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Y
BROTHER the Lord of Brouze and myself, during the time of our
civill
warres, travelling one day together, we fortuned to meet upon the way
with
a Gentleman in outward semblance, of good demeanour: He was of our
contrary
faction, but forasmuch as he counterfeited himselfe otherwise, I knew
it
not. And the worst of these tumultuous intestine broyles is, that the
cards
are so shuffled (your enemie being neither by language nor by fashion,
nor by any other apparent marke distinguished from you; nay, which is
more,
brought up under the same lawes and customes, and breathing the same
ayre)
that it is a very hard matter to avoid confusion and shun disorder.
Which
consideration made me not a little fearefull to meet with our troopes,
especially where I was not known, lest I should be urged to tell my
name,
and haply doe worse. As other times before it had befalne me; for, by
such
a chance, or rather mistaking, I fortuned once to lose all my men and
horses
and hardly escaped myself: and amongst other my losses and servants
that
were slaine, the thing that most grieved me was the untimely and
miserable
death of a young Italian Gentlemen whom I kept as my Page, and very
carefully
brought up, with whom dyed as forward, as budding and as hopefull a
youth
as ever I saw. But this man seemed fearfully dismaid, and at every
encounter
of horseman and passage by, or thorow any Towne that held for the King,
I observed him to be so strangely distracted that in the end I
perceived
and guessed they were but guilty alarums that his conscience gave him.
It seemed unto this seely man that all might apparently, both through
his
blushing selfe-accusing countenance, and by the crosses he wore upon
his
upper garments, read the secret intentions of his faint heart. Of such
marvailous-working power is the sting of conscience: which often
induceth
us to bewray, to accuse, and to combat our selves; and for want of
other
evidences she produceth our selves against our selves.
Occultum quaetiens
animo
tortore flagellum. --
Juven Sat. xiii. 195.
Their minde, the tormentor of
sinne,
Shaking an unseene whip within.
The storie of Bessus
the
Paeonian is so common, that even children have it in their mouths, who
being found, fault withal, that in mirth he had beaten downe a nest of
young Sparrowes and then killed them, answered, he had great reason to
doe it; forsomuch as those young birds ceased not falsly to accuse him
to have murthered his father, which parricide was never suspected to
have
beene committed by him, and until that day had layen secret; but the
revengefull
furies of the conscience made the same partie to reveale it, that by
all
right was to do penance for so hatefull and unnaturall a murther. Hesiodus
correcteth the saying of Plato, that punishment doth commonly
succeed
the guilt, and follow sinne at hand: for, he affirmeth, that it rather
is borne at the instant and together with sinne it selfe, and they are
as twinnes borne at one birth together. 'Whosoever expects
punishment
suffe reth the same, and whosoever deserveth it, he doth expect it.
Impietie
doth invent, and iniquitie doth frame torments against itselfe,'
Malum constilium
consultori
pessimum. -- Eras. Chil. i. cent. ii. ad. 14.
Bad counsell is worst for the
counsellor
that gives the counsell.
Even as the Waspe stingeth
and
offendeth others, but herselfe much more; for, in hurting others, she
loseth
her force and sting for ever.
-----itasque in
vulnere
ponunt. -- Virg. Georg.
iv. 238.
They, while they others sting,
Death to themselves do bring.
The Cantharides
have some
part in them, which by a contrarietie of nature serveth as an antidot
or
counter-poison against their poison: so likewise, as one taketh
pleasure
in vice, there is a certaine contrarie displeasure engendred in the
conscience,
which by sundry irksome and painfull imaginations, perplexeth and
tormenteth
us, both waking and asleep.
Quippe ubi se multi
per
somnia saepe loquentes, Aut morbo delirantes protraxe
ferantur, Et celata diu in medium
peccata
delisse. --Lucr. v. 1168.
Many in dreames oft speaking,
or
unhealed,
In sicknesse raving have
themselves
revealed,
And brought to light their
sinnes
long time concealed.
Apollodorus dreamed
he
saw himselfe first flead by the Scythians, and then boyled in a pot,
and
that his owne heart murmured, saying: 'I only have caused this
mischiefe
to light upon thee.' Epicurus was wont to say, that no lurking
hole
can shroud the wicked, for they can never assure themselves to be
sufficiently
hidden, sithence conscience is ever ready to disclose them to
themselves.
--------
prima
est haec ultio, quod se Judice nemo nocens absolvitur.
-- Juven. Sat. xiii. 2.
This is the first revenge, no
guilty
mind
Is quitted, though it selfe be
judge
assign'd.
Which as it doth fill us
with
feare and doubt, so doth it store us with assurance and trust. And I
may
boldly say that I have waded thorow many dangerous hazards with a more
untired pace, only in consideration of the secret knowledge I had of
mine
owne will, and innocencie of my desseignes.
Conscia mens ut
cuique
sua est, ita concipit intra Pectora pro facto
spemque
metumque suo. --Ovid. Fast. i. 485.
As each mans minde is
guiltie, so
doth he
Inlie breed hope and feare, as
his
deeds be.
Of examples there are
thousands:
It shall suffice us to alleage three only, and all of one man. Scipio
being one day accused before the Romane people of an urgent and
capitall
accusation, in stead of excusing himselfe, or flattering the Judges;
turning
to them, he said: 'It will well beseeme you to undertake to judge of
his
head, by whose meanes you have authoritie to judge of all the world.'
The
same man, another time, being vehemently urged by a Tribune of
the
people, who charged him with sundry imputations, in lieu of pleading or
excusing his cause, gave him this sudden and short answer: 'Let us goe
(quoth he), my good Citizens; let us forthwith goe (I say) to give
hartie
thanks unto the Gods for the victorie, which even upon such a day as
this
is they gave me against the Carthaginians.' And therewith advancing
himselfe
to march before the people, all the assembly, and even his accuser
himselfe
did undelayedly follow him towards the Temple. After that, Petilius
having beene animated and stirred up by Cato to solicite and demand a
strict
accompt of him, of the money he had managed, and which was committed to
his trust whilest he was in the Province of Antioch, Scipio,
being come into the Senate-house of purpose to answer for himselfe,
pulling
out the booke of his accompts from under his gowne, told them all that
that booke contained truly both the receipt and laying out thereof; and
being required to deliver the same unto a Clarke to register it, he
refused
to doe it, saying he would not doe himselfe that wrong or indignitie;
and
thereupon with his owne hands, in presence of all the Senate, tore the
booke in peeces. I cannot apprehend or beleeve that a
guiltie-cauterized
conscience could possibly dissemble or counterfet such an undismayed
assurance:
His heart was naturally too great, and enured to overhigh fortune
(saith Titus Livius) to know how to be a criminall offender,
and
stoopingly
to yeeld himself to the baseness to defend his innocencie. Torture and
racking are dangerous inventions, and seeme rather to be trials of
patience
than Essayes of truth. And both he that can, and he that cannot endure
them, conceale the truth. For wherefore shall paine or smart rather
compell
me to confesse that which is so indeed than force me to tell that which
is not? And contrariwise, if he who hath not done that whereof he is
accused,
is sufficiently patient to endure those torments, why shall not he be
able
to tolerate them who hath done it, and is guilty indeed; so deare and
worthy
a reward as life being proposed unto him? I am of opinion that the
ground
of this invention proceedeth from the consideration of the power and
facultie
of the conscience. For, to the guilty, it seemeth to give a kinde of
furtherance
to the torture, to make him confesse his fault, and weakneth and
dismayeth
him: and on the other part, it encourageth and strengthneth the
innocent
against torture. To say truth, it is a meane full of uncertainty and
danger.
What would not a man say, nay, what not doe, to avoid so grievous
paines
and shun such torments?
Etiam innocentes
cogit
mentiri dolor. -- Sen. Prover.
Torment to lye sometimes will
drive,
Ev'n the most innocent alive.
Whence it followeth that he whom
the
Judge hath tortured, because he shall not dye an innocent, he shall
bring
him to his death, both innocent and tortured. Many thousands have
thereby
charged their heads with false confessions. Amongst which I may well
place Phylotas, considering the circumstances of the endictment
that Alexander
framed against him, and the progresse of his torture. But so it is,
that
(as men say) it is the least evill humane weaknesse could invent;
though,
in my conceit, very inhumanely, and there withall most unprofitably.
Many
Nations lesse barbarous in that than the Grecian or the Romane, who
terme
them so, judge it a horrible and cruell thing to racke and torment a
man
for a fault whereof you are yet in doubt. Is your ignorance long of
him?
What can he doe withall? Are not you unjust who because you will not
put
him to death without some cause, you doe worse than kill him? And that
it is so, consi der but how often he rather chuseth to dye guiltlesse
than
passe by this informat1on, much more painfull than the punishment or
torment;
and who many times, by reason of the sharpnesse of it, preventeth,
furthereth,
yea, and executeth the punishment. I wot not whence I heard this story,
but it exactly hath reference unto the conscience of our Justice. A
countrie
woman accused a souldier before his Generall, being a most severe
Justicer,
that he, with violence, had snatched from out her poore childrens
hands,
the small remainder of some pap or water-gruell, which she had onely
left
to sustaine them, forsomuch as the Army had ravaged and wasted all. The
poore woman had neither witnesse nor proofe of it: it was but her yea
and
his no; which the Generall perceiving, after he had summoned her to be
well advised what she spake, and that shee should not accuse him
wrongfully;
for, if shee spake an untruth, shee should then be culpable of his
accusation:
But shee constantly persisting to charge him, he forthwith, to discover
the truth, and to be thoroughly resolved, caused the accused Souldiers
belly to be ripped, who was found faulty, and the poore woman to have
said
true; whereupon shee was discharged. A condemnation instructive to
others.