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A02361 A combat betwixt man and death: or A discourse against the immoderate apprehension and feare of death. Written in French by I. Guillemard of Champdenier in Poictou. And translated into English by Edw. Grimeston Sargeant at Armes, attending the Commons House in Parliament; Duel de l'homme et de la mort. English Guillemard, Jean.; Grimeston, Edward. 1621 (1621) STC 12495; ESTC S103559 187,926 790

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man is as the world aboue the Moone alwayes cleere and without clouds But what is this ioy it is saith Seneca peace concord greatnesse of spirit ioyned to mildnesse it is to bee content with things present whatsoeuer and to become a friend to his affaiers It is sayth D●…critus to haue his spirit free from feare and the religious Doctor Saint Ambrose will say That tranquillity of conscience and assured innocency make the life happy Finally Salomon will cry out than a ioyful spirit is a delightful banket and contrariewise a troubled minde thinkes alwayes of things which are distastfull mournfull Trust not to these mela●…cholie men to whom adu●… choler makes white things seeme blacke those that are happy vnfortunate and to feare where there is nothing but subiect of assurance Life is as we gouerne it good or bad pleasant or displeasant and therefore Epictetus sayed f●…ly That euery thing had two ends and that by the one it was easie to beare by the other combersome If your brother saith hee hath done you wrong doe not consider of ●…t of that side that he hath done you wrong for then it is vneasie to beare but of the other as he is your brother that you haue beene nourished together and then you wil find it very tolerable Du Vair who like the industrious Be●… hath gathered summarily together the flowers of the Stoicks writes that nature may say vnto vs as the Philosopher did vnto his Disciples What I present vnto you with the right hand you take with the left your choice tends alwayes to the worst you leaue what is good and imbrace the bad Let vs take things by the good end wee shall finde that there is subiect of loue in that which we hate For there is not any thing in the world but is for the good of man As for example you haue a sute with your neighbour when you thinke of him your sute coms to minde and then you curse him and are disquieted the reason is you take it by the bad end but take it by the other and represent vnto your selfe that he is a man like to you that God by a resemblance of nature calls you to a mutuall affection that he is in the same Citie in the same Temple and doth communicate in the same Lawes the same prayers and the same Sacraments with thee that you are bound to succour one another reciprocally Finally the Stoicks hold for a Maxime that a wise man is exempt from iniurie either to giue or receiue he cannot doe any being borne onely to ayde hee receiues none for that being grounded vpon vertue hee valiantly contemnes all reproch wrong so as hee is inuulnerable as Seneca saith not for that hee is not strooke but for that as hee saith hee cannot bee hurt Answer I know that the Stoicks with whose fethers our obiector decks himselfe haue sought to frame their wise man of that fashion that he should not be capable of any ill but continually possest of a sollide ioy but whatsoeuer they haue purtrayed was but a vaine picture without effect or truth like vnto the Chimeres and Centaures Who wil beleeue that a wise man put vpon the racke feeles no paine Who can say that the life of Metellus is not more to be desired then that of Regulus turned vp and downe in a pipe full of nailes and that they are equall fauours That a wise man will ioyfully holde his hand burning in the fire like vnto Mutius Scaeuola Finally that a wise man beeing burnt tormented and put in Phalaris burning bull will notwithstanding say O what a sweete life is this Let them do what they list I care not These and such like are the Paradoxes of these Philosophers who as Cicero saith carry admiration in their foreheads but beeing strip't naked they giue cause of laughter of themselues as Plutarke saith they confesse their absurditie and vanity And in truth who wold not laugh when among other things they say that only a wise man is truely a king rich beautifull yea though he were a slaue a begger or a Zopirus with his nose cut off c. But let vs answere punctually to the reasons obiected The Sarazin Abdala vnderstands that by some excellent relickes of thesoule man is admirable to the world but hee doth not touch his felicitie for hee hath nothing of that remayning since his transgressiō he is continually here below miserable in euery degree He had the gift of free will to haue enioyed his owne happynesse if hee had would but for that hee abused it he lost himselfe and his liberty saith S. Augustine He rules ouer all creatures but a miserable domination in the which the meanest subiect exceeds his Lord in felicitie and twise miserable in the which the Lord suffers more miserie then the most wretched of his subiects Reade Plutarke and then Homer but aboue all the Spirit of God in the holy writ who knowes what wee are and qualifies man with no other titles but of darkenesse and foolishnesse to thinke a good thought of himselfe a brutish man who comprehends not the things which are of the Spirit and cannot vnderstand them for they are spiritually discerned Finally hee shewes him to be weake sicke dead in his sinnes a vipers broode not able to doe any good thing for that he is bad and by consequence cannot take part but with Satan the prince of darkenesse and the father of lyes and all iniquitie Moreouer if Seneca and others to retayne men in life teach them what they ought to doe it is no argument that they diuert them from death when shee shall present herselfe vnto them but contrariwise Seneca doth in a manner generally protest That death hath no discommoditie that it is not onely without ill but without the feare of ill and that it is a foolish thing to feare it c. As for life hee calls it deceitful and vicious for that it is alwayes imperfect But see how vpon this question hee opens his heart to sorrowfull Martia for the death of her sonne O ignorant men saith he of their owne miseries which doe not commend death as the goodlyest inuention of nature For whether that she holds felicitie inclosed or excludes calamitie be it that shee ends the satietie and wearinesse of old age or that shee carries away youth in his flower in the hope of better things be it that shee calls vnto her the most vigorous age before that it hath mounted the roughest steps yet is she to all men their end to some a remedy to some a vow and those are more bound vnto her to whom she coms without calling He goes on but he cuts off his discourse to come to the end of his life which was cut off for being commanded by Nero to dye without any delay hee willed his Surgeon to open a veine in his foote holding it in a bason of warme
hath such circumstances as it is very horrible of it selfe Therefore it is not possible but it should terrifie MAny dissembling the feare which they haue of death when they come to thinke and speake of some kinde of sicknesse drawing neere vnto death and especially of the plague they cannot finde blacke enough to set it forth nor horrour sufficient to abhorre it But let vs see what reasons they can pretend It was a great scourge say they of the wrath of God executed vpon the people for Dauids ambition so as there dyed 70. thousand in lesse then one day threatned in the Apocalipse to embrace the fourth part of the earth It is a terrible thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God Moreouer it is an vnspeakeable paine to be burnt with the sore to bee strangled with the plague c. Thirdly it is a sorrow which exceeds all extreames to bee abandoned of wife Father mother children friends and kinsfolkes Finally it is a perpetuall griefe to die and haue no meanes to settle his estate Answer These reasons are but goodly shewes to shaddow the feare they haue of death and the shame which lies lurking in their hearts for seeing they must leaue this life what doth it import them whether it be by water or by land or by any other meanes As for the first reason Dauid wil answere for vs that we must not iudge rashly of the poore man in his torment His son will adde that none can discerne whether he be worthy of loue or hatred by that which happens exteriorly The Apostle will say The iudgements of God beginne by his owne house Iob the Apostles the Martyrs will manifest by their examples that they whom God loues are most chastized in this world Finally Iesus Christ will teach vs That in the blind man so borne neither his sinne nor the sinne of his father and mother was the cause that hee was borne blind that neither the Galileans so cruelly intreated by Pilate nor the Iewes smothered in the ruines of the Tower which was in Silo were more guilty then those which had escaped this disaster A faithfull man is not tempted aboue his strength if affliction abounds consolation will superabound He dies happily which layes downe his soule with a setled spirit feeling in himselfe the peace grace of God through Iesus Christ in the remission of his sinnes And it is a thousand times better to be quickned by the light affliction of the plague and to carry away an inestimable weight of glory then to be smothered in the delights of sinne and in danger of a finall ruine both of body and soule The example produced of Dauid makes for this against the Obiector Who sinned Dauid in ambitiously numbring his people who is punished the people the Grecians are plagued for the foolish resolutions of their Kings sayd the ancient Prouerbe But where is the duty of Iustice will you say God knowes it his will is the rule of equitie it is iust seeing God will haue it so And on the other side it was not the wil of God for that it is not right But we commonly see that the plague layes hold of the poorer sort whereupon Galen calls it Epidemique that is to say popular whereof the baites are famine sluttishnesse and stinkes rather then the chiefe of the Towne infected who notwithstanding will be found much more faulty before God Looke vpon that long plague which vnder the Empire of Gallus and Volusian continued 15. whole yeares and which comming out of Ethiopia vnpeopled all the Romane prouinces reade it and iudge of it As for that pretended paine wee must not apprehend it to be greater then in simple swellings and Impostumes or in Cauteries the poison rather mollifying then increasing the paine But there are two kinds of plagues as Phisitions do obserue the one is simple when as the spirits onely are infected by a venemous and contagious ayre which hath bin suckt in by the mouth or the nose or that hath gotten insensibly into the body by the pores of the skinne so as a man shal be stroken that shal not feele any thing it may be he shall be more faint and heauy then of custome but with very little heate and alteration so as hee shall bee sometimes smothered vp before he feeles any paine The other is a compound when as the Contagion seazing the spirits doth communicate his poyson with the foure humours infects them and alters them but without paine for these humours are incapable yet these humours beeing infected and altered infect and alter the parts of the body in the which they reside as in the head the heart and elsewhere and there growes the paine but no greater then in Feauers and swoundings yea lesse by reason of the putrid vapour which doth dull and mortifie the members so as the paine is no more then a small incision yea lesse then the pricking of a pinne The greatest is a certaine inflammation in the hypocondriake parts in the bowells which enuiron the heart for as poyson is the capitall enemy of life so this enemy of life strikes furiously at the heart The worst is a certaine heate whereof the Patient complaines as Thucidides obserues in the plague which happened at Athens but what paine in this heat that is not greater in the burning of a little finger or in a Tertian Ague But if your opinion will not yeelde to these reasons inquire of them which haue beene toucht with this infection they will answer that feare hath beene their greatest paine and if they had been assured of recouery they had felt no paine I know you will reply that there is a difference betwixt them that recouer and them that die But I will answer you that the paine is equall yea greater in them that recouer then in them that dye they that recouer are more vigorous and the vicious humour stings them and is more sensible then in them that are weaker when the parts lesse able to resist are sooner gotten and lost As a Leper hauing his flesh infected with Leprosie and rottennesse feeles little or no paine in the most sensible pricking euen so a weake woman hath lesse torment in her deliuerie although the throwes bee more dangerous wherein appeares the admirable wisedome of Nature which doth not afflict the afflicted Now followeth the third reason obiected the abandoning of wife kinsfolkes and friends Answer It is an accident which happens seldome or not at all this day hardly can that which life hath vnited by marriage consanguinity and friendship be dissolued in death Moreouer a wise man who should haue learned to bee content with himselfe in life should not be discontented if he die alone It was a constant Doctrinein the resolute Stoicks that he is happy that is content with himselfe and depends not vpon any other man nor vpon any thing in the world but like Iupiter liues and moues of himselfe rests in
〈◊〉 to say death i●… we take it as the argument giues it I answere That if there bee a great difference not to haue beene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be he ha●… the 〈◊〉 ●…nefit that is no more for hee hath this aboue●… the other that he hath enioyed life and the fruits thereof which the other ha●… vnles●… you will deny that h●… which hath bin admitted into the Kings Chamber 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ass●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…th not any 〈◊〉 ab●…ue ●…im that hath not beene admitted at all and that hee which hath beene a Maior or a Consul in a free Citie is not more honored then hee which hath neuer beene But the Obiector supposeth one thing which is not That this life is adorned which most excellent gifts being full of most sharpe agonies as is iustified in the 18. Argument and the●…fore I deny the consequence of his Minor and to prooue the falsehood I produce that which Salomon saith Eccles. 4. that hee more esteemes the dead then those which bee liuing yea hee esteemes him that hath not beene more happy then the one or the other Secondly the losse of fight of sences of the habit of s●…iences is grieuous to a liuing man who hath enioyed them for a time for that he is capable of sorrow but to make it a conclusion to a dead man who should be more grieued to haue lost all this and life it selfe there is no consequence for that death is incapable of sorrow and mourning wherein the Prouerbe of Hesiodus may be verrified The moitie is more then the whole the losse of sences and reason are more grieuous and more to bee lamented then the priuation of life Thirdly I deny that man dying loseth any thing hee was but Vsufructuarie of life God the proprietarie demands it and he restores it what losse Thou art not angry if any curious sercher of the most exquisite rarities of the world if hauing suffered thee to see his Cabinet he afterwards drawes the curtaine thou wilt take it patiently how great soeuer thou art If the Seigneurie of Venice hath done the●… the honour to see their stately treasure haue dazled thine eyes with the glistering of those 14. Pearles of their Ducall Bonet of the 12. Crownes of gold and of other most rich ornaments wouldest thou not take it patiently to giue place after some houres Know then that it is reasonable that the Lord of Lords hauing brought thee into his house there to behold the golden studdes which adorne the firmament to obserue the diuers motions of the 7. Planets and among the rest of the Sunne the eye of the world to touch and comprehend the 4. Elements and other infinite goodly creatures if it be his pleasure and hee make signe vnto thee to giue place to others that suruiue it is reason thou shouldest dislodge and thanke the Lord for his fauour Finally I maintayne that the depth and horrour is as great to reason to liue perpetually here without end the same life which wee now breathe for our discourse is of this life as great I say and greater then to bee dead depth for who can perfectly comprehend a life without end horrour for who would alwayes liue with the feare of a hundred millions of horrible miseries which may happen in a hundred millions of yeeres not making mention of the vices and sinnes whervnto man is subiect which a good man should feare more then death As for the authoritie of S. Paul it is not nature only but the heauenly grace which makes him to speake so and they that shall be partakers of this grace in the same degree may braue death with S. Paule and say vnto him O death where is thy victory O graue where is thy sting And if S. Paule in this place did contemplate in spirit the excellent ornaments which hee had seene in the third heauen in his extacie and on the other side toucht to the quicke with the venemous sting of sinne he makes no mention but of the simple deliuerance as if it had beene sufficient for him O wretched man that I am sayth he who shall deliuer me from the body of this death Hee makes mention of deliuerance for that he fel●… Co●…bate in himselfe and found himselfe prisoner to the Law of sinne as the verse going before doth declare But you will reply There is nothing to be compared to life it is a naturall desire and common to all men Ans●… Man desireth not only to be and to liue but to bee●…t ease else what is hee that like to Ixion in the Poet would alwayes liue to be fastened to a whe●…le Who would alwayes liue the damnable life of Satan and his angells in the middest of an vnquenchable fire but mad men and fooles And in truth the desire wee haue to roule on alwayes from day to day is that by an abusiue hope we promise vnto our selues some future pleasure and content The Apostles desire better ordered and grounded was to put off this mortall body and to put on one that was b●…essed and immortall not vpon earth where it is not to be found but in heauen and by a diuine and celestiall power But that doth contradict this assertion That man desires as much or more to end the miseries of this life as to continue this miserable life and therefore certaine wise men of the world did settle their resolution vnto death vpon this Dilemma saying Either we shal be happy in death if the soule escapes or else we shal be without paine or misery if all remaine No small aduantage doubtlesse seeing the greatest point of happinesse in this life is to beeleast vnhappy The 11. Argument taken from two resemblances of Death S●…ounding is a kinde of Death and the shadow of the body is an Image of it But in swounding there is no paine nor in the shadow any amazement BY Syncope I vnderstand the strongest and most extended swounding not that which is gentle which happeneth sometimes at the opening of a veine in the which the patient neither loseth feeling nor speech but that which carries away all the forces of a man his natural I say and principally his vitall Sleepe is nothing to represent death in regard of this symptome for it is death it selfe only there is in this sometimes a returning to life and there none I haue seene it and obserued it in my father being an old man I haue conferred it with some that were apparantly dead yet could I not finde any difference he lay without any shewe of soule in any of his ●…ects notwithstanding that he was continually rolled vp and downe in a chamber his pulse was not to bee felt he was in a cold swet ouer all the extreamities of his body were exceeding cold And these are the very signes of a right Syncope by the which the truth of our Maior is iustified that to fall into the Syncope is to fall into death for as death is a cessation
impossible that at the soules departure from the body there should be any great paine the soule leaues the body as the light doth the ayre which it doth inuest as Viues speakes after S. Augustine Wee must not then imagine heere a grosse tearing of the soule from the body as of a piece of cloth for the vnion of the soule with the body is spirituall and incomprehensible But of the pretended paine in death there is sufficiently spoken in the Obiection following As for the two other enemies it is true that the conscience presents vnto a dying man the foulenesse of his sinne and it is true that Satan tempts man to despaire to precipitate him into eternall perdition But for all this must a man that feares God feare death and feare to lose the battaile No but hee ought rather to assure himselfe of the victory and present himselfe boldly to the Combate as a valiant fortunate Champion against one that is weake and vnfortunate They that are for vs are stronger then they that are against vs God which hath begunne continues his worke in vs and ends it to his glory the faith which he hath prāted in vs wil quench the inflamed darts of the wicked spirit the full assurance of the remission of sins by Iesus Christ dead for our sinnes and risen for our iustification will pacifie the conscience and shew him Iesus Christ in heauen sitting on the right hand of God and stretching out his armes to him Thirdly the seales of the holy Ghost in vs for by it we are sealed to the day of Redemption Baptisme the Communion of the body of Christ and the Spirit of sanctification will terrifie Satan and make him flie Finally the good Angels which from our birth and throughout the whole course of our liues haue administred vnto vs guided and comforted vs will redouble their loue and courage in the like offices at our greatest need and at our last gaspe Let vs not feare seeing we haue such assurance in the Word of God which doth plainely witnesse that the Angells are administring Spirits sent to serue for their sakes that shall receiue the inheritance of saluation Here then is no subiect of desperate feare but rather of an assured resolution The 4. Obiection All paine is euill In dying there is paine EPicharmus by the testimony of Cicero sayd that he would not die but to be dead he cared not The reason is in my opinion for that he feared the passage of death not death it selfe which hee thought with vs had no paine There are many at this day of this opinion abhorring death like an internall gulfe for that they conceiue there is some sharp and violent paine which they endure before it comes and thereunto tends the prouerbe He is in bad case that dies And S. Augustine seemes to attribute I know not what sharpe feeling and force against nature in the diuulsion of the soule from the body which were vnited together Answere If death be terrible by reason of the paine we apprehend in it then life by the same reason should be more for in it some man endures more by the cholicke the stone the sciatica yea by the tooth ach and by many other infirmities without death then an other hath felt in dying And there is this aduantage in death that it comes but once wheras the aboue mentioned infirmities are often reiterated in life But to haue a perfect view if this paine bee so great as opinion a bad counsellor doth make vs beleeue let vs search with reason into the immediate cause of that which doth engender this paine in our bodies The pathes which leade man to death are infinite but all bend to one of these foure high wayes outward force subtraction of meate and drinke inward sicknesse and old age These foure kinds of death may happen to al men yea to wise men although by iniustice touching the first by some rare accident as touching the second concerning the third by ordinary corruption of humors and by an infallible defect of nature touching the fourth Paine according to the definition of learned Phisitions is the feeling of some thing that is offensiue and troublesome to the nature of the body for that it is contrary to the health thereof the which happens either by the dissoluing and cutting of his continued substance or by the alteration thereof which alteration proceeds from the intemperate heate or cold for as for humidity and drinesse they are rather passiue qualities then actiue whose operation is very slow and the paine in the member that is altered is suddaine not gentle as if you be exceeding cold and come to a very sensible paine cold settles his paine in disioyning heate in burning and it is to bee noted that any sence may be wounded yet little or nothing is his paine in comparison of that of touching the which is dispersed ouer the whole body from which no other vessell of the sences is exempt which is the cause that wee sometimes feele prickings in the eyes and shootings in the eares c. Let vs now come to the application Death which comes to man by extreame age can be no cause of paine there being nothing in him that tortures his body nothing that doth suddainely alter and change him by extreame cold or heate but his life goes out presently like vnto a Candle that wants tallow by the losse of his radicall humour deuoured by little and little since his birth by his naturall heate and although this heate doth yet striue as it hath formerly done to conuert the meate which is familiar and fit for the body into radicall humor to repaire his losse yet she can worke no more her vertue failes her euery agent hath his vertue limited what soeuer doth act suffers in acting through vse and in continuance of time this heate decayes dissolues is lost and death ensues So as it hath bene disputed in vaine whether life might bee continued this radicall humor being restored by some fit nutriment for that humor being at the first a certaine ayery onely portion of that seede which doth reside in all the sollide parts it is impossible that such an humour and so much as is needefull should be supplied in it's place The only fruite of the tree of life which was in Eden had this secret vertue by the diuine ordinance to make man immortal that shold eate therof and therefore according to the opiniō of the Fathers God suddenly after the sin chased Adam and Eue out of Eden least they should lay hold of that fruite and become immortally miserable with the diuells In processe of time there happens two notable changes to this radicall humour the one in the quality for that it degenerates by little and little of naturall becomes strange the other in the quantity for that it is wholy wasted whereunto man being once reduced he can suffer no paine if hee complaines
to this death they which haue condemned mee are more vniust then I am Inferring thereby that he died well and honestly seeing they put him to death wrongfully and without cause Plato doth teach vs that Socrates was wont to insult ouer death in these tearmes I haue beene carefull said he to liue well in my youth and to die well in my age I am not tormented within me with any paine I am not vnwilling to dye for seeing my life hath beene honest I attend death ioyfully This is much but it is nothing in regard of Saint Paule who protesting that he felt not himselfe guilty in any thing cried out with a bold spirit that hee was assured that neither death nor life nor Angels nor Principalities nor powers neither things present nor things to come nor height nor depth should separate him from the loue of God Let vs thē be careful to polish our soules and to settle our consciences let vs apply our selues to a well ordered equity let the body subiect it selfe vnto the soule and follow her motions Let the inferiour powers of the soule obey the commandements of reason Let reason guided by the holy Ghost obserue the Law grafted in euery creature by nature especially in man and most of all the Law of Moses To doe this is to be vertuous and to be vertuous is to haue a good conscience We must then direct all our actions to vertue if wee desire to liue in the world without feare without paine in peace and ioy vertue doth first of all make the soule perfect in her intellectuall part disperseth the clouds of error ignorance illuminating reason doth adorne it with prudence Secondly she labours to polish the will of man and hauing reformed it by her orderly course shee giues him the habite of Iustice. Thirdly she doth temper the angry part pulls away the extreame feare and on the other side prunes away the sprouts of rashnes and plants betwixt both valour and ha●… dy feare Finally it doth also bridle the faculty of concupiscence and restraines the motions of voluptuousnesse and makes them obedient to the command of Temperance It is in a few words the true meanes to get a pure and vpright conscience especially if we bee carefull to be as honest in our priuate secret actions as if all the world did behold vs Seneca doth recommend this vnto vt in many places Wee reade of one called Virginius whose History was written by Cluuius who presented it vnto the sayd personage and sayd vnto him If there be any thing written otherwise then thou wouldest pardon mee and reforme it Oh no answered Virginius whatsoeuer I haue done hath bene done in that manner to that end that it might bee free for all to write at their pleasures a worthy speech of a noble spirit and content with his conscience in his actions Iulius Drusus when as one promised a great sum of mony to his Master mason that his house might not be subiect to the view of any man and I sayd he will giue twice so much if thou canst build my house in that sort as all men may see into it what is done there This was to saue his conscience not to do more in secret then before all the world And what a madnesse is it in most men not to feare God nor their conscience and yet to feare men who can do least in the correction of their faults What shall we then feare in this world One only God for his feare will inspire our hearts with an hardy courage against the greatest feares The 27. Argument taken from the frequent thinking of Death He that will receiue Death ioyfully must propound it often to his thoughts Wee all desire to receiue it ioyfully c. SOme sayth Seneca come to their death in choler but no man receiues it when it comes with a cheerefull countenance but he that hath long before prepared himselfe for it Let vs try this remedy it cannot be bad In the night after our first sleepe in bed let vs presuppose that we are dead and by a strong imagination let vs settle our selues in that sort as hauing no sence nor feeling that our soule and reason tells vs that it is euen so in death that there is no other difference but that our soule is yet present in the body and then let vs goe vnto our friends or to any other that die let vs view them talke vnto them and touch them being dead and we shall finde that in all this there is nothing to be feared that all is quiet that there is nothing but opinion that 〈◊〉 abuse man Let vs proceed enter the Church-yards and go down into their graues wee shall finde that 〈◊〉 the dead rest in peace yea●… so profound 〈◊〉 peace as no liuing creature can interrupt them Let vs yet go on farther there is no danger for by the saying of Plato the knowledge of death is the goodliest science that man can attaine vnto Let vs do like vnto Iohn Patriarke of Alexandria build our tombes and not finish them but euery day lay one stone Let vs haue some Anatomy or Mōmie in our houses and let vs not passe a day without beholding it let vs handle it it is death Little children by little and little grow familiar with that which they did strangely fly and in the end they play with it and know that it is but a dead image of copper which so terrified them Wee shall also see in death that it was but a shaddow that so amazed vs. Let vs yet do more waking and not dreaming let vs dispose our selues of purpose as Philippe King of Macedon did by chance who wrestling vpon the sand after the manner of the Country saw and measured the length of his body and admired the littlenes thereof in the shape printed in the sand where he had fallen Finally let vs not forget what the Emperour Maximilian 2. or 3. yeares before his death commanded carefully to be done that they should carry with him a coffin of oake in a chest with an expresse command that being dead they should couer his body with a course sheete hauing put lime in his eares nosestrills and mouth and then to lay him in the ground Let vs follow these great examples both high low and wee shall see that when death shall present her selfe vnto vs it will bee without amazement But if wee flie from euery image of death from al thought therof if the ringing of bells a shew of some mans death doth importune vs finally if euery word of death be troublesome as there haue beene such I doubt not but to them death is wonderfull terrible Obiection If the most reasonable feare Death most it is by reason to be feared But the antecedent is true therefore the Consequent must follow SEneca yea experience doth teach vs that Infants little children and such as haue lost their