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I HAVE in my youth oftentimes beene vexed to see a Pedant brought in,
in
most of Italian comedies, for a vice or sport-maker, and the nicke-
name
of Magister to be of no better signification amongst us. For,
my
selfe being committed to their tuition, how could I chuse but he
somewhat
jealous of their reputation? In deed I sought to excuse them by reason
of the naturall disproportion that is betweene the vulgar sort, and
rare
and excellent men, both in judgment and knowledge: forsomuch as they
take
a cleane contrarie course one from another. But when I considered the
choysest
men were they that most contemned them, I was far to seeke, and as it
were
lost my selfe: witnesse our good Bellay:
Mais je hay par sur
tout
un scavoir pedantesque.
A pedant knowledge, I
Detest out of all cry.
Yet is this custome very
ancient;
for Plutarke saith, that Greeke and Scholer were amongst
the
Romans words of reproach and reputation. And coming afterwards to
yeares
of more discretion, I have found they had great reason, and that magis
magnos clericos, non sunt magis magnas sapientes: 'The most great
Clerkes
are not the most wisest men.But whence it may proceed, that a minde
rich in knowledge, and of so many things, becommeth thereby never
livelier
nor more quickesighted; and a grose-headed and vulgar spirit may
without
amendment containe the discourse and judgement of the most excellent
wits
the world ever produced, I still remaine doubtfull. To receive so many,
so strange, yea and so great wits, it must needs follow (said once a
Lady
unto me, yea one of our chiefest Princesses, speaking of some body) that
a man's owne wit, force, droops, and as it were diminishes it selfe, to
make roome for others. I might say, that as plants are choked by
over-much
moisture, and lampe dammed with too much oyle, so are the actions of
the
mind over-whelmed by over-abundance of matter and studie: which
occupied
and intangled with so great a diversitie of things, loseth the meane to
spread and cleare it selfe and that surcharge keepeth it low-drooping,
and faint. But it is otherwise, for our mind stretch the more by how
much
more it is replenished. And in examples of former times, the contrary
is
seene, of sufficient men in the managin g of publike affaires, of great
Captaines, and notable Counsellers in matters of estate, to have been
therewithall
excellently wise. And concerning Philosophers, retired from all publike
negotiations, they have indeed sometimes been vilified by the comike
libertie
of their times, their opinions and demeanors yeelding them ridiculous.
Will you make them Judges of the right of a processe, or of the actions
of a man? They are readie for it. They enquire whether there be any
life
yet remaining, wheth er any motion. Whether man be any thing but an
Oxe,
what working or suffering is; what strange beasts law and justice are.
Speake they of the Magistrate, or speake they unto him; they do it with
an unreverent and uncivill libertie. Heare they a Prince or a King
commended?
Hee is but a shepherd to them, as idle as a Swaine busied about milking
of his cattell, or shearing of his sheepe: but more rudely. Esteeme you
any man for possessing two hundred acres of land? They scoffe at him,
as
men accustomed to embrace all the world as their possession. Do you
boast
of your Nobilitie, because you can blazon your descent of seven or
eight
rich Grandafthers? They will but little regard you, as men that
conceive
not the universall image of nature, and how many predecessors every one
of us hath had, both rich and poore, Kings and groomes, Greekes and
Barbarians.
And were you lineally descended in the fiftieth degree from Hercules,
they deeme it a vanitie to vaunt or allege this gift of fortune. So did
the vulgar sort disdaine them as ignorant of the first and common
things,
and as presumptuous and insolent. But this Platonicall lustre is far
from
that which our men stand in need of. They were envied as being beyond
the
common sort, as despising publike actions, as having proposed unto
themselves
a particular and inimitable life, aiming and directed at certam high
discourses,
and from the common use; these are disdained as men beyond the ordinary
fashion, as incapable of publike charges, as leading an unsociable
life,
and professing base and abject customes, after the vulgar kind. Odi
homines ignavos opere, Philosophos sententia: (Pacuvius, Lips. i.
10) I hate men that are fooles in working, and Philosophers in
speaking.
As for those Philosophers, I say, that as they were great in knowledge,
so were they greater in all action. And even as they report of that Syracusan
Geometrician, who being taken from his bookish contemplation to shew
some
practice of his sk ill, for the defence of his countrie reared sodainly
certaine terror-moving engines, and shewed effects farre exceeding all
mens conceit, himselfe notwithstanding disdaining all this his
handieworke,
supposing he had thereby corrupted the dignitie of his art; his engines
and manuall works being but the apprentiships, and trials of his skill
in sport: So they, if at any time they have been put to the triall of
any
action, they have been seen to flie so high a pitch, and with so lofty
a flight, that men might apparently see their minds and spirits were
through
the intelligence of things become wonderfully rich and great. But some
perceiving the seat of politike government possessed by unworthy and
incapable
men, have withdrawne themselves from it. And hee who demanded of Crates,
how long men should Philosophize, received this answer, Untill such
time
as they who have the conduct of our Armies be no longer blockish asses.
Heraclitus resigned the royaltie unto his brother. And to the
Ephesians,
who reproved him for spending his time in playing with children before
the temple: he answered And is it not better to doe so, than to governe
the publike affaires in your companie? Others having their imagination
placed yond fortune and the world, found the seat of justice, and the
thrones
of Kings, to be but base and vile. And Empedocles refused the
royaltie
which the Agrigentines offered him. Thales sometimes
accusing
the carke and care men tooke about good busbandry, and how to grow
rich;
some replied unto him, that he did as the Fox, because he could not
attaine
unto it himselfe; which hearing, by way of sport he would needs shew by
experience how he could at his pleasure become both thriftie and rich;
and bending his wits to gaine and profit, erected a traffike, which
within
one yeare brought him such riches as the skilfullest in trade of
thriving
could hardly in all their life devise how to get the like. That which Aristotle
reporteth of some who called both him and Anaxagoras, and such
like
men, wise and not prudent, because they cared not for things more
profitable:
besides, I doe not verie well digest this nice difference of words that
serveth my find-fault people for no excuse: and to see the base and
needie
fortune wherewith they are content, we might rather have just cause to
pronounce them neither wise nor prudent. I quit this first reason, and
thinke it better to say, that this evill proceedeth from the bad course
they take to follow sciences; and that respecting the manner we are
instructed
in them, it is no wonder if neither Schollers nor Masters, howbeit they
may prove more learned become no whit more sufficient. Verily the daily
care and continuall charges of our fathers aymeth at nothing so much as
to store our heads with knowledge and-learning; as for judgement and
virtue,
that is never spoken of. If a man passe by, crie out to our people: Oh
what a wise man goeth yonder! And of another: Oh what a good
man
is yonder! he will not faile to cast his eyes and respect toward
the
former. A third crier were needfull, to say, Oh what blocke-heads
are
those! We are ever readie to aske, Hath he any skill in the
Greeke
and Latine tongue? can he write well? doth hee write in prose or verse?
But whether hee be growne better or wiser, which should be the chiefest
of his drift, that is never spoken of. We should rather enquire who is
better wise than who is more wise. We labour, and toyle, and plod to
fill
the memorie, and leave both understanding and conscience emptie. Even
as
birds flutter and skip from field to field to pecke up corne, or any
graine,
and without tasting the same, carrie it in their bils, therewith to
feed
their little ones; so doe our pedants gleane and picke learning from
bookes,
and never lodge it further than their lips, only to degorge and cast it
to the wind. It is strange how fitly sottishnesse takes bold of mine
example.
Is not that which I doe in the greatest part of this composition, all
one
and selfe same thing? I am ever heere and there picking and culling,
from
this and that booke, the sentences that please me, not to keepe them
(for
I have no store-house to reserve them in) but to transport them into
this:
where, to say truth, they are no more mine than in their first place:
we
are (in mine opinion) never wise, but by present learning, not by that
which is past, and as little by that which is to come. But which is
worse,
their Schollers and their little ones are never a whit the more fed or
better nourished: but passeth from hand to hand, to this end only,
thereby
to make a glorious shew, therewith to entertaine others, and with its
help
to frame some quaint stories, or prettie tales, as of a light and
counterfeit
coyne unprofitable for any use or imployment, but to reckon and cast
accompts.
Apud alios loqui didicerunt, non ipsi secum. Non est loq uendum,
sed
gubernandum: (SEN. Epist. cviii.) They have learned to speake
with
others, not with themselves: speaking is not so requisite as government.
Nature, to shew that nothing is savage in whatsoever she produceth,
causeth
oftentimes, even in rudest and most unarted nations, productions of
spirits
to arise, that confront and wrestle with the most artist productions.
As
concerning my discourse, is not the Gaskonie proverbe, drawne from a
bagpipe,
prettie and quaint? Bouha prou houha, mas a remuda lous dits qu'em:
You may blow long enough, but if once you stirre your fingers, you may
go seeke Wee can talke and prate, Cicero saith thus, These
are Platoes customes, These are the verie words of Aristotle;
but what say we our selves? what doe we? what judge we? A Peroquet
would
say as much. This fashion puts me in mind of that rich Romane, who to
his
exceeding great charge had beene verie industrious to finde out the
most
sufficient men in all sciences, which he continually kept about him,
that
if at any time occasion should bee moved amongst his friends to speake
of any matter pertaining to Schollership, they might supplie his place,
and be readie to assist him: some with discourse, some with a verse of Homer,
othersome with a sentence, each one according to his
skill
or profession; who perswaded himselfe that all such learning was his
owne,
because it was contained in his servants minds. As they doe whose
sufficiencie
is placed in their sumptuous libraries. I know some, whom if I aske
what
he knoweth, hee will require a booke to demonstrate the same, and durst
not dare to tell me that his posteriors are scabious, except he turne
over
his Lexicon to see what posteriors and scabious is. Wee take the
opinions
and knowledge of others into our protection, and that is all; I tell
you
they must be enfeoffed in us, and made our owne. Wee may verie well be
compared unto him, who having need of fire, should goe fetch some at
his
neighbours chimney, where finding a good fire, should there stay to
warme
himselfe, forgetting to carrie some home. What availes it us to have
our
bellies full of meat, if it be not digested? If it bee not transchanged
in us? except it nourish, augment, and strengthen us. We may imagine
that Lucullus, whom learning made and framed so great a
captaine
without
experience, would have taken it after our manner? We relie so much upon
other mens armes, that we disanull our owne strength. Will I arme my
selfe
against the fear of death? it is at Seneca's cost: will I draw comfort
either for my selfe, or any other? I borrow the same of Cicero. I would
have taken it in my selfe, had I been exercised unto it: I love not
this
relative and begd-for sufficiencie. Suppose we may be learned by other
mens learning. Sure I am we can never be wise but by our owne wisdome.
That wise man I cannot abide,
That for himselfe cannot provide.
Ex quo Ennius:
Nequidquam
sapere sapientem, qui ipso ibi prodesse non quiret.Whereupon saith
Ennius: That wise man is vainly wise, who could not profit himselfe.
----- si cupidus, si Vanus, et Euganea quantumvis
vilior agna. Juven. Sat.
viii. 14.
If covetous, if vaine (not
wise)
Than any lambe more base, more
nice.
Non enim paranda nobis
solum,
sed fruenda sapientia est: (Cic. Finib. i.p.). For wee
must
not only purchase wisdome, but enjoy and employ the same. Dionysius
scoffeth at those Gramarians, who ploddingly labour to know the
miseries
of Ulysses, and are ignorant of their owne; mocketh those
musitians
that so attentively tune their instruments, and never accord their
manners;
derideth those orators that study to speake of justice, and never put
it
in execution. Except our mind be the better, unless our judgement be
the
sounder, I had rather my scholler had imployed his time in playing at
tennis;
I am sure his bodie would be the nimbler. See but one of these our
universitie
men or bookish schollers returne from schole, after he hath there spent
ten or twelve years under a pedants charge: who is so inapt for any
matter?
who so unfit for any companie? who so to seeke if he come into the
world?
all the advantage you discover in him is that his Latine and Greeke
have
made him more sottish, more stupid, and more presumptuous, than before
he went from home. Whereas he should return with a mind full-fraught,
he
returnes with a wind-puft conceit: instead of plum-feeding the same, he
has only spunged it up with vanitie. These masters, as Plato
speaketh
of sophisters (their cosin Germanes) of all men, are those that promise
to be most profitable unto men, and alone, amongst all, that not only
amend
not what is committed to their charge as doth a carpenter or a mason,
but
empaire and destroy the same, and yet they must full dearely be paied.
If the law which Protagoras proposed to his disciples, were
followed,
which was, that either they should a pay him according to his word, or
sweare in the temple how much they esteemed the profit they had
received
by his discipline, and accordingly satisfy him for his paines, my
pedagogues
would be aground, especially if they would stand to the oath of my
experience.
My vulgar Perigordian-speech, doth verie pleasantly terme such
selfe-conceited
wizards, letter ferits, as if they would say letter-strucked men, to
whom
(as the common saying is) letters have given a blow with a mallet.
Verily
for the most part they seeme to be distracted even from common sense.
Note
but the plaine husbandman, or the unwilie shoemaker, and you see them
simply
and naturally plod on their course, speaking only of what they know,
and
no further; whereas these letter-puft pedants, because they would faine
raise themselves aloft, and with their litterall doctrine which floteth
up and downe the superficies of their braine, arme themselves beyond
other
men, they uncessantly intricate and entangle themselves: they utter
loftie
words, and speake golden sentences, but so that another man doth place,
fit, and applie them. They are acquainted with Galen, but know not the
disease. They will stuffe your head with lawes, when God wot they have
not yet conceived the ground of the case. They knowe the theorike of
all
things, but you must seeke who shall put it in practice. I have seene a
friend of mine, in mine owne house, who by way of sport talking with
one
of these pedanticall gulls, counterfeited a kind of fustian tongue, and
spake a certaine gibrish, without rime or reason, sans head or foot, a
hotch-potch of divers things, but that he did often enterlace it with
inke-pot
termes, incident to their disputations, to ammuse the bookish sot for a
whole day long with debating and contending; ever thinking he answered
the objections made unto him; yet was he a man of letters and
reputation,
a graduate, and wore a goodly formall long gowne.
Vos o patritius
sanguis
quos vivere par est Ooccipiti cæco,
posticæ
occurrite sannæ Pers. Sat. 1. 61.
You noble blouds, who with a
noddle
blind
Should live, meet with the mocke
that's made behind.
Whosoever shall narrowly
looke
into this kind of people, which far and wide hath spred it selfe, he
shall
find (as I have done) that for the most part they neither understand
themselves
nor others, and that their memorie is many times sufficiently full
fraught,
but their judgment ever hollow and emptie: except their natural
inclination
have of it selfe otherwise fashioned them. As I have seene Adrianus
Turnebus who having never professed any thing but studie and
letters,
wherein he was, in mine opinion, the worthiest man that lived these
thousand
yeares, and who notwithstanding had no pedanticall thing about him but
the wearing of his gowne, and some externall fashions that could not
well
be reduced, and incivilized to the courtiers cut; things of no
consequence.
And I naturally hate our people, that will more hardly endure a long
robe
uncuriously worne, than a crosse skittish mind: and that observe what
leg,
or reverence he makes, note his garbe or demeanor, view his boots or
his
hat, and marke what manner of man he is. For his inward parts, I deeme
him to have been one of the most unspotted and truly honest minds that
ever was. I have sundry times of purpose urged him to speak of matters
furthest from his study, wherein he was so cleare-sighted, and could
with
so quicke an apprehension conceive, and with so sound a judgment
distjnguish
them, that he seemed never to have professed or studied other facultie
than warre and matters of state. Such spirits, such natures may be
termed
worthy, goodly, and solid.
----- queis arte benigna Et meliore luto finxit
præcordia
Titan. Juven. Sat. xiv. 34.
Whose bowels
heavens-bright-Sunne
composed
Of better mold, art wel disposed.
That maintaine themselves
against
any bad institution. Now it sufficeth not that our institution marre us
not, it must change us to the better. There are some of our parliaments
and courts, who when they are to admit of any officers , doe only
examine
them of their learning; others, that by presenting them the judgment of
some law cases, endevour to sound their understanding. Me thinks the
latter
keep the better style: And albeit these two parts are necessarie, and
both
ought to concur in one, yet truly should that of learning be lesse
prized
than judgement, this may well be without the other, and not the other
without
this. For as the Greeke verse saith.
Ως
ουδεν η μαθησις,
ην μη
νους παρη. Gnom. Græc. χ.
et φ. ult.
Learning nought worth doth
lie,
Be not discretion by.
Whereto serveth learning,
if
understanding be not joined to it? Oh would to God, that for the good
of
our justice, the societies of lawyers were as well stored with
judgement,
discretion and conscience, as they are with learning and wit. Non
vitæ,
sed scholæ discimus: (SEN. Epist. cvi. f.) We
learne
not for our life, but for the schoole. It is not enough to joyne
learning
and knowledge to the minde, it should be incorporated into it: it must
not be inckled, but dyed with it; and if it change not and better her
estate
(which is imperfect) it were much better to leave it. It is a dangerous
sword, and which hindreth and offendeth her master, if it be in a weake
hand, and which hath not the skill to manage the same: Vt fuerit
melius
non didicisse: So as it were better that we had not learned. It is
peradventure the cause that neither we nor divinitie require much
learning
in women; and that Francis Duke of Britannie, sonne to John
the fifth, when be was spoken unto for a marriage betweene him and Isabel
a daughter of Scotland; and some told him she was but meanly
brought
up and without any instruction of learning, answered, hee loved her the
better for it, and that a woman was wise enough if she could but make a
difference betweene the shirt and dublet of her husbands. It is also no
such wonder (as some say) that our auncesters did never make any great
accompt of letters, and that even at this day (except it be by chaunce)
they are not often found in our kings and princes chiefest councels and
consultations: And if the end to grow rich by them which now adaies is
altogether proposed unto us by the studie of law, of Phisicke, of
Pedantisme,
and of Divinitie, did not keep them in credit, without doubt you should
see them as beggarly and needy, and as much vilified as ever they were.
And what hurt I pray you since they neither teach us to think well
nor-doe
well? Postquam docti prodierunt, boni desunt.(Sen. Epist.
xcv.) Since men became learned, good men failed Each other
science
is prejudiciall unto him that hath not the science of goodnesse. But
may
not the reason I whilom sought for, also proceed thence? That our
studie
in France, having as it were no other aime but profit, but those lesse
whom nature hath produced to more generous offices, than lucrative,
giving
themselves unto learning, or so briefly (before they have apprehended
any
liking of them, retired unto a profession that hath no communitie with
bookes) there are then none left, altogether to engage themselves to
studie
and Bookes, but the meaner kind of people, and such as are borne to
base
fortune, and who by learning and letters seek some meane to live and
enrich
themselves.The minds of which people being both by naturall
inclination,
by example, and familiar institution, of the basest stampe doe falsly
reap
the fruit of learning. For it is not in her power to give light unto
the
mind, that hath none, nor to make a blind man to see. The mysterie of
it
is not to affoord him sight, but to direct it for him, to addresse his
goings, alwaies provided he have feet of his owne, and good, strait,
and
capable legs. Knowledge is an excellent drug, but no drug is
sufficiently
strong to preserve it selfe without alteration or corruption, according
to the fault of the vessell that contained it. Some man hath a cleare
sight,
that is not right-sighted, and by consequence seeth what good is, and
doth
not follow it; and seeketh knowledge, but makes no use of it. The
chiefest
ordinance of Plato in his Commonwealth is to give unto his
Citizens
their charge according to their nature. Nature can doe all, and doth
all.
The crookt backt, or deformed, are unfit for any exercise of the bodie,
and crooked and mis-shapen minds unproper for exercises of the minde.
The
bastard and vulgar sort are unworthy of Philosophie. When we see a man
ill shod, if he chance to be a Shoomaker, wee say it is no wonder, for
commonly none goes worse shod than they. Even so it seemes that
experience
doth often shew us, a Physitian lesse healthy, a Divine lesse reformed,
and most commonly a Wiseman lesse sufficient than another. Aristo
Chius
had heretofore reason to say that Philosophers did much hurt their
auditors,
forasmuch as the greatest number of minds are not apt to profit by such
instructions which, if they take not a good, they will follow a bad
course: ασωτους ex Aristippi, acerbos ex Zenonis
Schola exire (Cic. Deor.
iii.). They proceed licentious out of the Schoole of Aristippus,
but bitter out of the Schoole of Zeno. In that excellent
institution
which Zenophon giveth the Persians, wee find, that as other
nations
teach their children Letters, so they taught theirs vertue. Plato
said the eldest borne sonne, in their royall succession, was thus
taught.
"As soone as he was borne, he was delivered, not to women, but to such
Eunuchs as by reason of their vertue were in chiefest authoritie about
the King. Their speciall charge was first to shapen his limmes and
bodie,
goodly and healthy; and at seven yeares of age they instructed and
inured
him to sit on horsebacke, and to ride a hunting: when he came to the
age
of fourteene, they delivered him into the ha nds of foure men, that is
to say, the wisest, the justest, the most temperate and the most
valiant
of all the nation. The first taught him religion; the second, to be
ever
upright and true; the third, to become Master of his owne desires; and
fourth, to feare nothing." It is a thing worthy great consideration,
that
in that excellent, and as I may terme it, matchlesse policie of Lycurgus,
and in truth, by reason of her perfection, monstrous, yet
notwithstanding,
so carefull for the education of children, as of her principall charge,
and even in the Muses bosome and resting-place, there is so little
mention
made of learning: as if that generous youth disdaining all other yokes
but of vertue, ought only to be furnished, in liew of tutors of
learning,
with masters of valour, of justice, of wisdome, and of temperance. An
example
which Plato hath imitated in his Lawes. The manner of their
discipline
was, to propound questions unto them, teaching the judgement of men and
of their actions: and if by way of reason or discourse they condemned
or
praised either this man or that deed, they must be told the truth and
best:
by which meanes at once they sharpened their wits, and learned the
right. Astiages in Zenophon calleth Cyrus to an
accompt of
his last lesson. It is (saith he) that a great lad in our Schools,
having
a little coat, gave it to one of his fellowes, that was of lesser
stature
than himselfe, and tooke his coat from him, which was too big for him:
our Master having made me judge of that difference, I judged that
things
must be left in the state they were in, and that both seemed to be
better
fitted as they were; whereupon he showed me I had done ill; because I
had
only considered the comelinesse where I should chiefly have respected
justice,
which required that none should be forced in any thing which properly
belonged
to him, and said he was whipt for it, as we are in our countrie-townes,
when we have forgotten the first preterperfect tense or Aoriste of
greekzzz.
My Regent might long enough make me a prolixe and cunning Oration in genere
demonstrativo, in the oratorie kind of praise or dispraise, before
ever hee should perswade me his Schoole is worth that. They have gone
about
to make the way shorter: and since Sciences (even when they are right
taken)
can teach us nothing but wisdome, honestie, integritie, and resolution;
they have at first sight attempted to put their children to the proper
of effects, and instruct them, not by heare-say, but by assay of
action,
lively modelling and framing them not only by precepts and words, but
principally
by examples and works, that it might not be a Science in their mind,
but
rather his complexion and habitude; not to purchase, but a naturall
inheritance.
To this purpose, when Agesilaus
was demanded what his opinion was, children should learne: he answered,
What they should doe being men. It is no marvell, if such an
institution
have produced so admirable effects. Some say, that in other Cities of
Greece
they went to seeke for Rhetoricians, for Painters, and for Musicians;
whereas
in Lacedemon, they sought for Law-givers, for Magistrates, and
Generals
of armies: In Athens men learn'd to say well, but here, to doe
well:
there to resolve a sophisticall argument, and to confound the imposture
and amphibologie of words, captiously enterlaced together; here to
shake
off the allurements of voluptuousnesse, and with an undaunted courage
to
contemne the threats of fortune, and reject the menaces of death: those
busied and laboured themselves about idle words, these after martiall
things:
there the tongue was ever in continuall exercise of speaking, here the
minde is an uncessant practice of well-doing. And therefore was it not
Strange, if Antipater requiring fiftie of their children for
hostages,
they answered cleane contrarie to that we would doe, that they
would
rather deliver him twice so many men; so much did they value and
esteeme
the losse of their countries education. When Agesilaus inviteth
Xenophon to send his children to Sparta, there to be
brought
up; it is not because they should learne Rhetorike or Logike, but, as
himselfe
saith, to the end they may learne the worthiest and best science
that
may bee, to wit the knowledge how to obey and the skill how to commmand.
It is a sport to see Socrates, after his blunt manner, to mocke
Hippias,
who reporteth unto him what great summes of money he had gained,
especially
in certain little Cities and small townes of Sicily, by keeping
schoole, and teaching letters, and that at Sparta he could not
get
a shilling. That they were but idiots and foolish people, who can
neither
measure nor esteeme nor make no accompt of Grammer, or of Rythmes and
who
only ammuse themselves to know the succession of Kings, the
establishing
and declination of estates, and such like trash of flim-flam tales.
Which
done, Socrates forcing him particularly to allow the
excellencie
of their forme of publike government, the happinesse and vertue of
their
private life, remits unto him to guesse the conclusion of the
unprofitablenesse
of his arts.. Examples teach us both in this martiall policie, and in
all
such like, that the studie of sciences donth more weaken and effeminate
mens minds than corroborate and adapt them to warre. The mightiest, yea
the best setled estate, that is now in the world, is that of the
Turkes,
a nation equally instructed to the esteem e of armes, and disesteeme of
letters. I find Rome to have beene most valiant when it was
least
learned. The most warlike nations of our daies are the rudest and most
ignorant. The Scithians, the Parthians and Tamburlane,
serve to verifie my saying. When the Gothes over-ran and
ravaged Greece; that which saved all their Libraries from the
fire
was,
that one among them scattered this opinion, that such trash of bookes
and
papers must be untoucht and whole for their enemies, as the only meane
and proper instrument to divert them from all militarie exercises, and
ammuse them to idle, secure, and sedentarie occupations. When our King Charles
the eight, in a manner without unsheathing his sword,
saw
himselfe absolute Lord of the whole Kingdome of Naples, and of
a
great part of Thuscanie, the Princes and Lords of his traine
ascribed
this sodaine and unhoped for victorie, and facilitie of so noble and
prodigious
a conquest, only to this, that most of the Princes and nobilitie of
Italie
ammused themselves rather to become ingenious and wise by learning,
than
vigorous and warriers by militarie exercises.