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ETHINKS
Virtue is another manner of thing, and much more noble than the
inclinations
unto Goodnesse, which in us are engendered. Mindes wellborne, and
directed
by themselves, follow one same path, and in their actions represent the
same visage that the vertuous doe. But Vertue importeth and soundeth
somewhat
I wot not what greater and more active than by an happy complexion,
gently
and peaceably, to suffer itself to be led or drawne to follow reason.
He
that through a naturall facilitie and genuine mildnesse should neglect
or contemne injuries received, should no doubt performe a rare action,
and worthy commendation: but he who being toucht and stung lo the
quicke
with any wrong or offence received, should arme himselfe with reason
against
this furiously blind desire of revenge, and in the end after a great
conflict
yeeld himselfe master over it, should doubtlesse doe much more. The
first
should doe well, the other vertuously: the one action might be termed
Goodnesse,
the other Vertue. For it seemeth that the very name of Vertue
presupposeth
difficulties and inferreth resistance, and cannot well exercise itselfe
without an enemie. It is peradventure the reason why we call God
good,
mightie, liberall, and just, but we term him not vertuous. His workes
are
all voluntarie, unforced, and without compulsion. Of Philosophers, not
only Stoicks, but also Epicureans (which phrasing I borrow of the
common
received opinion, which is false, whatsoever the nimble saying or
wittie
quipping of Arcesilaus implied, who answered the man that upbraided
him,
how divers men went from his schoole to the Epicureans, but no one came
from thence to him: I easily beleeve it (said he) for Of cocks are
many
capons made, but no man could ever make a cock of a capon. For
truly
in constancie opinion and strictnesse of precepts, the Epicurean sect
doth
in no sort yeeld to the Stoicke. And a Stoike acknowledging a better
faith
than those disputers who, to contend with Epicurus and make
sport
with him, make him to infer and say what he never meant, wresting and
wyre-drawing
his words to a contrarie sense, arguing and silogizing, by the
grammarians
privilege, another meaning, by the manner of his speech and another
opinion
than that they knew he had either in his minde or manners, saith that
he
left to be an Epicurean for this one consideration amongst others, that
he findeth their pitch to be over high and inaccessible: Et φιλοχαλοι
vocantur, sunt φιλοχανοι et φιλοιχαιοι omnesque virtutes et colunt et
retinent:
(Sen. Epist. xiii.) 'And those that are called lovers of pleasures, are
lovers of honestie and justice, and doe reverence and retaine all sorts
of vertue.' Of Stoicke and Epicurean Philosophers, I say, there are
divers who have judged that it was not sufficient to have the minde
well
placed, well ordered, and well disposed unto vertue; it was not enough
to have our resolutions and discourse beyond all the affronts and
checks
of fortune; but that, moreover, it was verie requisite to seeke for
occasions
whereby a man might come to the triall of it. They will diligently
quest
and seeke out for paine, smart, necessitie, want, and contempt, that so
they may combat them, and keepe their minde in breath: Multum sibi
adjicit
virtus lacessitæ: 'Vertue provoked addes much to it selfe.'
It
is one of the reasons why Epaminondas (who was of a third sect)
by a verie lawfull way refuseth some riches fortune had put into his
hands,
to the end (as he saith) he might have cause to strive and resist
povertie,
in which want and extremitie he ever continued after. Socrates
did
in my minde more undauntedly enure himselfe to this humor, maintaining
for his exercise the peevish frowardnesse of his wife, than which no
essay
can be more vexfull, and is a continuall fighting at the sharpe. Metellus
of all the Roman senators he onely having undertaken with the power of
vertue, to endure the violence of Saturninus Tribune of the
people
in Rome, who by maine force went about to have a most unjust
law
passe in favour of the Communaltie: by which opposition, having
incurred
all the capital paines that Saturninus had imposed on such as
should
refuse it, entertained those that led him to the place of execution,
with
such speeches: That to doe evill was a thing verie easie, and too
demissely
base, and to doe well where was no danger, was a common thing, but to
doe
well where was both perill and opposition, was the peculiar office of a
man of vertue. These words of Metellus doe clearly
represent
unto us what I would have verified ; which is, that vertue rejecteth
facilitie
to be her companion: And that an easefull, pleasant, and declining way
by which the regular steps of a good inclination of nature are directed
is not the way of true vertue. She requireth a craggie, rough, and
thornie
way. She would either have strange difficulties to wrestle withall (as
that of Metellus) by whose meanes fortune her selfe is pleased
to
breake the roughnesse of his course; or such inward incombrances as the
disordinate appetites and imperfections of our condition bring unto
her.
Hitherto I have come at good ease; but at the end of this discourse one
thing commeth into my minde, which is that the soule of Socrates,
which is absolute the perfectest that ever came to my knowledge, would,
according to my accompt, prove a soule deserving but little
commendation:
For I can conceive no manner of violence or vicious concupiscence in
him:
I can imagine no manner of difficultie or compulsion in the whole
course
of his vertue. I know his reason so powerfull, and so absolute mistress
over him, that she can never give him way in any vicious desire, and
will
not suffer it so much as to breed in him. To a vertue so exquisite and
so high raised as his is, I can perswade nothing. Me thinks I see it
march
with a victorious and triumphant pace, in pompe and at ease,
without
let or disturbance. If vertue cannot shine but by resisting contrarie
appetites,
shall we then say it cannot passe without the assistance of vice, and
oweth
him this, that by his meanes it attaineth to honour and credit? What
should
also betide of that glorious and generous Epicurean voluptuousnesse
that
makes accompt effeminately to pamper vertue in her lap, and there
wantonly
to entertaine it, allowing it for her recreation, shame, reproch,
agues,
povertie, death, and tortures? if I presuppose that perfect vertue is
knowne
by combating sorrow and patiently under going paine, by tolerating the
fits and agonies of the gout, without stirring out of his place; if for
a necessarie object I appoint her sharpnesse and difficultie, what
shall
become of that vertue which hath attained so high a degree, as it doth
not only despise all manner of paine, but rather rejoyceth at it, and
when
a strong fit of the collike shall assaile it, to cause it selfe to be
tickled,
as that is which the Epicureans have established, and whereof divers
amongst
them have by their actions left most certaine proofes unto us? As also
others have, whom ill effect finde to have exceeded the verie rules of
their discipline; witnesse Cato the younger; when I see him
die,
tearing and mangling his entrails, I cannot simply content my selfe to
beleeve that at that time he had his soule wholly exempted from all
trouble
or free from vexation: I cannot imagine be did only maintaine himselfe
in this march or course which the rule of the Stoike sect had ordained
unto him, setled, without alteration or emotion, and impassible. There
was, in my conceit, in this mans vertue overmuch cheerefulnesse and
youthfulnesse
to stay there. I verily beleeve he felt a kind of pleasure and
sensualitie
in so noble an action, and that therein he more pleased himself than in
any other he ever performed in his life. Sic abiit e vita, ut
causam
moriendi nactum se esse gauderet: (Cic. Tusc. Qu. i.)
'So
departed he his life, that he rejoiced to have found an occasion of
death.'
I doe so constantly beleeve it, that I make a doubt whether he would
have
had the occasion of so noble an exploit taken from him. And if the
goodnesse
which induced him to embrace publike commodities more than his owne did
not bridle me, I should easily fall into this opinion, that he thought
himselfe greatly beholding unto fortune to have put his vertue unto so
noble a triall, and to have favoured that robber to tread the ancient
libertie
of his countrie under foot. In which action me thinks I read a kinde of
unspeakable joy in his minde, and a motion of extraordinary pleasure,
joined
to a manlike voluptuousnesse, at what time it beheld the worthinesse,
and
considered the generositie and haughtinesse of his enterprise,
Deliberata morte
ferocior
-- Hor. i. Od. xxxvii. 29. Cleopatra.
Then most in fiercenesse did
he passe,
When he of death resolved was,
not urged or set-on by any hope of
glorie,
as the popular and effeminate judgements have judged: For, that
consideration
is over base, to touch so generous, so haughtie, and so constant a
heart;
but for the beautie of the thing it selfe, which he, who managed all
the
springs and directed all the wards thereof, saw much more clearer, and
in its perfection, than we can doe. Philosophie hath done me a pleasure
to judge that so honorable an action had been undecently placed in any
other life than in Catoes, and that onely unto his it
appertained
to make such an end. Therefore did he with reason perswade both his
sonne
and the Senators that accompanied him, to provide otherwise for
themselves. Catoni quum incredibilem natura tribuisset gravitatem,
eamque ipse
perpetua
constantia roboravisset, semperque in proposito consilio permansisset:
mortendum potius quam tyranni vultus aspiciendus erat: 'Whereas nature
had affoorded Cato an incredible gravitie, and he had
strengthened
it by continuall constancie, and ever had stood firme in his proposed
desseignes,
rather to die than behold the Tyrants face. ' Each death should be
such as the life hath been. By dying we become no other than we were. I
ever interpret a mans death by his life. And if a man shall tell me of
any one undanted in apparance, joyned unto a weake life; I imagine it
to
proceed of some weake cause, and sutable to his life. The ease
therefore
of his death, and the facilitie he had acquired by the vigor of his
minde,
shall we say, it ought to abate something of the lustre of his vertue?
And which of those that have their spirits touched, be it never so
little,
with the true tincture of Philosophie, can content himselfe to imagine Socrates,
onely, free from feare and passion, in the accident of his
imprisonment,
of his fetters, and of his condemnation? And who doth not perceive in
him,
not onely constancie and resolution (which were ever his ordinarie
qualities)
but also a kinde of I wot not what new contentment, and carelesse
rejoycing
in his last behaviour, and discourses? By the startling at the
pleasure,
which he feeleth in clawing of his legges, after his fetters were
taken-off;
doth he not manifestly declare an equal glee and joy in his soule for
being
rid of his former incommodities, and entering into the knowledge of
things
to come? Cato shall pardon me (if he please) his death is more
tragicall,
and further extended, whereas this in a certaine manner is more faire
and
glorious. Aristippus answered those that bewailed the same, 'When
I die, I pray the Gods send me such a death.' A man shall plainly
perceive
in the minds of these two men, and of such as imitate them (for I make
a question whether ever they could be matched) so perfect an habitude
unto
vertue, that it was even converted into their complexion. It is no
longer
a painefull vertue, nor by the ordinances of reason, for the
maintaining
of which their minde must be strengthened: It is the verie essence of
their
soule; it is her naturall and ordinarie habit. They have made it such,
by a long exercise and observing the rules and precepts of Philosophic,
having lighted upon a faire and rich nature. Those vicious passions
which
breed in us finde no entrance in them. The vigor and constancie of
their
soules, doth suppresse and extinguish all manner of concupiscences so
soone
as they but begin to move. Now that it be not more glorious, by an
undaunted
and divine resolution, to hinder the growth of temptations, and for a
man
to frame himselfe to vertue, so that the verie seeds of vice be cleane
rooted out; than by mayne force to hinder their progresse; and having
suffred
himselfe to be surprised by the first assaults of passions, to arme and
bandie himselfe, to stay their course and to suppresse them: And that
this
second effect be not also much fairer than to be simply stored with a
facile
and gentle nature, and of it selfe distasted and in dislike with
licentiousnesse
and vice, I am perswaded there is no doubt. For this third and last
manner
seemeth in some sort to make a man innocent, but not vertuous: free
from
doing ill, but not sufficiently apt to doe well. Seeing this condition
is so neere unto imperfection and weaknesses that I know not well how
to
cleare their confines and distinctions. The verie names of goodnesse
and
innocencie, are for this respect in some sort names of contempt. I see
that many vertues, as chastitie, sobrietie, and temperance, may come
unto
us by meanes of corporall defects and imbecilities. Constancie in
dangers
(if it may be termed constancie) contempt of death, patiencie in
misfortunes,
may happen and are often seen in men, for want of good judgeent in such
accidents, and that they are not apprehended for such as they are
indeed. Lacke of apprehension and stupiditie counterfeit vertuous
effects. As
I have often seen come to passe, that some men are commended for things
they rather deserve to be blamed. An Italian gentleman did once hold
this
position in my presence, to the prejudice and disadvantage of his
nation;
That the subtiltie of the Italians, and the vivacitie of their
conceptions
was so great that they foresaw such dangers and accidents as might
betide
them so far-off that it was not to be deemed strange if in times of
warre
they were often seene to provide for their safetie, yea, before they
had
perceived the danger: That we and the Spaniards, who were not so warie
and subtill, went further; and that before we could be frighted with
any
perill, we must be induced to see it with our eyes, and feel it with
our
hands, and that even then we had no more hold: But that the Germanes
and
Switzers, more shallow and leaden-headed, had scarce the sense and wit
to re-advise themselves, at what times they were even overwhelmed with
miserie, and the axe readie to fall on their heads. It was peradventure
but in jest that he spake it, yet is it most true that in the art of
warre-fare
new trained souldlers, and such as are but novices in the trade, doe
often
headlong and hand over head cast themselves into dangers, with more
inconsideration
than afterward when they have seene and endured the first shocks, and
are
better trained in the schoole of perils.
------ haud
iqnarus,
quantum nova gloria in armis, Et prædulce decus primo
certamine possit.
Not ignorant, how much in
armes new
praise,
And sweetest honour, in first
conflict
weighes.
Lo here the reason
why
when we judge of a particular action, we must first consider many
circumstances,
and throughly observe the man, that hath produced the same before we
name
and censure it. But to speake a word of my selfe: I have sometimes
noted
my friends to terme that wisdome in me which was but meere fortune, and
to deeme that advantage of courage and patience that was advantage of
judgement
and opinion; and to attribute one title for another unto me, sometimes
to my profit, and now and then to my losse. As for the rest, I am far
from
attaining unto that chiefe and most perfect degree of excellences,
where
a habitude is made of vertue, that even of the second I have made no
great
triall. I have not greatly strived to bridle the desires wherewith I
have
found my selfe urged and pressed. My vertue is a vertue, or to say
better
innocencie, accidentall and casuall. Had I been borne with a lesse
regular
complexion, I imagine my state had been verie pittifull, and it would
have
gon hard with me: for, I could never perceive any great constancie in
my
soule, to resist and undergoe passions, had they been any thing
violent.
I cannot foster quarels, or endure contentions in my house. So am I not
greatly beholding unto my selfe, in that I am exempted from many vices:
------- si vitiis
mediocribus,
et mea paucis Mendosa est natura, alioqui
recta,
velut si Egregio inspersos reprehendas
corpore nævos. -- Hor. i. Sat. vi. 65.
If in a few more faults my
nature
faile,
Right otherwise: as if that you
would raile
On prettie moles well placed,
On bodie seemely graced.
I am more endebted to
my
fortune than to my reason for it: Shee hath made me to be borne of a
race
famous for integritie and honestie, and of a verie good father. I wot
not
well whether any part of his humours have descended into me, or whether
the domestike examples and good institution of my infancie have
insensibly
set their helping hand unto it; or whether I were otherwise so borne:
Seu Libra, seu me
Scorpius
aspicit Formidolosus, pars violentior Natalis
horæ,
seu tyrannus
Hesperiæ
Capricornus undæ -- Hor. ii. Od. xvii. 17.
Whether the chiefe part of my
birth-houre
were
Ascendent Libra, or Scorpius
full of feare,
Or in my Horoscope were Capricorne,
Whose tyrannie neere westerne
seas
is borne:
But so it is, that
naturally
of my selfe I abhorre and detest all manner of vices. The answer of Antisthenes
to one that demanded of him which was the best thing to be learned; To
unlearne evill, seemed to be fixed on this image, or to have an
ayme
at this. I abhorre them (I say) with so naturall and so innated an
opinion,
that the very same instinct and impression which I suckt from my nurse,
I have so kept that no occasions could ever make me alter the
same:
no, not mine owne discourses, which, because they have been somewhat
lavish
in noting or taxing something of the common course, could easily induce
me to some actions which this my naturall inclination makes me to hate.
I will tell you a wonder, I will tell it you indeed: I thereby find in
many things more stay and order in my manners than in my opinion: and
my
concupiscence lesse debauched than my reason. Aristippus
established
certaine opinions so bold, in favour of voluptuousnesse and riches,
that
he made all Philosophie to mutinie against him. But concerning his
manners, Dionysius the tyrant, having presented him with three
faire
young
wenches, that he might chuse the fairest, he answered he would chuse
them
all three, and that Paris had verie ill successes forsomuch as
he
had preferred one above her fellowes. But they being brought to his
owne
house, he sent them backe againe, without tasting them. His servant one
day carrying store of money after him, and being so overcharged with
the
weight of it that he complained, his master commanded him to cast so
much
thereof away as troubled him. And Epicurus, whose positions are
irreligious and delicate, demeaned himselfe in his life very
laboriously
and devoutly. He wrote to a friend of his, that he lived but with
browne
bread and water, and entreated him to send him a piece of cheese,
against
the time he was to make a solemne feast. May it be true, that to be
perfectly
good we must be so by an hidden, naturall, and universall proprietie,
without
law, reason, and example? The disorders and excesses wherein I have
found
my selfe engaged are not (God be thanked) of the worst. I have rejected
and condemned them in my selfe, according to their worth; for my
judgement
was never found to be infected by them. And on the other side, I accuse
them more rigorously in my selfe than in another. But that is all: as
for
the rest, I applie but little resistance unto them, and suffer my selfe
over-easily to encline to the other side of the ballance, except it be
to order and empeach them from being commixt with others, which (if a
man
take not good heed unto himselfe) for the most part entertaine and
enterchaine
themselves the one with the other. As for mine, I have, as much as it
hath
laine in my power, abridged them, and kept them as single and as alone
as I could:
------nec
ultra, Errorem foveo -- Juven. Sat.
viii. 164.
Nor doe I cherish any more,
The error which I bred before.
For, as touching the
Stoikes
opinion, who say, that when the wise man worketh, he worketh with all
his
vertues together; howbeit, according to the nature of the action, there
be one more apparent than other (to which purpose the similitude of
mans
bodie might, in some sort, serve their turne; for the action of choler
cannot exercise it selfe, except all the humours set-to their helping
hand,
although choler be predominant) if thence they will draw a like
consequence,
that when the offender trespasseth, he doth it with all the vices
together,
I doe not so easily beleeve them, or else I understand them not: for,
in
effect, I feel the contrarie. They are sharpe-wittie subtilties, and
without
substance, about which Philosophie doth often busie it selfe. Some
vices
I shun; but othersome I eschew as much as any saint can doe. The
Peripatetikes
doe also disavow this connexitie and indissoluble knitting together.
And Aristotle
is of opinion, That a wise and just man may be both intemperate and
incontinent.Socrates avowed unto them, who in his
phisiognomie
perceived some inclination unto vice, that indeed it was his naturall
propension,
but that by discipline he had corrected the same. And the familiar
friends
of the Philosopher Stilpo were went to say, that being borne
subject
unto wine and women, he had, by studie, brought himself to abstaine
from
both. On the other side; what good I have, I have it by the lot of my
birth:
I have it neither by law nor prescription, nor by any apprentiship. The
innocencie that is in me is a kinde of simple- plaine innocencie,
without
vigor or art. Amongst all other vices, there is none I hate more than
Crueltie,
both by nature and judgement, as the extremest of all vices. But it is
with such an yearning and faint-hartednesse, that if I see but a
chickins
necke puld off, or a pigge stickt, I cannot chuse but grieve, and I
cannot
well endure a seelie dewbedabled hare to groane when she is seized upon
by the houndes, although hunting be a violent pleasure. Those that are
to withstand voluptuousnesse doe willingly use this argument, to shew
it
is altogether vicious and unreasonable: That where she is in her
greatest
prime and chiefe strength, she doth so over-sway us, that reason can
have
no accesse unto us, and for a further triall, alleage the experience
wee
feel and have of it in our acquaintance with women.
-----cum
iam præsagit gaudia corpus Atque in eo est Venus, ut
muliebria
conserat arva. -- Lucr. iv. 1097.
When now the bodie doth
light-joyes
fore-know,
And Venus set the womans fields
to sow.
Where they thinke
pleasure
doth so far transport us beyond our selves, that our discourse, then
altogether
overwhelmed, and our reason wholie ravished in the gulfe of
sensualitie,
cannot by any meanes discharge her function. I know it may be
otherwise:
and if a man but please, he may sometimes, even upon the verie instant
cast his mind on other conceits. But she must be strained to a higher
key,
and heedfully pursued. I know a man may gourmandize the earnest and
thoughtconfounding
violence of that pleasure: for I may with some experience speak of it,
and I have not found Venus to be so imperious a Goddesse as
many,
and more reformed than my selfe, witnesse her to be. I thinke it not a
wonder, as doth the Queene of Navarre, in one of the tales of
her Heptameron (which, respecting the subject it treateth of,
is a
verie
prettie booke) nor doe I deeme it a matter of extreame difficultie for
a man to weare out a whole night, in all opportunitie and libertie, in
companie of a faire mistresses long time before sued-unto, and by him
desired;
religiously keeping his word, if he have engaged himselfe, to be
contented
with simple kisses and plaine touching. I am of opinion that the
example
of the sport in hunting would more fit the same: wherein as there is
lesse
pleasure, so there is more distraction and surprising, whereby our
reason
being amazed, looseth the leasure to prepare her selfe against it: when
as after a long game, the beast doth suddenly start, or rowse up before
us, and haply in such a place where we least expected the same. That
suddaine
motion and the earnestnesse of showting, jubeting and hallowing, still
ringing in our eares, would make it verie hard for those who love that
kind of close or chamber-hunting, at that verie instant, to withdraw
their
thoughts elsewhere. And poets make Diana victoriously to
triumph
both over the firebrand and arrowes of Cupid.
Quis non malarum
quas
amor curas habet Hæc inter obliviscitur?
-- Hor. Epod. ii. 37.
While this is doing, who doth
not
forget
The wicked cares wherewith
Love's
heart doth fret?
But to returne to my
former
discourse, I have a verie feeling and tender compassion of other mens
afflictions,
and should more easily weep for companie sake, if possible for any
occasion
whatsoever I could shed teares. There is nothing sooner moveth teares
in
me than to see others weepe, not onely fainedly, but howsoever, whether
truly or forcedly. I do not greatly waile for the dead, but rather
envie
them. Yet doe I much waile and moane the dying. The canibales and
savage
people do not so much offend me with roasting and eating of dead
bodies;
as those which torment and persecute the living. Let any man be
executed
by law, how deservedly soever, I cannot endure to behold the execution
with an unrelenting eye. Some one going about to witnesse the clemencie
of Julius Cæsar; 'He was,' saith he, 'tractable and milde
in matters of revenge. Having compelled the pirates to yeeld themselves
unto him, who had before taken him prisoner and put him to ransome,
forasmuch
as he had threatned to have them all crucified, he condemned them to
that
kind of death, but it was after he had caused them to be strangled.' Philemon
his secretarie, who would have poysoned him, had no sharper punishment
of him than an ordinarie death. Without mentioning the Latin Author,
who
for a testimonie of clemencie, dared to alleage the onely killing of
those
by whom a man hath been offended, it may easily be guessed that he is
tainted
with vile and horrible examples of cruelties such as Romane Tyrants
brought
into fashion. As for me, even in matters of justice, whatsoever is
beyond
a simple death, I deeme it to be meere crueltie: and especiall
amongst
us, who ought to have a regardfull respect that their soules should be
sent to heaven, which cannot be, having first by intolerable tortures
agitated,
and as it were brought them to dispaire. A souldier, not long since,
being
a prisoner, and perceiving from a loft a tower, where he was kept, that
store of people flocked together on a greene, and carpenters were busie
at worke to erect a skaffold, suppposing the same to be for him, as one
desperat, resolved to kill himselfe, and searching up and downe for
something
to make himselfe away, found nothing but an old rustie cart-naile,
which
fortune presented him with; he tooke it, and therewithall, with all the
strength he had, strooke and wounded himselfe twice in the throat, but
seeing it would not rid him of life, he then thrust it into his bellie
up to the head, where he left it fast-sticking. Shortly after, one of
his
keepers coming in unto him, and yet living, finding him in that
miserable
plight, but weltring in his goare-blood and readie to gaspe his last,
told
the Magistrates of it, which, to prevent time before he should die,
hastned
to pronounce sentence against him: which when he heard, and that he was
onely condemned to have his head cut off, he seemed to take heart of
grace
againe, and to be sorie for what be had done, and tooke some
comfortable
drinks, which before be had refused, greatly thanking the Judges for
his
unhoped gentle condemnation: And told them, that for feare of a more,
sharply-cruell,
and intolerable death by law, he had resolved to prevent it by some
violent
manner of death, having by the preparations he had seen the carpenters
make, and by gathering of people together, conceived an opinion that
they
would torture him with some horrible torment, and seemed to be
delivered
from death onely by the change of it. Were I worthie to give counsell,
I would have these examples of rigor, by which superior powers goe
about
to keep the common people in awe, to be onely exercised on the bodies
of
criminall malefactors: For, to see them deprived of Christian buriall,
to see them haled, disbowelled, parboyled, and quartered, might haply
touch
the common sort as much as the paines they make the living to endure:
howbeit
in effect it be little or nothing, as saith God, Qui corpus
occidunt,
et postea non habent quod faciant. (Luke xii. 4.) 'Those that
kill
the bodie', but have afterwards no more to doe:' And Poets make the
horror of this picture greatly to prevaile, yea, and above death.
Heu reliquias
semiassi
Regis, denudatis ossibus, Per terram sanie delibutas
foede
divexarier. -- Cic. Tusc. Qu. i.
O that the reliques of an
halfe burnt
King, bones bared,
On earth besmear'd with filth,
should
be so fouly marred.
It was my fortune to
be
at Rome upon a day that one Catena, a notorious
high-way
theefe, was executed: at his strangling no man of the companie seemed
to
be mooved to any ruth; but when he came to be quartered, the
Executioner
gave no blow that was not accompanied with a piteous voyce and hartie
exclamation,
as if every man had had a feeling sympathie, or lent his senses to the
poor mangled wretch. Such inhumane outrages and barbarous excesses
should
be exercised against the rinde, and not practised against the quicke.
In
a case somewhat like unto this, did Artaxerxes asswage and
mitigate
the sharpnesse of the ancient lawes of Persia, appointing that
the
Lords which had trespassed in their estate, whereas they were wont to
be
whipped, they should be stripped naked, and their clothes whipped for
them;
and where they were accustomed to have their haire pulled off, they
should
onely have their hat taken off. The Ægyptians, so devout and
religious,
thought they did sufficiently satisfie divine Justice, in sacrificing
painted
and counterfeit hogges unto it: An over-hardy invention to go about
with
pictures and shadowes to appease God, a substance so essentiall and
divine.
I live in an age wherein we abound with incredible examples of this
vice,
through the licentiousnesse of our civill and intestine warres: and
read
all ancient stories, be they never so tragicall, you shall find none to
equall those we daily see practised. But that hath nothing made me
acquainted
with it. I could hardly be perswaded before I had seene it, that the
world
could have afforded so marble-hearted and savage- minded men, that for
the onely pleasure of murther would commit it; then cut, mangle, and
hacke
other members in pieces to rouze and sharpen their wits, to invent
unused
tortures and unheard-of torments: to devise new and unknowne deaths,
and
that in cold blood, without any former enmitie or quarrell, or without
any gaine or profit; and onely to this end, that they may enjoy the
pleasing
spectacle of the languishing gestures, pitifull notions, horror-moving
yellings, deep fetcht groanes, and lamentable voyces of a dying and
drooping
man. For that is the extremest point whereunto the crueltie of man may
attaine. Ut homo hominem, non iratus, non timens, tantum
spectaturus
occidat; (Sen. Clem. ii. c. 4.) 'That one man should
kill
another, neither being angrie nor afeard, but onely to looke on.' As
for me, I could never so much as endure, without remorse or griefe, to
see a poore, sillie, and innocent beast pursued and killed, which is
harmlesse
and void of defence, and of whom we receive no offence at all. And as
it
commonly hapneth, that when the Stag begins to be embost, and finds his
strength to faile him, having no other remedie left him, doth yeeld and
bequeath himselfe unto us that pursue him, with teares suing to us for
mercie:
------ questuque
cruentus Atque imploranti similis:
-- Virg. Æn. vii. 521.
With blood from throat, and
teares
from eyes,
It seemes that he for pittie
cryes:
was ever a grievous spectacle unto
me.
I seldom take any beast alive but I give him his libertie. Pythagoras
was wont to buy fishes of fishers, and birds of fowlers to set them
free
againe.
----- primoque a
cæde
ferarum Incaluisse puto maculatum
sanguine
ferrum. -- Ovid. Metam. xv. 106.
And first our blades in blood
embrude
deeme
With slaughter of poore beasts
did
reeking steeme.
Such as by nature
shew
themselves bloodie-minded towards harmlesse beasts, witnesse a naturall
propension unto crueltie. After the ancient Romanes had once
enured
themselves without horror to behold the slaughter of wild beasts in
their
shewes, they came to the murther of men and Gladiators. Nature (I fear
me) hath of her owne selfe added unto man a certaine instinct to
inhumanitie.
No man taketh delight to see wild beasts sport and wantonly to make
much
one of another: Yet all are pleased to see them tugge, mangle, and
enterteare
one another. And lest any bodie should jeast at this sympathie, which I
have with them, Divinitie itselfe willeth us to shew them some favour:
And considering that one selfe-same master (I mean that
incomprehensible
worlds-framer) hath placed all creatures in this his wondrous palace
for
his service, and that they, as well as we, are of his household: I say
it hath some reason to injoyne us to shew some respect and affection
towards
them. Pythagoras borrowed Metempsychosis of the Ægyptians,
but since it hath been received of divers Nations, and especially of
our Druides:
Morte carent
animæ,
semperique priore relicta Sede, novis domibus vivunt,
habitantque
receptæ. -- 158.
Our death-lesse soules, their
former
seats refrained,
In harbors new live and lodge
entertained.
The Religion of our ancient Gaules
inferred, that soules being eternall, ceased not to remove and change
place
from one bodie to another: to which fantasie was also entermixed some
consideration
of divine justice. For, according to the soules behaviors, during the
time
she had been with Alexander, they sayd that God appointed it
another
bodie to dwell in either more or lesse painfull, and suitable to her
condition.
----- muta ferarum Cogit vincla pati truculentos
ingerit ursis, Prædonesque lupis,
fallaces
vilpibus addit. Atque per varios annos per
mille
figuras Egit, letheo purgatos flumine
tandem Rursus ad humanæ
revocat
primordia formæ. -- Claud. in Ruff. i. 482, 491.
Dumbe hands of beasts he
makes men's
soules endure,
Blood-thirstie soules he doth to
Beares enure,
Craftie to Foxes, to Woolves
bent
to rapes;
Thus when for many yeares,
through
many shapes,
He hath them dri v'n in Lethe
lake at last,
Them purg'd he turns to mans
forms
whence they past.
If the soule had been
valiant,
they placed it in the bodie of a Lion: if Voluptuous, in a Swine: if
faint-harted,
in a Stagge or a Hare; if malicious, in a Foxe; and so of the, rest,
untill
that being purified by this punishment, it re-assumed and tooke the
bodie
of some other man againe.
Ipse ego, nam
memini,
Troiani tempore belli Panthoides Euphorbus eram. --
Ovid. Metam. xv. 160.
When Troy was won, I, as I
call to
mind,
Euphorbus was, and Panthus sonne
by kind.
As touching that
alliance
betweene us and beasts, I make no great accompt of it, nor do I greatly
admit it, neither of that which divers Nations, and namely of the most
ancient and noble, who have not onely received beasts into their
societie
and companie, but allowed them a place farre above themselves;
sometimes
deeming them to be familiars and favored of their Gods, and holding
them
in a certaine awfull respect and reverence more than humane, and others
acknowledging no other God nor no other Divinity than they. Belluæ
a barbaris propter beneficium consecratæ: (Cic. Nat.
Deor.
i.) 'Beasts by the Barbarians were made sacred for some benefit.'
----- crocodilon
adorat Pars hæc, illa pavet
saturam
serpentibus Ibin, Effigies sacri hic nitet
aurea
Corcopitheci. Juven.
Sat. xv. 2.
This Country doth the
Crocodile adore,
That feares the Storks glutted
with
Serpents gore,
The sacred Babion here, In gold
shape doth appeare.
-----hic piscem
fluminis,
illic Oppida tota canem
venerantur. -- 7.
A fish here whole Townes
reverence
most,
A dog they honour in that coast.
And the very same
interpretation
that Plutarke giveth unto this error, which is very well taken,
is also honourable for t hem. For, he saith, that (for example sake) it
was neither the Cat nor the Oxe that the Ægyptians adored, but
that
in those beasts they worshipped some image of divine faculties. In this
patience and utility, and in that vivacity, or (as our neighbours the
Borgonians
with all Germanie) the impatience to see themselves shut up:
Whereby
they represented the liberty which they loved and adored beyond all
other
divine faculty, and so of others. But when amongst the most moderate
opinions
I meet with some discourses that goe about and labour to shew the neere
resemblance betweene us and beasts, and what share they have in our
greatest
privileges, and with how much likely-hood they are compared unto us,
truly
I abate much of our presumption, and am easily removed from that
imaginary
soveraigntie that some give and ascribe unto us above all other
creatures.
I f all that were to be contradicted, yet is there a kinde of respect
and
a generall duty of humanity which tieth us not only unto brute beasts
that
have life and sense, but even unto trees and plants. Unto men we owe
Justice,
and to all other creatures that are capable of it, grace and benignity.
There is a kinde of enterchangeable commerce and mutual bond betweene
them
and us. I am not ashamed nor afraid to declare the tendernesse of my
childish
Nature which is such that I cannot well reject my Dog if he chance
(although
out of season) to fawne upone me, or beg of me to play with him. The
Turkes
have almes and certaine hospitals appointed for brute beasts. The
Romans
have a publike care to breed and nourish Geese, by whose vigilance
their
capital had beene saved. The Athenians did precisely ordaine that all
manner
of Mules which had served or beene imploied about the building of their
temple called Hecatompedon should be free and suffered to feed
wheresoever
they pleased, without any let or impeachment. The Agrigentines had an
ordinary
custome seriously and solemnly to bury all such beasts as they had held
deare; as horses of rare worth and merit, speciall dogs, choice or
profitable
birds, or such as had but served to make their children sport. And the
sumptnous magnificence which in all other things was ordinary and
peculiar
unto them, appeared also almost notably in the stately sumptuousnesse
and
costly number of monuments erected to that end, which many ages after
have
endured and been maintained in pride and state. The Ægyptians
were
wont to bury their Wolves, their Dogs, their Cats, their Beares, and
Crocodiles
in holy places, embalming their carcasses, and at their deaths, to
weare
mourning weeds for them. Cymon caused a stately honourable
tombe
to be erected for the Mares, wherewith he had three times gained the
prize
at running in the Olimpike games. Ancient Xantippus caused his
Dog
to be enterred upon a hill by the sea shore, which ever since hath
beene
named by him. And Plutarch (as himselfe saith) made it a matter
of conscience, in hope of a small gaine to sell or send an Oxe to the
shambles
that had served him a long time.