one alone to call vpon thy Name And to that People thou a Law hast giv'n Which from grosse earth transcendeth them to heav'n Notwithstanding these and the many glorious Miracles visible to the eyes of their fore-fathers which were not onely deliuered vnto their posteritie by tradition but by the mouth and pen of the Holy-Ghost in the person of Moses and many other Prophets yet of their refractorie condition stiffe-necked rebellion their idolatries and vtter falling off from their powerfull and mighty Preseruer numerous nay almost infinite are the testimonies in Holy-Writ Opposit vnto Pride is that most commendable Vertue of Humilitie which Pontanus calleth the Sister of true Nobility Blessed are the Poore in Spirit saith our Sauior for theirs is the kingdom of God And Prov. 16. It is better to be humble with the Meek than to diuide the spoile with the Proud Againe saith our blessed Sauiour Suffer these little Ones to haue accesse vnto me and forbid them not for to such belong the Kingdome of Heauen For whosoeuer shall humble himself as one of these little ones he shall be great in the kingdom of heauen Againe Iudg. The prayers of the Humble and Gentle haue beene euer pleasing vnto thee And Psal. 112. Who is like the Lord our God who dwelleth in the most high place and from thence regardeth the Humble both in heaven and earth lifting the Weake from the earth and raising the Poore from the Dung-hill that he may place him with Princes And 1. Pet. 5. Be ye humbled vnder the mighty hand of God that yee may be exalted in the time of Visitation Saint Augustine de Verb. Dom. saith Discite à me non Mundum fabricare c. Learne of me not how to build the world nor create things visible or inuisible not to work miracles and raise the Dead vnto life but seeke to imitate me in my humility and lowlinesse of heart If thou thinkst in thine heart to erect a building in great sublimitie consider first the foundation which is layd in humilitie And of the same Vertue he thus proceedeth O medicine vnto vs most profitable all tumors repressing all defects supplying all superfluities rejecting all depraued things correcting What Pride can be cured but by the Humility of the Son of God What Couetousnesse healed but by the Pouerty of the Sonne of God What Wrath be appeased but by the Wisdome of the Sonne of God Againe High is the countrey but low is the way and therefore let not him that desireth to trauell thither refuse the path which leadeth vnto it In Sermon de Superbia hee vseth these words O holy and venerable Humilitie Thou causedst the Sonne of God to descend into the womb of the blessed Virgin Mary thou didst wrap him in vile and contemptible garments that he might adorne vs with the Ornaments of Vertue Thou didst circumcise him in the flesh that hee might circumcise vs in the Spirit Thou madest him to be corporeally scourged that he might deliuer vs from those scourges due vnto vs for our sinnes Thou didst crowne him with Thornes that he might crowne vs with his eternall Roses Thou madest him to be feeble and weake who was the Physition of vs all c. Greg. in Explic. 3. Psal. Poeniten saith That he which gathereth Vertues without Humilitie is like one that carrieth dust in the winde And Saint Bernard Lib. de Consider Stable and permanent is the foundation of Vertue if layd vpon Humilitie otherwise the whole building is nothing but ruin Leo in Serm. de Nativ Christ. saith In vaine are we called Christians if wee be not Imitators of Christ who therefore named himselfe the Way That the conuersation of the Master might be a president vnto the Disciple that the Seruant might chuse that humility which the Master followed who is Christ. Hugo de Claus. Animae telleth vs That in the spirituall Building the foundation below is placed in Humilitie the bredth thereof is disposed in Charitie the height thereof is erected in Good-workes it is tiled and couered by Diuine protection and perfected in the length of Patience Bernard in Vita Laurent Iustiniani compareth Humilitie to a Torrent which as in the Summer it is temperat and shallow but in the Spring and Winter inundant and raging so Humilitie in prosperitie is milde and gentle but in aduersitie bold and magnanimious Chronatus Episcop de octo Beatitud saith That as it is not possible in any ascent to attaine vnto the second step or staire before thou hast passed the first so no man can attain vnto Humilitie and gentlenesse till he be first poore in spirit Thriverus in Apothegm 200. vseth these words As the deeper a Vessell is the more it receiueth so euery man is capable of so much grace as he is before possessed of Humilitie The Hierogliphycke of this Cardinall Vertue according to Pierius Valerius Lib. 35. is a Bended Knee borrowed it seemeth from that of Horrace Ius imperiaque Phraates Caesaris accepit genibus minor A Fable to this purpose I haue read and not altogether improper to be here inserted Amongst a many tall straight faire and well growne trees there was one low crooked and not a little deformed which was hourely derided by the rest insomuch that it grew wearie both of it's place and life But not long after the Lord of the soile hauing occasion to build he caused all those goodly Timbers to be felld and laid prostrat on the earth which being soone after remoued this despised and dejected shrub as a thing held meerely vnseruiceable was left standing alone neither obscured from the comfortable beams of the Sunne nor couered from the chearefull and tempestiue showres of the Heauens At which she began to acknowledge the happinesse of her humility since that which she apprehended to be her griefe and miserie returned in the end to be the sole meanes of her preseruation and safetie Not much forrein vnto this is that counsell which Ovid gaue his Friend Trist. lib. 3. Eleg. 4. Vsibus edocto si quicquid credis Amico Vive tibi longe nomina magna vita Vive tibi quantumque potes perlustria vita Saevum praelustri fulmen ab