the ages of sin, or sinnes birth & groweth with the stepps, and degrees of sin, from thought to finall impenitencie. this text is an enriched version of the tcp digital transcription a46819 of text r213543 in the english short title catalog (wing j661a). textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. the text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with morphadorner. the annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish. this text has not been fully proofread approx. 5 kb of xml-encoded text transcribed from 10 1-bit group-iv tiff page images. earlyprint project evanston,il, notre dame, in, st. louis, mo 2017 a46819 wing j661a estc r213543 99825899 99825899 30290 this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the early english books online text creation partnership. this phase i text is available for reuse, according to the terms of creative commons 0 1.0 universal . the text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. early english books online. (eebo-tcp ; phase 1, no. a46819) transcribed from: (early english books online ; image set 30290) images scanned from microfilm: (early english books, 1641-1700 ; 1795:33) the ages of sin, or sinnes birth & groweth with the stepps, and degrees of sin, from thought to finall impenitencie. jenner, thomas, fl. 1631-1656, attributed name. langeren, jacob van, engraver. 9 leaves : ill. (metal cuts) s.n., [s.l. : 1655] sometimes attributed to thomas jenner. an emblem book. the last plate is signed: ja. v. l. fecit, i.e. jacob van langeren. caption title. imprint from wing. reproduction of the original in the british library. eng sin -early works to 1800. emblem books, english -early works to 1800. a46819 r213543 (wing j661a). civilwar no the ages of sin, or sinnes birth & groweth. with the stepps, and degrees of sin, from thought to finall impenitencie. [no entry] 1655 571 5 0 0 0 0 0 88 d the rate of 88 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the d category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words. 2000-00 tcp assigned for keying and markup 2001-11 aptara keyed and coded from proquest page images 2001-12 tcp staff (michigan) sampled and proofread 2001-12 tcp staff (michigan) text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-01 pfs batch review (qc) and xml conversion the ages of sin , or sinnes birth & groweth . with the stepps , and degrees of sin , from thought to finall impenitencie . suggestion . originall-concupiscence doth make our nature like a foule great-bellyed snake : for , wer not sathan apt to tempt to sin ; yett , lustfull-thoughts would breed & brood , within : but , happie , hee , that takes these little-ones , to dash their braines ( soone ) 'gainst repentant-st●nes . rumination when lust hath ( thus ) conceiu'd it brings forth sin , and ruminating-thoughts its shape begin . like as the beares oft-licking of her whelps . that foule deformed creatures shape much helps . the dangers great , our sinfull thoughts to cherish , stop thire growth , or thy poore soule will perish . delectation . if , sinfull thoughts ( once ) nestle in mans heart , the sluce is ope , delight ( then ) playes its part : then , like the old-ape hugging in his armes , his apish-young-one ; sin , the soule becharmes and , when our apish impious-thoughts delight us oh , then , ( alas ) most mortally they bite us . consent . for , where sin workes content , consent will follow ; and , this , the soule , into sins gulfe , doth swollow . for , as two ravning wolves ( for , t is theire kinde ) to suck lambs-blood , doe hunt with equall-minde : even so , the soule & sin consent , in one , till , soule & body be quite overthrowne . act . sin and the soule●●us , ha●ing stricken hands , the sinner ( now ) for action ready stands ; and tyger-like , swollowes-up , at one-bitt , what euer impious prey his h●●●● doth fitt committing sin , with eager 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 selling his soule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 iteration . from eager-acting sin , comes iteration , or , frequent custome of sins perpetration ; which , like great flesh-flies liting on ra●●-flesh , though oft beat-off , ( if not kild ) come afresh : hence , be'lzebub is term'd prince of fflesh-fflies , 'cause sin , still , acts , vntill ( by grace ) it dies . gloriation . custome in sin takes sense of sin away , this makes all-sin seeme but a sport , a play : yea , like a rampant-lyon , proud and stout , insulting , o're his prey , staulking about , the saucy-sinner boasts & braggs of sinne , as one ( oh woe ) that doth a citty winne ... obduration . when sinne brings sinners to this fearefull pass , what followes , but a hard heart-brow of brass ? a heart ( i say ) more hard then tortess-back , which , nether sworde nor axe can hew or hack ; iudgements nor mercies , treats nor threats can cause to leave-off sin , to love or feare gods lawes . finall-impenitency . and ( now , alas ) what is sins last extent ? a hard-heart makes a heart impenitent . for , can a leopard change his spotted skin ? no nor a heart accustom'd ( thus ) , his sin . then , conscience , headlong , casts impenitence . with horrid ffrights of hellish recompence . the mirrour of maiestie: or, the badges of honour conceitedly emblazoned with emblemes annexed, poetically vnfolded. h. g., fl. 1618. 1618 approx. 55 kb of xml-encoded text transcribed from 37 1-bit group-iv tiff page images. text creation partnership, ann arbor, mi ; oxford (uk) : 2008-09 (eebo-tcp phase 1). a01375 stc 11496 estc s102778 99838541 99838541 2923 this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the early english books online text creation partnership. this phase i text is available for reuse, according to the terms of creative commons 0 1.0 universal . the text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. early english books online. (eebo-tcp ; phase 1, no. a01375) transcribed from: (early english books online ; image set 2923) images scanned from microfilm: (early english books, 1475-1640 ; 1098:10) the mirrour of maiestie: or, the badges of honour conceitedly emblazoned with emblemes annexed, poetically vnfolded. h. g., fl. 1618. goodyere, henry, sir, 1551 or 2-1629. [4], 63, [3] p. : ill. printed by william iones, dwelling in red-crosse-streete, london : 1618. "to those noble personages ..", [a]2a, signed: h.g. sometimes attributed to sir henry goodyere. in verse. signatures: [a]² b-i⁴. last leaf contains "a catalogue of those names vnto whom this worke is appropriated". variant: [a]2r contains dedication "to the kings most excellent maiestie"; [a]2 a cancel?. reproduction of the original in the british library. created by converting tcp files to tei p5 using tcp2tei.xsl, tei @ oxford. re-processed by university of nebraska-lincoln and northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. eebo-tcp is a partnership between the universities of michigan and oxford and the publisher proquest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by proquest via their early english books online (eebo) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). the general aim of 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limit of 100 instances per text. any remaining illegibles were encoded as s. understanding these processes should make clear that, while the overall quality of tcp data is very good, some errors will remain and some readable characters will be marked as illegible. users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a tcp editor. the texts were encoded and linked to page images in accordance with level 4 of the tei in libraries guidelines. copies of the texts have been issued variously as sgml (tcp schema; ascii text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable xml (tcp schema; characters represented either as utf-8 unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless xml (tei p5, characters represented either as utf-8 unicode or tei g elements). keying and markup guidelines are available at the text creation partnership web site . eng heraldry -early works to 1800. emblem books, english. 2007-09 tcp assigned for keying and markup 2007-09 apex covantage keyed and coded from proquest page images 2007-10 elspeth healey sampled and proofread 2007-10 elspeth healey text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-02 pfs batch review (qc) and xml conversion the mirrovr of maiestie : or , the badges of honovr conceitedly emblazoned : with emblemes annexed , poetically vnfolded . — nec his plebecula gaudet . london , printed by william iones , dwelling in red-crosse-streete . 1619. to those noble personages rancked in the catalogve . my feebler muse farre too too weake to sing , ha's got your honours on her flaggring wing , and borne them to the loftiest pitch she may : therefore ( submissiue ) she do's humbly pray , that when her tongue reeles , or inuention haults , your fauours will giue crutches to her faults . your lordships in all dutifull obseruancie , h. g. ❧ a catalogve of those names vnto whom this worke is appropriated . the kings maiestie . the queene . the prince . the lord arch-bishop of canterburie . the lord chancellor . the lord treasurer . the lord priuie seale . the lord admirall . the duke of lenox . the marquesse of buckinghame . the lord chamberlaine . the earle of arundell . the earle of south-hampton . the earle of hertford . the earle of essex the earle of dorset . the earle of mountgomerie . the viscount lisle . the viscount wallingford . the bishop of london . the bishop of winchester . the bishop of ely. the lord zouch . the lord windsor . the lord wentworth . the lord darcie . the lord wootton . the lord stanhope . the lord carew . the lord hay . the lord chiefe iustice of the kings-bench . the lord chiefe iustice of the common-pleas . the lord chiefe baron of the excheaquer . finis . to the king . i r qvi mal y pense honi soit those ( mighty soueraigne ) are your graces text , right king of heralds , not to any , next : you might their mysticke learning blazon best , but you reserue your knowledge vnexprest : as being most peculiar to you : and yet because the people may allow that which concernes your selfe : let me to them vnlocke the value of this prizelesse iem : the lyons trebled thus , may represent your equall fitnes for the regiment of this faire monarchie : brittaine then which euer ha's bin stuft with valiant men , may fittest beare a lyon , vrg'd to spoile : your irish kernes , who neuer vs'd to toyle , are in their silver-studded harpe explain'd . these splendent beauties limm'd by natures hand , by grace of ancient kings , made royall flow'rs , but now thrice royall made , by being yours . embleme 1 rex ✚ et ✚ sacerdos ✚ dei ✚ vvhy be these marshal'd equall , as you see ? are they dis-rankt , or not ? no : they should be thus plac'd : for common-weales doe tottering stand , not vnder-propt thus by the mutuall hand of king and priest , by gods and humane lawes : divine assistance most effectuall drawes kings to confesse , that t'heav'n they homage owe ; which consequently leads a king to knowe , that , that ambition's by dead embers fir'd , which ha's no ▪ beyond earth to heav'n aspir'd : earth can but make a king of earth partaker , but knowledge makes him neerest like his maker . for mans meere power not built on wisdomes for t , dos rather pluck downe kingdomes than support . perfectly mixt , thus power and knowledge moue about thy iust designes , ensphear'd with loue ; which ( as a glasse ) serue neighbour-kings , to see how best to follow , though not equall thee . embleme 2 nvllvm bonvm inremvneratvm seated on this three-headed mountaine high , which represents great brytaines monarchie , thus stand i furnisht t' entertaine the noise : of thronging clamours , with an equall poyse : and thus addrest to giue a constant weight to formall shewes , of vertue , or deceit : thus arm'd with pow'r to punnish or protect , when i haue weigh'd each scruple and defect : thus plentifully rich in parts and place to giue aboundance , or a poore disgrace : but , how to make these in iust circle moue , heav'n crownes my head with wisedome from aboue . thus merit on each part , to whom 't is due , with god-like power disbursed is by you . to the qveene . of all proportions ( madam ) diuers dare conclude that absolute , which is most square : well may they proue that theoreme : for i know square bodies doe the most perfection show : perfection still consisting in this best , to stand more sure , the more it is supprest . which speciall vertue chiefly doth belong vnto square bodies , or right do's them wrong : your scutchion therefore , and the honours due , may constantly support your worth and you ; whose life 's drawne out ( vnsoild with subiects hate ) by such a samplar , none can imitate . embleme 3. ❀ vnica ✚ eterna ✚ al ✚ mondo ✚ here aboue number , doth one wonder sit ; but one , yet in her owne , an infinit : being simply rare , no second can she beare , two sunnes were neuer seene stalke in one spheare . from old eliza's vrne , enricht with fire of glorious wonders , did your worth suspire : so must , from your dead life-infusing flame , your multiplyed-selfe rise thence the same : she whose faire memories , by thespian swaines are sung , on rheins greene banks , and flowrie plaines . thus time alternates in its single turnes ; one phaenix borne , another phaenix burnes . your rare worths ( matchlesse queene ) in you alone liue free , vnparalle'd , entirely one. to the prince . c p ich● dien your princedome's ensigne here ( right-royall sir ) may pinion your vp-soaring thoughts , and stirre them to a pitch of loftier eminence , then can be reached by base vulgar sense . these plumes ( charact'red liuely signifie valour in warre , ioyn'd with velocitie . the blacke prince ( bearing plumes ) approues this true , when through the french he like win'gd-lightning flue , and pull'd downe liues about him to the ground , till he himselfe with death had circled round ; his very looke did threaten publicke death : with every stroke fell from him , fled a breath . arm'd in the confidence of his iust cause , thus freely fearelesse his foes overthrowes . those high-borne acts which from his valour flue , with new-additions are impress't in you . embleme 4. post ✚ nvbila ✚ phebvs ✚ vvhen peace ( suspecting he would warre inferre , ) tooke henry hence , to liue aboue with her , she bade ioues bird returne from 's quicke convoy of his faire soule , left in heav'ns lasting ioy , and mildly offer to your princely hands , this embleme of soft peace and warlike bands : both vvhich ( vs'd rightly ) their large cares extend . to gaine o're others , and their owne defend . though all bright honours did their beauties shroud in his ecclipse , like phoebus in a cloud : yet at your rising , they more cleare againe peept-forth , like sun-shine after clouds and raine . and in your worth their worthinesse displayes to worthiest princes ; as the sun , his rayes . to the arch-bishop of canterbvry . how well these sacred ornaments become one , who by earth walkes t' his celestiall home : the staffe of comfort this , to leane vpon , this , pall of peace ▪ these , crosses vndergone : how easily good men ( knowne well by this ) lodge at the inne of their eternall blisse : these fruits , are workes , from bounty springing found , perfuming heau'n , & with heau'ns bounties crown'd : these shadow'd fruits , but by a figure , shew the ioyes of paradise prepar'd for you . saile thither with good speede then , yet make stay ; good angels guide you , y' are i' th abbots way . embleme 5. morir ✚ piv ✚ tosto ✚ che ✚ mancar ✚ di ✚ fede . these hands connext , engird religion , deciphring th' holy concords vnison , of faiths full harmony : this spiny pale sharpe conflicts are , who still the truth assaile : this heart the church is , th' holy ghost being center , afflictions may surround , but cannot enter . you are the prime linke of this manuall chaine , whereby religion do's its strengthmaintaine : o! may the reuerend rest to you sticke fast , that truth ( though long ) yet conquer may at last . to the lord chancellor . the north and southerne poles , the two fix'd starres of worth and dignitie , which all iust warres , should still maintaine , together : be here met and in your selfe as in your scutchion set : the halfe moone 'twixt , threatens as yet no change , or if she doe , she promises to range , till she againe recouer what she lost : your endlesse fame , ( so ) gaines your bounties cost . embleme 6. svb ✚ vmbra ✚ alarvm ✚ tvarvm ✚ neuer should any thinke himselfe so sure of friends assistance , that he dares procure new enemies : for vnprouok'd they will spring out of forg'd , or causelesse malice still . else , why should this poore creature be pursu'd , too simple to offend , a beast so rude . therefore prouide ( for malice danger brings ) house-roome to find vnder an eagles wings . you are this eagle , whcih ore-shades the sheepe pursu'de by humane wolues , and safe doth keepe the poore mans honest , though might-wronged cause , from being crushed by oppressions pawes . faire port you are , where euery goodnesse findes safe shelter from swolne greatnesse , stubborne winds ▪ eager to drench it : but that fearelesse rest dwels in your harbour , to all good distrest . i bid not you prouide , you are compleate , the good for to protect , or bad defeate . to the lord treasvrer . honi soit qvi mal y pense your sable crescent might to some ( whose lips speake ignorance ) portend a blacke ecclipse : i rather thus discerne , how time would shroud your radiant crescent in a sable cloud : and hold those enuious , ignorant , or dull , that cannot see , your crescent growing full . embleme 7. qvi ✚ cvrat ✚ vigilans ✚ dormit . the carefull states-man , who the key doth carie of a a kings treasury , must not ( partiall ) varie : but to iust causes compasse still be ti'de : for iustice ( vniust shutting ) opens wide , and lets in hard opinion , to disgrace his soueraignes selfe , his person , and his place . nor must he carelesse slumber : but thus keepe his lids vnshut-vp by soft-fingred sleepe : and hold a counsell with the saddest howres of silent night : and spend his purest powers in care , to render to whom dues belong , that subiects may haue right , and kings no wrong . but you ( great lord ) beare vp this waight of trust. with a most easie care , because most iust . to the lord privy seale . honi soit qvi mal y pense those dressings that adorne both parts of nature , first , is exprest in this maiesticke creature : next , in these flowres of light both which present your honours at full height of complement , and clearnesse , which runnes through your noble blood , mixt with this two-fold tincture , great and good : what 's here but shadow'd then , by outward kind , bedeckes the ●nner roomes of your braue mind . embleme 12. et ✚ deo ✚ et ✚ patriae ✚ vvhen ere thou draw'st out thy reuenging rod , let be for countrey , and the cause of god : else thy oblations will thy curses be , when thou encountrest with thine enemy . nor is it sacrifice that can appease gods wrath , vnlesse the mans obedience please more then his offering : for if his dull heart thinkes he inricheth god in any part , by offering hecatombs , he looseth all : nay further yet , he giues a sword with all to heau'ns high iustice , by inuoking downe reuenge , in lieu of guerdon , or a crowne . such as were sacrifices once , such bee our prayers still , and our true sanctitie : which is your in-mate , and familiar guest , more clearely seene in you , then here exprest . to the lord admirall . honi soit qvi mal y pense your sable mullet like a starre in blacke , shewes what our honour'd admirall doth lacke : and shewes as if that starre of effingham , were thus bemourn'd in a briefe epigram : this may your pole-starre be , most noble lord , and guide you vnto that ( so much abhorr'd ) the mournfull , yet the blessed , port of death , blowne by the prayers of all good mens breath . embleme 9. qvel che dritto da il ciel ✚ torcer non pvossi ✚ svppose a globe were fast'ned in the skie , with cordes depending on it quarterly , and men should striue by violence to wrest that cordage to what crooked forme they list , all wise men would conceiue them madly bent , why should they else impossibles attempt ? and we may thinke it as absurd a drift in him , who craftily shall hope to shift when fate forbids him , or shall hope to thwart the good intentions of an honest heart . for that which heau'n directs ( all ages see ) may iniured , but not diuerted be . seeke then no further , honest meanings can make a plaine minde best policy in man. to the dvke of lenox . honi soit qvi mal y pense vvhat neede i further striue to amplifie your high-borne worths , and noble dignitie : then by these beautious flowres , which declare : your mind 's faire puritie , vnstain'd , and bare : these golden buckles bordring them about , a palizado , to keepe foulenesse out . embleme 10. non manca al fin se ben tarda . a venire . the wolfe and lyon once together met , and by agreement they their purpose set to hunt together : when they had obtainde their bootie long pursude , the wolfe refrainde no more then formerly , from greedinesse : the lyon apprehending , that much lesse might satisfie a beast no bigger growne , thought all the purchase rather was his owne : and thought suppression of a beast so base was iustice , to preserue the common race of harmlesse beasts ; then speedily he teares the wolfe , to take away their vsuall feares . eu'n thus when our great monarch clearely saw , how that insatiate wolfe of rome did draw more riches to his coffers , then deare soules to heau'n , he like this lyon then controules his vsurpation , deeming him a slaue , who more intended to deuoure , then saue . but you know best to follow , in free course , the best in best things , and passe by the worse . to the marqvesse of bvckinoham . honi soit qvi mal y pense all that we see is comely , and delights ▪ the eyes ; which still are pleas'd with pretious sights : and ( as your golden scallops ) you appeare to promise ( that which we may value deare ) more then a glorious out-side , which containes . meate , not to be disclos'd without due paines : thus is it scarce to be imagin'd how desert should paralell your worth , or you. embleme 11. invidia ✚ svvm ✚ torqvet ✚ avthorem . this glorious starre attending on the sunne , having , from this low world , iust wonder wonne for brightnes ; envie , that foule stygian brand , t' extinguish it thrusts forth her greedie hand : to catch it from it s mounted moving place , and hurle it lower to obscur'd disgrace : but while she snatches , to put out the flame , foolishly fiers her fingers with the same . who others glories striuet ' eclipse ( poore elues ) doe but drawe downe selfe-mischiefe on themselues . you waiting on the sunne of maiestie may that elamping heliotropium be : still bright in your eclipticke circle runne , y' are out of envies reach , so neare the sunne . moue fairely , freely in your wonted orbe , aboue the danger of detractions curbe , and her selfe-bursting brood : sit there , contemne , nay laugh , and scorne both their despight , and them . to the lord chamberline . honi soit qvi mal y pense not because you are given to rage or spoile , like rampant lyonse , which deserue a toyle : nor yet because your gifts devided be , do lyons thus divide themselues in three : but ( when provok'd ) to shew you can resist , or shew your courage when your honor list : or thus in number they doe looke one way , to shew , what you command , your friends obey . embleme 12. candida , ✚ sal da , ✚ et ✚ immobile ✚ fixt heere snow-vested pietie remaines al-pure , and in all pure , purg'd from the staines of all false worship , chaste as aire , vntainted with the foule blemishes of that al-painted proude curtizan : nor wander do's her mind , shee best content in constancy doth find : to alethea's pillar close she clings , maugre the rapting straines romes syren sings : who is athirst , and do's but touch her cup , drinkes , with delight , his soules saluation vp . thus comprehends she ioyes , which most would buy at the high'st rate , in this one constancy , so aboue others may your honours shine , as past all others , do's this forme diuine , with her ingenuous beames blaze bright in you , who 's doubly gilt , with her , and learning too . to the earle of arvndell . honi soit qvi mal y pense on gules you beare the figure of a bend betweene crosse crosselets fixt : which all intend rightly to shadow noble birth , adorn'd with valour , and a christian cause , not scorn'd by any but by infidels , and they mistaking this , their hel-bred hate display . but to leaue shadowes , you ( substantiall ) shine with those good things , which make a man diuine . embleme 13. pace ✚ fermezza , ✚ e ✚ frvtto ✚ all' ✚ alme ✚ apporto . ✚ know ( honour'd sir ) that th' heate of princes loue , throw'n on those reall worths , good men approue , doth , like the radiant phoebus shining here , make fruitfull vertue at full height appeare : t'illustrate this in you , were to confesse how much your goodnesse doth your greatnesse blesse , by its owne warme reflexe : thus both suruiue , and both i' th sunne of royall fauour thriue . o may's reuerberating rayes still nourish . your noble worths , and make your vertues flourish . to the earle of sovth-hampton . honi soit qvi mal y pense no storme of troubles , or cold frosts of friends , which on free greatnes , too too oft , attends , can ( by presumption ) threaten your free state : for these presaging sea-birds doe amate presumptuous greatnes : mouing the best mindes , by their approach , to feare the future windes of all calamitie , no lesse then they portend to sea-men a tempestuous day : which you foreseeing may before hand crosse , as they doe them , and so prevent the losse . embleme 13. in ✚ vtraqve ✚ perfectvs ✚ vvhat coward stoicke , or blunt captaine will dis-like this vnion , or not labour still to reconcile the arts and victory ? since in themselues arts haue this quality , to vanquish errours traine : what other than should loue the arts , if not a valiant man ? or , how can he resolue to execute , that hath not first learn'd to be resolute ? if any shall oppose this , or dispute , your great example shall their spite confute . to the earle of hertford : these lyons gardant wisely seeme to take the name of gardant , for the flowers sake : as if they kept the flower-de-luces thus from them , who any way obnoxious , might gather them : it is a noble part , to keepe the glories purchas'd by desert . embleme 12. vnvm ✚ cor ✚ vnvs ✚ devs ✚ vna ✚ religio ✚ this triple close , if dis-united , none : but knit by faith , an indiuiduall one. standing vnmoou'd , like an heroicke rocke , affronts the batt'ries of fierce enuies shocke . god , heart , religion , these , one , made of three , ioyn'd in vnseuer'd threefold vnitie , royall paire-royall ( see ) three are the same , he that hath this paire-royall wins the game . view , how this heart , and how these hands agree , whose heart , and hands are one , thrice happy hee . and though two hands , yet but one are these two , both doe the same , and both the same vndoe . concord makes in a million , but one heart , whereat sterne hate may leuell her fierce dart , and deepely wound too , yet cannot that wound disanimate , or her free thoughts confound : but with a double valour she vp-beares such hearts , aboue the stroke of baser feares . thus you within haue rais'd vp such a fort , as keepes out ills , and doth your good support . to the earle of essex . the chiefest of this scuchion comprehends three torteaux , which vnto all commends a firme and plenteous liberality , proper to you , and to your familie : and this one vertue , in you ( cleare as day ) all other vertues elements display . embleme 16. qvis ✚ contra ✚ nos ✚ no wild , or desperate foole can hence collect proofe to applaud his vice , or to protect : nor can this figure civill warre portend , whither oppose , or whither it defend : but auntient valour , that which hath advanc'd our predecessours , ( while fine courtiers danc'd ) that 's heere infer'd , to re-informe the mind by view of instances , wherein we find recorded of your auncestrie , whose fame like forked thunder , threaten'd cowards shame ; who fearing , lest on their debosh'd base merit , heav'n should drop bolts , by a flame-winged spirit . to the earle of dorset . t is true , your various bend thus quarterly describ'd , poynts out the great antiquitie , of honour , and of vertue truely claim'd by you , who haue preseru'd them free , vnmaim'd . let none that 's generous thinke his time ill spent , to imitate your worths so eminent . embleme 17. d'odore ✚ il ✚ mondo ✚ e ✚ d'acvtezza ✚ il ✚ gielo . ✚ the world whose happinesse , and cheife delight , nay more , whose ▪ wisedome lies in appitite , rather then knowledge ; claimes the largest share of that which pleaseth most : nor doth it care to comprehend a higher mysterie : and therefore well doth nature dignifie th' ascending point , with heau'ns neere neighbour hood leauing to earth what 's great , to heau'n what 's good . which you perceiuiug , wisely doe bestow , your thoughts on heav'n , your wealth on things below . to the earle of movntgomery . honi soit qvi mal y pense the crescent to a second house belongs , the golden crescent ( worth a poets songs ) well appertaines vnto thy house and thee , thou arch-supporter of mountgomery . for not the vaprous breath of bad report , can cloud the splendour thou deseru'st in court : but as in gold no rust can finde a place , so hath thy crescent no enforc'd disgrace . embleme 18. mvsica ✚ dii ✚ placantvr ✚ mvsica ✚ manes . as busie bees vnto their hiue doe swarme , so do's th'attractiue power of musicke charme all eares with silent rapture : nay , it can wilde reason re-contract , diuorc'd from man. birds in their warblings imitate the spheares : this sings the treble , that the tenour beares : beasts haue with listning to a shepheards lay , forgot to feed , and so haue pin'd away : brookes that creepe through each flowr-befretted field , in their harmonious murmurs , musicke yeeld : yea , senselesse stones at the old poets song , themselues in heapes did so together throng , that to high beauteous structures they did swell without the helpe of hand , or vse of skill : this harmony in t'humane fabricke steales : and is the sinewes of all common-weales . in you this concord's so diuinely placed : that it by you , not you by it is graced . to the lord viscovnt lis●e . honi soit qvi mal y pense let there be no addition , this alone will make an embleme , and a perfect one . conceiue it thus then : a darts forked head apt to endanger , though not striking dead . such is , or should be every noble mind , prepar'd like this in most resolued kind to wound , or kill offensiue iniury , and though vnurg'd , yet threatens dangers nie . embleme 19. ordine ✚ tempo ✚ nvmero ✚ emisvra ✚ here sience do's in contemplation sit , distinguishing by formes , the soule of wit : knowing , perfection ha's no proper grace , if wanting order , number , time , or place : the theoricke and practicke part must be as heate and fire : the sunne , and claritie : such twins they are , and such correlatiues , as the'one without the other seldome thriues . how can a man the feates of armes well doe , if not a scholler , and a souldiour too ? if either then be missing in 's due place , defect steps in , and steales from all their grace : on good acts you employ the practicke part , the theory lies lodg'd within your heart . to the lord viscovnt wallingford . honi soit qvi mal y pense vvell may you neuer find the want , or loss of that most hallowed , and instructing crosse , on which our saviour di'de : for these will shew the many blessed thoughts of that , in few : heere you may over-looke the world , and see nothing so plentifull , as crosses be : thence you may take occasion to prepare your soule , to beare those that worse crosses are . these are the badges of your noble brest , that will conduct you to heave'ns quiet rest . embleme 20. sott ✚ hvmano ✚ sembiante ✚ empio ✚ veneno ✚ thus playes the courtly sycophant , and thus selfe-pleasing sinne , which poysons all of vs : thus playd the whore whome the wise king describes : thus he who rayles at , and yet pockets bribes : thus playes the polititian , who will smile , yet like this serpent sting your heart the while . bung vp thyne eares then , or suspect the harme , when sweete cyllenian words begin to charme . but you , can these vnmask by knowing best how to keepe such from lurking neere your breast . to the bishop of london . two swords there be , which all diuines should take , e're they this victory can perfect make : preuailing language is a powerfull one , zeale for the truth , the other : these haue done more noble acts , then warre could euer boast : both are in your field found , though else-where lost . embleme . 21. me thinkes ( right reuerend ) here you silence viewing this embleme , & it thus bespeake : ( breake . ride on triumphing , make a glorious shew , catch those , who onely but thy out-side know : hold forth thy witching cup , aduance thy crowne , and ' mounted thinke thy selfe past pulling downe : yet after all , thou canst be prou'd no more , then a deluding , and deluded whore . to the bishop of winchester . the sword and keyes to church-men beene bequeathed , since paul and peter were of life bereaued : the keyes , a type of prayers , which unlocke heau'ns glorious gates , to let in those that knocke . the spirits zealous , and soule-sauing word , is shadow'd by the sinne-subduing sword : of word and sword th'incorporate qualitie ha's power to heaue base earth aboue the skie . your powerfull , and victorious elegance , which ouercomes bold vice and arrogance , do's proue , no weapons to the church belong , but such as heau'n makes to encounter wrong : nor do's your gentry differ : lozenges are curing cordials : gentrous thoughts like these . embleme 22. sero ✚ ivpiter ✚ diphtheram ✚ inspexit ✚ behold , on what the romaine faith consists : so tost by errours winds ; so lapt in mists ; that their arch-pilot scarse can rule the sterne ▪ he lackes foundation , therefore still to learne how to make 's ship his harbour . o i wonder th'ore burden'd vessell crackes not quite asunder , and sinkes not downe , opprest by its owne weight , with sinfull soules so stuft , and over-freight . the high auenger ( though he seemes to faile ) with winged wrath will split their proudest saile . heau'ns yron-hand ( most slowly heau'd aloft ) falls quicke , dead-sure , and home , although not oft . all wish , for their sakes of romes simpler sort , that you might steere their vessell to the port : to the bishop of ely . how much more better may you challenge these , then all your predecessors , who in ease , and sloath ( you being consider'd ) did neglect that which deserues a crowne , or good respect : these then the heralds may thinke rather due , not to your place of state , but vnto you . embleme 23. vnvm ✚ et ✚ altervm ✚ divinvm ✚ religion still its owne , cannot be lost , nor from it selfe diuorc'd , though to the most , who iudge by guesse and slight formality , there might appeare schisme in diuinity : when not diuinity , which cannot change , but humane reason to schismes vild doth range : for so the fruites of diuers plants may seeme diuers in quality : and men may deeme nature hath err'd in such a serious course , when both consider'd be the same in force . you , that best iudge of schismes , can clearely see , error term'd truth , and truth term'd heresie . to the lord zovcu : see , how a worthy spirit not imployde may seeme to lookers on , or vaine , or voyd : these golden peeces thus vnshap't , vncoin'd , seeme as if worth and they were quite disioyn'd : when brasse or copper being stamp't or fram'd into the shape of plate , is oft misnam'd , and oft mistaken for the purest gold : but you are ever actiue , and vnfold your pretious substance , that your selfe may take , honours true stampe ; what 's counterfeite forsake . embleme 24. chiaro ✚ qvieto ✚ profondo ✚ e. ✚ divino . heere phoebus and the sacred sisters sit , chiefely attending harmonie , and wit : who stay to heare the dying swans to sing sad epods ; riding on the thespian spring . heere the wingd-horses hoofe digs vp that well whence gurgle streames of art , and sacred skill . divines ( like pegasus ) divinely mooue in man , springs of profound , and precious loue to heav'nly wisedome ; who t'ech passing by , poynts out the path-way to eternitie . and whilst you doe your noble thoughts confine to what divines preach , you become divine . to the lord windsor . me thinkes , i see in this , the true estate of man still subiect to a lucklesse fate : as if the greatest crosse did represent the generall curse , which even all over went. from adam to his wretched progeny : the lesser crosses which accompany the greater , be each severall haplesse chance : and all together shew , that ignorance is irrecoverably blind , where none prevents what happens thus to every one . but you doe well support the waightiest crosses with patience , and esteeme them but light losses . embleme 25. pace ✚ a ✚ glieletti ✚ e ✚ gverra ✚ a ✚ gliempi ✚ e ✚ rei . yee , whose blind folly doth not so maintaine a former choice , but yee may chuse againe : and yee , whose innocence ( not knowing yet the worse from better ) carelesly doth let both rest vnchosen : now begin to make your new , or first choise , and heere wisely tak e the patterne : if you would encline to peace , loue bookes with vertue stor'd , so will decrease your troubles : those will bring such powerfull fame , as shall the sternest lyon soonest tame . experience leades thee to this certaine choice , chuse then at first , to grieue , or to reioice . you haue already chosen true content : nor needs your honour euer to repent . to the lord wentvvorth . leopards haue euer ranked bin among those nobler beasts , which are both swift & strong . swiftnes alludes to a dexteritie , or quicke dispatch without temeritie . their strength alludes to iudgement which indures , when flashing wit no long delight assures . make these your owne , and then you beare display'd , your scutchions morrall , in your selfe pourtray'd . embleme 26. iovis ✚ apollinis ✚ et ✚ minervae ✚ ioue , phoebus , and minerua were assign'd , to be the three chiefe ornaments of mind . ioue figur'd prouidence , minerua , wit , phoebus , content : and all that purchas'd it well are they seated in a holy place , to shew the continent of all , is grace : it seemes that you haue well consider'd thus : the fair'st of titles is , religious . to the lord darcie . these health-preseruing leaues thus inly fixt amongst the crosselets ; shew , heau'ns fauours mixt with all calamities that seaze on man , if patiently he entertaine them can . to find cure then for crosses , looke aboue : see , ill made well by heau'ns all-curing loue . embleme 27. et ✚ tenebrae ✚ factae ✚ svnt ✚ sleepe , being the type of death : darknesse must be the shade of that , which we euanisht see : men so departed , that it may be said , a bird , as well , as such a man , is dead : chase , while thou liu'st , the cloudes of death away : or dying , neuer looke to see more day . you haue on earth , so studied heau'ns delight , that you can neuer be obscur'd : though night should threaten to obscure noone-day , yet will your noble mind vanquish deaths darkest ill . to the lord wotton . setled afflictions may be well express't vnder this forme of crosses , which men blest haue still indur'd to proue their patience : but i would rather in another sence haue this appli'de to such a man , whose vowes haue fixt him to the faith christs church allowes : and such a man ( scorning vngrounded wrongs ) are you , to whom this fixed crosse belongs . embleme 28. tempvs ✚ coronat ✚ indvstriam . th' ascending path that vp to wisedome leades is rough , vneuen , steepe : and he that treades therein , must many a tedious danger meet , that , or trips vp , or clogs his wearied feet : yet led by labour , and a quicke desire of fairest ends scrambles , and clambers higher then common reach : still catching to holde fast on strong'st occasion , till he come at last vp to her gate , where learning keepes the key , and lets him in , her best things to suruay : there he vnkend ( though to himselfe best knowne ) takes rest , till time presents him with a crowne : in quest of this rich prize , your toyle 's thus graced : euer to be in times best border placed . to the lord stanhope . this enterchang'd variety of furre , and naked quarters , fitly doe concurre . to shew the seasonable contenting store that rich wise men inioy , alike with poore : both are prouided ( lest they might take harme ) to keepe their innocence , both safe and warme . embleme 29. bis ✚ interimitvr ✚ qvi ✚ svis ✚ armis ✚ perit ✚ imagine heere , christ strongly fortifi'd , against the popes bold herefie and pride : and thinke , whilst his accomplices combine the castle of christs truth , to vndermine ; a flame breakes forth , which doth consume them all : so seeking his , they meete with their owne fall . and thus whilst heretickes ( like wretched elues ) out-stare the truth , they doe condemne themselues , subiected to the twofold victory of truth , and of their owne impietie . take refuge then , in heau'ns eternall rest , and see christs foes against themselues addrest . to the lord carevv . the noblest parts of wisedome , as cleare wit , high courage , and such vertues kinne to it : should ever be proceeding , and goe on forward , as seeme these lyons ; vrg'd of none . so ( like to these ) you keepe a passant pace , till wisedome seate you in your wished place . embleme . 30. virtvs ✚ vnita ✚ fortior ✚ forces vnited geminate their force , and so doth vertue : never should remorse nor obstacle restraine that man , who may strengthen his vertues by a noble way : who cannot perfect be , needes not repent to add his owne t' anothers president . and he that is entire may therewithall , by others helpe proue more effectuall . so helpe me learning , as i doe not know , where i this embleme fitter may bestowe . to the lord haye . beauties chiefe elements of white and red is all that in your coate is figured : nor is it needfull , any thing should be added to this most copious mysterie : gules vpon argent to conceit are playne , and pourtray out a life without all staine . embleme 31. meritvm ✚ sibi ✚ mvnvs ✚ see bountie seated in her best of pride , whose fountaines never ebbe , ever full tide at every change : see , from her streaming heart , how rivulets of comfort doe impart to worth dryde vp by want ; and to asswage the drought of vertue in her pilgrimage . looke , how her wide-stretcht , fruit-befurnisht hand vnlockt to true desert , do's open stand : but if she should not be deserts regarder , yet is it , in itselfe , it s owne rewarder . this emblem 's not presented ( noble sir ) your bounteous nature to awake , or stir : for you are bounties almner , and do's know , how to refraine , destribute , or bestow . to the three lordes chiefe ivstices . by these life-lengthning lozenges , are show'n cares to cure ills , by times corruption grow'n ▪ to comfort vertues heart , at point to die of a consumption , and doth bed-rid lie : this starre , that iustice is , which is not blind , ( as th' ancient hieroglyphickes her defin'd ) but searcheth out with quicke discerning eye th'hard difference twixt faith and fallacy . these birds , as yet vnlearnt to light on earth , figure that iustice , which from heau'n ha's birth , and scornes to looke so low , as base respect of its owne priuate ends , and truth neglect . care , truth , and iustice thus vnite , we see make in their goodnesse mixt , a sympathy , on whose ioynt pinions the realmes peace vp-towres t' her chaire of state , subsisteted by your powres . embleme 32. sic ✚ vbiqve ✚ she that illuminates the midnight , may be well admitted to take rest all day : yet haue our antique poets rather made night-wandring luna t' haue a daily trade ; reporting , that by day she takes delight to hunt wilde creatures , and then shines at night : teaching ( or i mistake ) how magistrates should quell disorders in all ciuill states . in darknesse they should watchfull insight keepe , to hunt out vice , when men are thought asleepe : for mischiefe ( as in darknesse ) skulkes disguis'd , and therefore needs some watchfully aduis'd , who hauing sented out this secret game , may then pursue them to a publicke shame . but your deepe wisedomes , better know , then this , what in our common-weale most needfull is . hieroglyphikes of the life of man. fra: quarles quarles, francis, 1592-1644. 1638 approx. 52 kb of xml-encoded text transcribed from 33 1-bit group-iv tiff page images. text creation partnership, ann arbor, mi ; oxford (uk) : 2003-01 (eebo-tcp phase 1). a10263 stc 20548 estc s115518 99850737 99850737 15962 this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the early english books online text creation partnership. this phase i text is available for reuse, according to the terms of creative commons 0 1.0 universal . the text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. early english books online. (eebo-tcp ; phase 1, no. a10263) transcribed from: (early english books online ; image set 15962) images scanned from microfilm: (early english books, 1475-1640 ; 934:2) hieroglyphikes of the life of man. fra: quarles quarles, francis, 1592-1644. marshall, william, fl. 1617-1650, engraver. [8], 61, [3] p. : ill. (metal cuts) printed by m. flesher, for iohn marriot, london : 1638. in verse. the title page is engraved except for the imprint. the first leaf and the last leaf are blank. the second leaf bears "the minde of the frontispeece" and license statement. thirteen of the fifteen engravings are signed "will. marshall. sculpsit"; title page and remaining two engravings are unsigned. variant: illustrations of hierogliphs vii and x (c1v and c7v) interchanged; error corrected by cancel slips. reproduction of the original in the british library. created by converting tcp files to tei p5 using tcp2tei.xsl, tei @ oxford. re-processed by university of nebraska-lincoln and northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. eebo-tcp is a partnership between the universities of michigan and oxford and the publisher proquest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by proquest via their early english books online (eebo) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). the general aim of eebo-tcp is to encode one copy (usually the first edition) of every monographic english-language title published between 1473 and 1700 available in eebo. eebo-tcp aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the text encoding initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). the eebo-tcp project was divided into two phases. the 25,363 texts created during phase 1 of the project have been released into the public domain as of 1 january 2015. anyone can now take and use these texts for their own purposes, but we respectfully request that due credit and attribution is given to their original source. users should be aware of the process of creating the tcp texts, and therefore of any assumptions that can be made about the data. text selection was based on the new cambridge bibliography of english literature (ncbel). if an author (or for an anonymous work, the title) appears in ncbel, then their works are eligible for inclusion. selection was intended to range over a wide variety of subject areas, to reflect the true nature of the print record of the period. in general, first editions of a works in english were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably latin and welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. image sets were sent to external keying companies for transcription and basic encoding. quality assurance was then carried out by editorial teams in oxford and michigan. 5% (or 5 pages, whichever is the greater) of each text was proofread for accuracy and those which did not meet qa standards were returned to the keyers to be redone. after proofreading, the encoding was enhanced and/or corrected and characters marked as illegible were corrected where possible up to a limit of 100 instances per text. any remaining illegibles were encoded as s. understanding these processes should make clear that, while the overall quality of tcp data is very good, some errors will remain and some readable characters will be marked as illegible. users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a tcp editor. the texts were encoded and linked to page images in accordance with level 4 of the tei in libraries guidelines. copies of the texts have been issued variously as sgml (tcp schema; ascii text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable xml (tcp schema; characters represented either as utf-8 unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless xml (tei p5, characters represented either as utf-8 unicode or tei g elements). keying and markup guidelines are available at the text creation partnership web site . eng emblem books -early works to 1800. 2002-03 tcp assigned for keying and markup 2002-04 aptara keyed and coded from proquest page images 2002-05 tcp staff (oxford) sampled and proofread 2002-05 emma (leeson) huber text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-06 pfs batch review (qc) and xml conversion the minde of the frontispeece . this bubble's man : hope , feare , false ioy and trouble , are those foure winds which daily toss this bubble . hieroglyphica haec de vitâ hominis perlegi , & digna censeo quae typis mandentur . ian. 9. 1637. tho : wykes r. p. episc. lond. capell . domest . hieroglyphikes of the life of man. london , printed by m. flesher , for iohn marriot . 1638. to the right honorable both in blood and virtue ; and most accomplisht ladie , mary , covntess of dorset ; lady governess to the most illustrious , charles , prince of great britain , and iames , duke of yorke . excellent lady , i present these tapours to burne under the safe protection of your honorable name : where , i presume , they stand secure from the damps of ignorance , and blasts of censure : it is a small part of that abundant service , which my thankfull heart owes your incomparable goodness . be pleased to honour it with your noble acceptance , which shall bee nothing but what your owne esteeme shall make it madam your la pps . most humble servant fra : quarles . to the reader . if you are satisfied with my emblems , i here set before you a second service . it is an aegyptian dish , drest on the english fashion : they , at their ●easts , used to present a deaths-head at their ●econd course ; this will serve for both : you need not feare a surfet : here is but ●●ttle ; and that , light of digestion : if it but ●lease your palate , i question not your sto●ack : fall too ; and much good may 't doe ●ou . covivio addit minerval . e. b. rem , regem , regimen , regionem , relligionem , exornat , celebrat , laudat , honorat , amat . benevolus . sine lumine inane . behold i was shapen in iniquity , and in sin did my mother conceive me . psal. 51. 5. man is mans abc : there is none that can reade god aright , unless he first spell man : man is the stayres , whereby his knowledge climes to his creator ; though it oftentimes ●tumbles for want of light , and sometimes tripps ●or want of carefull heed ; and sometimes slips through unadvised hast ; and when at length ●is weary steps have reach'd the top , his strength oft fayles to stand ; his giddy braines turne round , and phaëton like , falls headlong to the ground : these stayres are often darke , and full of danger to him whom want of practice makes a stranger to this blind way : the lamp of nature lends but a false light ; and lights to her owne ends : these be the wayes to heav'n ; these paths require a light that springs from that diviner fire whose humane soule-enlightning sunbeames dart through the bright crannies of th' immortall part . and here , thou great originall of light , whose error-chaceing beames do unbenight the very soule of darkness , and untwist the clouds of ignorance ; do thou assist my feeble quill ; reflect thy sacred rayes vpon these lines , that they may light the wayes that lead to thee ; so guide my heart , my hand , that i may doe , what others understand : let my heart practice what my hand shall write ; till then , i am a tapour wanting light . this golden precept , know thy selfe , came downe from heav'ns high court ; it was an art unknowne to flesh and blood . the men of nature tooke great iournies in it ; their dim eyes did looke but through a mist ; like pilgrims they did spend their idle steps , but knew no iournies end : the way to know thy selfe , is first to cast thy fraile beginning , progresse , and thy last : this is the summe of man : but now returne and view this tapour standing in this vrne : behold her substance , sordid , and impure , vseless and vaine , and ( wanting light ) obscure : t is but a span at longest , nor can last beyond that span ; ordain'd , and made to wast : ev'n such was man ( before his soule gave light to his vile substance ) a meere child of night ; ere he had life , estated in his vrne , and markt for death ; by nature , borne to burne : thus liveless , lightless , worthless first began that glorious , that presumptuous thing , call'd man. st. august . consider ô man what thou wert before thy birth , and what thou 〈◊〉 from thy birth to thy death , and what thou shall be after death : ●ou wert made of an impure substance , cloathed and nourished in thy ●●thers blood . epig . 1. ●●rbeare fond tapour : what thou seek'st , is fire : ●hy owne distruction's lodg'd in thy desire : ●hy wants are farre more safe than their supply : ●e that begins to live , begins to die . nescius vnde . will : marshall . sculpsit . and god said , let there bee light ; and there was light . gen. 1. 3. ●his flame-expecting tapour hath , at length , received fyre ; and , now , begins to burne : 〈◊〉 hath no vigour yet , it hath no strength ; apt to be puft and quencht at ev'ry turne : it was a gracious hand that thus endow'd this snuffe with flame : but marke , this hand doth shroud ●●●elfe from mortall eyes , and folds it in a cloud . 2. ●●is man begins to live ; an unknowne flame quickens his finisht organs ; now , possest ●●th motion ; and which motion doth proclaime an active soule , though in a feeble brest : but how , and when infus'd , ask not my pen ; here flyes a cloud before the eyes of men : ●●●n not tell thee , how ; nor canst thou tell mee , when . 3. as it a parcell of celestiall fire , ●nfus'd , by heav'n , into this fleshly mould ? 〈◊〉 was it ( thinke you ) made a soule entire ? then ; was it new created ? or of old ? or is 't a propagated spark , rak'd out from natures embers ? while we goe about . reason , to resolve , the more we raise a doubt . 4. ●t be part of that celestiall flame , ●t must be ev'n as pure , as free from spot 〈◊〉 that eternall fountaine whence it came : ●f pure , and spotless ; then , whence came the blot ? it selfe , being pure , could not it selfe defile ; nor hath unactive matter pow'r to soile ●●r pure and active forme , as iarrs corrupt their oyle . 5. or , if it were created , tell me , when ? if in the first sixe dayes , where kept till now ? or , if the soule were new created , then heav'n did not all , at first , he had to doe : six dayes expired , all creation ceast , all kinds , even from the greatest to the least were finisht , and compleat , before the day of rest. 6. but why should man , the lord of creatures , want that priviledge which plants and beasts obtaine ? beasts bring forth beasts , the plant a perfect plant ; and every like brings forth her like againe : shall fowles , and fishes , beasts and plants convey life to their issue ? and man lesse than they ? shall these get living soules ? and man , dead lumps of clay 7. must humane soules be generated then ? my water ebbs ; behold , a rock is nigh : if natures worke produce the soules of men , mans soule is mortall : all that 's borne must die . what shall we then conclude ? what sun-shine wil● disperse this gloomy cloud ? till then , be still , my vainely striving thoughts ; lie down , my puzzl'd quil● isodor . why doest thou wonder , ô man , at the height of the starres ? or 〈◊〉 depth of the sea ? enter into thine owne ●oule , and wonder there . the soule by creating is infused ; by infusion , created . epig . 2. ●hat art thou now the better by this flame ? ●hou knowst not how , nor when , nor whence it came : ●oore kind of happiness , that can returne ●o more accompt but this , to say , i burne ! quo me cunque rapit . will : marshall . sculpsit . the wind passeth over it and it is gone . psal. 103. 16. no sooner is this lighted tapour set vpon the transitory stage of eye-bedarkning night , but it is straight subjected to the threat of envious windes , whose wastfull rage disturbs her peacefull light , and makes her substance wast , and makes her flame lesse bright . 2. no sooner are we borne , no sooner come to take possession of this vast , this soule-afflicting earth ; but danger meets us at the very wombe , and sorrow with her full mouthd blast , salutes our painefull birth , to put out all our ioyes , and puffe out all our mirth . 3. nor infant innocence , nor childish teares , nor youthfull wit , nor manly power , nor politick old age , nor virgins pleading , nor the widows prayers , nor lowely cell , nor lofty tower , nor prince , nor peere , nor page can scape this common blast , or curb her stormy rage . 4. our life is but a pilgrimage of blasts ; and ev'ry blast brings forth a feare ; and ev'ry feare , a death ; the more it lengthens , ah , the more it wasts : were , were we to continue here the dayes of long lif'd seth , our sorrowes would renew , as we renew our breath : 5. tost too and fro , our frighted thoughts are driv'n with ev'ry puffe , with every tide of self-consuming care ; our peacefull flame , that would point up to heav'n , is still disturb'd , and turnd aside ; and ev'ry blast of ayre commits such wast in man , as man can not repaire . 6. w' are all borne detters , and we firmely stand oblig'd for our first parents det , besides our interest ; alas we have no harmeless counterband , and we are , ev'ry hou'r , beset with threatnings of arrest , and till we pay the det , we can expect no rest. 7. what may this sorrow-shaken life present to the false relish of our tast , that 's worth the name of sweet ? her minits pleasure's choakt with discontent , her glory foyld with ev'ry blast ; how many dangers meet poore man , betwixt the biggin and the winding sheet ! st. august . in this world , not to bee grieved , not to bee afflicted , not to bee in danger , is impossible . ibid. behold ; the world is full of troubles ; yet , beloved ; what if it were a pleasing world ? how wouldst thou delight in her calmes , that canst so well endure her stormes ? epig . 3. art thou consum'd with soule-afflicting crosses ? disturb'd with griefe ? annoy'd with worldly losses hold up thy head ; the tapour lifted high will brook the wind , when lower tapors dye . curando labascit . the whole need not the physitian . mat. 9. 12. alwaies pruning ? alwaies cropping ? is her brightnesse still obscur'd ? ever dressing ? ever topping ? alwaies cureing ? never cur'd ? too much snuffing makes a waste ; when the spirits spend too fast , they will shrinke at ev'ry blast . 2. you that alwaies are bestowing costly paines in lifes repairing , are but alwaies overthrowing natures worke , by overcaring : nature meeting with her foe , in a work she hath to doe , takes a pride to overthrow . 3 nature knowes her owne perfection , and her pride disdaines a tutor , cannot stoope to arts correction , and she scornes a coadjutor ; saucy art should not appeare till she whisper in her eare : hagar flees , if sara beare . 4 nature worketh for the b●tter , if not hindred , that she cannot ; art stands by as her a bettor , ending nothing she began not ; if distemper chance to seize , ( nature foyl'd with the disease ) art may helpe her if she please . 5. but to make a trade of trying drugs , and dosies , always pruning . is to dye , for feare of dying ; hee 's untun'd , that 's alwaies tuneing . he that often loves to lack deare bought drugs , has found a knack to foyle the man , and feede the quack . 6. o the sad , the fraile condition of the pride of natures glory ! how infirme his composition ! and , at best , how transitory ! when his ryot doth impayre natures weakness , then his care adds more ruine , by repaire . 7. hold thy hand , healths deare maintainer , life perchance may burne the stronger : having substance to sustaine her , she , untoucht , may last the longer : when the artist goes about to redress her flame , i doubt , oftentimes he snuffes it out . nicocles physitians of all men are most happy ; what good successe soever they have , the world proclaimes , and what faults they commit , the earth covers . epig . 4. my purse be'ng heavy , if my light appeare but dimme , quack comes to make all cleare ; quack , leave thy trade ; thy dealings are not right , thou tak'st our weighty gold , to give us light . te auxiliante resurgo . will : marshall . sculpsit . and hee will give his angels charge over thee . psal. 91. o how mine eyes could please themselves , and spend perpetuall ages in this precious sight ! how i could woo eternity , to lend my wasting day an antidote for night ! and how my flesh could with my flesh contend , that views this object with no more delight ! my work is great , my tapour spends too fast : 't is all i have , and soone would out , or wast , did not this blessed screene protect it from this blast . 2 o , i have lost the iewell of my soule , and i must finde it out or i must dye : alas ! my sin-made darkness doth controule the bright endeavours of my carefull eye : i must goe search , and ransack ev'ry hole ; nor have i other light to seek it by : o if this light be spent my work not done , my labour 's worse than lost ; my iewel 's gone , and i am quite forlorne , and i am quite undone . 3. you blessed angels , you that doe enjoy the full fruition of eternall glory , will you be pleas'd to fancy such a toy as man , and quit your glorious territory , and stoop to earth , vouchsafing to imploy your cares to guard the dust that lies before yee ? disdaine you not these lumps of dying clay , that , for your paines , doe oftentimes repay neglect , if not disdaine , and send you griev'd away ? this tapour of our lifes , that once was plac'd in the faire suburbs of eternity , is now , alas , confin'd to ev'ry blast , and turn'd a may-pole for the sporting fly ; and will you , sacred spirits , please to cast your care on us , and lend a gracious eye ? how had this slender inch of tapour beene blasted , and blaz'd , had not this heav'nly screene curb'd the proud blast , and timely stept betweene ! 5. o goodness , farre transcending the report of lavish tongues ! too vast to comprehend ! amazed quill , how farre dost thou come short t' express expressions , that so farre transcend ! you blessed courtiers of th' eternall court , whose full-mouth'd hallelujahs have no end , receive that world of praises that belongs to your great sov'raigne ; fill your holy tongues with our hosannas , mixt with your seraphick songs . st. bern. if thou desirest the helpe of angels , flee the comforts of the world , ●nd resist the temptations of the devill . he will give his angels charge over thee ? o what reverence , what ●●ve , what confidence deserves so sweet a saying ? for their presence , ●everence ; for their good will , love ; for their tuition , confidence . epig . 5. my flame , art thou disturb'd , diseas'd , and driv'n to death with stormes of griefe ? poynt thou to heav'n : one angel , there , shall ease thee more , alone , then thrice as many thousands of thy owne . tempus erit . will : marshall . sculpsit . to every thing there is an appointed time . eccles . 3. 1. time. death . time. behold the frailty of this slender snuffe ; alas it hath not long to last : without the helpe of either thiefe , or puffe , her weakness knowes the way to wast : nature hath made her substance apt enough to spend it selfe , and spend too fast : it needs the help of none , that is so prone to lauish out , untoucht ; and languish all alone . death . 2. time , hold thy peace , and shake thy slow pac'd sand ; thy idle minits make no way : thy glass exceeds her how'r , or else does stand , i can not hold ; i can not stay ; surcease thy pleading , and enlarge my hand i surfet with too long delay : this brisk , this boldfac'd light does burne too bright ; darkness adornes my throne ; my day is darkest night . time. 3. great prince of darknesse , hold thy needless hand ; thy captiv's fast , and can not flee : what arme can rescue ? who can countermand , what pow'r can set thy pris'ner free ? or if they could , what close , what forrein land can hide that head , that flees from thee ? but if her harmeless light offend thy sight , what needst thou snatch at noone , what will be thine at night ? death . 4. i have outstaid my patience ; my quick trade growes dull and makes too slow returne : this long-liv'd det is due , and should bin paid when first her flame began to burne : but i have staid too long , i have delayd to store my vast , my craving vrne . my patent gives me pow'r , each day , each how'r , to strike the peasants thatch , and shake the princely tow'r . time. 5. thou count'st too fast : thy patent gives no pow'● till time shall please to say , amen . death . canst thou appoint my shaft ? time. or thou my how'r death . t is i bid , doe : time. t is i bid , when. alas , thou canst not make the poorest flow'r to hang the drooping head , till then : thy shafts can neither kill , nor strike , untill my power give them wings , and pleasure arme thy will. st. august . thou knowest not what time he will come : wait alwaies , that be●ause thou knowest not the time of his comming , thou maiest be pre●ared against the time he comes . and for this , perchance , thou knowst not the time , because thou maiest , be prepared against all times . epig . 6. expect , but feare not death : death cannot kill , ●ill time. ( that first must seale her patent ) will : wouldst thou live long ? keepe time in high esteeme ; whom , gone , if thou canst not recall , redeeme . nec sine , nec tecum . will marshall sculpsit his light shall be dark , and his candle shall be put out . iob 18. 6. vvhat ayles our tapour ? is her luster fled , or foyl'd ? what dire disaster bred this change ? that thus she vailes her golden head ? 2. it was but very now , she shin'd as faire as venus starre : her glory might compare with cynthia , burnisht with her brothers haire . 3. there was no cave-begotten damp that mought abuse her beames ; no wind , that went about to breake her peace ; no puffe , to put her out . 4. ●●ft up thy wondring thoughts , and thou shalt spye 〈◊〉 cause , will cleare thy doubts , but cloud thine eye : subjects must vaile , when as their sov'raign's by . 5. ●anst thou behold bright phoebus , and thy sight ●o whit impayr'd ? the object is too bright ; ●he weaker yeelds unto the stronger light. 6. ●reat god , i am thy tapour ; thou , my sunne ; ●rom thee , the spring of light , my light begun , ●et if thy light but shine , my light is done . 7. 〈◊〉 thou withdraw thy light , my light will shine , 〈◊〉 thine appeare , how poore a light is mine ! ●y light is darkness , if compar'd to thine . 8 ●hy sun-beames are too strong for my weake eye ; 〈◊〉 thou but shine , how nothing , lord , am i ! ●h , who can see thy visage , and not die ! 9. if intervening earth should make a night , my wanton flame would then shine forth too bright ; my earth would ev'n presume t' eclipse thy light. 10 and if thy light be shadow'd , and mine fade , if thine be dark , and my dark light decayd , i should be cloathed with a double shade . 11. what shall i doe ? o what shall i desire ? what help can my distracted thoughts require , that thus am wasting twixt a double fire ? 12. in what a streight , in what a streight am i ? twixt two extreames how my rackt fortunes lie ? see i thy face , or see it not , i die . 13. o let the steame of my redeemers blood , that breaths fro' my sick soule , be made a cloud , t'interpose these lights , and be my shroud . 14. lord , what am i ? or what 's the light i have ? may it but light my ashes to their grave , and so from thence , to thee ? 't is all i crave . 15. o make my light , that all the world may see thy glory by 't : if not , it seemes to me honour enough , to be put out by thee . o light inaccessible , in respect of which my light is utter darkness ; so reflect upon my weaknes , that at all the world may behold thy strength : o majesty incomprehensible , in respect of which my glory is meere shame , so shine upon my misery that all the world may behold thy glory . epig . 7. wilt thou complaine , because thou art bereiv'n of all thy light ? wilt thou vie lights with heav'n ? can thy bright eye not brooke the daily light ? take heed : i feare , thou art a child of night . nec virtus obscurapetit . will : marshall . sculpsit . let your light so shine , that men seeing your good workes may glorifie your father which is in heaven . mat. 5. 16. vvas it for this , the breath of heav'n was blowne into the nostrils of this heav'nly creature ? was it for this , that sacred three in one conspir'd to make this quintessence of nature ? did heav'nly providence intend so rare a fabrick for so poore an end ? 2. was man , the highest master-peece of nature , the curious abstract of the whole creation , whose soule was copied from his great creator , made to give light , and set for observation , ordain'd for this ? to spend his light in a darke-lanthorne ? cloystred up in night ? 3. tell me , recluse monastick , can it be a disadvantage to thy beames to shine ? a thousand tapours may gaine light from thee : is thy lightless , or worse for lighting mine ? if , wanting light , i stumble , shall thy darkness not be guilty of my fall ? 4. why dost thou lurk so close ? is it for feare some busie eye should pry into thy flame , and spie a thiefe , or else some blemish there ? or being spy'd , shrink'st thou thy head for shame ? come , come , fond tapour shine but cleare , thou needst not shrink for shame , nor shroud for feare . 5. remember , o remember , thou wert set , for men to see the great creator by ; thy flame is not thy owne : it is a det thou ow'st thy maker ; and wilt thou deny to pay the int'rest of thy light ? and skulk in corners , and play least in sight ? 6. art thou affraid to trust thy easie flame to the injurious wast of fortunes puffe ? ah , coward , rouze ; and quit thy selfe , for shame ; who dies in service , hath liv'd long enough : who shines , and makes no eye partaker , vsurps himselfe , and closely robbs his maker . 7. take not thy selfe a pris'ner , that art free : why dost thou turne thy palace to a iaile ? thou art an eagle ; and befits it thee to live immured , like a cloysterd snaile ? let toies seeke corners : things of cost gaine worth by view : hid iewels are but lost . 8. my god , my light is dark enough at lightest , encrease her flame , and give her strength to shine : t is fraile at best : t is dimme enough at brightest , but 't is her glory to be foyld by thine . let others lurke ; my light shall be propos'd to all men ; and by them , to thee . st. bern. if thou be one of the foolish virgins , the congregation is necessary for thee ; if thou be one of the wise virgins , thou art necessary for the congregation . hugo . monasticks make cloysters to inclose the outward man , o would to god they would doe the like to restraine the inward man. epig . 8. affraid of eyes ? what still play least in sight ? t is much to be presum'd all is not right : too close endeavours , bring forth dark events : come forth , monastick ; here 's no parliaments . vt luna infantia torpet will : marshall . sculpsit . he cometh forth like a flower and is cut downe . iob 14. 2. 1. behold how short a span was long enough , of old , to measure out the life of man ! in those wel temper'd days his time was then survey'd , cast up , and found but threescore years and ten . 2. alas and what is that ? they come & slide and pass before my pen can tell thee , what . the posts of time are swift , which having run their sev'n short stages 'ore , their short liv'd task is don . 3. our daies begun , wee lend to sleepe , to antick plaies and toyes , untill the first stage end : 12. waining moons , twise 5. times told , we give to unrecover'd loss : wee rather breathe , then live . 4. wee spend a ten years breath , before wee apprehend what is to live , or feare a death : our childish dreams are fil'd with painted joys , w ch please our sense a while ; & waking , prove but toies . 5. how vaine , how wretched is poore man , that doth remain a slave to such a state as this ! his daies are short , at longest ; few , at most ; they are but bad , at best ; yet lavisht out , or lost . 6. they bee the secret springs , that make our minits flee on wheels more swift thē eagles wings : our life 's a clocke , and ev'ry gaspe of breath breathes forth a warning grief , til time shal strike a death 7. how soone our new-born light attaines to full-ag'd noone ! and this , how soon to gray-hayr'd night ! wee spring , we bud , we blossome , and we blast e're we can count our daies ; our daies they flee so fast . 8. they end when scarce begun ; and ere wee apprehend that we begin to live , our life is don : man , count thy daies ; and if they flee too fast for thy dull thoughts to count , count ev'rie day thy last . our infancy is consumtd in eating and sleeping ; in all which time what differ we from beasts , but by a possibility of reason , and a necessity of sinne ? o misery of mankind , in whom no sooner the image of god appeares in the act of his reason , but the devill blurres it in the corruption of his will ! epig . 9. to the decrepit man. thus was the first seav'nth part of thy few daies consum'd in sleep , in food , in toyish plaies : knowst thou what teares thine eies imparted then ? review thy losse , and weep them o're agen . proles tua , maia , iuventus . will : marshall . sculpsit . his bones are full of the sinnes of his youth . iob 20. 11. 1. the swift-foot post of time hath now begun his second stage ; the dawning of our age is lost and spent without a sun : the light of reason did not yet appeare within th' horizon of this hemispheare . 2. the infant will had yet none other guide , but twilight sense ; and what is gayn'd from thence but doubtfull steps , that tread aside ? reason now draws her curtains ; her clos'd eyes begin to open , and she calls to rise . 3. youths now disclosing bud peeps out , and showes her aprill head ; and from her grass greene bed , her virgin primerose early blowes ; whil'st waking philomel prepares to sing her warbling sonets to the wanton spring . 4. his stage is pleasant , and the way seemes short , all strow'd with flowers ; the daies appeare but howers , being spent in time-beguiling sport . here griefes do neither press , nor doubts perplex ; here 's neither feare , to curb ; nor care , to vex . his downie cheek growes proud , and now disdaines the tutors hand ; he glories to command the proud neckt steed with prouder reynes : the strong breath'd horne must now salute his eare , with the glad downefall of the falling deare . 6. his quicknos'd armie , with their deepmouth'd sounds , must now prepare to chase the tim'rous hare about his , yet unmorgag'd , grounds ; the ev'll he hates , is counsell , and delay , and feares no mischief , but a rainie day . 7. the thought he takes , is how to take no thought for bale , nor blisse ; and late repentance is the last deare pen ' worth that he bought : he is a daintie morning , and he may , if lust ' orecast him not , b' as faire a day . 8. proud blossom , use thy time ; times headstrong horse will post away ; trust not the foll'wing day , for ev'r●e day brings forth a worse : take time at best : beleeve 't , thy daies will fall from good , to bad ; from bad , to worst of all . st. amb. humility is a rore thing in a young man , therefore to be admired : when youth is vigorous , when strength is firme , when blood is hot , when cares are strangers , when mirth is free , then pride swells , and humility is dispised . epig . 10. to the old man. thy yeares are newly gray ; his , newly greene ; his youth may live to see what thine hath seene : hee is thy parallel : his present stage and thine , are the two tropicks of mans age. iam ruit in venerem . will : marshall . sculpsit . rejoyce o young man , and let thy heart cheare thee , but know , &c. eccles . 11. 9. how flux ! how alterable is the date of transitory things ! how hurry'd on the clipping wings of time , and driv'n upon the wheeles of fate ! how one condition brings the leading prologue to an other state ! no transitory thing can last : change waits on time ; and time is wing'd with hast ; time present's but the ruins of time past . 2. behold how change hath incht away thy span , and how thy light does burne nearer and nearer to thy vrne : for this deare wast what satisfaction can injurious time returne thy shortned daies , but this ; the stile of man ? and what 's a man ? a cask of care , new tunn'd , and working ; hee 's a middle staire twixt birth and death ; a blast of ful ag'd ayre . 3. his brest is tinder , apt to entertaine the sparks of cupids fire , whose new-blowne flames must now enquire ● wanton iuilippe out , which may restraine the rage of his desire , whose painfull pleasure is but pleasing paine . his life 's a sicknes , that doth rise ●rom a hot liver , whilst his passion lies ●xpecting cordials from his mistress eyes . 4. his stage is strowd with thornes , and deckt with flowers ; his yeare sometimes appeares a minit ; and his minits , yeares ; his doubtfull weather's sun-shine , mixt with showers ; his traffique , hopes and feares : his life 's a medly , made of sweets and sowers ; his paines reward is smiles , and pouts ; his diet is faire language mixt with ●louts ; he is a nothing all compos'd of doubts . 5. doe ; wast thy inch , proud span of living earth ; consume thy golden daies in slavish freedome ; let thy waies take best advantage of thy frolick mirth ; thy stock of time decaies ; and lavish plenty still foreruns a dearth : the bird that 's flowne may turne at last ; and painefull labour may repaire a wast ; but paines nor price can call thy minits past . sen. expect great joy when thou shalt lay downe the mind of a child , and deserve the stile of a wise man ; for at those yeares childhood is past , but oftentimes child shness remaines , and what is worse , thou hast the authority of a man , but the vices of a childe . epig . 11. to the declining man , why standst thou discontented ? is not he as equall distant from the toppe as thee ? what then may cause thy discontented frowne ? hee 's mounting up the hill ; thou plodding downe ? vt sol ardore virilj . will : marshall . sculpsit . as thy daies , so shall thy strength be , deut. 33. 25. the post of swift foot time hath now , at length , begun the kalends of our middle stage : the number'd steps that we have gone , do show the number of those steps wee are to goe : the buds and blossoms of our age are blowne , decay'd , and gone , and all our prime is lost ; and what we boast too much , we have least cause to boast . ah mee ! there is no rest , our time is alwaies fleeing : what rein can curb our headstrōg hours ! they post away : they passe wee know not how : our now is gone , before wee can say , now : time past and futur's none of ours ; that , hath as yet no being ; and this hath ceast to bee : what is , is onely ours : how short a time have wee ! and now apolloes eare expects harmonious straines , new minted frō the thracian lyre ; for now the virtue of the twiforkt hill inspires the ravisht fancy , and doth fill the veines with pegasean fire : and now , those sterill braines that cannot show , nor beare some fruits , shall never weare apollos sacred bow. excesse and surfet uses to wait upon these daies : full feed , and flowing cup , of wine conjure the fancy , forcing up a spright , by the base magick of deboysd delight ; ah pittie twise borne bacchus vine should starve apollo's bayes , and drown those muses that blesse and calm the peaceful soule , whē storms of cares oppres . strong light , boast not those beames that can but onely rise , and blaze a while , and then away : there is no solstice in thy day ; thy midnight glory lies betwixt th' extrems of night , a glory foyld with shame , and foold with false delight . hast thou climbd up to the full age of thy few daies ? look backwards , and thou shalt see the frailty of thy youth ; the foll of thy childhood , and the waste of thy infancy : looke forwards ; thou shalt see , the cares of the world , the troubles of thy mind , the diseases of thy body . epig . 12. to the midle ag'd . thou that art prauncing on the lustie noone of thy full age , boast not thy selfe too soone : convert that breath to wayle thy fickle state ; take heed ; thou l't brag too soone , or boast too late . et martem spirat et arma . will : marshall . sculpsit . hee must encrease , but i must decrease . ioh. 3. 30. time voyds the table : dinner 's done ; and now our daies declining sun hath hurried his diurnall loade to th' borders of the westerne roade ; fierce phlegon , with his fellow steeds , now puffes and pants , and blowes and bleeds , and froths , and fumes , remembring still their lashes up th' olympick hill ; which , having conquerd , now disdaine the whip , and champs the frothy reyn , and , with a full career , they bend their paces to their iournies end : our blazing tapour now hath lost her better halfe : nature hath crost her forenoone book , and cleard that score , but scarce gives trust for so much more : and now the gen'rous sappe forsakes her seir-grown twig : a breath ev'n shakes the down-ripe fruit ; fruit soon divorc'd from her deare branch , untouchd , unforc'd . now sanguine venus doth begin to draw her wanton colours in ; and flees neglected in disgrace , whil'st mars supplies her lukewarm place : blood turnes to choler : what this age loses in strength it finds in rage : that rich ennamell , which of old , damaskt the downy cheeke , and told a harmeless guilt , unaskt , is now worne off from the audacious brow ; luxurious dalliance , midnight revells , loose ryot , and those veniall evils which inconsiderate youth of late could pleade , now wants an advocate , and what appeard in former times whispring as faults , now roare as crimes : and now all yee , whose lippes were wont to drench their currall in the font of forkt parnassus ; you that be the sons of phocbus , and can flee on wings of fancy , to display the flagge of high invention , stay : repose your quills ; your veines grow sower , tempt not your salt beyond her power : if your pall'd fancies but decline , censure will strike at every line and wound your names ; the popular eare weighs what you are , not what you were . thus hackney like , we tire our age , spurgall'd with change , from stage to stage . seest thou the daily light of the greater world ? when attaind to the hig●est p●tch of meridian glory , it staieth not , but by the same degrees , it ascended , it descends . and is the light of the lesser world more premanent ? continuance is the child of eternity , not of time. epig . 13. to the young man. young man , rejoyce ; and let thy rising daies cheare thy glad heart ; thinkst thou these uphill waies leade to deaths dungeon ? no : but know withall , arising is but prologue to a fall. invidiosa senectus . will : marshall . sculpsit . yet a little while is the light with you . ioh. 12. 35. 1. the day growes old ; the low pitcht lamp hath made no lesse than treble shade : and the descending damp does now prepare t'uncurle bright titans haire ; whose westerne wardrobe , now begins t' unfold her purples , fring'd with gold , to cloathe his evening glory ; when th' alarmes of rest shall call to rest in restless thetis armes . 2. nature now calls to supper , to refresh the spirits of all flesh ; the toyling ploughman drives his thirsty teames , to tast the slipp'ry streames : the droyling swineheard knocks away , and feasts his hungry-whining guests : the boxbill ouzle , and the dappled thrush like hungry rivals meet , at their beloved bush . 3. and now the cold autumnall dewes are seene to copwebbe every greene ; and by the low-shorne rowins doth appeare the fast-declining yeare . the sapless branches d'off their summer suits and waine their winter fruits : and stormy blasts have forc'd the quaking trees to wrap their trembling limbs in suits of mossie freeze . 4. our wasted tapour , now hath brought her light to the next dore to night ; her sprightless flame , grown great with snuffe , does tu●● sad as her neighb'ring vrne : her slender inch , that yet unspent remaines , lights but to further paines , and in a silent language bids her guest prepare his wearie limbs to take eternall rest. 5. now carkfull age hath pitcht her painefull plough vpon the furrow'd brow ; and snowie blasts of discontented care hath blancht the falling haire : suspitious envie mixt with jealous spight disturb's his wearie night : he threatens youth with age : and , now , alas , he ownes not what he is , but vaunts the man he was . 6. gray haires , peruse thy daies ; and let thy past reade lectures to thy last : those hastie wings that hurri'd them away will give these daies no day : the constant wheeles of nature scorne to tyre vntill her worke expire : that blast that nipt thy youth , will ruine thee ; that hand that shooke the branch will quicklie strike the tree . st. chrys . gray hayres are honourable , when the behaviour suits with gray hayres : but when an ancient man hath childish manners , he becomes more rediculous than a childe . sen. thou art in vaine attained to old yeares , that repeatest thy youthfulnesse . epig . 14. to the youth . seest thou this good old man ? he represents thy future ; thou , his preterperfect tense ; thou go'st to labour , he prepares to rest : thou break'st thy fast ; he suppes : now which is best ? plumbeus in terram . will marshall sculpsit the dayes of our yeares are threescore yeares and ten . psal. 90. 10. 1. so have i seene th' illustrious prince of light rising in glorie from his crocean bed , and trampling downe the horrid shades of night , advancing more and more his conq'ring head , pause first ; decline ; at length , begin to shroud his fainting browes within a cole black cloud . 2. so have i seene a well built castle stand vpon the tiptoes of a lofty hill , whose active pow'r commands both sea and land , and curbs the pride of the beleag'rers will ; at length her ag'd foundation failes her trust ; and layes her tottring ruines in the dust. 3. so have i seene the blazing tapour shoot her golden head into the feeble ayre ; whose shadow-gilding ray , spred round about , makes the foule face of black-brow'd darknesse faire , till at the length her wasting glory fades , and leaves the night to her invet'rate shades . 4. ev'n so this little world of living clay , the pride of nature , glorified by art , whom earth adores , and all her hosts obay , ally'd to heav'n by his diviner part , triumphs a while , then droops , and then decaies , and worne by age , death cancells all his daies . 5. that glorious sun , that whilom shone so bright , is now ev'n ravisht from our darkned eyes ; that sturdy castle , man'd with so much might , lyes now a monument of her owne disguize : that blazing tapour , that disdain'd the puffe of troubled ayre , scarce ownes the name of snuffe . 6. poore bedrid man ! where is that glory now , thy youth so vaunted ? where that maiesty which sat enthron'd upon thy manly brow ? where , where that braving arme ? that daring eye ? those buxom tunes ? those bacchanalian tones ? those swelling veynes ? those marrow-flowing bones ? 7. thy drooping glory 's blurrd , and prostrate lyes grov'ling in dust ; and frightfull horror , now , sharpens the glaunces of thy gashfull eyes , whilst feare perplexes thy distracted brow : thy panting brest vents all her breath by groanes , and death enervs thy marrow-wasted bones . 8. thus man , that 's borne of woman can remaine but a short time ; his dayes are full of sorrow ; his life 's a penance , and his death 's a paine , springs like a flow'r to day , and fades to morrow ? his breath 's a bubble , and his daies a span. t is glorious misery to be borne a man. cypr. when eyes are dimme , eares deafe , visage pale , teeth decaied , skin withered ; breath tainted , pipes furred , knees trembling , hands fumbling ; feet fayling , the sudden downefall of thy fleshly house is neare at hand . st. august . all vices wax old by age : covetousness alone , growes young . epig . 15. to the infant . what he doth spend in groanes , thou spendst in teares : iudgment and strength 's alike in both your yeares ; hee 's helpless ; so art thou ; what difference than ? hee 's an old infant ; thou , a young old man. the end . the theater of fine deuices containing an hundred morall emblemes. first penned in french by guillaume de la perriere, and translated into english by thomas combe. théâtre des bons engins. english la perrière, guillaume de, 1499-1565. 1614 approx. 69 kb of xml-encoded text transcribed from 56 1-bit group-iv tiff page images. text creation partnership, ann arbor, mi ; oxford (uk) : 2005-03 (eebo-tcp phase 1). a05092 stc 15230 estc s109335 99844985 99844985 9848 this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the early english books online text creation partnership. this phase i text is available for reuse, according to the terms of creative commons 0 1.0 universal . the text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. early english books online. (eebo-tcp ; phase 1, no. a05092) transcribed from: (early english books online ; image set 9848) images scanned from microfilm: (early english books, 1475-1640 ; 549:9) the theater of fine deuices containing an hundred morall emblemes. first penned in french by guillaume de la perriere, and translated into english by thomas combe. théâtre des bons engins. english la perrière, guillaume de, 1499-1565. combe, thomas, fl. 1593-1614. [112] p. : ill. (woodcuts) printed by richard field, london : 1614. a translation of: la theatre des bons engins. in verse. signatures: a-g. the first leaf is blank. reproduction of the original in the henry e. huntington library and art gallery. created by converting tcp files to tei p5 using tcp2tei.xsl, tei @ oxford. re-processed by university of nebraska-lincoln and northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. eebo-tcp is a partnership between the universities of michigan and oxford and the publisher proquest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by proquest via their early english books online (eebo) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). the general aim of eebo-tcp is to encode one copy (usually the first edition) of every monographic english-language title published between 1473 and 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reviewed and edited 2005-01 pfs batch review (qc) and xml conversion the theater of fine devices , containing an hundred morall emblemes . first penned in french by guillaume de la perriere , and translated into english by thomas combe . london , printed by richard field . 1614. to the high and mighty princesse , ladie marguerite of france , queene of nauarre , and the onely sister of the most christian king of france . seneca the philosopher ( to whome without controuersie , the learned among the latines gaue the preheminence for morall philosophie ) saith in fewe words , but full of substance , that fortune is neuer at rest ; and further , that she vseth not to giue ioy without sadnesse , sweete without sowre , rest without labour , honour without enuie , and generally no felicitie vvithout his contrary : the vvhich novv i perceiue to be verified in my selfe . for vvhereas shee hath giuen me occasion of ioy in offering mee an oportunity to shew my dutifull reuerence to your royall maiestie , and also to our famous citie , by your happy approach thither : thereby she hath made me sad and melancholious , in that she hath so much hastened your said coming , that i had not the leisure to prepare and file these hundred morall emblemes , accompanied with an hundred staues of verses , expositors of the same : the which in their first inuention ( such as they are ) i dedicate to your most excellent maiestie . but that your maiestie may not blame me , in that ( following the errour of the gentiles and ethnickes ) i attribute to fortune that which ( as a christian writing to a christian princesse ) i ought to attribute to gods prouidence : i say therefore , that your said happy comming depēded not any whit vpon fortune , but ( euen as do all other humane actions ) onely vpon gods prouidence , who ( as it is necessary to beleeue ) doth all things for the best : and that consequently your sayd coming hath not bene to me hastie , but for the best . wherefore considering the precedent with my selfe , i do presume humbly to present vnto your maiestie my said emblemes , although they haue attained but to halfe the number that i intended ; beseeching your maiestie to receiue them ( such as they are ) according to your accustomed benignitie , and that with so good a will as they are by me your poore seruant offered and presented . moreouer ( madame ) it is not onely in our time that emblemes are in account and singular regard , but it hath bene of ancient times and almost from the beginning of the world : for the egyptians ( which thinke themselues to be the first people of the world ) before the vse of letters , wrote by figures & images , as well of men , beasts , fowles , and fishes , as of serpents , thereby expressing their intentions , as is written by most ancient authors , chaeremon , orus , apollo , and the like , which haue laboured diligently and curiously to expound the saide hieroglyphicall figures : whereof likewise lucan maketh mention in his pharsalie , and polyphile the author of the moderns , in the description of his dreame , clius rhodiginus in his commentaries of the ancient readings . alciat hath likewise in our time set out certaine emblemes , and adorned them with latine verses . and i ( imitating these abouesaid ) esteem the time wel bestowed , which i employed in the deuising & beautifying of these saide emblemes : and i shall think my selfe most happy , if the reading herof may yeeld you any honest recreation : praying god ( most noble princesse ) that he will send you long life and euerlasting happinesse . your humble seruant , guillaume de la perriere . to the reader . the more ( gentle reader ) the conceipt is pierced with the substance and life of that which anie way is obiected , the more wee endeuour to embrace or eschue the good or euill the obiect or subiect proposeth . so that where oftentimes feeling and effectuall words , though neuer so sensible , do passe the reader without due consideratiō , pictures that especially are discerned by the sense , are such helps to the weaknes of cōmon vnderstandings , that they make words as it were deedes , and set the whole substance of that which is offered , before the sight and conceipt of the reader . therefore for instruction sake is his labour worthilie bestowed , that vndertooke and accomplished the translation of this booke : contayning precepts and rebukes to our behauiours . wherein if the verse be any thing obscure , the impreses or pictures make it more liuely , and in a manner actuall . for the credite and acceptation of it , let the estimation which it had in the french suffise to grace and commend it englished : being dedicated vnto the queene of nauarre , whose dignity should not haue bene presented with a worke of any small value . which suppositions and authorities though they make it nothing the better , yet serue they verie worthily to moue thy desire to the triall of the contents , both by seeing and reading them . wherein let not the common conceipts of the world withdrawe thy minde , which hateth anything that is bitter , to their flattering delightes : but mooued with thine owne profite , and helpe of thy better part , requite the translatours paines in reading and obseruing , and thou shalt double his deserts in thine owne profite . embleme i. according to the time forepast , be wisely warned at the last . ianus is figur'd with a double face , to note at once the time to come and past . so should the wise obserue the passed space . as they may well foresee a chance at last , and with such prouidence direct this race , that in their thoughts both times be euer plaste : embracing vertue then in euery thing , themselues to rest and quiet peace shall bring embleme ii. ven'rie and drinke do now and then besot some of the wisest men . we reade when bacchus faire dame venus met , they two together walked forth in chase , forthwith their engines and their snares they set t' intrap the next that should come in the place : and straight minerua taken in the net , was holden prisoner in a wofull case . by which is shewne , as we may plaine perceiue that wine and women wisest folke deceiue . embleme iii. who doth presume aboue his state , doth still incurre the greater hate . thou that in court doest spend thy merry daies , sport not with princes , if that thou be wise : for he that with his owne superiour playes , shall finde great perils thereof to arise . meddle with thy match , the antiēt prouerbe saies on equall play-fellowes no danger lyes . he that presumes to shaue the lyons skin , full little knowes what danger he is in . embleme iiii. in pleasures vaine no time bestow , lest it procure your ouerthrow . the flie so often to the milke pan vseth , that in sweete milke at last her death she taketh : the foole delights in pleasures that he chuseth , so long vntill his ruine he awaketh . but happie he , who so in time refuseth , and all vaine fancies vtterly forsaketh . such one with heed , and graue & good instruction , doth wisely shun his perill and destruction . embleme lv. one bird in hand is better farre , then three which in the hedges are . who doth expect the bals vncertaine bound , and quite permit the certaine flight go by , a player bad at tennis he is found , and gets but seldome any good thereby . so some neglect the true and perfect ground , and for vaine hope do wander quite awry : that with fond enterprises and vaine glory . with diuers troubles haue thēselues made sory embleme vi. most men do vse some colour'd shift . for to conceal their craftie drift . masks will be more hereafter in request , and grow more deare than they did heretofore : they seru'd then onely but in play and iest , for merriment , and to no purpose more : now be they vsde in earnest of the best , and of such maskers there abound such store . that you shall finde but few in any place , that carrie not sometimes a double face . embleme vii . he that doth loue to liue at case . an angry man must not displease . who will with sword be foding of the fire , must looke to haue the sparks flie in his face : they that delight with speech as sharpe as brire to choler others with an humour base , vnlooked for perhaps shall finde retire , wordes or else deeds , vnto their owne disgrace . he that will stirre the angry man that 's still , assure himselfe , his hands shall quickly fill . embleme viii . it were a foolish senslesse part , with griefe and care to eate thy heart . the wise pythagoras hath euer taught , man should not eat vp his owne proper heart , nor as a stranger to himselfe be brought to waste his life with sorrow and with smart ; but so himselfe to temper still he ought , that woes and cares may vanish from each part : sith nothing hinders more a mans wel-fare , then lingring sorrow , heauinesse and care . embleme ix . there be some fooles the cords do spin , wherein themselues be netted in . who striues to set a narrow ring and straight vpon his finger , which too grosse he finds , like to the foole that bytes at eu'ry bayt , himselfe with his owne folly often binds . while for felicity some thinke they wait , they fall in bondages of diuerse kinds : but wise men vse their fortitude to shunne such seruitudes as fooles into doe runne . embleme x. vse iustice still with due regard , respect no person nor reward . the prouerb saith , a man must neuer passe nor peize his ballance with vnequall weights ; as once in rome a happie custome was , where equity maintained without sleights , and iustice was the monarks looking glasse , till auarice possessed their conceits : then ciuill discord set their hearts at warre , and caused each man his owne good to marre . embleme xi . try well thy friend before thou trust , lest he do leaue thee in the dust . ioin hands with none , nor make of him thy friend whom first thou hast not proued well and tride : his faith may fleete and saile thee in the end , whose bad conditions were not first descryde . know well his life and manners ere thou lend or giue him trust , if trust in him abide : for he that makes a friend of euery stranger , discards him not againe without some danger . embleme xii . nothing can temper yong mens rage , till they be tamed with old age . youth is too hote , and voyd of care and dread ; the aged cold , and full of doubts and feares : youth casts no dangers in his hastie head , where age with foresight warily forbeares . youth into needlesse quarrels soone is led . till oft the markes of his owne rod he weares : and then he learns to change the course he run , whē he hath seen & known what age hath dun . embleme xiii . vnhappie be some that be wise , and fooles sometime to honor rise . in thessalie their asses there be kept with speciall care , faire , plumbe , smooth , fat & ful , their mangers fild , their stables cleanly swept , though they be grosse , & thogh their pace be dul so many times sots haue to honour leapt , when wiser men haue had a colder pull . if asses haue such lucke , what should i say ? let schollers burn their books , and go to play . embleme xiiii . in friends this difference sole is tryde , true friends stand fast , the fained slode . false faith is ouer-peisd with smallest weight , the ballance yeelds vnto the lightest fether : the fained guest will quickly change conceit , and in a trice will hither turne and thither . but the sound friend will neuer sound retreit , nor stoope his sailes for any force of weather , but constantly his friendship stil doth last , and shine the clearer in the bitter blast . embleme xv. he that infinenesse would excell , oft marres the worke before was well . the painter that with curious hand and eye , is ouer-mending euery little line , with to much cunning bringeth all awrye , and marres the worke that was before more fine . so some there be thinking to soare so high , with piercing insearch of things most diuine , that fall so far from knowing that they sought , they do not know thēselues so as they ought . embleme xvi . search for strange monsters farre or wide , none like the woman wants her guide . great monsters mentioned are in stories found , as was chymera of a shape most wondrous , girion , pithon , cerb'rus that hel hound , hydra , medusa , with their heads most hideous , satyres and centaures ; all these same were found in bodies strange , deformed and prodigious : yet none more maruellous in stories read , then is a woman if she want a head . embleme xvii . they that want knowledge , do despise the vertues honoured of the wise . the dirty swine delights more in the mire , then in sweete balmes that are of costly price . some men likewise there be , that do desire , rather then vertue for to follow vice . the blockish idiots learning none require , but hate euen those that are by nature wise : and hoggish fooles at learning will repine , so long as puddle shall delight the swine . embleme xviii . within this picture are displaid , the beauties of a woman stayd . this picture here doth liuely represent the beauties that may best make women proud ; first by the tortesse at her feete is meant , she must not gad , but learne at home to shrowd ; her finger to her lip is vpward bent , to signifie she should not be too lowd : the key doth note , she must haue care to guide the goods her husbād doth with pain prouide . embleme xix . no man reapes the pleasant graine , but with trauell and with paine . out of the thornie and the pricking stem , riseth the dainty , sweetly smelling rose : labour and care all pleasures do in hem , and all the wayes of profit do foreclose . who seekes of knowledge the most precious gem , must ouer-tosse full many a wearie glose ; and through such prickles he that rose shal gain that many seekes , and very few attaine , embleme xx. they that follow fortunes guiding , blindly fall with often sliding . you blinded folkes by fortune set on hye , consider she is darke as well as ye , and if your guide do want the light of eye , you needs must fall , it can none other be . when blind do leade the blind , they both do lye in ditch , the prouerbe saith , and we do see : and those that trust to fortunes turning wheele , whē they feare least , their fall shall soonest feele . embleme xxi . an hypocrite is noted still , by speaking faire , and doing ill . who beares a sword with honie ouer-spread , may well be tearmed as an hypocrite , that hides the doings of his craftie head , with shew of sweetnes yeelding false delight ; nath'lesse at last he is discouered , when wisedome brings his subtilties to light , and though his sword be sharp , & cut & prick , a little bee shall sting him to the quicke . embleme xxii . a prince can haue no better part , then foxes wit and lions heart . the lyon is of nature stout and strong , of courage bold , whose fiercenes none can tame ; the craftie foxe all other beasts among , for subtill policies doth beare the name . so to that prince those gifts do chiefe belong , that here on earth would purchase endles fame : he like these two must frame his manners fit , for strength a lion , and a foxe for wit. embleme xxiii . no man his minde should euer set , to hope for that he cannot get . oft time when fishers plucke their nets to land , and make great boast what fishes they shall get , by hap a scorpion being there at hand , comes vp alone inclosed in the net . so in conceit some haue great wonders scand , that durst presume strong hercules to threat : but when they come to triall and to proofe , themselues are those will stand most far aloofe . embleme xxiiii . all things out of order runne , that are without decorum done . a gold ring set on snout of filthy swine , great weapons worne by infants yong & greene ▪ the rogue to brag and boast him with the fine , the foolish asse that wise himselfe doth weene ▪ all these to order vtterly repine , and euermore to disagree are seene . to keepe decorum this good precept hold , giue draffe to swine , to men the rings of gold . embleme xxv . no toile can last without his rest , in euery thing the meane is best . the bow that 's drawn with ouer hardy strength , is found more weake then it was felt before . by which we learne , we hurt our selues at length , the while we labour dayly more and more . for sloth corrupts & duls our might & strength ; but too much toyling breeds a greater sore , consuming courage so beyond all measure , it reaues the body of his chiefest treasure . embleme xxvi . it is not good in peace or warre , to presse thine enemie too farre . beware of quarrels with the desp'rat men , that feare not death , nor weigh anothers life : good conquerors will giue place now and then to those are vanquished in warlike strife , and let them flie with our pursuing ; when perhaps they would else turne on them as rife . as did the andebats in desp'rat wise run on their enemies with hooded eyes . embleme xxvii . when death doth call vs at the doore , what ods betwixt the prince and poore ? eu'n as the king , the whilst we play at chesse , the other men in his subiection be , vntill the mate be giuen without redresse , and then the king but like the rest we see ; and suffers with the little pawnes no lesse , then if they had no difference in degree . so high and low , when pleaseth death to strike , the prince , the poore , are laid in graues alike . embleme xxviii . fortunes blasts cannot preuaile , to ouerthrow dame vertues saile . as doth the tortesse neither feare nor feele the idle stinging of the busie bee ; for why his shell welnigh as hard as steele , keepes him as safe within as safe may be : eu'n so though fortune on her wan'ring wheele , turne vp and downe some men of high degree , yet may a man with wisedome so prouide , to stand so sure , she shall not make him slide . embleme xxix . we see it fall out now and then , the worser lucke the wiser men . we see how fortune sooner doth prouide for robin good-fellow and th' idle mate , than such as greater labours do abide , whose good desert she euermore doth hate ▪ in sleepers nets she powreth all her pride , to painfull persons she is still vngrate : she hunts about to make her best prouision , for fooles and dolts , & men of base condition . embleme xxx . there is no sweet within our powre , that is not sauced with some sowre . they hurt their hand sometime that hope to gain , and plucke the rose from off the prickling tree ; for why , no pleasure is without some paine , the good and bad together mingled be : faire weather waxeth sometime foule againe , and after foule faire weather oft we see . wise men may note by gath'ring of this flowre , none reaps the sweet but he must tast the soure . embleme xxxi . men should beware and take great heed , to hazard friends without great need . who strikes the anuill rudely with his blade , may hap to breake it with too little heed ▪ so he that vseth as a common trade , to presse his friend with too too much indeed , may chance to finde his curt'sie then to fade , when of the same he stands in greatest need . thus much this embleme in effect pretends , that ouer boldnes makes vs leese our friends . embleme xxxii . great persons should not with their might , oppresse the poorer , though they might . who notes the noble bird that doth command , all feathered fowles subiected to the skies , and hath the eagles princely nature scand , which doth disdaine to litigate with flies ; hereby may weigh and wisely vnderstand , in base contention little honour lies . for he that striueth with th' inferiour sort , shall with dishonour reape an ill report . embleme xxxiii . meddle not with thy ouer-match . lest thou thereby most hurt do catch . he that with razor thinks to cut the flint , doth vndertake a foolish fruitlesse paine , the tender edge making but little dint , is soone rebated with the rockie graine . with mightie men t were better strife to stint , than an vnequall quarrell to maintaine : lest , as you see the razor with the stone , the hurt fall all to you , and they haue none . embleme xxxiiii . some that in knowledge diue most deepe , know least from hurt themselues to keepe . the nightingale hath such a daintie note , no other bird the harmonie can mend ; sometimes to sing she straineth so her throte . that therewithall her song and life doth end . eu'n so likewise some students do so dote , when others do their prose and verse commend , that to attaine vnto more perfect skill , with studying too hard themselues they kill . embleme xxxv . the way to pleasure is so plaine , to tread the paths few can refraine . a labyrinth is framed with such art , the outmost entrance is both plaine and wide : but being entred , you shall finde each part , with such odde crooked turnes on euery side , and blind by-waies , you shall not for your heart come out againe without a perfect guide . so to vaine pleasures it is ease to go , but to returne againe it is not so . embleme xxxvi . it s hard to change an old abuse , wherein the heart hath taken vse . who thinks to change abuses waxen old , is foule deceiued in his inward mind : for they do rather grow more manifold , and still ingender and increase their kind . it were a foolish thing to heare it told , that in a net a man hath caught the wind : for that 's impossible to bring to passe , and so is this , both now and euer was . embleme xxxvii . herein the chiefest cause is taught , for which the glasses first were wrought . a woman should , and may well without pride , looke in a looking glasse ; and if she find that she is faire , then must she so prouide to sute that beautie with so faire a mind . if she be blacke , then that default to hide with inward beautie of another kind . if women would do so , they were but asses that should dislike the vse of looking-glasses . embleme xxxviii . patience brings the minde to rest , and helps all troubles to digest . the bird in cage restraind from libertie , for all her bondage ceasseth not to sing . but in the midst of all captiuitie , with songs some cōfort she her selfe doth bring . so when as men do stand in ieopardie , and feele that sorrowes do their senses sting , yet must they striue to put all cares away , and make themselues as merry as they may . embleme xxxix . to be a soldier good indeed , must of a captaine good proceed . suppose a heard of buckes should go to warre , and by a lusty lyon they were led : on th' other side , if that a bucke compare to beare the standard as the lyons head ; that onely lyons force surpasseth farre , with those his bucks , whose courage he hath bred . so valiant leaders cause faint cowards fight , a coward captaine mars the soldiers might . embleme xl. let honest truth be shield and guard , for hanging is the theeues reward . when as strong theeues get offices in hand , and care not what by wrong they scrape and pul , the king doth winke , and will not vnderstand : but when he sees that they do once waxe full , he is content their dealing shall be scand , and their authority to disanull . when swelling sponge is crusht , it doth restore and yeeld the liquor it had drawne before . embleme xli . from one t' another taunts do go , as doth a ball tost too and fro . the bail flies backe to him that first did strike , in as great haste , with like great force of arme : so words for words , and blowes for blowes alike men shall receiue , wher they bring good or harm . as merchats rich great wealth that scrape & pike , whereby they sit at ease and lye full warme , giue ownce for ownce , and like for like again : so for one mocke another still we gaine . embleme xlii . simplicitie is of small price . and eu'n reputed for a vice . in princes courts we see it so fals out , the mildest persons are of least account : such as be proud , are called braue men and stout , whose lofty lookes do other men surmount ; they that can cog and foist with all the rour , are still in prise , and do most praise amount . the simple man is like ( as in these shapes ) a silly asse amongst a sort of apes . embleme xliii . when one meane failes , then by and by , another meane we ought to try . when winds do stifly beate against the saile , yet galleys may by the maine force of ore , so much against the spite of winds preuaile , to come with safety to the merry shore . what if one meane or purpose hap to faile , is that a reason we should trie no more ? this will not serue , what though ? that may be good : is there no way but one vnto the wood ? embleme xliiii . when warres and troubles most molest , the wicked persons prosper best . to fish for eeles , they say that haue the skill , best be the troubled waters and the muddie : so they that take delight in doing ill , to trouble first the state is all their studie ; then can they best compasse their wicked will , and get most profit when the times be bloudy . iustice in force , peaceable times and quiet fits not their fishing , nor can serue their diet . embleme xlv . beware of fained flattering showes , for none are worse then friendly foes . false flatterers are worse then greedie crowes : crowes onely feed on things that we reiect , the flatterers do oft deuowre those , that are aliue , when least they do suspect . and when they make their fairest glosing shoes , and seeme most soundly friendship to affect , then suddenly , and ere a man is ware . he is beguil'd and falleth in their snare . embleme xlvi . the learned liue but poore and bare , when fooles be rich and better fare . who giues an asse the bone , a dog the hay , may well be thought an vnwise man i trow : yet such disorder waxeth now aday , men care not how their gifts they do bestow . fooles are set vp in offices most gay , the wiser men come downe and sit below . and now affection reason so doth smother , men giue to one what doth belong t'another . embleme xlvii . the child procures his parents ruth , that is not chastis'd in his youth . the ape embracing of her yong one hard , sometimes doth kill it with her being kind . so many parents haue their children mard , when with fond loue and with affection blind , they cannot chastise them with due regard , that in their childhood be not well inclin'd . for when they be growne vp to state of men , they are past mending and correcting then . embleme xlviii . disguised things may seeme most strange , but nature seeld is seene to change . bacchus cannot himselfe so well disguise , by clapping on his backe a lyons skin , but that his flagon and his bolle descries , it is no hercules that is within . so though a foole haue shew of being wise , by hoarie head , or by a bearded chin : yet by his talke a man may quickly know , whether he be discreete indeed or no. embleme xlix . the rich men sinne and feare no lawes , when poore are punisht for light cause . the spider with her web of rare inuention , lies close in waite to catch the silly flies ; but with the wasp she dares not moue contentiō , whose force the weakenesse of her web vnties . so rich men now against all good intentiō , withstād good laws , whose weight on poore mē lies , and like the wasp that rends the web in sunder , they rule those laws that meaner mē are vnder embleme l. malicious fooles worke most disgrace , when they are set in highest place . who giues him wine a feauer doth possesse , augmenteth more the patients present griefe : wine causeth heate the feauer doth no lesse , which needs must yeeld the sick but smal reliefe . eu'n so that prince doth little skill professe , that sets a foole aloft in office chiefe , whereas his malice he may best reueale , and do most hurt vnto the common weale . embleme li. after youth in trauell spent , let age be with her home content . the painfull pilgrime in his later daies : without his leaning staffe that cannot stand , forsaking wife and children goes his waies , to seeke old relicks in a new found land ; accounting it worth most especiall praise , to tell what iourneyes he hath tane in hand : whē he should cut those wings if he did well , and like the tortesse keepe him in his shell . embleme lii . with diligence we ought to wayt , to flie the snares of false deceit . the eagle then laments her death too late , when as the shaft hath pierced through her brest , who was selfe cause of such vnluckie fate , by meanes the stem with her own quill was drest . some men to ill are so predestinate , that though no hurt by others is profest , they wrong thēselues by lack of taking heed , and are chiefe cause of their owne euill speed . embleme liii . the liues of princes lewdly led , about the world are soonest spred . each little spot appeares more in the face , than any blemish in the corps beside : the face is plainly seene in euery place , when clothes the carkasse secretly do hide . by which we note , that in a princes grace . a fault seemes greater and is sonner spide , than in some man of base and low degree : as in fine cloth the brightest staines we see . embleme liiii . the prince that would beware of harme , must stop his eares to flatterers charme . when the wise birder meaneth to intrap the foolish birds within his craftie traine , that he may get more of them at a clap , with prettie pipe his voice he learnes to faine . so flatterers do not display the map of all their drifts in termes and speches plaine , but with sweet words they couer their deceit , lest princes should perceiue & shun their bait . embleme lv. wit can do with little paine , that strength alone cannot attaine . a man by force and strength cannot attaine , that which by staid discretion soone is wonne : he that doth pull the taile with might and maine , for all his force hath not so quickly done , the other haire by haire with little paine , in lesser time a better threed hath sponne . lo here the ods betweene the wife mans pause , and hastinesse of foolish furious dawes . embleme lvi . more die with surfet at their boord , then in the warres with dust of sword . the glut'nous rau'n deuours the venomd snake , which though at first seemes pleasant to his taste , when he doth feele his gorge with poison ake , he rues with death the meate he eat in haste . hereby we note what heed we ought to take , lest that we vse excesse in our repast : for gluttony doth more their deaths affoord , then mightie mars with his two edged sword . embleme liii . the liues of princes lewdly led , about the world are soonest spred . each little spot appeares more in the face , than any blemish in the corps beside : the face is plainly seene in euery place , when clothes the carkasse secretly do hide . by which we note , that in a princes grace . a fault seemes greater and is sooner spide , than in some man of base and low degree : as in fine cloth the brightest staines we see . embleme liiii . the prince that would beware of harme , must stop his eares to flatterers charme . when the wise birder meaneth to intrap the foolish birds within his craftie traine , that he may get more of them at a clap , with prettie pipe his voice he learnes to faine . so flatterers do not display the map of all their drifts in termes and speches plaine , but with sweet words they couer their deceit , lest princes should perceiue & shun their bait . embleme lvii . he that is prowdest of good hap , sorrow fals soonest in his lap . iupiter , as the learned homer writes , mingleth the good and bad in such a sort , that men obtaine not pleasures and delights , without some paine to waite vpon the sport . no man with labour wearieth so his sprights , but of some ease withall he may report : nor no man yet hath euer bene so glad , but he hath had a time to be as sad . embleme lviii vaine hope doth oft a man allure , a needlesse bondage to endure . who so to bondage will himselfe submit , and yet hath libertie to liue at will , is like a lyon when he doth permit a simple man with threed to hold him still . some are such fooles , that while in court they sit , and waste their time and all their riches spill : yet will they stay , although they do not need , and not escape whē they may break the threed . embleme lix . he that to thrift his mind would frame , must not delight to follow game . it is no time to sit still then at play , when as the house doth burne about our eares , who were in flames , and would not run away , were wondrous stout , or very void of feares . but wisedome bids vs shorten long delay , and to preuent the cause of future teares : sith if too farre we suffer dangers rome , t is long againe ere they be ouercome . embleme lx. a man of courage and of spright , no foolish threatning can affright . who thinks to feare the lyon with a maske , may proue conclusions , but preuaile no whit : for why , his force a stouter strength doth aske , ere that his courage can be quaild with it . so some we see do set their tongues to taske , and with great words that run beyond their wit ▪ they thinke to conquer hardie men and stout , that of vaine brags do neither dread nor doubt . embleme lxi . the man whose conscience is vnpure , in his owne mind he is not sure . the wicked man whose faults are manifest , seemes like the hare still full of feare and dread he dares not sleepe nor take his quiet rest , for doubt before some iustice to be led . the honest life who leades is better blest : he euermore secure may keepe his bed , the while the wicked studie and deuise , like fearefull hares to sleepe with open eyes . embleme lxii . where cupid list to play the knaue , he makes the asse to brag and braue . when cupids stroke tickles the inward vaines , oh what a power he hath to change the mind ! he makes the niggard carelesse of his gaines , the clowne a courtier , and the currish kind . briefly , his wondrous graces where he raignes , in cymon ou● of boccas you may find ; the little lad , his lute can finger so , would make an asse to turne vpon the toe . embleme lxiii . it is a point of no small cunning , to catch occasion at her coming . behold occasion drawne before your eies , as though she still were fleeting on her waies , which image so lisippus did deuise , with knife in hand to cut off long delayes . her locks before bids hold ere that she flies , her wings do shew she can abide no staies : and by her bald she tels vs at the last , there is no hold behind when she is past . embleme lxiiii. the praise of beauty is but small , where vertue is not ioynd withall . by mens proportions we can hardly guesse , or know precisely whether they haue wit : for who can tell what graces they possesse , although their members out of order sit ? some heads are great , and some againe be lesse , that to their bodies do not aptly fit : yet not proportion nor the bodies stature , but education setteth foorth the nature . embleme lxv . the fairest shape of th' outward part , shewes not the vertues of the heart . the stately cypresse in his outward show , is straight and tall , in colour fresh and greene ; yet on the same no wholesome fruit doth grow , or that to serue for nourishment is seene . in such bare titles many men do flow , that in their liues but barren still haue bene : who in experience well may seeme to sute the cypres tree that yeelds no wholsom fruite . embleme lxvi . annoint the lawyer in his fist , and he shall pleade eu'n what you list . some lawyers waxe so deafe they cannot heare , or at the least they cannot vnderstand , except your money do so plaine appeare , that palpably they feele it in their hand . giue right or wrong , your case they say is cleare ; as you would haue it , so it shall be scand . when double fees do walke , and money flees , a man would think their hands were ful of eies . embleme lxvii . let fire or sword their choler wreake , a constant heart can nothing breake . like to the stith i count the constant hart : the stith endures the heauie hammers beat , and doth not shrinke nor yeeld in any part ▪ though smiths lay on & thump it till they sweat . eu'n so should men in chances ouerthwart , whē paines increase & fortune seemes to threat , yet in their course with constant purpose run , and still persist till they haue honour wonne . embleme lxviii . when youth is in his flowring prime , he cares not how he passe his time . redeeme the time , time dearer is then gold , and time once gone can neuer be reclaimed , he need begin betimes that would grow old , if time be lost , our life is likewise maimed . yet greene yong heads disdaining to be told , as though more priuiledge of yeres they claimed , do seem to pul the weights with all their sway , and waste their time , and haste their dying day . embleme lxix . he that himselfe is void of wit , in a wise man despiseth it . some say , the camell will not stoope to drinke , till he hath first defil'd it with his feete . so in our time rude people vse to thinke , that perfect eloquence is most vnmeete : in whose dull heads this reason will not sinke , that eloquence should proue a thing so sweete ; such is their folly , and their sense so blind , they count this gift but of the basest kind . embleme lxx . greedie gaping after gaine , will make a man take any paine . the hope for gaine , and thirst for worldly goods compels a man to venture rocks and seas : neither can waters deepe , nor raging floods , cause any kind of perils to displease : men scrape out goods out of the myrie muds , for lucres sake , all labours seeme but ease : and to prouide themselues of things they lack , there be wil swim with burdens on their back . embleme lxxi . there is nothing can be more deere , than time , if we could keepe it heere . the fleeting time doth quickly steale away , which once let passe , returneth not againe , therefore t is good to take time while we may , lest afterward we rue our losse in vaine : time tarrieth none , the prouerbe old doth say , then vse it well the while it doth remaine : for those that leade their liues in belly-cheare , do leese their time , of al things else most deare . embleme lxxii . in time all things shall be reuealed , that are most secretly concealed . greene fruits and floures do ripen by the sunne , whose raies bring forth their beautie and their smel : eu'n so when youth with time is ouer-run , though it were greene , and though it often fell , yet riper yeares will mend all errors done , and make men liue more vertuously and well : and time doth change and alter mens behauior , as by the sunne the flowers mend their sauor . embleme lxxiii . a traitor and a flattering friend , say that they neuer do intend . the flatterers and traitors both be such , that with their words their thoughts do not agree . for till iust triall bring them to the tuch , they seeme in shew most faithfull friends to bee : but little will they do , professing much ; and inwardly from friendship they do flee ; who when their heart behind they do conuay , they beare in hand their tongue another way . embleme lxxiiii . with some light thing when thou needs must , trie thou thy friend before thou trust . we proue at first if that a pot will hold , with water , not with wine of any kind , to th' end the losse the lesse we may behold , if in the bottome any hole we find . so ere to trust a stranger ye waxe bold , tell him the lightest secret of your mind , whereof small danger growes another day , if he againe your secret should bewray . embleme lxxv . reason bids vs haue a care , that others harmes make vs beware . in affrica if lions hanged there , do terrifie the rest that them behold , why do not theeues and robbers likewise feare , that still commit most wicked acts for gold ? and magistrates that such great office beare , by like examples feare to be too bold : for they may know , except they do amend , by such lewd liuing they may haue like end . embleme lxxvi . we purchase nothing by our play , but beggery and our decay . they that do vse to hazard much at play . and venture all their substance at a cast , do often fall into so great decay , that they become meere beggers at the last : and then on others they are faine to pray , or liue of spoile , and others goods to wast ; when as their owne before with better thrift , would well haue seru'd their turn at eu'ry shift . embleme lxxvii . all those that loue do fancie most , but lose their labour and their cost . fond loue is chiefly likened to a siue , in which the more you poure the water in , the more is spilt , by letting thorow driue , and you no neare then when you first begin . eu'n so for loue when yong men frankly giue , till oft they leaue themselues not worth a pin : when all is spent , and they liue by the losse , they turne againe at last by weeping crosse . embleme lxxviii . a woman is of such a kind , that nothing can content her mind . who so a ship would vndertake to store , and furnish her with all that she doth lacke : he needs to haue his purse well lin'd before , and shall find worke enough to hold him tacke . yet women are as chargeable , or more , who still are wanting one or other knacke : so that who would be troubled all his life , may bost be troubled with a ship or wife . embleme lxxix . a thousand dangers dayly grow , of foolish loue , as louers know . alas that men should follow venus trace , and take delight to play on cupids bits , who casteth downe from high estate to base , and makes men counted wise , to leese their wits . none but vnhappy wretches void of grace , do euer fall into such franticke fits : vpon repentance fire he puts the still and blowes the coles , where nought but teares distill . embleme lxxx . the fruite of loue is very strange , it hath so many kinds of change . the fruits of loue are diuers in effect , some good , some bad , some withered , some are , greene , some sweet , some soure , som wholsom , som infect , and some are secret , some are plainely seene : now in regard ; to morrow quite reiect : oft in prosperitie ; and then in teene : they change as often , and do alter soone , eu'n as vnconstant as we see the moone . embleme lxxxi . in all his stockes blind loue doth set the graffes of griefe , our hearts to fret . if any man a perfect gardiner lacks . here shall he find one of no common skill , for sundry graffes , for knots and prettie knacks , he neuer will be idle by his will. what euer he doth set or sow , will waxe , and all your stocks with some plants he will fill : but with the rest he graffeth alwaies chiefe , the choaking peare of anguish and of griefe . embleme lxxxii . vngratefull men breed great offence , as persons void of wit or sence . the oke doth suffer the yong ivie wind vp by his sides , till it be got on hie : but being got aloft , it so doth bind , it kils the stocke that it was raised by . so some proue so vnthankfull and vnkind to those on whom they chiefly do rely , by whom they first were called to their state , they be the first ( i say ) giue them the mate . embleme lxxxiii . it is a point of great foresight , into our selues to looke aright . we reade how in phoenicia long ago , the people raisd this figure vpon hie , whereas the same might make the fairest show , and men obserue what it did signifie . the serpent in a circle painted so , thus much doth teach to vnderstand thereby , that in the world there is no greater art , then man to know himselfe in euery part . embleme lxxxiiii . on others some presume to pray , and fall themselues into decay . the faulcon sometime greedie of her pray , finds her owne foote fast tide vnto the tree : so are there some lay waite on others way , that are themselues the first that harmed bee . who digs a pit for other mens decay , may fall therein himselfe we often see , and feele the plagues in his own person then , which he ordaind to punish other men . embleme lxxxv . who labours that to bring to passe , that cannot be , is but an asse . the cannon charg'd with lesse then doth behoue , the heauie bullet farre off cannot throw ▪ and none hath seene the weighty windmil moue if one but with a paire of bellowes blow . this shewes we should in euery action proue with due proportion how each thing should go ▪ as wise men neuer will attempt the thing , that first they know to passe they cannot bring . embleme lxxxvi . the prelates life should shine as cleare , as lampe on mountaine doth appeare . the prelates vertues ought to shine so bright , as doth a lampe set on a mountaine hie , from whose good deeds should issue such a light that other men might see and walke thereby . through his example when it is not right , the silly people oft do walke awry ; and then the lord whose vengeance none withstands the bloud of those requireth at his hands . embleme lxxxvii . in euery thing aduise you first : take the best , and leaue the worst . in poets pamphlets fables fond we find , yet in those fables wisedome they inuent ; the morall still hath sense of other kind , how ere the verse do colour their intent : but to the letter who himselfe doth bind , may misse the matter that therein is meant : as vnder leaues that hang on crooked vines , lie hid sweet grapes that make the costly wines . embleme lxxxviii . no surety in a womans minde , her fancie changeth with the winde . a womans constancy is euen as sure , as if one held an eele fast by the raile , her faith nor loue do neuer long endure , but fleete away as sunne doth melt the haile : as many authors , greeke and latine pure , haue left in writing for out more auaile , that womens words mens cares do so delight , they make them oft beleeue the crow is white . embleme lxxxix . no shade of enuy can obscure , the light of vertue shining pure . when as the sunne stands iust aboue the head , the bodie shewes but short and slender shade ; eu'n so whē vertue her bright beames doth spred the smoke of enuy soone away doth fade . vertue doth make men liue when they be dead , though enuy brag , & thogh she draw her blade , in spite thereof yet vertuous men shall gaine honour and praise , for euer to remaine . embleme xc . a worde once spoken though in vaine , it cannot be recald againe . it is too late to catch the bird againe , that once hath bid her keepers hand adue : so when a man le ts slip a word in vaine , his speech once past is not recald anew ; for words will flie from mouth to mouth amaine whereof great quarrels oftentimes ensue . therefore be wise , and in your speech preuent , to speak such words as you may chance repent . embleme xci . none waxe more proud we lightly see , then beggers raisd to high degree . bucephalus was then in chiefest pride ▪ when he had felt rich armour on his backe , and onely alexander him might ride , when no man else could hold him any tacke . hereby we note a ahing that oft is tride , how such as are but base and in great lacke , when to new honor by good hap they grow , their old acquaintance they disdaine to know . embleme xc . loue and feare are chiefest things , that stablish scepters vnto kings . a prince that would his fame should stil increase , and honour to resound in euery place , he shall assure his scepter with more ease , if that his subiects loue and feare his face . a dog and hare two enemies to peace , one loues , the other feareth in like case : yet better peace to princes neuer springs , then when like dogs and hares men serue their kings . embleme xciii . he that would loade a happie life , for vertue let him chuse his wife . some do not care how nor with whō they linke , if fading beauty please their wanton eye : others so they be fingring of the chinke , care not how soone their hand be in the pie ; but a wise man doth warily forethinke , that both those courses run too farre awrie : that this nor that , is neither here nor there , the chiefest choice is chusing by the eare . embleme xciiii . no kind of friend will longer stay , when riches once are gone away . the lyce do shun the place where they were bred when life to leaue the carkasse they do find : so when mens fortune failes and waxeth dead , and when their wealth and riches do vnwind , we see the flatterers away are fled , from those to whom the same were earst inclind . this shewes that in aduersity and need , t is hard to finde a trustie friend indeed . embleme xcv . when thou for ayd to god dost pray , to helpe thy selfe thou must assay . when thou shalt trauell on the tedious way , and see thy asse fall loden in the mire , first for the helpe of god prepare to pray , that succours all that do his helpe require ; but in the meane time ceasse not to assay , with thy owne hands to draw him from the mire . for he that would the helpe of god attaine , to helpe himselfe must take a little paine . embleme xcvi . a wanton woman and a light , will not be tam'd by art nor might . with greater ease the dolphin is restrained , then wanton women bridled of their will , who from their purpose cannot be constrained . they are so full of craft and subtill skill : wel may they boast what guerdō they haue gained , that can subiect their wiues vnto their will ; for oft the ayer of a womans smocke , withstands alone the bonds of chast wedlock . embleme xcvii . constancie hath most renowne , when crosses most do beate vs downe . the more that saffron troden is with feete , the more it still doth flourish on the ground : so when with troubles vertuous minds do meet , the more opprest , the stronger they be found . where vertue is , there may we plainest see 't , in those whom cares & woes do compasse round : and when aduersity doth most assaile , by striuing then aloft to beare their saile . embleme xcviii . who so to studie doth incline , the hardest wit it shall refine . though childrens wit be not so ripe and quicke , as vnto others nature doth impart , paine wil helpe out where nature seemes to stick , and they great maisters made of many an art ; eu'n as the beare doth into fashion licke , the lump she laid without proportiond part ; for man is made againe by reasons helpe , as is new moulded the mis-shapen whelpe . embleme xcix . when some thinke most themselues in peace , their dangers oft do most increase . when hercles had ordaind to take his rest , and from his former labours him withdrew , hydra that monstrous seuen-headed beast against him came , his troubles to renew . euen so when vertue hath her hire possest , and once attained vnto honour due , some chance or other by fowle enuy growes , and still new troubles and new trauels sowes . embleme c. the hand that idlenesse detests , doth hoord the money in the chests . behold how diligence as she were wroth , sits in her charriot with a scourge in hand , and whippeth idlenesse now for her sloth , that of her need before time had not scand : the little ants take paines and draw them both , which giues vs this thereby to vnderstand , that lest we labour with the little ant , we still are like to liue in wo and want . a sight of ye trans-actions of these latter yeares emblemized with ingraven plats, which men may read without spectacles. vicars, john, 1579 or 80-1652. this text is an enriched version of the tcp digital transcription a95898 of text r201246 in the english short title catalog (thomason e365_6). textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. the text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with morphadorner. the annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish. this text has not been fully proofread approx. 77 kb of xml-encoded text transcribed from 15 1-bit group-iv tiff page images. earlyprint project evanston,il, notre dame, in, st. louis, mo 2017 a95898 wing v327 thomason e365_6 estc r201246 99861777 99861777 113922 this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the early english books online text creation partnership. this phase i text is available for reuse, according to the terms of creative commons 0 1.0 universal . the text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. early english books online. (eebo-tcp ; phase 1, no. a95898) transcribed from: (early english books online ; image set 113922) images scanned from microfilm: (thomason tracts ; 58:e365[6]) a sight of ye trans-actions of these latter yeares emblemized with ingraven plats, which men may read without spectacles. vicars, john, 1579 or 80-1652. [2], 21 [i.e. 29], [1] p. : ill. are to be sould, by thomas ienner, in his shop at the old exhange, [london] : [1646] signed at the foot of page 21 [i.e. 29]: collected by john vicars. a1r is blank. title and imprint from engraving on a1v; place and date of publication from wing. page 29 is misnumbered 21. annotation on thomason copy, leaf a1r: "decemb: 5th lond: 1646". reproduction of the original in the british library. eng emblem books, english -early works to 1800. great britain -history -charles i, 1625-1649. great britain -history -charles i, 1625-1649 -early works to 1800. great britain -history i, 1625-1649 -early works to 1800. a95898 r201246 (thomason e365_6). civilwar no a sight of ye trans-actions of these latter yeares: emblemized with ingraven plats, which men may read without spectacles. vicars, john 1646 12174 181 0 0 0 0 0 149 f the rate of 149 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the f category of texts with 100 or more defects per 10,000 words. 2007-06 tcp assigned for keying and markup 2007-06 aptara keyed and coded from proquest page images 2008-06 john pas sampled and proofread 2008-06 john pas text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-09 pfs batch review (qc) and xml conversion a sight of ye trans-actions of these latter yeares emblemized with engrauen plats which men may read with out spectacles . are to be sould , by thomas ienner in his shop at the old exhange time in a litle wrath i hid my face frō the for a moment ; but with everlasting kindn●es will i haue mercy on thee saith the lord thy redeemer . isaiah ▪ 54. ● . trvth i will mention the loving kindnesses of the lord , and the praises of the lord , according to all that the lord hath bestoued on us , and the great goodnesse towards the house of israell which hee hath bestowed on them according to his 〈◊〉 ▪ and according to the multitude of his louing kindnesses . and the fifth angel poured out his viall upon the seat of the 〈◊〉 , and his kingdom was full of darknesse , and they gnawed their tongues for pain . and blasphemed the god of 〈◊〉 〈…〉 to the reader . thou hast here ( friendly reader ) a resolution to that riddle , which hath so puzzelled and amazed the whole kingdome , betweene the main parties thereof , parliamentarians and royalists ; namely , who hath been the cause , or what hath been the main spur or spring , of all the late and lamentable destractions and distresses of the three kingdomes , england , scotland , and ireland , these five or six years past ; even the very same efficient and instrumentall cause that was of israels sore plague and punishment , 2 sam. 24. israel had sinned and provoked the lord to anger , and god suffered satan to provoke their king to sin grievously against god . so , england had grievously sinned , and gods wrath was thereby kindled , and therefore god suffered their king , and his prelaticall , papisticall , and malignant subjects , soundly to whip and scourge , england , even to the fetching of blood out of its ●oynes and sides ; and here 's i say , the riddle clearly resolved ; all this truth being in this little emblematicall treatise lively set forth , and illustrated with neat and pertinent pictures and figures , for the better affecting of the sight and sense of the readers therof , and especially for the full making out of the truth of what is therein delivered ; viz , that the king , and his unhappy and unholy atheisticall instruments , have been the main moving cause ( next , i say , to our sins ) of all the mischieves and miseries which we have all felt and found in this distressed kingdome , onely , or mainly , i say , for the driving on of that cruell and accursed designe of bringing in an arbitrary-government upon this free-born nation , to the utter ruine and overthrow of their most precious religion , and liberties ; as thou shalt easily and clearely see and discover , in this following treatise and relation . a sight of the trans-actions of these latter yeares , emblemized with ingraven plates , which men may read without spectacles . 1 parliament . 1. in the first year of king charles his reign , a parliament being called at oxford , two subsidies were granted , no grievances removed , but the said parliament soon dissolved . 2. the sad effects which the dissolution of this parliament produced , were the losse of rochell , by the unhappy help of englands ships . 3. the diversion of a most facile and hopefull warre from the west-indies , to a most expensive and successelesse attempt on cales . 4. the bloody and unblessed attempt on the isle of ree , and thereby a precipitate breach of peace with france , to our great losse . 5. a peace concluded with spain , without consent of a parliament , contrary to a promise formerly made to the kingdome by king james , a little before his death ; whereby the cause of the palatinate was altogether most shamefully deserted by us . 6. the kingdom suddenly billetted with souldiers , and a concomitant project set on foot for germane horses to enforce men , by fear , to fall before arbitrary and tyrannicall taxations , continually to be laid upon them . 2. parliament . 7. the dissolution of a second parliament at westminster , in the second year after a declarative grant of no lesse than five subsidies , and the said issues that flowed on the kingdome thereupon . 8. as first , the violent exacting from the people of that mighty summe of the five subsidies , or a summe , equall to it by a commission for a royall-loan , as it was called . 9. many worthy gentlemen imprisoned and vexed , that refused to pay it . 10. great summes of money extorted from subjects by privy seals and excises . 11. the most hopefull petition of right , blasted in the very blossome of it . 3 parliament . 12. a third parliament called , and quickly broken in the fourteenth year of the king , and therein parliamentary priviledges extreamly violated by after ill-usage of some of the best and worthiest members thereof , who were clapt up close prisoners , denied all ordinary and extraordinary comforts of life , and preservation of health , which might have proved perpetuall to them , had not a fourth parliament ( which afterward happened ) necessitated their relief and release . 13. and this third parliament thus dissolved , o the miserable effects that followed thereon also . 14. scandalous and opprobrious declarations published to asperse and besmear the proceedings of this last parliament , and some of the best members thereof ; yea , proclamations set out to those effects , thereby extreamely to dis-hearten the subjects , yea , and plainly forbidding them once to name a parliament , or to desire them any more . 15. whence , immediately gushed out ( this damme of parliaments thus being broken down ) the violent inundations ( even to a deluge of miseries ) of mighty summes of money , got by that strange and straining project of knight-hood ; yet , under a faire colour and pretence of law for it , and for all the rest that followed . 16. as , the most burthensom book of rates ; the most heavy and unheard of ( till then ) taxation of ship-money ; the enlargement of forrests , contrary to magna charta ; the injurious exaction of coat and conduct money ; the forcible taking away of the train'd-bands armes ; the desperate design of engrosing gunpowder into their hands , and keeping it fast from the subject in the tower of london , not to be had thence , but at most excessive rates . 17. the destruction of the forrest of dean , that most famous magazine , and timber-store-house of the whole kingdome , which was sold to papists . 18. the monstrous monopolies of sope , salt , wine , leather , and seacoal ▪ yea almost of all things in the kingdome of most necessary and common use . 19. restraint of subjects liberties in their trades and habitations ; for refusall of which foresaid heavy pressures , many were vext with long and languishing suites , some fined and confined to prisons , to the losse of health in many , of life in some ; some having their houses broke open , their goods seized on , their studies or closets searched for writings , books and papers to undoe them ; some interrupted also in their sea-voyages , and their ships taken from them , in an hostile manner , by projectors , as by pirates , or common enemies . 20. the crushing cruelties of the star chamber-court , and council table , in those dayes , chiefly , for the fomenting and increasing of most exorbitant taxations , pressures , and unjust suites against the subject . 21. thus farre for the miseries of the common-wealth ; now also for the churches danger , and distresse . the amazing miseries of the subjects consciences also , by the intolerable burthen of popish ceremonies , romish innovations , and such like other outrages of the arch-prelate of canterbury , and his prelaticall agents and instruments , over the whole kingdome , in matters of religion , divine worship , and spirituall cases of conscience . 22. the most palpable and abominable romish ceremonies used at the kings coronation , and insolent and impious , false and destructive additions in the oath administred to the king , at his said first inauguration to the crown , by that most arrogant arch-bishop . 23. and the manifold other impious impositions in matters of religion , divine worship , and spirituall cases of conscience ; for refusing and opposing of which , how was the honest-hearted and tender-conscienced subject , grievously oppressed by fines , imprisonments , stigmatizings , mutilations , whippings , pillories , gagges , consinements and banishments ; yea , and that , into perpetuall close imprisonments in the most desolate , remote , and ( as they hoped and intended ) remorslesse parts of the kingdome . 24. the putting down , yea , utterly ruinating of that most famous and honourable work , that ever this kingdom saw , in a private way , for the advancement of gods glory in the propagation of the gospel , i mean , the feoff●es for buying in of impropriations ; noy , the ( then ) atturney-generall , openly in court , accusing that blessed work to be a worse plot against the church ( he meant the prelaticall church sure , ) than the papists powder plot . 25. the advancing ( for the most part ) none , to ecclesiasticall dignities and livings , but arminians ; yea , popish-hearted pontificians ; suspending and silencing with deprivations , degradations , and excommunications , almost all the most pious , painfull and orthodox-learned pastours over the kingdom , whom they could catch in their snares , and all this under a pretence of peace , unity and conformity ; in which foresaid cases , the high-commission ( like the spanish-inquisition ) with its most pragmaticall pranks , was , all along , most intolerable and abominable . 26. printing-presses , set open for the printing and publishing of all sorts of popish and arminian tenets ; but , shut up and restrained from printing , sound and orthodox doctrines . 27. nay , not onely thus lamentably molesting us at home in england ; but attempting the like on our brethren of scotland , indevouring to impose upon their consciences also , a new liturgye , and a book of canons , upon the first introducing whereof into their church , they not induring them , threw stones and stooles at the arch-bishop of st andrews head , and beat him out of the church , crying out , a pape , a pape , and so rid themselves of them . 28. upon which refusall of theirs , o what foule calumnies and scoffes were immediately cast upon them , and they called and counted rebels and traytors ; yea , so proclaimed in all churches in england . 29. an army was also raised to oppresse and suppresse them , for thus resisting the arch-prelates most injurious impositions on them . a mighty and tumultuous rising of apprentices and young men in southwarke and lambeth side , with clubs and other weapons especially at the a●ch-bishops house , which put him into such a fright , as made him fly to croyden , to convey himself to some more private and remote place , and although pharoahs magisians were so honest , that at the sight of the dust of the earth turned into lice , they cryed out it was the finger of god , but he grew more and more outragious , and caused one to be hanged and quartered , and his head set on london-bridge . 30. our brethren of scotland likewise raising an army in their own just defence , and by force of armes , inforcing their own peace . 31. a first pacification being then made by the king , and some of his nobility , and ratified under hand and seal twixt them and the scots ; yet was it shortly after shamefully violated , and broken quite off by the arch-prelate of canterbury , and the earle of straford . 4. parliament . 32. a fourth parliament was thereupon shortly after called again , by those complotters meanes , but to a very ill intent , and another parliament summoned also at the same time by the earle of straford in ireland , both of them onely to levy and procure monies to raise another army , and wage a new warre against the scots ; 33. the ships and goods of our brethren of scotland , were , in all parts and ports of this kingdom , and of ireland , also surprised and seized on for the king ; their commissioners denyed audience to make their just defence to the king , and the whole kingdome of scotland and england too , hereupon much distracted and distempered with leavying of monies , and imprisoning all among us that refused the same . 34. this parliament also refusing to comply with the king , cant , and straf●rd in this episcopall warre against the scots , was soon dissolved and broken up by them and thereupon they returned to their former wayes of waste and confusion , and the very next day after the dissolution thereof some eminent members of both houses , had their chambers , and studies , yea their cabinets and very pockets of their wearing cloathes ( betimes in the morning before they were out of their beds ) searched for letters and writings , and some of them also imprisoned , and a false and most scandalous declaration was published against the house of commons in the kings name . 35. a forced loan of money was attempted in the city of london , to be made a president ( if it prevailed there ) for the whole kingdom , but some aldermen refusing , were fo●ely threatned and imprisoned . 36. in which interim , the clergies convocation continuing ( notwithstanding the dissolution of the parliament ) new conscience oppressing canons were forged , and a strange oath , with a monstrous &c ▪ in it , was framed for the establishing of the bishops hierarchy , with severe punishments on the refusers to take it . 37. in this convocation ●ore taxations were also imposed upon the whole clergie , even no lesse than six subsidies , besides a bountifull contribution to forward that intended warre against our brethren of scotland . the arch-prelate of st andrewes in scotland reading the new service-booke in his pontificalibus assaulted by men & women , with crickets stooles stickes and stones . the rising of prentises and sea-men on southwark side to assault the arch-bishops of canterburys house at lambeth . 38. for the advancing of which said summes for this warre , the popish pontifician party , and their scandalous priests were most free and forward ; yea , and a solemn prayer was composed and imposed by the bishops on their ministers every where to be used and read in all churches against the scots , as rebels and traytors . 39. the papists also in a high measure enjoyed even almost a totall toleration ; and a popes nuncio suffered among us to act and govern all romish affaires , yea a kinde of a private popish-parliament kept in the kingdom , and popish jurisdictions erected among them . 40. commissions were also ( secretly ) issued out for some great and eminent papists , for martiall commands , for levying of souldiers , and strengthening their party with armes and ammunition of all sorts , and in great plenty . 41. his majesties treasure was by these meanes so extreamly exhausted and his revenues so anticipated , that he was inforced to compell ( as it were ) his own servants , judges , and officers of all sorts , to lend him great summes of money , a●d prisons filled with refusers of these and the other illegall payments ; yea , many high-sheriffes summoned into the starre-chamber , and to the councill-board , and some of them imprisoned for not being quick enough in levying ship-money , and such like intolerable taxations . 42. in summe , the whole kingdome was now brought into a lamentable and languishing condition of being most miserably bought and sold to any that could give and contribute most of might and malice against us , and no hope of humane help , but dolour , desperation and destruction , to be the portion of all . 43. in which interim , our brethren of scotland being entred into our kingdome , for their own just defence , the king had advanced his royall-standard at york , where the creame of the kingdome , nobles , and gentry , being assembled , and a treaty twixt the prime of both armies had at rippon , for a faire and peaceable accommodation , the king was , at last , inforced to take his nobles counsell , and in the first place , a cessation of armes agreed on ; and then this fifth present parliament , ( the parliament of parliaments , ) was necessitously resolved on to begin , november 3. 1640. 5 parliament , anno 1640. novemb. 3. 44. but , behold , a desperate plot and design was herein also , immediately , set on f●ot , to ●poyle or poyson it in the very embrio and constitution of it , in the first choyce of the members thereof , by letters from the king , queen , malignant and popish earles , lords , knights , and gentry , posted into all parts of the kingdome , to make a str●ng party for them ; but , by admirable divine providence , this their plot was ●ounterplotted , and wonderfully frustrated , and the parliament most 〈…〉 and 〈◊〉 . 45. shortly after , a very formidable spanish-fleet , or armad● , appeared on our english●●●row seas , in fight of dover , and was comming in ( as was , on very st●ong grounds , more than probably conjectured ) as a third party , to help to destroy 〈…〉 spani●rds hoping ▪ that by this time , we and the scots were together by the ●ar● ▪ but they were by gods mercy , beaten of● from us by our neighbours of holland . and so in fighting against them , we fought against our friends . the souldiers in their passage to york turn reformers , pull dow● popish pictures , break down rayles , turn alters into tables , and those popish commanders , that were to command them , they forced to eat flesh on fridayes , thrusting it down their throats , and some they slew . 46 in the time of ours and the scots armies residing in the north , which was in june 1641. the popish and malignant lords and prelates , fearing the effects of this present parliament , complotted together to disaffect that our english army against the parliament , and indevoured to bring it out of the north , southward , and so to london , to compell the parliament to such limits and rules at they thought fit . the souldiers in their passage to york turn unto reformers pull down popish pictures , break down rayles , turn altars into tables ▪ the english and scotts armies at first ready to fight , lovingly embrace each other , & part kinde freinds , july 1641. at the beginning of the parliament there was a diligent inquisition after oppressions , and oppress●rs , and first upon the petition of mistris bastwick and mistris bur●on , two widdowed wives , and a petition exhibited in the behalf of mr. prynn , dr. laighton , mr. smar● , mr. walker , mr. foxley , mr. lilborn , and many others , set at liberty , some being banished , and all close prisoners , others fast fettered in irons , and their wives debarred from comming to them . the protestation . we the knights , citizens , and burgesses of the commons house in parliament , finding , to the great griefe of our hearts , that the designes of the priests and jesuites , and other adherents to the see of rome , have of l●te been more boldly and frequently put in practise than formerly , to the undermining and danger of the ruine of the t●ue reformed protest●nt religion , in his m●jesti●s dominions established : and finding also that there have been , and having just cause to susp●●● that there still 〈◊〉 , even during this sitting in parliament , indevours to subvert the fundamentall laws of england and ireland , and to introduce the exercise of an arbitrary and tyrannicall government , by most pernicious and wicked councels , practises , plo●● , and conspiracies : and that the long intermission , and unhappy breach of parliaments , hath occasioned many illegall taxations , whereupon the subject hath been prosecuted and grieved ▪ and that divers ●nnovations and superstition● have been brought into the church ; multitudes driven ●ut of his majesties dominions , jealousies raised and f●●ented betwixt the king and his people a popish army levyed in ireland , and two ▪ ●rmies brought into the bowels of this kingdome , to the hazzard of his majesties royall person , the consump●ion of the revenues of the crown , and treasure of this kingdom : and lastly , finding great cause of jealousie , that indevours have been , and a●cused to bring the english army into a misunderstanding of this parliament , thereby to incline that army , with force to bring to passe those wicked councels , have therefore thought good to joyn our selves in a declaration of our united affections and resolutions , and to make this ensuing protestation . ●a . b. do● in the presence of almighty god , promise , vow , and protest , to maintain and defend , as far as lawfully i may , with my life , power , and esta●e , the true reformed protestant religion , ●●●ressed in the doctrine of the church of england , against all popery ▪ and popish innovations within this realm , contrary to the same ●octrine , and 〈…〉 duty of my allegiance , his majesties royall pe●son , ho●our , 〈…〉 also the power and priviledges of parliament ▪ 〈…〉 the subject , and every person that maketh this protestation , ●n 〈◊〉 he shall doe , in the lawfull 〈◊〉 of the sa●● . 〈◊〉 to my power , and 〈…〉 as lawfully i 〈◊〉 , i will 〈◊〉 , and by all good way●● 〈…〉 to bring 〈…〉 punishment , all such as shall either by 〈◊〉 ▪ practise , councels , pio●● , conspiracies or otherwise , do any thing to the contrary of any thing in this present protestation contained . and further , that i shall 〈◊〉 all just and honourable wayes indevour to preserve the 〈◊〉 and peace between the three kingdoms of england , scotland and ireland ; and neither for hope , fear , nor other respect , shall relinquish this promise , vow , and protestation . the earl of straffords speech on the scaffold . the ministers and people solemnly take the protestation in all churches over the kingdome , mr. burton , dr. bastwick & mr: prinne ▪ triumphantly from perpetuall captivity ▪ those 3 famous wittnesses of truth , return home to london , attended with thousands of horse and foot , ( my lord ) i professe my self a true and obedient son to the church of england , to that church wherein i was born , and wherein i was bred ; prosperity and happinesse , be ever to it : and whereas it hath been said that i have inclined to popery , if it be an obiection worth answering , let me say truly , that from the time since i was one and twenty years of age , till this houre , now going upon 49. i never had thought in my heart , to doubt of the truth of my religion in england : and never any had the boldnesse to suggest to me the contrary , to the best of my remembrance ; and so being reconciled to the mercies of christ jesus my saviour , into whole bosome i hope shortly to be gathered , to those eternall happinesses that shall never have end . i desire heartily the forgivenesse of every man , both for any rash or unadvised word , or deed , and desire your prayers : and so my lords farewell , farewell all the things of this world : lord strengthen my faith , give me confidence and assurance in the merits of christ jesus . i desire you that you would be s●lent and ioyne in prayers with me ; and i tr●st in god that we shall all meet , and live eternally in heaven , there to receive the accomplishment of all happinesse , where every teare shall be wiped from our eyes , and every sad thought from our hearts : and so god blesse this kingdome , and jesus have mercy upon my soule . amen . the earle of strafford for treasonable practises beheaded on the tower-hill ▪ sr. francis windebank , sr. iohn finch , the lord digbie , iermin etc : fly for their lives beyond sea , 48. then , they attempted by foule and false scandals on the parliament , to intice the army of the scots , ( then , still in the north ) to a newtral●ty , and to sit still whiles our english army acted the farther designes hatched and hammered still in their heads and hearts , but this plot prevailed not neither . anno 1641. octob. 23. 49. about this time , that most horrid and inhumane bloody rebellion and monstrous massacring of almost 200000 innocent english protestants , men , women , and children , b●ake out in ireland , namely , about october 23. 1641. ( this also being a main branch of this most mischievous design against this parliament , by gods wonderfull power ) and providence , so firmly fixed and setled , that they knew not how to ruinate it ) those accursed rebels having had their principall encouragements and commissions to authorize them in that horrid and hideous rebellion from the court of england , and of purpose to have made england the chiefe seat of the warre , and of all the papists , prelates , and malignants utmost wrath and rage . 50. for the still effecting , and underhand working on , of this wicked designe , the malignant party in private , much prevailing still ; the designe now went on , chiefly against the city of london , for which purpose , the leivtenant of the tower , sir william belf●re , was ( for his loyalty ) displaced by the king from his leivtenantship , and popish lord cott●●g●on , made constable of the tower ; but his dangerous designes being soon discovered , he was as soon displaced ; and colon●ll lunsford , was made leivtenant of the tower ; but , he also by the parliaments petition and importunity to the king , was displaced ; and sir john byron , a desperate malignant ( who afterward proved the most bloody lord ●yr●n in 〈◊〉 ) was made leivtenant of the tower , in lunsfords stead , but he also , on many just jealousies being petitioned against , was at length , with much adoe removed and put out thence , and sir john conyers , by the power of the parliament , was put in his place . to the kings most excellent majesty , and the lords and peers now assembled in parliament . the humble petition and protestation of all the bishops and prelates now 〈◊〉 by his majesties writs to attend the parliame●t , and present abou● london and westminster for that service . that whereas the petitioners are called up by severall and respective writs , and under great penalties to attend the parliament , and have a clear and indubitable right to vo●e in bils , and other matters whatsoever debatable in parliament , by the ancient customes , laws , and statutes of this realm , and ought to be protected by your maiesty , quietly to attend and prosecute that great service . they humbly remonstrate and prot●st before god , your 〈◊〉 , and the noble lords and peers now assembled in parliament , that as they have an indubita●e right to sit and vote in the house of lords ; so are they , if they may be protected from force and violence , most ready and willing to performe their duties accordingly . and that they doe abhominate all actions or opinions tending to popery , and the maintainance thereof ; as also all propension and inclination to any malignant party , or any other side or party whatsoever , to the which their own reasons and conscience shall not move them to adhere . but , whereas they have been at the high commission-court and starr-chamber voted down , and pluralities & non residencies damned by parliament . the queen-mother sent away by sea , and the capuchine fryers & priests expell'd from somersett house ▪ beyond sea . severall times violently menaced , affronted and assaulted by multitudes of people , in their comming to perform their services in that honourable house , and lately chased away , and put in danger of their lives , and can finde no redresse or protection , upon sundry complaints made to both houses in these particulars . they likewise humbly protest before your majesty , and the noble house of peers , that saving unto themselves all their rights and interests of sitting and voting in that house at other times , they dare not sit or vote in the house of peers , untill your majesty shall further secure them from all affronts , indignities and dangers in the premises . lastly , whereas their fears are not built upon phantasies and conceits , but upon such grounds and objects as may well terrifie men of good resolutions , and much constancy . they doe in all duty and humility protest before your majesty , and the peers of that most honorable house of parliament , against all laws , orders , votes , resolutions , and determinations , as in themselves null , and of none effect , which in their absence , since the 27 of this instant moneth of december 1641. have already passed ; as likewise against all such as shall hereafter passe in that most honourable house , during the time of this their forced and violent absence from the said most honourable house ; not denying , but if their absenting of themselves were wilfull and voluntary , that most honourable house might proceed in all their premises , their absence , or this protestation notwithstanding . and humbly beseeching your most excellent majesty to command the clerk of that house of peers to enter this their petition and protestation among their records . they will ever pray to god to blesse , &c. jo. eborac . tho. duresme , rob. co. li●h . jos. norw. jo. asa. guli . ba. & wells geo. heref. rob. owon . ma. ely . godfr . g lonc . jo. peterburg . morris landaff . 51. none of all these plots , yet , prevailing against the parliament , neither in generalls nor particulars , they yet , persist to plot and attempt against it ; and about this time found occasions , craftily and causelesly ( in secret ) to foment many jealousies and jarres , to dis-joynt both houses of parliament , within themselves ; thereby at least , to obstruct and retard their ( then ) most weighty , and great affaires in church and state . 52. the bishops also themselves had a pestilent plot about this time , to subvert and overthrow the parliament , by endevouring to get the king to protest against their proceedings in it ; but twelve of them were thereupon presently impeached of high treason , and ●en of them imprisoned in the towre of london , and , afterward , they were all disabled from ever ●itting again in the parliament . bishops voted down root and branch : nullo contradiscente , insomuch that the citizens of london the same night , made bonfires , and had ringing of bels . and for the better securing the city within , as well as without , the parliament published an ordinance , thereby injoyning all popish recusants , inhabiting in and about the city , all disaffected persons , and such as being able men , would not lend any money for the defence of the commonwealth , should forthwith con●ine themselves to their own houses , and not to goe 〈◊〉 without speciall licence , as they would answer it at their 〈◊〉 , to the parliament . another ordinance was sent to the lord mayor , by which the trained bands were authorised to apprehend many of the prime and richest malignants , dis●affected persons in the city , whereof were foure aldermen put in safe custody , in crosby house , and some in gressan colledge . the bishops imprisoned in the towre of london for protesting against the parliament , popish recusants disarmed , for the greate security of the kingdome , 53. about which time , a most wicked fellow sent to mr. john py●● ( a most pious patriot of his country , and then a most eminent member of the house of commons ) a most reviling letter , therein calling him traytor , and in the said letter inclosed a plague-sore plaister , thinking thereby to have destroyed him , but , god mightily preserved him from the infection of it . 54. after this , the king himself ( being guarded with about 500 armed , ruffi●nly desperate cavaliers or souldiers ) violently rushed into the house of commons , accused five of their most eminent and pious members of treason , demanded their persons to be delivered up unto him , intending to destroy all that resisted him therein ; but this plot was blessedly crost , by the happy absence of the gentlemen ; this plot was attempted , jan. 4. 1641. anno 1642. 55. after this , one binion , a silkman of london ; and the kentish malignants , wherin sir edward deering , had a principall hand , framed dangerous and destructive petitions against the proceedings of the parliament ; but were both most justly rejected , and themselves fined and imprisoned for them . 56. immediately after this , things grew still , worse and worse among the malignants , the king himself in unjust discontent ( by the desperate and wicked counsell of that pernicious cataline , the young lord digby ) forsakes the parliament , and getting the prince to him , leaves london and presently posts into the north , and there attempts to get hull into his hands , but was happily prevented and bravely opposed by sir john hotham , then , in that time of his outward and seeming fidelity . 57. the king being● at york , interdicts the militia , then , set on foot , by the parliament , for their just safety and defence ; endevouring to remove the term from the city of london , but in both is opposed by the parliament . 58. the lords and gentry of ireland , and of scotland too , petition the king , to return to his parliament , yea and the gentry and commons of yorkeshire do the like , but are all rejected . 59. the king set on foot a most illegall commission of array , to clash against the parliaments militia , which occasioned much mischief and misery over the whole kingdom , but the parliaments militia prevailed in most places and parts of the land . 60. three letters were intercepted , discovering a most desperate plot against the parliament by the ro●●lists , commissary wilmot , digbie , jermine , ●rofts , and others , which by gods mercy failed them and came to nothing , but we in taking some of their ships were advantaged thereby . 61. sir richard gurney , then lord may●r of the city of london , proving a desperate malignant and array man , was crost in his desires , and clapt up prisoner in the tower of london , by the power of the parliament . 62. 〈…〉 and decla●●●●●● against the parliaments proceedings were printed and published and commanded to be read in al the churches and chappels over the whole kingdom , within the kings power . 63. sir john penington , a brave sea-man , but a desperate malignant , was constituted admirall of the seas , for the kings service , but displaced and dispossessed thereof by the parliament ; and the most noble and loyall earl of warwick ( notwithstanding the kings letter and command to interdict him therein , and to give way to penington ) being put in by the power and authority of the parliament , and possessed of the ships , most happily and honourably kept and continued in the place and office for the parliaments service . a letter sent to mr pym , mr. pym , doe not think that a guard of men can protect you if you persist in your traiterous courses and wiked designes , i haue sent a paper-m●ssenger to you , and if this does not touch your heart , a dagger shall so soon as i am recouered of my plague-sore . in the meane time you may be forborn ▪ because no better man may be endan●gered for you ▪ repent , traitor colonell lunfford assaulting the londonens at westminster hall , with a great rout of ruffinly cavaleires the citizens ●f london voluntarily prof●ered their service to attend and guard the parliament by lan to westminster , to secure them from danger . by water also the stout shipmasters and mariners , likewise made ready a great number of long●boats , furnished with ordnance , muskets , and other sea-like warlike instruments , their vessels also gallantly adorned with flagges and s●r●mers , together with martiall musick , drums and trumpets , so as it was a rare sight , and when they came to white hall , and understood that the parliament wor●hies were safely arrived , the trained bands by land , and the valiament seamen by water , let fly their thundering shot both small and great , their trumpets sounding , and their drums beating , in a triumphing and congratulating manner , a singular testimony of their cordiall affections . the very same day , a numerous company of buckinghamshire men , both gentlemen , ministers , and others of that country on horseback , with their protestations in their hats , partly in behalf of their knight of the shire , but especially to petition the parliament , for reformation of evills in church and state , and to assure their best services and assistance to the parliament , on all just occasions , and out of essex , hartford , barkeshire , surrey , and other counties of the kingdom came , one after another . 65. the most noble and right honourable earle of essex was ordained lord generall over all the parliaments forces , for the preservation of the kingdom , which he famously and faithfully managed and marshalled , as especially edge-hill and newbery , and other places can abundantly witnesse . 66. a plot to have blown up all the lord generalls magazine of powder ; and another at beverley in yorkeshire , to have slain sir john hotham both intended by one david alexander , and hired thereunto , but both , by gods providence timely prevented . 67. commissions granted to popish recusants to levy men and armes against the parliament ; but the parlia : published a declaration or protestation to the whole world , of their just proceedings therein . 68. the king received the most bloody irish rebels petition , and permitted their persons with great favour and allowance about him ; calling , and counting them good catholick subjects ; but utterly rejecting the parliaments petition , ( exhibited by the lord generall ) desiring peace and reconciliation with him . 69. a treaty of peace was really intended by the parliament , but meerly pretended and fraudulently for a while , transacted by the royalists ; in which interim , that most bloody bickering at ●rainf●●d , was most treacherously committed by the kings party , and a most wicked piece of villany c●●yed on therein , but ( though with much losse on both sides , but especially on theirs ) by gods great mercy the mischiefe prevented , and the city of london mightily preserved . 70. a dangerous plot against the kingdom , ●n new high-sheriffes , for the better collecting of the 400000 〈◊〉 . subsidies , intended to have been confirmed to the king in a former parliament ; but , that plot 〈◊〉 by the parliament providence , and an ordinance of parliament set on foot for the successefull association of counties for mutuall defence one of another , against regall injurious taxations and oppressions on them . 71. a wicked design of the royalists at oxford and elsewhere , to proceed against the parliaments prisoners , as traytors , and so to put them to death ; by which dr. bastwick , and captain lilburn , were to have been tryed for their lives ; but prevented by an ordinance of parliament for execution of a le● ta●●onis , and so of executing the royall prisoners among us . the citie trained bands , and the brave sea-men with barges and long-boates adorn'd with streamers drums & trumpets , and furnisht with ship-guns , & other warrlike instruments , guard the lords & commons safely to parl : by land & water . the countie of buckingham cometh to london the very same day of the lords & com̄ons so guarded ▪ with their petition to the parl : carrying the protestation on their slaves on horseback , and the counties of essex , hertford , barkshire , surrey , & others ▪ followed them ▪ in like maner , shortly after . anno 1643. 72. a notable plot against the city of london , immediately upon the cities prefe●●ing a petition to the king , by the hands of two trusty aldermen , and foure commoners of the said city , in reply to which petition , the king sending as his messenger , one captain hern to the city , and the whole body of the city assembling at a common hall , this hern desires faire-play above-board of them ; but the businesse being found to be a notable design of the malignant-citizens against the parliament and the ( then ) lord mayor of london , and the government of their city , the honest , and farre major party , cry out in the hearing of hern , they would live and dye with the parliament , and so sent hern away with a flea in his care . 73. another plot immediately after , contrivedat oxford , by a letter sent to all the freemen , journeymen and apprentices , of the said city to assemble at their severall halls ; and there the masters and wardens of all companies to read the kings letter to them , and to perswade them to yeeld to all the kings comemands against the parliament and city ; but this letter was nipt and crost also in the neck and nick of it , and voted by the parliament to be evill and scandalous . 74. a plot also to betray bristol into the royalists hands by one yeomans and bowch●r , and divers other their associates ; but by gods mercy the plot being timely discovered , and the danger avoyded , those two principall conspirators were by martiall law condemned , and hanged , and so the plot utterly frustrated . 75. cheapeside crosse , charing-crosse , and all other crosses , in and about london , utterly demolished and pulled down , and that abominable and blasphemous book of tolerating sports and pastimes on the lords daies , voted to be burnt , and shortly after accordingly burnt , together with many crucifixes and popish trinckets and trurnperies , in the very same place where cheapeside-crosse stood . 76. m. prynne sent by the parliament to the towre of london , to search the arch prelate of canterburies ▪ chamber and study there , where he was prisoner , who accordingly searching his study , and his pockets of his wearing cloathes ( a just requitall of his dealing with mr. prynne and others ) found the originall scotch service-book , with the arch●bishops owne hand-writings in it , the cause of all the scots warres ; and his diary , devotions , and discoveries under his own hands of matters of high concernment . 77. the city of london to have been betrayed into the hands of the royalists , under a pretence of a petition for peace , plotted by mr. waller , a member of the house of commons , m. tompkins , mr. challenor , and others ; and this wicked plot , te●med by king charles in his letter to the queen , one of his fine designes ; but god manifested th●● to be wicked and accursed designes ; and waller on● of the prime complotters , was by the sentence of the parliament fined 10000 livre. in his estate , and sent out of the kingdom into perpetuall banishment , and tompkins and challenor hanged in london . 78. the breaking out of sir john hothams rotten-heart and infidelity to the parliament , in his intended and 〈◊〉 pl●t ▪ for the betraying of that mighty strong town of hull into the queens hands , which treachery was plotted and contrived between sir john the father , captain hotham his son , and sir edward roades , and began to be suspected , by sir john hothams deserting of the most noble lord fairfax , by an intercepeed letter of the queens to the king , and divers other sumptomes of it , but especially by captain moyers letter to mr. ripley , and mr. ripley's faithfull acquainting the mayor of hull therewith , and their first seizing on the block-houses , castles , and commanders of them , and at length their apprehending of the persons of sir john hotham , and sir edward roads , for which treachery sir john hotham and captain hotham his son was also apprehended , and both of the●● beheaded at the tower of london . the 2 of may ▪ 1643. ye crosse in cheapeside was pulled downe ▪ a troope of horse & 2 companies of foote wayted to garde it & at ye fall of ye tope crosse drum̄es beat trūpets blew & multitudes of capes wayre throwne in ye ayre ▪ & a greate shoute of people with ioy , ye 2 of may the almanake sayeth , was ye invention of the crosse , & 6 day at night was the leaden popes burnt ▪ in the place where it stood with ringinge of bells , & a greate acclamation & no hurt done in all these actions . 10 of may the boocke of sportes vpon the lords day was burnt by the kingman in the place where the crosse s●●ode , & at exhange ▪ die merturii ; may 10. 1643. by vertue of an order of the house of commons , and agreeable to a bill passed by both houses of parliament , for suppressing of divers innovations in churches and chappels , this committee doth require you , and every of you , to take away and demollish every altar or table of stone within your church or chappell , and to remove the communion table from the east end of the said church or chappel , and to place the same in some other convenient place of the body of the said church or chappell , and to remove and take away all tapers , candlesticks , and basons from the communion table , and to take away and demolish all crucifixes , crosses , and all images and pictures of any one or more persons of the trinity , or of the virgin mary , and this committee doth further require you to demollish all crucifixes , crosses , images or pictures of any one or more persons of the trinity , or of the virgin mary , upon the outside of your said church or chappell , or in any open place within your parish . whereof you are to give an account to this committee , before the 20 day of this present moneth . to the church-wardens of the parish of , &c. and to every of them . 79. a desperate plot for the betraying of the city or town of lincolne , by the two purfries , two captains of hull , who let in 60 cavaliers by night in disguised habits , and who issuing out about 12 of the clock that night , to act their designe , where a plain fellow of the town discharging a piece of canon upon them , slew 10 of them at one shot the rest slain and taken by the centinels and souldiers of the town , and so by gods mercy the city preserved . 80. the queen wrote a dangerous letter to the king , to come with all his forces to surprize london ; but by gods over-powring wisedome and good providence , the king refusing that counsell resolved to take gloucester first , which he fiercely assaulted , but was as bravely repulsed , and by gods blessing on major generall mas●ies fidelity , and magnanimity of spirit , timely aide comming to relieve the town , it was admirably freed , and by the lord generalls army , and the city of londons regiments , delivered . 81. a desperate rebellion raised by the ke●tish malignants , but by gods mercy timely suppressed about tunbridge , by the valour of colonell brown , and the wel-affected gentry of the county of kent . 82. a ship bound from denmark to the king , of about 300 t●n , richly laden with armes and 〈◊〉 ; another ship bound from newcastle to holland , laden with 〈…〉 , but in the midst thereof 〈…〉 between 3 and 4000li . hid in the 〈…〉 to buy arms for the king ; and a third great ship called the fellowship , 〈…〉 least 400 tun , carrying 24 pieces of ordnance , all these 3 ships taken by the parliaments ships , and made prize of . 83. the comming in of our brethren of scotland with an army of at least 20000 horse and foot , invited thereunto by the parl : in the bitter depth of winter , when they marched up to the middle in snow , and were forced to bring their artillery over the ice of the frozen river of tyne , and the citizens of london lent the parliament a 100000 li. for the scots first pay , to encourage their advance to helpe us against the kings forces . on tuesday the 23 of may , 1643. 23. may . 1643. voted that ye queene pawning the iewells of ye crowne in holland & there with buying armes to assist the warr against ye par●a●● & her owne actuall performances with her popish army in the north was high treason & transmited to the lords ▪ images . crucifixes papist●call bookes in somerset and ●am●●●s ●are burnt and capuchin friers sent away may : 1643. an ordinance for the makeing of fortes , trenches , and bull workes , about the cittie , iuly . 1 : 43. the assembly of diuines m●tt , dr. ●●iss prolocutor . 120 : the totall may . ●3 . challenor and tomkins were hangd for seekeing to betray the cittie . the bishop of canterburies first prayer on the scaffold , 10 janua . 1644. o eternall god and mercifull father , look down upon me in mercy , in the riches and fulnesse of all thy mercies , look upon me , but not till thou hast nailed my sins to the crosse of christ , look upon me ; but not till thou hast hathed me in the blood of christ , not till i have hid my self in the wounds of christ , that so the punishment that is due to my sins may passe away and go over me and since thou art pleased to try me to the uttermost , i humbly beseech thee , give me now in this great instant , full patience , proportionable comfort , a heart ready to dye for thine honour , and the kings happinesse , and this churches preservation , and my zeale to these , far from arrogancy be it spoken , is all the sin , humane frailty excepted , and all incidents thereunto , which is yet known of me in this particular , for which i now come to suffer , i say in this particular of treason , but otherwise my sins are many and great , lord pardon them all , and those especially whatsoever they b● which 〈…〉 this present judgement upon me , and when thou hast given me strength 〈…〉 it , then doe with me as seems best in thine own eyes ●nd ca●●y me through death , that i may look upon it in what visage soever it shall appear 〈…〉 and that there may be a step of this issue of blood in this more then miserable 〈…〉 ▪ i shall desire that i may pray for the people too , as well as for my selfe ▪ 〈…〉 thee give grace of repentance to all people that h●ve a thirst for b●●●● , but if they will not 〈…〉 it device● so , and such as are or shall be contrary to the glory of thy great 〈◊〉 , the truth and sincerity of religion , the establishment of the king , and his posterity after him , in their just rights and priviledges , the honour and conservation of parliaments , in their ancient and just power , the preservation of this poore church , in her truth , peace , and patrimony , and the settlement of this distracted , and distressed people , under the ancient laws , and in their native liberties , and when thou hast done all this in mercy for them , o lord , fill their hearts with thankfulnesse , and with religious dutifull obedience to thee and thy commandements all their dayes : so amen , lord jesus , and i beseech thee receive my soule to mercy . our father , &c. sr alexander caro●● . sr. iohn hotham , capt●n hotham & the arch bishop of canterbury , beheaded on to●erhill for treason against ye parliament 1645. the great seale broken before the lords and commons on tusday the 11. august 1646 the bishop of canterburies last prayer on the scaffold . lord , i am comming as fast as i can , i know i must passe through the shadow of death , before i can come to see thee , but it is but um●ra mortis , a meer shadow of death , a little darknesse upon nature , but thou by thy merits and passion hast broke through the jaws of death ; so , lord , receive my soule and have mercy upon me , and blesse this kingdome with peace and plenty , and with brotherly love and charity , that there may not be this effusion of christian blood amongst them , for jesus christ his sale , if it be thy will . and when he said , lord receive my soule , which was his sign , the executioner did his office . 84. a desperate plot of the royalists to starve up the city of london , by breaking into surrey , sussex , kent , and the other associated counties , but disappointed by the parliaments victories at ault●n and als●●rd , fought by sir will : waller , with the help of the city of londons regiments ; and the royalists plots to hinder our brethren of scot●● comming in to our help , by letters and embassadors sent from france , and messengers from king charles to inveagle them to keep from us ; but all in vain by gods good providence and mercy to us . 85. the king gran●●d a cessation of arms with the bloody rebels of ireland , and afterward justified it by a declaration of his , printed and published at oxford ; but it was remarkably observed , that he never prospered in any of his great designs after that . 86. a solemn league and covenant taken by the lords and commons in parliament , and by the city of london , and all parts of the kingdom , in the parliaments power , for a pure reformation of religion and church-government , and a mutuall defence betwixt us and our brethren of scotland . 87. a notable plot by the royalists to have nottingham town & castle , betrayed unto them , the officers therein being proffered above 10000 livre. to consent to it ; but prevented by gods mercy in the fidelity of colonell hutchinson , who was then the governour thereof . 88. a generall plot against the protestant religion over all christendom , and the danes and holl●nde●● also , but god wrought a mighty overture therein by the sudden breaking out of the danes plot against the swedes , and their over-running almost all d●nmark thereupon . 89. a desperate plot against the city of london , under a pretence of petitioning for peace , acted by sir 〈◊〉 brook , colonell read , and one mr. riley , & vilet , 2 citizens of london 〈…〉 , but by gods providence discovered and prevented . 1645. 90. two 〈…〉 the betraying of milsbury into the royalists hands ; and another against 〈…〉 all then by gods mercy timely discovered also and prevented . 91. one mr. edward s●●nford , a papist , plotted with captain backhouse a capt. of horse , under colonell mass●e ▪ for the be●●aying of the city of gloucester into the enemies hands , and pr●ffered 5000 livre. for a reward thereof , 200 li . whereof was paid in hand to the said captain , but by gods providence the plot frustrated , and gloucester safely preserved . 92. englands great wonder to gods glory , there being ( about may 30. 1644. ) six brave armies in the kingdome , on the parliaments side , and other forces for defence of the city of london , besides . 93. a plot to have betrayed our whole army in cornwall in the vvest , but by gods blessing most of the souldiers lives were preserved , though with the losse of our artillery . 94. sir alexander carew , sir john hotham , captain hotham , and the arch-prelate of canterbury beheaded on tower-hill for treason against the parliament . 95. a peace onely pretended by the royalists at uxbridge , and a treacherous petition framed by the malignants of buckingham shire , wherein one sir john lawrence of that county was a great stickler , but the mischief of both was frustrated . 96. a desperate assault on melcomb-regis , to have betrayed it into the royalists hands , wherein divers of the malignant townsmen had a principall hand , and colonell goring , and sir lewis dives , were agents therein , but by gods blessing the plot was frustrated , the town and forts recovered , and two ships with rich prize from rhoan in france , were seized on to make amends for their trouble . 1645. 97. divers earles and lords forsook oxford , and came in and submitted themselves to the parliament . 98. a desperate plot in the west against the parliament , by the clubmen , but by gods providence turned to the enemies greatest hurt in the issue . 99. a devillish sudden plot upon scotland , which was almost over run , by traiterous montrosse ; but as suddenly recovered again , by gods blessing on generall david lesley , and montrosse discomfitted and beaten away into the mountaines . 1646. 100. a discovery of grosse impiety in the oxonians , pretending a desired treaty with the parliament , for a wel-grounded peace , and yet at that time the earl of glamorgan , had a commission to the ruine of all the protestants in ireland , and so consequently of us in england also . 101. the great seale broken before the lords and commons , on tuesday the 11 , of august , 1646. the speech of the lord louthe● , chancellour of scotland , to the king at newcastle , july , 1646. your majesty was pleased on monday last to call the lords of your councell and committee , to acquaint them with the propositions , and told them before you would deliver your answer , you would make the same known to them : the time assigned to the commissioners stay is so short , and the consequence of your majesties answer of so great importance , either for the perservation or ruine of your crowne , and kingdomes , as we could not be answerable to god , nor to that trust reposed in us , unlesse we represent to your majesty how necessary it is that your maiesty assent to the propositions as the condition of affaires now standin so great extremity , and that the danger and losse of your refusall will be remedilesse , and bring on a suddaine ruine and destruction . i shall begin first with the last , which is the danger and shall next speake a word of the remedy . the differences betwixt your majesty and your parliament ( which no man knoweth better than your majesties selfe , ) are growne to such a height , that after many , bloudy battels , the parliament having your majesty , all the forts , garr●●o●s , and strong holds in their hands , having your majesties revenue , excise , assessements , sequestrations , and the authority to raise all the men and money in the kingdome , and having , after many victories and great successes , a strong army on foot , are now in such a posture for strength and power : they are in a capacity to doe what they will , both in church and state . and some are so afraid , and others so unwilling to submit themselves to your majesties government , that they desire not you , nor any of your race , longer to reigne over them : but the people are so wearie of the warre , and great burthens they doe groane under , are so loath to have monarchicall government destroyed , that they are not attempt to cast it totally off , till once they send propositions of peace to your majesty , least the people ( without whose concurrence they are not able to carry on their design ) should fall from them ; but after so great warre and trouble , that they may have a perfect security from opposition and arbitrary power , they have resolved upon the propositions , which are tendred to your majesty , as that without which the kingdome and your people cannot be in safety , and that there cannot be a firme peace upon any other tearmes . your majesties friends in the houses , and the commissioners from scotland , ( after much wrasling ) did consent to the sending of those propositions , or to be ●ated the hunderers of peace , or otherwayes to send no propositions at all . and now sir , if your majesty ( as god forbid ) shall refuse to assent to the propositions , you will lose all your friends in the houses , lose the city , and all the countrey . and all england will joyne against you as one man ; they will processe and depose you , and set up another government ; they will charge us to deliver your majesty to them , and to tender their garrisons , and remove our armies out of england , and upon your maiesties refusall of the propositions , both kingdomes will be constrained for their mutuall safety , to agree and settle religion and peace without you , which ( to our unspeakable griefe ) will ruine your maiesty and your posterity , and if your maiesty refuse our faithfull advice ( who desire nothing on earth more than the preservation of your maiesties royall throne . ) and if your maiesty lose england by your wilfulnesse , you will not be permitted to come and reigne in scotland . sir , we have laid our hands upon our hearts , we have asked counsell and direction from god , and have had our most serious thoughts upon the remedy , but can finde no other to save your crowne and kingdomes , than your maiesties assenting to the propositions , and dare not say but they are higher in some things , ( if it were in our power and option to remedy ) than we approved of , but when we see no other meanes for curing the distempers of the kingdomes , and closing the breach between your majesty and your parliament , our most humble and safe advise is , your majesty will be graciously pleased to assent to them as the onely way to establish your throne ; because your majesty shall be thereby received againe in your parliament , with the applause and acclamations of your people , by your royall presence all friends will be strengthened , and all enemies , ( who feare nothing so much as the granting the propositions ) will be weakned ; your maiesty will have a fit opportunity hereafter , to offer such propositions as you and your parliament in wisedome shall thinke fit , for your crowne and kingdome , the armies will be disbanded , and your people finding the sweet fruit of a peaceable government : you will gaine their hearts and affections , and that will be your maiesties strength and glory , and will recover all that you have lost in this time of tempest of trouble . and if it please god to incline your royall heart to this advise of your humble , and faithfull servants , who next to the honour and service of god , esteem nothing more pretious , than the safety of your person , and crowne : our actions shall make it appeare , that we esteem no hazard too great for your maiesties safety , and that we are willing to sacrifice our lives and fortunes for establishing your throne and iust right . die sabbathi 5. april . 1645. be it ordained by the lords and commons in parliament assembled , that all and every person of what degree or quality soever , that hath lived or shall live within the kings quarters , or been aiding , assisting , or adhering unto the forces raised against the parliament , and hath or shall come to inhabite or reside under the power and protection of the parliament , shall swear upon the holy evangelist in manner following . the negative oath . i a. b. doe swear from my heart , that i will not directly nor indirectly adhere unto , or willingly assist the king in this warre , or in this cause against the parliament , nor any forces raised without the consent of the two houses of parliament , in this cause or warre . and i doe likewise swear that my comming and submitting my self under the power and protection of the parliament , is without any manner of designe whatsoever , to the prejudice of the proceedings of the two houses of this present parliament , and without the direction , privity , and advice of the king , or any of his councell , or officers , other then what i have now made known . so help me god , and the contents of this book . and it is further ordained by the authority aforesaid , that the commissioners for keeping of the great seale of england , for the time being , shall have power , and are hereby authorized to tender and administer the said oath unto any peere , or wife , or widow of any peere , so comming to inhabit as abovesaid . and it shall be lawfull to and for the committee of the house of commons for examinations , the committee for the militia in london , and all committees of parliament in the severall counties and cities of the kingdom , to tender and administer the said oath unto every other person so comming to inhabit as abovesaid . and if any person ( not being a member of , or assistant unto either of the houses of parliament ) shall refuse or neglect to take the said oath , so duly tendered unto him or her , as abovesaid , the said commissioners and committees respectively , shall , and may commit the same person to some prison , there to remain without baile or mainprize , untill he shall conforme thereunto . jo. brown cler. parliamentorum . collected by john vicars . finis . schola cordis, or, the heart of it selfe, gone away from god brought back againe to him & instructed by him in 47 emblems. harvey, christopher, 1597-1663. this text is an enriched version of the tcp digital transcription a43639 of text r13211 in the english short title catalog (wing h183). textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. the text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with morphadorner. the annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish. this text has not been fully proofread approx. 173 kb of xml-encoded text transcribed from 104 1-bit group-iv tiff page images. earlyprint project evanston,il, notre dame, in, st. louis, mo 2017 a43639 wing h183 estc r13211 13316676 ocm 13316676 99023 this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the early english books online text creation partnership. this phase i text is available for reuse, according to the terms of creative commons 0 1.0 universal . the text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. early english books online. (eebo-tcp ; phase 1, no. a43639) transcribed from: (early english books online ; image set 99023) images scanned from microfilm: (early english books, 1641-1700 ; 457:2) schola cordis, or, the heart of it selfe, gone away from god brought back againe to him & instructed by him in 47 emblems. harvey, christopher, 1597-1663. haeften, benedictus van, 1588-1648. schola cordis. quarles, francis, 1592-1644. [6], 195 p. printed for h. blunden ..., london : 1647. illustrated t. p. adapted by christopher harvey from bendictus van haeften's "schola cordis." sometimes wrongly ascribed to francis quarles. reproduction of original in british library. eng emblem books. a43639 r13211 (wing h183). civilwar no schola cordis or the heart of it selfe, gone away from god; brought back againe to him & instructed by him. in 47 emblems. harvey, christopher 1647 27515 241 0 0 0 1 0 91 d the rate of 91 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the d category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words. 2002-03 tcp assigned for keying and markup 2002-03 apex covantage keyed and coded from proquest page images 2002-04 tcp staff (michigan) sampled and proofread 2002-04 kirk davis text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-05 pfs batch review (qc) and xml conversion schola cordis or the heart of it selfe , gone away from god brought back againe to him & instructed by him in 47 emblems . audiam quid loquatur in me dominus psalm . 84 . loquar ad 〈…〉 cer. osa . 2 london printed for h blunden at the castle in corn-hill 1647. mickael uan lochom facit to the divine majestie of the onely begotten , eternall , well-belov 〈…〉 d son of god and saviour of the world christ jesus , the king of kings and lord of lords , the maker , the 〈◊〉 , the searcher and the teacher of the heart ; the meanest of his mostunworthy servants offers up this poore account of his thoughts , humbly begging pardon for all that is amisse in them , and a gracious acdeptance of these weak erdeavours for the advancement of his honor the good of others . the contents . the introduction . e bleme , 1. the infection of the heart . 2. the taking away of the heart . 3. the darknesse of the heart . 4. the absence of the heart . 5. the vanity of the heart . 6. the oppression of the heart . 7. the covetousnesse of the heart . 8. the hardnesse of the heart . 9. the division of the heart . 10. the insatiablenesse of the heart . 11. the returning of the heart . 12. the powring out of the heart . 13. the circumcision of the heart . 14. the contrition of the heart . 15. the humiliation of the heart . 16. the softening of the heart . 17. the cleansing of the heart . 18. the giving of the heart . 19. the sacrifice of the heart . 20. the weighing of the heart . 21. the trying of the heart . 22. the sounding of the heart . 23. the levelling of the heart . 24. the renewing of the heart . 25. the enlightening of the heart . 26. the table of the heart . 27. the tilling of the heart . 28. the seeding of the heart . 29. the watering of the heart . 30. the flowers of the heart . 31. the keeping of the heart . 32. the watching of the heart . 33. the wounding of the heart . 34. the inhabiting of the heart . 35. the enlarging of the heart . 36. the inflaming of the heart . 37. the ladder of the heart . 38. the flying of the heart . 39. the union of the heart . 40. the rest of the heart . 41. the bathing of the heart . 42. the binding of the heart . 43. the prop of the heart . 44. the scourging of the heart . 45. the hedging of the heart . 46. the fastening of the heart . 47. the new wine of the heart . $he conclusion . the school of the heart . the introdvction . turne in , my mind , wander no more abroad , her 's work enough at home , lay by that load of scatter'd thoughts that clogs and cumbers resume thy long neglected liberty ( thee ) of selfe-examination : bend thine eye inward , consider where thine heart doth lie , how 't is affected , how 't is busi'd : looke what thou hast writ thy selfe in thine own booke , thy conscience : here set thou thy selfe to schoole . selfe-knowledge 'twixt a wise man and a foole doth make the difference : he that neglects this learning , sideth with his owne defects . dost thou draw backe ? hath custome charm'd thee so , that thou canst relish nothing but thy woe ? find'st thou such sweetnesse in those sugar'd lyes ? have forain objects so ingrost thine eyes ? canst thou not hold them off ? hast thou an eare to listen but to what thou should'st not heare ? art thou incapable of every thing , but what thy senses to thy fancie bring ? remember that thy birth and constitution both promise better then such base confusion . thy birth 's divine , from heaven ; thy composure is spirit , and immortall ; thine inclosure in walls of flesh not to make thee debtor for house-roome to them , but to make them better . thy body 's thy freehold , live then as the lord , no tenant to thine owne : some time afford to view what state 't is in : survey each part , and above all take notice of thine heart . such as that is the rest is , or will be , better or worse , blame-worthy or fault-free . what ? are the ruines such thou art affrai'd , or else asham'd , to see how 't is decai'd ? is 't therefore thou art loth to see it such , as now it is , because it is so much , degenerated now from what it was , and should have been ? thine ignorance , alas , will make it nothing better , and the longer evills are suffer'd grow , they grow the stronger . or hath thine understanding lost its light ? hath the darke night of error dimm'd thy sight so that thou canst not , though thou would'st , observe all things amisse within thee , how they swerve from the straight rules of righteousnesse and reason ? if ' so , omit not then this precious season . t is yet schoole time , as yet the doore 's not shut . harke how the master calls . come let us put up our requests to him , whose will alone limits his pow'r of teaching , from whom none returnes unlearned , that hath once a will to be his scholar , and implore his skill . great scearcher of the heart , whose boundlesse sight discovers secrets , and doth bring to light the hidden things of darkenesse , who alone perfectly know'st all things that can be knowne . thou know'st i doe not , cannot , have no mind to know mine heart : i am not onely blind , but lame , and listlesse : thou alone canst make mee able , willing : and the paines i take , as well as the successe , must come from thee , who workest both to will and doe in mee : having now made mee willing to be taught , make mee as willing to learne what i ought . or , if thou wilt allow thy scholar leave to choose his lesson , lest i should deceive my selfe againe , as i have done too often , teach mee to know mine heart . thou , thou , canst soften lighten , enliven , purifie , restore , and make more fruitfull , then it was before , its hardnesse , darkenesse , death , uncleannesse , losse , and barrennesse : refine it from the drosse , and draw out all the dregs , heale ev'ry sore , teach it to know it selfe , and love thee more . lord , if thou wilt , thou canst impart this skill : and for all other learning take 't who will . embleme 1. the infection of the heart . acts 5.3 . why hath satan filled thine heart ? epigr. 1. whilst thou enclin'st thy voyce-envcigled eare , the subtill serpents syren-songs to heare , thy heart drinks deadly poyson drawn from bell , and with a vip'rous broed of sinne doth swell . ode 1. the soule . 1. profit , and pleasure , comfort , and content , wisedome , and honour , and when these are spent a fresh supply of more ! oh heav'nly words ! are these the dainty fruits , that this faire tree affords the serpent . 2. yes these , and many more , if more may be , all , that the world containes , in this one tree contracted is . take but a tast , and try , thou maist beleeve thy self , experience can not lye . the soule . 3. but thou maist lye : and with a false pretence of friendship rob me of that excellence , which my creators bounty hath bestow'd , and freely given me , to whom he nothing ow'd . the serpent . 4. strange composition ! so credulous , and at the same time so suspicious ! this is the tree of knowledge , and untill thou eat thereof , how canst thou know what 's good or ill ? the soule . 5. god infinitly good my maker is , who neither will , nor can , doe ought amisse . the being i receiv'd was that he sent , and therefore i am sure must needs be excellent : the serpent . 6. suppose it be : yet doubtlesse he that gave thee such a being must himselfe needs have a better farre , more excellent by much : or else be sure that he could not have made thee such . the soule . 7. such as he made me i am well content still to continue : for , if he had meant i should enjoy a better state , he would as easily as not have giv'n it , if he would . the serpent . 8. and is it not all one , if he have given thee meanes to get it ? must he still be driven to new workes of creation for thy sake ? wilt thou not what he sets before thee daine to take ? the soule . 9. yes , of the fruits of all the other trees i freely take and ear : they are the sees allow'd me for the dressing by the maker : but of this fatall fruit i must not be partaker . the serpent . 10. and why ? what danger can it be to eat that which is good being ordain'd for meat ? what wilt thou say ? god made it not for food ? or dur'st thou think that made by him it is not good the soule . 11. yes , good it is , no doubt , and good for meat : but i am not allow'd thereof to eat . my makers prohibition under paine of death the day i eat thereof , makes me refraine . the serpent . 12. faint-hearted fondling , canst thou feare to dye , being a spirit and immortall ? fie . god knowes this fruit once eaten will refine thy groster parts alone , and make thee all divine . the soule . 13. there 's something in it sure : were it not good , it had not in the mid'st of th'garden stood : and being good , i can no more refraine from wishing , then then i can the fire to burne restraine 14. why doe i trifle then ? what i desire why doe i not ? nothing can quench the fire of longing but fruition . come what will , eat it i must , that i may know what 's good and ill . the serpent . 15. so , thou art taken now : that resolution gives an eternall date to thy confusion . the knowledge thou hast got of good , and ill , is of good gone , and past , of evill present still . embleme 2. the taking away of the heart . hos. 4. 11. whoredome and wine , and new win take away the heart . epigr. 2. base lust and luxury the scumme and d●…osse of hell-borne pleasures , please thee to the losse of thy souls precious eyesight , reaso●… ; ●… mind●…sse thy mind , hear●…●… heart doth grow . ode 2. 1. laid downe already ? and so fast asleepe ? thy precious heart left loosly on thine hand , which with all diligence thou shouldest keep , and guard against those enemies , that stand ready prepar'd to plunge it in the deep of all distresse ? rouze thee , and understand in time , what in the end thou must confesse , that misery at last and wretchednesse is all the fruit that springs from slothfull idlenesse . 2. whilst thou list soaking in security , thou drown'st thy selfe in sensuail delight , and wallow'st in debauched luxurie , which when thou art awake and see'st , will fright thine heart with horror . when thou shalt de●…cry by the daylight the danger of the night , then , then , if not too late , thou wilt confesse , that endlesse misery and wretchednesse is all the fruit that springs from riotous excesse . 3. whilst thou dost pamper thy proud flesh , and thrust into thy panch the prime of all thy store , thou dost but gather fuell for that lust , which boyling in thy liver runneth o're , and frieth in thy throbbing veines , which must needs vent , or burst , when they can hold no more . but oh consider what thou shalt confesse at last , that misery and wretchednesse is all the fruit that springs from lustfull wantonnesse . 4. whilst thou dost feed effeminate desires with spumy pleasures , whilst fruition the coals of lust fannes into flaming fires , and spurious delights thou doatest on , thy mind through cold remisnesse ev'n expires , and all the active vigour of 't is gone . take heed in time , or else thou shalt confesse at last that misery and wretchednesse is all the fruit that springs from carelesse-mindednesse . 5. whilst thy regardlesse sense-dissolved mind lies by unbent , that should have been thy spring of motion , all thy headstrong passions find themselves let loose , and follow their own swing , forgetfull of the great account behind , as though there never would be such a thing , but , when it comes indeed , thou wilt confesse that misery alone and wre●…hednesse is all the fruit that springs from soule forgetfulnesse . 6. whilst thou remembrest not thy later end , nor what a reck'ning one day thou must make , putting no difference betwixt foe and friend , thou suffer'st hellish fiends thine heart to take , who , all the while thou triflest , doe attend , ready to bring it to the burning lake of fire and brimstone : where thou shalt confesse that endlesse misery and wretchednesse is all the fruit that springs from stupid heartlesnesse . embleme 3. the darknesse of the heart . rom. 1.21 . their foolish heart was darkened . epigr. 3. svch cloudy shadowes have eclips'd thine heart as nature cannot parallel nor art : vnlessethou take my light of truth to guide thee , blacknesse of darknesse will at last betide thee . ode 3. 1. tarry , o tarry , lest thine heedlesse hast hurry thee headlong unto hell at last : see , see , thine heart 's already half-way there , those gloomy shadowes , that encompasse it , are the vast confines of th'infernall pit . o stay , and if thou lov'st not light , yet feare that fatall darknesse , where such danger doth appeare . 2. a night of ignorance hath overspread thy mind and understanding : thou art led blindfolded by unbridled passion : thou wand rest in the crooked wayes of errour , leading directly to the king of terrour : the course thou takest , if thou holdest on , will bury thee anon in deep destruction . 3. whilst thou art thus deprived of thy ●…ight , thou know'st no difference between noone and night , though the sun shine , yet thou regard'st it not . my love-alluring beauty cannot draw thee , nor doth my mind-amating terrour awe thee : like one that had both good and ill forgot , thou carest not a jot what falleth to thy lot . 4. thou art become unto thy selfe a stranger , observest not thine own desert , or danger , thou know'st not what thou dost , nor canst thou tel whither thou goest : shooting in the darke how canst thou ever hope to hit the marke ? what expectation hast thou to doe well , that art content to dwell within the verge of hell ? 5. alas , thou hast not so much knowledge left , as to consider that thou art bereft of thine owne eye-sight . but thou runn'st , as though thou sawest all before thee : whilst thy minde to neerest necessary things is blind . thou knowest nothing as thou ought'st to know , whilst thou esteemest so the things that are below . 6. would ever any , that had eyes , mistake as thou art wont to doe : no difference make betwixt the way to heaven and to hell ? but , desperatly devoted to destruction , rebell against the light , abhorre instruction ? as though thou did'st desire with death to dwell , thou hatest to heare tell how yet thou maist doe well . 7. oh that thou didst but see how blind thou art , and seel the dismall darkenesse of thine heart : then would'st thou labour for , and i would lend my light to guide thee : that 's not light alone , but life , eyes , sight , grace , glory , all in one . then should'st thou know whither those by wayes bend , and that death in the end on darkenesse doth attend . embleme 4. the absence of the heart . prov. 17. 16. wherefore is there a price in the hand of a foole to get wisdome , seeing he bath no heart to it ? epigr. 4. had'st thou an heart , thou fickle fugitive , how would thine heart hate and disdaine to live mindfull of such vaine trifles , as these be , resting forgetfull of it selfe and me ? ode 4. the soule . 1. brave , dainty , curious , rare , rich , precious things ! able to make fate-blasted mortals blest , peculiar treasures , and delights for kings , that having pow'r of all would choose the best . how doe i hugge mine happinesse that have present possession of what others crave ? christ . 2. poore , silly , simple , sense-besotted soule , why dost thou hugge thy self-procured woes ? release thy freeborne thoughts , at least controul those passions , that enslave thee to thy foes . how would'st thou hate thy self , if thou did'st know the basenesse of those things thou prizest so ! the soule . 3. they talk of goodnesse , vertue , piety , religion , honesty , i know not what ; so let them talk for me : so long as i have goods and lands , and gold , and jewells , that both equall and excell all other treasure , why should i strive to make their paine my pleasure christ . 4. so swine neglect the pearles that lie before them , trample them under foote , and feed on draffe : so fooles gild rotten idols , and adore them , cast all the corne away , and keep the chaffe . that ever reason should be blinded so , to graspe the shadow , let the substance goe ! the soule . 5. all 's but opinion that the world accounts matter of worth : as this or that man sets a value on it , so the price amounts : the sound of strings is vari'd by the frets . my mind 's my kingdome : why should i withstand , or question that , which i my selfe command ? christ . 6. thy tyrant passions captivate thy reason : thy lusts usurpe the guidance of the mind : thy sense-led fancy barters good for geason : thy seed is vanity , thine harvest wind : thy rules are crooked , and thou writ'st awry : thy wayes are wand'ring , and thine end to die . the soule . 7. this table summes me myriads of pleasure : that booke enroules mine honours inventory : these bags are stuft with millions of treasure : those writings evidence my state of glory : these bells ring heav'nly musicke in mine eares , to drown the noise of cumbious cares and feare . christ . 8. those pleasures one day will procure thy paine : that which thou glorist in will be thy shame : thou 'lt finde thy losse in what thou thought'st thy gaine : thine honour will put on another name . that musicke in the close will ring thy knell , in stead of heaven toll thee into hell . 9. but why doe i thus wast my words in vaine on one , that 's wholly taken up with toyes , that will not loose one dramme of earth to gaine a full eternall weight of heav'nly joyes ? all 's to no purpose , 't is as good forbeare , as speak to one , that hath no heart to heare . embleme 5. the vanity of the heart . iob 15.31 . let not him that is deceived trust in vanity , for vanity shall be his recompence . epigr. 5. ambitious bellowes with the wind of honour puffe up the swelling heart , that dotes upon her : which fill'd with empty vanity breaths forth nothing , but such things as are nothing worth . ode 5. 1. the bane of kingdomes , worlds disquieter , hells heire apparent , satans eldest sonne , abstract of ills , refined elixir , and quintessence of sinne , ambition , sprung from th'infernall shades , inhabits here , making mans heart its horrid mansion , which , though it were of vast content before , is now puft up , and swells still more and more . 2. whole armies of vaine thoughts it entertaines , is stuft with dreames of kingdomes and of crownes , presumes of profit without care or paines , threatens to baffle all its foes with frownes , in ev'ry bargaine makes account of gaines , fancies such frolicke mirth , as choakes and drownes the voyce of conscience , whose loud alarmes cannot be hard for pleasures countercharmes . 3. wer 't not for anger and for pity , who could choose but smile to see vaineglorious men racking their wits , straining their sinewes so , that thorow their transparent thinnesse , when they me●… with wind and sun , they quickly grow riv'led and dry , shrinke till they crack againe , and all but to seeme greater then they are : stretching their strength they lay their weaknesse bare 4. see how hells fueller his bellowes plies , blowing the fire , that burnt too fast before : see how the furnace flames , the sparkles rise and spread themselve abroad still more and more : see how the doating soule hath fixt her eyes on her deare fooleries , and doth adore with hands and heart lift up those trifling toyes , wherewith the devill cheates her of her joyes . 5. alas , thou art deceiv'd , that glitt'ring crowne , on which thou gazest , is not gold but grief , that scepter sorrow : if thou take them downe , and try them , thou shalt find what poore relief they could afford thee , though they were thine owne , didst thou command ev'n all the world in chief , thy comforts would abate , thy cares encrease , and thy perplexed thoughts disturbe thy peace . 6. those pearles so thorow pierc'd , and strung together , though jewells in thine eyes they may appeare , will prove continu'd perills , when the weather is clouded once , which yet is faire and cleare . what will that fanne , though of the finest feather , steed thee , the brunt of windes and stormes to beare ? thy flagging colours hang their drooping head , and the shrill trumpets sound shall strike thee dead . 7. were all those balls , which thou in sport dost tosse , whole worlds , and in thy power to command , the gaine would never countervaile the losse , those slipp'ry globes will glide out of thine hand , thou canst have no fast hold but of the crosse , and thou wilt fall , where thou dost thinke to stand . forsake these sollies then , if thou wilt live : timely repentance may thy death reprive . embleme 6. the oppression of the heart . lvke 21.34 . take heed lest at any time your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkennesse . epigr. 6. two massy weights , surfciting , drunkennesse , like mighty logs of lead , doe so oppresse the heav'n-borne hearts of men , that to aspire vpwards they have nor power nor desire . ode . 6. 1. monster of sins ! see how th'inchanted soule o'rcharg'd already calls for more . see how the hellish skinker plies his bowle , and 's ready furnished with store , whilst cups on every side planted attend the tide . 2. see how the piled dishes mounted stand , like hills advanced upon hills , and the abundance both of sea and land doth not suffice , ev'n what it fills , mans dropsy appetite , and cormorant delight . 3. see how the poyson'd body s puft , and swell'd , the face enflamed glowes with heat , the limbs unable are themselves to welld , the pulses deaths alarme doe beat : yet man sits still , and laughs , whilst his owne bane he quaffes . 4. but where 's thine heart the while , thou senselesse sot ? looke how it lieth crusht , and quell'd , flat beaten to the board , that it cannot move from the place , where it is held , nor upward once aspire with heavenly desire . 5. thy belly is thy god , thy shame thy glory , thou mindest only earthly things ; and all thy pleasure is but transitory , which grief at last and sorrow brings : the courses thou dost take will make thine heart to ake . 6. is 't not enough to spend thy precious time in empty idle complement , unlesse thou straine ( to aggravate thy crime ) nature beyond its owne extent , and force it to devoure an age within an houre ? 7. that which thou swallow'st is not lost alone , but quickly will revenged be , ●… on thine heart , which like a stone lyes buri'd in the midd'st of thee , both void of common sense and reasons excellence . 8. thy body is diseases rendevouze , thy mind the market place of vice , the devill in thy will keeps open house , thou liv'st , as though thou would'st intice hell torments unto thee , and thine owne devill be . 9 oh , what a dirty dunghill art thou growne , a nasty stinking kennell foule ! when thou awak'st and seest what thou hast done , sorrow will swallow up thy soule , to think how thou art foyl'd , and all thy glory spoyl'd . 10. or if thou canst not be asham'd , at least have some compassion on thy self : before thou art transformed all to beast , at last strike saile , avoid the shelf , which in that gulse doth lie , where all that enter die . embleme 7. the covetousnesse of the heart . mat. 6.21 . where your treasure is , there will your heart be also . epigr. 7. dost thou enquire , thou heartlesse wanderer , where thine heart is ? behold , thine heart is here . here thine heart is , where that is , which above thine own deare heart thou dost esteem , and love . ode . 7. 1. see the deceitfulnesse of sinne , and how the devill cheateth worldly men : they heap up riches to themselves , and then they think they cannot choose but winne , though for their parts they stake their hearts . 2. the merchant sends his heart to sea and there together with his ship 't is tost : if this by chance miscarry , that is lost , his considence is cast away : he hangs the head , as he were dead . 3. the pedlar cryes , what doe you lack ? what will you buy ? and boasts his wares the best : but offers you the refuse of the rest , as though his heart lay in his pack , which greater gaine alone can draine . 4. the plowman furrowes up his land , and sowes his heart together with his seed , which both alike earth-borne on earth doe feed , and prosper or are at a stand : he and his field like fruit doe yeeld . 5. the broker , and the scriv'ner have the us'rers heart in keeping with his bands : his souls deare sustenance lyes in their hands , and if they break their shop 's his grave . his int'rest is his only blisse . 6. the money-horder in his bags binds up his heart , and locks it in his chest ; the same key serves to that , and to his brest , which of no other heaven brags : nor can conceit a joy so great . 7. so for the greedy landmunger : the purchases he makes in ev'ry part take livery and seifin of his heart : yet his insatiate hunger , for all his store , gapes after more . 8. poore wretched muckwormes , wipe your eyes , uncase those ●… that be●…ot you so : your rich appearing wealth is reall woe , your death in your de●…res lyes . your hearts are where you love , and feare . 9. oh , think not then the world deserves either to ●…e belov'd , or fear'd by you : give heaven these affections as its due , which alwayes what it hath preserves in perfect blisse that endlesse is . embleme 8. the hardnesse of the heart . zech. 7. 12. they made their hearts as an adamant stone , lost they should beare th●… law . epigr. 8. words move thee not , nor works : nor gifts , no●… strokes thy sturdy adamantine heart provokes my justice , sleights my mercies : an●…le ●… thou stand'st unmoved , though my ha●…mer strike . ode 8. 1. what have we here ? an heart ? it lookes like one , the shape , and colour speake it such : but having brought it to the touch i find it is no better then a stone . adamants are softer by farre . 2. long hath it steeped been in mercies milke , and soaked in salvation , meet for the alteration of anvills to have made them soft as silke ; yet it is still hard'ned in ill . 3. oft have i rain'd my word upon it , oft the dew of heaven hath distill'd , with promises of mercy fill'd , able to make mountaines of marble soft : yet it is not changed a jot . 4. my beames of love shine on it every day , able to thaw the thickest ice , and where they enter in a trice to make congealed cry●…all melt away : yet warme they not this frozen clot . 5. nay more , this hammer , that is wont to grind rocks unto dust , and powder small , makes no impression at all , nor dint , nor crack , nor flaw , that i can find ; but leaves it as before it was . 6. is mine almighty arme decai'd in strength ? or hath mine hammer lost its weight ? that a poore lumpe of earth should sleight my mercies , and not feele my wrath at length , with which i make ev'n heav'n to shake ? 7. no , i am still the same , i alter not , and , when i please , my workes of wonder shall bring the stoutest spirits under , and make them to confesse it is their lot to bow or break , when i but speak . 8. but i would have men know , 't is not my word , or works alone can change their hearts : these instruments performe their parts , but 't is my spirit doth this fruit afford . 't is i , not art , can melt mans heart . 9. yet would they leave their customary sinning , and so unclench the devills clawes , that keepes them captive in his pawes , my bounty soone should second that beginning : ev'n hearts of ●…eel my force should feel . 3. i gave 't thee whole , and fully furnished with all its faculties entire , there wanted not the smallest jot , that strictest justice could require to render it compleatly perfected . 4. and is it reason what i gave in grosse should be return'd but by retaile ? to take so small a part for all , i reckon of no more availe , then where i scatter gold to gather drosse . 5. give me thine heart but as i gave it thee : or give it me at least as i have given mine to purchase thine . i halv'd it not when i did die : but gave my self wholly to set thee free . 6. the heart i gave thee was a living heart , and when thine heart by sinne was slaine , i laid downe mine to ransome thine , that thy dead heart might live againe , and live entirely perfect , not in part . 7. but whilst thine heart 's divided it is dead , dead unto me , unle●… it live to me alone , it is all one to keepe all , and a part to give : for what 's a body worth without an head ? 8. yet this is worse , that what thou keep'st from me thou dost bestow upon my foes : and those not mine alone but thine , the proper causes of thy woes , for whom i gave my life to set thee free . 9. have i betroth'd thee to my selfe , and shall the devill , and the world , intrude upon my right , ev'n in my fight ? think not thou canst me so delude . i will have none , unlesse i may have all . 10. i made it all , i gave it all to thee , i gave all that i had for it : if i must loose , i 'll rather choose mine interest in all to quit : or keep it whole , or give it whole to me . embleme 10 the insatiablenesse of the heart . hab. 2.5 . who inlargeth his desire as hell , and is as death , and cannot be satisfied . epigr. 10. the whole round world is not enough to fill the hearts three corners , but it craveth still . onely the trinity , that made it , can suffice the vast triangled heart of man . ode . 10. 1. the thirsty earth and barren wombe cry , give : the grave devoureth all that live : the fire still burneth on , and never saith , it is enough : the horseleech hath many more daughters : but the heart of man outgapes them all as much as heav'n one span . 2. water hath drown'd the earth : the barren wombe hath teem'd sometimes , and been the tombe to its owne swelling issue : and the grave shall one day a ●…cke surfeit have : when all the fuell is consum'd , the fire will quench it selfe , and of it self expire . 3. but the vast heart of man's insatiate , his boundlesse appetites dilate themselves beyond all limits , his desires are endlesse still : whilst he aspires to happinesse , and faine would find that treasure where it is not , his wishes know no measure . 4. his eye with seeing is not satisfi'd , nor 's care with hearing : he hath tri'd at once to furnish ●…ry sev'rall sense with cho●…e of curious objects , whence he might e●…tract , ●… into one unite a perfect quinteflence of all delight . 5. yet , having all that he can fancy , still there wanteth something more to fill his empty appetite . his mind is vext , and he is inwardly perplext he knowes not why : when as the truth is this , he would find something there where nothing is . 6. he rambles over all the faculties , ransacks the secret treasuries of art and nature , spells the universe letter by letter , can reherse all the records of time , pretends to know reasons of all things , why they must be so . 7. yet is not so contented , but would faine prie in gods cabinet , and gaine intelligence from heav'n of things to come , anticipate the day of doome , and read the issues of all actions so , as if gods secret counsells he did know . 8. let him have all the wealth , all the renowne , and glory , that the world can crowne her dearest da●…gs with ; yet his desire will not rest there , but still aspire . earth canno●… hold him , nor the whole creation containe his wishes , or his expectation . 9. the heart of man 's but little , yet this all compared thereunto's but finall , of such a large unparallel'd extense is the short-lin'd ●… of that three-corner'd figure , which to fill with the round world is to leave empty still . 10. go greedy soule , addresse thy selfe to heav'n , and leave the world , as 't is , bereav'n of all true happinesse , or any thing that to thine heart content can bring , but there a trine-une god in glory fits , who all grace-thirsting hearts both fills and fits . embleme 11. the returning of the heart . isay 46.8 . remember this , and shew your selves men : bring it again to heart , o ye transgressors . epigr. 11. oft have i call'd thee : o returne at last , returne unto thine heart : let the time past suffice thy wanderings : know that to cherish revolting still is a meer will to perish . ode . 11. christ . 1. returne o wanderer , returne , returne . let me not alwayes wast my words in vaine as i have done too long . why dost thou spurn and kick the counsells that should bring thee back again ? the soule . 2. what 's this that checks my course ? me thinks i feel a cold remisnesse seifing on my mind : my stagger'd resolutions seem to reel , as though they had in hast forgot mine heart behind . christ . 3. returne , o wanderer , returne , returne . thou art already gone too farre away , it is enough : unlesse thou meane to burne in hell for ever , stop thy course at last and stay . the soule . 4. there 's something holds me back , i cannot move forward one foot : me thinks the more i strive the leste i stirre . is there a pow'r above my will in me , that can my purposes reprive ? christ . 5. no power of thine own : 't is i , that lay mine hand upon thine haste : whose will can make the restlesse motions of the heavens stay , stand still , turne back againe , or new found courses take . the soule . 6. what ? am i riveted , or rooted here ? that neither forward , nor on either side i can get loose ? then there 's no hope i feare , but i must back againe , what ever me betide . christ . 7. and back again thou shalt . i 'll have it so . though thou hast hitherto my voyce neglected , now i have handed thee , i 'll have thee know , that what i will have done shall not be uneffected . the soule . 8. thou wilt prevaile then , and i must returne . but how ? or whither ? when a world of shame , and sorrow , lie before me , and i burne with horror in my self to think upon the same . 9. shall i returne to thee ? alas , i have no hope to be received : a runne away , a rebell to returne ! mad men may rave of mercy miracles , but what will justice say ? 10. shall i returne to mine owne heart ? alas , 't is lost , and dead , and rotten long ago , i cannot find it what at first it was , and it hath been too long the cause of all my woe . 11. shall i forsake my pleasures , and delights , my profits , honours , comforts , and contents , for that , the thought whereof my mind affrights , repentant sorrow , that the soule asunder rents ? 12. shall i returne , that cannot though i would ? i , that had strength enough to go astray , find my self saint , and feeble , now i should returne . i cannot runne , i cannot creep this way . 13. what shall i doe ? forward i must not goe , backward i cannot : if i tarry here , i shall be drowned in a world of woe , and antidate mine own damnation by despaire . 14. but is 't not better hold that which i have , then unto future expectation trust ? oh no : to reason thus is but to rave . therefore returne i will , because returne i must . christ . 15. returne , and welcome : if thou wilt thou shalt . although thou canst not of thy selfe , yet i , that call , can make thee able . let the fault be mine , if when thou wilt returne i let thee lie . embleme 12. the powring out of the heart . lam. 2. 19. powre out thine heart like water before the face of the lord . epigr. 12. why dost thou hide thy wounds ? why dost thou hide in thy close breast thy wishes , and so side with thine owne soares and so rowes ? like a spout of water let thine heart to god break out . ode . 12. the soule . 1. can death , or hell , be worse then this estate ? anguish , amazement , horror , and confusion , drowne my distracted mind in deep distresse . my grief 's grown so transcendent , that i hate to heare of comfort , as a false conclusion vainly inferr'd from feigned premises . what shall i do ? what strange course shall i try , that , though i loath to live , yet dare not die ? christ . 2. be rul'd by me , i 'll teach thee such a way , as that thou shalt not onely draine-thy mind from that destructive deluge of distresse , that overwhelmes thy thoughts but clear the day , and soone recover light , and strength to find , and to regaine thy long lost happinesse . confesse , & pray . say what it is doth aile thee , what thou wouldst have , and that ●…all soon ava●…e thee●… the soule . 3. confesse and pray ? if that be all , i will . lord , i am sick , and thou art health , restore me . lord , i am weake , and thou art strength , sustaine me . thou art all goodnesse , lord , and i all ill . thou lord , art holy , i uncleane before thee . lord , i am poor , and thou art rich , maintaine me . lord , i am dead , and thou art life , revive me . justice condemnes , let mercy , lord , reprieve me . 4. a wretched miscreant i am , compos'd of finne , and misery ; 't is hard to say , which of the two allyes me most to hell : native corruption makes me indispos'd to all that 's good , but apt to go astray , prone to doe ill , unable to doe well . my light is darknesse , and my liberty bondage , my beauty foule deformity . 5. a plague of leprosie o'rspreadeth all my pow'rs , and faculties : i um uncleane , i am uncleane : my liver broyles with lust , rancor and malice overflow my gall , envy my bones doth rot , and keep me leane , revengefull wrath makes me forget what 's just : mine eare 's uncircumcis'd , mine eye is evill , and hating goodnesse makes me parcell devill . 6. my callous conscience is cauteriz'd ; my trembling heart shakes with continuall feare : my frantick passions fill my mind with madnesse : my windy thoughts with pride are tympaniz'd : my poys ' nous tongue spits venome ev'ry where : my wounded spirit 's swallow'd up with sadnesse : impatient discontentment plagues me so , i neither can stand still , nor forward goe . 7. lord , i am all diseases : hospitalls , and bills of mountebanks , have not so many , nor halfe so bad . lord , heare , and help , and heale me . although my guiltinesse for vengeance calls , and colour of excuse i have not any , yet thou hast goodnesse , lord , that may availe me . lord , i have powr'd out all my heart to thee : vouchsafe one drop of mercy unto me . embleme 13. the circumcision of the heart . devt. 10. 16. circumcise the foreskin of your heart , an be no more stiffnecked . epigr. 13. here , take thy saviours crosse , the nailes , and speare , that for thy sake his holy flesh did teare : use them as knives thine heart to circumcise , and dresse thy god a pleasing sacrifice . ode . 13. 1. heale thee ? i will . but first i 'll let thee know what it comes to . the plaister was prepared long agoe : but thou must doe something thy selfe , that it may bee effectually apply'd to thee . 2. i , to that end , that i might cure thy sores , was slaine , and dy'd , by mine owne people was turn'd out of doores , and crucify'd : my side was pierced with a speare , and nailes my hands and feet did teare . 3. doe thou then to thy selfe , as they to mee : make haste , and try , the old man , that is yet alive in thee , to crucifie . till he be dead in thee , my blood is like to doe thee little good : 4. my course of physick is to cure the soule by killing sinne . so then , thine owne corruptions to controule thou must beginne . untill thine heart be citcumcis'd , my death will not be duly priz'd . 5. consider then my crosse , my nailes , and speare , and let that thought cut rasor-like thine heart , when thou dost heare , how deare i bought thy freedome from the pow'r of sinne , and that distresse which thou wast in . 6. cut out the iron finew of thy neck , that it may be supple , and pliant to obey my beck , and learne of me . meeknesse alone , and yeelding , hath a power to appease my wrath . 7. shave off thine hairy scalpe , those curled locks powd'red with pride , wherewith thy scornfull heart my judgements mocks , and thinks to hide its thunder-threatned head , which bared alone is likely to be spared . 8. rippe off those seeming robes , but reall rags , which earth admires as honourable orna●…nts , and brags that it attires , cumbers thee with indeed . thy sores fester with what the world adores . 9. clip thine ambitions wings , let downe thy plumes , and learne to stoope , whilst thou hast time to stand . who still presumes of strength will droope at last , and flagge , when he should flye . falls hurt them most that climbe most high 10. scrape off that scaly scurffe of vanities , that clogges thee so : profits and pleasures are those enemies , that worke thy woe . if thou wilt have me cure thy wounds , first ridde each humor that abounds . embleme 14. the contrition of the heart . psal. 51.17 . a broken and contrite heart , o god , thou wilt not despise . epigr. 14. how gladly would i bruise , and breake this heart into a thousand pieces , till the smart make it confesse , that , of its owne accord , it wilfully rebell'd against the lord ? ode . 14. 1. lord , if i had an arme of pow'r like thine , and could effect what i desire , my love-drawne heart , like smallest wyre , bended and writhen , should together twine , and twisted stand with thy command : thou should'st no sooner bid , but i would goe , thou should'st not will the thing i would not doe . 2. but i am weake , lord , and corruption strong : when i would faine d●…e what i should , then i cannot doe what i would : mine action 's short , when ●… intention 's long : though my desire be ●… as fire , yet my performance is as dull as earth , and stitles its own issue in the birth . 3. but what i can doe , lord , i will , since what i would i cannot : i will try whether mine heart , that 's hard and dry , being calm'd , and tempered with that liquor which falls from mine eye-balls , will worke more pliantly , and yeeld to take such new impression as thy grace shall make . 4. in mine owne conscience then , as in a mortar i 'le place mine heart , and bray it there : if griefe for what is past , and feare of what 's to come be a sufficient torture , i 'le breake it all in pieces small : sinne shall not finde a sheard without a flaw , wherein to lodge one lust against thy law . 5. remember then , mine heart , what thou hast done ; what thou hast left undone : the ill of all my thoughts , words , deeds , is still thy cursed issue onely : thou art growne to such a passe , that never was , nor is , nor will there be , a sinne so bad , but thou some way therein an hand hast had . 6. thou hast not been content alone to sinne , but hast made others sinne with thee , y●… made their sinnes thine owne to be , by liking , and allowing them therein . who first beginnes , or followes , sinnes not his owne sinnes alone , but sinneth o're all the same sinnes , both after , and before . 7. what boundlesse sorrow can suffice a guilt growne so transcendent ? should thine eye weepe seas of blood , thy sighes outvie the winds when with the waves they run at tilt , yet they could not cancell one blot . the least of all thy sinnes against thy god deserves a thunderbolt should be thy rod . 8. break then , mine heart : and since thou cannot grieve enough at once , while thou art whole , shiver thy self to dust , and dole thy sorrow to the sev'rall atomes , give all to each part , and by that art strive thy dissever'd self to multiply , and want of weight with number to supply embleme 15. the humiliation of the heart . eccl. 7.9 . the patient in spirit is better then the proud in spirit . epigr. 15. mine heart , alas , exalts it self too high , and doth delight a loftier pitch to flye , then it is able to maintaine , unlesse it feel the weight of thine imposed presse . ode . 15. 1. so let it be , lord , i am well content , and thou shalt see the time is not mis-spent , which thou dost then bestow , when thou dost quell and crush the heart , that pride before did swell . 2. lord , i perceive as soone as thou dost send , and i receive the blessings thou dost lend , mine heart begins to mount , and doth forget the ground whereon it goes , where it is set . 3. in health i grew wanton , began to kick , as though i knew i never should be sick . diseases take me downe , and make me know , bodies of brasse must pay the death they owe . 4. if i but dreame of wealth , mine heart doth rise with a full streame of pride , and i despise all that is good , untill i wake , and spie the swelling bubble prickt with poverty . 5. a little wind of undeserved praise blowes up my mind , and my swoll'n thoughts doth raise above themselves , untill the sense of shame makes me contemne my self-dishonour'd name . 6. one moments mirth would make me run starke mad , and the whole earth , could it at once be had , would not suffice my greedy appetite , did'st thou not paine in stead of pleasure write . 7. lord , it is well , i was in time brought downe , else thou canst tell , mine heart would soone have flow'n full in thy face , and studi'd to-requite the riches of thy goodnesse with despight . 8. slack not thine hand , lord , turne thy screw about : if thy presse stand , mine heart may chance slip out . o quest it unto nothing , rather then it should forget it selfe , and swell again . 9. or if thou art dispos'd to let it goe , lord , teach mine heart to lay it selfe as low , as thou canst cast it : that prosperity may still be temper'd with humility . 10. thy way to rise was to descend : let me my selfe despise , and so ascend with thee . thou throw'st them down , that lift themselves on high , and raisest them , that on the ground doe lie . embleme 16. the softening of the heart . iob 23.16 . god maketh my heart soft . epigr. 16. mine heart is of it selfe a marble ice , both cold , and hard : but thou can●… in a trice meli it like ●…axe , great god , if from above thou kindle in it once thy fire of love . ode . 16. 1. nay , blessed founder , leave me not : if out of all this grot there can but any gold be got , the time thou dost bestow , the cost , and paines will not be lost : the bargaine is but hard at most . and such are all those thou dost make with me : thou know'st thou canst not but a loser be . 2. when the sun shines with glitt'ring beames , his cold dispelling gleames turne snow , and ice to wat'ry streames . the waxe , as soone as it hath smelt the warmth of fire , and felt the glowing heat thereof , will melt . yea pearles with vinegar dissolve we may , and adamants in bloud of goats , they say . 3. if nature can doe this , much more , lord , may thy grace restore mine heart to what it was before . there 's the same matter in it still , though new inform'd with ill , yet can it not refist thy will . thy pow'r , that fram'd it at the first , as oft as thou wilt have it , lord , can make it soft . 4. thou art the sun of right●… e●…e : and though i must ●… mine heart 's growne hard in wickednesse , yet thy resplendent rayes of light , when once they come in sight , will quickly thawe what froze by night . lord , in thine healing wings a pow'r doth dwell able to melt the hardest heart in hell . 5. although mine heart in hardnesse passe both iron , steel , and brasse , yea th'hardest thing that ever was , yet , if thy fire thy spirit accord , and working with thy word a blessing unto it afford , it will grow liquid , and not drop alone , ●…●… it self ●… before thy throne . 6. yea , though my flinty heart be such , that the sun cannot touch , nor fire sometimes affect it much , yet thy warme reeking self shed blood , o lamb of god , 's so good it cannot alwayes be withstood . that aqua-regia of thy love prevailes , ev'n where thy powers aqua-fortis failes . 7. then leave me not so soon , dear lord , though i neglect thy word , and what thy power doth afford , yet try thy mercy , and thy love , the force thereof may move , when all things else successesse prove . soakt in thy bloud mine heart will soone surrender its native hardnesse , and grow soft , and tender . embleme 17. the cleansing of the heart . ier. 5. 14. o jerusalem wash thine heart from wickednesse , that thou maist be saved . epigr. 17. ovt of thy wounded husbands saviours side , espoused soul , there flowes with ●… tide a sountaine for uncleannesse : wash thee there , wash there thine heart , and then thou need'st not feare . ode . 17. 1. o endlesse misery ! i labour still , but still in vaine . the staines of sinne i see are oaded all , or d●…d in graine . there 's not a blot will stirre a jot for all that i can doe : there is no hope in fullers sope , though i adde nitre too . 2. i many wayes have tri'd , have often soakt it in cold feares , and , when a time i spi'd , powred upon it scalding teares , have rins'd , and rub'd , and scrap't and scrub'd , and turn'd it up , and downe : yet can i not wash out one spot , it 's rather fouler growne . 3. o miserable state ! who would be troubled with an heart , as i have been of late , both to my sorrow , shame , and smart ? if it will not be cleaner got , 't were better i had none . yet how should we divided be , that are not two , but one ? 4. but am i not starke wilde , that go about to wash mine heart with hands that are defil'd , as much as any other part ? whilst all thy teares , thine hopes , and feares , both ev'ry word , and deed , and thought is foule , poore filly soule , how canst thou looke to speed ? 5. can there no helpe be had ? lord , thou art holy , thou art pure : mine heart is not so bad , so soule , but thou canst cleanse it sure . speak , blessed lord , wilt thou afford me meanes to make it cleane ? i know thou ●… : thy ●…loud were spilt should it runne still in vaine . 6. then to that blessed spring , which from my saviours sacred side doth flow , mine heart i 'll bring , and there it will be purifi'd . although the dye , wherein i lie , crimson , or scarlet were , this bloud i know will make 't , as snow , or wooll , both cleane , and cleere . embleme 18. the giving of the heart . prov. 23.21 . my sonne give me thine heart . epigr. 18. the onely love , the onely seare , thou art , dear , and dread saviour , of my sin-sick heart . ●… heart thou gavest , that it might be mine : take thou mine heart then , that it may be thine . ode . 18. 1. give thee mine ●… lord so i would , and there 's great reason that i should , if it were worth the having : yet sure thou wilt esteem that good , which thou hast purchas'd with thy bloud , and thought it worth the craving . 2. give thee mine heart ? lord , so i will , if thou wilt first impart the skill of bringing it to thee : but should i trust my selfe to give mine heart , as sure as i doe live , i should deceived be . 3. as all the value of mine heart proceeds from favour , not ●… , acceptance is its worth : so neither know i how to bring a present to my heav'nly king , unlesse he set it forth . 4. lord of my life , me thinkes i heare thee say , that thee alone to feare , and thee alone to love , is to bestow mine heart on thee , that other giving none can be , whereof thou wilt approve . 5. and well thou dost deserve to be both loved , lord , and fear'd by me , so good , so great , thou art : greatnesse so good , goodnesse so great , as pa●…eth all finite conceit , and ravisheth mine heart . 6. should i not love thee , blessed lord , who freely of thine owne accord laid'st downe thy life for me ? for me , that was not dead alone , but desp'ratly transcendent grown in enmitie to thee ? 7. should i not feare before thee , lord , who●… hand ●… heaven , at whose word devills themselves doe quake ? whose eyes out-shine the sunne , whose beck can the whole ●… of nature check , and its foundations shake ? 8. should i with-hold mine heart from thee , the fountaine of felicity , before whose presence is fulnesse of joy , at whose right hand all pleasures in perfection stand , and everlasting blisse ? 9. lord , had i hearts a million , and ●…riads in ev'ry one of choisest loves , and feares , they were too little to bestow on thee , to whom i all things owe , i should be in arreares . 10. yet , since mine heart 's the most i have , and that which thou dost chiefely crave , thou shalt not of it misse . although i cannot give it so , as i should doe , i 'll offer 't though : lord take it , here it is . embleme 19. the sacrifice of the heart . psal 51.17 . the sacrifices of god are a broken heart epigr. 19. nor calves , nor bulls , are sacrifices good enough for thee , who gav'st for me thy bloud , and more ●… that , thy life : take thine own part , great god , that gavest all , here take mine heart . ode . 19. 1. thy former covenant of old , thy law of ordinances , did require fat sacrifices from the fold , and many other oft rings made by fire . whilst thy first tabernacle stood , all things were consecrate with ●… 2 and can thy better covenant , thy law of grace , and truth by jesus christ , it s proper sacrifices want for such an altar , and for such a priest ? no , no , thy gospell doth require choyse off'rings too , and made by fire . 3. a sacrifice for ●…nne indeed , lord , thou didst make thy self , and once for all : so that there never will be need of any more sin-off'rings , great , or small . the life bloud thou did'st shed for me , hath set my soule for ever free . 4. yea , the same sacrifice thou dost still offer in behalfe of thine elect : and to improve it to the most , thy word , and sacraments doe in effect offer thee oft , and sacrifice thee daily in our eare●… , and eyes . 5. yea , each beleeving soule may take thy sacrificed flesh , and bloud by faith , and therewith an atonement make for all its trespasses , thy gospell faith . such infinite transcendent price is there in thy sweet sacrifice . 6. but is this all ? must there not be peace-offerings , and sacrifices of thanksgiving tendered unto thee ? yes , lord , i know i should but mock , and scoffe thy sacrifice for ●…nne , should i my sacrifice of praise deny . 7. but i have nothing of mine owne worthy to be presented in thy fight , yea the whole world affords not one or ramme , or lambe , wherein thou canst delight . lesse then my self it must not be : for thou didst give thy self for me . 8. my self then i must sacrifice : and so i will , mine heart , the onely thing thou dost above all other prize as thine owne part , the best i have to bring . an humble heart 's a sacrifice , which i know thou wilt not despise , 9. lord , be my altar , ●… mine heart thy sacrifice , and ●… thy spirit kindle thy fire of love , that i , burning with zeale to mag●… thy merit , may both consume my ●… , and ●… et●…nall ●…phie to thy ●… . embleme 20. the weighing of the heart . prov. 21.2 . the lord pondereth the heart . epigr. 20. the heart thou giv'st as a great gift , my love , brought to the triall nothing such will prove , if iustice equall baliance tell thy fight that weighed with my law it is too light . ode 20. 1. 't is true indeed , an heart such as it ought to be , entire , and sound in ev'ry part , is alwayes welcome unto me . he that would please me with an offering cannot a better have , although he were a king . 2. and there is none so poore , but if he will he may bring mean heart , although no more , and on mine altar may it lay . the sacrice which i like best , is such as rich men cannot beast , and poore men need not grutch 3. yet ev'ry heart is not a gift sufficient , it must be purg'd from ev'ry spot , and all to pieces must be rent . though thou hast sought to circumcise , and bruise't , it must be weighed too , or else i shall refuse 't . 4. my ballances are just , my law 's an equall weight , the beame is strong , and thou maist trust my steady hand to hold it streight . were thine heart equall to the world in ●…ght , yet it were nothing worth , if it should prove too light . 5. and so thou see'st it doth , my pond rous law doth presse this scale , but that , as fill'd with froth , tilts up , and makes no shew of stresse . thine heart is empty sure , or else it would in weight , as well as bulke , better proportion hold . 6. search it , and thou shalt find it wants integrity , and is not yet so thorow lin'd with single ey'd sincerity , as it should be : some more humility there wants to make it weight , and some more constancy . 7. whilst windy vanity . doth ●…any up with pride , and double fac'd hypocri●… doth many empty hollowes hide , it is but good in part , and that but little , wav'ring unstaidnesse ma●… its resolutions brittle . 8. the heart , that in my sight as currant coyne would passe , must not be the least graine too light , but as at first it stamped was . keep then thine heart till it be better growne , and , when it is full weight , i 'll take it for mine owne . 9. but if thou art asham'd to find thine heart so light , and art afraid thou shalt be blam'd , i 'll teach thee how to set it right . adde to my law my gospell , and there see my merits thine , and then the scales will equall be . embleme 21. the trying of the heart . prov. 17.3 . the fining pot for silver , and the furnace for gold : but the lord trieth the hearts . epigr. 21. thine heart , my deer , more precious is then gold , or the most precious things that can be told : provided first that my pure fire have tri'd out all the drosse , and passe it purifi'd . ode . 21. 1. what ? take it at adventure , and not try what metall it is made of ? no , not i. should i now lightly let it passe , take sullen lead for silver , sounding brasse in stead of solid gold , alas , what would become of it ? in the great day of making jewells 't would be cast away . 2. the heart thou giv'st me must be such a one , as is the same throughout . i will have none but that , which will abide the fire . 't is not a glitt'ring outside i desire , whose seeming shewes doe soone expire : but reall worth within , which neither drosie , nor base allayes , make subject unto losse . 3. if in the composition of thine heart a stubborne steely wilfulnesse have part , that will not bow and bend to me , save onely in a meer formality of tinsell-trim'd hypocrisie , i care not for it , though it shew as faire , as the first blush of the sun-gilded aire . 4. the heart that in my furnace will not melt , when it the glowing heat thereof hath felt turne liquid , and dillolve in teares of true repentance for its faults , that heares my threatning voyce , and never feares , is not an heart worth having . if it be an heart of stone , 't is not an heart for me . 5. the heart , that cast into my fornace spits , and sparkles in my face , falls into fits of discontented grudging , whines when it is broken of its will , repines at the least suffering , declines my fatherly correction , is an heart on which i care not to bestow mine art . 6. the heart that in my flames asunder flies , scatters it selse at randon , and so lies in heapes of ashes here , and there , whose dry d●…persed parts will not draw nee●… to one another , and adhere in a firme union , hath no metall in 't fit to be stamp'd , and coyned in my mint . 7. the heart , that vapours out it selfe in smoak , and with those cloudy shadowes thinks to cloak its empty nakednesse , how much so ever thou esteemest it , is such as never will endure my touch . before i tak 't for mine then i will trie what kind of metall in thine heart ' doth lie . 8. i 'll bring it to my furnace , and there see what it will prove , what it is like to be . if it be gold , it will be sure the hottest fire that can be to endure , and i shall draw it out more pure . affliction may refine , but cannot wast , that heart wherein my love is fixed fast . embleme 22. the sounding of the heart . jer. 17.9 . the heart is deceitfull above all things , and desperatly wicked . who can know it ? i the lord . epigr. 22. i , that alone am infinite , can try how deep within it self thine heart doth lie . the sea-mans plummet can but reach the ground : i find that which thine heart it self ne'er sound , ode . 22. 1. a goodly heart to see to , faire and fat ! it may be so : and what of that ? is it not hollow ? hath it not within a bottomlesse whirlpoole of sinne ? are there not secret creeks , and cranies there , turning , and winding corners , where the heart it self ev'n from it self may hide , and lurke in secret unespi'd ? i 'll none of it , if such a one it prove : truth in the inward parts is that i love . 2. but who can tell what is within thine heart ? 't is not a worke of nature , art cannot performe that taske : 't is i alone , not man , to whom mans heart is knowne . sound it thou maist , and must : but then the line and plummet must be mine , not thine , and i must guide it too , thine hand , and eye may quickly be deceiv'd : but i , that made thine heart at first , am better skill'd to know when it is empty , when 't is fill'd . 3. lest then thou should'st deceive thy self , for me thou canst not , i will let thee see some of those depths of satan , depths of hell , wherewith thine hollow heart doth swell . under pretence of knowledge in thy mind errour and ignorance i find , quick-sands of rotten superstition spred over with misprision . some thing thou knowest not , misknowest others , and oft thy conscience its owne knowledge smothers . 4. thy crooked will , that seemingly enclines to follow reasons dictates , twines another way in secret , leaves its guide and laggs behind , or swarves aside , crab-like creepes backward when it should have made progresse in good , is retrograde . whilst it pretends a priviledge above reasons prerogative , to move as of it self unmov'd , rude passions learne to leave the oare , and take in hand the sterne . 5. the tides of thine affections ebbe , and flow , rise up aloft , fall downe below , like to the suddaine land-flouds , that advance their swelling waters but by chance . thy love , desire , thy hope , delight , and feare , ramble they care not when , nor where , yet cunningly beare thee in hand they be only directed unto me , or most to me , and would no notice take of other things , but only for my sake . 6. such strange prodigious impostures lurke in thy prestigious heart , 't is worke enough for thee all thy life time to learne how thou may'st truly it discerne : that , when upon mine altar thou dost lay thine off'ring , thou may'st sasely say , and sweare it is an heart : for , if it should prove only an heart-case , it would nor pleasing be to me , nor doe thee good . an heart 's no heart not rightly understood . embleme 23. the levelling of the heart . psal. 97.11 . gladnesse to the upright in heart . epigr. 23. set thine heare upright , if thou would'st reioyce , and please thy self in thine hearts pleasing cho●…se : but then be sure thy plimme , and levell be rightly appli'd to that which pleaseth me . ode . 23. 1. nay , yet i have not done : one triall more thine heart must undergo , before i will accept of it : unlesse i see it upright be , i cannot think it fit to be admitted in my sight , and to partake of mine eternall light . 2. my will's the rule of righteousnesse , as free from errour as uncertainty : what i would have is just . thou must desire what i require , and take it upon trust : if thou preferre thy will to mine , the levell's lost , and thou go'st out of line . 3. do'st thou not see how thine heart turnes aside , and leanes toward thy self ? how wide a distance there is here ? untill i see both sides agree alike with mine , 't is cleer the middle is not where 't should be , likes something better , though it looke at me . 4. i , that know best how to dispose of thee , would have thy portion poverty , lest wealth should make thee proud , and me forget : but thou hast set thy voyce to cry aloud for riches , and unlesse i grant all that thou wishest , thou complain'st of want . 5. i , to preserve thine health , would have thee fast from natures dainties , lest at last thy senses sweet delight should end in smart : but thy vaine heart will have its appetite pleased to day , though grief , and sorrow threaten to cancell all thy joyes to morrow . 6. i , to prevent thine hurt by clining high , would have thee be content to lie quiet and safe below , where peace doth dwell ; but thou dost swell with vast desires , as though a little blast of vulgar breath were better then deliverance from death . 7. i , to procure thine happinesse , would have thee mercy at mine hands to crave : but thou dost merit plead , and wilt have none but of thine owne , till justice strike thee dead . thus still thy wand'ring wayes decline , and all thy crooked ●… go crosse to mine . embleme 24. the renewing of the heart . ezek. 36.26 . a new heart will i give you , and a new spirit will i put within you . epigr. 24. art thou delighted with strange novelties , which often prove but old fresh garnisht lies ? leave then thine old , take the new heart i give thee : condemne thy self , that so i may reprieve thee . ode . 24. 1. no , no , i see there is no remedy , an heart , that wants both weight , and worth , that 's fill'd with naught but empty hollownesse , and screw'd aside with stubborne wilfulnesse , is onely fit to be cast forth , nor to be given me nor kept by thee . 2. then let it goe , and if thou wilt bestow an acceptable heart on me , i 'll furnish thee with one shall serve the turne , both to be kept , and given : which will burne with zeale , yet not consumed be : nor with a scornfull eye blast standers by . 3. the heart , that i will give thee , though it lie buri'd in seas of sorrowes , yet will not be drown'd with doubt , or discontent , though sad complaints sometimes may give a vent to grief , and teares the checks may wet , yet it exceeds their art to hurt this heart . 4. the heart i give , though it desire to live , and bath it self in all content , yet will not toyle , or taint it self , with any : although it take a view , and tast of many , it feeds on few , as though it meant to break fast only here , and dine elsewhere . 5. this heart is fresh , and new : an heart of flesh , not , as thine old one was , of stone . a lively sp'ritly heart , and moving still , active to what is good , but slow to ill : an heart , that with a sigh , and grone can blast all worldly joyes , as trifling toyes . 6. this heart is sound , and solid will be found ; 't is not an empty ayrie flash , that baites at butterflies , and with full cry opens at ev'ry flirting vanity . it sleights , and scornes such paltry trash : but for eternity dares live , or die . 7. i know thy mind : thou seek'st content to find in such things as are new , and strange . wander no further then : lay by thine old , take the new heart i give thee , and be bold to boast thy self of the exchange , and say , that a new heart exceeds all art . embleme 25. the enlightening of the heart . psal. 34.5 . they looked unto him , and were lightened . epigr. 25. thou that art light of lights , the onely sight of the blind world , lend me thy saving light : disperse those mists , which in my soule have made darkenesse as deepe as hells eternall shade . ode . 25. 1. alas , that i could not before espie the soule-confounding misery of this , more then egyptian , dreadfull night ! to be deprived of the light , and to have eyes , but eyes devoid of sight , as mine have been , is such a woe , as he alone can know , that feeles it so . 2. darknesse hath been my god and me between like an opacous doubled skreen , through which nor light , nor heat could passage sind . grosse ignorance hath made my mind , and understanding not bleer-ey'd , but blind ; my will to all that 's good is cold , nor can i , though i would , doe what i should . 3. no , now i see there is no remedy lest in my self : it cannot be that blind men in the darke should find the way to blessednesse : although they may imagine that high midnight is noone-day , as i have done till now , they 'll know at last unto their woe , 't was nothing so . 4. now i perceive presumption doth bereave men of all hope of helpe , and leave them , as it finds them , drown'd in misery : despairing of themselves , to cry for mercy is the only remedy that sinne-sicke soules can have : to pray against this darknesse may turne it to day . 5. then unto thee , great lord of light , let me direct my prayer , that i may see . thou , that did'st make mine eyes , canst soone restore that pow'r of fight they had before , and , if thou seest it good , canst give them more . the night will quickly shine like day , if thou doe but display one glorious ray . 6. i must confesse , and i can doe no lesse , thou art the sun of righteousnesse : there 's healing in thy wings : thy light is life ; my darkenesse death . to end all ●…rise , be thou mine husband , let me be thy wife . then both the light , and life that 's thine , though light , and life divine , will all be mine . embleme 26 the table of the heart . ier. 31.33 . i will put my law in their inward parts , and write it in their hearts . epigr. 26. in the soft table of thine heart i 'll write a new law , which i newly will ind te . hard stony tables did containe the old : but tender leaves of flesh shall this infold . ode . 26. 1. what will thy fight availe thee , or my light , if there be nothing in thine heart to see acceptable to me ? a self-writ heart will not please me , or doe thee any good , i wot , the paper must be thine , the writing mine . 2. what i indite 't is i alone can write , and write in bookes that i my self have made . 't is not an easie trade to read or write , in hearts : they that are skilfull in all other arts , when they take this in hand , are at a stand . 3. my law of old tables of stone did hold , wherein i writ what i before had spoken , yet were they quickly broken : a signe the covenant contain'd in them would due ob●…ervance want . nor did they long remaine coppy'd again . 4. but now i 'll try what force in flesh doth lie : whether thine heart renew'd afford a place fit for my law of grace . this covenant is better then that , though glorious , of the killing letter . this gives life , not by merit , but by my spirit , 5. when in mens hearts , and their most inward parts , i by my spirit write my law of love , they then begin to move , not by themselves , but me , and their obedience is their liberty . there are no slaves , but those that serve their foes . 6. when i have writ my covenant in it , view thine heart by my light , and thou shalt fee a present fit for me . the worth for which i look , lies in the lines , not in the leaves of th book . course paper may be lin'd with words refin'd . 7. and such are mine . no furnace can resine the choisest silver so to make it pure , as my law put in ●… purgeth the hearts of men : which being rul'd , and written with my pen , my spirit , ev'ry letter will make them better . embleme 27. the tilling of the heart . ezek. 36.9 . i will turne unto you , and yee shall be tilled , and sowne . epigr. 27. mine heart 's a field , thy crosse a plow : be pleas'd dear spouse , to till it , till the mould be rais'd fit for the seeding of thy word : then sow , and if thou shine upon it , it will grow . ode . 27. 1. so , now me thinks i find some better vigour in my mind , my will begins to move , and mine affections stirre towards things above : mine heart growes bigge with hope it is a field , that some good fruit may yeeld , if it were till'd , as it should be , not by my self , but thee . 2. great husbandman , whose pow'r all difficulties can devour , and doe what likes thee best , let not thy field , mine heart , lie lay , and rest , lest it be over-runne with noysome weeds , that spring of their own seeds : unlesse thy grace the growth should stoppe , sinne would be all my croppe . 3. break up my fallow ground , that there may not a clod be found to hide one root of finne . apply thy plow betime : now , now beginne to furrow up my stiffe , and starvy heart , no matter for the smart , al though it roare , when it is rent , let not thine hand relent . 4. corruption 's rooted deep , showres of repentaut teares must steep the mould to make it soft : it must be stirr'd , and turn'd , not once , but oft . let it have all its feasons . o impart the best of all thine art . for , of it self it is so tough , all will be but enough . 5. or , if it be thy will to teach me , let me learne the skill my self to plow mine heart : the profit will be mine , and 't is my part to take the paines , and labour , though th' encrease without thy blessing cease : if fit for nothing else , yet thou may'st make me draw thy plow . 6. which of thy plowes thou wilt , for then hast more then one . my guilt , thy wrath , thy rods , are all ●… fit to ●… mine heart to pieces small : and , when in ●…●… prehends thee neer , 't is furrowed with fear : each weed turn'd under hides its head , and shewes as it were dead . 7. but , lord , thy blessed passion is a plow of another fashion , better then all the rest . oh fasten me to that , and let the best of all my powers strive to draw it in , and leave no roome for finne . the vertue of thy death can make sinne its fast hold forsake . embleme 28. the seeding of the heart . lvke 8.15 . that on the good ground are they , which with an honest , and good heart , having heard the word , keep it , and bring forth fruit with patience . epigr. 28. lest the field of mine heart should unto thee , great husbandman that mad'st it , barren be , manure the ground , then come thy self and seed it ; and let thy servants water it , and weed it . ode . 28. 1. nay , blessed lord , unlesse thou wilt afford manure , as well as tillage , to thy field , it will not yeeld that fruit which thou expectest it should beare : the ground i feare will still remaine barren of what is good : and all the graine it will bring forth , as of its owne accord , will not be worth the paines of gathering so poore a thing . 2. some faint desire , that quickly will expire , wither , and die , is all thou canst expect . it thou neglect to sow it now 't is ready , thou ●… find that ●…●…●… , and ●… grow then at the first it was . thou must bestow some further cost , else all thy former labour will be lost . mine heart no corne will breed without thy seed . 3. thy word is seed , and manure too : will seed , as well as fill mine heart . if once it were well rooted there , it would come on apace : o then neglect no time expect no better season . now , now thy field mine heart is ready : reason surrenders now , now my rebellious will begins to bow , and mine affections are tamer by farre . 4. lord , i have laine barren too long , and saine i would redeem the time , that i may be fruitfull to thee , fruitfull in knowledge , saith , obedience , ere i goe hence : that when i come at harvest to be reaped , and brought home ; thine angels may my soule in thy celestiall garner lay , where perfect joy , and blisse eternall is . 5. if , to intreat a crop of purest wheat , a blessing too transcendent should appeare for me to beare , lord , make me what thou wilt , so thou wilt take what thou do st make , and not disdaine to house me , though amongst thy coursest graine , so i may be laid with the gleanings gathered by thee , when the full sheaves are spent , i am content . embleme 29. the watering of the heart . isa. 27.3 . i the lord doe keep it . i will water it every moment . epigr. 29. close downwards tow'rds the earth , open above tow'rds heaven mine heart is . o let thy love distill in fructifying dewes of grace , and then mine heart will be a pleasant place . ode . 29. 1. see how this dry , and thirsty land , mine heart , doth gaping gasping stand , and close below opens towards heav'n , and thee thou fountaine of felicity , great lord of living waters , water me : let not my breath that pants with paine , waste , and consume it selfe in vaine . 2. the mists , that from the earth doe rise , an heav'n-borne heart will not suffice : coole it without they may , but cannot quench the scalding heat within , nor drench its dusty dry desires , or fill one trench . nothing , but what comes from on high , can heav'n-bred longings satisfie . 3. see how the seed , which thou did'st sow lies parch'd , and wither'd , will not grow without some moisture , and mine heart hath none , that it can truly call its owne , by nature of it self , more then a stone : unlesse thou water't , it will lie drowned in dust , and still be dry . 4. thy tender plants can never thrive , whilst want of water doth deprive their roots of nourishment : which makes them call , and cry to thee , great all in all , that seasonable show'rs of grace may fall , and water them : thy word will do 't , if thou vouchsafe thy blessing to 't . 5. o then be pleased to unseal thy fountaine , blessed saviour , deal some drops at least , wherewith my drooping spirits may be revived . lord , thy merits yeeld more refreshing then the world inherits : rivers , yea seas , but ditches are , if with thy springs we them compare . 6. if not whole show'rs of raine , yet lord , a little pearly dew afford , begot by thy celestiall influence on some chast vapour , raised hence to be partaker of thine excellence : a little , if it come from thee , will be of great availe to me . 7. thou boundlesse ocean of grace , let thy free spirit have a place within mine heart : full rivers then i know of living waters forth will flow , and all thy plants , thy fruits , and flow'rs will grow . whilst thy springs their roots doe nourish , they must needs be fat , and flourish . embleme 30. the flowers of the heart . cant. 6. 2. my beloved is gone downe into his garden , to the beds of spices , to feed in the gardens , and to gather lillies . epigr. 30. these lillies i doe consecrate to thee , beloved spouse , which spring as thou ma●…st see , out of the seed thou sowedst , and the ground is better'd by thy flow'rs , when they abound . ode . 31. 1. is there a joy like this ? what can augment my blisse ? if my beloved will accept a po●…e of these flowers kept , and consecrated unto his content , i hope hereafter he will not repent the cost , and paines he hath bestow'd so freely upon me , that ow'd him all i had before , and infinitly more . 2. nay , try them , blessed lord , take them not on my word , but let the colour , ●…ast and ●… the truth of their ●…●… tell . thou that art in●…nite in wisdome ●…ee if they be not the same that came from thee . if any difference be found , it is occasion'd by the ground , which yet i cannot see so good as it should be . 3. what say'st thou to that rose , that queen of flowers , whose maidenly blushes , fresh , and faire , out-brave the dainty morning aire ? dost thou not in those lovely leaves espy the perfect picture of that modesty , that self-condemning shamefastnesse , that is more ready to confesse a fault , and to amend , then it is to offend ? 4. is not this lilly pure ? what fuller can procure a white so perfect , spotlesse , clear , as in this flower doth appear ? do st thou not in this milky colour see the lively lustre of sincerity , which no hypocrisie hath painted , nor self-respecting ends have tainted ? can there be to thy sight a more entire delight ? 5. or wilt thou have beside violets purple-di'd ? the sun-observing marigold , or orpin never waxing old , the primrose , cowslip , gilliflow'r , or pinke , or any flow'r , or herbe , that i can think thou hast a mind unto ? i shall quickly be furnisht with them all , if once i doe but know that thou wilt have it so . 6. faith is a fruitfull grace , well planted stores the place , fills all the borders , beds , and bow'rs with wholsome herbs , and pleasant flow'rs . great gardiner , thou saist , and i beleeve , what thou do'st meane to gather thou wilt give . take then mine heart in hand to fill 't , and it shall yeeld thee what thou wilt . yea thou , by gath'ring more , shalt still increase my store . embleme 31. the keeping of the heart . prov. 4.23 . keepe thy heart with all diligence . epigr. 31. like to a ●… , that is ●… , ●… heart is ●… , ●… still is found comp●…st w●…th care , ●…nd ●… with the feare of god , as with a flaming sword , and speare . ode 31. the soule . 1. lord , wilt thou suffer this ? shall vermine spoile the ●…uit or all thy toyle , thy trees , thine herbs , thy plants , thy flow'rs thus : and for an overplus of spite , and malice overthrow thy mounds , lay common all thy grounds ? canst thou endure thy pleasant garden should be thus turn'd up as ordinary mould ? christ . 2. what is the matter ? why do'st thou complaine ? must i as well maintaine , and keep , as make thy fences ? wilt thou take no paines for thine own sake ? or doth thy self-confounding fancy feare thee , when there 's no danger neer thee ? speak out thy doubts , and thy desires , and tell me , what enemy or can , or dares to quell thee ? the soule . 3. many , and mighty , and malicious , lord , that seek , with one accord , to work my speedy ruine , and make haste to lay thy garden waste . the devill is a ramping roaring lion , hates at his heart thy zion , and never gives it respit day , nor houre , but still goes seeking whom he may devoure . 4. the world 's a wildernesse , wherein i find wild beasts of ev'ry kind , foxes , and wolves , and dogs , and boares , and bears ; and which augments my feares , eagles and vultures , and such birds of prey , will not be kept away : besides the light-abhorring owles , and bats , and secret corner-creeping mice and rats . 5. but these , and many more would not dismay me much , unlesse there lay one worse then all within , my self i meane , my false , unjust , unclean , faithlesse , disloyall self , that both entice , and entertaine each vice . this homebred traiterous partaking 's worse , then all the violence of forain force . 6. lord , thou maist see my feares are grounded , rise not from a bare surmise , or doubt of danger only , my desires are but what need requires , of thy divine protection , and defence to keep these vermine hence : which , if they should not be re●…rain'd by thee , would grow too strong to be kept out by me . christ . 7. thy feare is just , and i approve thy care . but yet thy comforts are ●… for , ●… in that care , and feare : whereby it d●…th appeare ●…●… what then ●… , my protection to keep thee from defection . the ●…●… cares , and ●… , is kept by me . i watch thee , whilst thy foes are watch'd by thee . embleme 32. the watching of the heart . cant. 5.2 . i sleep , but my heart waketh . epigr. 32. whilst the soft hands of sleep tie up my sences , my watchfull heart , free from all such ●… , searches for thee , enquires es all about thee , nor day , nor night , able to be without thee . ode . 32. 1. it must be so : that god that gave me senses , and a mind , would have me use them both , but in their severall kinds . sleep must refresh my senses , but my minds a ●… of heav'nly fire , that seeds on ●… , and employment , needs no ●… or rest : for , when it thinks to please ●… with idlenesse , 't is least at ease . though quiet rest refresh the head , the heart that stirres not sure is dead . 2. whilst then my body ease doth take , my ●… refusing heart ●… all wake : and that mine heart the better watch may keep , i 'll lay my senses for a t●…e to sleep . wanton de re shall not ●… , nor lust enveigle them to vi●…e : no fading colours shall ●… my fight , nor sounds enchant mine eares with their delight : i 'll bind my smell , my touch , my tast , to keep a strict religious fast . 3. my worldly businesse shall lie still , that heav'nly thoughts my mind may fill : my marthaes cumb'ring cares shall cease their noise , that mary may attend her better choise . that meditation may advance mine heart on purpose , not by chance , my body shall keep holy day , that so my mind with better liberty may goe about her bus'nesse , and ingrosse that gaine , which worldly men count losse . 4. and though my senses sleep the while , my mind my senses shall beguile with dreames of thee , dear lord , whose rare perfections of excellence are such , that bare inspections cannot suffice my greedy soule , nor her fierce appetite controule , bur that the more she lookes the more she longs , and strives to thrust into the thickest throngs of those divine discoveries , which dazell even angels eyes . 5. oh could i lay aside this flesh , and follow after thee with fresh and free desires , my disentangled soule , ravisht with admiration , should roule it self , and all its thoughts on thee , and by beleeving strive to see , what is invisible to flesh and blood , and only by fruition understood , the beauty of each sev'rall grace , that shines in thy sunne-shaming face . 6. but what i can doe that i will , waking and sleeping , seek thee still : i 'll leave no place unpri'd into behind me , where i can but imagine i may find thee : i 'll aske of all i meet , if they can tell thee where thou art , which way thou go'st , that i may follow after thee , which way thou com'st , that thou mai'st meet with me . if not thy face , lord , let mine heart behold with moses thy back part . embleme 33. the wounding of the heart . lam. 3.12 . he hath bent his bow , and set me as a mark for the arrow . epigr. 33. a thousand of thy strongest shasts , my light , draw up against this heart with all thy might , and strike it through : they , that in need doe stand of cure , are healed by thy wounding hand . ode . 33. 1. nay , spare me not dear lord , it cannot be they should be hurt , that wounded are by thee . thy shafts will heale the hearts they hit , and to each sore its salve will fit . all hearts by nature are both sick , and sore , and mine as much as any else , or more : there is no place that 's free from finne , neither without it , nor within , and universall maladies doe crave variety of medicines to have . 2. first , let the arrow of thy piercing eye , whose light outvieth the star-spangled skie , strike through the darkne●… of my mind , and leave no cloudy mist behind . let thy resplendent rayes of knowledge dart bright beames of understanding to mine heart , to my finne-shadow'd heart , wherein black ignorance did first begin to blurre thy beauteous image , and deface the glory of thy self-sufficing grace . 3. next let the shaft of thy sharp-pointed pow'r discharged by that strength that can devour all difficulties , and encline stout opposition to resigne its steely stubbornesse , subdue my will , make it hereafter ready to fulfill thy royall law of righteousnesse , as gladly , as i must confesse it hath fulfilled heretofore th' unjust , prophane , and cruell lawes of its own lust . 4. then let that love of thine , which made thee leave the bosome of thy father , and be●…eave thy self of thy ●… glory , matter for an eternall story . strike through mine affections all together , and let that sun shine ●…eer the cloudy weather , wherein they wander without guide , or order , as the wind , and tide of floting ●… transport , and tosse them , till self-begotten troubles curbe and crosse them . 5. lord , empty all thy quivers , let there be no corner of my spacious heart left free , till all be but one wound , wherein no subtill sight-abhorring sinne may lurk in secret unespi'd by me , or reigne in power unsubdu'd by thee . perfect thy purchas'd victory , that thou mai'st ride triumphantly , and leading captive all captivity mai'st put an end to enmity in me . 6. then , blessed archer , in requitall i to shoote thine arrowes back again will try . by pray'rs , and praises , sighs , and sobs , by vowes , and teares , by groans , and throbs , i 'll see if i can pierce , and wound thine heart , and vanquish thee againe by thine own art . or , that we may at once provide for all mishaps that may betide , shoot thou thy self , thou polisht shaft , to me , and i will shoot my broken heart to thee . embleme 34. the inhabiting of the heart . gal. 4.6 . god hath sent ●… the spirit of his son into your hearts . epig●… . 34. mine heart 's an ●… , my ●… , and thou ●… tell ●…●… enough ●… thy spirit dwell for ever ther●…●…●…●… mai'st love me , and being to ●… i m●…y aga●…ne love thee . ode . 34. 1. welcome , great guest , this house , mine heart , shall all be thine : i will resigne mine interest in ev'ry part : only be pleas'd to use it as thine own for ever , and inhabite it alone : there 's roome enough , and if the furniture were answerably fitted , i am sure thou would'st be well content to stay , and by thy light possesse my sight with sense of an eternall day . 2. it is thy building , lord , ' r was made at thy command , and still doth stand upheld , and shelter'd by the shade of thy protecting providence : though such as is decaied , and impaired much , since the removall of thy residence , when with thy grace glory departed hence , it hath been all this while an inne to intertaine the vile , and vaine , and wicked companies of sinne . 3. although 't be but an house of clay , fram'd out of dust , and such as must dissolved be , yet it was gay , and glorious indeed , when ev ry place was furnished , and fitted with thy grace : when in the presence-chamber of my mind , the bright sun-beames of perfect knowledge shin'd : when my will was thy bed-chamber , and ev'ry pow'r a stately tow'r sweetned with thy spirits amber . 4. but whilst thou do'st thy self absent , it is not grown noysome alone , but all to pieces torne , and rent . the windowes all are stopt , or broken so , that no light without wind can thorow goe . the roofe's uncover'd , and the wall 's decai'd , the door 's flung off the hooks , the floor 's unlai'd , yea , the foundation rotten is , and every where it doth appeare all that remaines is farre amisse , 5. but if thou wilt returne againe , and dwell in me , lord , thou shalt see what care i 'll take to intertaine thee , though not like thy self , yet in such sort , as thou wilt like , and i shall thank thee for 't . lord , let thy blessed spirit keep possession , and all things will be well ; at least confession shall tell thee what 's amisse in me , and then thou shalt or mend the fault , or take the blame of all on thee . embleme 35. the enlarging of the heart . psal. 119.32 . i will runne the way of thy commandements , when thou shall enlarge my heart . epigr. 35. how pleasant is that now , which heretofore mine heart hela buter , sacred learnings l●…e ? ●… hearts enter with greatest ease the ●… paths , and runne the narrowest wayes . ode . 35. 1. what a blessed change i find , since i intertain d this guest ! now me thinks another mind moves and rules within my brest . surely i am not the same , that i was before he came , but i then was much too blame . 2. when before my god commanded any thing he would have done , i was close , and gripple handed , made an end ere i begunne . if he thought it fit to lay judgements on me , i could say they are good , but shrinke away . 3. all the wayes of righteous●…sse i did think were full of trouble , i complain'd of tediousnesse , and each duty ●… double . whilst i serv'd him but of feare , ev'ry minute did appeare longer sarre then a whole yeare . 4. strictnesse in religion seemed like a pined pinion'd thing : bolts , and fetters i esteemed more beseeming for a king , then for me to bow my neck , and be at anothers beck , when i felt my conscience check . 5. but the case is alter'd now : he no sooner turnes his eye , but i quickly bend , and bow , ready at his feet to lie : love hath taught me to obey all his precepts , and to say , not to morrow , but to day . 6. what he wills i say i must : what i must i say i will : he commanding , it is just what he would i should fulfill . whilst he biddeth i beleeve what he calls for he will give . to obey him is to live . 7. his command'ments grievous are not longer then men think t●…m so : though he send me forth i care not , whilst he gives me strength to goe . when , or whither , all is one , on his bus'nesse , not mine owne , i shall never goe alone . 8. if i be compleat in him , and in him all fulnesse dwelleth . i am sure aloft to swim , whilst that ocean overswelleth , having him that 's all in all , i am confident i shall nothing want , for which i call . embleme 36. the inflaming of the heart . psal. 39.3 . my heart was hot within me : while i was musing the sire burned . epigr. 36. spare not , my love , to kindle , and enflame mine heart within throughout , untill the same breake forth , and burnc : that so , thy salamander , mine heart may never from thy furnace wander . ode . 36. 1. welcome , holy , heavenly fire , kindled by immortall love : which descending from above , makes all earthly thoughts retire , and give place to that grace , which with gentle violence conquers all corrupt affections , rebell natures insurrections , bidding them be packing hence . 2. lord , thy fire doth heat within , warmeth not without alone ; though it be an heart of stone , of it self congeal'd in sinne , hard as steel , if it feel thy dissolving pow'r , it groweth soft as waxe , and quickly takes any print thy spirit make , paying what thou sai'st it oweth . 3. of it self mine heart is dark , but thy fire by shining bright , fills it full of saving light though 't be but a little spark lent by thee , i shall see more by it , then all the light , which in fullest measures streames from corrupted natures beames , can discover to my sight . 4. though mine heart be ice , and snow , to the things which thou hast chosen , all benum'd with cold , and frozen , yet thy fire will make it glow . though it burnes , when it turnes tow'rds the things which thou do'st hate : yet thy blessed warmth , no doubt , will that wild-fire soone draw out , and the heat thereof abate . 5. lord , thy fire is active , using alwayes either to ascend to its native heav'n , or lend heat to others : and diffusing of its store gathers more , never ceasing till it make all things like it selfe , and longing to see others come with thronging of thy goodnesse to partake . 6. lord , then let thy fire enflame my cold heart so thoroughly , that the heat may never die , but continue still thr same : that i may ev'ry day more , and more , consuming sinne , kindling others , and attending all occasions of ascending , heaven upon earth begin , embleme 37. the ladder of the heart . psal. 84. 5. in whose heart are the wayes of them . epigr. 37. would'st thou , my love , a ladder have , whereby thou mai'st climbe heaven to sit downe on high ? in thine owne heart then frame thee steps , and bend thy mind to muse how thou mai'st there ascend . ode . 37. the soule . 1. what ? shall i alwayes lie grov'ling on earth , where there is no mirth ? why should i not ascend , and climbe up , where i may mend . my meane estate of misery ? happinesse i know's exceeding high : yet sure there is some remedy for that christ . 2. true , there is . perfect blisse , the fruit of love , may be had above : but he , that will obtaine such a gold-exceeding gaine , must never think to reach the same , and scale heav'ns walls , untill he frame a ladder in his heart ●…●…●… the soule . 3. lord , i will : but the skill is not mine owne : such an art 's not knowne , unlesse thou wilt it teach : it is farre above the reach of mortall minds to understand . but if thou wilt lend thine helping hand , i will endeavour to obey thy word . christ . 4. well then , see that thou be as ready prest to performe the rest , as now to promise faire , and i 'll teach thee how to reare a scaling-ladder in thine heart to mount heaven with : no rules of art , but i alone , can the composure tell . 5. first , thou must take on trust all that i say , reason must not sway thy judgement crosse to mine , but her scepter quite resigne . faith must be both thy ladder sides , which will stay thy steps what e'er betides , and satisfie thine hunger , and thy thirst . 6. then , the round next the ground , which i must see ; is humilitie : from which thou must ascend , and with perseverance end . vertue to vertue , grace to grace , must each orderly succeed in' ts place . and when thou hast done all beginne againe . embleme 38. the flying of the heart . isa. 60. 5. who are these that fly as a cloud , and as the doves to their windowes ? epigr. 38. oh that mine heart had wings like to a dove , that i might quickly hasten hence , and move with speedy flight tow'rds the cel●…stiall spheares , as weary of this world , its faults , and feares ! ode . 38. 1. this way , though pleasant , yet me thinks is long : step after step makes little haste , and i am not so strong as still to last among so great so many lets : swelter'd and swill'd in sweat my toyling soule both fumes and frets , as though she were inclin'd to a retreat . 2. corruption clogs my feet like filthy clay , and i am ready still to slip : which makes me often stay , when i should trip away . my feares and faults , are such , as challenge all my teares so justly , that it were not much , if i in weeping should spend all my yeares . 3. this makes me weary of the world below , and greedy of a place above , on which i may bestow , my choisest love , and so obtaine that favour , which excells all worldly gaine , and maketh the possessour rich , in happinesse of a transcendent straine . 4. what ? must i still be rooted here below , and riveted unto the ground , wherein mine haste to grow will be though sound , but slow ? i know the sunne exhales grosse vapours from below , which , scorning as it were the vales , on mountaine-topping clouds themselves bestow . 5. but my fault-frozen heart is flow to move , makes poore proceedings at the best , as though it did not love , nor long for rest above . mine eyes can upward looke , as though they did despise all things on earth , and could not brooke their presence : but mine heart is slow to rise . 6. oh that it were once winged like the dove , that in a moment mounts on high , then should it soone remove , where it may ly in love . and loe , this one desire me thinks hath imp'd it so , that it already flies like fire , and ev'n my verses into wings doe grow . embleme 39. the union of the heart . ezek. 11.19 . i will give them one heart . epigr. 39. like minded minds , hearts alike heartily affected will together live , and die : many things meete , and part : but loves great gable tying two hearts makes them inseparable . ode . 39. the soule . 1. all this is not enough : me thinks i grow more greedy by fruition : what i get serves but to set an edge upon mine appetite , and all thy gifts doe but invite my pray'rs for more . lord , if thou wilt not still encrease my store , why did'st thou any thing at all bestow ? christ . 2. and is 't the fruit of having still to crave ? then let thine heart united be to mine , and mine to thine in a firme union , whereby we may no more be thou , and i , or , i , and thou , but both the same : and then i will avow , thou canst not want what thou do'st wish to have . the soule . 3. true , lord , for thou art all in all to me , but how to get my stubborne heart to twine , and close with thine , i doe not know , nor can i guesse how i should ever learne , unlesse thou wilt direct the course that i must take to that effect . 't is thou , not i , must knit mine heart to thee . christ . 4. 't is true , and so i will : but yet thou must doe something tow'rds it too : first , thou must lay all ●…nne away , and separate from that , which would our meeting intercept , and hold us distant still : i am all goodnesse , and can close with ill no more , then richest diamonds with dust . 5. then thou must not count any earthly thing , how ever gay , and gloriously set forth , of any worth , compar'd with me , that am alone th' eternall , high , and holy one : but place thy love onely on me , and on the things above : which true content , and endlesse comfort bring . 6. love is the loadstone of the heart , the glew , the cement , and the ●…oder , which alone unites in one things that before were not the same , but only like , imparts the name , and nature too of each to th' other : nothing can undoe the knot that 's knit by love , if it be true . 7. but if in deed , and truth thou lovest me , and not in word alone , then i shall find that thou dost mind the things i mind , and regulate all thine affections , love , and hate , delight , desire , feare , and the rest , by what i doe require , and i in thee my self shall alwayes see . embleme 40. the rest of the heart . psal. 116.7 . returne unto thy rest , o my soule . epigr. 40. my busie , stirring heart , that seekes the best , can find no place on earth wherein to rest : for god alone , the author of its blesse , it s only rest , its onely center ●… . ode . 40. 1. move me no more , mad world , it is in va●…ne , experience tells me plaine i should deceived be , if ever i againe should trust in thee . my weary heart hath ransackt all thy treasuries both great , and small , and thy large inventories beares in minde : yet could it never finde one place wherein to rest , though it hath often tried all the best . 2. thy profits brought me losse in stead of gaine , and all thy pleasures paine : thine honours blurr'd my name with the deep staines of self-confounding shame , thy wisdome made me turne starke fool , and all the learning , that thy school afforded me , was not enough to make me know my self , and take care of my better part , which should have perished for all thine heart . 3. not that there is not place of rest in thee for others : but for me there is , there can be , none : that god , that made mine heart , is he alone , that of himself both can , and will , give rest unto my thoughts , and fill them full of all content , and quietne●… , that so i may ●… my soule in patience , untill he find it time to call me hence . 4. on thee then , as a sure foundation , a tried corner-stone , lord , i will strive to raise the tow'r of my salvation , and thy praise . in thee , as in my center , shall the lines of all my longings fall . to thee , as to mine anchor , surely ti'd my ship shall safely ride . on thee , as on my bed of soft repose , i 'll rest my weary head . 5. thou , thou alone , shalt be my whole desire , i 'll nothing else require , but thee , or for thy sake . in thee i 'll sleepe secure , and when i wake thy glorious face shall satisfie the longing of my looking eye . i 'll roule my self on thee , as on my rock , and threatning dangers mock . of thee , as of my treasure , i 'll boast , and bragge , my comforts know no measure . 6 lord , thou shalt be mine all , i will not know a profit here below , but what ●… on thee : thou shalt be all the pleasure i will see in any thing the earth affords . mine heart shall owne no words of honour , out of which i cannot raise the matter of thy praise . nay , i will not be mine , unlesse thou wilt vouchsafe to have me thine . embleme 41. the bathing of the heart . joel 3.21 . i will cleanse their bloud , that i have not cleansed . epigr. 41. this bath thy saviour swet with drops of bloud , sick heart , of purpose for to doe thee good . they that have tri'd it can the vertue tell , come then and use it , is thou wilt be well . ode . 41. 1. all this thy god hath done for thee : and now mine heart it is high time that thou should'st be acting thy part , and meditating on his blessed passion , till thou hast made it thine by imitation . 2. that exercise will be the best and surest meanes , to keep thee evermore at rest , and free from paines . to suffer with thy saviour is the way to make thy present comforts last for aye . 3. trace then the steps , wherein he trade , and first begin to sweat with him . the heavy load , which for thy sinne he underwent , squeez'd bloud out of his face , which in great drops came trickling downe apace . 4. oh let not then that precious bloud be spilt in vaine , but gather ev'ry drop . 't is good to purge the staine of guilt , that hath defil'd , and overspred thee from the sole of th'foot to th'crown of th'head . 5. poison possesseth every veine , the fountaine is corrupt , and all the streames uncleane : all is amisse . thy bloud 's impure , yea thou thy self , mine heart , in all thine inward pow'rs polluted art . 6. when thy first father first did ill , mans doome was read , that in the sweat of 's face he still should eat his bread . what the first adam in the garden caught , the second adam in a garden taught . 7. taught by his owne example , how to sweat for sinne , under that heavy weight to bow , and never linne begging release , till with strong cries , and teares the soule be drain'd of all its saults , and ●…eares . 8. if sins imputed guilt opprest th' almighty so , that his sad soule could find no rest under that woe : but that the bitter agony he felt made his pure bloud , if not to sweat , to melt . 9. then let that huge inherent masse of sinne , that lies in heapes on thee , make thee surpasse in teares , and cries , striving with all thy strength , untill thou sweat such drops as his , though not as good , as great . 10. and if he thinke it fit to lay upon thy back , or paines , or duties , as he may untill it crack , shrinke not away , but straine thine utmost force to beare them cheerfully without remorse . embleme 42. the binding of the heart . hos. 11.4 . i drew them with cords of a man , with bands of love . epigr. 42. mr sinnes , i doe consesse , a cord were found heavy , and hard by thee , when thou wast bound , great lord of love , with them , but thou hast twin'd gentle love cords my tender heart to bind . ode . 42. 1. what ? could those hands , that made the world , be subject unto bands ? could there a cord be found , wherewith omnipotence it self was bound ? wonder mine heart , and stand amaz'd to see the lord of liberty led captive for thy sake , and in thy stead . although he did nothing deserving death , or bands , yet he was bound , and put to death , to set thee free . 2. thy sinnes had ti'd those bands for thee , wherein thou should'st have di'd and thou did'st daily knit knots upon knots , whereby thou mad'st them ●…t closer , and faster , to thy faulty self . so like a cursed else , helplesse , and hopelesse , friendlesse , and forlorne , the sinke of scorne , and kennell of contempt , thou should st have laine eternally enthrall'd to endlesse paine . 3. had not the lord of love and life been pleased to afford his helping hand of grace , and freely put himself into thy place . so were thy bands transferr'd , but not unti'd , untill the time he did , and by his death vanquisht , and conqu'red all , that adams sall had made victorious . sinne , death , and hell , thy fatall foes , under his footstool sell . 4. yet he meant not that thou should'st use the liberty he got as it should like thee best , to wander as thou listest , or to rest in soft repose carelesse of his commands : he that hath loos'd those bands , whereby thou wast enslaved to the foes , binds thee with those , where with he bound himself to doe thee good , the bands of love , love writ in lines of blood . 5. his love to thee made him to lay aside his majesty , and cloathed in a vaile of fraile , though faultlesse flesh , become thy baile . but love requireth love : and since thou art loved by him , thy part it is to love him too : and love affords the strongest cords that can be : for it ties , not hands alone , but heads , and hearts , and soules , and all in one . 6. come then , mine heart , and freely follow the prevailing art of thy redeemers love . that strong magnetique tie hath pow'r to move the steeli'st stubbornesse . if thou but twine , and twist his love with thine , and by obedience labour to expresse thy thankfulnesse , it will be hard to say on whether side the bands are surest , which is fastest tide . embleme 43. the prop of the heart . psal. 102.7 , 8. his heart is fixed , trusting in the lord . his heart is established , he shall not be affraid . epigr. 43. my weak , and seeble heart , a prop must use , but pleasant fruits , and flow'rs doth refuse : my christ my pillar is , on h●…m rely , repose , and rest my self , alone will i. ode . 43. 1. suppose it true , that whilst thy saviours side was furrowed with ●…courges he was ti'd unto some pillar fast , think not , mine heart , it was because he could not stand alone , or that left loose he would have shrunk away at last . such weakne●… suits not with omnipotence , nor could mans malice match his patience . 2. but , if so done , 't was done to tutor thee , whose frailty , and impatience he doth see such , that thou hast nor strength , nor will , as of thy self , to undergo the least degree of duty , or of woe , but would'st be sure at length to flinch , or faint , or not to stand at all , or in the end more fearfully to fall . 3. thy very frame , and figure , broad above , narrow beneath , apparently doth prove thou canst not stand alone , without a prop to boulster , and to stay thee . to trust to thine own strength would soone betray thee . alas , thou now art growne so weak , and feeble , wav'ring , and unstaid , thou shrink'st at the least weight that 's on thee laid . 4. the ea●…est command'ments thou declinest , and at the lightest punishments thou whinest : thy restlesse motions are innumerable , like the troubled sea whose waves are toss'd , and tumbled ev'ry way . the hound-pursued hare ●…●… so many doubles , as thou do'st , till thy crosse courses in themselves are lost . 5. get thee some stay that may support thee then , and stablish thee , lest thou should'st start againe . but where may it be found ? will pleasant fruites , or flowers serve the turne ? no , no , my tott'ring heart will overturne , and lay them on the ground . dainties may serve to minister delight , but strength is onely from the lord of might . 6. betake thee to thy christ then , and repose thy selfe in all extremities on those his everlasting armes , wherewith he girds the heavens , and upholds the pillars of the earth , and safely folds his faithfull flocke from harmes . cleave close to him by saith , and let the bands of love tie thee in thy redeemers hands . 7. come life , come death , come devills , come what will , yet ●… ned so thou shalt stand ●… still : and all the pow'rs of hell shall not ●… to shake thee with their shock , so long as ●… art founded on that rock : no duty shall thee quell , no danger shall ●… thy ●… state , nor soule-perplexing ●… thy mind ●… embleme 44. the scourging of the heart . prov. 10.13 . a rod is for the backe of him that is void of understanding . epigr. 44. when thou withhold'st thy scourges , dearest love , my sluggish heart is slack , and slow to move . oh let it not stand still , but lash it rather , and drive it , though unwilling , to thy father . ode . 44. 1. what doe those scourges on that sacred flesh , spotlesse and pure ? must he , that doth sin-weari'd soules refresh , himself endure such tearing tortures ? must those sides be gash'd ? those shoulders lash'd ? is this the trimming that the world bestowes upon such robes of majestie as those ? 2. is 't not enough to die , unlesse by paine thou antidate thy death before hand , lord ? what do'st thou meane to aggravate the guilt of sinne ? or to enhance the price thy sacrifice amounts to ? both are infinite i know , and can by no additions greater grow . 3. yet dare i not imagine that in vaine thou did'st endure one stripe : though not thine owne thereby , my gaine thou did'st procure , that when i shall be scourged for thy sake , thy stripes may make mine acceptable , that i may not grutch , when i remember thou hast borne as much . 4. as much , and more , for me . come then mine heart , and willingly submit thy selfe to suffer : smile at smart and death de●…e . feare not to feel that hand correcting thee , which set thee free . stripes as the tokens of his love he leaves , who scourgeth ev'ry sonne whom he receives . 5. there 's foolishnesse bound up within thee fast : but yet the rod of fatherly correction at the last , if blest by god , will drive it farre away , and wisdome give , that thou maist live , not to thy self , but him , that first was slaine , and died for thee , and then rose againe . 6. thou art not onely dull , and slow of pace but stnbborne too , and refractory , ready to outface , rather then doe , thy duty : though thou know'st it must be so , thou wilt not go the way thou should'st , till some affliction first set thee right , then prick , and spurre thee on . 7. top-like thy figure , and condition is , neither to stand , nor stirre , thy self alone , whilst thou do'st ●… an helping hand to set thee up , and store of stripes bestow to make thee goe . begge then thy blessed saviour to transferre his scourges unto thee , to make thee stirre . embleme 45. the hedging of the heart . hos. 2.6 . i will hedge up thy way with thornes . epigr. 45. he , that of thornes would gather roses , may in his own heart , if handled the right way . hearts hedged with christs crowne of thornes , in stead of thorny cares , will sweetest roses breed . ode 45. 1. a crowne of thornes ! i thought so : ten to one , a crowne without a thorne there 's none : there 's none on earth i meane , what shall i then rejoyce to see him crown'd by men , by whom kings rule , and reigne ? or shall i scorne , and hate , to see earths curse , a thorne , prepost ' rously preferr'd to crowne those browes , from whence all blisse , and glory flowes ? or shall i both be clad , and also sad , to think it is a crowne , and yet so bad ? 2. there 's cause enough of both , i must confesse : yet , what 's that unto me , unlesse i take a course his crowne of thornes may be made mine , transferr'd from him to me ? crownes had they been of starres could adde no more glory , where there was all before , and thornes might scratch him , could not make him worse then he was made finne , and a curse . come then , mine heart , take downe thy saviours crowne of thornes , and see if thou canst make 't thine owne . 3. remember first , thy saviours head was crown'd by the same hands that did him wound : they meant it not to honour , but to scorne him , when in such sort they did bethorne him . think earthly honours such , if they redound not to his glory , th' are not sound . never beleeve they minde to dignifie thee , that thy christ would crucifie . think ev'ry crowne a thorne , unlesse 't adorne thy christ , as well as him , by whom 't is worne . 4. consider then that , as the thorny crowne circled thy saviours head , thine owne continuall care to please him , and provide for the advantage of his side , must fence thine actions , and affections so , that they shall neither dare to goe out of that compasse , nor vouchsase accesse to what might make that care goe ●… . let no such thing draw nigh , which shall not spie thornes ready plac'd to ●…ick it till it die . 5. thus , compass'd with thy saviours thorny crowne , thou mai'st securely sit thee downe , and hope that he , who made of water wine , will turne each thorne unto a vine , were thou ●… gather grapes , and to delight thee roses : nor need the prickles fright thee . thy saviours sacred temples tooke away the curse , that in their ●… lay . so thou mai'st crowned be , as well as he , and at the last light in his light shalt see . embleme 46. the fastening of the heart . jer. 32.40 . i will put my feare in their hearts , that they shall not depart from me . epigr. 46. thou , thath wast nailed to the crosse for me , lest i stould slip , and fall away from thee , drive home thine holy feare into mine heart , and clench it so , that it may ne'er depart . ode . 46. 1. what ? do'st thou struggle to get loose againe ? hast thou so soone forgot the former paine , that thy licentious bondage unto sinne , and lust enlarged thraldome , put thee in ? hast thou a mind againe to rove , and ramble rogue-like a vagrant through the world , and scramble for scraps , and crusts of earth bred base delights , and change thy dayes of joy for tedious nights of sad repentant sorrow ? what ? wilt thou borrow that griefe to day , which thou must pay to morrow ? 2. no , self-deceiving heart , lest thou should'st cast thy cords away , and burst the bands at last of thy redeemers tender love , i 'll try what further fastnesse in his feare doth lie . the cords of love soaked in lust may rot , and bands of bounty are too oft forgot : but holy filiall feare , like to a naile fast ned in a sure place , will never faile . this driven home will take fast hold , and make thee that thou darest not thy god forsake . 3. remember how , besides thy saviours bands , wherewith they led him bound , his holy hands , and feet , were pierced , how they nail'd him fast unto his bitter ●… , and how at last his precious side was goared with a speare . so hard sharp-pointed ●… , and steel did teare his tender flesh , that from those wounds might flow the sov'raigne salve for sin-procured woe . then that thou mai'st not saile of that availe , refuse not to be fast'ned with his naile . 4. love in an heart of flesh is apt to taint , or be fly-blowne with folly : and its saint and feeble spirits , when it shewes most faire , are often fed on by the empty aire of popular applause , unlesse the salt of holy feare in time prevent the fault : but season'd so it will be kept for ever . he , that doth feare because he loves , will never adventure to offend , but alwayes ●…end his best endeavours to content his friend . 5. though perfect love cast out all servile feare , because such feare hath torment : yet thy dear redeemer meant not so to set thee free , that filiall feare , and thou should strangers be . though , as a sonne , thou honour him thy father , yet , as a master , thou maist feare him rather . feare 's the soules centinell , and keepes the heart , wherein love lodges so , that all the art , and industry , of those , that are its foes , cannot betray it to its former woes . embleme 47. the new wine of the heart . psa●… . 104.115 . wine that maketh glad the heart of man . epigr. 47. christ the true vine , grape , cluster , on the crosse trod the ●…nepresse alone , unto the losse of bloud , & life . draw , thankfull heart , and spare not : here 's wine enough for all , save those that care not . ode . 47. 1. leave not thy saviour now , what ev'r thou do'st , doubtfull distrustfull heart , thy former paines , and labours , all are lost , if now thou shalt depart , and faithlesly fall off at last from him , who to redeeme thee spar'd nor life nor limme . 2. shall he , that is thy cluster , and thy vine , tread the winepresse alone , whilst thou stand'st looking on ? shall both the wine , and worke be all his owne ? see how he bends , crusht with the straitned screw of that fierce wrath , that to thy sinnes was due . 3. although thou canst not helpe to beare it , yet thrust thy selfe under too , that thou mai'st feel some of the weight , and get although not strength to doe , yet will to suffer something as he doth , that the same stresse at once may squeeze you both . 4. thy saviour being press'd to death , there ran out of his sacred wounds that wine , that maketh glad the heart of man , and all his foes confounds . yea , the full-flowing fountain s open still for all grace-thirsting hearts to drinke their fill . 5. and not to drinke alone , to satiate their longing appetites , or drowne those cumbrous cares , that would abate the edge of their delights , but , when they toyle , and foile themselves , with sinne , both to refresh , to purge , and cleanse them in . 6. thy saviour hath begun this cup to thee , and thou must not refuse 't . presse then thy sin-swoll'n sides , untill they be empty , and fit to use 't . doe not delay to come , when he doth call , nor feare to want , where there 's enough for all . 7. thy bounteous redeemer in his bloud fills thee not wine alone , but likewise gives his flesh to be thy food , which thou ●… make thine owne , and feede on him , who hath himself revealed the bread of life by god the father sealed . 8. nay , he 's not food alone , but physicke too , when ever thou art sick , and in thy ●… strength , that thou mai'st doe thy duty , and not stick at any thing , that he requires of thee , how hard soever it may seeme to be . 9. make all the haste then that thou canst to come , before the day be past , and think not of returning to thy home , whilst yet the light doth last . the longer , and the more thou draw'st this wine , still thou shalt find it more , and more divine . 10. or if thy saviour think it meet to throw thee in the presse againe , to suffer as he did : yet doe not grow displeased at thy paine : a summer season followes winter weather , suffring you shall be glorifi'd together . revel. 22. 17. the spirit , and the bride say , come . and let him that heareth say , come . and let him that is a thirst , come . and whosoever will , let him take the water of life freely . the conclvsion . is this my period ? have i now no more to doe hereafter ? shall my mind give o're it s ●…●… thus , and idle be , or buss'd other wise ? should i not see how to improve my thoughts more ●… , before ●… these heart school ●… by ? sea-knowledge is an ●…●… , an ●… that doth not onely aske a ●… time , but challengeth to ●… until death . yet as in ●… they have a care to call for ●…●… , and are ●… ●… ●… ●… so ●… what i have done , ●… perhaps i may ●… to alter , or to ●… and i may ●… with my great ●… from taking our ●… how i retaine ●… old ●… and if it be his pleasure , i shall say these ●… before others , that they may , or learne them too , or only censure me ; i 'll wait with patience the successe to see . and though i looke not to have leave to play , for that this school allowes not , yet i may another time perhaps , if they approve of these , such as they are , and shew their love to the school of the heart , by calling for 't , adde other lessons more of the like sort . the learning of the heart . the preface . i am a scholar . the great lord of love and life , my tutor is : who from above all that lack learning , to his school invites , my hearts my prayer-book , in which he writes , systemes of all the arts and faculties : first reads to me , then makes me exercise , but all in paradoxes , such high strains , as flow from none but love inspired brains ; yet bids me publish them abroad and dare t' excell his arts above all other arts that are . why should i not ? me thinks it cannot be , but they should please others as well as me . come then joyn'd hands , and let our heart's embrace , whil'st thus loves labyrinth of arts we ●… ; i mean the sidem's call'd ●… : both ●… , and ●… . with the higher ●… , ●… ; and law , and ●… the grammar of the heart . psal. 15. 2. that speaketh the truth in his heart . my grammar , i define to he an art , which teacheth me to write and speak mine heart , by which i learn that smooth tongu'd flatt'ries are false language , and in love irregular . among'st my letters , vow-wells i admit , of none but consonant to sacred ●… . and therefore when my soul in silence moans , half vowel'd sighs , and double deep thong'd groans , mute looks , and liquid tears in stead of words , are of the language that mine heart affords . and since true love abhors all variations , my grammar hath no moads nor conjugations : tenses , nor persons , nor declensions , cases , nor genders , nor comparisons : what are my letters are , my words but one , and on the meaning of it love alone . concard is all my syntax and agreement : is in my grammar perfect regiment . he wants no language that hath learn'd to love , when tongues are still , hearts will be heard above . the rethorick of the heart . psal. 45. 1. my heart is inaiting a good matter . my rethorick is not so much an art , as an infused habit in mine heart , which a sweet secret elegance instills , and all my speech with tropes and figures fills . love is the tongues elixir , which doth change the ordinary sense of words , and range them under other kinds , dispose them so that to the height of eloquence they grow , e'vn in their native plainness , and must be so understood as liketh love and me . when i say christ , i mean my saviour ; when his command'ment my behaviour ; for to that end it was he ●…●… , and to this purpose 't is i bear his name . when i say hallow'd be thy name , he knows i would be holy : for his glory grows together with my good , and he hath not given more honour then himself hath got so when i say , lord let thy kingdom come , he understands it , i would be at home ; to raign with him in glory . so grace brings my love in me to be the ●… of kings he teacheth me to say . thy will be done , but meaneth he would ●… me do mine own ; by making ●… to ●… and so to rule my self and serve him both . so when he saith , my son give me thine heart : i know his meaning is , that i should part with all i have for him , give him my self , and to be rich in him from worldly pelf . when he says come to me , i know that he means i should wait his coming unto me , since 't is his coming unto me that makes me come to him , my part he undertakes . and when he says , behold i come , i know his parpose and intent is i should go with all the speed i can , to meet him whence his coming is attract ve , draws me hence . thick folded repititions in love , are no ●… , but strongly move and bind ●… attention . exclamations , are the hearts heaven ●… exaltions . epiphonemaes and apostrophes , love likes of well , but no prosopopes . not doubtful but careful deliberations , love holds as grounds of strongest resolutions . thus love and i a thousand ways can find , to speak and understand each others mind , and descant upon that which unto others , is but plain song , and all their musick smothers ●… that which worldly wit worms call nonsence , is many times loves purest eloquence . the logick of the heart . 1 pet. 3. 15. be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you . my logick is the faculty of faith , where all things are resolv'd ●… be saith ; and ergoes drawn from trust and ●… twist and tie truths with stronger ●… then either sense or reason : for the heart and not the head is fountain of this art . and what the heart objects none can ●… , but god himself , till death the frame ●… , nay faith can after death ●… with dust , and argue ashes into stronger trust . and better hopes then brass and ●… can be emblemes , of unto the outward man . all my invention is to find what terms my lord and i stand in : how he confirms his ●… to me , how i inherit what he hath purchased for me by his merit . my judgment is submission to his will . and when he once hath spoken to be still . my method 's to be ●… by him what he ●… , that i think most trim . loves arguments , are all will , thou must , what he says and commands are true and ●… . when to dispute and argue's ●… of ●… , then to ●… and to ●… is ●… . finis . partheneia sacra. or the mysterious and delicious garden of the sacred parthenes symbolically set forth and enriched with pious deuises and emblemes for the entertainement of deuout soules; contriued al to the honour of the incomparable virgin marie mother of god; for the pleasure and deuotion especially of the parthenian sodalitie of her immaculate conception. by h.a. hawkins, henry, 1571?-1646. 1633 approx. 452 kb of xml-encoded text transcribed from 144 1-bit group-iv tiff page images. text creation partnership, ann arbor, mi ; oxford (uk) : 2004-05 (eebo-tcp phase 1). a02823 stc 12958 estc s103886 99839628 99839628 4067 this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the early english books online text creation partnership. this phase i text is available for reuse, according to the terms of creative commons 0 1.0 universal . the text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. early english books online. (eebo-tcp ; phase 1, no. a02823) transcribed from: (early english books online ; image set 4067) images scanned from microfilm: (early english books, 1475-1640 ; 926:5) partheneia sacra. or the mysterious and delicious garden of the sacred parthenes symbolically set forth and enriched with pious deuises and emblemes for the entertainement of deuout soules; contriued al to the honour of the incomparable virgin marie mother of god; for the pleasure and deuotion especially of the parthenian sodalitie of her immaculate conception. by h.a. hawkins, henry, 1571?-1646. aston, herbert, b. 1614, attributed name. langeren, jacob van, engraver. langeren, p. van, engraver. [16], 271, [1] p. : ill. printed by iohn cousturier, [rouen] : m.dc. xxxiii. [1633] h.a. = henry hawkins. sometimes attributed to herbert aston. with an additional title page, engraved, signed "p. van langeren fecit", with title "hē parthenos" in greek characters. at least the last engraved illustration is signed: iacob van langeren. fecit. reproduction of the original in the folger shakespeare library. created by converting tcp files to tei p5 using tcp2tei.xsl, tei @ oxford. re-processed by university of nebraska-lincoln and northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. eebo-tcp is a partnership between the universities of michigan and oxford and the publisher proquest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by proquest via their early english books online (eebo) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). the general aim of eebo-tcp is to encode one copy (usually the first edition) of every monographic english-language title published between 1473 and 1700 available in eebo. eebo-tcp aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the text encoding initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). the eebo-tcp project was divided into two phases. the 25,363 texts created during phase 1 of the project have been released into the public domain as of 1 january 2015. anyone can now take and use these texts for their own purposes, but we respectfully request that due credit and attribution is given to their original source. users should be aware of the process of creating the tcp texts, and therefore of any assumptions that can be made about the data. text selection was based on the new cambridge bibliography of english literature (ncbel). if an author (or for an anonymous work, the title) appears in ncbel, then their works are eligible for inclusion. selection was intended to range over a wide variety of subject areas, to reflect the true nature of the print record of the period. in general, first editions of a works in english were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably latin and welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. image sets were sent to external keying companies for transcription and basic encoding. quality assurance was then carried out by editorial teams in oxford and michigan. 5% (or 5 pages, whichever is the greater) of each text was proofread for accuracy and those which did not meet qa standards were returned to the keyers to be redone. after proofreading, the encoding was enhanced and/or corrected and characters marked as illegible were corrected where possible up to a limit of 100 instances per text. any remaining illegibles were encoded as s. understanding these processes should make clear that, while the overall quality of tcp data is very good, some errors will remain and some readable characters will be marked as illegible. users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a tcp editor. the texts were encoded and linked to page images in accordance with level 4 of the tei in libraries guidelines. copies of the texts have been issued variously as sgml (tcp schema; ascii text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable xml (tcp schema; characters represented either as utf-8 unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless xml (tei p5, characters represented either as utf-8 unicode or tei g elements). keying and markup guidelines are available at the text creation partnership web site . eng mary, -blessed virgin, saint -meditations. emblem books. 2004-01 tcp assigned for keying and markup 2004-01 aptara keyed and coded from proquest page images 2004-02 judith siefring sampled and proofread 2004-02 judith siefring text and markup reviewed and edited 2004-04 pfs batch review (qc) and xml conversion ηπαρθενος by iohn cousturier m. d.c.xxx.iii . p. van langeren fecit . partheneia sacra . or the mysteriovs and deliciovs garden of the sacred parthenes ; symbolically set forth and enriched with piovs devises and emblemes for the entertainement of devovt sovles ; contriued al to the honovr of the incomparable virgin marie mother of god ; for the pleasure and deuotion especially of the parthenian sodalitie of her immaculate conception . by h. a. printed by iohn covstvrier . m.dc.xxxiii . the order of the symbols contained in this garden . 1. the garden . 2. the rose . 3. the lillie . 4. the violet . 5. the heliotropion . 6. the deaw . 7. the bee . 8. the heavens . 9. the iris . 10. the moone . 11. the starre . 12. the olive . 13. the nightingal . 14. the palme . 15. the hovse . 16. the hen. 17. the pearl . 18. the dove . 19. the fovntain . 20. the movnt . 21. the sea. 22. the ship . wherunto are annexed the phoenix , and the swan without the garden . the epistle to the parthenian sodalitie . my deare parthenians , when the sauiour of the world had passed the torrent of cedron , into the garden of gethsemani , there to commence the tragedie , whose sad catastrophe he was to finish on mount caluarie , he gaue to vnderstand , how much ( no doubt ) he was pleased with gardens . but then especially , after the tragick scene was ended , and that doleful curten or veyle was rent asunder ( a token of the period of the iewish theater ) when al was voyded , and he vouchsafed to appeare familiarly againe to his deerest friends , in the forme and habit of a gardener , he euidently declared his good affection , towards the garden of their soules , which then he came to cheer-vp and refresh with his diuine presence , & to banish the clowdes of heauines , which so sad a spectacle had cast vpon the garden of their harts , when as no flowers or functions of their soules could chearfully yeald their luster , or send forth anie special odour of sāctitie , so drowned in teares . may it not therefore seeme strange vnto you , if i , knowing the sympathie of harts , between the mother and the sonne , the blessed iesvs , flower of nazareth , and his sacred stem , presume heer to personate , and make her appeare to your viewes , not in the habit of fashion of a gardener , which office she rather yealds ( as proper ) to her sonne , but of a garden , vnder the veyle of symbols , to deliciate a while with her deuotes , you , deerest parthenians , yet greeued and groaning with the burden of your pressures , for his sake , who is the cu●ious gardener indeed , that from the beginning planted the same for himself , from al eternitie . now then the winter past of melancholie thoughts , the showers blowne-ouer and quite vanished , of teares of persecution ; i say , laying the memorie of them al aside , as stormes already past , in conceit at least , you heer behold our sacred parthenes , who presents her self for your delights in garden-attire and cheerfully receaue her , with serene browes , in this coorse and rural array , of hearbes and flowers , as if she were clothed with the sunne , crowned with the starres , and trampling the moone , as once she was seen by her holie guardian , the deare disciple , whom iesvs loued . nor would i wish you perfunctoriously to view her only , and passe her ouer with a slender glance of the eye , but to enter into her garden , which she is herself , and suruey it wel . where , to the end you may not erre , mistake , or goe astray , in wayes so new , and strange , and ( for ought i know ) as yet vntraced or trod of anie , take heer , i pray , for guide , my proper genius , wel acquainted with al passages of them . and you ( o sacred parthenes ) i beseech especially , to guide me also , while in your seruice i take thus vpon me to guide the rest . the preface to the reader . considering , gentle reader , how much thou art taken and delighted ( as men are wont ) with change and varietie in al things : i 〈◊〉 heer endeauoured to serue thee in this worke , according to thine appetite . which being not my sole end , but for thy deuotion rather , i made varietie the hand mayd to pietie , directing al , as you see , therunto . and though i am a most vnworthie client and deuote to the immaculate virgin-mother of god , i haue presumed ( as you see ) to direct both the one and other , to the honour of that incomparable queene of heauen . wherin though the instruments i vse , may seeme prophane , so prophanely vsed now adayes , as deuises cōsisting of impreses , and mottoes , characters , essayes , emblemes , and poesies ; yet they may be like that panthaeon , once sacred to the feigned deities , and piously since sanctified , conuerted , and cōsecrated to the honour of the glorious queene , and al the blessed saints of heauen . and following the example of the israelits , warranted by god himself , i haue borrowed but the siluer and golden vessels , of those profane aegyptians , and not the poysonous liquours they caroused in them ; to conuert them ( i say ) to a better vse , in seruice of my ladie and mistris , and for the pleasure and deuotion of her especial familie ; yea , gentle reader , for thy solace too , if thou art pleased to accept of my poore endeauours . the proeme to his genivs on the sacred parthenes herself . my genivs ; if thou needs must praise , extol , and magnify beautie , vertue , honour ; and not in the ayre only of ideas , or abstract from sense , but in a subiect really , subsisting : i say , if thou needs must dignify and eternize a pure creature aboue the skyes , praise then such an one , whose superlatiue praises , when thou hast sayd the most , can hardly so exceed , but that her due elogies , encomiums , and panegyricks , stil shal farre transcend the facultie of thy tongue , and thou be acquit of the least imputation of flatteries . and if my genius carrie thee ( my pen ) into daliances , as it were , to deliciat with thy self , vpon thy plumes , in contemplation of that noble sex , corriual with the masculin ; doe not , i prythee , with isocrates , seeke a helena , that fatal and most deplorable fire-brand of the troyan cittie , on whom that elegant and terse sophister powred forth the musks and ciuets of his venal tongue , the riches of of a wanton and luxuriating wit. behold she is euen now at hand , whom worthily thou mayst , and whom thou canst not prayse enough , so farre from praysing her too much ; who besides is able wel to guerdon and recompence thy prayses giuen her , with heaped and redoubled interest . behold then our sacred parthenes , virgin of virgins , for excellencie , is she , whom safely thou mayst prayse , whom the impatient world for so manie ages , groaning vnder their pressing burden of their crimes , with vowes and prayers had most incessantly begged and importuned . a boon of wel-nigh fiftie ages suit , obtained at last with much adoe . so great a work it was for nature , albeit holpen by grace , to bring forth to mortals a creature , worthie to be the mother of god , ladie of the world , and the true reparatresse of life . nor doe thou frame to thyself heer the mercuries of a counterfet and sophisticat candour , couloured cheekes , curled hayre , and wreathed knots with inexplicable meanders . seeke not vermilion or ceruse in the face , bracelets of oriental-pearles on her wrist , rubie-carknets on the neck , rich pendants in the eares , and a delicious fan of most exquisit feathers in her hand , nor al that magasin of feminin riches , or richest ornaments of beautie , enough to belye beauties rather , and destroy them quite , then to afford them , where they are not found ; they being nothing els then a precious scene of fopperies , which they only seeke with a curious wastfulnes , who wil needs be wholy mad with the greatest sumptuousnes and cost ; wheras surely true beautie is but one , which euen integritie of the mind makes , being the liuelie coulour of god ; and was no doubt that , which so much graced our parthenes , and set her forth , whom the entire and intemerate comlines of vertues hath crowned with such a gloriet on her head , and such splendour and glorie in heauen , as in a pure creature nothing may be imagined more magnificent in riches , nor in suauities sweeter . and surely when i think more attētiuely of her , it seemes to me , the highest architect of all and great god , the sole moderatour of all , in creating this one soule , hath so admirably exprest himself in her , and with his most exquisit fingars , hath bestowed so much art and industrie in her delineation , and so pleased himself with the delicat draughts he hath shewed in this one image of himself , as if in the shop of human things he would expose her to all , to be imitated . wherefore when as that soule , farre purer then the starres , and flowing with so manie exquisit ornaments , glided into the tabernacle of her bodie , that impure firebrand was not cast into her , which first was kindled in the authours of our kind , and flamed forth afterwards farre and wide , to the waste and vtter ruine of the whole world , but as a saphyr or purer adamant , appeares and growes vp in pure and burnisht gold : so a most chast soule , by the hands of god disposing so therof , was put into her inuiolable and sanctified bodie , that no least stayne of her stock and progenie might light vpon her . then , after . she ( that golden issue of her mother ) was borne and brought forth to light , i easily beleeue , that nature recreated and refreshed from the daylie miserie it lay in , euen laughed to behold her , supposing the light was newly risen to her , when first she fixt her eyes on her , from whose precious and virginal womb , was the fountain of light itself to spring . the virgin-infant heervpon was nursed-vp and trayned betwen chast walls , in a most holie discipline of patrial lawes , and instructed with those studies of arts , that might addresse her as a noble sacrarie of god. anticipating vertue , she vrged and pressed more hard the flower paces of her years , which hardly could endure the long demurres of age , of vhom was nature ashamed as it were to impose anie lawes of longer attendance . for euen now in her first age , there shined manie dotes in her , as starres in the heauens in a serene night , like sparkling gemmes fixed in their orbs ; since she had in her whole life , as you know , a maruelous societie of al vertues , wherewith she woue that loome of her age , as with singular and most excellent figures , in whom the absolute consent and harmonie of al vertues haue magnificently conspired , that beautie should not violate shamefastnes ; grauitie , infringe lowlines ; meekenes , grauitie ; simplicitie , maiestie ; facilitie , constancie ; lastly ( which til then was neuer heard of ) that the name of mother should be nothing iniurious to virginitie . al vertues stroue alike in her , and al had the victorie . nor yet was she destiture of the guifts of nature likewise , while a certain diuinitie of beautie dazeled the aspects of men . the bashful forhead ( seate of shamfastnes ) soft and gently arose ; beneath the black and archie browes , shined forth the bright lamps of her eyes , which how powerfully they pierced and penetrated the heauens , who knowes not ? the nose most gracefully inflecting , made a handsome kind of pillaster to her forhead ; lips somewhat thinner , the receptacle of a meeke elocution , and celestial graces ; a great affabilitie of speach ; a singular modestie of gate ; a countenance , graceful without softnes or leuitie , graue without statelines , set alwayes in a perpetual sereanes , which hardly could admit the least impression of laughter . it were long to prosecute the rest ; i shal haue sayd al things , saying , she is the mother of god. but this dignitie when al the tongues , i say not of men only , but euen of the angels themselues , shal proclaime and set forth , doe what they can , shal be enforted to cry out : de dilecta nunquam satis . the plat-forme of the garden . wherefore , my genivs , i would wish thee , to enter into the large , spacious , and ample garden of our sacred parthenes , and there behold those specious , and most delicious obiects ; all , so wholy consecrated to her seruice , that they seeme as borne to expresse her prayses ; euerie one , to help thee out , to accomplish and performe this task so hard to vndertake , and impossible to be done so worthily , as she deserues . goe , i say ; suruey her garden , beset with the bashful rose , the candid lillie , the purple violet , the goodlie heliotropion , sprinckled al with dewes , which the busie bee gathers as it falles from the heavens , dressed with an iris , as with a siluer moon , insteed of a torch , and enameled with miriads of starres , as lesser lamps , to afford it light , in the obscuritie of the night ; enclosed round , and compassed-in with a wal , where on an olive , you may behold the iollie philomel to pearch , chanting her roundelayes ; and on the other side , a flourishing and statelie palme ; and likewise see a goodlie hovse of pleasure , standing therin before you ; and if you mark it wel , you shal discerne that domestical and almost inseparable companion therof , the hen , there scraping in the dust for food , wherin she finds a precious margarit or pearl ; and on the top therof espy an innocent and meek dove , as white and candid , as the driuen snow ; for in this garden are al things pure . where likewise in a place more eminent and conspicuous then the rest , you may behold a faire and beautiful fovntain , artificiously contriued with pipes so vnder ground , as waters al , when need requires . and if , my genius , al these wil not suffise , to make vp ful thy quire of laudes , to magnify thy sacred parthenes , ascend vpon that movnt before thy face ; and with an opticon discouer thence , the ocean sea , and inuite it likewise with the rest , to beare a part ; and for a fuller complement of al , waue but a little banner to some ship or other , to come-in with al her fraught of magnificent prayses . for al within ken or view of that same movnt , are subiects and deare deuotes of our sacred and incomparable parthenes . but soft , my genius ; ere thou leade thy reader into the maze or labyrinth of the beauties therin contained , pause heer a while , to consider how to behaue thy self , before ( i say ) thou let him in , to speculate that magazin of beauties ; which being so mysterious and delicious an obiect , requires not to be rashly lookt vpon , or perfunctoriously to be slighted ouer , but , as the manner is of such as enter into a garden , to glance at first theron with a light regard , then to reflect vpon it with a better heed , to find some gentle mysterie or conceipt vpon it , to some vse or other ; and then liking it better , to reuiew the same againe , and so to make a suruey thervpon to the same vse . this would i haue thee punctually obserue in al , to guide thy reader with , in this present garden of our sacred parthenes . first then shalt thou presente him with the symbol it self , set-forth in manner of a deuise , with an imprese and motto , expressing the allusion to the sacred parthenes herself , in some mysterie of hers , or attribute belonging to her . then shalt thou take the imprese being the symbol by itself , and dallie as it were with some natural and apt character vpon it ; being no more , then certain superficial glances , deciphering it in some sort , but lightly only , for a first entertainment of thy reader . thē with morals , on the motto , shalt thou but touch or reflect vpon the paragon herself for the present , and no more . then looking back with a fresh reuiew on the symbol itself , by way of an essay , shalt thou make a fuller suruey therof , discoursing on the paragon herself , to match compare , and paralel them togeather , to find out some elogies or other , in prayse of our sacred parthenes . thence to satisfy the eye as wel as the vnderstanding , for his greater delight , thou shalt pause a while , to leade him to behold , as in a tapestrie , the symbol turned into an embleme , piously cōposed ; where for the clearer vnderstanding therof , the same shal be indicatiuely expressed in a poesie , made for the purpose . then shalt thou make him sit downe a while , to ponder , consider , and contēplate some things besides , conducing to the further discouerie of the hidden mysterie , contained in the symbol itself , to the honour of our sacred parthenes , as certain speculations or theories theron . and after al , shalt thou inuite him to apostrophize with the paragon parthenes herself , vnder the symbol so handled , being the vtmost scope , and ful fruition of the whole ; and so conclude the peece with some boone or suite , correspondent to the present occasion , in euerie one . and this method would i haue thee keepe in al. now then , being thus admonished , i licence , and freely giue thee leaue , to leade thy reader first into her priuate garden ( for princes , you must know , and great ladies too , besides their publick , haue some priuate garden of their owne ) where , though enclosed , yet with the wings of contemplation , may he secretly view , reflect , reuiew , suruey , delight , contemplate , and enioy the hidden and sublime perfections therin , and lastly obtaine , no doubt , anie reasonable suite at the hands of the sacred parthenes in respect thereof , for his reward . the i. symbol . the garden . the devise . the character . the garden is a goodlie amphitheater of flowers , vpon whose leaues , delicious beauties stand , as on a stage , to be gazed on ; and to play their parts , not to see so much ; as to be seen ; and like wantons to allure with their looks , or enchant with their words , the ciuets and perfumes they weare about them . it is euen the pride of nature , her best array , which she puts on , to entertaine the spring withal . it is the rich magazin or burse of the best perfumes or roman wash : a poesie of more worth , then a bal of pomander , to make one grateful where he comes ; the one being sweetly sweet , the other importunely . it is a monopolie of al the pleasures and delights that are on earth , amassed togeather , to make a dearth therof els-where , and to set what price they list vpon them ? it is the precious cabinet of flowrie gems , or gems of flowers : the shop of simples in their element , delighting rather to liue delicious in themselues at home , where they are bred , then changing their conditions , to become restoratiues to others ; or to dye to their beauties , to satisfy the couetous humour of euerie apothecarie , to enrich himself with their spoyles . it is the pallace of flora's pomps , where is the ward-robe of her richest mantles , powdred with starres of flowers , and al embroadred with flowrie stones . it is the laughter and smile of nature : her lapful of flowers , and the garland she is crowned with in triumphs . it is a paradice of pleasures , whose open walks are tarrases , the close , the galleries , the arbours , the pauillions , the flowrie bancks , the easie and soft couches . it is , in a word , a world of sweets , that liue in a faire communitie togeather , where is no enuie of another's happines , or contempt of others pouertie ; while euerie flower is contented with its owne estate ; nor would the dazie wish to be a rose , nor yet the rose contemnes the meanest flower . the morals . sacer principi . it is a maxime in al arts : there is no rule without exception . and sanctuaries , we know , in al good christian common-wealths haue been euer allowed of . who is he so rude ; that dares lay hands vpon the vessels marked with the prince's armes ? or who presumes to disannul or cancel his priuie or broad seals ? the prince's closet is shut to al , but to the prince himself . his signet is a key , that opens al the posterns of his court. there is no prince , who , besides his common treasure , hath not a priuat casket of his owne . when the world was drowned , there was an ark , that safely floted on the mayne ; nor al the cataracts of heauen , were able to ouerwhelme it . the iewes indeed had their citties of refuge , and the king of iewes no lesse his sanctifyed cittie . it was a great praculum to violate the immunities of those ; what think you then of his priuat cittie ? hath he a cittie for himself , and not a garden priuate to himself ? doubtles he hath . he hath then a priuate garden of his owne ; and keeps the keys himself . long liue the prince then , to enioy his garden ; and cursed be he ; that shal but with the mouth or hart seeme to violate the sacred closures of his garden . quia principi sacer . the essay . i wil not take vpon me to tel al ; for so of a garden of flowers , should i make a labyrinth of discourse , and should neuer be able to get forth . cast but your eyes a little on those goodlie allies , as sowed al ouer with sands of gold , drawne-forth so streight by a line . those cros-bowes there ( be not affrayed of them ) they are but cros-bowes made of bayes ; and the harquebusiers , wrought in rosmarie , shoot but flowers , and dart forth musk . those beasts likewise , horrible there and dreadful to see to , are but in ieast ; al that menace they make , is but a shew only . al those armed men with greenish weapons , and those beasts al clad in skins of green , are but of prim , isop , and tyme , al hearbs very apt to historify withal . i wil quite passe ouer those little groues , thickets , and arbours , and speake nothing of those pety-canons there and quiristers , chanting their complines in the euening , and nocturnes in the night , mingling their prettie mottets , which nature learnes them , of their owne accord . nor wil i heer speake a word of those water-works , conduits , and aquaducts , which yet might you heare to make a gentle murmur throughout , affording an apt base for the birds to descant on . i hast me to the flowers only most proper to our garden heer . behold , i pray , those bushes , al enameled with roses of so manie sorts ; these heer apparrelled with the white of innocencie ; those there with a scarlet tincture ; one wel-nigh withered embalmes the ayre with its perfume , and makes a shew with its golden threads , and al its treasure ; that other is yet in its folds , and dares not hazard so much as to peepe forth ; this heer puts forth the bud , and now half-open smiles withal , and shewes forth a glimps of its purple , through a cliff of the green cafe , wherein it is ; which the theeuish birds would soone come to steale away , were it not for the garrison of thornes , that serues for a corps-de-guard to that queene of flowers . behold there the lillies of ten sorts ; some yet hidden in their green cups ; others half borne ; and the rest newly disclosed . what think you ? are they not exceeding faire ? you would say , they were of white satin , streaked without , and al embroadered within with gold ; you can hardly tel , whether they be milk condensed into leaues , or figured snow , or siluer flower-de-lis'd , or a starre al musked . those yellow ones , would you not verily think them to be golden bels ? and that red one , a little purse of crimson-satin ? and those others , some goodlie vessels of emeralds , or the like ? but marke a while ; see you not those beds strewed with a thousand violets ? some yellow , some purple , some white , some speckled , and some party-couloured , some carnashion , and some changeable . behold those faire and beautiful tulips there ; those rich amaranths , cerulean hiacinths , pansies , the gemmes of the goodlie iris ; the scarlet gilloflower , the pinks , the marygolds , and a thousand other flowers . o what a paradice of flowers is this ! what a heauen of muskie starres , or celestial earth al starred with flowers , empearled with gemmes and precious stones ! a land of promise , ful of milk and honie ! behold , i say , the rose , dedicated ( they say ) to that little elf cupid ; whose threads are as golden hayres ; whose thornes in steed of arrowes ; whose fire , a flash of luster ; and whose leaues are wings ; few can touch it , without touch of loue vnto it ; and it costs them deare , who meddle with it . the lillie hangs the head downe ; for modestie , i suppose ; though it can not blush , for hauing nothing to blush at ; her flower being al so white and without spot . they say , she was borne of the milk of iuno ; howsoeuer she is called the royal flower , the rose of iuno . note there the humilitie of the violet , how like to the strawberrie she keeps by the ground , hiding , what she can , her beautie in her leaues , but is discouered whether she wil or no ; partly by the flashes of her luster , breaking forth vnawares betweene the leaues , not so reserued as they ought ; and partly with the odour she can not choose but send forth . the tulip is a singular ornament to this garden ; looke and obserue it wel . how were it possible , one would think , so thin a leaf , bred and nourished in the same ayre , and proceeding from the same stem , should be golden in the bottome , violet without , saffron within , bordered on the edge with fine gold , and the prickle of the point blew as a goodlie saphir ? and a hundred others of seueral fashions , as if they had striuen to dresse themselues to put the eyes into paine , not knowing where to bestow themselues . there againe , may you note another , not vnlike to a columbin , very gracious to see to , enameled with drops of gold , and a thousand other the like varieties ; so as of necessitie we must needs confesse , that god is very admirable in his works , since on so poore a thing , as a slender stalk , grow such a number of excellent varieties . and now i addresse myself to thee , the soueraigne and mystical garden itself , the paragon of gardens . the discovrse . i speake not heer of the couent-garden , the garden of the temple , nor that of the charter-house , or of grayes-inne walkes , to be had and enioyed at home ; nor of the garden of padua , or of mountpelier , so illustrious for simples , i speake not of the gardē of hesperides , where grew the golden apples , nor yet of tempe , or the elizian fields . i speake not of eden , the earthlie paradice , nor of the garden of gethsemany , watred with bloud flowing from our sauiour's precious bodie : but i speake of thee , that garden so knowne by the name of hortvs conclvsvs ; wherein are al things mysteriously and spiritually to be found , which euen beautifyes the fairest gardens : being a place , no lesse delicious in winter , then in summer , in autume , then in the spring ; and wherin is no season to be seen , but a perpetual spring ; where are al kinds of delights in great abundance , that can possibly be deuised ; where are faire and goodlie allies , streight and euen , strewed al with sands , that is , a streight , vertuous , and angelical life , yet strewed with the sands and dust of her proper humilitie ; where are arbours to shadow her from the heats of concupiscence ; flowrie beds to repose in , with heauenlie contemplations ; mounts to ascend to , with the studie of perfections : where are hearbs , and simples , soueraigne medicines of al spiritual maladies , where ( i say ) are the flowers of al vertues : the lillie of spotles and immaculate chastitie , the rose of shamfastnes and bashful modestie , the violet of humilitie , the gilloflower ol patience , the marygold of charitie , the hiacinth of hope , the svn-flower of contemplatiō , the tulip of beautie and gracefulnes . in this garden enclosed are certain risings to be seen of hils in eleuations of mind , and valleys againe in depressions and demissions of the same mind , through annihilation ; heer likewise are vines of spiritual gladnes , and groues of a retired solitude , to be found . heer whole quiers of angels are accustomed to to sing their alleluyas , at al howers , in lieu of the phil●mels in the silence of the night ; in steed of the larks , at the hower of prime ; in place of the thrush , the linet , and canarie-bird , at al howers . heer spring the limpid fountains of al graces ; whence streame the little rils and brooks watering the paradice on al sides , and thence abundantly flowing to the rest of mortals . heer are pooles for the harmles fry of her innocent thoughts , like fishes heer and there to passe vp and downe in the heauenlie element of her mind ; heer and there certain labyrinths formed in the hearbs of her endles perfections . heer lastly are statues of her rare examples to be seen , obelisks , pyramides , triumphal arches , aqua-ducts , thermes , pillars of eternal memorie , erected to her glorie , in contemplation of her admirable , angelical , and diuine life . but that which sets forth and adornes this incomparable and mysterious garden most , is the special priuiledge and prerogatiue it hath , not only ouer al the gardens of the world besides , but euen also of the terrestrial paradice itself ; for that the garden of eden , or terrestrial paradice , was not so exempt from sinne , but the place where sinne began ; and was not so free from the serpent , but that he could get-in and work the mischief ; so as for auoyding more enfuing dangers , it was necessarie to place at the gates therof for euer after , an angel-porter of the order of the cherubins , with a fierie and two-edged sword , to guard the same . wheras this garden ( our ladie ) was a garden shut-vp indeed frō the beginning , and diuinely preserued immaculate , from her first conception , adorned with al those sorts of flowers and plants of graces , vertues , and perfections i mentioned aboue ; whereto no serpent , nor original sinne , much lesse actual , could haue acces , but was alwayes euen from her first beginning , a most delicious paradice and garden shut-vp from al inuasions of enemies . the embleme . the poesie . the virgin was a garden round beset with rose , and lillie , and sweet violet . where fragrant sentss , without distast of sinne , inuite● god the sonne to enter in . but it was clos'd : * alma's shut vp , we know , what gard'ner then might enter in to sow ? or plant within this eden ? or , what birth might be expected from a virgin-earth ? the holie-spirit , like a subtile wind , peercing through al , only a way could find . as th' earth brought forth at first , how 't is not knowne : so did this garden , which was neuer sowne . the theories . contemplate first , how our lord god had planted a paradice of delights , that is , the virgin marie , from the beginning , to wit , in the east ; wherin he placed man , whom he had framed , because indeed he put christ in her womb , through the operation of the holie-ghost . which place in truth is very pleasant ; because whatsoeuer is delightful in a garden , was abundantly found in her : there being the cedar of high contemplation , the cypres of odoriferous fame and sanctitie of life , the lawrel of constancie , the palme of glorious victorie , the mulberrie of patience , the myrtle of mortification , the oliue of mercie , the almond of fruitfulnes , the fig-tree of deliciousnes , the plane-tree of fayth ; for the plane hath leaues like to our escuchions , or targets , and therefore signifyeth fayth ; for that fayth is a target against the temptations of the diuel ; but especially the tree of life , whereof s. augustin sayth thus : the virgin marie is sayd to be a paradice , in the midst wherof is the tree of life , with whose leaues the sick are cured , whose odour reuiues the , dead , whose tast sweetens the bitter , whose shadow refreshes the wretched , and whose aspect reioyceth the angels . consider then the amenitie and pleasure of this garden of our ladie . for there were pomgranats , that is , an ordination of vertues , and a wonderful sweetnes of deuotion ; for loe , pomgranats haue their graines disposed in an admirable order , and are indeed most delicious fruits ; to which kind of apples the spouse inuites her spouse , saying : let my beloued come into his garden , and eate the fruit of his apples . there likewise was the cypres with nara , that is odoriferous fame and profound humilitie ; because the cypres is an oderiferous tree , and the nard a most humble hearb . there was nard and saffron , to wit , feruent charitie , and humilitie of celestial contemplation ; because the nard is a hot hearb ; and saffron hath a golden colour . there were canes and cinamon , withal the trees of libanus ; because in her was a singular puritie of conscience , an excellent odour of good fame , and incorruptibilitie of the flesh . for the cane hath its vertue in the pith ; the cinamon hath its odour in the bark ; and the wood of libanus is incorruptible : and lastly was there both mirrh and alloes , with al the prime vnguents ; because in her was bitternes of tribulation for her sonne 's passion , the bitternes of compassion for the affliction of the miserable ; and the sweetnes of deuotion was in her mind . for mirrh and alloes are bitter ; and the vnguents sweet and delicious . ponder lastly these words of the canticles : come southern wind , and blow vpon my garden , and the spices shal flow forth . where by the southern wind is vnderstood the breath of the holie-ghost . for the south-wind is a hot , humid , and fruitful wind ; which euen blew in the virginal garden of our ladie , for that it made her hot through charitie , humid through pietie , and fruitful through plentie of good works : and so flowed she with odoriferous spices , whose odour as balme did recreate god ; and like cinamon comforted the whole world : because cinamon cōforts the stomack ; and like vnto mirrh did driue away diuels ; for that indeed the smel of mirrh expels the wormes . the apostrophe shal be made to the incomparable virgin , as to the abstract of perfections , in this or the like manner : o most soueraigne princesse , ladie of paradice , yea a paradice itself of al perfections : most pure virgin , most chast spirit , virgin ful of grace , mirrour of puritie , pattern of sanctitie , sunne of chastitie , model of innocencie , image of vertue , example of perfection , vessel of singular pietie , mother and mistris of christian religion , blessed band , delicious garden , the deuotion of the whole world : be al vertues , o my dear aduocat , afforded me . o ladie , soueraigne creature among the pure ; obtaine them for me , i beseech thee from the bottome of my hart , through the sweetnesses of thy immaculate conception , and thy blessed child-birth ; through the sweet nourishment of the precious milk , giuen to thy sonne , god and man , the king of kings ; by those sacred and diuine kisses , which thou so reuerently gauest him in his tender infancie . o grant me those flowers of thy delicious garden , i beseech thee ; and after al , to behold thee triumphant in the celestial paradice . the ii. symbol . the rose . the devise . the character . the rose is the imperial queene of flowers , which al doe homage to , as to their princesse , she being the glorie and delight of that monarchie . she is herself a treasurie of al sweets , a cabinet of musks , which she commends to none to keepe , but holds them folded in her leaues ; as knowing wel , how little conscience is made of such stealths . if anie haue a wil to seeke diamonds among flowers , he may seeke long enough ere he find them ; but if a rubie he seekes for , the rose is a precious rubie . it is the darling of the garden-nimphs , and the cause sometimes perhaps of much debate betweene them , while each one striues to haue it proper to herself , being made for al , and is verily enough for al. it is the pallace of the flowrie numens , enuironed round with a court-of-guard about her , that stand in a readines with iauelins in hand , and the qui va la in the mouth , with whom is but a word and a blow , or rather whose words are blowes , that fetch the bloud . it is the metropolis of the graces , where they hold their cōmon-wealth , and where the senat of al odoriferous spices keepe their court. it is the chiefest grace of spouses on their nuptial dayes , and the bride wil as soone forget her fillet as her rose . it is the maister-peece of nature in her garden-works , and euen a verie spel to artizans to frame the like ; for though perhaps they may delude the eye , yet by no meanes can they counterfeit the odour , the life , and spirit of the rose . when flora is disposed to deliciate with her minions , the rose is her adonis , bleeding in her lap ; the rose her ganimed , presenting her cups ful of the nectar of her sweets . it is euen the confectionarie-box of the dantiest conserues , which nature hath to cherish-vp herself with , when she languisheth in autumne . the cellarie of the sweetest lickours , either wine or water ; her wines being nectars , and her waters no lesse precious then they , whose dryed leaues are the emptie bottles . in a word , the rose for beautie is a rose , for sweetnes a rose , and for al the graces possible in flowers , a verie rose ; the quintessence of beautie , sweets , and graces , al at once , and al as epitomized in the name of rose . the morals . casto perfvsa rvbore . it is a cōmon saying : the honest bridegroome , and the bashful bride . for so when rebecca first was brought to the youthful isaac , as a spouse , she put her scar for veile before her eyes . so rachel did , and manie others . lucretia the chast chose rather to wallow in her bloud , then to suruiue her shame , wherin she blushed indeed , but yet without cause ; for yet stil she remaynes in al mens mouths , the chast lucretia . the hart and cheeks haue their intelligences togeather , and the purest bloud is messenger betweene them . the hart is put into a fright ; the obsequious bloud comes-in anon , and asks : what ayle you , sir ? goe , get you vp , and mount to the turret of the cheeks , my onlie friend , and cal for help ; the bloud obeyes , and makes the blush , that rayseth such alarmes , intender virgins most especially . what feares the virgin , when she blushes so ? the wrack of her honour ; you wil say . how so ? is honour in the bodie , or the mind ? if in the mind , the mind is a citadel impregnable , not subiect to violence , nor to be betrayed , but by itself . then blush not , virgin , for the matter ; thy hold is sure enough , and thou in safetie , if thou wilt thyself . but this of al other vertues , neuer is safe and secure enough ; this of al others feares the verie shadowes themselues , and trembles like an aspin-leaf at the least motions . now lookes she pale like a verie clowt ; and now through modestie , the colour moūtss into her cheeks , and there sets-vp his ruddie standard , as if the fort were his ; til feare againe preuayling , plucks it downe and these were the vicissitudes our sacred virgin had , when her glorious paranimph discoured his embassage to her in her secret closet , presenting her a shadow only , seeming opposite to her chast vow ; wher at she trembled in his sight , casto perfvsa rvbore . the essay . behold heer the princesse of flowers , the pearl of roses , with al its varieties : the damask rose , the musk-rose : the red , the cinamon , the carnation , the prouince , the white , the sauage rose ( which growes in the eglantines ) and lastly the golden rose , faire indeed to behold , but not so sweet . the rose growes on a speckled thorn , swelling into sharp or pointed buttons somwhat green , which riues by little and little , and opens at last , then vnbuttons and discloses its treasure , the sunne vnfolds it , and opens the lights and leaues , making it display itself , and take life , so affording it the last draught of beautie to its scarlet ; and now hauing perfumed it , and made the infusion of rose-water therinto , in the midst appeares , as in a cup , certain golden points , and little threds of musk or saffron , sticking in the hart of the rose . but to speake of the fires of its carnation , the snow of the white satin , the fine emralds , cut into little toungs round about , to serue as a trayne to wayt vpon it ; of the balme and ambergrees , that breathes from this little crop of gold , which is in the midst ; of the sharpnes of the thorns , that guard it from the little theeues , that would be nibling it away with their beaks ; of the iuice and substance , which being squeezed , embalmes al round about it , with its fauour , of a hundred hidden vertues ; as to fortify the hart , to cleer the cristal of the eyes , to banish clowds , to coole our heats , to stirre-vp the appetite , and a thousand the like , were a world to deale with ; but i hasten to the mistris-flower herself , who mysteriously sits in this goodlie oeconomic of sweets and beauties , as in her bower , wherin she delights to shrowd herself . the discovrse . two things in the rose chiefly doe i note : what inwardly it containes , and what vertue and qualitie the rose outwardly giues forth . it is strange , the same should be hot and cold togeather ; cold in the leaues , hot in the seed ; so as passions proceeding of excessiue heat , it alayes and qualifyes with its leaues ; and with the heat and vigour of its seeds , it quickens and virifyes the frigid and melancholie affections of the bodie . some men are tepid , yea cold in the loue of god ; they are so dul & stupid in diuine things , that they cannot rayse vp the mind from terreue and earthlie cogitations , to sublimer thoughts ; being immured with base affections . but our mystical rose , with the seed of grace in her , wherewith she was replenished , inflames their harts to the loue of god. oh seed of our rose ! she shal not feare her house for the colds of the snowes ; for al her houshold are cloathed double . this snow so cold , is a frigiditie of mind ; but against this cold she cloathes her deuotes with double suites of charitie , to god and their neighbour . some also are hot , and most desperatly inflamed with the fires of concupiscence ; these heats she tempers and extinguishes with the deawes of her refrigerating grace , as with the leaues or mantle as it were of her gracious protection . the rose , the more it is wrung or pressed , the sweeter odour it sends forth , and yealds such a redolent fragrancie withal , that al are wonderfully taken with the odoriferous breath it giues : and this our rose , the more she was wrung and pressed with the cruel fingar of tribulations and afflictions , the greater her sanctitie appeared . being banished into aegypt , she gaue forth a most fragrant odour of patience , wherewith she embalmed al aegypt , and fructifyed afterwards into an infinit race of deuotes , to her and her sonne ; witnes the pauls , the anthonies , the hilarions , the macarians of aegypt . in the passion of her sonne , transfixed with the sword of sorrow , she yealded a sweet perfume of perfect fayth . in other afflictions and tribulations she imparted the communicatiue odour of compassion . for the tormēts which he suffered of the iewes , she sent vp the fragrancie of thanks-giuing to the heauenlie father , from the thurible of her hart. and in the desolation she felt after his ascension , for the absence of her beloued , she powred forth incense of her holie desires and incomparable deuotion . after al which odours , o giue me leaue , most sweet and odoriferous rose , through desires and deuotion to runne after thee ; or , doe thou but draw me after thee , vnto the odour of thine oyntments . the rose growes on thorns , but puts not on their nature ; the thorns are churlish and rough , while the rose is sweet and gentle . and our rose sprung indeed from the thornie stock of the iewish race , but yet tooke nothing of the condition of thorns with her . the iewes were prowd and haughtie , she most humble ; they ful of vices , she fully replenished with grace ; the iewes , we see , are infidels , she the pattern and mirrour of fayth ; the iewes couetous of earthlie and terrene things , and she most thirsting after celestial . she sprung likewise from the thornie eua ; but yet tooke not after her nature . o thou virgin ( sayth s. bernard ) most flourishing rod of iesse ! through whom was recouered in the branch , what had perished in the root ! eua was a branch of bitternes , marie a branch of eternal sweetnes . an admirable and most profound dispensation of the diuine wisedome ! that such a rod should grow from such a root ; such a daughter from such a mother ; such a free-borne from such a bond-slaue ; such an empresse from such a captiue ; from so dry a thorn , so flourishing a rose . what the rose giues outwardly forth , are the objects of three principal senses : of seing , smelling and touching ; and for the first , who sees not , that hath the benefit of eyes , how gorgeous the rose is among al the flowers of the garden , alluring and attracting the eyes of al that enter into it ? so our incomparable rose , was exceeding faire ; and with incredible beautie , seemed gracious and amiable to the eyes of al. she was a glad spectacle vnto god , men , and angels ; to god , because so specious to her sonne , her spouse , her god. the king desires thy beautie , and sayes therefore : shew me thy face , for thy face is comelie . vnto men , she was so admirable for beautie and grace , that s. denys , that great light of the militant church , beholding her , acknowledged himself to haue been dazeled , and nigh transported from himself . and for the angels , heare what the prophet sayes : al the rich of the people , shal implore thy countenance . and who are these rich , but the angels , who beyond others enioy the riches of the heauenlie kingdome ? whence she is sayd to be the glorie of hierusalem , the gladnes of israel , the honour of her people . as for the odour she gaue-forth of her sanctitie , it is sayd : the odour of thy garments ; which is of her outward vertues , being as the odour of incense , a grateful sacrifice to god , which recreates those that are edifyed therewith . and for the sense of touching in the rose , it is vnderstood in a spiritual sense . heare s. bernard : why feares human frailtie to approach to marie ? you shal find nothing terrible ; she is wholy sweet and gentle ; and being so sweet , is therefore to be sought-for , and embraced through deuotion . take her then , and she shal exalt thee ; when thou shalt embrace her , thou shalt be glorified by her . the embleme . the poesie . the virgin sprung euen from the barren earth , a pure white rose was in her happie birth , conceau'd without a thorne . this onlie flower the father rays'd by his almightie power . when th' angel said , she should conceaue a sonne , she blushed , & asked , how it should be donne ? the holie-ghost inflam'd , & so the white by him was made a damask firie bright . lastly her sonne made her purple red , when on the crosse his precious bloud was shed ▪ no faith of mortals then but had a staine , excepting hers ; for she was died in graine . the theories . contemplate first , a gallant and odoriferous rose , growing on a pricklie and thornie stemme , and men with admiration to stand pointing at it , saying to one another : what is that , there so shot-vp , so beautiful to behold , from so ragged , sharp , and harsh a thorn ? and then ponder , how the angels stood amazed , seing so our mystical rose transplanted from hierico , into the heauenlie paradice ; or ascending rather so flourishing from the desert , when there was like questioning amongst them , at her glorious assumption , asking : who it was , that ascended flowing with delights ? consider then the rose , while it growes in the garden , and flourisheth , as it were aliue ; how it cheeres and glads the eyes of al with its glorious presence ; and how , after it is cropt from its stemme also , which is the death of the said rose , what an odour it hath with it , euen after it hath been persecuted with fire in the fournace of the stil , as wel in the water , as in the cake ; and then think , what a mirrour and pattern of sanctitie our ladie was , during her abode heer in the garden of the world ; and how she multiplied her fauours to man-kind , especially after she was translated thence , and had been proued and exercised with infinit tribulations , leauing an vnspeakable odour behind , of miracles and graces ; witnes the innumerable votes that hang on her tēples and chapels throughout the world . ponder lastly , that of roses are made , sometimes electuaries , sometimes oyles , sometimes playsters , and conserues very soueraigne and medicinal for manie diseases , namely foure : for first , the rose fortifyes the stomack , and comforts the hart ; secondly , it stops the flux of the venter ; thirdly , it clarifyes the eyes ; and finally , heales the head-ach . so our mystical rose comforts the hart , in affording it the charitie of god ; restraines the flux of sinnes , through the feare of god , which she giues to eschew sinnes withal ; clarifyes the eye of the vnderstanding , by imparting to it the knowledge of diuine things ; and cures the head , which is hope , being the helmet of health , when she rayseth our tepid hope , to desire celestial things ; and therefore sayth : i am the mother of fayre dilection , of feare , of knowledge , and of holie hope . the apostrophe . flower of flowers , o rose of roses , o flower of roses , o rose of flowers ! shore me vp with flowers , because i languish for loue of thy loue iesvs , the bud of thee , ô rose , little in thy womb greater in thine armes , & then fayrest of al , when opened throughly and displayed on the crosse. by that precious bud of thine , i beseech thee , and the sheading of his most precious bloud , thou wouldst change my thorns into roses ; and present me , as a rose of sweet odours , to thy sonne , and not as thorns for fuel of the fire of his indignation . o grant me this , i beseech thee ; and heer doe i present thee , in honour of thee , the mystical rose , and thy sonne , thy soueraigne bud , the hymne that followes : salue christi sacra parens , flos de spina , spinâ carens , flos , spinati gloria . nos spinetum , nos peccati spinâ sumus cruentari ; sed tu spinae nescia . the iii. symbol . the lillie . the devise . the character . the lillie is the scepter of the chast diana ; whose flower-deluce , the crowne ; and stemme , the handle ; which she chastly wealds amidst the nimphs of flowers . it is a siluer-bel , without sound to the eare , but ful of sweets to the brim ; and where it can not draw the eares , the eyes it wil ; and inebriats the curious with its ouer-sweets . it is a box of ciuets , which opens to the zephirs , and prodigally powers forth its spices to the standers round-about , though they come not very nigh it , flora it seemes hath no other purse , then this of candid saffron , without strings to shut it vp ; so prodigal she is of her sweets which she wel knowes can neuer al be disbursed . who had not seen a lillie heertofore , especially the flower-deluce , the prince of lillies , would start ( no doubt ) as with the sight of a garden-comete , and cal in his friends perhaps to gaze on a blazing starre or garden-miracle . it is the ensigne of france , euen vying with the brittish or lancastrian whiter rose ; if not so happie for her vnion with the red , the ensigne of peace , yet in this more happie , that she neuer was diuided , to haue need of such a vnion , as euer standing of herself . it is a quiuer of amourous shafts , with golden heads , which some cal hammers rather , against lust , to blunt the thorns of lewd concupiscence . a verie purselin cup , replenished within , with the rarities of nature , enough to stupify and astonish the curious in the search of secrets . it is besides a precious pot of the purest alablaster , filled with the inualuable spicknard of arabia ; for sent and odour , as it were , fellow vnto that , the blessed magdalen powred on her maister 's head ; and if you wil not beleeue me , approach but to the vessel itself , and you shal feel it streight . to say no more , no snow is found to be more white then it , nor giues a greater flash of lightning in the eyes then it , that sweetly dazels and not duls the sight . the morals . niveo candore nitescen they are truly chast , whose mind and bodie neuer yet admitted stayne in the virgin-wax of their pure integritie , in either part . chast is she held to be , and so is truly , that vowes her chastitie , and keepes the same , howbeit once stayned perhaps , at least with impurities of mind , and washed againe with the lauer made of the purest bloud of the immaculate lamb , she seemes indeed to follow the lamb , wheresoeuer he goes . the turtle-widowes are accompted chast , and so they are , that hauing lost their virginal integritie , are re-borne anew , as it were , both in mind and bodie , with a chaster purpose , neuer more to choose another earthlie mate , or turtle-doue , to follow and consort withal ; but insteed of such , make choice to linck themselues from thence-forth to a heauenlie spouse ; and who , trow you , but the spouse of spouses ? and that for euer . the vestal-virgins were esteemed such by al their flamins , though they had but a bodilie integritie , and no more , while the mind perhaps was secretly a prostitute to al impurities . and if there was anie of them , as some there might be , who kept both the one and other sort of purities indeed , yet were they not vowed perpetually to be such ; and so were chast , though they shined not with that snowie chastitie ; which , if it be , were , and euer shal be so , is not yet the perfectest chastitie of al , nor anie way such , as the queen of virgins was , and therefore worthily sayd to be : niveo candore nitescens . the essay . when nature is in her cheefest iolitie , she tapistryes the whole vniuers with a world of delicious flowers . and to say truth , these flowers are euen the smiles and laughters of the earth , that sees herself now deliuered of the cruelties of the winter , and long captiuitie . she seemes therin to take pleasure , recreate , and disport herself ; to diaper the face of the earth in a thousand fashions , enameled with as manierarities ; while the gentle breaths of zephirus , with the sweet influences of heauen , mixing their moystures , with the heats of the april-sun , make that whole diuersitie , which is in the bosome of the earth , al sowed-ouer with a thousand seeds , now mortifyed with the austerities of the winter . when they are come forth , nature solicitous of these treasures so odoriferous , seekes to guard them carefully , and adorne them curiously ; arming some with thorns , others with prickles ; couering these with rough , and others with large and shadie leaues , to conserue their luster . amōg the which the lillie carries hers very long , and green , the stem , high and round , streight , vnited , fat , & firme , al clothed with leaues . on the top wherof , grow out as it were certain wyers , with heads therō , or buttons somewhat long , of the coulour of the hearb , which in time grow white , and fashion themselues in forme of a bel of satin or siluer . from the bottome and hart therof , grow vpright , some litle wyers of gold , with heads like hammers of the same . the leaues wherof , of an exquisit whitnes , al streaked and striped without , goe enlarging themselues , like a bel , as before is sayd . the seed remaines in these hammers of gold . the stem to carrie the head the better , is knotted and strengthned through-out ; for that the lillie is euer with the head hanging down-wards , and languishing , as not able to beare vp itself . there are some of them red , some of them azure . these are al so delicious , that euen to behold them were a great delight . the discovrse . the liseron is a lillie also , though a bastard of that kind , without odour and those wyers aboue , made as an essay , or practice , and first draught of nature , endeuouring so to forme patterns , to frame some maister-piece of the true flower-deluce , the prince of lillies . our incomprable virgin is this flower-deluce , that princesse of lillies , for the manie sympathies and faire resemblances it hath with it . the lillie is white without , and gold within , and both within and without , most fragrant and odoriferous ; and the blessed virgin was most faire and beautiful in her flesh , through the candour of her virginitie : she , the candour of the eternal light ; and the glasse without spot . in mind she was al inflamed , as the burnisht gold , gold ( as aristotle sayth ) can not be corrupted ; nor could her charitie be euer extinguished . for , manie waters , as it is sayd , can not extinguish charitie . and how sweet she was both inwardly and outwardly , who sees not , that considers her humilitie , in the lowlines of her hart within , and outwardly in her conuersation ? which humilitie of hers sent forth such an odour vnto god , as allured and attracted him to her : when the king was in his seaty , my nard gaue forth an odour : to wit , her humilitie : and these are the lillies : virginitie , humilitie , and charitie , which cheefly inuironed the blessed virgin , while her litle iesvs was hanging at her breast , being fed among lillies ; for if these be not lillies , what are they ? againe the lillie hath a streight stem or stalk , tending wholy and directed vpwards , but the leaues pendant and hanging downwards ; and the virgins mind like a staf was alwayes streight , and tending to god , in yealding him thanks for his benefits , and euer magnifying his holie name . for as the lillie whatsoeuer odour and candour it hath , directs it to heauen-wards : so marie , what sanctitie or grace soeuer she had , offered it vp al vnto god , but for the leaues , her words , they were alwayes bent to the earth , in speaking perpetually most humbly of herself . whence sayd she so affectuously : my soule doth magnify our lord ; behold the stem of this lillie , how streight it was , and how directly ascended to the heauens : but see the leaues now , and marke how they looke downwards : he hath regarded the lowlines of his handmayd , and the like . the lillie besides is alwayes fragrant , and of a most sweet odour ; and our lillie was perfumed with an odoriferous oyntment , which made her so fragrant and redolent , composed of three odoriferous spices : aromatizing as balme , mirrh , and cinamon . for she was embalmed by the diuinitie , when the deitie was lodged in her ; spiced with mirrh , through the guift of angelical puritie and virginitie ; and enflamed with a sweet diuine loue , which is as the powder of cinamon heer vnderstood , hot in smel , and tast ; hot in smel , and therefore as loue , draw me with the odour of thy oyntments , to wit , with the loue of thy heauenlie graces ; hot in tast , and therefore diuine ; because we are bid to see and tast , how sweet our lord is . of which oyntment it is sayd in the canticles : the odour of thine oyntments , is beyond al spices . besides , the lillie hath the root and stem , six-square or corner-wise . so the root of charitie in this paragon , hath six points with it : the first , a loue of god aboue al things ; the second , wherewith she loued her owne soule , conseruing the same in al sanctitie ; the third , wherewith she loued her bodie , keeping it entirely for the diuinitie ; the fourth , wherewith she loued her domesticks and familiars , instructing them in al vertue ; the fift , wherewith she loued her friends , in god ; the last , wherewith she loued her enemies , for god. and to conclude , as the bed-chambers of kings are adorned with lillies , that they may rest more deliciously among them ; so the virgin , not the chamber only of a king , but of god also , was dressed-vp and beset al with lillies round-about ; according to that : thy womb as a heap of corn hedged-in with lillies ; for she was al encompassed with lillies : aboue , being enclosed with the lillie of eminent charitie ; beneath , with the lillie of profund humilitie ; inwardly , with the lillie of internal puritie ; outwardly , with the lillie of virginitie ; on the right hand , with the lillie of temperance , in prosperitie ; on the left , with the lillie of patience , in aduersitie ; before , with the lillie of prouidence , in future things ; behind , with the lillie of gratitude , for passed benefits . and since she was so enuironed and enclosed with lillies of al sides , the church sings of her : as the dayes of the spring , doe the flowers of the roses enuiron her round . among which flowers of roses and lillies , the beloued , that is christ , is feeding : my beloued to me , and i to him , who seeds among the lillies . the embleme . the poesie . a pure-white lillie , like a siluer cup , the sacred virgin humbly offers vp . her constant , stedfast , lowlie hart ( the foot , which al supports ) is like this flower 's root . the stemme , her right intention ; & the bole ( the flower itself ) is her chast spotlesse soule . the yellow knobbes , which sprowting forth are seen , isradiant loue , which guild's her cup within . in lieu of liquides , is a fragrant sent : her vertues odours , which she doth present . her sonne accepts al , that she offers vp , god , part of her inheritance , & cup. the theories . contemplate first , how al thorns conceaue but thorns . for what should thorns conceaue but meerly thorns ? corrupt mothers bring forth into the world but men , which meerly are but men and sinners . but the virgin-mother conceaued the holie of holies . she now a lillie conceaued , and afterwards produced the true lillie of the vallies ; a lillie of virginitie , the lillie of maiestie : through whose candour is darknes expelled ; with whose odour , are raysed the dead ; with whose touch , are the leaprous cleansed , and al the infirme and diseased cured . and therefore how much this lillie of ours , is to be exalted aboue al the other daughters , iudge you , and ponder it wel . consider then , that though there were manie other virgins besides , conspicuons and eminent for sanctitie , yet were as thorns ; for that they had some blemish in them ; since , howbeit they were pure in themselues , yet the fomes of sinne was not extinguished in them ; who were indeed as thorns to others , that haue been touched and incited with concupiscence towards them . wheras the virgin-mother was wholy priuiledged from al guilt , in whom was that fomes altogeather extinguished , and was accomplished with so intense a chastitie , that with her inestimable virginal puritie , she so penetrated the harts of the beholders , as she could not be coueted of anie ; but for the time rather extinguished al lust of concupiscence in them . o beautie of virginitie and humilitie , wherewith the sonne of god was so allured and rauished ! ponder lastly , that as the lillie hath a most efficacious vertue against leaprosie , vlcers , and the holiefire , as also against the stinging of serpents : so the blessed virgin being conceaued as a lillie , was endued with such vertue of the diuine grace , that neither the leaprosie of original sinne , the fire of concupiscence , nor the biting of the old serpent , could anie wayes hurt her . the apostrophe . o lillie of lillies , and next the lillie ( thy dearest sonne ) the purest of al lillies . alas ! most pure and immaculat virgin , shal i alwayes liue in the flauerie and seruitude of this impure flesh of mine ? and shal i euer be troubled and vexed with these vnchast cogitations , and impure apprehensions ; which so macerate my vnwilling soule ? oh , thou eleuated and raysed aboue al pare creatures , most blessed virgin , i say blessed with al benediction ! how long ? alas ! how shal i sustaine the bodie of this death , this impure thistle of the bodie , with its thorns ? alas , when shal i be deliuered and rid therof ? the iv. symbol . the violet . the devise . the character . the violet is truly the hermitesse of flowers , affecting woods and forests , where , in a lowlie humilitie mixt with solicitude , she leads a life delicious in herself , though not so specious to the eye , because obscure . she is a great companion to the primrose , and they little lesse then sworne sisters ; with whom , when she is disposed , she wil recreate herself whole nights and dayes ; and you shal likely neuer find them farre asunder . when they are so in companie in the wood togeather , where she is bred and borne , they make an excellent enamel of blew and yelow ; but being by herself alone , as in her celle , she is a right amethyst . had iune been in quest ; to seeke her bird , as strayed in the woods , she would easily haue thought these purple violets had been her argoe's eyes , as shattered heere and there , and dropt downe from her peacocks trayne ; and so wel might hope to haue found her bird againe , as deere are traced by their footing . she is euen the wanton among leaues , that playes the bo-peep with such , as she is merrie and bold withal ; whom when you think you haue caught , and haue now already in your hand , she slips and leaues you mockt , while you haue but her scarf only , and not her self . she is the anchoresse , sending forth a fragrant odour of her sactitie , where she is not seen ; which she would hide ful faine , but can not . she is the herald of the spring , wearing the azure-coat of armes , and proclaiming sweetly in her manner to the spectatours the new arriuall of the wel-come guest . she is the primitiae or hastie present of flora , to the whole nature . where if the rose and lillie , be the queene and ladie of flowers , she wil be their lowlie handmayd , lying at their feet , and yet happely ( for worth ) be aduanced to lodge in the fayrest bosomes , as soō as they ; as being the onlie faire affecting obscuritie and to lye hid , which other beauties hate so much . the morals . hvmi serpens extollor honore . virginitie indeed is a specious and glorious thing , and hath somewhat of the angel with it : but yet nothing so happie as humilitie is , which hath in truth somewhat els withal , as it were diuine . virginitie and puritie inuited the word to take vp his lodging in the virginal womb ; but humilitie was it , that strook-vp the bargain between the immaculat hostesse and the diuine guest . and hence arose the source of al her aduancements . the angels are pure indeed , but lower then their nature is , they can not stoop ; since lucifer himself euen after his fal retained his nature stil , which he could not forgo : t●rice happie they , had they not aspired higher then they were indeed . but the eternal word could stoop so low , and really did , to be lesse then angels . if puritie then be a glorious , specious , and angelical thing , humilitie is a vertue more then angelical , as being diuine . the angels would faine haue risen higher , but could not ; they tryed their wings , and with that iearus ( that daring youth ) had a shameful fal . but the purest of al virgins in contemplation of the eternal word , readie to stoop so low , wheras she was to be truly the queen of angels , stiles heer herself the lowlie handmayd of our lord ; when creeping on the ground as low as might be , she came to be exalted to the highest dignitie next her sonne , in human nature , and might worthily say : hvmi serpens extollor honore . the essay . one would think , the authour of nature had made choice of the violet , to couch his enamel , and to make the delicatnes of his pencil shine therin , and the fairest coulours of the world , to border the mantle of the spring withal . there are some purple , but with the finest purple ; some as snow , fashioned into litle flowers , like curdled milk , and blazoned as with argent leaues , al sowen thick with little odoriferous starres : others are of ore musked , or of violcts metamorphosed into most sweet gold , cut into blossomes . there are some deckt with a hundred and a hundred leaues neatly fitted togeather , and al as grafted into one stemme , which casting themselues into a round and folding within one another through a sweet oeconomie , agree to frame and compose a very dayntie and delicious violet , as faire as sweet , mingling , with a gentle confusion , a thousand coulours , which simpathize exceeding wel , and glad the eye . behold the violet of march and april ; may and iune haue theirs a-part , being of a changeable coulour , hauing the top and edge of purple , white in the midst , and guilded beneath in the bottome . what a maruelous enamel to see the argent , the purple , the ore , and azure of the leaues , which shade round-about , al coming forth of a litle green tuft , from a litle sprig , with a string , that serues as a pipe for nature to distil her musks , that breathe from thence . the leaues are somewhat round in their peering forth , and iagged ; and then after extend they in length , and spread themselues . their great vertue comes from a litle fire wel tempered in them , and a sweet heat , which is the predominant qualitie of their complexion , and makes them sweetly bitter . to renew their forces againe , when they are decaying , they steep them in vinagre ; and it is incredible , the vertues these little flowers haue ; for they mollify hardnes , alay heats , and extinguish inflāmations : the iuyce softens the venter , dissipates and euacuats choler , sweetens the asperitie of the lights , alayes the fire that burns the breast ; with infinit other things , most soueraigne for vse . the discovrse . behold now the violet , which after the rose ( the queene of flowers ) and the lillie ( the honour of gardens ) i should think might follow wel in our ladyes garden , as an excellēt type or symbol of her . it is flower wel knowne to al , familiar and domestical with al nations . for where haue you a garden , that hath not store of them ? yea the woods togeather with the primrose seeme to be as strewed with them as tapistryes ; they are so diapred al-ouer with those flowers . and our glorious virgin is as easie and familiar to approach vnto , as it . the honour of this violet , is in the spring ; or rather is the violet , the honour of the spring . because the hoarie & horrid winter now passed ouer , and the rigid frosts and snowes dissolued , the pleasant season of the spring returning , the earth seemes to put forth the violet , as the primitias of flowers , togeather with the primrose her inseparable companion , to welcome it with ; a hastie present indeed , but yet a rare one . the spring of grace so appearing , and opening the breast , after so tedious a winter ouerpast , of horrid sinne and frozen infidelitie , our marie the violet , or the violet-marie rather , is put forth , as a ioyful present to glad the time withal . this flower i find now to affect the hils and mountains , though there want no store and plentie of them in the plaines and vallies also ; and , as gardiners vse to say , it loues to be transplanted to and fro . and so our violet heer was no lesse transplanted in her visitation , when she rifing vp , went hastily into the mountains . for loe , this violet sprung at first and grew in the vallies , to wit , of herself ; but was then transferred and remoued into the mountain of perfection , to the mountain of glorie , mountain of fame , honour , and exaltation : but yet was admirably planted in the valley of humilitie . a strange thing truly , and more then a garden-miracle , that our violet should stil remaine in the valley , and yet be placed on a mountain ! yea the higher she was exalted on the mountain , the better she was rooted in the valley : both on the same mountain , and in the same valley , at one and the self-same time . now , philosopher , tel me , what would you more ? can not the same thing be in two places at once ? it may ; marie on the hil of exaltation , and the self-same marie in the valley of demission , fulfilling therin the precept of the wife-man : how much greater thou art , do thou humble thyself in al. and now see , i pray , the haste the violet makes aboue al flowers , to entertaine the spring ; and then to behold our violet made to clime the mountaines , would make you wonder , to see her in such haste . for who would not admire to see a tender virgin , great with child , to fly from the valley , ouer hils and dales , through thick and thin , to the mountain-tops ? but yet wonder not , while we dayly see great engins moued , and that most swiftly too , by force of fire : god is our consuming fire . this fire then the virgin carried in her bosome ; she is stirred and excited with the blast of the holie-ghost , vnto offices of pietie . the fire breaks forth ; what maruel then , if it carries so the engine of the bodie with it ? i say , what maruel , while the spirit of god , whose symbol is fire , carries her so fast through publick places , to shun the aspect of men ( so contrarie to the inclination of virginal modestie ) to hide herself in the house of her cosen ? the violet , as the rose also , being planted neer the leek , or garlick , becomes more fragrant in odour ; so as the vngrateful sent of the one , giues a sweeter fauour vnto the other ; and therefore the gardiner plants it neer vnto them , to haue it send forth a greater odour . now the virgin-mother being in herself a most odoriferous violet aboue al other violets and roses of the world , breathed from herself the sweetest odour of al vertues . the odour of her garments were as the odour of the fulfield . but in her house at nazareth , which ●ignifyes flowerie , this violet shined lesse , and , as a violet , lay hid within her leaues . wherefore it seemed good to the expert gardiner , her heauenlie spouse in her womb , to transferre this violet with his spirit into the mountains of iudea , being places al set with garlick and leeks , as i may terme it ; where zacharie and elizabeth sat sheading of teares for the redemptsion of israel , the proper effect of those hearbs ; which she through her coming wiped away , and further gaue forth a greater odour of sanctitie , then euer ; for loe , she filled the whole house with the odour of her vertues . the embleme . the poesie . in heauen the humble angels god beheld ; and on the earth , with angels paralel'd , the lowlie virgin viewd ; her modest eye , submissiue count'nance , thoughts that did relye on him , that would exalt an humble wight , and make his mother . alma , ne're in sight , with vertues , fragrant odours , round beset , close to the earth lay like the violet ; which shrowded with its leaues , in couert lyes , found sooner by the sent , then by the eyes . such was the virgin rays'd to be heauens queene , who on the earth neglected , was not seene . the theories . contemplate first , how , as plinie sayth , the violet is soueraigne against the squinzi in the throat , the catharre in the eyes , and impostumes in the bodie . so s. iohn baptist was before his sanctification , being as vlcerous and impostumat , as we al before baptisme , through original sinne : elizabeth continually powring forth teares , for the barrenes and sterilitie as wel of the sinagogue , as of herself : and zacharie's throat being stopt with the squinzi of infidelitie , so as he could not speake . marie the violet entering into this hospital , the impostume● of iohn vanished , the defluxions of elizabeth ceased , and zacharie's squinzies were vnstopt ; and finally health was restored to the whole house . consider then againe , how , as plinie sayth , the seed of the violet , is the infallible destruction of the scorpion ; then which , what more expresly in symbolical theologie declares the mother of god to be a violet ? for this malediction was giuen by god against the accursed serpent , from the first beginning : i wil put enmities between thee and the woman ; and thy seed and her seed ; and she shal tread ( or it shal tread ) thy head . no seed more opposit to the scorpion , then that of the violet : nor none to the serpent so much , as the seed of the virgin , iesvs . ponder lastly , how the violet by some is called the flower of the trinitie ; perhaps for the triple coulour which is found therin : for that , as in the violet are seen the violet , the purple , and the golden coulour ; and as those coulours in the natural , so in the violet marie may you consider , the violet coulour of humilitie , the purple of her chasti●●e , and the golden coulour of maternitie or charitie in her ; since her charitie was the cause of her maternitie , and consequently , she the violet of a trinitie . the apostrophe . o faire and goodlie flower , the true aurora of the spring , the gladsome herbinger of the spring of grace , thou fairest of al flowers , and yet who holdst the lowest place , stil grounded in thy nothing ! o that this true contempt of my-self were planted once and rooted in the ground of my hart ! that this lowlines of hart , i say , o ladie violet , and humilitie of spirit , were imprinted for euer in my soule ! oh obtaine for me . alas ! due . i coniure and bes●e●h you to it , by al the reuerences and respects , which the sonne of god , the wisedome of the father , hath yealded you in heauen ; and which the great god your sonne no lesse hath afforded you on earth . the v. symbol . the heliotropion . the devise . the character . the heliotropion is the loftie cedar of flowers , wherin the sun , could he nestle himself , would choose of al the rest to build his neast ; for birds , we know , breed where they hant most , and delight to harbour and conuerse in , al the day . it is euen the eye , & nothing els but eye , to behold the sun ; which she neuer shuts , til he sincks down in tethis's bed ; where being drowned ouer head and eares , she wincks and shrowds herself the while , in the thin eyelids of her leaues , to meditate vpon him . it is the arsenal of crimson-flags displayed to the pithian apollo , in despite of mars , whom she adores as god of armes as wel as books ; wheras mars , if you take him from his speare and shield , can neither write nor reade . it is the gnomon of the garden , a dial artificially made in hearbs , to expresse al the howers of the day ; a verie needle , pointing to its radiant starre ; which being so restles as it is , makes her as restles euerie whit ; with this difference only , that he measures infinit degrees of heauens , and she as manie points . it is a verie mart of silks , sarcenets , taffeties , and satins , al of gingeline in graine , because in fashion . if the rose excel in sauour , which she professes not to vtter in her shop , she vowes to be more loyal and constant to her paramour , then it . she is so amourous , & dotes so much vpon him , that she can not liue without his conuersation ; which she hath so much , as she almost is turn'd and quite metamorphosied into him , and now become already in the garden , what he is in his zodiack , the true and real flower of the sun , or sun of flowers , as he himself the sun of starres , or that great starre they cal a sun. it is the true alferes of hearbs , bearing vp the standard of flora , amidst the rest of flowers ; the pharus , to direct the gardē-nimphs , whē they loose themselues in the labyrinth of flowrie knots or maze of flowers : the beacon al on fire , to giue warning to the rest of flowers of the arising of the sun , to beware of his parching rayes , for feare of withering before their times . it is euen the daphne of flowers , whom phoehus followes al the day ; and , if she fly , she hath her eye on her shoulder , to looke behind her , as she runnes . the morals . ad me conversio eivs . pictures likely are so framed , that be you in the roome , in anie part , they wil seeme to look vpon you . looke where the panther is , in woods and forests , there wil commonly other beasts resort , to look and gaze vpon him ; whether it be the beautie of his spotted coat , or sweetnes of his breath , which attracts , i know not ; but this is sure , the effect is so , as i haue heard . the turtle seemes to haue no eye but for his mate ; and where they sit togeather , their eyes wil be as glued vpon each other . the pole that drawes the needle to it , the load-stone that attracts the iron , the ieat that puls the fescue , what is it el's but a natural instinct , or moral rather i may say , of more then mutual loue that makes the one so powerfully to allure , and the other to be so easie and wiling to be drawne ? this i am sure of , vertue is so specious , and so goodlie a thing , that it drawes the eyes of al to look vpon her ; and where they haue not harts to follow her faire steps , yet wil they stand to gaze vpon her , and admire at least . the litle iesvs lying in the crib , like a loadstone drew the shepheards from their flocks , kings from their peoples , a starre from the rest of the fellowship of starres , yea euen the angels from the heauens , to sing a gloria in excelsis vnto god , and peace to men : what trow you , but a secret instinct , that could be no lesse then heauēlie and diuine , made so great a conuersion of terrestrials and celestials to a litle infant ? and as for the mother her self , that held him in her lap the while , she before sitting in her little nazareth obscure , drew so the eyes of the almightie to her , that he could not choose , but so conuert himself vnto her , as to descend and lodge within her , and she truly say : ad me conversio eivs . the essay . the honour of our gardens , and the miracle of flowers , at this day , is the heliotropion or flower of the sun ; be it for the height of its stem , approaching to the heauens some cubits high ; or beautie of the flower , being as big as a man's head , with a faire ruff on the neck ; or , for the number of the leaues , or yellow , vying with the marigold ; or , which is more , for al the qualities , nature , and properties of the flower , which is to wheel about with the sun ; there being no needle , that more punctually regards the poles , then doth this flower the glorious sun. for in the morning it beholds his rising ; in his iourney , attends vpon him ; and eyeth him stil , wheresoeuer he goes ; nor euer leaues following him , til he sink downe ouer head and eares in tethis's bed , when not being able to behold him anie longer she droops and languishes , til he arise ; and then followes him againe to his old lodging , as constantly as euer ; with him it riseth , with him it falles , and with him riseth againe . nature hath donne wel in not affording it anie odour at al ; for with so much beautie and admirable singularities , had there been odour infused therinto , and the sweetnesse of odoriferous flowers withal , euen men , who are now half mad in adoring the same for its excellent guifts , would then haue been stark mad indeed , with doting vpon it . but nature , it seemes , when first she framed a pattern for the rest , not being throughly resolued , what to make it , tree or flower , hauing brought her workmanship almost vnto the top , after a litle pause perhaps , at al aduenture put a flower vpon it , and so for haste , forgot to put the musks into it . whervpon , to countervaile her neglect heerin , the benigne sol , of meer regard and true compassion , graced her by his frequent and assiduous looke with those golden rayes it hath . and as the sun shewes himself to be enamoured with her , she , as reason would , is no lesse taken with his beautie , and by her wil ( if by looks we may guesse of the wil ) would faine be with him . but like an estrich , with its leaues as wings , it makes vnprofitable offers , to mount vp vnto him , and to dwel with him ; but being tyed by the root , it doth but offer , and no more . it is like the scepter which the payn●ms attribute to their deitie , that beares an eye on the top ; while this flower is nothing els but an eye , set on the point of its stem ; not to regard the affayres of mortals so much , as to eye the immortal sunne with its whole propension ; the midle of which flower , where the seed is , as the white of the eye , is like a turkie-carpet , or some finer cloth wrought with curious needle-work , which is al she hath to entertaine her paramour . the discovrse . could there be deuised a more noble symbol of our incomparable ladie then this flower , regarding indeed the true sunne 〈◊〉 iustice , whom she followed stil in the whol● course of her life , vnto her death ? therefore , whom we haue already represented , as a rose , lillie , and violet , let vs now contemplate , as a true heliotropion . compare we then , first , by certain analogies , the sunne , being the king of planets , with the sunne of iustice , king of the sunne and planets ; and the heliotropion , with the virgin marie , the sun chief of planets , fils the earth with his influences : the sun of iustice , the world , with the effects of his power . the sun of planets is the first cause , among the seconds ; the sun of iustice the first before them al ; that trauerses al places , this penetrates al harts ; that lends his light to the moon and starres , this giues both life and being to al creatures . the sun , the planet , is the origin of life , the sun of iustice , life itself ; that is soueraignly visible , this most soueraignly intelligible . in the sun of planets , is fruitfulnes , light , and heat , essentially but one and the self same thing ; and the sun of iustice , with the father , and the holie-ghost , substantially is but one god. the sun of planets was neuer without these properties ; nor the holie diuinitie of the sun of iustice , without these three eternal persons . and for our ladie herself , our faire heliotropion , as the sun of planets illumines the starres , so the sun of iustice enlightned her thoughts . the sun of planets , is the eye of the world , the ioy of the day , the glorie of heauens , the measure of times , the vertue of plants and flowers , the perfection of the starres : and the sun of iustice , is the eye of her thoughts , the ioy of her hart , the glorie of her soule , the rule of her desires , the vigour of her spirit , the maister of her loues , and euen the center of her propensions . he was , i say , the obiect of her looks , the monark of her wils , the thought of her thoughts , the light of her vnderstanding ▪ and the absolute moderatour of al her passions . looke where the sun is , the heliotropion , being nothing els but eye , hath the same stil cast vpon it : and so the virgin had the eye of her soule , stil on the sun of iustice. i to my beloued , and his conuersion to me . examine each day of her blessed life ; runne ouer the howers , tel the quarters , discusse the moments , and you shal alwayes find her turned to the sun. in her natiuitie , an heliotropion ; in the presentation , an heliotropion ; in the annunciation , an heliotropion ; in the purification , and euerie action , a true heliotropion . for she neuer sayd , did , or thought anie thing , which she directed not to god as to the authour , which she reduced not to him as to the last end , which she began not for his seruice , and finished not for his glorie , and lastly , wherin she followed not her sonne , that true sun of iustice , which is to be a true heliotropion indeed . and for her bodilie eyes , she was directly so , when she stood dolourous by the tree of the crosse , on the top wherof was christ the true sun indeed in the height of the zodiack , as in his proper orbe , whē not only with the face , but with the whole bodie also she regarded her sonne , and with eyes fixt attentiuely indeed , beheld him fully : and as the flower heliotropion is wont to flag with the leaues at the setting of the sun , so likewise was she ( had she been left only to the strength of nature ) readie to fal and sinck to the ground , when her sonne drooped . plinie wonders at the holiotropion , for conuerting itself to the sun , euen vnder a clowd , and that in the night also ; but marie , our true heliotropion heer , takes not her eye of contemplation of from her sonne so much as in the night . for manie doctours most constantly hold her contemplation was neuer interrupted so much as in her sleep ; and that she slept in bodie , but waked in hart . i sleep , and my hart wakes . there was neuer knowne a time more clowdie , nor euer night more obscure then that , wherin the sun of iustice being set , the whole light seemed quite extinguished ; nor anie , heliotropion appeared in the garden of the church , so to gaze on the sun vnder a clowd , but only those two beautiful heliotropions , iohn and marie ; neuer creatures better resembled that flower , being of the self-same posture , of the same pale sad coulour , and with the whole countenance cast stil vpon him , and she especially , not taking off her eye from him , who was enwrapped in the clowd of death . behold now this rare heliotropion of ours , euen at the point of death , as she lay a-dying ; dying , doe i say , or sleeping rather ? for if the death of anie mortal wight may be tearmed a sleep , surely that of the mother of god is not to be called a death so much , as a sweet sleep . she lyes in her death-bed , as burning al with loue , like a true heliotropion turning to her sonne , stil casting her eyes vpon him . i to my beloued , and his conuersion vnto me . the eternal father , like the sun ; darts most radiant beames of loue vpon her : she endeauours of the other side ; with reciprocal looks of loue , as darts ; to returne to him the like , but sincks and fayles in the midst of the endeauour , and like a flower hangs downe the head , and dyes . with this kind of death , the fathers of the church , clients of that great mother , affirme , she was translated from the earth , and assumpted into heauen . the embleme . the poesie . heer you behold the handmaide of the sunne , that waites vpon him , as his stallions runne . there in the moone an other flower attends , and followes her , that borrow'd brightnes sends vpon its gazing eyes . eue , like this flower , was al for change . her happines an howre continued not . alas ! 't was altred soone ; affected deitie , was like the moone , which she beheld . but marie's thoughts were high , vpon the sunne of iustice fixt her eye ; her soule , with al her powers were stil theron , as flowers & leaues of heliotropion . the theories . contemplate first , how as soone as the golden sun peers and puts forth his head in the morning , the heliotropion displayes itself to the sunnie beames , circles with the sun , and when he comes to the west , bowes downe the head , and sits with him . so marie , as sooneas christ , the sun of iustice , arose in his natiuitie , framed and composed her countenance to his , with him fetching her compas in the zodiack of his life , she ordered her course , as it were , by the same coasts : by the south of loue , when he redeemed mankind ; by the north of patience , in so manie aduersities ; by the east of resignation , whē he satisfyed the eternal father , by his passion ; and lastly in the west , in the setting of her sonne the sun , in her solitarie retirement til his glorious resurrection , the new aurora of the eternal day . consider then , how we first conuert not ourselues to the sun of iustice , nor attract the rayes of the diuine benignitie vnto vs : but he with a gracious cast of his beames , vpon the heliotropion of our hart , excites the flower , and allures it to turne the face vnto it back againe . conuert me , and i shal be conuerted , sayth the prophet . but the mother of god , the true heliotropion indeed , doth otherwise ; and therefore , i to my beloued , that is , i conuert myself vnto him ; and so it followes : and his conuersion vnto me . imagine you behold artificially painted , a iesvs sporting in his mothers armes ; looke which way you wil , of anie side , he alwayes seemes to haue his eyes cast vpon you . so surely the most sweet face of iesvs , whose eyes shine like starres , of their parts are alwayes conuerted towards thee ; so as if thou perceauest not thyself to be especially regarded by them , it proceeds no whit from them , but from thyself , who turnest away thy face , or dost not marke or eye them at al. wheras our heliotropion heer neuer takes off her eyes frō her sonne , but hath them alwayes cast vpon him : and therefore truly may say : i to my beloued , and his conuersion vnto me . the apostrophe . o fairest virgin-flower ! thou most specious and amourous heliotropion , more happie then the rest of flowers for those especial fauours from thy spouse , being no lesse then the glorious and radiant sun of iustice. o gracious queen of flowers ! o sacred prodigie of al gardens , and m●st stupendious heliotropion , the miracle of paradice , the amazement of philosophie , wonder of nature , fruitful virgin. virgin-mother ! o mediate for me , with thy amourous sun , thy sonne , and obtaine for me , through thy example , i may become a true heliotropion , with mine eyes stil cast vpon thee my obiect , and may receaue like glances from that al-seing eye . the vi. symbol . the deaw . the devise . the character . the deawes are the sugred stillicids of nature , falling from the limbeck of the heauens , as so manie liquid pearls , and euerie pearl as precious as the truest margarits . they are liquifyed cristal , made into so manie siluer-orbs as drops . they are the verie teares of nature , dissolued & soft through tendernes , to see the earth so made a libian desert , which she supplies of meer compassion with the ruine of herself . no teare she sheads , that stāds her not in as much , as a drop of her deerest bloud . they are the grayne & seed , once reaped from the ocean fields , and sowne againe vpon the earth , for a better haruest . they are the sweatie drops of tethis face , which the benigne sol exhales & wipes away for the vse of tellus . they are the māna of nature , to vye with those corianders , food of pilgrims , made by angels : with this vnhappines , they could not be cōgealed , to make a food so much for mē , as a nectar for the plāts to drink . they are the protheus of fresh waters , diuersifying into as manie coulours , as they light vpon ; and are so courtlie withal , as they wil easily comply with euerie thing they meete with ; and likely seeme to put-on the forme , the garb , and qualities of euerie one : so as i verily beleeue , had they but toungs to speake , they would say the same with euerie one , that can so temporize with al. and as the showres were wrung and drawne from magdalen through contrition of her sad and clowdie hart : so these deawes are wrung and strained from heauen , through compression and mutual collision of the clowds . the bees are the most laborious and industrious factours for these pearls ; and they wil venture for them , as farre into the ayre , as any moor shal diue into the seas for the best pearls . in fine , they are the milk of nature , wherewith she is disposed to suckle creatures at her owne breast . the morals . rore madens , rore liqvescens . the sweats of that great monark , were held to be perfumes ; and why ? perhaps because they took some deitie to be in him , for his so strange and prodigious conquests . the trees that haue a gummie & viscous lickour in them , looke what they haue within , the same they oft put forth ; and if they sweat at al , they sweat but gummes . the spouse , when he knockt so long at his spouses doore , and could not be let in , was al wet with deawes from heauen ; and no maruel , that deawes should fal on him , from whom al deawes proceed ; since deawes exhaled from the earth , do thither distil againe . when the sauiour of the world was borne , arose a spring of oyle , to signify the infused oyle of grace was then powred forth into the world . and what is oyle in drops , but deawes of oyle ? and what is it to spring , but to ascend vpwards ? what to deaw , but to spring downe ? our sauiour then being oyle of grace , was dissolued al into deawes of graces , when he was borne . in this , looke what the sonne was , the same the mother is , with this difference , he the fountaine of grace and mercie essentially the same , she the fountaine likewise , but participant of his ; and as he through her distils downe deawes of grace and mercie : so she from him distils the self-same deawes of grace and mercie ; and therefore rightly rore madens , rore liqvescens . the essay . heer now , must i needs confesse mine ignorance ; for otherwise should i loose myself , in considering of the one side , the accompt which god and nature make of the deaw ; and of the other , the poornes of this litle creature in itself . the voice of men , that set it forth , is more rich and copious farre , then what soeuer is in the deaw ilself ; it is but euen a litle fume , and oftentimes an vnholesome exhalation raysed from some corrupt marishes or other , drawne-vp to the second stage of the ayre ( being the matrice as it were of nature , whence hayls , snowes , frosts , and the like proced ) if it arriue so high ; where being dissolued , and recollecting itself , within a litle after thickens and turnes into litle teares , which falling downe againe , affords vs nothing but a meer seren infected , and breeds often very mortal catharres , lighting on our heads . see now a trim and goodlie thing , for vs to make such reckoning of . and yet how manie treasures doe i see enclosed within these litle drops , within these graines of cristal liquifyed ? what think you thē , is it ought els , then a litle water ? oh , do no think so of it ; for if plinie say true , that the deaw takes the qualitie of the thing it lights on , that which to you seemes to be a water only , is sugar in the reeds of madera , hypocras in the vine , manna in the fruits , musk in the flowers , medicines in the simples , amber in the poplers , the verie milk of the breasts of nature , wherewith she nourisheth the vniuers . the deaw it is which falling on our gardens , empearls them with a thousand muskie gemmes : heer it makes the rose , there the flower deluce ; heer the tulips , there the violets ; and a hundred thousand flowers besides . it is the deaw , that couers the rose with scarlet , that clothes the lillie with innocēcie , the violets with purple , which embroders the marygold with gold , and enriches al the flowers with gold , silk , and pearls , that metamorphosies itself , heere into flowers , there into leaues , and then to fruits in sundrie sorts ; it is euen the protheus and chamaeleon of creatures , clothing itself with the liuerie of al the rarest things ; heer scarlet , there milk , heer the emerald , the carbuncle , gold , siluer , and the rest . the discovrse . bvt now come we to the mystical deaw indeed , the incomparable ladie & queene of al the meteors of this region of ours , or of the other , the thereal or celestial . who if she were not the deaw itself , she was the fle●ce al steept in deaw , and consequently may wel be held for deaw ; for she is sayd to be ful of grace , which is a kind of deaw . the deaw is properly engendred in the spaces and regions of the ayre , tempered with heat and cold . three regions there are : the heauens , the world , and hel. this deaw of grace , was not engendred in the vpper region , that is , in heauen ; nor was the work of the incarnation of christ effectually wrought therin , because he assumed not the angelical nature : he apprehended not the angels ; nor beneath , that is , in hel : because he redeemed not diuels , or spared thē , or shewed mercie to them : god pardoned not the angels sinning ; but it was engendred in the midst , that is , the incarnation was wrought in this middle region . because therin the diuine hypostastis assumpted human nature to itself . god sent his sonne made of a woman . now was this deawing or incarnation made , as i sayd , of hot & cold . for god vouchsafed to become man , for two respects , that is , out of abundāce of charitie , of the one side , which was excessiue heat , and out of a general miserie of ours , which was a kind of benumming cold . from this heat therfore , to wit , from this charitie of god , and from this cold , the general miserie of mankind , was wrought roration or deawing , that is , the incarnation of the sonne of god ; with this onlie difference , that there , was a temperate heat and cold togeather , but heer a heat , with a great excesse , through his too much charitie , wherewith he loued vs , and a great frigiditie of languour in vs , or a languishing frigiditie : because al haue declined , and are become vnprofitable . moreouer , this roration or deaw we speake of , was made in our virgin-earth , who being watered with celestial deaw , brings forth the nazaraean flower , that sayth of himself : i am the flower of the field . againe : let flow thy speech like deaw , and as drops vpon the gras . to which the church alluding sayth : let him descend into the virgins womb like deaw therin . this earth therefore so moystned and watered with deaw , produced the lillie of paradice . i the deaw of israel budding like the lillie . this israel is interpreted a man seing god , and heer signifyes our incomparable ladie , who was truly masculin in al her actions , beholding , as it were , the diuine essence , through contemplation . i wil now then maruel no more , that god leauing al other creatures , should take complacencie as he doth to be the father of deawes , the scriptures saying : who begat the drops of deaw ? and who is the father of rayne ? you would say , he meāt that there is nothing , which better represents the diuine generatiō of the sonne , which is begotten of the father by way of vnderstanding ; from whence as from a fruitful clowd , distils the diuine deaw of the word : let my word flow like deaw . but for the incarnation itself , it seemes to be iust the verie same . for the sun of the diuinitie therin vnited to the little poore vapour of our mortalitie hath fertilizd this beautiful paradice of the church , the deaw watering the same , which fel from the fiue wounds of iesvs , that deawie clowd suspended in the ayre , and hanging on the tree of the crosse. hence it is , that god makes so great accompt of this deaw ; for when he would make a feast for his people , in the wildernes , he did it by meanes of the deaw , which was then conuerted into manna , and manna virtually into al meats . and if god would make him a chamber al of gold , or a cabinet for himself , surely he would choose the deaw to be his house : who puts the clowds his bower &c. god makes as exact esteeme of a simple drop of deaw , as of al the world besides . before thee ( sayth salomon ) is the whole world as a drop of morning-deaw . you wonder now at a smal matter ; but i wil tel you yet a thing more strange , which is , that since the sonne god of a litle graine of mustard sayes : the kingdome of heauen is like to a graine of mustard-seed &c. me thinks , i might say as wel : the kingdome of heauen is like to a drop of deaw : for the sauiour of the world , who is the graine of mustard-seed , is likewise this same rich drop of deaw . for as the sonne of god in outward apparance was , as it were , no bodie , nor seemed to make anie shew , yet when the sun of the diuinitie once began to appeare in him , he shewed himself to be the vertue of paradice , euen so a little drop of deaw falling from the heauens , for example , on the flowerdeluce , would seeme perharps to you but a little round point of water , and a meer graine of cristal , but if the sun do but shine vpon it , ah! what a miracle of beautie it is ? while of the one side it wil looke like an orient-pearl , and being turnd some other way , becomes a glowing carbuncle , then a saphir , and after an emerald , and so an amethist , and al enclosed in a nothing , or a litle glasse of al the greatest beauties of the world , that seeme to be engraued therin ; so manie drops , so manie orient-pearls , so manie drops of manna , wherewith the heauens seeme to nourish the earth , and to enrich nature , as being the symbol of the graces , wherewith god doth water and fertilize our soules . for what should that flcece of gedeon signify , but the grace of graces , the admirable grace of the incarnation of christ to be wrought in the conception of the diuine word , in the virginal womb or fleece of the said gedeon , which was replenished with the deaw of the holie-ghost , in liew of the verie deaw ; that is , where descended the fulnes of the diuinitie , she being worthily called and compared to a fleece , since she hath cloathed the true lamb of god with her flesh , who takes away the sines of the world ? o virgin worthie of al grace ! how art thou graced indeed , and fauoured aboue al the daughters of ierusalem ! since thy head , iesvs christ , came so to thee , ful of deaw , and reposes in thy chast bower ? the embleme . benedicta inter mulieres . lucae . c. i. the poesie . not like a duskie clowde , which sol exhales , nor like a gloomie mist , that shrowdes the vales : but from the earth , the sunne of iustice drew a purer vapour , which dissolu'd the deaw , distilling from the limbeck of the skies , our drie & barren earth doth fertilize . the barren womb erst was accurst ; but she , though virgin , was a faire & fruitful tree . women bring forth with paineful throbs & throwes ; she was a mother , but not one of those . mongst women blest , drawne by heauens radiant beames , twixt clowd & mist , pure deaw twixt both extreames . the theories . consider first , that as eue our first parent and mother of vs al , was not created immediatly of earth , as adam was , but taken from his rib ( it being a priuiledge only due to adam , so to be framed of virgin-earth ) and was therefore called virago , fetching her extraction as it were a viro : so our second eue , our spiritual and celestial mother , adopting vs , & engendring vs as children , through the deawes of celestial graces procured vs from heauen , was not made of virgin-extraction herself , that is , was not framed of the diuine or angelical nature , as a deaw exhaled from the virgin-element of waters , but of the pure human nature , as drawn from the mixt , bitter , and brackish waues of the sea , by that great architect of heauen , the sun of iustice , giuing her the name of maria , to wit , a mari amaritudinis , as it were , fetcht from the ocean of bitternes of human kind . and now with her graces and fauours , as deawes falling from heauen , perpetually doth nothing , but showre downe vpon her children and deuotes . consider then , how our ladie became as a marine coucha , or oyster of the sea , which opens itself to receaue the heauenlie deaw into her lap , that so the precious gemme might be engendred in it , which when it hath receaued once , it closeth vp againe , not to loose so precious a depositum , til it be fairely deliuered , and brought forth in time prefixed . euen so our incomparable ladie , the precious vessel of so heauenlie and diuine a deaw , hauing once conce aued the same within her virginal womb , retires herself into her nazareth , to ruminate on the mysterie she had within her , vntil necessitie drew her to bethleem and the time prefixed of the deliuerie of her fruit was come ; for then as purely as she receaued it , she gaue it vp most perfect and compleat , and made therof a rich present to the world . ponder lastly , how the deaw being a meer extract from the seas , exhaled by the vertue of the sunnie rayes , which when he can hold no longer , lets it fal to cōfort and refresh al fublunarie things , and drawing it againe vnto himself , lets it fal againe for the same end ; and so wil do , to the end of the world , for the comfort and solace of man-kind . so the humanitie of our sauiour christ , as a waterie deaw , being extracted from the virgin marie ( amaro mari ) and through the sunnie rayes of the diuinitie assumpted vp to heauen in the glorious ascension , through loue not able to stay any longer , descends againe in the blessed sacrament , to recreate and refresh vs mortals , & so as often as we desire , is readie to visit vs with his supercelestial and diuine deaw , and thus til the consummation of the world . the apostrophe . o thou great ladie , mother of grace and mercie , who in a strange and maruelous manner hast been replenished with the deaw of grace in a soueraigne degree ; i beseech thee , intercede for me , that i may likewise be replenished & filled with grace , feruour , loue , and the diuine delights of thy soune , whom thou receauedst from heaven as the deaw fallen into thy virgin-lap . and this i beg o blessed virgin-mother , through the virginal milk , wherewith thou fedst that little great god in person ; and by the teares of ioy thou sheadst for the deare embraces of so great a sonne of thine ; and by al the sweetnesses of his diuinitie , which made thy blessed soule to liquify with ioy . o ladie , o virgin-mother , o my sweet aduocate , to thee do i recurre to impetrate these grates for me , at his hands , who sitting on thy lap , and hanging at thy breasts , can deny thee nothing . the vii . symbol . the bee . the devise . the character . the bee is that great little architect of houses made of wax , as of playster of paris , al ciment , and no stone , while you find not a stone or rub in al his works . he is a great enginer in that mould , working his subtle mines til he be al in a sweat , which in truth is no more then a moisture he hath with him through his so much padling , and medling with deawes . it is a world to see , what mines and countermines they wil make amongst them , to supplant one another , whervpon manie suits of law arise between them . for you must know , they haue a notable gouerment , and a wise and politick reason of state with them , which though it may seeme to partake of al , yet is in truth a pure monarchal rule , and surely the best . as the venetians haue their duke or doague , they haue their king , enthroned doubtles and inuested with a more absolute authoritie then he , and yet not apt to slide or degenerate to tyranie , as some would imagine . and if the venetians haue their senat and magnificoes , they haue the same . the king for sword of iustice , hath his sting , which he weares for terrour rather then vse , whose best armes is a certain sweet and serene maiestie with him , which makes him loued rather then feared , if not feared for loue : yet were anie so refractarie as not to loue so sweet a maiestie , he could tel , how to bend the brow . he is then the great dictatour aboue al , and true augustus caesar of that great common wealth of little romans . the bee of al others makes his vintage in the spring , because his chiefest haruest is ●n the sugred deawes , that fal vpon the tender blossomes , at that time , wherof part they tunne vp in pi●●es , for the purpose , to brew their meade with , against the winter ; and churning the rest as handsom● as they may , they make it into a kind of butter , ●e cal honie , which they crock and barrel vp for ●reatest marchandise . they are but pigmies , in ●espect of the giants amongst them , whom for their ●undring voice , they cal humble-bees . nor can you ●now the rest by their voices only , while the least ●il carrie as great a horn about him , as the biggest ●f them . they are notable husbands abroad , and ●ood huswiues at home ; for so they are both , or ●either , as hanieg no sex amongst them ; ●hich if they haue , they are mayds , or bachelours euerie one , because they haue no marriages with them , as liuing very chastly togeather like so manie angels . the morals . operosa et sedvla . labour and industrie are brother & sister , dwelling in the same house . he is strong and robustuous with atlas shoulders ; she as quick and nimble of the other side . it is incredible , what these two are able to do , when they ioyne togeather ; they wil work wonders , moue mountains , and runne through stitch with euerie thing . rome indeed was not built on a day , but yet with labour and industrie in short time became the metropolis of the whole world . what a work was that , which the infamous incendiarie , to eternize his name , ruined in a moment , which labour and industrie had reared-vp from the verie foundation to the roofe ? the great mausoleas , amphitheaters , piramids ( and what not ? ) haue al been built and finished by them . if labour once fayle , industrie anon rouze● him vp : and then wil they roundly fal to their wor●● as fresh as euer . wheresoeuer they meet , he is the bodie , and she the soule ; and as the bodie and soul● can not be diuided without ruine of the person , 〈◊〉 labour without industrie is no bodie , and wil presently come to nought . the grace of the holie-ghos● wheresoeuer it is , is industrie itself , and knowes 〈◊〉 delayes ; it is as gun-powder set on fire , which carries the bullet , though of lead , more swift then an arrow where it goes . the tender virgin-mother of god had ●his powder of industrie in her , when conceauing with fire , through the match of fiat , she flew so ●imbly ouer hils and dales to her cosen elizabeth , the subiect of charitie ; wherin truly she shewed herself operosa et sedvla . the essay . the bee is the greatest politick in the world ; the gouerment of their litle commō-wealth is most admirable . the king is he that hath the best prēsēce with him , & a royal looke ; al his subiects obey him with submission & reuerence , not doing anie thing against their oath of alleageance . the king himself is armed with maiestie and beautie ; if he haue a sting , he neuer makes vse of it , in the whole manage of his estate . he carryes nothing but honie in his cōmands ; one would not beleeue the great seueritie and courtesie there is amongst them , liuing in communitie , with good intelligences abroad , al goes with them with weight and measure , without errour or mistakings . in the winter they keep wholy within , not knowing otherwise how to defend themselues from the force of the weather and violence of the winds , & hold their little assemblies , in some place deputed for that effect , and keep correspondencies one with another ; but for the drones and idle bees , they banish them quite from their common-wealth . they commit not themselues to the discretion of the weather abroad , vntil such time as the beanes begin to blowe , and from that time they wil loose no day from labour . they frame the wax from the iuice which they suck from flowers , hearbs , and trees ; and for honie they deriue it also from trees & gommie reeds , hauing a glue and viscous lickour on thē . they wil make their wax likewise of euerie herb and flower ; saue only , they neuer light on a dead or withered one . their sting is fastned in their bellie ; and when they stick it so , as they cannot draw it forth againe without leauing the instrument behind , they dy of it ; and if the sting remaine but half , they liue as castrat , and become as droans , not being able to gather either honie or wax . the discovrse . the mellifluous doctour s. ambrose , in his sweet booke of virgins , sayth : the bee feeds of the deaw , engenders not at al , and frames the honie . which three properties peculiarly and singularly appertaine to virgins ; but most expresly and sublimely of al to the sacred virgin herself , the queen of virgins . for as al other creatures liue of the earth or water , as birds , beasts , and fishes , some few excepted , to wit , the camaeleon of the ayre , and the salamander of the fire ; the bee , as a choicer creature , more curious then the rest , feeds no worse then of the deaw , that falles from heauen ; and wheras al other creatures ( not bred of putrefaction ) are subiect to libidinous heat in their kinds , the bee is free therof , and multiplies by a way more chast ; and where other creatures are wholy maintained at their maister 's charge , and some wil eate you more then their bodies are worth , or their labour comes to , the bee makes its owne prouision of itself , and leaues his owner rich with the bootie and spoyle they make of the flowers of the field , without anie cost or charge of the maister ; so industrious they are , to the great confusion of men . iust so our ladie , not taken with the bayts and allurements of this world , for spiritual life , liued not but of the heauenlie deaw of diuine grace ; being capable of no other heat , then of the chast and amourous fire of diuine loue ; not conceauing fruit , but by an admirable , mysterious , and miraculous way , through the work of the holie-ghost , remaining a virgin before , in , and after her child-birth ; and lastly framed without anie cost or merits of ours , that honie of honies , that honie-comb distilling , which carries the honie in his lips . the honie indeed is engendred in the ayre through the fauour and influence of certain starres ; as in the canicular dayes , we may note betimes in the morning , the leaues to be charged and sugred with it . such as go forth at that time , before day , shal find themselues to be moistned therewith , which the bees suck from the leaues and flowers , and tunne-vp in their little stomaks , to discharge againe , and to make it perfect honie in al points , for the vse of men . so our incomparable virgin receauing this deaw or honie of the eternal word , as it came from heauen , into her virginal womb , so wrought it in her , as being deliuered therof , it proued a honie most apt for the vse of man ; the true bread of life indeed . most happie bee ! and a thousand times most blessed honie ! where it is to be noted , that bees are exceedingly delighted with these things : first , with faire & serene weather ; for then those deawes more plentifully fal & are more delicious : and of the contrarie in the raynie & more boysterous weather they are wholy hindered from their vintage , as it were , or gathering those sugred deawes . secondly , they are pleased much with abundance of flowers ; from whence they gather their purest honie ; for though the deawes fal vpon the leaues , and they gather it no doubt from them also , yet is it not so delicious and pure ; for the nature of deawes participats much of the places they light on , which makes the bee farre more busie and industrious on the flower , then on the leaues . thirdly , they are wonne with a sweet sound . for aristotle sayth , they are exceedingly allured with the harmonie of musick and sweet sounds ; which we ordinarily practise now adayes , to stay them with , when they are in a great consult to take their flight and be gone ; for then with the striking of a pan only insteed of other musick are they brought to settle themselues neer home ; so musical they are . and lastly , they ioy greatly insweet wine , as we find by experience and daylie practise , as often as they begin to swarme , & are now on the wing and point to trauel into forren parts . al these things the blessed virgin was exceedingly affected to , and had them al , as it were , within her ; as first a serenitie in the internal conscience , where appeared no clowd in the ayre of her mind , and where the pacifical salomon sat peacefully indeed as in his iuorie throne . al the glorie of the king's daughter , was wholy within her . then had she the flowers of al vertues and graces within her , to wit , the diuersities of al vertues , the lillies of chastitie , the blush and mo●estie of the rose , the hope of the violet , the charicie and diuine loue of the heliotropion , and the like . her soule was a garden of al flowers , and no lesse then a paradise , which had the archangel as paranimph & guardian therof , with the two-edged sword of humilitie and the chast feare of god. o delicious paradise , and more then terrestrial , euen when she was dwelling on the earth ! thirdly she was affected to musick , and very rare and singular therin , as appeares by that excellent and melodious canticle of hers , the diuine magni●●at , so chanted now adayes in the world , and taken-vp in the church , for an admirable peece of that art , to vye with the angels , the cherubins , and seraphins themselues , to frame the like . nor yet was she so pleased , to heare herself sing only , as to listen to her spouse , the voice of her beloued knocking and saying : my sister , open vnto me ; to whom she would answer againe : behold , my beloued speaks vnto me . oh let thy voice stil sound in mine eares ! and a thousand other affects of her musical hart would she dayly sing besides to the angelical troups , which enuironed her round . and lastly for her loue to wine , that is , to the angelical nectar , she was dayly feasted with , of spiritual gladnes , as tasts before hand , of her future ioyes , which might appeare by the quantitie she tooke of those wines , and the qualitie againe by the frequent extasies of loue she would breake into , remaining in her closet , as we may piously beleeue , being inebriated therewith . the embleme . the poesie . to bethlem's sillie shed , me thinkes i see the virgin hasten like a busie bee ; which in a tempest subiect to be blowne , in lieu of ballast , beares a little stone ; as 't were with oares beats to and fro his wings , collects heauens deaw , which to the hiue he brings . within that store-house lyes the daylie frait . le ts fal the stone , euen so of greater weight , cut without hands , the virgin now is gone to lay the prime and fundamental stone , heauens deaw condens'd was in the honie-comb . she was the bee , the hiue her sacred womb. the theories . contemplate first , how little soeuer the bee seemes , yet how great its excellencies and eminencies are ; and measure not the singular properties it hath , with the outward shew it giues forth . for though it seeme no more indeed , then as raysed but a little higher then an ordinarie fly ; yet is it a miracle in nature , an astonishment to men , and a liuelie symbol of our blessed ladie ; who being so singular and eminent in al prerogatiues and graces , celestial and diuine , made no greater a shew , then she did in being so priuate in her closet or oratorie , where she was , as a bee , in her cel a-framing the delicious honie of her admirable examples of life , to sweeten the world with , for after-ages . where you may note her stupenduous humilitie , that seing herself elected the mother of god , and consequently the queene of angels and men , yet held herself to be no more then as a seruiceable bee , to worke the precious honie of man's redemption , in her virginal womb , when she sayd : behold the hand-mayd of our lord. consider then , that as one of the properties of the bee is , when it is on the wing , and feares to be carried away with the winds of the ayre , to take vp a stone , to keep itself steadie therin , through the poyse therof : so our blessed virgin , in her highest contemplation of heauenlie mysteries , which was frequent and ordinarie with her , would take herself to her little iesus , the mystical stone ( for christ was a stone ) for feare of being carryed away with the wind of vanitie ; she would fly and soare aloft , but yet hold her to her little nothing , which she euer tooke herself to be . o admirable humilitie of our incomparable and industrious bee ! ponder lastly , that if the bee is so admired for its singular guists of continencie , of policie , and industrie , and especially so affected by al men for the benefit of the honie they receaue from it ; how admirable needes must the blessed virgin be ? so chast , as to be the first , and onlie patterne of al chastitie , both virginal , coniugal , and vidual ; so wise , politick , & wel-gouerned in herself , to haue sensualitie so obedient to reason , and reason to god , as to haue no deordination in her , either of the inferiour to the superiour part ; and so industrious withal , as to work so exquisit a loome of al perfection , as wel human as angelical , in the whole course of her diuine life . yea how ought she to be honoured and worshipped of vs al , for the celestial & diuine fruit she brought vs forth , that mellifluous honie of the diuine word incarnate and made man in her most precious and sacred wombe ? the apostrophe . o great monarkesse and princesse of intercession in heauen , most constant and immoueable in thy virginal purpose , who hadst rather not to haue been so great in the kingdome of god , then to falsify thy promise & vow of perpetual virginitie , if in being the mother of god , the same had been put in the least danger : o help me then to guard this inestimable treasure of chastitie in my state of life ! by that sweetest honie-comb thou hredst within thee , and broughtst into the world , thy deerest sonne . ah , let me not be perfidious , disloyal , or a breaker of my faith , nor rash in my good purposes made to his diuine maiestie . for that , o soueraigne ladie , displeases him highly , and offends thee likewise , deare princesse of virgin-soules . the viii . symbol . the heavens . the devise . the character . the heauens are the glorious pallace of the soueraigne creatour of al things ; the purple canopie of the earth , powdred ouer and beset with siluer-oes ; or rather an azure vault enameld al with diamants , that sparckle where they are . and for that there is aloft aboue this seeling , they make a pauiment likewise for the intelligences and angelical spirits , strewed , as become such inhabitants , with starres . it is a court , where those blessed spirits , as pensioners , stand continually assisting in the king's presence , with the fauour to behold him to face in his greatest glorie , while the starres as pages attend in those spacious hals & lower roomes . if al togeather , should make vp the bodie of an armie ranged and marshalled in the field , the spirits themselues would make the caualrie , and the infanterie the starres , s. muhael general of the one , and phoebus of the other ; where euen as the foot , that are as the corps of the whole batallions , make a stand ; so remaine the whole multitude of starres al fixt in the firmament , while the planets , which are as the collonels of the rest , with the speedie coursers of their proper orbs , fly vp and down to marshal the legions , and to keepe the companies in their due squadrons . if they shoot , their shafts and darts , they send , are but their influences they powre on mortals and terrene things , good and bad ; some sweet , of loue ; as those which venus shoots from her regiment , headed with gold ; some with steel , as those of mars , and his troups ; and some againe , as more malignant , dipt in venome , as those of saturn and the caniculars . as the earth hath beasts , the heauens haue their lion and beare , the great and lesse . where the sea hath fish , the heauens haue theirs , and waters enough , as wel aboue as vnder the firmament . as the ayre hath birds , the heauens haue angels , as birds of paradise . and if the vpper region of the elements be of fire , the seraphins are al of amourous fires of diuine loue , and the highest order of the blessed spirits . the morals . capacitatis immensae . that great galleasse or argosey of noe clapt vnder hatches the epitome of the world ; which yet virtually contained that vast volume or tome of the greater world. the troyan horse held a whole ambuscado in his bellie of warlick grecians in compleat armour . yea the eye of man , though de facto it reach no farther then the hemisphere only , yet of itself is able to extend to the ful immensitie of the whole sphear , were it placed as center therof , but that were to make the heauens the visible obiect of the eye only : i wil then go further . the hart of man as it is , how litle soeuer , if it be wel purged , is able to walke through the heauenlie vaults , both aboue and beneath ; i meane , contemplate the starres and spirits themselues , with the immense capacitie of that wast dwelling of theirs . but what were al this but a meer extension and perlustration of the mind only , wholy occupyed in measuring intellectual obiects ? it is the local continencie , i meane , as the kernel is contained in the shel , and the like . i say that great amphitheater of pompey was but a nutshel , as it were , of so manie sonnes of men , compared with the globe of the earth , and the earth with the zodiack of the sun , and the sun againe being paraleld with god himself . it is god only , who truly beholds al obiects , both intellectual and visible ; and truly containes them al , being present to al , comprehends al , is al in al. and yet this great al , whom the heauen of heauens can not cōtaine , hath the virgin-womb of the immaculate mother of god conceaned and held in her lap , as the church sings ; an therefore is sayd to be , and that most rightly , and worthily too , capacitatis immensae . the essay . the heauens with their circuit , cloathe and mantle al the world , & with the sweetnes of their influences nourish the same , and distil a life into it . they are the house of god ; the floare and pauiment of paradise ; the garden of the angels , al beset with starres insteed of flowers , with an eternal spring ; the temple of the diuinitie ; and the azured vault of the vniuers . the number of the heauens hath not alwayes been agreed vpon ; for one while they beleeued , there was but one onlie , wherin the ●tarres did sweetly glide heer and there , and glance along , as in a liquid cristal floud . sometimes haue they allowed of eight , by reason of so manie diuers motions and agitations very different in them ; then nine ; then ten , and then eleuen ; and if perhaps some new gal●laeus should deuise and frame vs other spectacles or opticons to see with , we are in danger to find out yet some new starres and heauens neuer dreamed of before . this round machine makes its circular reuolutions through an vnspeakable swiftnes . but that is a meer tale , which plato tels , to busie mens braynes with , to say , the starres and heauens yeald a sound or delicicus melodie through their motion and stirring vp and downe ; whereas truly the sweet sliding and shuffling of the heauens , the accords so discordant of contrarie motions , those sweet coniunctions and diuorces of starres , is it truly which is called , the sweet harmonie of the heauens . they would likewise make vs beleeue , the heauens were al engraued ouer , because the zodiack is composed and distinguished into twelue figures of beasts , therin cut , as with a chisel ; and the whole figure and face of heauen were as fully stockt with beasts , carued and fashioned so to beautify the heauens ; and therefore wil some haue caelum to take its denomination from caelatum , as much to say , as carued and engraued ; but in effect , are nothing els but certain assemblies and congregations of starres togeather , which the fantasies of men hath fashioned in figures and constellations ; which being so taken , resemble some kinds of beasts , but in truth haue so smal resemblance with them , as that which they cal a beare , might as wel be tearmed an ape ; and necessitie makes vs to accept it for good coyne , and god himself with iob makes vse of such manner of speach , in naming them orion , the hyades , and the like . this great bowle of the heauens , roules and turnes about an axeltree , fixt in a certain place , and flyes with the winged swiftnes it hath ; the angel giues it the whirle about , and makes it turne round according to the diuine prouidence , crowning the world with its vaulted arch enameled al with starres . the discovrse . thvs are the heauens expressed in themselues ; and now let vs seeke another heauen , these ancients neuer dreamed of . one authour diuides the heauens into seauen parts ; the aërean , aetherean , olympian , firie , firmamental , waterie , and empyreal . but we wil content ourselues with these three only , the syderean , the cristalin , and empyreal . and for the first , we shal find our queene of heauen to be so the queene therof , as she is a syderean or starrie heauen herself , if we regard but the ornaments she is decked with , as so manie starres . for as that heauen is adorned with varietie of starres ; so she with diuersitie of al vertues . the beautie of heauē , to wit , of marie , is the celestial glorie of the starres , that is , the glorious varietie of al vertues . for as for the ornaments of this heauen , it is sayd in the apocalyps : she had a crowne of twelue starres vpon her head . now in this nūber of twelue is a double nūber of six , which is the number of perfection , and signifyes the saints , as wel those which are in glorie & celestial paradise , as those , who are as yet on their way thither ; who al honour , crowne , and adore this blessed virgin , as their queene and ladie . for as the heauen with its proper orb and certain reuolutions , carries al the mouing starres along with it , so she induceth al the saints , to ioyne in intercession with her . the cristalline heauen she is , being a heauen as composed of the waters aboue the heauens ; which is hardned , as it were , & made solid , like cristal ; the matter being nothing els but waters hardned and condensed , as some think , not much vnlike to the crust of cristal , which is solid , lucid , and most pure : and so the waters of our ladie were solid , that is , her vertues were confirmed ; and lucid , that is , transparent , because through them she might contemplate and behold the glorie of god ; according to that : but we with face reuealed , shal speculate the glorie of god. the forme of this cristalline heauen , is spheral and round , which is truly the most capacious , the perfectest , and fairest of al figures ; & so is she most capacious , as becomes the habitatiō of god , according as the church deliuers : whō the heauēs could not containe , hast thou held in thy womb ; the perfectest , because endued with al vertues : in me is grace , of the way & veritie ; most faire , because stained with no blot , nor euer touched with anie blemish , so much as venial : thou art wholy faire , my friend , and there is no blemish in thee . she is the empyreal heauen , which is the habitation of the saints , and a heauen al of light , of an infinit capacitie , and immēse sublimitie . the blessed virgin then is resembled to this heauen : first , for her vnspeakable claritie , because she is now wholy radiant and resplendent in celestial glorie , hauing beneath , the moone vnder her feet , and on her head , a crowne of starres , & for the rest clothed with the sunne . secondly , for her great capaciousnes ; for as there can be thought no place of greater capacitie , then the empyreal heauen , so can no creature be found of greater charitie , then marie . for she had an ample womb , which was able to receaue god ; she had an ample vnderstanding , which had the knowledge of al diuine things ; an ample affect she had , for her singular compassion on the miseries of al the afflicted . thirdly , for her highnes and sublimitie ; for as heauen is the highest of al bodies , so is she higher farre then al spiritual creatures , as wel angelical as reasonable . thy magnificence is raysed , that is , the virgin marie , to whom god hath shewed very great things , yea aboue al the heauens , as wel material as rational , because appointed queene ouer al saints ; and therefore sayes of her self : who hath wrought great matters for me ▪ who is potent ▪ and holie is his name . which things s. epiphanius considering , in his sermō of the prayses of our ladie , breakes forth into these words ▪ o impolluted womb , hauing the circle of the heauens within thee , which bare the incomprehensible god most truly comprehēded in thee ? o wōb more ample , then heauen , which streightned not god within thee ! o womb ▪ which art euen verie heauē indeed , consisting of seauen circles , and art more capacious farre then them all o womb more high and wider ▪ then are the seauen heauens ! o womb , which are euen the eight heauen itself , more large then the seauen of the firmament . so he . and s. chrysologus thus : o truly blessed , who was greater then heauen , stronger then the earth , wider then the world ! for god , whom the world could not containe , she held alone ; and bare him , that beares the world ; yea bare him , who begat her , and nursed the nourisher of al liuing things . but yet heare what s bonauenture sayth heerof : thou therefore ( sayth he ) most immense marie , art more capacious then heauen , since whom the heauens could not hold , thou hast held in thy lap ; thou art more capacious then the world : for whom the whole world could not hold , hath been enclosed within thy bowels , being made man. but especially indeed is the blessed virgin sayd to be the empyreal heauen , because as that same being the proper place of beatitude , where god cleerly manifests himself to the blessed , face to face : so the wōb of the blessed mother of god , was the first of al wherin god in a permament manner communicated to the soule of christ our lord , the cleare and blessed vision of himself ; since certain it is , that from the beginning of his conception , he was truly a comprehensour ; and yet in his way , and a true viatour . which no doubt is a singular prayse of the virginal womb ; that , where the wombs of other women are meerly the shops of original sinne , as dauid lamented ( and my mother conceaued me in sinnes ) which makes one vnworthie of the visiō of god : the virgins wōb of al others should be a place for the blessed vision , and the only first shop of beatitude . so as wel might the woman of the ghospel cry out : blessed is the womb , that bare thee . the embleme . the poesie . the blessed virgin , euen from her birth , was like a heauen without a clowd , on earth ; where fixed starres did shine , each in his place , as she encreas'd by merits more in grace ; til ful of grace ( as is with starres the sky ) gabriel salurtes . then more to glorify this heauen , from his , the sunne of iustice came , light of the world , with his eternal flame . lo , how the angels from th' empyreal sphere admire this heauen on earth , that shines so cleare , contesting with their glorious orbe aboue , and with the seraphins in burning loue . empyreal heauen ! for in her makes abode the first blest soule , that had the sight of god. the theories . contemplate first , that as the heauens in their motions commit no errour , because they are alwayes obedient to the intelligences or mouing angels that moue and guide them : so likewise the blessea virgin could slide into no errour of sinne , because she punctually obserued the holie-ghost , her motour and proper intelligence , as it were , in al things ; while being moued with such motiōs , she was carryed to god through feruent loue , as being the wheel of god , wherof ezechiel speaks ( which was carryed wheresoeuer the spirit went ; for the spirit of life was in the wheels ) now in praying for vs to her sonne , now directing the angels themselues vnto our ministerie , and then exhorting the blessed spirits to pray for vs , behold of what agilitie and motion this heauen is ! cōsider then that euen as frō heauen ; and its ●ights , we receaue al the chiefest benefits of nature , especially the growth and prosperitie of plants , without which nothing would succeed or come to anie thing : so from this glorious virgin-mother we likely receaue the most notable fauours & guifts we haue frō god. for as the heauen visits the earth , affording its light by day & night , by meanes of the two great torches , sun and moon , and millions of lesser lights , which with their influēces besides doe fructify the same , and with their sweet showers in a māner inebriate it , and coole it againe , when need requires , with dryer clowds , yea enrich it also , with gold , siluer , and precious stones : so our incomparable ladie visits and illustrats the whole vniuersal church with her admirable examples , and with the guifts of the holie-ghost inebriats the same , stores it abundantly with good works , and enriches it with an infinit treasure of al vertues : and therefore is it sayd : thou hast visited the earth . ponder lastly , how among al things which haue anie stuff , matter , or dimesion in them of length , breadth , or thicknes , there is no incorruptible thing to be thought on , but only the heauens ; for al mixt things , whatsoeuer they be , corrupt at last , and the elements we see continually corrupt ; saue only the celestial bodie , which is wholy incorruptible of its owne nature : so in like māner , whenas al the childrē of adam , begot according to nature , are lyable , and obnoxious to the corruption of original sinne ; and al women loose in cōceauing , the integritie of the bodie ; yet this heauen of marie , through especial grace & prerogatiue of her sonne , was made incorruptible , according to either part , of soule and bodie : of the soule truly , because the cōtagion and corruption of original sinne touched not her so much as a momēt only ; & of bodie also , because though indeed she were a true & natural mother , and cōceaued her sonne most truly indeed , yet knew she no corruption at al , obseruing and keeping perpetually , the virginitie of mind and bodie . how worthily therefore , is she compared to heauen for this so strange and admirable incorruptibilitie in her ? the apostrophe . o great miracle of the world , or little world of miracles ; not queene so much of heauen alone , as the heauen of the king of thee , queene & mistris of the heauens ; thou only maister-peece of the almightie hand ; o diuine throne , not second vnto anie ; thou liuing ark of alliance ; and the elder sister of al creatures , who wast a mother and a virgin a virgin , & a mother , al in one ; a mayden & a nurse , a nurse & yet a mayden , the mother and the nurse of god and man , a virgin and a mayd for euer . by that glorious virgin-fruit of thine , the astonishment of angels , which so miraculously thou broughtst into the world , after thou hadst so long afforded him thy precious womb , as a gratful and delicious paradise of heauen : grant , we beseech thee , by that shower of grace in him , which fel through thee , o mysterious heauen , that we may come at last to that heauen of his glorie , which he hath purchased for vs with his more then precious bloud . the ix . symbol . the iris . the devise . the character . the iris is the radiant and refulgent bow of heauen , that shoots but wonders to astonish the world with . it is the thiara , or fayrest dresse of nature , her shining carkanet enchaced with the richest iewels . it is the triumphal arch of the heauenlie numens , set-vp in triumph as a trophey of beautie , to allure the eyes of al , to stare and gaze vpon it . the protheus of the seas could neuer take so manie shapes vpon him , as the iris diuersifyes its coulours . and for the camelion of the ayre , she doubtles vsed no other pattern then it , to coppie forth the great varietie of coulours she assumes . this prodigie of nature , liues in and by the ayre , but hath its whole subsistence in the eye only . open the eyes , and there it is ; but shut them vp , and it wil vanish . it is indeed the faire and goodlie mirrour of the heauenlie intelligences themselues , which they wil gaze on , as their leasure serues them , and breake at their pleasure , if they like it not , to make them new perhaps to please them better . if the angels would lay aside their wings , and goe afoot , i doe not think , they could haue a better way to descend by , and ascend againe , then by this causway , paued al with iewels heer and there , and where not , al strewed with tapistries ; the turkie ones are nothing like ; nor those of barbarie come neere them ; while those the mothes wil eate , and time destroy their coulours , and they fade ; but these , wil last til al be quite worne out . they seeme al as made by the same hand ; they are so like ; looke what you haue to day , the same you haue to morrow . and surely no other artizan then he that made you this , can make you such another . they say , it is a nothing in itself ; which if it be , it is a prettie nothing , that so with nothing should make the heauens so beautiful , nay more , so rich , and al with nothing . the morals . pacis fero signa fvtvrae . the scythian tamberlan , the terrour of the house of ottomans , had in his warres , three ensignes : the red , the black , and white ; which he vsed to aduance vpon occasions ; wherof the white especially signifyed peace & a reconciliation offered ; which if refused , the red , & then the black succeeded . castor and pollux in the heauens , are held to be sweet , propitious , and pacifical starres . the halcion in time of a tempestuous storme at sea appearing on the decks , is a comfortable , and little lesse then a certain signe of a calme and quiet sea , wherat mariners wil cheer vp , as no such thing had euer hapned . the spring immediatly followes the bitter and sharp winter ; the signes are the buds appearing then , in the tender and green twigs . when the lyon is in his chiefest rage , and when he roars most dreadfully of al , and for anger beats himself with his tayle in meer despite , let come but a tender virgin , by , the while , and appeare in his sight , his courage wil fayle him , & he be a lamb in a lion's skin . the lion of iuda roared then , when the lord of hoasts , to extirpate human kind , so let go the cataracts of heauen , to drowne the world , with a total deluge of waters couering the earth ; when lo , the white flag was spred in the heauens , in forme of an iris , representing the pure and immaculate virgin of virgins , which made the lion to let fal his creast , and to enter into a league with al mankind , to drowne it no more ; and therefore our ladie herself was a true iris , and may rightly be called , and truly is , that pacis fero signa fvtvrae . the essay . the iris or rainebow is that goodlie mirrour , wherin the humane spirit sees very easily its owne ignorance , and wherin the poore philosopher becomes banckrout , who in so manie yeares can know no more of this bow , then this , that he knowes nothing to the purpose , & that it is a noli me tangere ; since as manie as haue mused thervpon , haue but broken their braines about it to their owne confusion . for of the one side , there is nothing of lesse being , in the whole pourtrait of nature , being framed of a goodlie nothing , diuersifyed and diaperd with false coulours , dressed-vp with a feigned beautie , the matter nothing , its durance a moment . it is a bow without an arrow , a bridge without a basis , a crescent not encreasing , a phantasme of coulours ; a nothing , that would faine shew to be somewhat . and yet is this rich nothing a miracle of beautie , among the fairest things of the world , which being compared thervnto , are euen as nothing . would you haue riches ? the whole bow is nothing els then the carkanet of nature , enameled with al the precious iewels she hath ; some are pearls , others haue the sparcle of the diamant , the flames of the carbuncle , the twincle of the saphir ; i should say rather it is the maister-peece , wherin nature had embrodered al her rarest stones , and placed the richest peece of her treasures , which she can seuer at her pleasure : it is the collar of her order , her chaine of pearles , and the fairest of al her cabinet , wherewith she decks herself , to please her spouse , the heauens . good god! what a goodlie nothing is this , if it be no more , that carryes such beautie and riches with it ? it is said , that great high way of milke , which appeares in the heauens , was the way of the gods , whē they went vnto the cōsistorie of iupiter ; but it is a fable : whereas i should think , that were there any ordinary way for the angels to descend down vnto the earth by , or for men to mount vp to heauen , there could be no fayrer thē this bridge alwayes tapistryed , and paued with so bewtiful stones . the discovrse . god himself takes such complacencie in the rainebow , that when he is in the highest point of his iust choler , if he cast but his eye thervpon , he is suddenly appeased . i wil looke on my bow , and wil remember &c : sayth he . and no maruel surely ; since the bow , he regards so much , is the symbol heer of his deerest mother , the incomparable virgin. let vs see then , how this heauenlie bow deciphers the queen of heauen , this mirrour of nature , and the astonishment of man-kind . the generation and extract of anie thing discouers it most . this iris then or raynebow , is caused by the reflexion of the sunnie beames , vpon a lucid clowd , concaue and waterish . clowdes are engendred of the marine vapours or exhalation of the seas , where the vapoural parts of the ocean are attracted by the vertue of the sun ; which conglomerated togeather , engender a clowd , when the brackishnes of the sea-water is turned to sweetnes . and so was our ladie a true clowd , since in her were found these marine vapours , that is , incredible tribulations , bitter and brackish of themselues , though to her made sweet , through the force and vertue of diuine loue. the sunnie beames therefore , that is , the grace of god being a ray , as it were , of the diuine essence , reflecting on the purest virgin , a lucid clowd , concaue and waterish , produced the iris or rainebow in the hierarchie of the church , as in the firmament of the heauens ; and therefore called the iris or celestial bow , a signe of the reconciliation of god with al mankind . she was concaue through humilitie , and therefore very apt to receaue the rayes of the sunne of iustice , the influence of diuine graces ; as she was waterish no lesse through compassion and pietie , because her hart was a spring , and her eyes as continual-standing pooles of teares . a bow commonly hath a string , is bent with an arrow in it , and hath the horns conuerted towards vs , as menacing the foes . our blessed vigin is a bow indeed , but without the string of seueritie , because most iust ; and without menaces and feare , because most sweet ; and hath two horns withal , to wit , grace and mercie , which she holdeth towards vs ; while grace she affordeth to the iust , and mercie to sinners , and is therefore called the mother of grace , and mother of mercie . aboue al , the rayne-bow hath its proper subsistence in coulour , which it seemes to borrow ( as bede sayth ) of the foure elements . for , of the fire it contracts a ruddie coulour ; from the water a cerulean ; from the ayre , the coulour of the hyacinth ; and from the earth , the green it hath : al which seeme spiritually to be found in our celestial bow , the incomparable ladie ; for red she was , being wholy inflamed with the fire of diuine loue , which she tooke from the diuine fire , god being our consuming fire : a fire indeed , that burns and consumes others , but not her ; because although she were a bush , and burning too ; yet incombustible . she might borrow that coulour likewise from her dead sonne , as he lay on her lap , being taken from the crosse , al bathed with his precious bloud , which mixed with her faire complexion , might wel appeare like to flames , in our heauenlie iris. she had the cerulean , which is the coulour of the sea , because she is properly the starre of the sea , and hath therefore a great correspondencie with that liquid element ; and through meer compassion , was become , as it were ; al liquid , according to that of the psalmist : my hart is become as dissolued or liquifyed wax ; as wel for the abundance of teares she was wont to shed , as the puritie of her mind , which made them so limpid and cleare . she had thirdly the coulour of the hyacinth ; which she tooke , as from the ayre ; since al her conuersation was in the ayre , as it were , abstracted from the earth , or terrene cogitations . she was wholy as the bird of paradise , which hath no feet to touch the earth with ; & from the time that her sonne ascended to heauen , from the mount oliuet , she could do nothing but cast vp her eyes thither-wards ▪ and so powerfully perhaps contracted that coulour ▪ through the vehemencie of her attention , and application to that object , til her assumption haply , when she left it by the way in her bow , to remayne for euer , as a signe of her puritie . but now to conclude with the green , which she tooke from the earth , what might it be , but a continual spring of al graces and vertues , which she practised on earth ? looke into a garden , in that season of the spring ; and whatsoever your eyes can behold truly delicious there , in the greennes of the plots and arbours , both open and close , and in the green-sword allies and bancks ; your vnderstanding shal be able to paralel and find-out her vertuous conuersation on earth . for if you consider her green walks , they were al as streight , as garden-walks ; for streight were the paths of her whole life . if on the arbours , you shal find her continually in her closet ; her plots were nothing els , but how to become more gratful to her sonne , her spouse , her lord ; and those alwayes new & euer green ; so as in the garden of her mind , was a perpetual spring to be seen of al vertues , while she liued amongst vs : no maruel then , the green was so dear vnto her , to be put into her bow . the embleme . the poesie . from heauen the father viewes his sonne below vpon the crosse , as on a clowde a bowe , when vapours from the earth exhal'd arise . the mother likewise sees with mourning eyes her sonne al black & blew , pale , wan , & red , green with a crowne of thornes fixt on his head . al which reflect , & by reflexion die the mother , like a raine-bow in the skie . to her for mercie when the sinner sues , the sonne his mother as a raine-bow viewes , that pleades for mercie , to her sonne appeales , who signes the pardon , and his wounds are seales . the theories . contemplate first , that if nature be able to frame so rare a peece of workmanship as the rayne-bow ; and that no wit of man can truly comprehend the reasō of its forme and figure , with the admirable diuersitie of coulours in it , so as among her other works most choice and rare , the same is accounted as a cheef miracle in nature , in the visible heauens : i imagin the while , what god himself is able to doe in his works of grace , being disposed , as it were , to vye with nature in framing an iris likewise , in this heauen of heauēs , to astonish not mortals only , but the angels and blessed spirits themselues , better able to iudge of the diuersitie of coulours in her , to wit , the mysteries and graces , wherewith he hath adorned her . consider then , that as the rayne-bow of it-self is no more then a meer meteor in the ayre , if it be so much , whose whole luster it takes from the sun , and vanisheh as soone as he is either in a clowd , or hath his aspect some other way , since it is wholy of him , and so of him , as without him it is nothing : so our incōparable virgin-iris , whatsoever she was of herself , she esteemed as nothing , not so much as a meteor , as it were , in the celestial hierarchie of heauen , attributing al to the sun of glorie reflecting his rayes so powerfully vpon her , to make her appeare so glorious as she doth , the most refulgent bow , or carkanet of heauen , the delight of the angels , and the gracious signe of reconciliation to mortals with her onlie sonne , the sun of iustice , whose she is wholy , and euer was . ponder lastly , how as the rayne-bow of itself , is nothing els , but exhalations and vapours extract from the seas , and drawne-vp into the ayre , by the heat of the sun. so this iris is the quintessence , as it were , extracted from the sea of the generation of adam , through particular fauour and priuiledge of the sun of iustice , to become first a light clowd , that is , capable of celestial rayes ; and then being concaued through humilitie , to beare him in her womb , and to haue the forme of a celestial bowe , enriched with such diuersities of al graces . the apostrophe . oh specious iris ! hand-mayd of the sun of iustice , in thine owne account ; and yet esteemed of al the world besides , the glorious queene of heauen , and placed as a radiant iris or anckour of our hope and reconciliation to god thy sonne , whose vnbent bow thou art , sure signe of peace . ah then ! shal i alwayes liue thus ? shal i alwayes walke the labyrinth of the fraylties and inordination of my soule , for want of a clue to guid me forth , and to leade me vnto the true loue of my god , the only louelie and amiable aboue al louelie and amiable things ? shal i alwayes walke thus , by the brinck of hel , vnrulie , unmortifyed , curious , sensual , and vayne ? o my most deer diuine mother ; guard me with the bow of thy safeguard and protection , and make intercession for me , o thou proclaymed happie through al nations ; heare my desires , haue pittie on my teares , let my sights mount vp vnto thee . o receaue them , i pray , most gracious and auspitious iris of the empyreal heauens . the x. symbol . the moone . the devise . the character . the moone is the dowager , and queen-regent of the firmamēt , that rules that monarchie by turnes with titan her brother , with this happines aboue him , that his gouerment ouer some of his prouinces is found too hot & intolerable , & held as tyranous ; but hers more benigne & sweet ouer al. she is so good , as she seems to spend her whole demeanes vpon the poore & indigēt . and as she is charitable to al , she is euē prodigally profuse of the treasure of her influēces of on her neerest kin about her , especially tellus her sister , more necessitous then stands with her gentle breast , to see her in ; and therefore as made for her alone , she seemes to apply herself to her only . and to the end she may stil haue to giue , she is stil borrowing from her elder brother new and fresher lights , from the rich magasin of his greater splendour ; wherof she spends so fast , as she is often forced to breake and become bankerout , and as often by her brother set aflote againe , with a new stock , as brisk as euer . she holdes besides very faire correspondences and good intelligence with the seas , and those so good , as neuer fayle without some prodigie or other . they vse to taxe her of inconstancie ; but they doe her wrong ; for she is constant stil , in that inconstancie of hers , they charge her with ; how then inconstant ? the spots they note her for , shew but how good a glasserepresentatiue she is , that so figures something , which they cal a man , which i scan not heer . she is faire and beautiful , & yealds to none but to the sun , and that for reuerēce , and good respects . she is a great riser in the night , which she doth to good purpose , stil obliging the whole world through manie fauours . she is indeed the precious diamant of the rest of starres , cut round of the larger size , and sometimes crescent-wise , as she is pleased to communicate herself , & take away the veyle before her face . the morals . benigna et facilis . the children of israël indeed , though they acknowledged god for the authour and creatour of al things , yet not to be dazeld with his glorie , were stil calling vpon moyses to speake to them , and not the lord. the kings of china are neuerseen to their subiects , but negotiate their royal affaires by the trustie hands of their eunucks about them ; and they dispense his fauours heer and there according to his mind . by them giues he audience to embassadours ; and by their hands , receaues the presents , suits , and requests of al ; and giues dispatches by them : and so his subiects doe more sweetly tast his benignities and fauours , and seeme more freely to communicate with him . the vnderstanding or reason hath the common sense for chief dispenseresse , and the executiue powers for ministers , while al things are not done immediatly by himself . tyberius had seianus as it were his right hand . he that would haue a fauour at the hands of alexander , would apply himself streight to his deerest ephestion , and he was sure to haue his suit . yea the great s. peter himself , how great soeuer in his maister 's fauour , would stil be pulling of s. iohn by the sleeue , to put forth his doubts and his requests to his maister for him . and the great assuerus had his gracious and benigne hester alwayes by his side ; who did nothing but communicate the prince's fauours to his people with a pious and prudent hand . this was the virgin-mother right , to our great assuerus indeed ; & therefore is she heer most truly and aptly stiled : benigna et facilis . the essay . the moon of al others , is a planet the neerest to the earth , and most familiar with it . it is the sun of the night ; her course and decourse neuer fayles ; her glasse is cleer according as she lookes on the sun ; and sometimes do we see but a certain list , as it were , and crescent of siluer ; sometimes it waxeth againe , and makes a demie o or half circle , & then growes it to be wholy orbicular and round ; her argent is alwayes dimmed , with some shadowes and certain obscurities , that seeme to fashion a face with them . she supplyes the defaults of the sun , and often shines in fellowship with him , and mingles her rayes with his , euen at midday . the simplicitie of painters heerin is discouered , in that ordinarily painting her in companie with the sun , they make her horns , to looke to the sun-wards ; wherein truly are they quite mistaken ; for the back is it , which is turnd to the sun , and not the horns ; for she hath no claritie in her , but that which she borrowes of the sun , presenting him in lieu therof , her mirrour and glasse to looke vpon . she is the sister of the sun ; and , as i sayd before , the sun of the nights , which pearceth the thicknes of their darknes , with her siluer rayes ; somewhat moyst , and sweetly cōforting the tediousnes of them , being otherwise gloomie and dark of themselues . a starre she is , that liues but of loane , and hath the visage alwayes vpon change : she is the mistris of the sea , the queen of the night , the mother of deawes , the sweet nurse of the earth , the guide of mariners , the glasse of the sun , the companion of his trauels , the guardian of his light , and depositariā of the day and treasures of the heauens : the second glory of the firmamēt , the empresse of starres , & regent of this world beneath , where she hath her iurisdictiō & demeanes . she marks-out the months and yeares , and the ages , as they runne , and through her sweetnes tempers the burning heats of her brother the sun. when she is diametrally set vnder the sun , & interposed between him and the earth , she ecclipseth him , and robs the earth of the beames of the sun ; and the shadow of the earth of the other side being cast ouer her , ecclipses her , and suffers her not to enioy the sunnie rayes : but the point of the shadow of the earth , not mounting neere so high , makes no ecclips at al in the other starres . the discovrse . now what may this moon denote and signify to vs , but the glorious queene of heauen ? for she is al faire as the moone : she is , as the moone , ful in her dayes : and a perfect moone , because her throne as the sun in my sight , & as a perfect moone for euer . she is a moon therefore , yea farre more beautiful then the moon euer was , or euer like to be . for as the moon indeed hath her light borrowed , very gracious to behold , but none of her owne , being meerly a light reuerberated frō the sun : so the virgin truly , though her light be borrowed , and none of her owne , as simply hers , yet hers it is indeed , though borrowed of her sonne , the sun of iustice , as daughter of the king. for al the glorie of the king's daughter is within her &c : not outwardly only in the voice of people , alwayes doubtful , euer vncertain , for the most part vndeserued , and of little subsistence and permanencie , but intrinsecally in her most certain , meritorious , and for euer . besides , the moon hath her light often ecclipsed , and looseth wholy her light for a time ; but the blessed virgin , though she seemed to be ecclipsed , through the vehemencie of her sorrow , when she saw her sonne so shadowed by a clowd , in the time of his passion , yet for her cōstancie of fayth she could not be ecclipsed so , as to despaire of his resurrectiō . i wil not cease vnto the end of the world . wel might the apostles fayle at that time , but marie neuer . moreouer as the moon is variable and subiect to changes , in the light it affords to mortals ( an argument accounted of weaknes of brayne , while the foole , as the wise-man sayth , is changed as the moone ) let vs see , what chāges & mutabilities they are . one is of the mind , which is often moued through diuers affectīons ; another in the bodie , which is subiect to manifold alteration and corruption ; an other of fortune , because temporal things are alwayes a flowing or ebbing , a flux or reflux , the losse of guilt and offence which is in sinners , who alwayes are sliding from vice to vice . but our ladie hath al these changes and mutabilities vnder her feet , since the moon indeed is placed vnder her feet ; while she alwayes retained the constancie of her mind , and vow of virginitie ; she put on the glorie of immortalitie on her bodie ; she trampled al terrene and temporal things vnder foot ; and lastly through a singular prerogatiue was euer priuiledged from sinne . furthermore , the moon hath her light al speckled ouer with little spots : but our blessed ladie had no blemish or spot at al , either in her thoughts , because alwayes pure and immaculate ; or in her bodie , because angelical . thou art wholy fayre , my friend , and there is no spot in thee . i say , most fayre in cogitations , affections , and intentions ; and spotles in al. oh beautiful moon , transcending anie heauenlie planet or starre in the firmament , as farre in dignitie and excellencie , as so heauenlie a ladie and queene of heauens can surpasse her rational , sensible , or insensible subiects ! the moon is sometimes wholy obscure , sometimes wholy lucid and bright , and sometimes partly obscure , and partly resplendent ; wherin it resembles the virgin right . for the moon , as s. augustin sayth , is obscured either when it is vnder a clowd , or when ecclipsed , or when renewed , as in the new moon : so the blessed virgin in this world , was thrice or three manner of wayes obscured . first , through her excessiue humilitie , which was a kind of obscure clowd , that ouershadowed her brightnes or splendour in the eyes of the world . black i am but beautiful ; as if she had sayd : i am outwardly black through humilitie , but inwardly beautiful in grace and maiestie . secondly , through acerbitie and bitternes of sorrow ; and this in the passion of her sonne , as i sayd aboue , where she suffered an ecclips in the vehemēcie of her greef . the sun , that is to say , christ , shal be turned into darknes through death ; and the moon , to wit , the blessed virgin , into bloud , that is , into dolour . and thirdly , through corporal death ; for then became she obscure in a sort , when her soule departed frō her precious bodie so obscured , as it were to become a new moone againe in her assumption ; and then indeed was she a moone most perfect for euer . secondly this moon of ours , was wholy lucid , in her assumption , because she was glorified in soule and bodie , and receaued there her double stole ; and likewise shines vpon vs , with her infinit fauours and graces , which she dayly sends vs. for then indeed as the moon is wholy bright and lucid , when she shines in the beginning , midst , and to the end of the night : by which night is tribulation both signified and vsually vnderstood : and as some saints there are , who help the afflicted , in the beginning of the night as it were ; others , who suffer men to fal into tribulation , and to be tempted , in the beginning and middle , but help and succour them at the end : the blessed virgin shines with her fauours vpon the distressed , as wel in the beginning , in affording courage ; and in the midle , in giuing perseuerance ; as in the end , in placing the crowne on their heads . this is she , when others fayle , who neuer fayles ; whom other saints for sinnes iustly forsake , she neuer leaues ; and while others seeme to subtract their suffrages , she alwayes helps . thirdly , this moon was partly lucid and partly obscure ; and this truly in the passion of her sonne , where both she was obscured , and yet gaue light ; obscure , through intēse sorrow , yet lucid by most firme fayth . for as whē the sun is ecclipsed , the moon being opposed between vs & the sun , appeares wholy obscure : so when the sun of iustice suffered ecclips at his death , the blessed virgin became wholy dark , that is , quite ouercast and ful of sorrow ; and yet notwithstanding she shined euen then likewise , because she kept the light of fayth vnextinguished in her . her light shal not be extinguished in the night . surely two heauēs there are , which yet neuer lost their light , nor euer are like to doe : to wit , christ for one , who neither with death did forgoe the light of his diuinitie , but his deitie was both with his bodie in the sepulcher , and with his soule in limbus : and his mother the other , who neuer lost the light of grace and fayth within her . the embleme . the poesie . the empresse of the sea , latona bright , drawes like a load-stone by attractiue might the oceans streames , which hauing forward runne calles back againe , to end where they begunne . the prince of darknes had ecclipsed eues light , and mortals , clowded in cymmerian night , were backwards drawne by eue , as is the maine ; ●t was only marie drew to god againe : 〈◊〉 chast diana , with thy siluer beames , fluse & reflux ( as in the oceans streames ) ●tis thou canst cause , o draw ! and draw me so , that i in vice may ebbe , in vertue flow . the theories . contemplate first , that if the moon being so faire , beautiful , and perfect , be so accounted of mortals ; and for the manifold influences and fauours , which she continually imparts to creatures , be held in so great veneration , as to share in their opinion with the sun himself , in the gouerment of the world , whom the paynim gentilitie holds to be a god , and her brother , and she his sister , notwithstanding she hath yet so manie blemishes , defects , and spots appearing in her , who can except against the churches deuotion , in so magnifying our ladie , who is truly so faire , beautiful , & perfect indeed , without any the least blemish , or spot in her ; & so beneficial withal , as to communicate her graces vnto vs in a far higher nature , and those in a measure so immense ? or who can tax vs , for stiling her the queen of heauen , who is not only the sister , the friend , the doue , and beautiful spouse of the sun o● iustice , but euen his most immaculate mother , the fountain of al her prerogatiues besides ; when especially we afford her no more honour , then may worthily be due to a meer creature ? consider then , that as in the opinion of such as hold the moon encreasing to haue her horns directed towards the rising of the sun ; but decreasing , or being in the wayne , to haue the horns pointing to the setting of the sun : so our heauenlie , angelical , and spiritual moon , the incomparable virgin-mother , had certain addresses and preparations , of humilitie and virginitie , wherewith she disposed herself , to embrace her sun in her armes , in the morning of his birth , as he lay in the crib : and at his setting againe , that is , at his passion , regarded him with two other horns as it were ; to wit , with the sorrow she had for his death , of the one side ; and the ioy , she receaued of the other , for the redemption of the world . ponder lastly , how though the moon , while it is iust ouer the earth , and the sunne in oppositiō thervnto , in a right diameter beneath the same , is shadowed , obscured , or ecclipsed : yet our mystical moone , when christ , our true sun indeed , descended and abid in hel , which is vnder the earth , and our moon remayning there ouer it , lost not the light of fayth , of his present resurrection ; for that the shadow of the earth , that is , the infidelitie of terrene things , could not ascend vnto her , whereby the darknes of infidelitie comprehended her not . the apostrophe . o empresse of the world , ladie of the vniuers , queen of angels , standing in the moon , and crowned with starres in heauen by god almightie ; most wise , most good ! oh regard me , i beseech thee , from the top of the heauens with thy sacred influences from thence ; and haue pittie vpon me most miserable wretched sinner in al points . present , o sacred virgin-mother , al my pouerties to god , al my perils , al my miseries and necessities , to thy sonne . for so wil he take pittie on me , and open his hand , and afford me his benediction , through thy gracious intercession . this grant , i beseech thee , most radiant and resplendent moone , who shinest in heauen , and shal for al eternitie , the xi . symbol . the starre . the devise . the character . the starres are the glittering lāps of heauen , set vp as so manie lights , in the close or vpper seeling of the ample theater of the world . they are as sparckling diamants strewed in the firmament , to entertaine the world with , as a goodlie maister-piece of the great creatovr . they are the siluer oes , al powdred heer and there , or spangles sprinckled ouer the purple mantle or night-gowne of the heauens : the seed of pearle , sowne in the spacious fields of the heauens , to bring forth light . haue you seen a statelie mask in court , al set round , and taken vp with a world of beautiful ladies , to behold the sports and reuels there ? imagin the starres then , as sitting in the firmamēt , to behold some spectacle on earth , with no other light then their owne beauties . if that great pan they speake of , were that man sitting in the cabin of the moone , the starres would be his sheep and lambs , feeding in those ample downes of heauen ; which not appearing by day ( their proper night ) you must suppose to be lockt-vp in their folds for feare of those beares and lions in the welkin . as cinthia in the heauēs is euen the very same that diana is in the woods and forests , the starres by cōsequence are her nimphs , who encompas her about , and dāce the canaries in her presence , while so they seeme in twinckling to dance and foot-it in the same place . they are extremely giuen to mortification , and to a strange annihilation of themselues ; that being so great as they are , they appeare to be so litle in the eyes of men ; yea manie of them , are so passionatly addicted to it , as they appeare not at al. they affect equalities amongst them ; and be anie of them neuer so great , they wil shew to be no greater then the rest . their greater height and eminencie in degrees swelles them not a whit or puffs them vp , but diminisheth their creasts , and abates them rather . in fine , they are a happie common-wealth , deuoyd of enuie or ambition ; where wel may you heare of coniunctions of houses , but no iarres and discords amongst them , that euer i could heare of . the morals . in itinere pharvs . when theseus was puzled and entangled in minos labyrinth , he found the twist of ariadne to deliuer him thence . the little bird with the red breast , which for his great familiaritie with men they cal a robin , if he meet anie one in the woods to goe astray , and to wander he knowes not whither , out of his way , of common charitie wil take vpon him , to guide him , at least out of the wood , if he wil but follow him ; as some think . this am i sure of , it is a comfortable and sweet companiō , insuch a case . it is the manner in al countries likely , in doubtful wayes especially , where they seeme to crosse one another , to set vp pillars with hands , directing and pointing this way or that way ; and you wil not beleeue , what comfort it affords to wearie pilgrims , whose euerie step out of their right way , is a greeuous corrasiue to them . the kings had a starre , as companion in their pilgrimage , to the crib . and the pastours of the church , are as so manie starres , to leade their sheep , and to guide their subiects in the pilgrimages of their owne saluation . when the hauens are crooked and perilous to passe to and fro , the publick care of common safeties , in the night especially , prouides some burning torch or other , vpon some turret-top , to admonish the marriners , where they are , and fayrly to guide and direct them into the wished port . this same prouision hath the wisedome likewise of the great creatovr found out , to comfort and direct vs , no lesse , in the open seas , exposing a certain starre among the rest , as a sure and infallible pharus : but more truly and abundantly farre , in ordaining the incomparable virgin marie , his blessed mother , to be our starre in the dangerous and tempestuous sea of the world ; and therefore is heer very truly sayd in the motto : in itinere pharvs . the essay . the starres , as sowne vp and downe the heauens , are the thicker and massiue parts of heauen , certain buttons of crystal as it were , which serue as a grace and entertainment to heauen . by these siluer channels , nature distills her influences vpon vs , and insensibly distributes fauours . they are the eyes of nature , which without cease serue vs as a court-of-guard for watchfulnes ; the iewels of nature , wherewith ordinarily she dresses herself , sometimes they send forth their fire & rayes ; sometimes they ecclipse their beautie , and strip themselues of al refulgence . there are some , who can punctually tel you , the course and trauails of the starres , their aspects , their encounters , and their fruits ; the marriages and diuorces of the planets , their defects and ecclipses , their risings , their settings , their ascēdants , their coniunctions , and the whole ●economie of the heauens . for the swiftnes of their motions , it is a thing almost incredible , what they write , that one starre in the firmament , should goe 200000. italian miles in a minute of an hower ; so as neither the flight of a bird , nor force of an arrow , nor the furious shot of a canō nor anie thing of the world , can approach or come neere the imaginable swiftnes of these starres ; bus yet most true , besides al this , there is no starre , thahath not a particular vertue with it , though vnt knowne to vs. the clowded starres cause infallibly rayne ; others , frost ; some , snow ; others shead abundant deawes ; some sow their hayle ; others open the mouth and gates of the winds ; others fold the world in clowds ; others send downe mistie fogs ; and others contribute to the production and generation of minerals ; and when the sun and the canicular starre are in coniunction , and match togeather , the world burnes with outrageous heats . it is a dreadful thing , to consider the greatnes of these starres , their distāce in the heauens , and the inexplicable swiftnes of their courses and reuolutions . you shal haue a starre which shewes no bigger then a crowne , that is a ●15 . times greater then the earth . goodnes of god ! who would imagin this beautie , to see such a boule of cristal al of fire , to cast downe here beneath a thousand benedictions on the earth , by meanes of its rayes , and the sweetnes of its influences ? the discovrse . thvs farre then of starres in general ; which being thus decyphered , may seeme , as so manie glorious suns , in the firmament of the heauens , but are indeed as the common-people of that celestial citie and kingdome , compared with the sun himself , sitting in the midst of planets , as the king of heauen , to whom al the rest of starres make vp a court ; among whom , as a choice hester , is one especially selected by that great assuerus of starres , to cast his most amorous glances and fayrest influence vpon . this happie and auspicious starre is knowne and called by diuers names , according to the offices she discharges in the great assuerus his house . for first is she stiled by the name of venus , not as the goddesse of loue , which the poets feigne , but for that she disposes them to loue , whom she lwayes , and exercises her vertues on . secondly , she is called the morning-starre , because she shewes and declares the morning now at hand , and euen begins the same herself with her burning torch , to glad the world withal , who then begins to shake off sleepe , and disperse the mistie vapours , which so long had shadowed & clowded ouer the gemell starres or eyes of the microcosmes of men . thirdly , they cal her lucifer , in that her light exceeds so much the other starres ; so as wel she may be sayd , the hester of thē al. and fourthly , she is tearmed the hesperus , for as much as she respects the ensuing night , and greatly illustrats the same with her more then ordinarie splendour and light ; so as she glads the world therewith , & drawes al eyes to gaze vpon her . such is this special starre indeed , the glorie of the heauenlie orbs ; but loe , we haue another starre in hand , dwelling in the vpper region of the empyreal heauens , that greatly symbolizes with this ; but as farre exceeds it ( analogically speaking ) as the great assuerus , sun of iustice , excelles the same of this our firmament ; or as much as this same firmament itself , where god eternally raignes in his empyreal and celestial court : to whom , i say , these seueral titles may aptly agree , according to these other things , which are sayd of her : i am the mother of faire dilection , & of feare , & of knowledge , & of holie hope . this starre is the blessed virgin , that may wel be tearmed venus , because she enflames mens harts with diuine loue ; and therefore is sayd to be the mother of faire dilection . then the morning-starre ; for that she is the beginning of a new life ; as the morning is the commencement of the ensuing day , and therefore , of feare . for feare is the beginning of grace and of a new life ; according to that of the psalmist : the feare of god , is the beginning of wisedome . againe , she is sayd to be the lucifer , for that she giues the beginning of diuine knowledge , and so is the mother of knowledge ; and lastly hesperus , since she so piously regards and illumines sinners , who are in the darknes of wickednes and sinne ; and for that cause is fayd to be the mother of holie hope . she is likewise called the morning-starre , because appearing to mortals , she is the most certain and infallible signe of the approach of the day of grace , and rising of the sun of iustice . this starre besides is called the starre of the sea ; and that most fitly , if philo most skilful of the hebrew tongue be worthie to be beleeued , to whose interpretation beda assents , and the doctour s. bonauenture in his glosse of the blessed virgin ; yea the catholick church , while she sings the aue maris stella , and againe stella maris , succurre cadenti . and truly , if stella be sayd of stando for its stabilitie and immobilitie , then needs must marie be a starre , whose firmitie & stabilitie in good , is known to be such , as she neuer stept a whit frō the wil of god ; which to no other creature once of riper yeares was yet afforded , since ( as the apostle s. iames sayth ) we haue al offended in manie things . but for the glorious virgin , as s. bernard sayth , she was a starre , because that as the starre sheads its rayes without corruptiō , so she powred forth her sonne without impeachment of her virginitie ; and as the starre thereby looses no light : ●o the virgins sonne empayred not the light of her integritie anie wayes . reade but s. bonauenture in his foresaid glasse , and he wil tel you , how fitly the virgin heer bears the office of the marine starre . for it is read ( sayth he ) and true it is , that the custome of marriners is , that when they determine to sayle vnto some land , to make choice of some one starre , by whose signe they may be lead without errour into that part they desire to arriue vnto . and such truly is the office heer of marie our starre , who directs the marriners through the vast sea of the world , in the ship of innocencie or pennance , to the shore of the heauenlie countrey . and not vnlike to this , pope innocent writes , being cited likewise by the sayd s. bernard in the same place . by what helps ( sayth he ) may ships among so manie perils arriue at the shore of that heauenlie countrie ? surely by these two , that is , through the wood , & starre , to wit , through fayth of the crosse , and vertue of that light , which marie , that starre of the sea , hath brought vs forth . now therefore as that starre guides and directs the saylers to their port : so this blessed virgin is worthily called the starre of this tēpestuous sea of the world , while in the midst of the stormes of this life , she lends so her light to such as sayle to heauen-wards ; and through her example and patronage continually directs them to the hauen of the heauenlie countrie . which s. bernard knew wel when he sayd : this is the glorious and renowned starre very needfully raysed vpon this great and spacious sea , shining with merits , and illustrious in examples : if the winds of temptatiōs arise , if thou lightst vpon rocks of tribulations , if thou beest tossed by the waues of pride , & hoysed vp with the surges of ambition , looke on the starre , cal vpon marie , let her not depart from thy hart , let her not depart from thy mouth ; and sayth presētly thervpō : in following her thou strayest not ; imploring her , thou despayrest not ; in thinking on her , thou errest not ; while she protects , thou fearest not ; thou art not wearie , while she guides ; and she propitious , thou landst securely at the part ; and shalt find in thy felf , how worthily it was sayd : the virgins name was marie . the embleme . the poesie . the glorious sunne withdrew his beames of light ; my sinne was cause : so i in dismal night am sayling in a stormie dangerous maine ; and ere the sunne ( i feare ) returne againe , shal suffer shipwrack , where the fraite's my soule . my onlie hope 's a starre , fixt neere the pole , but that my needle now hath lost its force , once touchd with grace , and saile out of course . starre of the sea , thy sun hath giuen thee light ; til he brings day , guide me in sinnes dark night . i seeke , what sages heertofore haue donne , guided by thee a starre , to find the sunne . the theories . contemplate first , that howbeit a starre be sayd , by many degrees to be greater then the earth , yet seemes it to be but a spangle or fierie point only in that immense and vast vault of the firmament . so likewise the blessed virgin though she be the greatest starre in the heauenlie hierarchie , yet thought she alwayes humbly of herself ; and seemed the least & meanest of al the daughters of hierusalem , while she liued on earth . for she was humble in mind , in word , & fact : in mind , because she euer preferred others before herself ; as ioseph : thy father and i with heauines haue sought thee ; in word , because she called not herself the mother of god , nor ladie of the world , nor queene of heauen , but the handmayd of christ , when she replyed so : behold the hādmayd of our lord ; and agayne . he hath regarded the lowlines of his handmayd ; and lastly in fact , because that after she was now become the mother of god ; she made herself the handmayd of elizabeth , when she ministred to her for three months togeather that she remayned with her . consider then , how this starre of ours is as the pole starre or axeltree of the firmament . for as the whole circumference of the lesser starres encompasseth the pole , and the wheel enuirons the axeltree round : so is the whole firmament of saintlie and angelical starres , about this singular & soueraigne starre , that is , the whole celestial court of blessed spirits , wheele , as it were ; and beset the virgin round , because they encōpasse & enuiron her about as the queen & ladie of thē al , according to that which the church sings : like the dayes of the spring-time doe the flowers of roses & lillies of the vallies beset her round , that is , the orders of confessours and virgins ; and the prophet sayth : the queen stood at thy right hād , in a garmēt al of gold with varietie beset round . for the saints are a certain robe or garment of the blessed virgin , adorning her richly indeed like a ladie or queen , where the apostles afford the embroderie of gold ; martyrs , the ground of scarlet , confessours , saphyrs and emeralds ; and the virgins , the orient pearls and diamonds . pōder lastly , that as this starre is moued most swiftly by the motion of its superiour , to wit , of the vpper firmament or chief mouer , because it dayly carries it about the world ; but moues most slowly of its owne motion , for that they say it moues but one degree in a hundred yeares . so the blessed virgin , our delicious starre , moued neuer of her proper motion , but through the motion of her superiour , to wit , the holie-ghost ; for as much as moued by the holie-ghost made she a vow of chastitie , and kept her virginitie inuiolable , and that perpetual ; moued by the holie-ghost , she gaue her assent to the conception of the sonne of god in an instant ; being moued to goe to serue her coseu , presently she climbd the mountains ; being moued ( so great with child , and neer her time ) to goe to bethlem , she went her wayes ; and lastly moued to returne againe , immediatly she returned . behold how she moued not of herself , but meerly of the holie-ghost , which was within her , and guided and directed her in al things : for other motion in moral actions had she none . the apostrophe . o glorious starre ! o mother of mercie ! we haue heard , thou art ful of grace ; and grace is it which we haue need of . o ful of grace ! o radiant starre ! we , who are thy humble suppliants , present our selues before thy sonne , great king of israel , with sack cloth on our back , ashes on the head , and cords about our necks , confessing our offences in thy sight , that by thy meanes , we may obtaine pardon of them . look toward the north heer of our afflictiō , o starre of the sea ; thou art our cōfidence ; interpose thyself , between thy sonne and thy seruants ; that of the one side thou mayst appease his wrath , and of the other cancel our sinnes ; that through the heat of thy rayes , o diuine starre , the frigiditie of our soule may be warmed againe , that by thy aspect , the heat of the holie-ghost may viuify vs. o grant the same , most orient and bright starre of heauen . the xii . symbol . the olive . the devise . the character . the oliue , the fig , and vine , are the three triumuiri , that might wel haue shared the monarchie of trees between them ; as hauing the voyces of al the tribunes on their parts . but the oliue especially refused the scepter , as greater in itself , then the flash and luster of purple and diadem could make it . it is the true agathocles , contented with his sallets in an earthen dish . it is euen the meek and innocent doue of trees , as the doue is the oliue of birds , hauing such sympathie and faire correspondencies with them . it was once the gladsome mirth and ioyful solace of noë's hart ; was then , and is stil the ensigne of peace and mercie . it is the herald of armes , that passeth freely to and fro , amid the holbards and squadrons of pikes , and cryes but out : hold your hands , and al is whist . it decks the browes of poets , equal with lawrel , since apollo and minerua were as brother and sister , and deare to each other . it works the same effects , that musick doth to reuiue the spirits after a dearth , like a liuelie galyard , after a doleful and sad pauen . and for the oyle , the bloud of the oliue , it is the quintessence and creame therof . it is the fat or butter of the garden , and foyls the dayrie , as more wholsome , and agreable with our first nature . if the vine be the dearling of bacchus , the oliue is so to minerua , that being the cellar of the one , and this the apothecaries shop of the other . the oyle is so coy and delicate , so reserued and recollected in itself , as it opens no doores to admit anie stranger into its house . it is fierie and haughtie in its nature , and wil mount and ride on the back of al his fellowes . yet wil it slily insinuate and familiarize itself with its neighbours ; for there is nothing wil encroch so much and shew so slick and smooth a brow . and finally it is the ioyful smile of the husbandman , and the leaping of his hart , his barne , his cellar , and his whole riches . it is the wardrop to cloath his children , wherwith he payes his rent , and liues as merrie as his landlord doth . the morals . speciosa et frvctifera . the lion is a statelie and princelie creature , and held to be the king of beasts , but is not fruitful ; because lightly they whelp but one at once , and that but rarely too , as once in fiue yeares only ; while the wren wil bring fortha 16. or 20. yong in a neast , that besides a litle skin and bone is litle more then a tuft of feathers . the sicamour is a goodlie and beautiful tree , and hath so faire a leaf , so smooth and delicat , as a reasonable taylour might wel haue made therof a gowne and cloke for adam and eue. and yet this galland tree is wholy barren ; wheras the slowe , though she beare a world of fruit , they are but sowre , and she no more then a thorn , sara , the wife of abraham , was so faire and beautiful , as abraham himself had some litle iealousies of her ; and pharao was so passionatly enamoured with her , as to snatch her away from him , and to carrie her to his court. but yet she was not fruitful , while she had much ado , to bring an isaac into the world . lia indeed was very fruitful , and brought her iacob manie children ; but she was but bleer-eyed and ilfauoured , and iacob illuded in taking her for another . rachel indeed was gracious and extreme faire , but barren , that with al her mandragoras was hardly able , to bring her iacob a ioseph ; and the litle beniamin cost her her life . only the virgin marie was truly faire and fruitful both togeather , who remayning stil a virgin , was yet so fruitful , as to bring forth not a ioseph , or a sauiour of a few , or a beniamin , wo to his mother , but a iesvs and a sauiour indeed of the world , being the true primogenitus of an infinit ofspring of christians , succeeding in the world ; and particularly of true parthenians . and therefore was truly speciosa et frvctifera . the essay . by the oliue , is vnderstood the tree , the fruit , the oyle . as for the tree , if man be a tree , turnd vpside downe , as some wil haue it , whose bodie is the trunck , his legs and armes the branches , and whose head the root , where , by the mouth , it takes its nutriment ; the oliue is that tree , since no other tree resembles him so wel . for no other tree , is so ciuilized as it ; no other tree so vseful and profitable to the neighbour ; no other tree , so medicinal . the first makes him a citizen , at least a free denison amongst men ; the second , a marchant ; and the third , a physician ; and what are these but trades , faculties , and professions of men ? minerua was the first as the paynim antiquitie wil haue it , who found-out the culture and planting of the oliue , and expressiō of the lickour thence , or pressing of the oyle ; howbeit they grant the plant had been euer existing , and had growne before , but altogeather vnknowne to men , among the other trees . and for a good while was not the oliue to be found , but with the athenians ; and therefore the epidaurians contracted with them , to send them yearly oliue branches for their sacrifices . and for as much as the lickour of the oliue , as the oyle expressed , is apt for al arts , they held minerua was the inuentresse of al arts . for surely , there is hardly anie art , that makes not vse of this vnctuous lickour , we cal oyle of oliues . there are two sorts of these oliue-trees ; the one ciuil , as i sayd , and fit for citties , bred and trayned vp in gardens , wel cloathed with oliue-coulour suits without , and faced or lined with ash-coulour within ; the other wild , and fitter for the forrests , being somewhat of a harsher & more churlish disposition ; as being ful of thorns and prickles mingled with the leaues , and whose fruit seldome or neuer come to good , as hauing little acquaintance or familiaritie with the sun , that perfects al things , by reason of the thickets of the forrests where they dwel , which hinder it . but for the nobler & more generous oliue , they are high and tal of stature , wel branched , and with as manie armes and hands to feed vs with , as had briarius to sling and hurt with . their flowers and blossomes cluster togeather , like to grapes ; the fruit , made oual-wise , being long and round , about the bignes of our damsons ; whose bones within , were they as smal as the flesh is good , the marchāts needed not to venture so far as to the indies for gold or spices , while spayne and italie would hold them trade enough . as for the oyle , the poets , who are punctual & religious in their epithets , are wont to adorne and mark out al other lickours with their proper attributs , as to tearme the milk , candid ; the honie , liquid gold ; the rose , crimson ; the wine , brisk ; but the oyle of al others , they cal humid , a qualitie common to al lickours , chiefly , for that it hath no ariditie of anie mixture with it , as other lickours haue , euen the water itself , there being nothing more smooth , slick , and lesse porie , then it . it hath besides very faire correspondencie with the eyes , and little lesse then good wil between them ; affording itself to be easily gazed on , as a glasse ; and though not so transparent as other lickours , yet more reflectiue & representatiue , then others . it is apt to burne , as being so liquid , as i sayd ; for were it ayrie , it would vanish into smoke ; if earthlie , turne to ashes ; but being humid , it spends itself , and nourishes the fire . finally this sweet lickour , as the friend and dear companion of nature , restores the fraile forces , comforts the languishing vigour , repayres and nourisheth the bodie in decay , clarifyes the voice , dissipates , resolues , and quite consumes the coldnes of humours , and asswages tumours ; and what not ? the discovrse . the sacred scriptures shew , that when the trees decreed among themselues , to elect a king , the first they cast their voyces on , to haue aduanced to that regal dignitie , and weild the scepter , was the oliue of al other ; for that , the first and principal thing they require in such a one , to gouern subiects with , must needs be pietie and mercie , whose type indeed the oliue beares . no man denyes , but the incomparable virgin is worthily heer compared to the oliue-tree ; of whom is sayd : as it were an oliue specious in the fields . since then that supreme , soueraigne , and more then royal dignitie of mother of god , was conferred so vpō her in her annunciation , as on the mystical oliue , after the receauing of that imperial title , her charitie & mercie appeared more then euer , as became a queē . and as in the annuntiation of the immaculate mother of god , the doue was a true type of her ; so is the oliue-tree no lesse , wheron she sate a liuelie & represētatiue figure ; between which two , are so great correspōdencies , which philisophers cal a sympathie . cal then to mind that admirable doue , which noe , the great restorer of the world , from that vast and huge argo●rie of his , or rather vnmeasurable chest , wherin he had enclosed and shut-vp the world , as vnder lock and key , sent forth to be his spy and intelligencer abroad , to vnderstand , how matters went with the other world so buryed vnder waters . who flying freely through the emptie world , within the liquid ayre , prying euerie where with the pearcing cast of her litle eyes , the elder world beginning now at length to discouer some part of its lamētable ruines , when she mought wel haue lighted either on some statelie cedar , or victorious palme , vpon some mountainous cypresse , or robustuous oak , or els on a prudent mulberrie , the most sweet fig-tree , or most florishing almond : yet she belike as slighting them al , and al other kinds of plants or fruits whatsoeuer , made choice of the oliue to set her litle foot vpon ; and with her litle bil , as a wise and ingenious spy , to fasten on some proof or argument , to bring away with her of the faire dispatch of her negociation , which was to bring her maister certain & infallible tidings of the discouerie and recouerie anew of that greater world . returning to the arck againe , as scriptures testify , she brought along with her a branch of that oliue-tree : the 70. reade a leaf , a sprig of oliue , or , as others , a fescue ( as it were ) therof , to wit , with leaues , or the top only and most slender twig of an vpper bough , as del●ius expounds it ; for so might the doue very easily twitch it off . wherefore we aptly marke the oliue in the whole mysterie of the annunciation , as the symbol of mercie and peace . for in the same was made the first beginning of human redemption , as also of the diuine benignitie and liberalitie ; which to the end that patron and louer of men the sonne of god might truly shew , it was needful , through the bowels of mercie to visit vs rising from aboue ; which in this mysterie was truly done , when gabriel taking the person of an embassadour , deliuered his embassage to marie , whom if you conceaue as the doue of noë , bringing in his hand a sprig of green and flourishing oliue with him , as the ensigne of his legation , you shal not think amisse ; since the oliue-branch is euen with the gentils themselues , the symbol of mercie , but in a singular and peculiar manner denotes to vs the virgin in the theater of the annunciation . but heer may we demand with s. ambrose : how came it to passe , the oliue should flourish so suddenly after the deluge , and put forth a twig so soone ? doubting , whether that leaf ( for so he calles it ) sprung before the floud , or , during it ; concludes it did , and that the iust noë reioyced , to see some fruit reserued of the old seed ; and gathered thence a notable signe of the diuine mercie , for that as then he had remoued the deluge , shewing the fruit which the inundatiō could not hurt , as holding the litle branch of green oliue to be a signe therof , which euen flourished in the midst of the waters and vniuersal inundation of vindicatiue iustice , since this oliue of mercie could not be drownd , swallowed , or withered wholy . wherein truly may we worthily contemplate our blessed virgin marie expresly deciphered , as the especially and most singularly preserued plant of this mysterious oliue , which euen flourishing before the floud , ceased not likewise to be green and prosper in the verie floud . for if the iust man worthily reioyced to behold yet some fruit to remaine of the old seed ; could he choose but admire this mystical branch of our oliue heer , which euen so great an vniuersal floud of sinne could no whit domage ? heer now the hebrewes would haue mount-oliuet not to haue been couered wholy with the waters of the floud , and how that branch of oliue was taken from that mount-oliuet . others report it to haue been fetcht out of paradice . both which i hold fictitious , if we speake of the mount or paradice in a literal or historical sense ; and otherwise most certain , if we vnderstand it in the mystical . for the mother of christ is mystically indeed the mount of oliues , and she also the paradice of pleasure , wherin our lord hath placed the man whom he had formed . this mount of oliues then , this paradice , no floud of ouer-flowing sinnes hath drowned or couered . the embleme . the poesie . not without cause the oliue-tree is slow and backward in it's growth : the fruit doth show , by th' oyle it yealdes ( the type of mercie ) long we did expect , before that tender , yong , and fruitful tree , the oliue , from the earth , ( the blessed virgin ) sprung , by whose blest birth , the oyle of mercie , from the fruit did slow , which with the tree grew vp , and grew vp so , as the first oliue tree , not slow in growth , but branch'd , & leau'd , & fruitful . mercie both ( like oyle ) the tree & fruit , produce : a priest messias in her womb 's annoynted christ. the theories . contemplate first , that as the oliue is euer green , both in sommer , winter , spring , and autumne ; and what hew it receaues in the spring , it stil retaines the dead of winter , when al other trees besides haue either no leaues , or els are changed into other coulours , as tasting the common calamitie of al plants , some few excepted . so the incomparable virgin marie neuer lost the flourishing greennes of her sanctitie , eyther in the smiling sommer of her abundant consolation in her ioyful passages with her deer sonne ; or in the sad winter of her greatest desolatiō , as when she lost him in the temple , and when she found him afterwards hanging on a forren tree , so strangely altered , as he could hardly be knowne , in his passion ; nor in the spring of her youth , while she liued in the house of her parents , and especially in the temple of our lord , during her minoritie ; nor yet in the autumne of her elderage , since look what feruour she had in youth , the same she stil retained in her elder yeares . consider then , how the blessed virgin , and her deer sonne , were both oliues , to wit , the fruits of oliues . for as the oliues are first green , then red , then brown or black : so was the virgin-mother green through the precious and ifitemerate flower of her virginitie ; red , through her burning and enflamed charitie ; and brown or black , through humilitie . i am black behold the brownnes of her humilitie ; but faire : see there the flourishing state of her virginitie ; like to the skins of salomō : where you may note the rednes of her charitie . and for her sonne , the yong oliue , he was green in his whole conuersation . if in green wood they do this , what wil be done in the dry ? he was red in his passion : wherefore is thy garment red , and thy vestments like to those , who stamp or tread in the presse ? and black he was , at his death : while the sun became black as a sack-cloth . ponder lastly , how christ himself was truly the oliue ; and the virgin-mother , but as the oliue . he was truly the oliue , because he had the total and vniuersal mercie with him , and was indeed the natural mercie himself , since it was indeed his verie nature , & proper to him , to haue mercie , and take compassion of al : while the virgin was but as an oliue ; for that she was so accustomed to pittie , and so readie and prompt to compassion , as she seemed in a sort most like vnto him . the apostrophe . o delicious and fruitful mother , doe thou shew thy self a true mother ; and doe not reiect me from thy bosome , so open to al sinners . o virgin mother , o oliue truly fruitful in the house of god : according to thy name , let me proue the effects therof : for thy name dilates itself like oyle ; thou healest the wounded , thou giuest light to the ignorant ; thy name seemes to carrie a bitternes with it , and yet affords vs a sweet and delicate oyle or balme of mercie and grace , more sweet then honie , or the honie-comb , and thy name , in the mouth , is ful of suauitie and delectation . o how faire is thy mercie , in time of tribulation ! for then dost thou powre it forth , when the necessitie is most euident , mother of mercie , who presentst thyself most prompt to al , that erre and goe astray : doe me the grace , to participate of the fruit of thy name : giue me a special deuotion to praise thee , a loue to loue thee , and a perfect humilitie to follow thee , through the fruit of thee , the oliue , thy blessed sonne iesvs . the xiii . symbol . the nightingal . the devise . the character . the nightingal is the litle orpheus of the woods , and the true amphion of the forrest , that hath for lyre the litle clarigal , or organ of his throat ; wherin he is so expert , as not contented to outstrip others , he wil neuer lyn , til with running his diuisions , he hath put himself to a non-plus , for want of breath : and then wil look about him , as he had done some thing , and some notable conquest , when it is but himself or his owne eccho he hath so foyled , and put to silence . he is the pety quirister of the groues , that sings his anthems and prettie alleluyas in the night , giuing the word to chantecler , the obstreperous cock , to ring the world an alarme or peal to mattins . he is so prowd of his musick , and hath so good a conceipt therof , as he wil not consort with anie other minstril besides , to fil-vp his melodious symphonies , but wil alone haue al the pipes to himself . he is a true musician indeed , that hath a litle of the fantastick with him ; and wil in a humour , if he iarre but neuer so little with himself , of meer choler be readie to break his pipes to peeces . it is wel he sings no words or dittyes to his sol-fa ; for if he did , we should doubtles loose our selues , and be rauished and reft of our senses . and much i doubt , whether the intelligences themselues would not quite giue ouer their musick , to listen to his mottets . his vsual songs are certain catches and roundelayes he hath , much after the manner of the french braules ; you would take him verily to be a mōsieur of paris streight , if you heard but his preludiums ; for then indeed is he set on a merrie pin . sometimes againe wil he be in a melancholie dump , and strik you such notes , as dowland himself neuer strock , in al his plaints and lachrymies . it is then perhaps , when he feels so the prickle at his breast , in the midst of his nocturns . for then like a right michael-angelo with his statue framed to the life , which seemes to liue and breath , wil he make his pipes to speak out plainely : ay me ! ah! eheu ! they are hermits al , for the most part , and keep in the wildernes ; and are so contemplatiue , as they hate the citties , and neuer come there but as captiues , sore against their wil. it is maruel , there is such store of them , and that euer they should leaue the single life , and betake them to the coniugal state , but that chastitie indeed is a strayne beyond their ela. the morals . in ore melos , corde ivbilvs . it is a common prouerb : musica in luctu , importuna narratio : as much to say , as musick in mourning , is a harsh hearing . and yet the rauen hath had the commendation of a good voice , and been seriously told , she had a good one ; but whosoeuer it was , he did but to flatter her grosly to herface , & spake not as he thought indeed , but to bring her into a foole 's paradise , and to sooth her vp for some politick ends of his owne . but what haue we heer to doe with such saxtons , as she , that rings but knells to passengers out of this world ? welfare the swan yet , who though she sings very dolefully , yet doth it very sweetly ; nor should i think the swallow had reason of her side , to contend with her for skil in musick ; for if her tune be reasonable good , she hath no varieties ; & though she sing very cheerfully and hath iubiley in the hart , yet hath she no great melodie in her mouth . the philomel is truly she of al wind-instruments , that carries the siluer bel away . for she wil iug-it forth both cheerfully and sweetly to . she wil sing from the hart , as hauing an innocent soule of her owne , not an ounce of care within , nor so much as a doit of debts to pay . a good musiciā indeed can not choose but be an honest man ; nor doe i see , how an honest man can be ought els , then a good musician ; since musick is no more then a harmonie and sweet accord of diuers tones into one melodie , without any iarre or discord between them . and man is a harp ; the powers and faculties of the soule , the strings ; and reason , the harper . if reason then playes wel his part , which makes the honest man , oh what a harmonie there is in al , & especially where the tongue and hart agree togeather ? when dauid playd on the harp , the il spirit fled frō saul . and why ? because he hateth vnitie and concord : whereas had he iarr'd but neuer so litle , the spirit had stayd no doubt . is it so in the harp , & not in the organ of the voyce ? no doubt it is . as the hand striks , what the hart dictats , so the mouth puts forth , of the abundance of the hart . the hart then of the incomparable virgin , so innocent and free from al engagements , how cheerful of necessitie must it needs be ? and being so ful of glee and iubiley , how must she needs exhale & vent forth melodie ? and consequently , how diuinely brake she forth into that melodious canticle of her magnificat ? and if euer els where , was that truly verifyed in her : in ore melos , corde ivbilvs . the essay . it is one of the prettiest sports of nature , when she is in her deepest silence , to heare the litle nightingal to warble , in telling and recounting her delights & pleasures to zephirus and the forrests , tuning a 1000. canzonets , and sweetly cutting the ayre with repetitiō of a hundred thousand semi-semi-quauers , which she lets go without cease . to take her pleasure and recreation , she wil ballance her self vpon a branch that shakes , to dance laualtoes as it were at the cadēce of her lighter sōgs , & to match her voyce with the siluer streames of a chrystal currant , gliding there along , which breaking against the litle pibles , murmures and sweetly purls , while she pearches and sets herself iust ouer a banck enameled al with litle flowers . this litle musician alone making vp a song of foure parts , and a ful quire of musick , you would say she held within her throat , a thousand quiristers , and as manie violins , and that the litle cornet of her beak were in steed of al the wind-instrumēts . it is admirable in so smal a bodie , so cleere , so sweet , so strong , and pleasant a voice should be found ; that in the spring , when trees begin to bud their leaues , whole dayes and nights perpetually she should sing without intermission at al. for whence from so litle a bird , so bold and pertinacious a spirit ? whence that force of containing yet the soule , in chanting so manie diuersities in the continuation of one song ? and where , i pray , are the liuelie streightnings and remissions of the voice cōtained ? whence so artificious and so perfect a knowledge of musick , so ingenious a modulation , so gratful a tone to the eares , which now with a continued breath is drawne out at length , now turns againe with a strange and admirable varietie , distinguished with a slicing voice , and then with a wreasted , peeced togeather ? there is truly no song so hard and abstruse , which she can not expresse , ful , flat , sharp , quick , long , high , meane , base , what more ? now in these litle throats , are al kinds of songs to be found entire and perfect ; which , with so much labour , with so much industrie , and with so manie instruments inuented , the art of man hath deuised . but oh what sport it is , when this litle feathered voice , this prettie harmonie in the shape of a bird , this litle end of nothing , as it were , being viuifyed with musick , is euen readie to kil herself with singing , when she heares the counterfet nightingal ( the eccho ) to mock her , in repeating and returning her whole melodie againe ! for then she mounts vp , as it were , to the heauens , and then stoops againe to the center of the earth , she flyes , she followes , she sighs , she sobs , she is angrie , and then pleas'd againe , she mingles the sharp with the sweet , the sharp with the b. flat ; one while a chromatick , then a sweeter stroke , now strikes a diapente , and thē a diapasō . she counterfets the hawboy , cornet , & flute ; she deuids , she gargles , & hath her groppo , the trills , and the like , and al in that her litle throat , but yet can varie nothing , but the eccho imitates and expresses ; til at last , as it were , she looseth al patience , falles into a litle chafe with herself , in that seing nothing , she heares notwithstanding , and so flyes into some bush to hide her self for shame , til prickt with a thorn , at last she is pushed to sing againe ; which she doth without measure , where al is delicious as before . the discovrse . bvt what are al these to the sweet modulations of maries voice , wherewith she tuned a canticle of her diuine soule , surely a magnifying of god , to be imitated of no nightingal els inferiour to her self , whether we regarde the manifold varietie of her voice , or the delectable sweetnes , or pertinacitie in the cōtinuation therof ? the orpheans , amphions , arions , the orlandos , and marenzas , yea the sirens them selues , with casting downe their eyes would goe their wayes confounded , and breake their harps and other instruments into peeces , had they heard the melodie of that diuine voice of hers . o let thy voice then sound in mine eares ? for thy voice is sweet . the nightingals are sayd to be of two sorts : some conuersant in the mountains , and some in the marishes ; which wil appeare by the manner of their singing , there being no comparison between them ; since the one doth far excel the other , whether it be the litle pipes of their organs be stopt by the vapours of those humid places , i know not , but am sure of this , that iulius alexandrinus vpon the 9. booke of galen , puts a notable difference between them ; for thus he sayes : it is noted , that the nightingals of the plaine and marish places , are wont to giue forth a voice a great deale shirler , then those of the mountains , the organ of the voice relenting no doubt through too much moisture , as they cannot haue so smart , cunning , & tunable a voice with them , as the others haue . behold then our lalie a nightingal of the mountains : for marie arising went into the mountains , and so became the nightingal of the mountains . she inhabited not the fens or marishes of dissolute lubricitie , abode not in the playnes of an ordinarie vertue , but left the vallies of baser cogitations , aspired to the tops of heroical vertues , placed the nest in the sublimitie of diuine contemplations , and dwelt in the top of the mount of perfection ; whence proceeded that sweet voice , more sweet then anie mortal harmonie besides : my soule doth magnify our lord. let others with the tongue , hand , or breath charme the delicate eares ; let them wind the cornet , with a thousand diminutions , runne diuisions on the harpsicon or virginals : let them pay the violin as much as they wil , spatter the lute , touch the orpharion neuer so sweetly , the cithern , pandore , and the harp itself : yet this canticle of magnificat in my mind exceeds them al , and wil stand for organs , flutes , cornets , harps , lutes , citherns , pandoras , and a thousand the like . this is the musick indeed that pleased god , and which i like best , which the syllables of the soule and hart doe make , while the tongue playes the harp. god magnifyed marie because he made her great ; marie magnified god , because she proclaimed him great . when i think of our nightingal , what hast she made to goe vnto the mountains , it comes into my mind , what a certain authour hath , writing of the nature of things : that the nightingal is wont to sing with expedition and celeritie . but what are the causes of her so hastie and precipitous speed ? the naturalists wil tel you : perhaps , because she feares , least the time of her singing passe away ; perhaps she hastens , least her tunes otherwise would seeme harsh and vngratful to delicate eares ; perhaps , because she would charme the eares more powerfully and politely withal . but why made marie such hast then ? let ambrose tel vs : the virgin made hast , that she might not remaine long in publick out of her house . learne , you virgins , sayth he , not to stay in the streets , nor to hold vnprofitable chats in publick . againe let ambrose tel vs : she hastned for ioy , wherewith the virgins hart exulted to god. let him tel vs a third time againe : the virgin being ful of god , whither should she goe but to the higher places , with ful speed ? the grace of the holie-ghost knowes no delayes . let origen yet tel vs : for that christ , who was in the virgins womb , made hast to sanctify iohn , and cleanse him from original sinne . o let our nightingal therefore sing apace . but hearken awhile , you musicians , how the nightingal sings ; obserue her wel , and you shal note , how she pauses not , but equally sings at length with a cōtinual breath without anie chāge , stil holding out her wind to the ful : now she sings her diminutions , and diuides in infinitum ; now she wrigles and curles her voice as it were , now she lengthens it againe , now she drawes it back ; one while she chants forth longer verses , as they were heroicks ; another while , more short and sudden , much like vnto saphicks ; and sometimes againe , extreme short as adonicks . now she tunes with a fat and grosser voice , you would verily say , it were a sack but at least : anon rings she forth a most shril treble , as fetched a note aboue ela at least ; cleer ; to fil the eares with a siluer sound ; sweet , to charme the hearing with deliciousnes , running descant as it were , vpon the ground of her lower notes ; and now she goes smooth & euen againe , now seeme you to heare a tenour voice , then a counter , & a counter-alt following and chasing one another with certain fugnes . but oh terrene philomel , thou art but a babler heer , with al thy trilloes , if thou standst in competencie in musick with this diuine nightingal . let vs heare then this celestial bird : my soule doth magnify the lord. what is this i heare ? what is it , that filles so mine eares ? what is it ? what a melodie and most delicious sound it makes ? which being conioyned with vnequal pauses , but yet distinct , with certain quauer-rests , and not with an artlesse voice vnskilfully come off , nor with affectatiō ridiculously handled ; nor with a swelling of the throat vncomely to see to , nor expressed with instruments il tuned , but most diuinely and sweetly done , with a gratful inflection of the natural voice , which tempering the flat with the sharp , the rough with the sweet , the obscure with the plaine and perspicuous , the ligatures with the free , the slow with the quick , in one expresseth most different harmonies . let 〈…〉 the musick magnificat &c. which if we relish wel , and the eares of our soule be not wholy out of tune , we shal find most melodious indeed , and framed not only with admirable artificiousnes and skil , but tempered with a singular sweetnes and varietie withal . for therin is heard the height of diuinitie in the treble , my spirit hath exulted in god my saviovr : the vilenes of the humanitie , and so the bottom and the base of demission , he hath regarded the lowlines of his hand mayd : the alt of power , he hath done great things for me , who is powerful : the tenour of mercie , and mercie from generation to generation to them that feare him : the graue or flat of vindicatiue iustice , the prowd hath he dispersed in the mind of their hart : the sharp of exultation , my spirit hath exulted in god my saviovr : the sweet of refection and refreshment , he hath filled the hungrie with good things : the chromatick or harshnes of rebuke , the rich hath he sent emptie away : the fatnes or fulnes of fidelitie , he hath receaued his child : the artificiousnes of reuelation , as he hath spoken : the consonance of both instruments , to abraham and his seed for euer . the embleme . the poesie . eve , like a nightingal , was plac'd to sing in eden , where , with euerlasting spring . god for her solace pleasant arbours rays'd , had she with lowlie straines her maker prays'd . but to an alt her mind aspir'd too high , would be like god , affecting deitie , therefore from eden's spring she was expel'd , sad philomel , to mourne : til god beheld a nightingal with an exulting straine , that magnifyed her lord. but downe againe she lowly stoop'd , & iug'd it , when she sayd : he hath beheld euen me a seruile mayd . the theories . contemplate first , that as the searchers into natural things ; haue deliuered , al birds haue their peculiar notes , which are as their proper dialects , in the region of their kinds , & by which , when they are not seen , they are easily distinguished one frō another , saue only the nightingal , which hath no proper note of its owne , but rather alone is a quire of al the musical birds in the world . so is it right with our heauenlie and diuine nightinga ; for as al other creatures chant forth the prayses of their creatour with notes each one in their seueral kinds , our nightingal warbles them , with the diuersitie of al voices , with the voice of the angels , of men , & of things that want both reason and sense . consider then , that , as plinie sayth , the nightingal sings not so artificiously by nature so much as by art ; while the yong are taught to warble of the elder . the yonger ( sayth he ) do meditate and receaue their verses frō the elder to practise , to imitate : the schollars attentiuely listen , and proue their notes , and by turnes hold their peace . you may note a correction in the learner , and a kind of reprehension in the teacher . where behold , how s. iohn was a yong nightingal ; and if you doubt it , aske of him , if he be so or no : he wil tel you : he is the voice of the desert ; which is nothing els but a nightingal . for if you pul but the feathers of his titles from him , you wil find but a voice , and nothing els ; and what is that but a nightingal , that sings as it is taught by an elder one ? whē being in his mothers womb , and hearing this our nightingal , to lead him a verse of her canticle of magnificat ; he prouing to follow and sing likewise , as then could no more , but skip and dance . ponder lastly , that as the nightingal , though often she be iouial & ful of glee , & out of iolitie of hart doth often sing in the publick groaues among a thousand of other quiristers besides , vying and inuiting them al to sing to the prayse of their common creatour : yet wil she sometimes by herself alone be singing in priuate also in a bush , where hauing a thorn at her breast , it is incredible , the varieties she wil put forth , that were euen able to rauish the intelligēces themselues , could they heare her at leasure , and were not occupyed already with their owne musick . so our blessed virgin , the nightingal of heauen , though she would often sing in the companie of angels , as likely was she rarely without their companie , with whom she would chant alleluyas more audible and melodiously ; yet sometimes againe she would retire herself , and the thorns of her deerest beloued through a liuelie memorie sticking at her breast , & pricking the hart , it can not be imagined , how dolefully , and yet how sweetly , she would sing . the apostrophe . behold , great chorist and rectrice of the angelical quire , we poore petty-quiristers beneath , haue our eyes cast vpon thy al-commanding rod , to moderate our time , that with due proportiō heer on earth , we may answer in some maner to that vpper quire in heauen , chanting the prayses of our cōmon lord & great creatour . ô marie , ô diuine nightingal ; thy quire beneath is held in the whole church : but thy priuate schoole is kept in the cōclaue of the hart , where thou art wont to teach thy deuotes , to sing aright , how with the voice , the hart should iump withal , & the hand and foot be keeping a iust time , that is , with our hart , voice , example , and good works , that we keep an euen time with thee , in correspondencie of that great magnificat of thine . come then , great chantresse of heauen , and errect thy schoole within my hart , & teach it to sing forth his praises with out cease . lo heer , i say , let thy voice sound in mine eares ; for thy voice is sweet . the xiv . symbol . the palme . the devise . the character . the palme is the inuincible champion among trees , whose chiefest point of valour consists in bearing iniuries and oppressiōs , without shrinking . it is euen a verie atlas , for the breadth and sturdines of its shoulders ; which the more you loade , the stoutlyer it stands to it : it is for name and qualities a phenix right ; & therefore as they sympathize much , the phenix wil lightly take vp his inne no where els . and verily i think , if the phenix were to be a tree , it would be no other ; and i doubt much whether if the palme could metamorphize itself , it would wish to be anie other , then it is . it is a whole prouisiō for the vse of man : so as a new marryed couple might wel go o● howse with such a stock . they are euen as turtles among trees , & constant louers to each other . they are so amourous one of an other , as they wil hardly liue without the societie of each other ; and yet so chast , as they breed and bring forth without contaction . as the turtle-widowes sit mourning on a withered branch , or die of greef ; so wil the palme in loosing his mate become a withered tree , and pine away . if diuers sexes they haue with them ( as some think ) they are the constant vlisses , and chast penelope ; if not , a damon and pithias . of al trees , the palme comes neerest to a reasonable soule , if loyaltie and friendship be according to reason , who are so passionatly carryed towards each other . no maruel then the palme alone , is so taken vp to heauen , as scepter of the martyrs , where nought but reasonable things can haue admittance . the male , that beares no fruit himself , in a manner is endles and euerlasting , because dateles , as without dates ; and the femal though fruitful & ful of dates , yet bearing pulles her not downe , but is for al her dates as durable euery whit as the other . they are the hermit's kitchin & refectorie at once ; whose dates they eate no otherwise then as they come already cooked and dressed on the tree . they shew a far off like tropheys hangd with fauchions or turkie scimiters ; but neerer hand , as loaden and adorned with strange leaues , insteed of armes or branches without boughes . by reason wherof no bird can hansomely pearch vpon them : which priuiledge is only reserued to the phenix , where she willingly and deliciously plants her cradle , her couch , her temple of the sun , her aultar of holocausts , and finally her tomb at one . the morals . depressa resvrgens . the vertues of fortitude and patience may seeme as two , but are easily reduced to one , that is , to a stout patience , or patient fortitude . if you deuide them , fortitude attempts without temeritie ; and hauing once begun , without al feare goes through with it . patience hath large shoulders , and fit to beare a burden of iniuries , which it suffers not of pusillanimitie or basenes , as not daring to reuenge it self , but out of a true and christian magnanimitie , because he may not . fortitude seekes not dangers , but meeting with them , beares them brauely indeed with courage and good successe . patience is so subiect to it self , as iniuries can not subdue it , as holding this maxim , that the whole victorie consists in yealding . fortitude is sole mistris of it self , submitting passions to reason's lore , through which interiour victorie it works its owne peace . patience walkes aboue nature , so long as it is beneath itself . fortitude is troubled at nothing , but for displeasing the soueraigne good , and feares nothing but sinne. patience makes vse of lawes for its onlie protection , not for reuenge , and its owne forces , to eschew indignities and not to offer them . if fortitude haue a quarel in hand , it regards not the arme , but the cause , not how stout it is , but how innocent ; and where it hath equitie for warrant , wel may it be maistered , but not vanquished . the contrarie euents , do only exercise , but not affright it ; and whensoeuer it is pressed with afflictiō , it acknowledgeth the inuisible hand to be ouer it , that layes very sensible scourges vpon it , against which it dares not rebel or murmur a whit . this stout patience then , or patient fortitude , this heroical constancie ( i say ) the glorious virgin had , through the whole course of her blessed life , but especially in bearing the dolours of her sonne 's passiō , so equal , and perseuering so long at the foot of the crosse , and not fainting the while , but remaining firme on her feet , so victorious a palme of cades , as wel might she say indeed : depressa resvrgens . the essay . the palme , of trees is it , that beares away the palme . it is euen the tower of plants , both for height and strength at once ; for if the pine be higher , it is the weaker ; if the oak be stronger , it is nothing neer so high ; and therefore with antiquitie it was the symbol of constancie and victorie . it is ( as i may say ) the phenix of trees , with which it hath such simpathies , as what with the etimologie of the name , being the same in greek , and the faire correspondencies they haue with each other , in authours they are much confounded . and for the phenix , she wil neast herself in none other . the palmes are likewise the turtles amōg trees ; for they are male and female , as they ; they match and payre togeather as they , and are as loyal as they , and ful as chast as they . for in the absence of each other , they produce no fruit , and yet ( wherin they much exceed the turtles ) they bring thē forth without cōtaction of branch or root , but it is enough that they enioy each others companie ; and so great a sympathie they haue withal , that if they be transplanted from each other , they mourne and languish likewise , if not dye . the palme is euen the magazin of al prouisions , for the vse and sustentation of man. the indians haue need of manie things , and lo the palme supplyes thē al ; so as if anie one be industrious among them , or anie thing be very profitable , they wil say immediately : behold the palme . it affords them oyle , wine , and bread , as they hādle it ; with the leaues they couer their houses , as we with tiles ; they write theron , insteed of paper ; if they put themselues to sea , the palmes doe furnish them with al things necessarie thereto ; and not only with victuals , but euen the very vessel in itself is nothing els but palme . the trunck and branches yeald them masts and boards ; the leaues being wouen , make vp their sayles ; with the bark , they frame their tacklings and cordage . so as not without some miracle , as it were , may you say , when you see a man-of-warre of theirs , or a marchant's ship , behold a palme , how it rides vpon the seas . the discovrse . behold heer the true triumphant palme indeed , the queen of heauen , who notwithstanding al her combats and bitter agonies in the passion of her sonne , yet stil she triumphed ouer al , especially in her glorious assumption : i am exalted as a palme in cades , that is , in my assumption , since cades is interpreted : translation ; for who sees not the assumption of the mother of god , to be nothing els , but a certain translation of her frō this militant to the triumphant church ? a palme being oppressed with a heauie weight , was put vp in the obsequies of marguerit of austria , with this deuise : subacta mole resurgo ; representing therin , how the iust shal arise at the last resurrection , like the palme , more faire and beautiful then before ; though formerly oppressed , by the burden of death and of human necessitie . and so was it with our incomparable ladie in an eminent degree , especially ( i say ) at her glorious assumption . among the palmes , there are male and female ; and the female neuer brings forth fruits , but standing opposit by her male ; and hence it is , that two palmes , being planted by two banck-sides of a riuer , are the hieroglifick of nuptials , with valerius : & especially , say i , of the spiritual nuptials between the spouse , & his spouse , between christ and his blessed mother . amōg these palmes likewise , is noted this difference ; that the male growes and flourishes sooner then the femal ; and so fares it heer with our two palmes , our sauiour christ , and his deare mother . where , of the first sayth the prophet : the iust shal flourish like the palme ; and the latter sayth of herself : i am exalted like a palme in cades ; with this difference , that christ much sooner then his mother arising to immortal life , seemed to flourish sooner : as he testifyes of himself : and my flesh hath flourished . but the blessed virgin dying some yeares afterwards , and gloriously resuscitated , did flourish indeed , but so as after him . it is sayd moreouer , that though the palme grow higher then manie trees , yet neuer arriues it to the height of the cedar . so likewise , though our mystical palme , our admirable ladie , were raysed and exalted so high , as she far transcended the glorie of al men and angels , yet to the height of the glorie of christ , very aptly signified by the cedar , was she neuer assumpted , as wel for sublimitie as innated incorruptibilitie ; because our lord christ as wel in the triumphant as militant church is the head of the mystical bodie , whereof his mother was a member only , though the noblest part of al , as being the neck . heerto may be added that prettie deuise of mark anthonie , being this : a pillar wreathed and composed about with two branches , the one of palme , the other of cypresse , with this motto : erit altera merces ; signifying thereby , the recompence of a generous man , was either a noble victorie , or an honourable death ; for that the palme representing victorie , the cypresse of the other side is a symbol of death , being ordinarily vsed in the funerals and sepulchers of the dead . so was al the life of the blessed virgin a perpetual standing pillar or trophey , as is were , of incredible mysteries , especially in the palme of her glorious assumption , yet by the meanes of the cypresse of her death , since that was to be the way and the next step to her highest aduancement , and the greatest victorie of al. the palme , is sharp and rough beneath , but smooth and handsome aboue ; wherein s. gregorie sayth in his morals , the life of the iust man is aptly represented , being bitter and rough in the exteriour shew and in the sensitiue part , but yet sweet and delightful through contentments which the soule receaues the while : so was the whole life of the mother of god nothing els but a life of paynes and doulours , especially at the passion of her deerest sonne , which through compassion she made her owne , but yet sweet for the end , to wit , of a life of rest and repose afterwards in the kingdome of heauen , and of the ineffable ioyes of her glorious assumption by the way , as riding in triumph . which saint besides , makes yet another note , which is this ; that the palme heerin is differing from other trees , in that the other are grosse beneath , and grow slenderer vpwards ; while the palme of the contrarie , is slender beneath , and bigger and grosser , the higher it goes : so were the thoughts of the blessed virgin , the true palme indeed , as poore and slender downe to the earth-wards , but substantial and solid vp to the heauens , whose conuersation doubtles , as s. paul sayth , was wholy in heauen . strange things are reported of the palmes , to liue mutually , and dye togeather . a singular type surely of the sympathie between our two palmes , our christ and his blessed mother , affording one life , and as it were one self-same death between them both . for christ dying , she languished as dead ; and he arising from his sepulcher after his death , she reuiued againe as it were from death . and so that same epitaph more fitly might be applyed to these diuine louers , our amourous palmes , which a certain poet of ours had framed for a payre of profane louers , dying both with one and the self-same sword : his being was in her alone , and he not being , she was none , they ioy'd one ioy ; one grief they grieu'd ; one loue they lou'd ; one life they liu'd . the hand was one , one was the sword , that did his death , her death afford . the embleme . the poesie . phaenix ( in greek a palme ) doth aptly sute with that rare bird the phaenix , here the fruit ; which , when bright phoebus scorching heames displayes , a neast of spices ( to renew his dayes , by a second birth ) vpon this tree he makes : where burnt to ashes so himself forsakes , made yong , that he retaines what he had byn . thus th' only sonne of god , t' abolish sinne , midst burning flames reuest with mortal plume , reuiues man's nature , which he doth assume ; the virgin phaenix is the fruitful tree , where god in flames of loue , new-borne would be . the theories . contemplate first , in the palme , what a gratful shade it affords to wearie trauellers on the way , preseruing them from the scorching rayes of the sun , and yealding them dates to expel hunger , and not so only , but is a notable delicacie besides . the monks and fathers of aegypt , thebarda , and arabia , would make a goodlie liuing with a palme-tree only by a chrystal riuer side , subministring them al things needful , for meat , drink , and cloath , to satisfy nature . o rare and admirable tree ! but then consider the palme of paradise ; i say , the admirable virgin palme , vnder whose shadow and protection , we are saued from the outrageous heats of concupiscence , fed with the delicious examples of her life , and cloathed with the habits of her vertues , and especially refreshed with the sweet consideration of the limpid streames of her purest chastitie , no lesse then nectar in the tast . consider then , how as the palme is rough without , narrow beneath , and broad on the top , wheron the phenix takes delight to build his neast : so was our blessed ladie in exteriour shew but coorse in the eyes of her nazarean neighbours , being held for no more , then a carpenter's wife ; while she was truly indeed the palme of cades . beneath she was narrow , that is , in the loue of terrene things , wheron she touched as it were , but in a point only of the human nature , not acquainted with the impurities and miseries therof : but broad on the top , that is , in diuine contemplation , and loue of celestial things , where she alwayes dwelt in the highest ; and where the glorious phenix , the eternal word , had taken vp his neast for so many moneths , to issue thence a human phenix , her true and natural sonne indeed . ponder lastly , that as the palme euer flourisheth and neuer withers , so our incomparable mother of god , had alwayes fresh and flourishing thoughts , being holie and chast ; green and intentions , because most pure and neat ; and green and flourishing affections , because very liuelie and actiue in the seruice of the highest , whose lowlie handmayd , notwithstanding her maternitie , she would be ; nor decayd or withered euer , because euer entire and neuer once subiect to corruption ; not in bodie , because embalmed with the deitie : as cinamon and balme aromatizing i haue sent forth an odour ; not in soule , because being vnited with the soule , of her sonne , they were made in a manner both as one , as by this is insinuated : a sword shal pierce through thy verie soule : that is , thy soule , which is his ; or his , which is thyne : nor in spirit , because through loue she was truly conuerted into god ; and s. hierom sayth : the grace of the holie-ghost had fully replenished her , and diuine loue had made her wholy white . the apostrophe . o statelie and victorious palme of paradice , most triumphant queen of heauen , cittie of refuge , temple of safeguard , house of the liuing god , faire couch of the mystical salomon , and his throne of iuorie ! oh sanctuarie of god , the arck of peace , seat of wisedome , the rest and repose of the most high god , the glorious cabinet of a thousand and a thousand guifts of the most blessed holie-ghost , the precious reliquatie of al infused graces ! o sacred pauilion , where god sets himself in the shadow of the rayes of his great glorie ; most delicious ladie , most pure and gracious , in the midst of those celestial pleasures , and diuine delectations of thine : grant , i beseech thee , that i alwayes rest vnder the shade of thy branches , within the folds of thy protection and sweet mercie , in this life ; and when i shal finish the course of my pilgrimage , in this vale of miseries , it would please his omnipotencie , to vnite my hart and spirit , with his more then holie spirit , by the sacred linck of his most faire and transforming loue . this doe i beg as the feet of thee , most soueraigne palme of the heauenlie paradise . the xv. symbol . the hovse . the devise . the character . the house is an artificious plasme , framed by the hand of man , for his vse and habitation . it is a creature made in spite of nature , to vye with her : that forasmuch as man only is borne naked , and without a house to put his head in , afforded him by nature , art taking compassion on him , abundantly supplyes the defect . there is nothing comes so suddenly to so great a growth , as it ; for wheras an elephant being one of the greatest among beasts , and yet by manie degrees not so big as manie houses are , he is twentie yeares ere he comes to his ful growth : a goodlie house wil be reared , and brought to perfection in lesse then a yeare . plants wil not grow without rayne , or waters cast vpon them , where this plantation hath no need of waters , but rather al industries are vsed to keep them out . the tortoyes in this respect , is better housed , not charged with reparations as long as his lease lasts , for terme of his life : but yet hauing none els to trust , to looke vnto it , he is faine to carrie it about him . the cockle hath his house , tiled with slate ; which hauing no lock and key too , he is forced to keep at home for feare of theeues . and not so much as the poore snayle but hath a house of his owne , which in his pace , like a pedler with his pack , wil he carrie about him throughout the world , and do that with time , which the sunne can no more then do , with al his swiftnes , nay you eate not an oyster , but you vn-house him and put him out of his tenement . the sun is the house of light , that needs no windowes , being nothing els but light . and for the 12. principal houses and pallaces in the heauens , they are but weakely built without foundation , more then the astronomers working braines . the moone is the house of the flux and reflux of the seas , who thence go in and out by turnes at their pleasures . the almond is a house of the kernels within , which neuer comes forth til the roof comes fluttering downe about her eares , that costs her life . the hiue , is a house and colledge of bees , where they liue collegially togeather ; the combs are their refectorie . the birds , for proper houses , haue their neasts ; whose children are the yong ones , and she the good huswif that keeps at home . the morals . sedes sapientiae . looke where the prince is , there is the court ; and where the court , there his seate . wisedome is the prince of the whole microcosme of man : his court then , and seate must needs be in the power of the vnderstanding , where he chiefly resides , and not where soeuer his dominion stretcheth ; for so should he be in euerie place in person , which stands not with the maiestie of so great a prince . wel may his ministers , like purseuants and heralds , performe and execute the royal commands : as the hands , to make prouisions to maintaine the state ; the feet , to trauel for that purpose ; the eyes , to keep centenel in the turrets of his pallace , and that neer to his person , against forren iuuasions , and the like : but yet the prince himself in his royal person departs not a whit from his proper chamber of presence , the intellect . and god himself , the monarck of the whole vniuers , is seen to be euerie where within his dominions , through his essence , power , and presence , but not in that particular manner , as he is in heauen , in his proper seat ; or as he was in earth , in his humanitie , or in the sacrament itself most mysteriously and diuinely . for to speake in general , his seat is euerie where : the heauens , are the roof ; the starres , the seelings ; the earth al diaperd and diuersifyed with infinit coulours , his footstool and pauements ; and the maruels of nature , his shop of wonders , but his proper and peculiar seat , where he resides in , as in his court , is either in the empyreal heauē ( as i sayd ) or in christ's excellent humanitie , or in the most venerable and dreadful sacrament of the aultar ; nor hath he made choice of anie other seats to dwel in , as not worthie or able to comprehend him . where then had wisedome properly set vp his seat , but in that pallace he had built for himself , founded in so great an humilitie , and so wel sustained with the seauen-fold pillars of the holie-ghost , i meane , in the virgin-womb of the incomparable ladie ? who receauing , and so long entertaining the wisedome increated , in her virginal lap , as the true salomon indeed , reposing sweetly in his iuorie throne , may wel be stiled : sedes sapientiae . the essay . a house being a meer artificial , and no natural thing , hath its first subsistence in the idea of man's brayne ; according to whose model , good or il , the house so built , proues good or il . we recurre then to the architect , for direction in al. this architecture is a soueraigne mistris of building , which giues the addresses , for disposing al the parts of a house , with relations in themselues , in comlines , proportion , ornaments , situation , distances , eleuations , and a thousand of the like ; of al which yealds it a pertinent and satisfactorie reason to the curious examiners , why euerie thing is so done , this and not that . some are architects by hand only , and no more , who frame their buildings by roat , taking forth copyes heer and there , but can afford no reason at al for what they do , nor inuent ought that is worth a rush ; and for a final reason say nothing but , such is the custome so to do . others are architects by booke only , and by discourses which they haue read ; but they haue no hands to put in practise , and know but the theorie only ; such as they , are good for nothing , but to build a house for plato , of ideas , al suspending in the ayre . the good architect should linck his spirit with his hand , and the compas with his reason , setting his hand to work , as wel as the brayne . the first do frame but bodies without a soule ; the second , soules without a bodie ; the third do build the whole , and are men of note and reputation indeed . the perfect architect indeed should be ignorant in no science ; otherwise , if he do wel , it is by chance , or els by nature , as beasts do , which do manie goodlie things , and know not why , nor wherefore . he had need be a painter , to make his plaines , eleuations , designes , & to copie-out a thousand rarities to please the phantasie withal ; a geometrian , to handle the compas , for the vse of circles , rulers , squares , plummets , and the like ; to haue the perspectiue , to let-in lights into his house , to steale-in the day in certain corners , to content the eye with diuers aspects ; and if not directly to introduce the sunnie rayes , at least obliquikly through reflexions ; the arithmetick , to cast vp and calculate the charges he is at , to number the materials and degrees that belong thereto ; the historie : for al the enrichments of buildings , armes , statues , and other ornaments , are nothing els but historie , true and fayned , which if he knowes not , he shal commit a thousand errours ; to haue philosophie , to know the nature of beasts , the seas , the elements , flowers , fruits , and al whatsoeuer in nature ; astrologie and phisick , in planting his house in a holsome and sound climat , in choosing the best sun , a good wind , the purest ayre , holesome waters , a faire and free prospect , a good situation for pleasure and profit . this is certain , that al art is then in truest perfectiō , when it may be reduced to some natural principle or other . for what are the most iudicious artizans , but the mimiks of nature ? this same in our house is seen , comparing it with the fabrick of our natural bodies , wherin the high architect of the world hath displayd such skil as euen stupifyes the human reason to enter into it : where the hart , as the fountain of life , is placed in the midle , for the more equal communication of the vital spirits ; the eyes seated aloft , to comprehend the greater circuit in their view ; the armes , proiected on each side for the vse and commoditie of reaching ; briefly , the place of euerie part , is determined by the vse . wherefore , the principal chambers of delight ( as studies and libraries ) should be towards the east : for the morning is a friend to the muses ; al offices requiring heat , as kitchins , stil-houses , stoues , and roomes for baking , brewing , washing , or the like , would be meridional ; al that needs a coole & fresh temper , as cellars , pantries , butteries granaryes , to the north ; and so likewise al galleryes appointed for gentle motion , especially in warme climes , to the west . the discovrse . the chiefest grace , splendour , and glorie of a house , is , that the maister therof , who dwelles therin , be markable & illustrious for singular & eminent vertues ; since the chiefest ornament of a house is , the vertue of the lord therof . now then the blessed virgin , being eternally ordayned to be a house and habitation of the diuine word incarnate , and wherin the holie of holies for nine months , and the endles fountaine of al sanctitie was corporally to inhabite , this sacred house must borrow needs so great a splēdour & dignitie , as no other , nor the empyreal heauen itself , might anie wayes cōpare with it . what more ? howbeit the glorie of that ancient house and temple of salomon were great , yet can none deny this defect in it , for being incapable to hold the greatnes of god in its ample galleries & spaces , euen by the genuin confession of salomon himself : if the heauen and the heauen of heauens can not containe thee , how much lesse this house which i haue built ? but the golden house of the blessed virgin , more capacious then the heauens themselues , did close in and encōpas the greatnes of god on euerie side , as ieremie sayth : a woman shal encompas a mā . and the holie catholick church itself sings : whom the heauens can not containe , hast thou held in thy lap. besides that , which highly aduanceth & sets forth the glorie of a house , this same prerogatiue is of no smal moment , to haue been deciphered , delineated , plotted , and contriued , & euen raysed and built from the first foundatiō by a skilful & exquisit architect . behold god himself , the supreme architect , not only designed this house , but euen finished it himself , & brought the same to that eminent perfection , it is of : i haue been eternally ordayned . behold the plotting , cōtriuing , & designing of our house ; the highest himself hath founded her , where note the foundation . i know , how ouid in his metamorphosis describes the house of the sun very elegantly in this manner : the pallace of the sun , on pillars highly placed , with burnisht gold did shine , and pyrops stone , and seeling roofs with purest iu'rie graced . but who sees not , how this house heer , wherin the sun of iustice dwelt , did farre exceed the same , whose ornaments surpasseth those , by infinit degrees ? for whose golden pillars , were the guifts of the holie-ghost erected in her ; for whose pyropus or carbuncle , which euen glowes like a burning cole , her most ardent charitie abundantly supplyed ; & for the white & purest iuourie , her inuiolable & immaculate virginitie . whence , while the most blessed virgin marie more plētifully abounded with the guifts of the holie-ghost , she burned more ardently with charitie ; and in virginal puritie was more neat , then the heauenlie spirits themselues ; surely more strong and statelie pillars sustained this house , more precious carbuncles enriched it , & purer iuourie adorned it , then those others did the ouidian pallace of the sun. i haue sanctifyed this house , which thou hast built , to put my name eternally therin , sayd god to salomon , not being yet ( as i suppose ) affected so to that material house , as he pretended thereby rather to shew the loue he bare to his spiritual house , & yet corporal both , of his incomparable mother , whom he hath so sanctifyed with his eternal predestination before , and enriched so with his personal presence , to put his name eternally in her . for that saying can not so wel be verified of the house built by salomon , which was afterwards demolished & razed ; but rather of marie heer , who shal be sayd & preached for euer , the temple of god , the holie house , where al glorie hath entred in , as to a chast bower , & which hath neuer been ruined like that of salomon ; for that her foundations haue been planted in the holie mountaines , as dauid sayth , that is to say , by the diuine persōs of the holie trinitie ; while the power of the father hath confirmed her in goodnes , the sonne hath illustrated her with wisedome , & the holie-ghost preserued and established her in his grace . material houses , which are built but of frayle matter & trāsitorie stuff , diuersly fal to rubbage , & are soone demolished quite , as iob sayth : who dwel in clay houses , haue a terrene foundatiō . but the bodie of marie , howbeit otherwise framed of a frayle matter , is neuertheles so consolidated & cōfirmed through the fire of the holie ghost , as she is subiect to no demolishment or dissolution at al ; & as she sayd in the canticles , that leaning or resting on her wel-beloued , she was strong as the mountaine of sion , hauing such confidence in him . so as truly the prophecy of aggeus was fully accomplished in her : that the glorie of the latter house should be greater then that of the former . for as in the building of the first , was heard no noyse or the least stroke of anie hammer : so heer in this house of marie , could not be heard so much as the least sound or touch of original sinne , so built by the diuine wisedome , who was a more expert architect by far , then salomon was , of whom is verifyed that which dauid so long before had prophecyed & foretold : that glorie and riches should be in the house of the diuine wisedome , and its iustice shal be perpetual . the embleme . the poesie . hau , who dwels heer ? a virgin. what are you ? a paranymph sent far , am come to sue for one that pilgrime-like would lodge this night vnder your roof , and be a mortal wight , comes as a bride-groome . heer 's no harbouring seat . but h 'is a monarch . then for me too great . h 'is god. he now , & euer lodg'd with me . would be a child , your sonne . how can this be ? by th' holie-ghost you shal be shadow'd ore ; you let him in by keeping closd your doore . then be it donne . one fiat banisht night , and now an other brings from heauen the light. the theories . contemplate first , that as in euerie house wel built , and orderly disposed , there is a dining-roome at least ; and a hansome chamber for some principal guest to lodge in ; so this gol●ē house , the mother of god , which he had so eternally prepared for himself , was not contriued without them both . and first for the dining-roome , king salomon made him a throne of the wood of libanus ; which woodē throne was the blessed virgin , because the heauenlie prince and bride-groome sate and lay sweetly reposed in her armes and wombe delightful vnto him , while he took flesh of her . she was a bride-chamber , because a golden couch . for as gold is beautiful , incorruptible , and refulgent : so was her vertue golden , because beautiful for sinceritie of manners ; incorruptible , through priuiledge of virginitie ; and refulgent , for her luster of vertues . o how beautiful ! behold the beautie of her manners , chast generation : see the priuiledge of virginitie ; with clarity : note the luster of vertues . consider then , that as a house hath also galleries for recreation and delight , so had our mystical house heer , delicious galleries to walke in , and , for varietie , three : to wit , the lower , the middle , and the vpper gallerie . the lower was sustained with siluer pillars ; and therefore is it sayd , that wisedome erected siluer pillars . the middle was paued with precious stones , according to that : the middle was strewed with charitie . the highest was hangd with silks and purples ; and therefore is added a purple ascent . the lower gallerie of this virginal house , was the precious bodie of the virgin ; the middle , her purest soule ; and the highest , her sublime and angelical spirit . her bodie was the lower gallerie , because her sensualitie was neuer prone to euil , but alwayes cōformable to reason . her soule , the second ; because strewed with precious stones , that is , diuine vertues . her spirit was the vpper gallerie , & adorned with purple hāgings , for being so enflamed with charitie , or wounded with the sorrow of her sonne 's passion , or sprinckled with his bloud . ponder lastly , as a house , especially the pallace of kings , requires to be spacious and ample ; so was this house , our ladie , being the house of god , most spacious & wide ; according to that which the church sings of her : whom the heauens can not containe , hast thou held in thy lap . secondly , wide and ample in cōpassion , while she receaues al , and refuseth none , into the bowels of her mercie ; receauing the tempted , in prtoecting them from the snares of the diuel ; sinners , in obtaining mercie and grace for them ; the iust , in conseruing thē in grace obtained ; and lastly the dying , in receauing their soules into her protection : and therefore sayd to be mother of grace , and mother of mercie . the apostrophe . o sacred house , temple of the diuinitie , & diuine tabernacle of the liuing god ! a work surely much greater thē the workmāship of the world besides ! o sacred pallace framed by the diuine hand , with admirable art , and most exquisit & choice matter ; a peece of workmāship without peer , erected by the diuine wisedome , imputrible arck incorruptible vessel , celestial tēple , cittie of god. oh what glorious things are sayd of thee ! thou wast ordained eternally , before the earth was made . the lord hath possessed thee frō the beginning of his wayes , & thou wast before his works . thou wast begot , when as yet there was no abysses seen ; thou wast formed before moūtaines were yet placed . whē he prepared the heauēs , was thou presēt . by al the se faire prerogatiues we beseech thee , incōparable peece of his handie work so lōg designed & premeditated before hād , & so exactly framed at last to his owne idea & designe , that in vs likewise his eternal designe of predestinatiō through our defaults may not vtterly perish . the xvi . symbol . the hen. the devise . the character . the hen is that gentle hart , that contents herself with the common apellatiue of her sex ; & as others ambitiously vsurp strange titles , as in hawkes , for males or females ( as the māner is ) to be called ladie , mistris , & the like , she wil go no higher then the stile of plaine goodwif , & be called the hen , and wil take it amisse , to be termed otherwise . yet is she the dear consort of the generous chantecler , and his deerest beloued partner , and most indiuidual cōpanion . she is very familiar and domestical , and that so truly as she wil neuer goe from home so much as a flights shot . but is so kind-harted to al , especially to her owne children , as she hath not a dish , which she shares not among them . it is sport to see , how she knocks to her dresser , to haue thē come quickly , if she haue but a bit worth the eating , and then to see what strife there wil be amōgst the litle fry of them , for a single graine of corn , as the ambitious of the world for a crowne & scepter , or as caesar and pompey for the empire and dictatourship of rome itself ; while the hen falles a deluing and digging afresh for more . she wil be as fierce as a tigre or nemean lionesse against the assassinats , who are so bold at to seaze on her familie , when she wil bristle her self and fly in the faces of the cruelest bandites that are of the lād , or pirats of the ayre , on behalf of her brood ; and triumph as fast , if she come but handsomly off with her owne . and then must al the world take notice of her conquests , and she be recounting the same to her deer consort , who wil swel therat and bristle as fast ; and euen menace the skyes in his greatestcholer . she is no great arithmetician , and hath but a shallow memorie ; for she neuer knowes , how manie yong she hath ; & so she haue anie at al , she is pleased alike . she loues not her children so much , as the name of mother ; which holds in one , as wel as a 100. she is not a castle , or bulwark , which keep their stands attending the assailants ; but as a pinck at sea , wel man'd , wil meet and encounter the aduersaries themselues , and defye them to their teeth , and with the sayles of her wings wil seeme to fetch the wind of them , to fly the fuller into their faces . but if she be let alone , and not prouoked , there is noe doue more meek and gentle them she . the morals . tvtela fidissima . it is hard to say , which is better , to giue protection to others , or to find it for themselues ; this am i sure of , the first is more specious and glorious , the latter more happie and secure . it is sayd indeed : beatius est dare quàm accipere , because it is supposed , who hath to giue , hath otherwise no need to craue , wherin the beatitude consists ; wheras who finds protection now , was of late in distresse , or feare of danger ; so as though he hath the happines now , to dry vp his waterie eyes , yet not the priuiledge , to haue them neuer to dry . to giue protectiō , inuolues a power to be able to afford it ; to take the same , implyes a necessite to recurre vnto it : the first hath a kind of obligation with it , if not of iustice , of charitie at least , to yeald his succours : in which estate he euer stands , & cōsequently in a state of seruitude , because obliged . but the secōd discouers his impotencie only , and present il condition ; but yet with a hope of enfranchizment , and a kind of title vnto it ; yea manie times an absolute freedome and quite discharge of further cares . the truth is , howsoeuer the first , as it is more honourable , so is it more happie , & as approaching neerer to the soueraigne excellencie of god himself , is acquit frō anie imperfection of seruile obligation ; but al what is , is meerly a goodnes in him , that seemes to put the obligation vpon him , which is no more indeed , then a kind of vertue in him , that makes him so prompt and readie to help the miserable in al necessities . this excellēcie and singular priuiledge the glorious vrgin hath , of power , to protect ; & of beneuolence , to haue the wil to protect ; with the happines besides of an infallible efficacie in al whatsoeuer she vndertakes . and therefore is she implored of al , and held to be the common sanctuarie of the necessitous that fly vnto her , & especial patronesse and sure protectrice of her deuotes , and by consequence rightly and deseruedly called : tvtela fidissima . the essay . the cock is very glorious , when he hath al his attires and accoutrements about him ; for then he wil strout it , as a souldier right ; he buckles himself against his enemies , and with his wing making a target or buckler , defends , couers , and shroudes the chickens from the assaults of the rauen ; and falles a quarrelling with euerie one , either friend or so , that approches or but looks vpon them . and for the hen herself , before she layes her egs , as others doe , she begins to prouide and take care for her lying downe . for she chooses her a quiet place to breed in , and builds a neast or couch to sit in , and makes it very soft , as knowing wel her egs would bruise and destroy one an other , if they be not commodiously and handsomly layd . her yong are no sooner hatched , but she presently clucks them with her wings , least the cold or sharper ayre should hurt them ; and is so tender of them , as that if a kite or wesel come in sight of her , receauing them vnder the shaddow of her wings , she opposes herself as a stout champion against them , with a great clamour and outcry , to strike a terrour into them , defending them herself with spurre , bill , and wings , with might and mayne , so as she wil rather euen dye in the place in defence of her brood , then by flying away leaue them in anie danger . to some she wil present her wings to cluck beneath , to others yeald her back to mount vpon , nor hath she anie part about her , which she is not willing to afford them what she may , to cherish and conserue them ; nor that truly without ioy and alacritie , as appeares by their kackle and tone they haue at such times . when she is alone , and hath no more to care for then herself , she trembles at the hawke and buzard , and wil fly away from them ; but if she haue yong , and espy anie danger neer , she comes forth like a lion against them in their defence , and fights oftentimes far beyond her forces . the discovrse . now is this hen truly a gallant symbol of the fruitful mother of god , as wel for the plentie of egs she layes ( for they wil lay , some two , and some three a day ) as also for breeding so each moneth of the yeare , whereof though aristotle and plinie except the two winter-moneths , yet experience shewes and some authours affirme , they wil lay also in those moneths , and some there are , that wil lay two a day euen in those moneths likewise ; which surely is a great fecunditie , not lightly found in anie fowle besides . for lo , the blessed virgin hath a double fecunditie with her , one natural , & the other mystical : the natural , in bringing forth christ , whose natural mother she was ; and being his mother , she was mother in a sorte to as manie , as are called an are truly christians : whilst of this one her seed became multiplied beyond the starres in heauen , & aboue the sands , that lye on the sea-shores . but what shal i say of her mystical fruitfulnes , which euen filles and embraceth the whole world , that inuocates and calles vpon the name of marie , as their common mother ? behold al the kingdomes therof , and al the ample prouinces , and you shal find them ful of her deuotes and children . nor is hungarie only her proper damilie , which title she hath taken , and yet holds from the donation of s. stephen king of that nation , who freely and deuoutly once consecrated the same to the mother of god ; but euen our england is knowne also by the name and title of our ladies dowrie : yea erance , spayne , italie , and germanie , and the rest of the kingdomes and prouinces of the world , whose affection and deuotiō is no lesse to this common parent , our incomparable ladie , the mother of god. but nothing demonstrates her spiritual secunditie so much as the innumerable multitude of families of the sodalitie o● her immaculate conception , the true parthenian children of our sacred parthenes . for in how short a time , throughout al europe first , & then through america , the new world , the indies as wel the east as west , haue sodalities of al sorts & conditions whatsoeuer either secular or ecclesiastical been instituted , vnder the soueraigne and most blessed name of marie ? which with al obseruance and due worship serue her as the mother of god , and their common parent : while they doubt not by her meanes to be led and conduced to a better life , and to obtaine eternal saluation , if they serue her truly indeed , and but obserue the rules of her said sodalities . besides the propertie , the hen hath to defend her chickens , during life , this is singular in her , that euen after death , she is soueraigne and medicinal for infinit diseases , and her bodie the choycest diet for the sick and infirme . and therefore is the cock consecrated to esculapius the inuentour of physick . and for our ladie , what need i say more then that versicle of her litanies : salus infirmorum ? because she procures health both of bodie and soule . for is there a disease in anie part of the bodie of mā , euen running through the whole catalogue of maladies , whereto present remedie hath not been begd and obtained of our mysterious hen , the soueraigne mother of god ? o what a thing it were to reckon vp the tēples & chapels , & therin the votes , tables , & waxen images set vp as testimonies of her infinit cures ! nor helps she the bodie more thē the soule . for pride she heales no lesse , thē the head-ach ; vanitie no lesse , thē the vertigo or turning of the head ; wrath no seldomer thē the frēzie ; slouth , thē the lethargie : ignorāce as easily , as the pin & web in the eye ; lust , as the disease belonging to it : gluitonie , as the consumption : & auarice , as the dropsie . there is yet another thing which i note in the hen , not so much out of aristotle , as by experience , though aristotle hath it likewise : that the hen is a great scraper in the dust , which especially they do for three causes : as wel by busking therinto satisfy the itching they haue in thēselues , & to mēd their plumes & feathers , as also to shakeoff the venī about thē . our hen likewise most willingly busked & rould herself in herdust & ashes also . dust is the beginning of humā generatiō , & the origin of our vile extractiō ; & ashes the verie epilogue therof : whence both are the symbol of our birth & end ; & thēce humilitie . al mē are earth & ashes . why art thou proud , thou earth & ashes ? in these cogitations & the like , as in a heap of dust , the most blessed virgin continually volued herself , reuoluing nothing so much in mind , as her dust and proper extraction . whence that : behold the handmayd of our lord. god hath regarded the lowlines of his hand mayd . but how then , o mysterious hen , louest thou dust so wel , hating al fowlnes and sordities so much ? feltst thou the itching of vanitie a whit , that thou shouldst scrape in that sort ? no , not the least itching of vaine ostentation infested thee , the immaculate virgin. or wouldst thou haue pranckt thy quils & plumage of supernal affects ? it was not needful , since they were without anie lets to hinder them at al. or was thy intention , to shake off at least any euil cogitations ? not so likewise ; no such thing had euer accesse or ingresse into that purest mind . no temptation of arrogancie , ostentation , or pride could euer find admittance there . but truly , this it was ; thou louedst humilitie , which thou knewest to be gratful and acceptable to thy sonne , which could no where more appeare , then in the dust of human nullitie , then in the ashes of mortalitie , and thy proper annihilation . an other reason may be also , why thou diggest so in the dust of thy nothing : to find , as hens are wont in the dust , some food more acceptable to them ; for this is a maine cause likewise of their so frequent scraping in the dust ; & who knowes perhaps , whether they may not light on a gemme or no ? for so it hath been knowne . the most humble virgin marie indeed euen nourished herself with humilitie , as a most sauourie food vnto her ; this she supposed to lye in the dust of her proper abiection ; and therefore with clawes of consideration , neuer left she digging and scraping it forth ; nor was she anie whit deceaued ; the earth of her abstraction , gaue her abundantly to feed most deliciously . and which is more , she found , in so doing , the precious gemme indeed , which was so enamoured with her humilitie , as he euen stoopt into the dust , to be there found by this mysterious and blessed hen. the embleme . the poesie . no mother , like the hen , preserues her yong , protects , & shelters with her wings ; her tongne is clucking with a sad and doleful note ; call's back her chickens , when they are remote ; and if they come not , chides sharp , shril , & lowd ; with beck & tallions fights for them . thus shrow'd , ovirgin mother , while the puttock flies , ( the prince of darknes ) who with watchful eyes seekes for my soule , his prey . the hen is knowne , careful of al. yet if she hath but one , her care 's as great . so 's thine of one , or other . then to me sinner , shew thy self a mother . the theories . contemplate first , the great magnanimitie of the hen , in defence of her chickens , as aboue sayd . and then reflect vpon the courage and fortitude of our victorious patronesse , the glorious virgin , especially in the protection likewise of her children ; for to her enemies is she terrible as a battail wel arrayed . as an armie wel marshalled , is a terrour to the enemies , and makes them fly at the sight thereof , before they enter into fight : so are the diuels danted at the presence of this inuincible champion , standing in defence of her clients and children . consider then , the great compassion of the hen towards her yong ; which appeares in this , that with the sick and infirme , she wil be infirme ; she is so sollicitous in feeding them , as she finds not a graine , but she calles them to her , to participate therof : and for her care of preseruing them from danger , she clucks them vnder her wings , from the rapin of the kites , and the like rauenous fowle . and then weigh withal the tender compassion the virgin-mother hath euer shewen towards vs her children and seruants , in being so sollicitous to feed vs , while she was on earth , with the food of her doctrine : she hath opened her mouth in wisedome , and the law of clemencie in her toung ; and for custodie , how she hides vs vnder her wings , and protects vs from the snares of the diuel . for this is she , to whom was sayd , that two great wings were giuen her : the one , the wing of mercie , to which sinners do fly to be reconciled to god ; according to the prophet : protect me vnder the shadow of thy wings ; the other , that of grace , vnder which the iust remaine , to be conserued in grace , and may say with him likewise : she hath shadowed vs with her shoulders . ponder lastly , how the hen not only sits vpon her owne egs , but sometimes strangers likewise , as the egs of ducks and pea-hens , put into her nest , which being hatched , the ducks according to kind wil betake themselues to the waters , and there diue and plunge themselues ouer head and eares ; and the yong pea-hens enamoured with their owne beautie wil forsake their tender nurse that bred them vp . and then weigh withal , how manie strange and vngratful children our mysterious hen , the admirable virgin , cherishes and nurse ; with her daylie protection , who requite her il for al her care in trayning them vp . the apostrophe . o queen of angels , saluted hy the archangel , adored by the powers of heauen , mistrisse of vertues , dutchesse of principalities , ladie of dominations , princesse of thrones , more highly aduanced then the cherubins themselues , more enflamed with ardour os diuine loue , then al the seraphins ; the first next to god , the second in the role or register of the predestinate : thou most terrible to thy foes , as an host wel arrayed ; and yet infirme with the infirme , as a hen amid her chickens , most tender of them , & a most sure bulwark for them , against al incursions and assaults of forren and domestick enemies , either visible or inuisible . o thou , who through thy sonne , and thy matchles humilitie , hast crushed the serpent's head : through thy holie prayer and intercession , i beseech thee , let sathan be trampled likewise , vnder thy seruants feet . o grant this same , mysterious and indulgent bird of paradice . the xvii . symbol . the pearl . the devise . the character . the pearl , or margaret , the lillieamōg iewels , is the peerlesse gemme of nature , so much happier then the rest , as nobler descended then they : this being bred in the womb of the sea , and they in the bowels of the earth . if they be stillicides from heauen ( as some think ) they are the milkie drops distilled from iuno's breast , which sol parcheth into seeds ; which seeds empearle in those litle ouens lying on the beach . the diamant that sparcles so , though rich indeed , arriues not to that wealth without trade , and exercise of the ieweller , in passing the file and chizel , wheras the pearl needs none of those to raise its fortunes by , but is truly borne a ptince . they are the ordinarie companions of the greatest ladies , and so chast as they wil be dandling in their necks , without sensualitie in themselues , or those they dallie with , without iea●ousie of anie . they are true subsidie-men , and such sureties indeed , as their credit wil be taken for as much as they are worth . if you would epitomize an ample estate , & put the same into a litle compendium , with bias to carrie your wealth about you , sel what you haue , and put it into pearl . if you haue anie suit in court , it wil purchase greater friends , and procure you better preferments , then the best deserts . like a pin and web , it wil put out the eyes of linceus himself , not to see what he should . it is the key , that wil set open the iayle to the worst conditions ; and the bolt to shut vpon the best deseruings . what ciuil warres could neuer effect , the pearl or vnion hath infallibly brought to passe , to wit , the ruine of that great triumvirat , being disunited or dissolued : what would it then haue done , if vnited ? it is called oriental , as much to say , as it makes al men to arise vnto it , to do it homage : and wil make you more place in a throng of people , of meer respect , then a rufling whifler shal do with torch in hand . in fine , it is a rich treasurie of rarities enclosed in a box of pearl . the morals . preciosa et caelestis . rare things are likely precious , and precious rare : not that scarcitie alone should set the price , or price and valew make them rare ; but that the ordināce of god is such , to haue them so , that things which are excellent in themselues , should be rare and scarce to be found , that pearls ( for worth ) might not be cast to swine , or trampled vnder foot . monsters are rare indeed , and yet most hateful , and prodigious . it is the worth then that giues the price to things . the sybils books were valued lesse being nine , then when they were but three ; not for the plentie of the nine , or scarcitie of the three ; but to let tarquinius see , the true estimate and value of each one ; and had he not perhaps taken her at last at her word , as he did , he had payd as much for one alone , as for the nine , or gone without it . yea gold itself , were it as common happely as manie other things are of litle worth , would yet be in as great esteeme as now it is , through a certain excellence it hath in itself aboue others . and therefore s. iohn did very wel , to dresse vp god al in gold , and paue the paradice of ioyes with the same : for otherwise , do i feare , that manie an one , would neuer haue had anie great thirst after it ; who perhaps would better haue liked the horns of lucifer , tipt with gold , then those of the moon with siluer , or the burning cristal of the sun. who would thinke , that a peece of earth , taken , as it were , with the disease of the yelow iaundise , being no more indeed then a yelow earth , a glittering stone , a kind of froth boyling from hel , should haue such a power vpon reasonable men ? so as wel it may seeme , to be the golden age , since al is set vpon gold ; they wish but gold , they speake or thinke of nothing els but gold , when lo , the gold of gold , the precious margarit of pearls , is truly valuable indeed , the incomparable virgin-mother , i meane , who is either the pearl itself , or mother of the true oriental pearl , which descended from heauen , and therefore is worthily called : preciosa et caelestis . the essay . the true pearl hath a luster of siluer with it , which wil not soyle a whit , nor wax yellow ; its skin feares no nipping of the frosts , nor the tooth of time. it is bred in the sea , and seemes to disdayne the fare of its hostesse , the scallop , wherin it is a prisoner , while it takes its food from the heauens , and hath its whole alliance with them . they vse to counterfeit the same in a thousand manners with glasse , and aboue al , with the mother-pearl , in beating it to powder , and making a past therof , and then causing pigeons to let it downe , which with their natural heat do boile and polish it in the manner it is , and then put it forth againe . the mother-pearl engenders from the heauens , and liues but of celestial nectar , to bring forth her pearl withal , either siluer , pale , or yelowish , according as the sun makes it , or the ayre , whence it feeds , be more or lesse pure . receauing then the deaw of heauen into the gaping shel , it formes litle graines or seeds within it , which cleaue to its sides , then grow hard , and geale , as it were : and so nature by litle and litle polishes them through fauour of the sunnie beames , and at last they become the oriental pearls ; and as the deaw is greater or lesse , the pearls become the bigger and fayrer . the pearl in powder , is good in a manner for al maladies . it growes not only in the flesh of the fish , but in the mother itself , or shel without the fish . it is tender within the mother , but growes hard as soone as taken out of the water . the greatest gallantrie of ladies , is to haue them dangling at their eares by half dozens , whence are they called cymbals ; they wil say likewise : a faire pearl in the eare , is as good as an vsher to make them way in a presse . cleopatra wore two of them , which were worth a million and a half ; wherof one she swallowed downe , being first dissolued by vinagre . the discovrse . if you look now into the mysteries of al natural secrets , you shal find none to symbolize better with the virgin marie , this margarit of ours , then this same pearl or precious margarit of the sea : if especially we regard but the names only , wherewith they are stiled , the one of marie , the other of margarit , and both hauing so great alliances with the seas : the one being , amarum mare , a bitter sea : and the other , as wholy borne and bred in the seas ; the one importunatly begd and obtayned of god , by anna her mother : and the other , as greedily gaped-after from the heauens , and especially from the sun , by the mother of pearl , so properly called by like , for her motherlie & maternal appetite to engender and bring forth ; and we al know , what pearls of sanctitie are lightly brought into the world , with so great importunities . but if we looke into the other congruities between them , we shal find them to sympathize so , as we may wel tearme our virgin-mother , a pearl or margarit of the heauens , as the other of the seas . the margarit , as i sayd , is bred in the sea ; which isidor affirmes , and that in this manner . at certain times of the yeare , to wit , in the spring and autumne , the cockles , oysters , or scollops , or cal them what you wil , approach to the sea-shore , and lye there gaping , and opening themselues , and receaue the celestial deaw into their bowels ; from the coagulation wherof , as abouesayd , are the margarits engendred . now this shelfish , oyster , or mother-pearl ( for the mother , or issue pearl , are al of a substance , as mothers and embrions vse to be ) is the virgin-mother-pearl it self , which opened her virginal soule , at her mysterious annunciation , in the spring of the yeare , by the quiet shore of her tacit and silent contemplation , to receiue the heauenlie deaw , the new margarit : that is , to conceaue that precious pearl , christ iesus , in her womb . for she opened her consent , to the great angel , her singular paranimph , to obey god in al things , saying : behold the handmayd of our lord , &c. and her soule likewise to the holie-ghost , to ouershadow her : and after the opening thus of her free consent , and her angelical soule , the celestial deaw of the holie-ghost descended into her , and so this infant pearl was diuinely begot in the virginal womb of the virgin-mother pearl . of which deawing of the holie-ghost , and opening of the blessed virgin therevnto , it is prophetically sayd : deaw you heauens thervpon , and let the clouds rayne downe the iust ; let the earth open and bring forth the sauiour . these pearls besides , if they be right margarits indeed , are faire , white , and cleer ; for such as are so , are truly of the best , and a great deale better then those which are dimmer , and of a yellow and duskish coulour . for those which are faire , white , and cleer , are bred of the morning-deaw ; and the others , of thar which falles in the euenings . and our incomparable margarit , was predestinate so from the morning of the eternal decree in heauen , so created , as it were , ab initio & ante secula , while the other pearls of lesse regard were only produced in the euening , after that sinne was brought into the world . this margarit therefore so faire , so white , and cleer , signifyes our heauenlie margarit and glorious virgin , who was beautiful and faire in mind through a more then angelical puritie of hers consisting in the mind ; most snowie and white in bodie , through an immaculate chastitie and virginitie ; and cleer and sincere in works , through a simple sanctitie , and saintlie simplicitie in al her actions , in the whole course of her blessed and incomparable life , which she led on earth . i sayd aboue , that pearls being stampt and beat to powder are holesom , soueraigne , and medicinal for manie maladies ; wherof i find the naturalists chiefly to reckon three : first , they are purgatiue , because they purge and euacuate the bodie of al noxious and superfluuous humours ; secondly , restrictiue , staying the flux of bloud or venter ; and thirdly , they comfort and corroborate the hart , being readie to faynt or swoune through debilitie of the spirits , or the vital parts . to these infirmities , the applications of these pownded pearls so beat to powder , are of singular auayle . in this manner the blessed virgin , being seriously pressed with importunitie of prayers , and often vrged and called vpon with incessant vowes , relenting and mollifyed at last , as fallen into powder , applyes herself , first through a purgatiue power to purge vs of our sinnes , by procuring vs the grace of contrition , and the holesome sacrament of pennance , to bewayle and purge our sinnes past ; secondly , with her restrictiue vertue , to restraine the soule from flowing and falling againe into future sinnes ; and thirdly , with her restoratiue , comfortatiue , and corroboratiue power , to strengthen and fortify the hart , in present occasions of sinnes . the embleme . the poesie . a rare and precious pearl is hardly found , that 's great , & heauie , smooth , pure-white and round . the sonne of god came from his heauenlie throne , factour for pearles , aet last found such an one . great , to containe himself ; & heauie , ful of grace . and therefore sunck vnto a handmayds place . smooth without knob of sinne. virgin pure-white . round in perfection , more then mortal wight . this pleas'd his eye ; a long time hauing sought , gaue al that ere he had , & this he bought . vnion's a pearle ( no twinnes ) it-self , but one ; such was the virgin-mother paragon . the theories . contemplate first , how this pearl or margarit is vsually called , as we sayd , by the name of vnion ; whether it be for the great vnion and sympathie there is , between the mother and the pearl , i know not ; for you can not mention the mothers name , but needs must you bring-in the pearl withal : or for the vnion of the celestial deaw , with the conchal nature , to make vp a pearl , in the lap of the fish , i wil not say : this i am sure of , that our blessed pearl heer is called deipara , as much to say , as the mother of god ; nor can she be so called a mother , as she is , but god must needs be vnited to her , to make vp her name . consider then , that as the mother-pearl , being otherwise only a meer shel-fish of its owne nature , and of no greater a ranck then a playne oyster of the sea : yet through the appetite she had to suck , and draw in the heauenlie deaw into her bowels , obtained the especial priuiledge and prerogatiue , to become indeed the mother of the true oriental pearl . so the virgin-mother , though she were , as she sayd herself , the sillie handmayd of our lord , and of our human nature , subiect to the natural fray leties therof ; yet through a singular immunitie with the puritie of her intention , integritie of bodie , and angelical candour of mind , disposing herself most affectuously and ardently indeed , to receaue the celestial deawes frō heauen , that is , the grace of perfect vnion with god , in her pure soule , she deserued to become the mother of the pearl of pearles , sweet iesvs . ponder lastly , that if a meer pearl , being so basely bred in an oyster-shel , whose extract at the best is but meer deawes let fal from the nether region of the ayre , and those but drops of fresh water , as it were impearled in the fish , through benefit of the sun should come to be so highly prized as we haue sayd , being no more then a meer seed of pearl somwhat fairer then the rest of that kind ; how are we to prize and magnify , trow you , our heauenlie pearl heer , whether you meane the pearl , or mother herself ? the pearl himself , for being such a pearl so truly descending from heauen ; and her , for being the mother of such a pearl . the apostrophe most sweet , most debonnaire virgin-mother , the immaculate through emphasis , the mother of faeyre dilection , mother of iesus , regard me poore wretched soule , and obtaine , that my hart and affection be pure and clean , at least like the seed pearl , according to the proportion of my litlenes , and my bodie wholy free , from the duskish blemishes of the least sinnes , and that by day and night my thoughts being repurged from al immundicities and vncleane obiects , the flourishing bed of my fancie , may neuer be soyled more , to offend thine eyes , and those of the immaculat pearl of thy womb , the spouse of my soule , christ iesvs . the xviii . symbol . the dove . the devise . the character . the doue is the true and perfect type of loue ; let them but change caps with each other , and the doue shal be loue , and loue a doue . if venus betake her to her chariot , she is drawne with the teame of foure of them , as poets say . this are we sure of , the holie-ghost , the essential diuine loue , hath been seen to appeare , as carried with charitie , in the forme and figure of a doue . the doues are neuer in their proper element more , nor better pleased , then in digging them holes in the rock , and planting their litle pauillions there . and the eyes ( the agents of loue ) like a payre of twin-like doues haue set vp their rests , and built their nests , as it were , in the hollow concaues of the browes , in seruice of loue. the doue is the trustie messenger , or winged post of the ayre , that carries letters to and fro , in matters of the greatest importance ; which she fayles not to deliuer with the hazard of her life , nor euer misseth , but it costs her the best bloud of her bodie . she is euen an arrow , and verily as swift as it , but without a steelie head to hurt withal , as hauing no gaule within her , or curstnes in the bil . she is a very sociable creature , and apt for citties ; witnes their douecots , where they liue in great peace and neighbourhood togeather ; and not of feare , as some , do they flock togeather in great troupes , but meerly of loue and charitie one to an other . she is very abstemious and religious in her dyet , and wil not feed on those flesh-pots of egipt , that first came-in with that patriark and second parent of our kind ; contenting herself with bread alone , allowed euen from adam's time , who tilled and ploughed the first of anie . she is hot by nature , & yet of condition a moyses for meeknes , and euen the verie lamb of birds ; if not so able to cloath our nakednes with her wool as he , yet surely she would , if she could ; yet euer readie and prompt to lodge vs in her downes . and when she can not stead vs otherwise , she wil afford her bodie , to be sacrificed by vs , as an entire holocaust of her good nature . the morals . in foraminibvs petrae . who wil giue me the wings of a doue ( the prophet sayth ) and i wil fly and rest ? the doue would fly , and then rest : fly in the exercise of al vertues , and then rest in the contemplation of the diuine attributes ; or fly in the meditation of our sauiour's life , & then rest in the deep contemplation of his bitter passion ; fly in reading the diuine scriptures , that point vs the rock ; and rest in digging in the holes of the said rock , the blessed stigmats of his venerable and sacred wounds . for reading indeed , though it much auayle to lead vs to the rock , yet diues not so deep into the rock , as serious meditation doth ; & meditation though it dig into the rock , yet dwels not so quietly there , nor rests so sweetly in the rock , as a deep contemplation doth ; while reading regards but the shel only , that is , brings to the rock ; meditation , the kernel , that is , digs into the rock ; but contemplation swallowes & relisheth the kernel , that is , dwels and sets vp its rest in the rock . reading looks but superficially therinto ; meditation bores and enters into it ; but contemplation diues and sounds into the depth . reading exhibits the breasts of the mother-church , in opening the books of the old and new testament ; but meditation , and more contemplation , wrings them , to fetch out the milk to nourish withal . reading crops off the eares of corne ; and meditation and contemplation , as with the fingar and thumb , wrings out the grayne ; then grinds it to meal , til it comes to be bread and food of men . and this the tender and compassionate mother did , who flying , like to the doue , al the time of her life , neuer rested herself , til finding her sonne , become a rock of scandal and reproch , aud piteously bored on euerie side , she enters into them , and dwelles within them ; and if you ask her , where she is , might very wel answer : in foraminibvs petrae . the essay . the doue , the mercurie of birds , the faythful messenger of noe , the friend to the oliue , hath properly no coulour of her owne to know or distinguish her by ; so is she vniuersal for al ; in this only she is singular aboue the rest , that being of what coulour soeuer , her neck being opposed to the sun wil diuersify into a thousand coulours , more various then the iris it-self , or that bird of iuno in al her pride ; as scarlet , cerulean , flame-coulour , and yealding a flash like the carbuncle , with vermilion , ash-coulour , and manie others besides , which haue no name , but as you borrow them from other things . and though she be neuer so chast , innocent , and loyal to her mate , yet can she not auoyd his iealousie . which you may see , and it is a pleasant contemplation to note the while , when the cock returns to his douecot , how , discouering his iealousies , his litle breast wil swel vp to the bignes of his bodie ; then with the voice to break forth into a hoarse and angrie note ; by and by to walke in state , as it were , and encompas his mate about ; and with the shew of a wrothful nemesis , rake the ground , with the swift trayling and strotting of his trayne , and that you may not doubt but he is angrie indeed with the pecking of his bil , & strokes of his wings he persecutes the poore wretch , deseruing it not . yet she abides very patient to al , nor is troubled a whit at his causeles indignation , proceeding out of vehemence of loue ; she flyes not away to shun him , and withdraw herself , but rather approaches neerer and closer to him ; she returns not blow for blow againe , but meekly endures and suffers al ; vntil the diuturnitie of sufferance and her meeknesse do vanquish and mollify the choler and fiercenes of the furious thing . and so at last the cock forgetting his suspicion , is quite tamed ; & laying the enemie aside , puts on the louer , returns to reconciliation of friendship againe ; and the ioyning of their bils togeather , with more ardent affection , renewes the same , as the flame is encreased with the sprinckling of frigid drops theron . she is a meek creature , and hath no gaule ; she feeds on no liuing thing ; she brings vp others yong , she makes choice of the purest grayne , she builds in the rocks , she hath groanes for singing notes , & sits very willingly by the waters side , that she may suddenly shun the haw ke foreseen by his shadow therin ; and a thousand other qualities besides . the discovrse . now then , as the doue builds her nest not in trees nor on the earth , but in the holes and concauities of the rock , not so curious as some birds be , to plaister and trim vp their nests , or to seeke for the softest downes to prepare their beds with , against the hatching of their yong : so our ladie , the mystical doue we treat of , built not a whit , nor placed her hart , in the baser earth of terrene desires , nor in the higher thrones of princelie maiesties , but euē in the wounds and passions of her dearest sonne . arise , my friend , make hast , my doue ; i say , make hast , and come into the holes of the rock , where our doue is sayd to inhabit . in the holes of the rock , i say , because in her thoughts and remembrance was she stil conuersant and lodged , as it were , in the wounds of christ. or we may say , and not vnaptly to , that christ had sundrie nests , to wit , the crib , the crosse , and his sepulcher or monument . in these nests now of christ , our doue would oftē inhabit , because she would often visit these places with incredible ardour & deuotions . of which opiniō is doubtles s. hierom , thoughhe say , perhaps : perhaps , sayth he , through excesse of loue she is sayd to haue dwelt in the place , where her sonne was buryed . for one hardly would beleeue , how much internal loue and affection is fed with looks . the doue againe feeds not on the flesh of other fowles & birds , as some do , but of the graynes of corne , and that the select & most choice of al. nor was our doue , the blessed virgin , affected or giuen to terrene and worldlie things , but to celestial and eternal ; she fed not on the flesh-pots of egipt , nor yet of manna , being but only the bread of angels , but rather fed of the bread of life , the thing represented by that manna , she fed on the sweet thoughts of the diuine word it self incarnate in her womb , and fed of that grayne of corne , wherof it is sayd : vnles the grayne of corne falling into the earth be mortifyed and dy &c. this grayne of corne refreshes and satiats ; and therin may signify our sauiour christ , according to the psalmist : he satiats thee with the fat of corne ; and hath rednes without , in regard wherof may it signify the flesh of christ ; agreable to that : how red is thy garment &c : and besides is white within , and expresseth the soule , which is fulgent and bright with the candour and splendour of puritie ; for indeed it is the candour of light , and therefore in the canticles the virgin sayth : my heloued is white and red , and chosen of a thousand ; white , for his blessed and diuinifyed soule ; red , for his precious flesh , embrued with is bloud ; and the choice of a thousand , for his soueraigne and supreme diuinitie . this doue then fed of such a grayne , because she was wholy and fully delighted with the diuinitie and the humanitie of christ. and for her groanes , the ordinarie musick of the lyre of her hart , they were the lamentable and sad accents , which the passion of her deer sonne had caused in her . for lo , this doue with the rest of that desolate and mourning flight of maries , her fellow-doues , did nothing els , but sigh and groane , in beholding the onlie pearl of doues , her deerest sonne , in so piteous a plight , so hampered and entangled in the fowler's nets . like doues that meditate , they groned sore , as the prophet sayth , especially this doue aboue the rest , the incomparable virgin-doue , being the natural dam and parent of the poore distressed one , most sadly powring forth a floud of teares without measure . whence s. anselm sayth in a certain place : my most merciful ladie , what fountains may i say brake forth of thy purest eyes , when thou sawest thy onlie innocent sonne to be scourged , bound , & so cruelly entreated before thee , and the flesh of thy flesh so mangled in thy sight ? what groanes shal i imagin thy breast sent forth the while , when thou heardst him say : woman , behold thy sonne ; and agayne : behold thy mother ? for she could not see her sonne to be so crucifyed , without groanes , and motherlie laments for her dying sonne , the ioy of her hart , and hart of al her ioyes , so pierced with a souldiers speare , that euen transfixed withal the mothers breast , a verie niobe of teares , or rather noome of bitter groanes . now for the wing , which so eternizeth the doues , and makes them most illustrious among fowles of the highest pitch , this i note , they loue not much to fly alone , bur to assemble themselues in flights . the blessed virgin , is that woman cloathed with the sunne , of whome it is sayd in the apocalyps , that two wings were giuen her to fly with , in the desert ; which two wings are the wings of loue and hope , wherewith she flyes into heauen . who wil afford me wings as the doue ? but yet she would not fly alone , but draw others also to fly along with her , to wit , the apostles , during her life , and through her example afterwards al other saints . they were accustomed of old , the better to attract strange pigeons to their houses , to vse this industrie or slight , to annoynt some one tame and domestical doue with an oyntment , which they knew most grateful vnto them , and so annoynted to let it fly at large ; when she so flying in the ayre , through the fragrance of the odours about her , would draw to her a number of them ; & so she , who first flew alone , would returne back againe in triumphing manner . the virgin of herself alone at first was the onlie louer of vowed chastitie , who professed , she knew not , nor euer would know man. this doue then the heauenlie fowler had sent forth into the ayre of the world , as annoynted with the perfume of al graces , and especially of chastitie ; but now she flyes with an innumerable number of virgins , led by her example , singing altogeather with one consent that verse : we wil runne after the odour of thine oyntments ; the yong virgins haue loued thee , o louelie doue . lastly , for the sitting of the doue by the waters side , heare what the holie-ghost in the canticles sayth : thine eyes like doues vpon riuer-waters , which are washed with milk , and sit by the fullest streames . s. hierom , that great contemplatour of celestial secrets vpon the canticles , speaking of this most holie virgin , how she was assumpted to heauen , sayth : i saw one specious as a doue ascending from the waters . she was a beautiful doue , as it were ; because she shewed the forme and simplicitie of that doue , which came vpon christ , coming out of the streames of waters . now as the doue is sayd to dwel vpon the streames , as wel to discouer the shadow of the hawke , as to refresh herself against the heats : so the blessed virgin rests & abides vpon the fulnes of the flouds of the holie-ghost , as wel to admonish her deuotes to beware the diabolical snares , as to enioy the plenitude of the waters of the same holie-ghost , to wit , the guifts therof . the embleme . the poesie . the holie-ghost , that nestles like a doue , betwixt the father & the sonne aboue , is flowne from heauen to seek a mate below , a virgin , chast , pure doue , as white as snow fethred ; a like consort ; she without gal , simple & mild ; he loue essential . thus they accord , as they in colour sute , and to the flower correspond's the fruit . the virgin 's shadowd , yet remaines pure white ; ( shadowes expeld ) the substance brings to light . but while her sonne is shadowd on the crosse , the mourning * doue in blackes laments her losse . the theories . contemplate first , how the doue , being a most pure creature , feares to be defiled , & abhorres whatsoeuer is foule and sordid , as appeares by that which hapned in noe's floud . noë sent forth a doue after fourtie dayes , to discerne whether the waters were fallen and ceased vpon the face of the earth or no , who not finding wheron to rest her foot , returned into the ark againe ; and the reason was , as s. augustm thinks , that though the tops of hils appeared bare , yet they remained moist and slymie , and therefore the doue being a nice and delicate bird , and extremly amourous of puritie and cleannes , would by no meanes put her foot theron . and heer reflect vpon the virgin pure , in whome no spot appeared of original sinne at al , in that great inundation & deluge therof in adam , but remayning in the ark of her innocencie immaculate , because the mother of the immaculate lamb. consider then the singular prouidence of the doue , which is a part indeed of the prudence of this creature , in that to shun the hawke , she shrouds herself in the secret holes of the rock , and there securely reposeth in great peace . and then consider , how this doue of doues , this same most prudent virgin , being higher then the rest , and more profound , had placed her nest or chamber in christ her rock ; where being alwayes safe and kept inuiolable , the slights of the diuels and the subtleties of hereticks could doe nothing against her ; but what they did , was against the rock itself , rebounding back vpon the impious themselues , like the waues against the cliffes , the ships against the shelfs , the rusling of the winds against the towers , the fomie froth against the beach , the edge of the sword against the adamant , the reed against a target , drifts of snow against a helmet , fire against gold , & lastly a slender cloud against the sun. ponder lastly the great similitude and resemblāce , which is between the saluation of mens liues in noës ark , and that of soules in the church , whose foundatiō was layd in the virgin-mothers womb , our true doue indeed , at the annunciation of the angel gabriel , when that stupēdious miracle of grace was wrought within her . but as then that doue of the ark carryed only the message of saluation , the figure of that embassage heer brought by gabriel , whom when you behold so painted with a brāch of oliue in his hand , as a token of peace and mercie , what see you els , but not's doue , bearing a bough of oliue , in the feet ? the apostrophe . o most innocent doue , lady of meeknes ! o would you please to remember me for my good , most sober & ●emure virgin , & amourous mother of my deerest spouse , oh pray the eternal loue for me ; reiect me not poore wretch , most wretched sinner , so wholy immortifyed in al my senses , who heer present myself before your goodnes in the demād and pursuit of man suetude of mind . oh grant , most precious virgin-mother , that i perish not for euer , and be lost . o admirable ladie , ladie , i say , of heauen and earth next god your deerest sonne , placed aboue al the hierarchies of heauen : let me not quite perish , queen of the heauenlie empir● ; for alas , what profit wil there be in my vtter ruine ? alas , alas , let me not fal , a caytif and vnworthie worme as i am , to nothing , or worse then nothing , so wholy drowned in sinne and vice . the xix . symbol . the fovntain . the devise . the character . the fountain is the liquid glasse or mirrour of the naiades , where they haunt to contemplate their beauties in ; or rather is the nimph herself , who gazing on her proper beautie , through a strange metamorphosis of self-loue had lost herself in her owne glasse . hence it is , she runnes the hay , as it were , in the meadowes , to seeke herself in the waters which she is herself , got forth to take the ayre , in the fields abroad ; and as it runnes , it playes on the harpsicon the while , whose iacks are the pible stones , checking the litle waues as strings , that so with purling frames the harmonie it makes . the feathered nimphs there , are much taken with it , especially the swan , that wil be tuning her descant to that ground . al the care she takes , is but to haste to pay her rents , which she doth to the brooks and riuers , as bay lifes to that great exactour , who takes them grumbling , as neuer satisfyed . she is the breast of nature , and nature the nurse that suckles al things with her milke , and is so good a nurse and so prodigal of her sugred lickours , as where she can not els communicate herself , of her owne accord wil she break out into springs : springs so called indeed , because they leap and spring forth of the earth . for so shal you see the litle lambs and kids prickt with this milk of nature , wel concoct with youthful heat , to spring , to iump , and frisk ; whence doubtles the season of the spring tooke first the name . for what is the blossomes , trow you , to spring and bud forth , but for nature to breake out as into springs ? the rose springs forth , while nature breaks a veyne as it were , that springs into a rose . the lillie springs , while nature spilles her crystal milk , that sprouts into a lillie . the springs and fountains therefore , are the life of nature , if the life , as some maintaine , abide in the veynes , which may wel be . they are the verie ticklings of natures hart , that make her sprug vp herself in the season of the spring , to court the world with , in her best array . for then she crownes herself with a garland of al flowers , puts on the mantle of her goodlie meadowes diapred al ouer , and tricks and decks vp her hayre , the fruitful trees , with gemmes of blossomes of infinit varieties , to feast and entertaine the new-borne world . the morals . perennis et indeficiens . al things that are , haue their certain tearmes ; and ther is a stint and period to be seen , in al things . be they treasures of immense riches how vast soeuer , they may be summed with good arithmetick , to a last farthing . the cataracts of waters , in noe's time , that powred downe so fast , at last were exhausted quite , and gaue leasure to the earth , to swallow and digest so huge a draught . they were neither perpetual , for they lasted but a time ; nor yet without measure , for it may be supposed the springs were dryed , or that the hand of god had put a sluce to the torrents . elias called for rayne , and it powred downe so fast , as manie were affrayd of a second deluge ; but the glut and tempest ceased in a certain time , & al was wel . to leaue these , and to come to man , whose pride makes him oft-times to pretēd to a kind of eternitie of felicitie ; let him lift vp his crest neuer so loftily , his pride wil soon haue a fal . alexander how great soeuer , when he saw he could not eternize himself , & become dreadful enough otherwise , vsed a stratagem , which was to be drawne by apelles in sundrie manners , now mounting on his steed , that braue bu●ephalus , in the action of making the earth to trēble with his looks ; and then to be admired in the habit and equipage of a god , calling himself the sonne of iupiter amon ; but the truth is , his looks made not the earth to quake , but only in his picture ; nor was he adored , but in his pourtrait , and he no more then a mortal man , whose aurora and cursorie day , had a speedie sun-set . nero caused a coyne of gold to be stampt , where his owne effigies was engrauen of the one side , and of the other fortune enchained at the foot of a rock , with this word : nec scopulos metuo . but he shortly found the contrarie , when killing himself , he suffered shipwrack in the sea of his owne bloud . otho represented himself in such peeces of gold , with his hand armed with thunder , with this : alijs non ●tor armis . but soone the spring of his life and raigne , was the winter of his death ; and what death but a death which his life deserued ? there is nothing sure and perpetual in this world ; but al things slide away like running streames from the spring-head , which leaue not so much behind them , as the memorie of their passage . the spring only is it , which stil remaynes , whose waters after they haue runne an endles time , shal then but seeme to begin to runne , as being an abysse of waters sprung from an endles source . looke then what the spring is of elemental liquids , the same is the mother of god , an endles fountain of spiritual graces and perfections , and is truly the fons perennis et indeficiens of al graces . the essay . to speake of the fountain truly , as the thing deserues , one had need of a fountain of wit and brayne about him , to decipher it aright . for who can draw a picture of one that can not sit , but is euer iogging vp and downe ? for lo , the fountain-water neuer stands , but hath the palsey in the veynes , that wil not rest . it is sometimes taken for the fabrick itself ; as built of stone ; which if we should , the diffitie would encrease . for so were we obliged to expresse as manie formes wel nigh , as there are fancies in the brayne . for some shal you see of one fashion , some of another , as euerie one abounds in his sense . witnes that so artificially wrought by the famous michael angelo de bonaro●i in figure of a woman washing and winding of linnen clothes in her hands ; in which act of hers , she straynes forth the fountain-waters . another haue i seen of an elephant spouting the waters from his proboscides or trunk , to the pleasures of the spectatours ; another of a whale , that spouted the waters so high , as euen did diselement the same into a dust or powder of waters . another so cunningly set and contriued , as what with the waters so disposed , and the sunnie rayes togeather , it would make a perfect iris in the eyes of al men ; and a thousand other , while art in nothing more wil vye with nature , then with her workmanships of this kind . the fountain therfore is properly neither the manufacture alone so wrought , nor the water of itself , as it creeps in the veynes of the earth . for so the one were a liuelesse statue of man or beast , and the other a spring only , and no fountain ; the one would be but a dead or sensles carkas , and the other only in the concha , as the bloud abiding in a boule ; so as to haue a fountain indeed it must be aliue , and haue the siluer bloud , as in the veynes , that spouts , streames , or trickles from it : such as niobe herself was transformed into a liuing fountain , as it were , when she wept out her eyes ; such , i say , as magdalen was at her maister 's feet , or as that great porter of heauen and the keeper of the keyes therof , when he so bitterly wept at the cock-crow . i can not tel , whether there can be a brauer sight , then such as these , curiously represented in marble , with the azure veynes appearing in the bodie , and the rest of the lineaments liuely set forth ; and then to behold the trickling streames to fal from the eyes , either as pearls by drops , or as open cataracts burst forth . the discovrse . behold we now the incomparable fountain itself of liuing waters of grace , that flow from thence : to wit , the signed fountain , the most pure virgin mother of god , according to that of the canticles : the fountain of gardens , the well of liuing waters which flow with violence from libanus ; and againe : my sister is a signed or sealed fountain . she is a fountain placed by or neer god ; she is a fountain turned into a riuer ; she is a perpetual fountain ; and lastly a sweet and pleasant fountain . she was a signed fountain , because she was likewise an enclosed garden . she was a garden , because her vnderstanding was ful of fayth , and knowledge of god , with infinit varietie of flowers of al kinds ; and closed it was , because no errour or ignorance might enter therinto . she was a garden , because her affect was ful of loue to god and her neighbour ; and closed , because no terrene loue or base desire of the flesh or world , could find accesse to her hart . she was a signed fountain , because her virginal womb was ful of the water of celestial grace ; and signed , because sealed with the irreuocable vow of perpetual and immaculate virginitie . she was a fountain placed neer to god , because with thee is the fountain of life ; a fountain , in that she refrigerates from the heat of concupiscence ; and a fountain of grace , for that she viuifyes from the death of mortal sinne ; and because she is very neer to god , she plentifully and aboundantly powreth forth herself to al. this litle fountain encreased to a huge riuer , and flowed into very manie waters . for lo she was a litle fountain in her humilitie and conuersation ; but then grew into an immense riuer , in her annunciation and conception of the sonne of god ; and flowed into manie waters in her glorious assumption , when she flowes so abundantly , as al participate of her fulnes ; as wel they without ( as yet in banishment ) as those also in the streets of the celestial hierusalem ; according to that of salomon in his prouerbs : thy fountains are deriued abroad , and thou diuidest thy waters in the streets . she is a perpetual fountain , because ( as esay sayth ) a fountain of waters , whose waters neuer fayle . other fountains wil soone dry vp , but this neuer , for the loue of the world is no endles or perpetual spring , but slides away , goes , and comes , and oft comes to nought ; but is a cestern rather , that wil in time be exhausted , and that ere very long . they haue left me the fountain o● liuing water , and framed to themselues broken cesterns that leake and can hold no water . lastly , this fountain of ours , is sweet and pleasant . for as springs and fountains of waters , arising from the sea ▪ and passing through veynes , as it were , and subterranean places , become very fauourie and sweet ; and that by certain degrees , hauing first of al a kind of bitternes with them , and then a more gratful , and lastly a pleasant and delicious tast . so the blessed virgin like a fountain springing from the source and origin of the bitter and harsh people of the iewes , was through a singular and especial prerogatiue preserued from the least tack of those brackish waters , whence she came ; and being diuinely sanctifyed by the holie-ghost , became a most delicious fountain of al graces ; according to that of iudith : the bitter fountains are made sweet to drink . from whence , as from a publick conduit of a cittie , the vniuersal church deriues infinit streames of graces and fauours . and , as in great citties there is wont to be some conduit or concha , or most ample and spacious channels erected in the open market-place , from whence may al at their pleasure fetch waters without limit or restraint , for al their vses ; besides some special pipes conueighed into some mens houses , as a singular fauour : so the blessed virgin , like a copious and endles conduit , abundantly affords the waters of her graces to al that haue their recourse to her for them ; and more particularly and familiarly to those , that are her special deuotes , as being of her families and holie sodalities . let vs now see then , what waters she affords ; for surely her waters are ful of vertues . and first , they coole and refrigerate , and are therefore most welcome to the thirstie soule . and as fountain-water in sommer is more cold , and hotter in winter : so the incomparable virgin , in the sommer of prosperitie giues fresh and coole waters , to wit , a cooling and refrigerating grace , that the mind be not too much enflamed with terrene affects ; but in the winter of aduersitie yealds her waters hot , that is , inflaming , least the mind with aduersities being too much depressed , might coole , and at last grow vtterly cold in the loue and seruice of god. as these waters coole , so do they quicken and viuify withal ; and are therefore called liuing or the waters of life . heart the clamour of this people , and open them the treasure , the fountain of liuing water . these fountain-waters haue an humectiue and vegetatiue vertue with them , to water and to make things prosper and grow vp . a fountain ascended from the earth , watering the vniuersal superficies . so genesis . and for growing , esay sayth : the shower falles and snow from heauen , and returns no more ; but inebriates the earth , powers vpon it , and makes it to spring and grow vp . for the earth indeed is sayd , first to put forth the blade of the wheat , then the green eare , and lastly it becomes a ripe and ful-grayned eare of corne . and this heauenlie fountain of ours , first makes the earth of our soule , to put forth the green hearb of the feare of god , which is the beginning of a new life ; then the green eare of pennance , which is bitter and sharp ; lastly a ful perfect fruit in the ripe eare , which is charitie ; since dilection is the fulnes of the law. and to conclude , the vertues of these waters haue the power to ascend and mount vp , according to that : the water which i shal giue you , shal be ( in her ) a fountain of water arising and springing to eternal life . and as the nature and propertie of the water is especially in pipes to arise the higher , the lower it falles : so the virgin stooping to the center of her nothing , is aduanced so high , aboue the cherubins and seraphins themselues ; and so consequently the waters of grace , that flow to vs from her , rayse vs the higher in heauen , while by her example we stoop downe and abase our selues , and especially despise these base and terrene things . the embleme . the poesie . it had not rayn'd , and so the earth was dry , no showres of grace were falling from the sky . an vniuersal drought possest the land with dearth & famine ; god's reuengeful hand on eue , pass'd to her progenie , for sinne , man's soule , like earth dried vp had euer byn , but that there did a cristal spring arise , to drench the barren soile , and fertilize : for naamans ( iordan-like ) it made a floud , that flowd with grace . * 't was troubled ( not with mud , while she 's cal'd ful of grace ) but sinner i am troubled , 'cause i want . fountain , supply . the theories . contemplate first , that as an aqueduct hath length and breadth with it : so our glorious virgin , the fountain , i mentioned aboue , of liuing waters , as an aqueduct hath so great a length , as she reaches euen from heauen to the earth ; according to that mellifluous doctour : marie is an aqueduct , whose top like iacob's ladder , reaches to heauen . and the breadth of this aqueduct is such , as she was able to containe the diuine fountain itself , as the same s. bernard affirmes : a fountain is borne to vs , because that celestial veyne hath descended by the aqueduct , though not affording vs the whole plentie of the fountain , yet powring out certain stillicides of grace , into our dry and arid harts . consider then , that as we can not deriue the waters of the heauens into our conduits on earth , without some conueyance or other : so can we not expect the waters of grace to come from thence without some aqueduct of grace , which is the blessed virgin , the incomparable fountain therof ; for that , as s. bernard sayth , the flouds of graces were wanting so long to human kind , for that as yet no aqueduct had made intercession for it . seeke we therefore grace through the inuocation of marie , mother of grace ; and whatsoeuer we offer to god , commend we to marie , that grace may returne back by the same channel , by which it flowed . ponder lastly the manner how this aqueduct or fountain of ours communicates its waters ; for to some she communicates in manner of a well , to some againe in manner of a spring , and thirdly to others in manner of riuer-waters . the well hath its waters hid in the bottom of the pit , and not to be drawne without some difficultie : in which manner she communicates herself to sinners only , to whom the waters of grace are hidden , but yet to be fetcht and had with the labour of contrition and pennance . but the water of the spring is drawne without labour at al , and flowes continually : and in this manner she communicates herself to pious soules and her deuotes , because continually she affords them graces with much facilitie ; and lastly , as touching the riuer , that flowes so with great abundance , she communicates and powres forth herself to the blessed soules , with ineffable graces , which are not communicable to mortal wights . the apostrophe . o virgin marie , fountain of grace , fountain , i say , of the paradise of pleasure . thou cristal well of the liuing waters , which flowe with impetuositie from libanus , o signed and sealed fountain , such as the wise-man so points forth , that beganst to rise from the earth of a barren soile , to fructify the world with thy merits , and to water it with thy graces . thou litle fountain as then , now growne to a great and ample riuer , who in thy birth appearing as a litle spring by humilitie , and then a fountain of more note , and so encreasing stil with sanctitie in conuersation becamest atlast to be a swelling riuer , when so thou conceauedst in thy wōb , the source of al graces , that precious oyle christ iesvs ; so as now from the plenitude of this fountain , through al places of the church , haue balsomed liquours been deriued to vs , obtayne , ô incomparable virgin , inexhaustible fountain of graces , of that deare sonne of thine , that the waters of his celestial graces may so water my soule , that through spiritual ariditie it be not enforced to languish vtterly . this i beseech thee , thou fountain of liuing waters . the xx. symbol . the movnt . the devise . the character . the mount or mountains are of the noblest and best extraction of the earth , and therefore aptest to take fire ; witnes aetna or mongibel . they are as great barons in england , and grandes in spaine , for their eminencie aboue the rest of hils , in the vpper-house , & the other as knights & bourgeses of the lower ; the vallyes being no more then the commons of the land , who choose them out to stand for the people . they are the cedars of the earth , and cesars in the senat of the highest towers , as topping them al and keeping them vnder . they are the piramides of mould , more ancient and more lasting then those of egipt ; and the true mausoleums of the monuments of nature ; the statelie collosses of earth , erected as gog magogs among the lesser people of the hils or hillocks . they are as sauls , far higher then their brethren by head and shoulders : and the rest as litle dauids , more fit to keep sheep in the lower playnes . had not mount arrarat stood so a tipt-toe as it were , the ark had been forced to haue made a longer nauigation , and natures shop had not been opened so soone , to expose her specieses of liuing things to the new world , nor yet the doores and windowes therof so soon had been vnbolted within . the mountains then , are as atlas shoulders ; to sustaine and bear vp the welkin with . if the earthlie paradise be yet on earth , it must be surely on some mountain top , or els as hanging in the ayre , and so no earthlie paradise . they are the rocks of the ayre , against the which the racking clowds , like argoseyes , dash and breake themselues , and suffer shipwrack . they haue the honour of the first salutes of the glorious sun , in the aurora of his first appearing ; and haue his last kisses , ere he goe to bed . they haue their intelligences with the intelligences themselues ; and were they not so pursie and vnweildie , might euen dance to their musicks , howsoeuer they may listen to them as they stand . the morals . in vertice montivm . there is nothing honourable , that is not good ; nothing good , that is not equitable ; and nothing equitable , that is not wholy opposit to al deordinations . true honour consists in fearing god ; and to spare neither life nor ought that is deerest , in augmentation of one's glorie . it stands not vpon its ancesters , in seeking so much to borrow luster from them , as to earne it of itself . so as if it can not arriue to their vertue , who haue left it anie title by inheritance , it blushes more for its owne infirmitie therin , then vaunts of the blazon of its house , whose greatnes makes it not haughtie or imperious , but rather , as the fixed starres , the higher it is , the lesse it desires to appeare ; nor regards it so much an outward pomp , or swelling o●tētation , as the solid veritie of a soule truly noble . courtesie and sweetnes can no more be seuered from it , then the bodie from the soule , to remayne true honour ; nor doth it of anie base facilitie to insinuate with , but out of a natural courtesie coming from a true esteeme of its self . none more enclined to compassion towards the afflicted , or more disposed to succour them , then it ; and then most , when they haue least help otherwise , and lesse possibilitie to requite . it is more careful to yeald true honour to the creatour , then to receaue it frō anie one . in a word , it so behaues itself , as it holds the bodie of true honour , to consist not in the bloud or dignitie only , but the soule in the eminence of vertue aboue others . this true nobilitie and honour the glorious virgin had in high measure , who being lineally descended from the race of kings , and , which is more , exalted to the soueraigne degree of the mother of god , and consequently raysed aboue al the hils of the blessed spirits in heauen , yea the cherubins and seraphins themselues ; stiled herself , the handmayd of our lord , being arriued , i say , to sit in vertice montivm . the essay . movntains are one of the gallantst things in nature , especially if we regard the prospect they afford , to deliciat the eyes with ; when taking a stand vpon some good aduantage , you behold from thence a goodlie riuer vnderneath ; which in token of homage , as it were , runnes kissing the foot therof , along as it goes . but the most delicious it is , whē you see on the other side , a vast playne suspended before you , and diuersifyed with litle risings , hils , and mountains , heer and there , which bounding not the view too short , suffers the eyes with freedome to extend themselues into the immensitie of heauen , while the riuer , creeping along the meadowes with meander-windings encloses the hil about , in forme of an iland , whence manie vessels of al sorts riding there at ancker , may be discryed , the neerest questionles very easily discerned , & the rest farther off through interposition of bācks between , not perceaued , the tops of the masts only appearing , like a groue or wood in winter without leaues ; the litle closes or fields thereabout , with the hedge-rowes enuironing the same , seeming as garden-plots hedged in with prim ; and the lanes and high wayes as dressed into allyes . the verdures giue forth themselues delicious to behold , like a lādskap in a table , with al the greenes to be foūd in the neck of a mallard , heer a bright , there a dark , and then a bright and a dark againe , & al by reason of the leuels , with the risings , and fallings togeather , with the lights & reflectiōs caused through the dawning of the day in the morning or twylight of the euening , the rayes of the sunne being an open enemie to such neer prospects , offending the view with too much simplicitie & sinceritie of dealing . it is a great curiositie in nature , to enquire how these mountains first came vp , so to surmount the lesser hils and lower vallyes ; or whether nature intended them first , or no. if so ; how came she partial ? if not , how came they to be so ? and a thousand other diuels they rayse besides , which no ordinarie coniurer can lay . but such would i haue to aske the vallyes , how they came to be so beneath the hils or higher mountains ? which if they satisfye , i vndertake , the mountains shal as much . but the truth is , he that puts generositie in some aboue the rest , and made not al of the same euennes and tenour of mind : and so in other things he made a cedar and a shrub , a pine and a bramble , an alexander & a diogenes , a caesar and an irus , a giant and a dwarf : so made he mounts of pelion and ossa , and the vales of mambre and iosaphat . these , frō the first , were so created mountains & vallyes ; vnles perhaps , as with the angels , al were once as mountains , til lucifer and his complices aspiring higher then they should , were throwne headlōg , and made the vales of hellish feinds : so such as wil aspire to be so wise , to search into the secrets of god's hidden architecture , shal be rankt in the number of the sillie vales , in punishment of their daring follie to presume so much . the discovrse . bvt then to speake of the mount of mountains , placed in the garden of the empyreal heauens , where al are mounts , and this the mount paramount aboue them al ; is a work of a higher nature , the incomparable virgin maria , i meane , that admirable and mysterious mount , so like in name and qualitie to that of mo●nt-moria , a certain hil in the cittie of ierusalem . for as on that mount-moria , salomon first founded his temple , the house of god : so in this our montain maria , was the heauenlie and celestial temple of the true salomon raysed indeed , which he sayd within three dayes should be re-edifyed againe , in case it were ruined , to wit , the temple itself of the humanitie of iesvs christ . moria signifyeth the land of vision ; & what land more worthie to be seen thē marie , the mother of god ? moria is sayd to be a high and statelie land , and next to god : and there is nothing so high and sublime as marie is , no not the angels nor archangels , nor yet the cherubins or seraphins themselues . moria is interpreted shining o● illuminating : and marie being clothed with the sun , illumines mortals , and truly shines , as being truly the starre of the sea. moria , as some authours say , is deriued of the hebrew mori , which signifyes my mirrh , and iah , which is god , as much to say as god is my mirrh . and was he not truly her mirrh indeed , when she stuck him so in her bosome , as he lay in her lap , being taken from the crosse , according to that : my beloued to me is a bundle of mirrh ? and she herself no lesse then mirrh ; if we look into her name , which is marie , quasi amarum mare , a sea as bitter as mirrh itself ; of whom is sayd : as a choice mirrh haue i yeaded a sweetnes of odour : maria is deriued also , as some wil haue it , from the hebrew mereh , which is teaching , and iah , god ; teaching ; who taught indeed , when being seated as salomon in his throne , or rather wisdome it-self in its scholastical chaire , in the womb of the virgin-mother , for so manie months , he read to the world such a lecture of humilitie , patience , charitie , and al vertues particularly in his incarnation ; but especially in the crib , and armes of his mother , when teaching both iew and gentil , in the shepheards and magi , at his birth & manifestation , he so taught them the ghospel . it is finally interpreted the rayne of god , where you may iudge what a showre of grace by this our marie was powred into the world , when anna , as a dry & barren clowd , for manie yeares before , was at last deliuered of her ; and she powred into the world , as a showre of rayne , after a tedious famine , to fertilize and fructify the earth . nor is marie our mount restrayned to moria only , but sinaj also seemes to represent her , no lesse in regard that hil is accompted the mount of mercie & promise , as wel as she . this sinaj is scituated in the prouince of madian , wherof oreb is a part , & where our lord appearing to moyses in a bush , and taking compassion on the affliction of his people , promised to free them , from the bondage of the egyptians , through the power of this mightie hand , as we haue it in exodus . and so was the blessed virgin marie , as the queen of mercie , promised and prefigured in the same bush , wherin our lord appeared to moyses ; and for the rest , were the promises likewise performed in her , of the redemption and deliuerance of the human kind , from the thraldome and slauerie of the diuel , while the sonne of god tooke flesh of her for our ransome and deliuerie . our lord descended on mount sinaj &c. that mount was likewise as the rendeuous & haunt of our lord ; for there the angel appeared oftē on behalf of our lord , & spake familiarly to moyses ; & therefore it is said of him in the acts : he appeared to him in the desert of mount sinaj , in the flame of a fierie bush . and so was the blessed virgin saluted , and as frequently visited by the angel , and instructed no lesse of the word of life . sinai was a mount of rayne , & deaw : & so was the blessed virgin , in conceauing the sonne of god ; according to that : he shal descēd as rayne on a 〈◊〉 . sinaj was the mount of the diuine habitation ; for so , according to iosephus was the cōmon opinion in those dayes . and the blessed virgin was truly the habitation and dwelling of god. she was the mount in whom god took much delight . sinaj was the mount of wisdome aud learning ; for therin was the law deliuered to the people by the hand of moyses : so likwise the blessed virgin-mother brought him forth to the world , who is the word & wisdome of the father ; who is our captain & law-giuer , through whō do kings raigne , & the giuers of lawes decree iust things . she was a mount distilling the oyle of mercie ; a mount of peace & alliance ; a mount of pastures to feed on ; a mount , where it pleased god to inhabit , as dauid sayd , the mount of god , the fat mōut , the holie & litle mount , which esay fortold of , which should be prepared , & to which al the world should resort for pleasure , and repayre for sweet consolation ; the mount familiar to the angels , in their frequent visits . the embleme . the poesie . againe is rays'd ( while mortals feigne , and erre ) the statue of nabucodonozer . heresie on feet of clay and iron stands , which haue no vnion . lo , cut without hands a stone falles from a mountaine . sh' had a sonne , who ( hauing vow'd ) sayd : how can this be donne ; i know no man. 't was then the work alone of th' holie-ghost : thus without hands the stone fel from the mountain . head , brest , armes , and al by striking of the feet , demolisht , fal . o , with that stone , this monsters feet misled , may she breake downe , that crusht the serpe●●● the theories . contemplate first , that as libanus is a mount of indeficient waters ; for that , there , according as we haue it in the cāticles , are springs of liuing waters , which flow with a force and violence ; & libanus itself is a fountain and spring of flouds ; while on the foot therof , two fountaines arise , the one ior , the other dan ; which sliding & falling into one , do make the iordan at last , as s. hierom sayth . so our incomparable virgin is truly a libanus likewise of endles & indeficiēt waters , whose graces and fauours continually flow to mortals ; nor can those springs of hers be euer dry , to wit , her perpetual virginitie , and stupendious humilitie ; which being so vnited in her annunciatiō ; produced such a iordan of al graces in the person of her deerest sonne our sauiour christ. consider then , that as mount libanus is a mount of fragancie and sweet odours ; and therefore it is sayd ; like libanus hauing the odour of sweets . for there are trees that beare the incence , and many odoriferous herbs besids , do there grow . so in our sacred libanus , the virgin marie ; are the delicious odours of al vertues , with the incence of sublime prayer and contemplation ; the perfumes of sanctitie & holie conuersation , the mirrh of mortification & memorie of death , while her life was nothing els , but a continual languor of perpetual mortification , as wel in denying herself the pleasures , contentments , and delights of the world , as in sighing & groning so much after heauen , where her whole conuersation was . and therefore is it sayd in the canticles : fly my beloued , resemble the goat & fawn of the deer on the mountains of spices , as much to say , as fly from the vanities of the world , & hygh you to libanus the mount of spices , to the blessed virgin the libanus of al graces . ponder lastly , that as libanus is interpreted white , for the candour of the snow , which perpetually couers the same : so is our libanus no lesse white , yea a great deale more , through the candour of perpetual virginitie , which is a kind of whitnes of the flesh ; & as libanus through the abundance of the deawes , & much quantitie of raynes , that fal vpon it , abounds with principal hearbs , fat pastures , and excellent fruits : so in our libanus of the blessed virgin ; do flow the deawes of diuine grace , and the raynes of spiritual knowledge : and therefore abounds she so with the rich pastures of the sacred scriptures , and celestial vnderstandings of high mysteries , with plentiful hearbs of the flourishing green of al vertues , & especially loaden with the gallāt fruits of soules . her root shal break forth , as that of libanus ; her boughes shal grow out , and her glorie shal be as the oliue , and her odour as of libanus ; sayth the prophet . the apostrophe . o queen of angels and archangels , of patriarks , prophets ; and euangelists ; of apostles , martyrs , and confessours ; of doctours , anchorits , and hermits , and especial●y the crowne and glorie of virgins , widowes , and of al holie woemen , in the coui●gal state . o mountain among the lesser hils of al those saints , that haue been euer , are , or euer shal be . o excellent mountain , o eminent mountain . o mount , whose aire is temperate and neuer troubled , where no serens of inordinate concupiscences euer fal , and where no iniurie of times euer works anie mischief . mountain of pleasure , delicious paradice , the libanus of sanctitie , the sinaj of maiestie , and terrour to the reprobate , the caluarie of compassion of thy sonne 's passion , the thabor of diuine mysteries , the oliuet of ioy and eternal happines : in a word , o mount of heauen & fayre habitation of the heauen of heauens , o virgin , alas , make me of thy condition , draw my soule from the seruitude of sinne , from the affection of the world , & tyrannie of the flesh ; & put my feet on the mountain of perfectiō , that so approching neerer to thee , i may come to inbabit with thee , aboue the clowds , o graūt this same , i beseech thee , for his sake , who came downe from heauen to meet thee , in the clowds , accōpanied with miriads of saints , & blessed spirits , at thy glorious assumptiō . the xxi . symbol . the sea. the devise . the character . the seas , are the great diet , or parliament held of waters , at the first creation of the world , when god himself was the onlie speaker of the house ; where they met of compulsion rather then faire accord , while euerie whispering of sinister breath puts them al into combustion , when for the time , there wil be no dealing with thē , so implacable they are , that the stoutest are faine to vale-bonet & stoop vnto them . they are great vsurers , & likelie neuer let go anie pawnes they once lay hold of , which they extort ful sore against their wils who leaue thē in their clutches . they are infinit rich with such booties , & may wel compare with their neighbour pluto or mamō himself . they wil sometimes notwithstanding be very calme , courteous , & seren : so as they wil inuite the houshold-nimphes & halcions to sing & dance to the noyse of their musick , & of a sudden change the key and tune so , as none but dolphins cā brook the stage , or keep measure with their boysterous time , in the vnrulie reuels they keep . as the earth , haue they also their mines of richest wealth , lying in the bowels of their abysses , which enioy no other light , thē their owne lusters , nor euer are like to do ; such couetous misers they are of their pelf . they haue likewise their dales & mountains to , but those so restles , as no beasts can graze vpō them , going vpon foure , but such as take anie benefit of those pastures , are faine to go on their breasts . they are the humid firmament without firmnes , where al the starres are mouing planets . they are the clowdie or waterie ayre , where the birds make vse of fins insteed of wings . only the element of fire hath no frienship with thē , but is at deadlie fewd with them , & therefore goes as farre frō them , as possibly it can , because they neuer meet , but it payes wel for it , with its owne destruction . they scarcely acknowledge anie deitie aboue them , or homage due to anie but the moon , to whome they are very punctual & obsequious , nor misse her a moment with their seruice , at her beck to go & come as hawkes in a line , or horses with the bit , that dare not go amisse . most think , they are flegmatick , because so humid , but rather i take them , to be of a melancholie complexion , with the guift of teares only , for that their waters are euer brackish & bitter as teares are . in fine , they are another world in thēselues , wherin god hath plūged and drencht the diuersities of al earthlie creatures . the morals . ab a maro mare , a mari maria . the egiptians for characters , had pictures ; of pictures , made they books ; wherin they had need to haue been excellent morallists , and consequently good naturallists , to know the natures and properties of al creatures . i adde withal , some part of their wits also , should haue layne in their fingars ends , to shape forth with cole or chisel , so manie diuersities of things . adam our first parent , gaue them the first ground therof , when frō the beginning he so called & assembled al the new-born creatures to giue thē names , as a baylif of some great lord should goe about , to marke this maister 's sheep , with special marks , notes , or signes of whose they are . and this he did , by the pattern & exāple first giuē him by god in himself and his consort , the first that euer took anie name ; while he was called adam , as signifying , de terra terrenus , & she virago , à viro desumpta . the patriarks after him stil practized the same , which adam did ; assigning names very apt to al their children , as the present occasiōs put them in the head , or rather as diuinely inspired by him , that best can skil , to single out and cal each thing by its proper name . hēce ioseph , as his type , was called a sauiour and iosue likewise , for the same reason . s. iohn the baptist his precursour was called grace , which iohn imports , to signify the coming and approach of grace indeed , in the messias at hand . yea iesvs , which signifyes sauiour , came at last with that name assigned him from al eternitie , and lastly giuen him by the paranymph angel , with the surname of emanuel , as much to say , as deus nobiscum . and so the incōparable virgin , was diuinely sorted with the name of marie , that fitted her so right . for she was indeed a sea of bitternes , through the seauenfold sword of sorrow , that pierced her hart ; and therefore rightly . ab a maro mare , a mari maria . the essay . the richest pieces of eloquence , and poetry are borrowed of the sea ; be it for descriptions of some notable shipwrack , or to expresse the blustering winds , which furrow the face of that liquid element , raysing vp billowes , that dash and wash as it were the very face of the heauens , and seeme to plunge the starres in the surges of the wrathful nemesis or thetys rather ; or lastly in expressing some naumachias , or sea-fights , or that of the remora , that caesar of caesars in captiuing so , in a floating castle , caligula the roman monark , to the stupour and amazement of the world . these are the vses poets make therof , but philosophers goe further yet , and tel vs stranger things of this stupendious work of nature , of the flux and reflux therof , and faire correspondences it hath with the moon . the fabulous antiquitie hath reckoned euer the sirens those chanting nimphs , & great enchantresses , to be the hostesses of the sea ; and euen the sagest of them in their follies , take it for a grace to their goddesse venus , to fetch her extraction from the impure flames of the waues . this we know by experience , the fome and froth of the sea , being dryed with the rayes of the sun , conuert to sponges , & they againe into pomice-stones , as light as venus herself ; it is ordinarily veyled with vapours , curtened ouer with clowds , enwrapped with fogs , and sometimes buryed in cimerian darknes ; then of a sudden it changes the countenance , and becomes a cerulean sea , as various in hew , with as manie coulours , as the changeable neck of a doue giues forth with the reflection of the sun ; when the former furrowes al of wrath in the face of this stern ocean wil turne to smiles and daliances with his amorous tethis ; the halcion , the ioy of marriners wil streight appeare vpon the decks of ships to glad the passengers , & the dolphins dāce before them with a pleasant glee ; the waterie pauements seeme as swept the while , to inuite them likewise to dance laualtoes with thē ; and the gentle eurus and zephirus in disposition to tune their pipes for the purpose . and for cosmographers ( whome we must beleeue , vnles with measuring the world ourselues , we wil disproue thē ) they tel vs , the ocean is that vniuersal choas of waters , which enuirous the land of al sides : for looke what coasts soeuer they sayle vnto , they alwayes find the seas to waft thē thither ; which on the east is called the indian sea : on the west the atlantick : on the north and the regions opposit , the pontick and the frozen sea : and on the south , the red or ethiopian ; beyond al which , manie striuing to reach to the vtmost shores , haue made vast nauigations , and haue sooner found their victuals to fayle them , then ample spaces of immense waters vndiscouered . the discovrse . behold heer a singular symbol of cur incōparable virgin , a vast and immense sea of charitie ; for so is she pleased to go shadowed at this time , nor may it seeme to anie strange , she should do so , or we presume so to stile her , since lo the blessed cyprian tearmes her , not a microcosme only , as we are al , but euen an ample , cōpleat , and vniuersal world within herself , adorned with the species of al creatures , i reade , sayth he , and vnderstand , that marie is a certain intelligible and admirable world , whose land is the soliditie of humilitie ; whose sea , the latitude of charitie ; whose heauen , the height of cōtemplation ; whose sunne , the splēdour of vnderstanding ; whose moone , the glorie of puritie ; whos 's lucifer , the brightnes of sanctitie ; whose cluster of seauen starres , the seauen-fold grace ; and whose other starres are the beautiful ornaments of the rest of her admirable vertues . the histories report , that helena amōg the grecian beauties carried the prize away ; & that zeuxis , a most exquisit painter , in the age immediatly following , would needs draw her pourtraict , though he had neuer seen her while she liued : & therefore gathered he togeather al the fayrest damzels in those parts , and whatsoeuer he found rare and excellent in anie , he would exactly put into his peece , not leauing , til he had finished a most admirable peece of work , delineated from them , which euen rauished the eyes and harts of al. so may we say of our blessed ladie , mother of the eternal king , that she was an abstract of al the perfectiōs possible , dispersed not only in that sex , or the humā kind , but euen likewise in the angelical nature itself ; and therefore wel might be called a sea of al perfectiōs ; since both her name , in the hebrew , sounds as much as sea ; and as the sea is nothing els , but a certain congregation togeather of al waters , so is she no lesse an assemblie and congregation of al graces and perfections to be found elswhere . the sea indeed hath three properties ; it is the spring and origin of al fountains ; it is alwayes ful ; and is bitter and brackish in tast . our ladie likewise is the spring and origin of al graces , from whose virginal womb did iesvs flow , the fountain of this fountain , the increated grace , from the plenitude of whose grace , we al receaue grace , in what measure soeuer we become capable of . and as from the sea do flow great quantities of waters which it receaues againe , not being kept ; so do graces flow frō the sea of marie in great plentie ; yet with flowings and ebbings , through our ingratitude , and not making vse therof . but if after our neglect of her fauours we returne , as we ought , to beg them againe , though we receaue no effectual benefits by her first offers which we refused , yet doth she dayly offer them againe ; with this differēce from those flowings of the liquid seas , that they go and come to and fro of course , and at certain times with stints ; but she is readie euerie moment to communicate her fauours without limits , so we wil but open the chanels of our harts to let them in . as al wels , springs , and fountaines deriue from the sea , the sea virtually containes the nature and qualities of al well-springs , current fountaines , and riuers . by which waters are aptly vnderstood the three degrees of graces , which through our ladie flow into our harts ; to wit , the incipient or preuenient grace , in the first beginnings of our conuersiōs ; the proficient , by which we proceed ; to vertuous actions through grace receaued ; & the perfect grace , which is the ful consummation therof , and is indeed a constant perseuerance to the end in al vertues . this incipient or commencing grace , is signifyed by the well or spring of liuing waters ; because these springs haue their waters secret & hiddē vnder ground ; they suddenly arise , and no man knowes from whence , & so preuenient grace , is by vs not merited at al , but springs , and is powred into vs , through a secret and hidden inspiration of god , no man can tel how , or whence , but often comes through the intercession of the incōparable mother of mercie , and the sea of graces , being called the liuing waters , for that by this grace , are sinners dead in sinnes , as viuifyed to life . the fountain-water , is vnderstood to be grace proficiēt ; wherof is sayd : the fountain of the gardens ; which gardens of god , are the good proficients in grace , & vertues ; in whome are the hearbs & plants of al vertues , in a flourishing state ; which yet could not spring at al , nor grow a whit , much lesse seeme to prosper & flourish , vnles by this fountain they were watered with grace , being a fountain indeed ascending from the earth , which waters the vniuersal face therof . by the riuer-water , which flowes with violēce , is perfect grace to be vnderstood , which is sayd to flow with violence , because such as are replenished therwith , are very earnest and sollicitous in the works of vertue , and proceed with feruour therin . looke where the force of the spirit leads them , thither wil they go with a violence and impetuositie as it were . the sea is alwayes ful , and neuer wasts ; and so our ladie was announced by the angel , to be ful of grace , as truly she was a vast and immense sea of al graces . of whom the mellifluous s. bernard sayth vpō those words of , aue gratia plena : in the mouth truly was she ful of affabilitie ; in her womb , with the grace of the deitie ; in her hart , with the grace of chatitie ; in her hand or work , with the grace of mercie and liberalitie . so likewise are the waters of the sea exceeding bitter ; and our virgin marie was amarum mare , that is a bitter sea , for diuers respects , first for sorrow , for the losse of her sonne in the temple : behold thy father and i haue sought thee with sorrow . then was she bitter , meerly of compassion , in beholding the spouses in the nuptials to be abashed & confounded for want of wine ; she had compassion of the iewish nation , while she saw them to be reprobate and forsaken of god ; she pittied the apostles in seing them dispersed in the passion of her sonne ; but especially was she bitterly sorie at the passion of her sonne , when the sword of sorrow trāsfixed her hart ; and lastly was she bitter for her tedious pilgrimage heer so long : and therefore would she say : alas , how my ●i●grimage is prolonged ! the embleme . the poesie . no sooner was the infant-world disclos'd , but that god's spirit on the sea repos'd : borne on the waters did impart a heat by influence diuine : a fertil seat he made that vast and barren ocean's wombe t was fruitful when the holie-ghost was come . the sacred virgin was a sea like this , but darknes on the face of the abysse , was neuer on her soule , that shined bright from her first being ; for god sayd : let light be made : the word was in this sea compriz'd , when th' holie-ghost the waters fertiliz'd . the theories . contemplate first , that when the world was first created , & that the waters were diuided , as it were , by the firmament , while part was put aboue the firmament and part beneath , the waters beneath on the earth , were called by the name of maria , or seas ; and the spirit of god , as we haue it in genesis , did incubare super aquas couer , as we say , or ouershadow the waters : which was a work of the first creation . so in the work of our redemption , where the blessed virgin , maria by name , which signifyes the seas also , it pleased the eternal word , leauing the delicious bosome of the heauenlie father to descend into this sea , of human miseries to take them vpon him ; and the holie-ghost likewise to ouershadow her withal . consider then in the temple of salomon , that as besides other riches and ornaments there , as the propitiatorie aboue ; the cherubins and seraphins of each side therof , the golden candlestick in the midst , the altars of perfumes and of propitiation , heer and there , with the lamps , the veyle , the ark , and the like in their places , was planted a great vessel of brasse , ful of water , at the entrance of the said tēple , where the priests were to cleanse themselues , before they entred to sacrifice ; and this vessel was called , mare aeneum , or the brazen sea. so ought the priests in our churches before they enter or approach vnto the dreadful sacrifice of al sacrifices , the sacrifice of the masse , to recurre to this mare aeneum , our blessed ladie , to procure them a puritie of soule , to assist therat , or approch thervnto . ponder lastly , that as god , the soueraigne lord of al things , communicates his offices and charges to men according to his most holie and diuine dispensation very suitable and agreable to euerie one : as to moyses the office of a law-giuer to his people of israel ; to aarō the office of high priest ; to iosue , of captain & leader of them into the land of promise ; and consequently gaue them talents accordingly to discharge the same very punctually in al things . so is it likelie , that in choosing his mother , he vsed the self-same tenour in his fayre dispositiō therof , to wit , in appointing her so to be the starre of the sea , he ordeyned her no doubt to be the ladie of the sea , as her name imports . now then as in the seas , he hath drencht and plunged , as it were , an other world , since there is no liuing creature but hath its like in the sea also implicitiuely , he hath likewise appointed her to be the ladie and mistris of al the world . for how should she saue from shipwrack , if were not ladie & mistris of the waues and winds ? and how should she be ladie of the seas alone , if she were not the ladie likewise of the land ? since she who is stiled the ladie of the seas , is the true and natural mother of him , who is lord both of sea and land , and al the world . the apostrophe . o ladie of the ocean , starre of the sea , sea of graces , fountain ; of life , spring of liuing waters , that flow frō the libanus of the candour of glorie ! thou great abysse of limpid waters , whose bottome , none can reach vnto ; whence nothing ariseth , but the purest exhalations of paradise ; light clowd , whence nothing falles but deawes and showres of graces . o immense ocean of charitie , which bearest vp al things , and where easily nothing sincks ; bitter , but in the dolours and passions of thy sonne ; sweet to the creatures , that liue of thee , or depend vpon thee . o grant , i beseech thee , that wholy relying on thee , i perish not , and by neglecting thee and thy seruice , i incurre not thy disgrace , nor so running on the rocks of thy displeasure , i split not on them , nor suffer shipwrack of my soule . the xxi . symbol . the ship . the devise . the character . the ship is the artificial dolphin of the seas , that much addicted to musick , is neuer set on a merrier pin , then when the winds whissel to her dancing . it is a floating castle , that hath the gates open indeed , but trusts to her battlements , which she hath wel planted with canons and sacres , wherin she more confides , then manie do in sacred canons ; her whole saluation depending vpon them . it is a litle common-wealth , whose whole reason of state consists in iealousies , & spyes , which she sends vp to her turret-tops , to discouer , if the coasts be clear , stil standing on her guard , against the neighbour waues , that seeke but to swallow her vp . and al her care is , to walke vpright amidst her enemies , least vnawares they arrest her , and cite her to appeare at pluto's court , for euerie errour or default of the least ship-boy . there is no bride requires so much time to dresse her on her wedding-day , as she to be rigd , whensoeuer she goes to sea . if they haue their fillets to bred and wreath their haires with , she hath her tacklings to trim her vp ; whose ropes are as manie & as intricate as they ; if they haue their veyles to spread vpon them , she hath her sayles , to hoyse vp to go her wayes . it is the lion of the seas , that feares no monsters , but is as dreadful herself , as anie monster , hauing as manie mouthes as gun-holes , & in euerie mouth a serpent tongue , that spits & vomits fire , & which euen spits her teeth too , in the face of her enemies , which often sincks them vnder water . it is one of the prettiest things in the world , to see her vnder sayle , how like a turkiecock she strouts it out , as brauing euen the elements themselues , both aboue and beneath her , wherof the one she ploughes with her slicing share , and braues the other with her daring look . she is an excellēt swimmer , bnt no good diuer at al ; which she neuer doth , but sore against her wil , and that with so il successe , as likely she is neuer seen more . the first that euer was seen to our antipodes , was thought by them to haue had indeed a liuing soule with her ; els would the simple people say , how could so great a bulk , so easily wind & turne it sell euerie foot ; & this , because they knew but the oare only , and not the rudder . what would they haue said then , had they knowne the effects of her card and compas ? doubtles she had a reasonable soule . she likely neuer goes without her pages with her , to wit , her long-boat and her cockboat , wherof she makes such vse now & then , as without them , she might starue for ought i know . she is very ciuil , if a marchant-man ; but when she is a man of warre , then marchants beware , and looke to your selues . the morals . de longe portans panem . in the tēple of salomon , no gold would serue his greatcuriositie , but that of ophir . which the southern queē of saba knowing wel perhaps , thought no doubt her presents would be gratful to him , coming so frō parts remote . who is he that is not takē much with verie toyes that come frō china , which carrie i know nor how in themselues , ( at least in our opiniō ) a kind of luster with thē , greater farre then otherwise they would . the presēts which the magi brought vnto the crib , coming from the east were deemed by them sit presents for a king , yea for a god. and how were iosue & caleb the spyes & intelligencers of the people of israel extolled & magnifyed at their returne with those rare & admirable booties fetched from canaan ? and yet the gold of ophir was but gold , a yellow earth ; the presents made by saba , such as that countrie afforded ; & those indiā toyes , but toyes indeed . yea the guifts the magi brought , had greater luster with them from the giuers harts , then frō thēselues ; & more respected for the place to which , thē whēce they came . and for those forren fruits , they came indeed frō the lād of promise , frō palestin , which was but the figure only of the heauenlie countrie . but lo , our incōparable virgin like a ship , most richly fraighted , hath brought vs bread frō farre . what bread ; but the true & liuing bread ? how farre ? as farre as heauen . but how bread ? bread whose corne was haruested in the mightie man's rich boozfield , framed by the hand of the maister baker himself of a most pure meale or flower , to wit , of the immaculate bloud of the holie virgin herself , baked in the ouen of an ardēt loue , which she hath brought into the world . and therefore is truly sayd : de longe po●tans panem . the essay . i can not tel , whether in the world besides , be a more statelie fight to behold , then an english ship vnder sayle , riding in the ocean , & cutting the watrie playnes with her sharp keel , in case she haue a gallāt gentle gale in the poop ; for then they feast it , and make good chear , who are the liuing soules abiding in this bulk of human art , compiled togeather in despite of nature , to frame a liuing creature more then she intended , that neither should be fish nor fowle , yet liue in the ayre and water . but if the seas proue rough , & al the marine mōsters vise vp against her , cōspiring with the blustering spirits of the ayre ; to sinck her quite , it is a sport to see , how she rides & prances on his crooked back , sporting herself the while , and making a meer scoff at al their menaces ▪ there is an infinit number of seueral sorts of these artificial creatures in the world , each country almost hauing their kinds . there are ships , pinaces , hoyes , barkes , ketches , galleyes , galeons , galleasses , frigots , brigandines , carackes , argoseyes , for the seas ; to say nothing of lighters , barges , tiltboats , lighthorsmen , oares , canoas , & gundeloes , for the riuers . the ships do fly and swimme togeather , with the help of ●ayles only ; the galleyes and their like , as swans do sometimes fly , and sometimes paddle with the oare . they haue maine masts , crosse sayles , top & top gallāns , they haue stern , poop , rudden , ancker , cable , decks , tacklings , gunnes , andigun-holes , where they haue canon demy-canō , saker , culuering ; not to speak of the smal shot , as muskets , harkebuses , & firelocks , and a thousand more . and so much for the sensles bodie of this bulk in it-self . but then to speak of the soule , or policie , and oeconomie of this admirable artificial creature , or mouing world , it is a busines no lesse , to set them downe . for as for the officers which are simply necessarie either in the admiral or vice-admiral of a fleet or royal armado at the seas , there is a general , a lieutenant general , a captain , a pilot , and the pilot's mate ; a maister , and the maister 's mate ; a marchant , & a marchāt's mate ; the maister of the ship-boyes , a secretarie , a chirurgion ; a boatswain , a purser , dispensers , cooks , canonier , & his mate , with vndergunners , ship-boyes and marriners without number . the captain commands absolutely in al things ; the chief marchāt hath power ouer the marchandize and commerce only . they double so the principal officers , that one may supply the others want . the secretarie sets downe the marchādize the ship is fraighted with , & takes accompt of goods vnladed . the pilot hath no other commād , but in what concerns the nauigation . the maister hath cōmand ouer al the mariners and saylers of the ship ; & of al the prouisions and victuals ; he places & remoues the officers at his pleasure . the maisters of the boyes are the ablest of al the marriners , and haue the care of the cordages , sayles , and tacklings , & the like , and command the yong marriners , and do only giue correction to the ship-boyes . the discovrse . bvt now come we to our mystical ship , whose wayes in the vast seas the oraculous salomon admired so much . this had for architect and shipwright no lesse then the blessed trinitie it-self , wherin the diuine persōs bestowed their chiefest architecture . for the heauenlie father employed his omnipotēcie therin as farre as the subiect was capable of , the eternal word made vse of his wisdome , in preseruing so entire the seale of integritie , & the holie-ghost shewed his loue , by infusing such a plenitude of grace into her . the matter she was framed of , tels vs she was of herself , of wood doubtles most sacred & mysterious . as the cedar am i exalted in libanus , and as the cypresse in mount sion ; as the beautiful ; oliue in the fields ; & am exalted as the planetree neer the waters in the streets . this ship then was made of the cedar of virginitie , in that the cedar is odoriferous and incorruptible ; & therefore signifyes her virginitie , which made her grateful and odoriferous to god , & kept her flesh immaculate & incorrupted . it was made of cypresse , which is a wood so strong & solid , as shrincks & yealds not with anie burden , being qualities most apt for shipping : nor would the charitie of the blessed virgin permit her euer , to shrinck vnder the weight of tribulations . for loue is strong as death . she was made of the oliue of pietie , which alwayes flourisheth , & looks green , in that her pietie neuer fayled any , either in the spring of their youth , in the autumne of their age , in the winter of tribulation , or in the heat of inordidinate concupiscences . she was further made of the plane-tree of humilitie ; for the plane is a most spacious & ampletree ; & humilitie made the virgin most ample & illustrious ; because thereby she receaued him into her womb , whom the heauen of heauens was not able to containe , since s. bernard sayth : she pleased with her virginitie , but conceaued through humilitie . her stern , is her wisdome & discretion ; her oares most sacred and holie affects ; the mast , high & sublime contemplation ; the galleries , pure & chast conuersation ; the ropes & tacklings , the cords of loue , vnitie and concord ; the anckor , firme hope & confidence in god ; the deckes & hatches , external & holie example & edification ; the sayles , cleanes & puritie of bodie , ioyned with the blush of shamfastnes , the pilot or maister of the ship , the holie-ghost , which steered , guided , & directed her in the whole nauigation of her sacred life . for if they be led by the holie-ghost , who are the sonnes & children of god , how much rather shal she be gouerned by it , who is acknowledged to be not only the daughter but likewise the natural mother of god ! the forme & figure of a ship we know to be open aboue , close beneath , streight in the beginning , narrow in the end , broad in the midst , & very deep . and this ship of ours the incomparable virgin , according to the superiour part of the soule , was open to receaue celestial guifts , but as for the inferiour , wholy shut vp frō terrene affectiōs ; & moreouer so strict in the beginning of her cōception , as original sinne could find no place to stayne her in ; she was narrow in the end of the passiō , while for the death of her sonne she was put to diuers streights ; in the midst she was most , capacious or broad , because , as we sayd , whō the heauens could not hold , she held & cōtained in the lap of her wōb ; lastly she was deep through humilitie , when being raysed to the top of the highest dignitie of being the mother of god , she calles herself his lowlie hādmayd saying : behold the handmayd of our lord. but for the m●st indeed , and tree of this ship , it was christ our lord , the verie same , who called himself green wood , saying : if this be done in green wood , what shal become of the dry ? erected also , as s. paul sayth : being made higher then the heauens ; raysed in , and born of the virgin ship. of which tree or mast , we haue this in exodus : they took out a cedar from libanus to make be no other then christ erected in this ship of our virgin heer . the ships are made for burden ; and for as much as nations oftentimes stand in need of each other , they serue for transportation of commodities to and fro , and especially corne from the fruitful to barren countries , with the abundance of the one to supply the necessities of the other . and therefore the blessed virgin , as we haue in the prouerbs , was made as a marchants ship , bringing her bread from farre & remote parts . for euen from the fertile and most fruitful soyle of the celestial paradise , brought she indeed that supersubstantial bread , into the barren coasts of this world ; which bread sayes of itself : i am the liuing bread , who descend from heauen , wherewith the faythful are fed and nourished . whence appeares , how farre off this mysterious ship brought the celestial bread vnto vs , being no lesse then from heauen to the earth , an immense distance ; shewing yet a greater distance of natures , in that this bread consists of the diuine and human nature , which are infinitly distant one from the other , togeather with the distance of merits ; because no merits had euer deserued , that for our sakes god should become mā ; which bread it seemed she likewise made her self , so signifyed by that woman in the ghospel , who mingled togeather the three hād-fuls of meale , as heer are vnited the soule , the bodie , and the diuinitie itself . o glorious baker of so heauenline bread ! o diuine bread so mysteriously made ! and most rich and precious ship , that conueighed the same to vs from parts so remote ! lastly , as the ship vseth the winds only to sayle with , & the galley passes not to & fro without the help of oares : so likewise between the blessed virgin , and the rest of saints , this difference is ; that they , as galleyes , performe the nauigation of this life , with the strength of the oares , as it were , against the wind and tyde of carnal difficulties , and trauel with infinit encounters of worldlie assaults , vnto their heauenlie countrie . but the blessed virgin with the gentle gale of the holie-ghost , and the most sweet push thereof , was conueighed thither . and as the ship is driuen with twelue sorts of seueral winds ; the blessed virgin like a prosperous ship , with the twelue fruits of the holie-ghost , which s. paul reckons vp , as with so manie fauourable winds , without rebellion or impugnation of sinne , or anie remora , to stop her course , was sweetly wafted to the hauen of the celestial countrie . the embleme . the poesie . a iewish rabby sayes , the angels fed on manna ; but an other , better read , affirmes ' t was light condens'd ( & so made meat . for men , ( which shin'd before god's glorious seat , as food of angels . true ; for one of three , the second person of the trinitie descends , & sayes , he is the liuing bread , he was the light whereon the angels fed : which , when the holie-ghost o'er cast his shade was first condends'd , when flesh the word was made in maries womb , wherewith our soules are fed . she is the ship , that brought from farre her bread . the theories . contemplate first , that as ships of salomon , as we read of in the book of kings , brought most precious gold from ophir , to adorne the temple he had built to the maiestie of god ; so our mystical ship , brought forth our lord , the finest gold ; not from ophir truly , but from the most precious mines of heauē ; with whose merits , as the daughters of hierusalem , deckt their heads in memorie of salomon's yealow hayre and crowne : so the catholick church is most gloriously enriched , honoured , and delighted , by our second salomon's glorious merits , through whose valew and inestimable price , great sūmes of debts are defrayed ; with whose admirable vertue , as with a most present antidote , are the sick and infirme cured , and the harts of the faythful cōforted ; & finally through his meruelous luster and bright splendour , the temple of the church incredibly shineth . consider then , that wheras other ships are subiect to infinit dangers in the seas , being tossed with tēpests and oftentimes cast away and swallowed vp in the waues , or dasht against the rocks ; for ecclesiasticus sayth : who trauel on the seas , do recount their perils : either tyrannized by the winds , or falling into the hands of pirats or running on the sirtes or scylla , and falling sometimes into the gulf of charibdis , & lastly allured through the sirens songs , to their owne destruction : yet this ship of our ladie heer , while of the one side , the stormes of original sinne had no power vpō her , so as she felt not the least internal rebellion of the bodie or mind , against the rectitude of reason ; and of the other was inuincibly through the diuine assistance preserued against the assaults of the ghostlie enemie : so as neither the syrtes or scylla of riches , nor the charibdis of worldlie honour , nor the pirats of concupiscence , nor the sirens of eternal delights , could stopp or hinder her , in the fayre nauigation , she made vnto the heauenlie countrie . ponder lastly , that as heretofore in the vniuersal deluge & floud of noë , in that general inundation of the wrath & furie of god , was no mā saued or anie liuing creature besides , except such only , as fled to the arck of noë , built in effect as a goodlie & statelie ship : so no sinner escapes the indignation of god , but such as hye thēselues & fly vnto the virgin-mother for refuge , according to that of s. bernard . if thou darestnot approach to the maiestie of god , least thou melt as wax before the fire ; go to the mother of mercie , & shew her thy wounds , & she for thee wil shew her breast & paps , & the sonne to the father his side & woūds . the father wil not deny the sonne requesting ; the sonne wil not , deny the mother crauing ; the mother wil not deny the sinner weeping . my children , why feare you to go to marie ? she is not austere , she is not bitter , but milke & honie is vnder her tōgue . this is the ladder and honie is vnder her tongue . this is the ladder of sinners , this my great confidence , this the whole reason of my hope . and what meruel ? for can the sonne repel the mother ? or be repelled of the mother ? neither one , nor other . let not therefore humane frailtie feare to approach vnto her ; for she is wholy sweet , and sweetnes itself . the apostrophe . o thou ●al and goodlie arck , thou valiant woman , valiant by excellence , more faire then rachel , more gracious then hester , more pleasing then sara , more gentle and generous then iudith , more sweet and chast then abiseig the sunamite , more officious and prudent then abigail , more magnanimous then debora , more illumined then marie the sister of moyses . thou who hast found grace before the eyes of god , work with thy prayers most dear ladie , o my most noble princesse , that i may alwayes find grace before thy sonne . thou who through thy sonne hast broken the head of the serpent ; crush likewise through thy holie prayers his head vnder thy seruants feet . thou ship of the great god , who from those counries so farre remote hast brought to vs the bread of paradise , true god in flesh grant , i beseech thee , i may be fed with the bread of grace , of life , and wisdome ; and that receauing the sacred bread of angels , which is the precious bodie of sweet iesvs thy sonne , i may euen suck in the fountain itself , the most sweet pleasures , and the most pleasing sweetnesses of the diuinitie , and be wholy inebriated with the torrent of diuine consolations . the conclvsion to his proper genivs . now heer , my genius , shalt thou dismisse thy reader , with his ship ful fraught with the prayses of the sacred parthenes ; and shutting vp thyself in this parthenian paradice , walk in it vp and downe by thyself alone , without eye or arbiter , to witnes the secret aspirations of thy hart ; while contemplating with thyself , this great rich magazin of the treasures of nature , enclosed in this spacious and ample garden of our sacred parthenes , thou enter into thyself a while , gathering the fruits and flowers , at least of good desires , from the obiects themselues . not be a whit dismayd , though they put thee to the blush , to be taught thy dutie so , from irrational and insensible things ; but yeald and submit thy hart , to learne of each creature , how to serue the common creatour of vs al. and as thou walkest vp and downe , taking a view of those curious knots of euer-flourishing and green hearbs , say this vnto thyself : when shal i order and compose my greener and inordinat affections in so faire and goodlie a decorum , and so sweet proportion ? walking in the allyes , say : lord , conduct me by the streight and readie way ; and shew me thy kingdome . noting the neatnes of those walkes , how trim and smooth they are , say : when shal it be , i be so curious , to purge and take away the impurities from my hart ? the great diuersitie of flowers , wil present to thee , the great multiplicitie and wel-nigh infinitie of thy thoughts , as various as numerous , & al as trāsitorie as they . if thou seest a swarme of emōts at thy feet , charged and loaden al with graynes of corne , and carrying them with toyle , vnto their litle grayneries , one groaning with his load , another newly discharged therof , most lightly and nimbly running for another , say vnto thyself : oh slothful wretch , looke on these people heer , how they labour to mayntaine that paltrie litle carkas of theirs , of smal continuance ; and thou to mayntaine thy soule , in good estate , so created for eternitie , art so litle laborious , and industrious . when thou beholdst the trees , ful loaden with their fruits , so faine to be shored vp beneath ; remember the menace of fire , the sauiour made against the barren tree . when thou seest the plants , to be watered so , against the scor ching of the sun , thinke and say inwardly in thyself : when shal , we with our teares appease the auenging wrath of the diuine iustice ? the faire and beautiful pansyes , but without al sent or odour , wil tel thee , of the vnprofitable agitations of thy soule ; the tyme , the bitternes of displeasures ; the poppie , that lulles the soule a-sleep , wil admonish thee of the sweet extasies and rauishments of heauenlie contemplation , thou neglectest so much ; the rubarb , or hearb called patience , wil put thee in mind of that vertue , which giues it the name ; the balme , of a good and faire reputation . nor stay thou heer , but runne to resalute the proper and peculiar familie likewise the genuine symbols of the sacred parthenes , so mentioned aboue ; and note the documents they wil yeald thee , for thine owne behoof ; and then take thy leaue of al. the priuate garden wil teach thee to keep thy vertues close , if thou hast anie ; and not very easily to loose their odour , through a voluntarie publishing the same to others . saluting the rose , enuironed with thorns , think , there is no contentment to be found , without displeasures . beholding the lillie among bryars , imagin chastitie is so conserued amid austerities . the violet wil figure thee a low and humble esteeme of thyself ; which yet is a fragrant and delicious flower . the heliotropion , which hath alwayes its look to the sun-wards , and followes it by day , and closes vp agayne with the night , wil put thee in conceipt of the true sun of iustice indeed thou oughtst to follow , and should be the whole obiect of thy soule . the deaw , that falles from heauen , wil remember thee of the heauenlie graces , that were shed and distilled from heauen , by the coming of the holie-ghost in forme of fierie tongues . the busie and industrious bee , which bounds and rebounds so aloft in the ayre as she flyes , wil cal to thy mind , those words of thy great maister : work , and negotiate while tune lasts . the heauens , wil attract thy thoughts , to heauenlie things ; the rain-bow , moue thee to pardon iniuries , and immediatly to reconcile thee , to thine enemies . the moon wil tax thee of inconstancie , like to hers ; the starre , rayse vp thy thoughts to a vertuous emulation , to become a starre indeed , in the heauenlie hierarchie , as it is so fixed in the celestial firmament . the oliue wil warne thee , to be alwayes green in thy good purposes , and fruitful in good works . the nightingal , wil let thee heare a taste or relish , as it were , of the heauenlie quiers , and sacred alleluya's , sung by the angels in heauen . the palme , wil stirre thee to martyrdome ; at least , to fortitude in difficult atchieuements . the house , wil cal the heauenlie mansions and tabernacles into thy thoughts , which are permanent for euer . the hen , wil cause thee to fly , to the heauenlie protection . the pearl , wil inuite thee to sel al thou hast , to purchase that of the heauenlie kingdome . the doue , wil retire thee , and draw thee into solitude . the fountain , wil allure thee , to drinck of the waters , which the sauiour mentioned , that spring to eternal life . the mount , wil cal thee to a higher degree of perfection ; the sea , represent to thee an ocean of grace , to launch forth thy soule , as a webrigd ship , into that mayne , to arriue at last into the hauen of eternal happines ; and that especially through the steering of our sacred parthenes , cui laus & gloria in secula , amen . the epilogve to the parthenians thus , gentle parthenians , you haue viewed , reflected , reviewed , surueyed , paused on , and contemplated the mysterious and delicious garden of our sacred parthenes ; and after al implored and importuned your soueraigne ladie-mistris , and mine , vnder so manie apt and rich symbols . so graciously she hath daigned , to condescend , for our pleasure and deuotion , as it were , to deliciate with vs in these irrational species of things , made al but to expresse ( you would think ) her prayses , and al the peculiar deuotes of hers , our deare companions , in her seruice . where you must note , that these are but they only , which wayte and attend vpon her , in her garden ; and that she hath infinit other clients and deuotes besides , in created things , as forward al , to offer vp themselues , in her seruice ; i meane , in this symbolical theologie , to giue forth elogies , encomiums , and panegyricks , to her sacred prayse . for testimonie wherof , you might obserue , the garden being shut vp , two noble creatures likewise , though too late , to be admitted with the rest , to come in with their deuises and emblemes , to expresse no lesse in her honour , then the rest had done . but the garden , as i sayd , was shut already , nor would our leasure afford vs more , then to receaue their escuchions only , & to hang them thus on the postern , as you see , the phoenix . the devise . the morals . nec similis visa , nec secvnda . one cittie holds not two lisanders , the ancient prouerb sayth ; nor the heauens two suns , say i ; which neuer appeare in shew only without a prodigie . hercules had thought , he had set a spel to the world , when he set vp his pillar so in the then vtmost spanish gades , and called it his non plus vltra . but alas ! since that , hath a new whole world been discouered , far beyond it . one painter with his art deceaued the birds , with a bunch of grapes , and he thought verily he had done a great peece of matter ; when comes me another streight , and with his art likewise , deludes the verie painter himself in his owne art . one drawes me a line , which he held to be indiuisible ; comes me another with a lighter touch , and cuts that line asunder with another line . it is often seen , the scholler goes beyond the maister , plato excelled his maister , aristotle his , and so haue infinit others ; the reason yealds that reuerēd father southwel in his spiritual poems . deuise of man , in working hath no end ; what thought can think another thought can mend ? god , when he framed the world , might as wel haue built manie more , and happely a second better then the first , & so a third , and so a fourth , because al are in the compas of his omnipotencie ; but so can not mā do in his works ; for stil there wil be found an vtmost tearme , beyond the which he can not passe ; because he is finit . the giants in their big conceipts , had framed in their imagination a stayre-case vp to heauen , by setting pelion vpon ossa's back ; but when they had brought it to a certain pitch , they could reare their building no whit higher , but downe comes ossa much sooner then he got vp ; and al was but a castle in the ayre , which hangs there stil , the foundation being shrunck away . such are the works of mortals ; and so are they limited in al they do . god only is he , who is boundles in al. yet when he framed the incomparable virgin marie , and chose her to be his mother , he made her so incomparable a phāenix , not only to al , that euer were , or shal be , but euen to such , as he intended or was able to frame ; since being not able to be greater then he is himself , he could not make her to be a greater mother then she is , * making her his owne mother ; & therefore wel may besayd : nec similis visa nec secvnda . the character . the phenix , is the cesar of birds , and sole dictatour amongst them , which admits no pompey in his kind : & therefore nature hath framed but one at once , to take away the cause of ciuil iarres . he is the miracle of nature , and a prime maister-peece of her workmanship ; wherin she seemes , contrarie to her custome , to shew some art . he is euen the honour of arabia felix , or the felicitie of that region ; the of-spring of the sun , that might wel haue been his father , if either two suns had been possible , or two phenixes at once . he is a treasurer , or rather an vsurer of spices , with the interest of his life . he is the heyre apparant to himself , and feares no other 's clayme to that nature ; bred of ashes , and , as we al , to ashes must returne againe ; and yet immortal , while he dyes not , but renewes rather ; and not as the hawke , which mewes his feathers only , but himself . the tomb is his cradle , the fire his midwif , himself the damme , the sun his sire . there being but one at once , they are framed without a pattern , and yet so like , as they are taken for the same . he can speake much of others ancesters , but nothing of his owne . he is the alpha and omega of his kind , the first and last , because alwayes the same . being solitarie , he is apt to scruples , but puts them ouer through the innocencie of his life ; for though by nature he be a prince , yet dares he not say we , because there is no more then he . if he steale , they are but spices , wherof he makes no conscience , because for his altar of holocausts ; nor hath anie casuist with him , to put that scrupule into his head . and being so accessarie to his owne death , he makes as litle scruple of that also , as done through the inspiration of nature , as he calles it , to maintaine his house , and to rayse his seed . were he not wel knowne otherwise to the arabians , to be a bird , by manie faire demonstrations , it had been a wonder , that people had not chosen him for a god. but god , it seemes , would not permit it , as a special fauour to this singular and miraculous bird. like the camelion , he liues by the ayre ; and no maruel , the spirit of birds should liue of its proper element , the ayre being the elemēt of birds , as the waters of the fish . the fire he makes his purgatorie in this world ; and that so efficaciously , as he becomes renewed to an other life , or like the snake , which changing his coat only , is stil the same , but yet more fresh . whereby obseruing the precept , he puts off the old man , to be take him self to a new being , in newnes of life . behold , how death aymes with his mortal dart , and wounds a phaenix with a twin-like hart . these are the harts of iesus and his mother so linkt in one , that one without the other is not entire . they ( sure ) each others smart must needs sustaine , though two , yet as one hart . one virgin-mother , phenix of her kind , and we her sonne without a father find . the sonne 's and mothers paines in one are mixt . his side , a launce , her soule a sword transfixt . two harts in one , one ph●nix loue contriues . one wound in two , and two in one reuiues . the swan . the devise . the morals . ad vada concinens elisii aristotle sayth , that harmonie and musrck , is a worthie , great , and diuine thing , whose bodie is composed of parts discordant in thēselues , & yet accordant one with the other ; which entring into the bodie by the eare with i know not what diuinitie as it were , rauisheth the soule . the world therefore is much obliged to the first inuentour of musick , being the sweet charme of al the annoyes of our pittiful mortalitie . for euen they , who are plunged in the abysse of al euils , at the least touch of sweet musick , do euen swim , & vault like dolphins ( as poets say ) at the feet of that minstrel orion . what grief or trouble is so great , that reuiues not , when a gentle treble mounts vpto hēauen , and there soaring and houering aloft , as on the wing , comes like a falcon at last to seize vpon the base , as a prey , euen to the losse of breath & sense of hearing ? or when the base after a long pursuit of the treble , and not able to reach it as it would , as in a rage in despite with itself , seemes to precipitate and plunge itself euen to the center of the earth ? who would not wonder , to see the gentle orpheus haue such power vpon sauage beasts , to make them to forget their prey and chase , to feed and fatten themselues with such mincing diuisiōs , & by the eare feed on those diuine viands ? who , when he made his harp to speak , and his fingers to runne so fast , marrying his angelical voyce to the miracle of his strings , he made euen the people of the seas to cast themselues in sholes vpon the strond , to listen to him ; and the sirens to come forth and dance vpon the green banck-side , al diaperd with flowers ; the beares and lions to quit the forrests , running in troupes to lye at the feet of their sweet tyrant . but away with these fables now , and cast we our eyes & eares vpon that diuine harp , fallen from heauen to the earth , into the hands of dauid , who causing his strings to speake and chant forth his heauenlie and diuine psalmes , so did exorcise and dispel the diuel from his hold. this musick therefore is an essay , as it were , and tast of paradise itself , while in heauen they seeme to do nothing but sing the greatnes & maruels of god , in two quiers , of the angels of the one side , & of the blessed saints of the other . but then , what musick made the white delightful swā , sitting on the bancks , not of po , meander , or euridanus , but on the brinck of death ? not of cocitus , stix , or fierie flegiton , but of the playnes of elizeum , that is , by the shores of paradice ; when , like the swan , feeling her purest bloud to tickle her hart for ioy of her approaching passage out of this world , we may piously coniecture she tuned forth her diuine canti●le anew for a farwel to the world and a last adieu ; and therefore worthily is sayd : ad vada concinens elizei . the character . the sweet delightful swan is that delicious siren of the brook ; the liuing ghost , that walks and hants those humid playnes , as if confined to her eliseum there . she is much taken with the pleasant banck of the continent , and spends much time therin , but yet wil not trust it with her houshold , nor there be brought to bed , but rather hires some iland for the purpose ; & the rent she payes , is some part of her children . she likes to haue her walks and gardens there , for her delights ; but her mansion-house , for more securitie , wil she haue wel gyrt with an ample and spacious moat . it is strange to see , how solitarie she liues ; and yet otherwise , you would think her , though she seemes highly to affect that life , made for citties and the court ; her clothing al , saue her spanish-leather buskins , from top to toe , of the richest mineuers ; her gate , statelie and maiestical ; her garb and fashion , graue , yet not affected , or sprung from an ouer-weening of herself . she rather pitties the companie of men , and their good fellowships , as feastings , bancketings , and pastimes , then hates them for it , and so neglects them rather , with a demisse eye , then with a brow contracted , or a lookmore cinick , to appeare diogenes , or a tymō , a hater of men , rather then the deboishments of their māners . as she is solitarie and melancholie by nature , she is very musical , as likely are al such ; but chiefly doats she on the wind-instruments , and is neuer seen without her howboy ; wherewith , when she list , wil she enchant the verie sirens themselues with the melodie she makes ; but then especially , when feeling the chimes of her passage out of this world to sound within her , as a presage of her death to others , she wil ring forth such a peale of delicious and chromatick straines mixt togeather , as would moue deuotion in the hearers rather , then compassion , while they wil iudge streight , she had a pure soule of her owne . she is a right hermitesse ; and hath her sallets proper to herself alone ; and as she loues them wel , she wil feed of no man's picking , but her owne . other whiles she liues in state , and keeps her kitchin , as the manner is in some places , in the cellars , and lower roomes ; which by reason of the moystnes of those places , are alwayes vnder waters ; but she likes them neuer the worse for that , but rather so much the better ; for so she feeds on her sallets very fresh , but new-gathered . she is further much delighted , to take her pleasure on the waters , for her meer disport and recreation ; and wil haue no other boat , then her owne barge , nor other oares then her owne ; and being so good a swimmer , makes a pastime of it , to tilt her boat quite ouer head and eares . she is very hale , and hath a long breath , and wil keep her head vnder water , longer then any moor shal doe , that hunts for pearls . when milde fauonius breathes , with warbling throat the milk-white swan chants with a sweeter note ; but sweeter yet her musick farre excels , when death approches , which her tune fore-tels . so th' holie spirit breathing from aboue vpon the virgin , r●ys'd with wings of loue , her heauenlie muse vnto a higher straine in her melodious sonnet , but againe , when gentle death drew neare , she high aspires to tune an antheme with the angels quires . thy cygnets ( mother swan ) on thee relye ; o make them white , that they may singing dye . finis . notes, typically marginal, from the original text notes for div a02823-e710 so epiphanius very nigh describes her , notes for div a02823-e1130 the impres●●● . the mor● . capit comme de●●us : the review . the suruey . * alma signifyes inclosed & a virgin shut vp in hebrew . the contemplation . cant. 4. the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e2840 the impresa . the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . 〈…〉 . cant. 1. h●st . 2. psal . iudith . 14. cant. 4. the pause . the contemplation . cant , vlt. thess , 5 , ecel , 24 the colloquis notes for div a02823-e4900 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . sap. 7. cant , 8. c 1. cant 1 eccl 24. cant. 2. cant. 7. cant. 2. the p●use . the cōtemplation , the colloqute notes for div a02823-e6610 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . eccles. deut ▪ 4. the pause . the contemplation . the colloquie notes for div a02823-e8400 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . cant 1. 10. the pause . the contemplation . ierem. 31. 18. cant. the colloquie notes for div a02823-e10490 the impresa the motto . the re●iew . the suruey . 2. pet 2. gal. 4. ephes. 2 psal. ●see 14. iob 38. psal. the pause . the contemplation . the coll●quie . notes for div a02823-e12800 the , impresa . the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . the pause . the contemplation . s. paul the colloquie notes for div a02823-e14400 the impresa the mott● . the reuiew . the suruey ▪ ●arth . angl. l. 8. c. 2. eccl. 4● . apoc. 12. 1. cor. 3. eccl. 24. cant. psal. epip . in laud. mariae . cherisoh . ser. 11s . bonau . in spec . c. 50. psal. 50 the pause . the contemplation . ezech. psal. the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e17090 the impresa . the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . gen. the pause . the contemplation . the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e19110 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . cant. 5 eccl. 53 psal. eccl 22. eccl. 22. cant. 4. cant. 1. i●el 2. prou. vlt. the pause . the contemplation . the colloqui● . notes for div a02823-e20910 the impresa . the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . eccl 24. phil. de mar●no . bonau . in opera . iacob . 3. bern. ser. super mis. bonau . in spec . bern. ser. 20. the pause . the contemplation . the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e23080 the impresa the motto . the reuiew : the suruey iudic. 9. eccl. 24. the pause . the contemplation . isid. cant. 1. leuit. 23. isay. 69. the colloquie . eccl. 25. notes for div a02823-e25220 the impresa . the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . cant. alex 9 l. galen . vliss. aldr. ornith . l. 28. p. 780. the pause . the contemplation : the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e27060 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . psal. 31 eccl. 24. psal. 27. the pause . the contemplation . eccl. 24. the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e29060 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . 3. reg. 8 ier. 31. eccl. prou. 86. psal. 86. 3. reg. 9. iob. 4 ▪ cant 2. agg. 2. ps. 111. the pause . the contemplation . sap. 4. the colloquie . psal. 86 eccl. 24. prou. 8. notes for div a02823-e31010 the impresae the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . arist l. 9. c. 49. ec. 19. ec● . 10. the pause . the contemplation . pro. 31. ap. 12. the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e32540 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the reuiew . isay. 45 the pause . the contemplation . the coll●quie . notes for div a02823-e34300 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . can● . 20. s. hier. ioan. 10. isay. 63. sap. 7. cant. 3. s. anselm . can. 5. the pause . * columbam nigram pingebāt aegypty ad significandā●iduā c●stam & constantem ; inquit pierius . the contemplation . gen 88. the golloquie . notes for div a02823-e36190 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . cant ▪ 4. hest. 11. prou 5. esay . 1. 6. hier. 2. iud. 5. num. 13. c●n. 2. esa. 55. rom. 13. i. 4. the pause . * turbata est in sermone cius . the contemplation . s. ber. idem . the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e38170 the impresa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . pagnin eccl. 24. exod. act 7. psal. 71 ps. 110. psal. 75. 67 41. isai. 2. th. p● the contemplation . ec. 39. oset. 14. the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e40490 the im●resa the motto . the reuiew . the suruey . gen. 1. gen. 2. esech . 1 ●ern . psal. the pause . the contemplation . the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e42400 the impresa the mott● . the reuiew . the suruey . eccl. 24. cant. 8. luc. 1. luc. 23. heb. 7. ex. 27. pro 31. lue. 6. the pause . the contemplation . reg 3. ec. 43. the colloquie . notes for div a02823-e44880 the motto . the inpresa . the mot●● . the impresa