{"id":8611,"date":"2011-11-12T18:42:00","date_gmt":"2011-11-12T23:42:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/?p=8611"},"modified":"2011-11-12T18:45:59","modified_gmt":"2011-11-12T23:45:59","slug":"dialogue-comfort-tribulation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/2011\/11\/12\/dialogue-comfort-tribulation\/","title":{"rendered":"Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>           Title: Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation<br \/>\n      Creator(s): More, St. Thomas (1478-1535)<br \/>\n     Print Basis: Sheed &#038; Ward, 1951<br \/>\n          Rights: Public Domain<\/p>\n<p>     LC Subjects:<\/p>\n<p>                  Practical theology<\/p>\n<p>                  Practical religion. The Christian life<\/p>\n<p>                  Works of consolation and cheer<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>   Produced by David McClamrock<\/p>\n<p>                    DIALOGUE OF COMFORT AGAINST TRIBULATION<\/p>\n<p>   by St. Thomas More<\/p>\n<p>   with modifications to obsolete language by Monica Stevens<\/p>\n<p>   ______________________________<\/p>\n<p>    PUBLISHED 1951 BY SHEED AND WARD, LTD. 110\/111 FLEET STREET, LONDON, E.C.4<br \/>\n    AND SHEED AND WARD, INC. 830 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, 3<\/p>\n<p>   ______________________________<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    NOTE<\/p>\n<p>   This edition of the Dialogue of Comfort has been transcribed from the<br \/>\n   1557 version as it appears in Everyman&#8217;s Library. The Everyman edition<br \/>\n   is heartily recommended to readers who would like to taste the dialogue<br \/>\n   in its original form.<\/p>\n<p>   The first plan was to change only the spelling. It soon became evident<br \/>\n   that the punctuation would have to be changed to follow present usage.<br \/>\n   The longest sentences were then broken up into two or three, and<br \/>\n   certain others were rearranged into a word order more like that of<br \/>\n   today. Nothing was omitted, however, and nothing was added except<br \/>\n   relative pronouns, parts of &#8220;to be,&#8221; and other such neutral<br \/>\n   connectives. Finally, obsolete words were changed to more familiar<br \/>\n   equivalents except when they were entirely clear and too good to lose.<br \/>\n   Thus &#8220;wot&#8221; became &#8220;know&#8221; but &#8220;gigglot&#8221; and &#8220;galp up the ghost&#8221; were<br \/>\n   retained. Words that have come to have a quite different meaning for<br \/>\n   us, such as &#8220;fond&#8221; and &#8220;lust&#8221; were replaced by less ambiguous<br \/>\n   ones&#8211;wherever possible, by ones that More himself used elsewhere.<\/p>\n<p>   The text has not been cut or expanded, re-interpreted or edited. Any<br \/>\n   transcription seems to involve some interpretation, conscious or<br \/>\n   otherwise, but an effort has been made to keep it to a minimum.<br \/>\n   Passages that seemed to make no sense have therefore been left<br \/>\n   unaltered. If other readers find solutions for them their suggestions<br \/>\n   will be welcomed.<\/p>\n<p>   This is not in any sense a scholarly piece of work. That would require<br \/>\n   a very different method, as well as a far more thorough knowledge of<br \/>\n   sixteenth-century English. It would be a most commendable undertaking,<br \/>\n   but it might result in an edition for the learned. This one is for<br \/>\n   everyone who has the two essentials, faith and intelligence,<br \/>\n   presupposed by Anthony in Chapter II.<\/p>\n<p>      MONICA STEVENS<\/p>\n<p>   Middlebury, Vermont.<br \/>\n   Feast of St. Benedict, 1950.<\/p>\n<p>   ______________________________<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    BOOK ONE<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Who would have thought, O my good uncle, a few years past,<br \/>\n   that those in this country who would visit their friends lying in<br \/>\n   disease and sickness would come, as I do now, to seek and fetch comfort<br \/>\n   of them? Or who would have thought that in giving comfort to them they<br \/>\n   would use the way that I may well use to you? For albeit that the<br \/>\n   priests and friars be wont to call upon sick men to remember death, yet<br \/>\n   we worldly friends, for fear of discomforting them, have ever had a way<br \/>\n   here in Hungary of lifting up their hearts and putting them in good<br \/>\n   hope of life.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, my good uncle, the world is here waxed such, and so great<br \/>\n   perils appear here to fall at hand, that methinketh the greatest<br \/>\n   comfort a man can have is when he can see that he shall soon be gone.<br \/>\n   And we who are likely long to live here in wretchedness have need of<br \/>\n   some comforting counsel against tribulation to be given us by such as<br \/>\n   you, good uncle. For you have so long lived virtuously, and are so<br \/>\n   learned in the law of God that very few are better in this country. And<br \/>\n   you have had yourself good experience and assay of such things as we do<br \/>\n   now fear, as one who hath been taken prisoner in Turkey two times in<br \/>\n   your days, and is now likely to depart hence ere long.<\/p>\n<p>   But that may be your great comfort, good uncle, since you depart to<br \/>\n   God. But us of your kindred shall you leave here, a company of sorry<br \/>\n   comfortless orphans. For to all of us your good help, comfort, and<br \/>\n   counsel hath long been a great stay&#8211;not as an uncle to some, and to<br \/>\n   others as one further of kin, but as though to us all you had been a<br \/>\n   natural father.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Mine own good cousin, I cannot much deny but what there is<br \/>\n   indeed, not only here in Hungary but also in almost all places in<br \/>\n   Christendom, such a customary manner of unchristian comforting. And in<br \/>\n   any sick man it doth more harm than good, by drawing him in time of<br \/>\n   sickness, with looking and longing for life, from the meditation of<br \/>\n   death, judgment, heaven, and hell, with which he should beset much of<br \/>\n   his time&#8211;even all his whole life in his best health. Yet is that<br \/>\n   manner of comfort to my mind more than mad when it is used to a man of<br \/>\n   mine age. For as we well know that a young man may die soon, so are we<br \/>\n   very sure that an old man cannot live long. And yet there is (as Tully<br \/>\n   saith) no man so old but that, for all that, he hopeth yet that he may<br \/>\n   live one year more, and of a frail folly delighteth to think thereon<br \/>\n   and comfort himself therewith. So other men&#8217;s words of such comfort,<br \/>\n   adding more sticks to that fire, shall (in a manner) quite burn up the<br \/>\n   pleasant moisture that should most refresh him&#8211;the wholesome dew, I<br \/>\n   mean, of God&#8217;s grace, by which he should wish with God&#8217;s will to be<br \/>\n   hence, and long to be with him in Heaven.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, as for your taking my departing from you so heavily (as that of<br \/>\n   one from whom you recognize, of your goodness, to have had here before<br \/>\n   help and comfort), would God I had done to you and to others half so<br \/>\n   much as I myself reckon it would have been my duty to do! But<br \/>\n   whensoever God may take me hence, to reckon yourselves then<br \/>\n   comfortless, as though your chief comfort stood in me&#8211;therein would<br \/>\n   you make, methinketh, a reckoning very much as though you would cast<br \/>\n   away a strong staff and lean upon a rotten reed. For God is, and must<br \/>\n   be, your comfort, and not I. And he is a sure comforter, who (as he<br \/>\n   said unto his disciples) never leaveth his servants comfortless<br \/>\n   orphans, not even when he departed from his disciples by death. But he<br \/>\n   both sent them a comforter, as he had promised, the Holy Spirit of his<br \/>\n   Father and himself, and he also made them sure that to the world&#8217;s end<br \/>\n   he would ever dwell with them himself. And therefore, if you be part of<br \/>\n   his flock and believe his promise, how can you be comfortless in any<br \/>\n   tribulation, when Christ and his Holy Spirit, and with them their<br \/>\n   inseparable Father, if you put full trust and confidence in them, are<br \/>\n   never either one finger-breadth of space nor one minute of time from<br \/>\n   you?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: O, my good uncle, even these selfsame words, with which you<br \/>\n   prove that because of God&#8217;s own gracious presence we cannot be left<br \/>\n   comfortless, make me now feel and perceive how much comfort we shall<br \/>\n   miss when you are gone. For albeit, good uncle, that while you tell me<br \/>\n   this I cannot but grant it for true, yet if I had not now heard it from<br \/>\n   you, I would not have remembered it, nor would it have fallen to my<br \/>\n   mind. And moreover, as our tribulations shall increase in weight and<br \/>\n   number, so shall we need not only one such good word or twain, but a<br \/>\n   great heap of them, to stable and strengthen the walls of our hearts<br \/>\n   against the great surges of this tempestuous sea.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Good cousin, trust well in God and he shall provide you<br \/>\n   outward teachers suitable for every time, or else shall himself<br \/>\n   sufficiently teach you inwardly.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Very well, good uncle, but yet if we would leave the seeking<br \/>\n   of outward learning, when we can have it, and look to be inwardly<br \/>\n   taught by God alone, then should be thereby tempt God and displease<br \/>\n   him. And since I now see the likelihood that when you are gone we shall<br \/>\n   be sore destitute of any other like you, therefore methinketh that God<br \/>\n   bindeth me of duty to pray you now, good uncle, in this short time that<br \/>\n   we have you, that I may learn of you such plenty of good counsel and<br \/>\n   comfort, against these great storms of tribulation with which both I<br \/>\n   and all mine are sore beaten already, and now upon the coming of this<br \/>\n   cruel Turk fear to fall in far more, that I may, with the same laid up<br \/>\n   in remembrance, govern and stay the ship of our kindred and keep it<br \/>\n   afloat from peril of spiritual drowning.<\/p>\n<p>   You are not ignorant, good uncle, what heaps of heaviness have of late<br \/>\n   fallen among us already, with which some of our poor family are fallen<br \/>\n   into such dumps that scantly can any such comfort as my poor wit can<br \/>\n   give them at all assuage their sorrow. And now, since these tidings<br \/>\n   have come hither, so hot with the great Turk&#8217;s enterprise into these<br \/>\n   parts here, we can scantly talk nor think of anything else than his<br \/>\n   might and our danger. There falleth so continually before the eyes of<br \/>\n   our heart a fearful imagination of this terrible thing: his mighty<br \/>\n   strength and power, his high malice and hatred, and his incomparable<br \/>\n   cruelty, with robbing, spoiling, burning, and laying waste all the way<br \/>\n   that his army cometh; then, killing or carrying away the people thence,<br \/>\n   far from home, and there severing the couples and the kindred asunder,<br \/>\n   every one far from the other, some kept in thraldom and some kept in<br \/>\n   prison and some for a triumph tormented and killed in his presence;<br \/>\n   then, sending his people hither and his false faith too, so that such<br \/>\n   as are here and still remain shall either both lose all and be lost<br \/>\n   too, or be forced to forsake the faith of our Saviour Christ and fall<br \/>\n   to the false sect of Mahomet. And yet&#8211;that which we fear more than all<br \/>\n   the rest&#8211;no small part of our own folk who dwell even here about us<br \/>\n   are, we fear, falling to him or already confederated with him. If this<br \/>\n   be so, it may haply keep this quarter from the Turk&#8217;s invasion. But<br \/>\n   then shall they that turn to his law leave all their neighbours<br \/>\n   nothing, but shall have our goods given them and our bodies too, unless<br \/>\n   we turn as they do and forsake our Saviour too. And then&#8211;for there is<br \/>\n   no born Turk so cruel to Christian folk as is the false Christian that<br \/>\n   falleth from the faith&#8211;we shall stand in peril, if we persevere in the<br \/>\n   truth, to be more hardly handled and die a more cruel death by our own<br \/>\n   countrymen at home than if we were taken hence and carried into Turkey.<br \/>\n   These fearful heaps of peril lie so heavy at our hearts, since we know<br \/>\n   not into which we shall fortune to fall and therefore fear all the<br \/>\n   worst, that (as our Saviour prophesied of the people of Jerusalem) many<br \/>\n   among us wish already, before the peril come, that the mountains would<br \/>\n   overwhelm them or the valleys open and swallow them up and cover them.<\/p>\n<p>   Therefore, good uncle, against these horrible fears of these terrible<br \/>\n   tribulations&#8211;some of which, as you know, our house hath already, and<br \/>\n   the rest of which we stand in dread of&#8211;give us, while God lendeth you<br \/>\n   to us, such plenty of your comforting counsel as I may write and keep<br \/>\n   with us, to stay us when God shall call you hence.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Ah, my good cousin, this is a heavy hearing. And just as we<br \/>\n   who dwell here in this part now sorely fear that thing which a few<br \/>\n   years ago we feared not at all, so I suspect that ere long they shall<br \/>\n   fear it as much who now think themselves very sure because they dwell<br \/>\n   further off.<\/p>\n<p>   Greece feared not the Turk when I was born, and within a while<br \/>\n   afterward that whole empire was his. The great Sultan of Syria thought<br \/>\n   himself more than his match, and long since you were born hath he that<br \/>\n   empire too. Then hath he taken Belgrade, the fortress of this realm.<br \/>\n   And since that hath he destroyed our noble young goodly king, and now<br \/>\n   two of them strive for us&#8211;our Lord send the grace that the third dog<br \/>\n   carry not away the bone from them both! What of the noble strong city<br \/>\n   of Rhodes, the winning of which he counted as a victory against the<br \/>\n   whole body of Christendom, since all Christendom was not able to defend<br \/>\n   that strong town against him? Howbeit, if the princes of Christendom<br \/>\n   everywhere would, where there was need, have set to their hands in<br \/>\n   time, the Turk would never have taken any one of all those places. But<br \/>\n   partly because of dissensions fallen among ourselves, and partly<br \/>\n   because no man careth what harm other folk feel, but each part<br \/>\n   suffereth the other to shift for itself, the Turk has in a few years<br \/>\n   wonderfully increased and Christendom on the other hand very sorely<br \/>\n   decayed. And all this is worked by our wickedness, with which God is<br \/>\n   not content.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, whereas you desire of me some plenty of comforting things,<br \/>\n   which you may put in remembrance, to comfort your company with&#8211;verily,<br \/>\n   in the rehearsing and heaping of your manifold fears, I myself began to<br \/>\n   feel that there would be much need, against so many troubles, of many<br \/>\n   comforting counsels. For surely, a little before you came, as I devised<br \/>\n   with myself upon the Turk&#8217;s coming, it happened that my mind fell<br \/>\n   suddenly from that to devising upon my own departing. Now, albeit that<br \/>\n   I fully put my trust in God and hope to be a saved soul by his mercy,<br \/>\n   yet no man is here so sure that without revelation he may stand clean<br \/>\n   out of dread. So I bethought me also upon the pain of hell, and<br \/>\n   afterward, then, I bethought me upon the Turk again. And at first<br \/>\n   methought his terror nothing, when I compared with it the joyful hope<br \/>\n   of heaven. Then I compared it on the other hand with the fearful dread<br \/>\n   of hell, casting therein in my mind those terrible fiendish tormentors,<br \/>\n   with the deep consideration of that furious endless fire. And methought<br \/>\n   that if the Turk with his whole host, and all his trumpets and timbrels<br \/>\n   too, were to come to my chamber door and kill me in my bed, in respect<br \/>\n   of the other reckoning I would regard him not a rush. And yet, when I<br \/>\n   now heard your lamentable words, laying forth as though it were present<br \/>\n   before my face that heap of heavy sorrowful tribulations that (besides<br \/>\n   those that are already befallen) are in short space likely to follow, I<br \/>\n   waxed myself suddenly somewhat dismayed. And therefore I well approve<br \/>\n   your request in this behalf, since you wish to have a store of comfort<br \/>\n   beforehand, ready by you to resort to, and to lay up in your heart as a<br \/>\n   remedy against the poison of all desperate dread that might arise from<br \/>\n   occasion of sore tribulation. And I shall be glad, as my poor wit shall<br \/>\n   serve me, to call to mind with you such things as I before have read,<br \/>\n   heard, or thought upon, that may conveniently serve us to this purpose.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    I<\/p>\n<p>   First shall you, good cousin, understand this: The natural wise men of<br \/>\n   this world, the old moral philosophers, laboured much in this matter.<br \/>\n   And many natural reasons have they written by which they might<br \/>\n   encourage men to set little by such goods&#8211;or such hurts, either&#8211;the<br \/>\n   going and coming of which are the matter and cause of tribulation. Such<br \/>\n   are the goods of fortune, riches, favour, friends, fame, worldly<br \/>\n   honour, and such other things: or of the body, as beauty, strength,<br \/>\n   agility, liveliness, and health. These things, as you know, coming to<br \/>\n   us, are matter of worldly wealth. And, taken from us by fortune or by<br \/>\n   force or the fear of losing them, they are matter of adversity and<br \/>\n   tribulation. For tribulation seemeth generally to signify nothing else<br \/>\n   but some kind of grief, either pain of the body or heaviness of the<br \/>\n   mind. Now that the body should not feel what it feeleth, all the wit in<br \/>\n   the world cannot bring that about. But that the mind should not be<br \/>\n   grieved either with the pain that the body feeleth or with occasions of<br \/>\n   heaviness offered and given unto the soul itself, this thing the<br \/>\n   philosophers laboured very much about. And many goodly sayings have<br \/>\n   they toward strength and comfort against tribulation, exciting men to<br \/>\n   the full contempt of all worldly loss and the despising of sickness and<br \/>\n   all bodily grief, painful death and all.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, indeed, for anything that ever I read in them, I never could<br \/>\n   yet find that those natural reasons were ever able to give sufficient<br \/>\n   comfort of themselves. For they never stretch so far but that they<br \/>\n   leave untouched, for lack of necessary knowledge, that special point<br \/>\n   which not only is the chief comfort of all but without which also all<br \/>\n   other comforts are nothing. And that point is to refer the final end of<br \/>\n   their comfort unto God, and to repute and take for the special cause of<br \/>\n   comfort that by the patient sufferance of their tribulation they shall<br \/>\n   attain his favour and for their pain receive reward at his hand in<br \/>\n   heaven. And for lack of knowledge of this end, they did, as they needs<br \/>\n   must, leave untouched also the very special means without which we can<br \/>\n   never attain to this comfort, which is the gracious aid and help of God<br \/>\n   to move, stir, and guide us forward in the referring of all our ghostly<br \/>\n   comfort&#8211;yea, and our worldly comfort too&#8211;all unto that heavenly end.<br \/>\n   And therefore, as I say, for the lack of these things, all their<br \/>\n   comforting counsels are very far insufficient.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, though they be far unable to cure our disease of themselves<br \/>\n   and therefore are not sufficient to be taken for our physicians, some<br \/>\n   good drugs have they yet in their shops. They may therefore be suffered<br \/>\n   to dwell among our apothecaries, if their medicines be made not of<br \/>\n   their own brains but after the bills made by the great physician God,<br \/>\n   prescribing the medicines himself and correcting the faults of their<br \/>\n   erroneous recipes. For unless we take this way with them, they shall<br \/>\n   not fail to do as many bold blind apothecaries do who, either for lucre<br \/>\n   or out of a foolish pride, give sick folk medicines of their own<br \/>\n   devising. For therewith do they kill up in corners many such simple<br \/>\n   folk as they find so foolish as to put their lives in the hands of such<br \/>\n   ignorant and unlearned Blind Bayards.<\/p>\n<p>   We shall therefore neither fully receive these philosophers&#8217; reasons in<br \/>\n   this matter, nor yet utterly refuse them. But, using them in such order<br \/>\n   as may beseem them, we shall fetch the principal and effectual<br \/>\n   medicines against these diseases of tribulation from that high, great,<br \/>\n   and excellent physician without whom we could never be healed of our<br \/>\n   very deadly disease of damnation. For our necessity in that regard, the<br \/>\n   Spirit of God spiritually speaketh of himself to us, and biddeth us<br \/>\n   give him the honour of all our health. And therein he thus saith unto<br \/>\n   us: &#8220;Honour thou the physician, for him hath the high God ordained for<br \/>\n   thy necessity.&#8221; Therefore let us pray that high physician, our blessed<br \/>\n   Saviour Christ, whose holy manhood God ordained for our necessity, to<br \/>\n   cure our deadly wounds with the medicine made of the most wholesome<br \/>\n   blood of his own blessed body. And let us pray that, as he cured our<br \/>\n   mortal malady by this incomparable medicine, it may please him to send<br \/>\n   us and put in our minds at this time such medicines as may so comfort<br \/>\n   and strengthen us in his grace against the sickness and sorrows of<br \/>\n   tribulation, that our deadly enemy the devil may never have the power,<br \/>\n   by his poisoned dart of murmur, grudge, and impatience, to turn our<br \/>\n   short sickness of worldly tribulation into the endless everlasting<br \/>\n   death of infernal damnation.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    II<\/p>\n<p>   Since all our principal comfort must come from God, we must first<br \/>\n   presuppose, in him to whom we shall give any effectual comfort with any<br \/>\n   ghostly counsel, one ground to begin with, on which all that we shall<br \/>\n   build may be supported and stand; that is, the ground and foundation of<br \/>\n   faith. Without this, had ready before, all the spiritual comfort that<br \/>\n   anyone may speak of can never avail a fly.<\/p>\n<p>   For just as it would be utterly vain to lay natural reasons of comfort<br \/>\n   to him who hath no wit, so would it undoubtedly be frustrate to lay<br \/>\n   spiritual causes of comfort to him who hath no faith. For unless a man<br \/>\n   first believe that holy scripture is the word of God, and that the word<br \/>\n   of God is true, how can he take any comfort in that which the scripture<br \/>\n   telleth him? A man must needs take little fruit of scripture, if he<br \/>\n   either believe not that it be the word of God, or else think that,<br \/>\n   though it were, it might yet for all that be untrue! As this faith is<br \/>\n   more strong or more faint, so shall the comforting words of holy<br \/>\n   scripture stand the man in more stead or less.<\/p>\n<p>   This virtue of faith can no man give himself, nor yet any man to<br \/>\n   another. But though men may with preaching be ministers unto God<br \/>\n   therein; and though a man can, with his own free will, obeying freely<br \/>\n   the inward inspiration of God, be a weak worker with almighty God<br \/>\n   therein; yet is the faith indeed the gracious gift of God himself. For,<br \/>\n   as St. James saith, &#8220;Every good gift and every perfect gift is given<br \/>\n   from above, descending from the Father of lights.&#8221; Therefore, feeling<br \/>\n   our faith by many tokens very faint, let us pray to him who giveth it<br \/>\n   to us, that it may please him to help and increase it. And let us first<br \/>\n   say with him in the gospel, &#8220;I believe, good Lord, but help thou the<br \/>\n   lack of my belief.&#8221; And afterwards, let us pray with the apostles,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Lord, increase our faith.&#8221; And finally, let us consider, by Christ&#8217;s<br \/>\n   saying unto them, that, if we would not suffer the strength and fervour<br \/>\n   of our faith to wax lukewarm&#8211;or rather key-cold&#8211;and lose its vigour<br \/>\n   by scattering our minds abroad about so many trifling things that we<br \/>\n   very seldom think of the matters of our faith, we should withdraw our<br \/>\n   thought from the respect and regard of all worldly fantasies, and so<br \/>\n   gather our faith together into a little narrow room. And like the<br \/>\n   little grain of mustard seed, which is by nature hot, we should set it<br \/>\n   in the garden of our soul, all weeds being pulled out for the better<br \/>\n   feeding of our faith. Then shall it grow, and so spread up in height<br \/>\n   that the birds&#8211;that is, the holy angels of heaven&#8211;shall breed in our<br \/>\n   soul, and bring forth virtues in the branches of our faith. And then,<br \/>\n   with the faithful trust that through the true belief of God&#8217;s word we<br \/>\n   shall put in his promise, we shall be well able to command a great<br \/>\n   mountain of tribulation to void from the place where it stood in our<br \/>\n   heart, whereas with a very feeble faith and faint, we shall be scantly<br \/>\n   able to remove a little hillock.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, as for the first conclusion, since we must of necessity<br \/>\n   before any spiritual comfort presuppose the foundation of faith, and<br \/>\n   since no man can give us faith but only God, let us never cease to call<br \/>\n   upon God for it.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, good uncle, methinks that this foundation of faith<br \/>\n   which, as you say, must be laid first, is so necessarily requisite,<br \/>\n   that without it all spiritual comfort would be given utterly in vain.<br \/>\n   And therefore now shall we pray God for a full and fast faith. And I<br \/>\n   pray you, good uncle, proceed you farther in the process of your matter<br \/>\n   of spiritual comfort against tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That shall I, cousin, with good will.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    III<\/p>\n<p>   I will in my poor mind assign, for the first comfort, the desire and<br \/>\n   longing to be comforted by God. And not without some reason call I this<br \/>\n   the first cause of comfort. For, as the cure of that person is in a<br \/>\n   manner desperate, who hath no will to be cured, so is the comfort of<br \/>\n   that person desperate, who desireth not his own comfort.<\/p>\n<p>   And here shall I note you two kinds of folk who are in tribulation and<br \/>\n   heaviness: one sort that will not seek for comfort, and another sort<br \/>\n   that will.<\/p>\n<p>   And again, of those that will not, there are also two sorts. For the<br \/>\n   first there are the sort who are so drowned in sorrow that they fall<br \/>\n   into a careless deadly dullness, regarding nothing, thinking almost of<br \/>\n   nothing, no more than if they lay in a lethargy. With them it may so<br \/>\n   befall that wit and remembrance will wear away and fall even fair from<br \/>\n   them. And this comfortless kind of heaviness in tribulation is the<br \/>\n   highest kind of the deadly sin of sloth.<\/p>\n<p>   Another sort there are, who will seek for no comfort, nor yet receive<br \/>\n   none, but in their tribulation (be it loss or sickness) are so testy,<br \/>\n   so fuming, and so far out of all patience that it profiteth no man to<br \/>\n   speak to them. And these are as furious with impatience as though they<br \/>\n   were in half a frenzy. And, from a custom of such behaviour, they may<br \/>\n   fall into one full and whole. And this kind of heaviness in tribulation<br \/>\n   is even a dangerous high branch of the mortal sin of ire.<\/p>\n<p>   Then is there, as I told you, another kind of folk, who fain would be<br \/>\n   comforted. And yet are they of two sorts too. One sort are those who in<br \/>\n   their sorrow seek for worldly comfort. And of them shall we now speak<br \/>\n   the less, for the divers occasions that we shall afterwards have to<br \/>\n   touch upon them in more places than one. But here will I say this,<br \/>\n   which I learned of St. Bernard: He who in tribulation turneth himself<br \/>\n   unto worldly vanities, to get help and comfort from them, fareth like a<br \/>\n   man who in peril of drowning catcheth whatsoever cometh next to hand,<br \/>\n   and that holdeth he fast, be it never so simple a stick. But then that<br \/>\n   helpeth him not, for he draweth that stick down under the water with<br \/>\n   him, and there they lie both drowned together. So surely, if we<br \/>\n   accustom ourselves to put our trust of comfort in the delight of these<br \/>\n   childish worldly things, God shall for that foul fault suffer our<br \/>\n   tribulation to grow so great that all the pleasures of this world shall<br \/>\n   never bear us up, but all our childish pleasure shall drown with us in<br \/>\n   the depth of tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   The other sort is, I say, of those who long and desire to be comforted<br \/>\n   by God. And as I told you before, they undoubtedly have a great cause<br \/>\n   of comfort even in that point alone, that they consider themselves to<br \/>\n   desire and long to be comforted by almighty God. This mind of theirs<br \/>\n   may well be cause of great comfort to them, for two great<br \/>\n   considerations.<\/p>\n<p>   One is that they see themselves seek for their comfort where they<br \/>\n   cannot fail to find it. For God both can give them comfort, and will.<br \/>\n   He can, for he is all-mighty; he will, for he is all-good, and hath<br \/>\n   himself promised, &#8220;Ask and you shall have.&#8221; He who hath faith&#8211;as he<br \/>\n   must needs have who shall take comfort&#8211;cannot doubt but what God will<br \/>\n   surely keep his promise. And therefore hath he a great cause to be of<br \/>\n   good comfort, as I say, in that he considereth that he longeth to be<br \/>\n   comforted by him who, his faith maketh him sure, will not fail to<br \/>\n   comfort him.<\/p>\n<p>   But here consider this: I speak here of him who in tribulation longeth<br \/>\n   to be comforted by God, and who referreth the manner of his comforting<br \/>\n   to God. Such a man holdeth himself content, whether God comfort him by<br \/>\n   taking away or diminishing the tribulation itself, or by giving him<br \/>\n   patience and spiritual consolation therein. For if he long only to have<br \/>\n   God take his trouble from him, we cannot so well warrant that mind for<br \/>\n   a cause of so great comfort. For a man may desire that who never<br \/>\n   mindeth to be the better, and also may he miss the effect of his<br \/>\n   desire, because his request is haply not good for him. And of this kind<br \/>\n   of longing and requiring, we shall have occasion hereafter to speak<br \/>\n   further. But he who, referring the manner of his comforting to God,<br \/>\n   desireth of God to be comforted, asketh a thing so lawful and so<br \/>\n   pleasing to God that he cannot fail to fare well. And therefore hath<br \/>\n   he, as I say, great cause to take comfort in the very desire itself.<\/p>\n<p>   Another cause hath he to take of that desire a very great occasion of<br \/>\n   comfort. For since his desire is good, and declareth to him that he<br \/>\n   hath a good faith in God, it is a good token unto him that he is not an<br \/>\n   abject, cast out of God&#8217;s gracious favour, since he perceiveth that God<br \/>\n   hath put such a virtuous, well-ordered appetite in his mind. For as<br \/>\n   every evil mind cometh of the world and ourselves and the devil, so is<br \/>\n   every such good mind inspired into man&#8217;s heart, either immediately or<br \/>\n   by the mean of our good angel or other gracious occasion, by the<br \/>\n   goodness of God himself. And what a comfort then may this be to us,<br \/>\n   when we by that desire perceive a sure undoubted token that towards our<br \/>\n   final salvation our Saviour is himself so graciously busy about us!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    IV<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, good uncle, this good mind of longing for God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   comfort is a good cause of great comfort indeed&#8211;our Lord in<br \/>\n   tribulation send it to us! But by this I see well, that woe may they be<br \/>\n   who in tribulation lack that mind and who desire not to be comforted by<br \/>\n   God, but either are of sloth or impatience discomfortless, or else of<br \/>\n   folly seek for their chief ease and comfort anywhere else.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That is, good cousin, very true, as long as they stand in that<br \/>\n   state. But then you must consider that tribulation is a means to drive<br \/>\n   them from that state, and that is one of the causes for which God<br \/>\n   sendeth it unto man. For albeit that pain was ordained by God for the<br \/>\n   punishment of sins (so that they who never do now but sin cannot but be<br \/>\n   ever punished in hell) yet in this world, in which his high mercy<br \/>\n   giveth men space to be better, the punishment that he sendeth by<br \/>\n   tribulation serveth ordinarily for a means of amendment.<\/p>\n<p>   St. Paul himself was sorely against Christ, till Christ gave him a<br \/>\n   great fall and threw him to the ground, and struck him stark blind. And<br \/>\n   with that tribulation he turned to him at the first word, and God was<br \/>\n   his physician and healed him soon after both in body and in soul by his<br \/>\n   minister Ananias and made him his blessed apostle. Some are in the<br \/>\n   beginning of tribulation very stubborn and stiff against God, and yet<br \/>\n   at length tribulation bringeth them home. The proud king Pharaoh did<br \/>\n   abide and endure two or three of the first plagues, and would not once<br \/>\n   stoop at them. But then God laid on a sorer lash that made him cry to<br \/>\n   him for help. And then sent he for Moses and Aaron and confessed<br \/>\n   himself for a sinner and God for good and righteous. And he prayed them<br \/>\n   to pray for him and to withdraw that plague, and he would let them go.<br \/>\n   But when his tribulation was withdrawn, then was he wicked again. So<br \/>\n   was his tribulation occasion of his profit, and his help in turn was<br \/>\n   cause of his harm. For his tribulation made him call to God, and his<br \/>\n   help made hard his heart again. Many a man who in an easy tribulation<br \/>\n   falleth to seek his ease in the pastime of worldly fantasies, in a<br \/>\n   greater pain findeth all those comforts so feeble that he is fain to<br \/>\n   fall to the seeking of God&#8217;s help.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore is, I say, the very tribulation itself many times a means<br \/>\n   to bring the man to the taking of the aforementioned comfort<br \/>\n   therein&#8211;that is, to the desire of comfort given by God. For this<br \/>\n   desire of God&#8217;s comfort is, as I have proved you, great cause of<br \/>\n   comfort itself.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    V<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, though the tribulation itself be a means oftentimes to get a<br \/>\n   man this first comfort in it, yet sometimes itself alone bringeth not a<br \/>\n   man to it. And therefore, since unless this comfort be had first, there<br \/>\n   can in tribulation no other good comfort come forth, we must consider<br \/>\n   the means by which this first comfort may come.<\/p>\n<p>   Meseemeth that if the man of sloth or impatience or hope of worldly<br \/>\n   comfort have no mind to desire and seek for comfort of God, those who<br \/>\n   are his friends, who come to visit and comfort him, must before<br \/>\n   everything put that point in his mind, and not spend the time (as they<br \/>\n   commonly do) in trifling and in turning him to the fantasies of the<br \/>\n   world. They must also move him to pray God to put this desire in his<br \/>\n   mind. For when he once getteth it, he then hath the first comfort&#8211;and,<br \/>\n   without doubt, if it be well considered, a comfort marvellously great.<br \/>\n   His friends who thus counsel him must also, to the attaining thereof,<br \/>\n   help to pray for him themselves, and cause him to desire good folk to<br \/>\n   help him to pray for it. And then, if these ways be taken to get it, I<br \/>\n   doubt not but the goodness of God shall give it.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    VI<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily methinketh, good uncle, that this counsel is very good.<br \/>\n   For unless a person have first a desire to be comforted by God, I<br \/>\n   cannot see what it can avail to give him any further counsel of any<br \/>\n   spiritual comfort.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, what if the man have this desire of God&#8217;s comfort: that is,<br \/>\n   that it may please God to comfort him in his tribulation by taking that<br \/>\n   tribulation from him&#8211;is not this a good desire of God&#8217;s comfort, and a<br \/>\n   desire sufficient for him who is in tribulation?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: No, cousin, that it is not. I touched before upon this point<br \/>\n   and passed it over, because I thought it would fall in our way again,<br \/>\n   and so know I well that it will, oftener than once. And now am I glad<br \/>\n   that you yourself move it to me here.<\/p>\n<p>   A man may many times, well and without sin, desire of God that the<br \/>\n   tribulation be taken from him. But neither may we desire that in every<br \/>\n   case, nor yet very well in any case (except very few) save under a<br \/>\n   certain condition, either expressed or implied. For tribulations are,<br \/>\n   as you know well, of many sundry kinds. Some are by loss of goods or<br \/>\n   possessions, some by the sickness of ourselves, and some by the loss of<br \/>\n   friends or by some other pain put unto our bodies. Some are by the<br \/>\n   dread of losing these things that we fain would save, under which fear<br \/>\n   fall all the same things that we have spoken of before. For we may fear<br \/>\n   loss of goods or possessions, or the loss of our friends, or their<br \/>\n   grief and trouble or our own by sickness, imprisonment, or other bodily<br \/>\n   pain. We may be troubled most of all with the fear of that thing which<br \/>\n   he feareth least of all who hath most need to do so&#8211;that is, the fear<br \/>\n   of losing through deadly sin the life of his blessed soul. And this<br \/>\n   last kind of tribulation, as the sorest tribulation of all, though we<br \/>\n   may touch some pieces of it here and there before, yet the chief part<br \/>\n   and the principal pain will I reserve to treat apart effectually at the<br \/>\n   end.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, as I said, since the kinds of tribulation are so diverse, a<br \/>\n   man may pray God to take some of these tribulations from him, and may<br \/>\n   take some comfort in the trust that God will do so. And therefore<br \/>\n   against hunger, sickness, and bodily hurt, and against the loss of<br \/>\n   either body or soul, men may lawfully many times pray to the goodness<br \/>\n   of God, either for themselves or for their friends. And toward this<br \/>\n   purpose are expressly prayed many devout orisons in the common services<br \/>\n   of our mother Holy Church. And toward our help in some of these things<br \/>\n   serve some of the petitions in the Pater Noster, in which we pray daily<br \/>\n   for our daily food, and to be preserved from the fall into temptation,<br \/>\n   and to be delivered from evil.<\/p>\n<p>   But yet may we not always pray for the taking away from us of every<br \/>\n   kind of temptation. For if a man should in every sickness pray for his<br \/>\n   health again, when should he show himself content to die and to depart<br \/>\n   unto God? And that mind must a man have, you know, or else it will not<br \/>\n   be well with him. It is a tribulation to good men to feel in themselves<br \/>\n   the conflict of the flesh against the soul and the rebellion of<br \/>\n   sensuality against the rule and governance of reason&#8211;the relics that<br \/>\n   remain in mankind of old original sin, of which St. Paul so sore<br \/>\n   complaineth in his epistle to the Romans. And yet may we not pray,<br \/>\n   while we stand in this life, to have this kind of tribulation utterly<br \/>\n   taken from us. For it is left us by God&#8217;s ordinance to strive against<br \/>\n   it and fight with it, and by reason and grace to master it and use it<br \/>\n   for the matter of our merit.<\/p>\n<p>   For the salvation of our soul may we boldly pray. For grace may we<br \/>\n   boldly pray, for faith, for hope, and for charity, and for every such<br \/>\n   virtue as shall serve us toward heaven. But as for all the other things<br \/>\n   before mentioned (in which is contained the matter of every kind of<br \/>\n   tribulation), we may never well make prayers so precisely but that we<br \/>\n   must express or imply a condition therein&#8211;that is, that if God see the<br \/>\n   contrary better for us, we refer it wholly to his will. And if that be<br \/>\n   so, we pray that God, instead of taking away our grief, may send us of<br \/>\n   his goodness either spiritual comfort to take it gladly or at least<br \/>\n   strength to bear it patiently.<\/p>\n<p>   For if we determine with ourselves that we will take no comfort in<br \/>\n   anything but the taking of our tribulation from us, then either we<br \/>\n   prescribe to God that he shall do us no better turn, even though he<br \/>\n   would, than we will ourselves appoint him; or else we declare that we<br \/>\n   ourselves can tell better than he what is better for us. And therefore,<br \/>\n   I say, let us in tribulation desire his help and comfort, and let us<br \/>\n   remit the manner of that comfort unto his own high pleasure. When we do<br \/>\n   this, let us nothing doubt but that, as his high wisdom better seeth<br \/>\n   what is best for us than we can see it ourselves, so shall his<br \/>\n   sovereign high goodness give us that thing that shall indeed be best.<\/p>\n<p>   For otherwise, if we presume to stand to our own choice&#8211;unless God<br \/>\n   offer us the choice himself, as he did to David in the choice of his<br \/>\n   own punishment, after his high pride conceived in the numbering of the<br \/>\n   people&#8211;we may foolishly choose the worst. And by prescribing unto God<br \/>\n   ourselves so precisely what we will that he shall do for us, unless of<br \/>\n   his gracious favour he reject our folly, he shall for indignation grant<br \/>\n   us our own request, and afterward shall we well find that it shall turn<br \/>\n   us to harm.<\/p>\n<p>   How many men attain health of body for whom it would be better, for<br \/>\n   their soul&#8217;s health, that their bodies were sick still? How many get<br \/>\n   out of prison who happen outside on such harm as the prison would have<br \/>\n   kept them from? How many who have been loth to lose their worldly goods<br \/>\n   have, in keeping of their goods, soon afterward lost their life? So<br \/>\n   blind is our mortality and so unaware what will befall&#8211;so unsure also<br \/>\n   what manner of mind we ourselves will have tomorrow&#8211;that God could not<br \/>\n   lightly do a man more vengeance than to grant him in this world his own<br \/>\n   foolish wishes.<\/p>\n<p>   What wit have we poor fools to know what will serve us? For the blessed<br \/>\n   apostle himself in his sore tribulation, praying thrice unto God to<br \/>\n   take it away from him, was answered again by God (in a manner) that he<br \/>\n   was but a fool in asking that request, but that the help of God&#8217;s grace<br \/>\n   in that tribulation to strengthen him was far better for him than to<br \/>\n   take that tribulation from him. And therefore, perceiving well by<br \/>\n   experience the truth of the lesson, he giveth us good warning not to be<br \/>\n   too bold of our minds, when we require aught of God, at his own<br \/>\n   pleasure. For his own Holy Spirit so sore desireth our welfare that, as<br \/>\n   men say, he groaneth for us, in such wise as no tongue can tell. &#8220;What<br \/>\n   we may pray for, that would be behovable for us, we cannot ourselves<br \/>\n   tell,&#8221; saith St. Paul, &#8220;but the Spirit himself desireth for us with<br \/>\n   unspeakable groanings.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore I say, for conclusion of this point, let us never ask of<br \/>\n   God precisely our own ease by delivery from our tribulation, but pray<br \/>\n   for his aid and comfort by such ways as he himself shall best like, and<br \/>\n   then may we take comfort even of our such request. For we may be sure<br \/>\n   that this mind cometh of God. And also we may be very sure that as he<br \/>\n   beginneth to work with us, so&#8211;unless we ourselves fly from him&#8211;he<br \/>\n   will not fail to tarry with us. And then, if he dwell with us, what<br \/>\n   trouble can do us harm? &#8220;If God be with us,&#8221; saith St. Paul, &#8220;who can<br \/>\n   stand against us?&#8221;<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    VII<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: You have, good uncle, well opened and declared the question<br \/>\n   that I demanded you&#8211;that is, what manner of comfort a man might pray<br \/>\n   for in tribulation. And now proceed forth, good uncle, and show us yet<br \/>\n   farther some other spiritual comfort in tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This may be, methinketh, good cousin, great comfort in<br \/>\n   tribulation: that every tribulation which any time falleth unto us is<br \/>\n   either sent to be medicinable, if men will so take it; or may become<br \/>\n   medicinable, if men will so make it; or is better than medicinable,<br \/>\n   unless we will forsake it.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Surely this is very comforting&#8211;if we can well perceive it!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: There three things that I tell you, we shall consider thus:<br \/>\n   Every tribulation that we fall in, either cometh by our own known<br \/>\n   deserving deed bringing us to it, as the sickness that followeth our<br \/>\n   intemperate surfeit or the imprisonment or other punishment put upon a<br \/>\n   man for his heinous crime; or else it is sent us by God without any<br \/>\n   certain deserving cause open and known to ourselves, either for<br \/>\n   punishment of some sins past (we know not certainly which) or for<br \/>\n   preserving us from sin in which we would otherwise be like to fall; or<br \/>\n   finally it is not due to the man&#8217;s sin at all but is for the proof of<br \/>\n   his patience and increase of his merit. In all the former cases<br \/>\n   tribulation is, if we will, medicinable. In this last case of all, it<br \/>\n   is better than medicinable.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    VIII<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This seemeth to me very good, good uncle, save that it seemeth<br \/>\n   somewhat brief and short, and thereby methinketh somewhat obscure and<br \/>\n   dark.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: We shall therefore, to give it light withal, touch upon every<br \/>\n   member of it somewhat more at large.<\/p>\n<p>   One member is, as you know, of them that fall in tribulation through<br \/>\n   their own certain well-deserving deed, open and known to themselves, as<br \/>\n   when we fall in a sickness following upon our own gluttonous feasting,<br \/>\n   or when a man is punished for his own open fault. These tribulations,<br \/>\n   and others like them, may seem not to be comfortable, in that a man may<br \/>\n   be sorry to think himself the cause of his own harm. Yet hath he good<br \/>\n   cause of comfort in them, if he consider that he may make them<br \/>\n   medicinable for himself if he will. For whereas there was due to that<br \/>\n   sin, unless it were purged here, a far greater punishment after this<br \/>\n   world in another place, this worldly tribulation of pain and<br \/>\n   punishment, by God&#8217;s good provision for him put upon him here in this<br \/>\n   world before, shall by the mean of Christ&#8217;s passion, if the man will in<br \/>\n   true faith and good hope by meek and patience sufferance of his<br \/>\n   tribulation so make it, serve him for a sure medicine to cure him. And<br \/>\n   it shall clearly discharge him of all the sickness and disease of those<br \/>\n   pains that he should otherwise suffer afterward. For such is the great<br \/>\n   goodness of almighty God that he punisheth not the same thing twice.<\/p>\n<p>   And albeit that this punishment is put unto the man, not of his own<br \/>\n   election and free choice but by force, so that he would fain avoid it<br \/>\n   and falleth in it against his will, and therefore it seemeth worthy of<br \/>\n   no thanks; yet the great goodness of almighty God so far surpasseth the<br \/>\n   poor imperfect goodness of man, that though men make their reckoning<br \/>\n   here one with another such, God yet of his high bounty in man&#8217;s account<br \/>\n   alloweth it toward him far otherwise. For though a man fall in his pain<br \/>\n   by his own fault, and also at first against his will, yet as soon as he<br \/>\n   confesseth his fault and applieth his will to be content to suffer that<br \/>\n   pain and punishment for the same, and waxeth sorry not only that he<br \/>\n   shall sustain such punishment but also that he hath offended God and<br \/>\n   thereby deserved much more, our Lord from that time counteth it not for<br \/>\n   pain taken against his will. But it shall be a marvellous good<br \/>\n   medicine, and work as a willingly taken pain the purgation and<br \/>\n   cleansing of his soul with gracious remission of his sin, and of the<br \/>\n   far greater pain that otherwise would have been prepared for it,<br \/>\n   peradventure forever in hell. For many there are undoubtedly who would<br \/>\n   otherwise drive forth and die in their deadly sin, who yet in such<br \/>\n   tribulation, feeling their own frailty so effectually and the false<br \/>\n   flattering world failing them, turn full goodly to God and call for<br \/>\n   mercy. And so by grace they make virtue of necessity, and make a<br \/>\n   medicine of their malady, taking their trouble meekly, and make a right<br \/>\n   godly end.<\/p>\n<p>   Consider well the story of Acham, who committed sacrilege at the great<br \/>\n   city of Jericho. Thereupon God took a great vengeance upon the children<br \/>\n   of Israel, and afterward told them the cause and bade them go seek the<br \/>\n   fault and try it out by lots. When the lot fell upon the very man who<br \/>\n   did it&#8211;being tried by the lot falling first upon his tribe and then<br \/>\n   upon his family and then upon his house and finally upon his person&#8211;he<br \/>\n   could well see that he was deprehended and taken against his will. But<br \/>\n   yet at the good exhortation of Josue saying unto him, &#8220;Mine own son,<br \/>\n   give glory to the God of Israel, and confess and show me what thou hast<br \/>\n   done, and hide it not,&#8221; he confessed humbly the theft and meekly took<br \/>\n   his death for it. And he had, I doubt not, both strength and comfort in<br \/>\n   his pain, and died a very good man. Yet, if he had never come in<br \/>\n   tribulation, he would have been in peril never haply to have had just<br \/>\n   remorse in all his whole life, but might have died wretchedly and gone<br \/>\n   to the devil eternally. And thus made this thief a good medicine of his<br \/>\n   well-deserved pain and tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   Consider well the converted thief who hung on Christ&#8217;s right hand. Did<br \/>\n   not he, by his meek sufference and humble knowledge of his fault,<br \/>\n   asking forgiveness of God and yet content to suffer for his sin, make<br \/>\n   of his just punishment and well-deserved tribulation a very good<br \/>\n   special medicine to cure him of all pain in the other world, and win<br \/>\n   him eternal salvation?<\/p>\n<p>   And thus I say that this kind of tribulation, though it seem the most<br \/>\n   base and the least comfortable, is yet, if the man will so make it, a<br \/>\n   very marvellous wholesome medicine. And it may therefore be, to the man<br \/>\n   who will so consider it, a great cause of comfort and spiritual<br \/>\n   consolation.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    IX<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, mine uncle, this first kind of tribulation have you to<br \/>\n   my mind opened sufficiently. And therefore, I pray you, resort now to<br \/>\n   the second.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: The second kind, you know, was of such tribulation as is so<br \/>\n   sent us by God that we know no certain cause deserving that present<br \/>\n   trouble, as we certainly know that upon such-and-such a surfeit we fell<br \/>\n   in such-and-such a sickness, or as the thief knoweth that for a certain<br \/>\n   theft he is fallen into a certain punishment. But yet, since we seldom<br \/>\n   lack faults against God worthy and well-deserving of great punishment,<br \/>\n   indeed we may well think&#8211;and wisdom it is to do so&#8211;that with sin we<br \/>\n   have deserved it and that God for some sin sendeth it, though we know<br \/>\n   not certainly for which. And therefore thus far is this kind of<br \/>\n   tribulation somewhat in effect to be taken alike unto the other. For<br \/>\n   you see, if we thus will take it, reckoning it to be sent for sin and<br \/>\n   suffering it meekly therefor, it is medicinable against the pain of the<br \/>\n   other world to come for our past sins in this world, And this is, as I<br \/>\n   have showed you, a cause of right great comfort.<\/p>\n<p>   But yet may then this kind of tribulation be, to some men of more sober<br \/>\n   living and thereby of more clear conscience, somewhat a little more<br \/>\n   comfortable. They may none otherwise reckon themselves than sinners,<br \/>\n   for, as St. Paul saith, &#8220;My conscience grudgeth me not of anything, but<br \/>\n   yet am I not thereby justified,&#8221; and, as St. John saith, &#8220;If we say<br \/>\n   that we have no sin in us, we beguile ourselves and truth is there not<br \/>\n   in us.&#8221; Yet, forasmuch as the cause is to them not so certain as it is<br \/>\n   to the others afore-mentioned in the first kind, and forasmuch as it is<br \/>\n   also certain that God sometimes sendeth tribulation to keep and<br \/>\n   preserve a man from such sin as he would otherwise fall in (and<br \/>\n   sometimes also for exercise of their patience and increase of merit),<br \/>\n   great cause of increase in comfort have those folk of the clearer<br \/>\n   conscience in the fervour of their tribulation. For they may take the<br \/>\n   comfort of a double medicine, and also of that thing that is of the<br \/>\n   kind that we shall finally speak of, that I call &#8220;better than<br \/>\n   medicinable.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But as I have before spoken of this kind of tribulation&#8211;how it is<br \/>\n   medicinable in that it cureth the sin past and purchaseth remission of<br \/>\n   the pain due for it&#8211;so let us somewhat consider how this tribulation<br \/>\n   sent us by God is medicinable in that it preserveth us from the sins<br \/>\n   into which we would otherwise be like to fall. If that thing be a good<br \/>\n   medicine that restoreth us our health when we lose it, as good a<br \/>\n   medicine must this one be that preserveth our health while we have it,<br \/>\n   and suffereth us not to fall into that painful sickness that must<br \/>\n   afterward drive us to a painful remedy! Now God seeth sometimes that<br \/>\n   worldly wealth is coming so fast upon someone (who nevertheless is<br \/>\n   good) that, foreseeing how much weight of worldly wealth the man may<br \/>\n   bear and how much will overcharge him and enhance his heart up so high<br \/>\n   that grace should fall from him, God of his goodness, I say, doth<br \/>\n   anticipate his fall, and sendeth him tribulation betimes while he is<br \/>\n   yet good. And this he doth to make him know his maker and, by less<br \/>\n   liking the false flattering world, to set a cross upon the ship of his<br \/>\n   heart and bear a low sail thereon, so that the boisterous blast of<br \/>\n   pride blow him not under the water.<\/p>\n<p>   Some lovely young lady, lo, who is yet good enough&#8211;God seeth a storm<br \/>\n   come toward her that would, if her health and fat feeding should last a<br \/>\n   little longer, strike her into some lecherous love and, instead of her<br \/>\n   old-acquainted knight, lay her abed with a new-acquainted knave. But<br \/>\n   God, loving her more tenderly than to suffer her to fall into such<br \/>\n   shameful beastly sin, sendeth her in season a goodly fair fervent<br \/>\n   fever, that maketh her bones to rattle and wasteth away her wanton<br \/>\n   flesh. And it beautifieth her fair skin with the colour of a kite&#8217;s<br \/>\n   claw, and maketh her look so lovely that her love would have little<br \/>\n   pleasure to look upon her. And it maketh her also so lusty that if her<br \/>\n   lover lay in her lap she should so sore long to throw up unto him the<br \/>\n   very bottom of her stomach that she should not be able to restrain it<br \/>\n   from him, but suddenly lay it all in his neck!<\/p>\n<p>   Did not, as I before told you, the blessed apostle himself confess that<br \/>\n   the high revelations that God had given him might have enhanced him<br \/>\n   into so high a pride that he might have caught a foul fall, had not the<br \/>\n   provident goodness of God provided for his remedy? And what was his<br \/>\n   remedy but a painful tribulation, so sore that he was fain thrice to<br \/>\n   call to God to take the tribulation from him. And yet would not God<br \/>\n   grant his request, but let him lie therein till he himself, who saw<br \/>\n   more in St. Paul than St. Paul saw in himself, knew well the time was<br \/>\n   come in which he might well without his harm take it from him.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus you see, good cousin, that tribulation is double<br \/>\n   medicine&#8211;both a cure of the sin past, and a preservative from the sin<br \/>\n   that is to come. And therefore in this kind of tribulation is there<br \/>\n   good occasion for a double comfort; but that is, I say, diversely to<br \/>\n   sundry diverse folk, as their own conscience is cumbered with sin or<br \/>\n   clear. Howbeit, I will advise no man to be so bold as to think that his<br \/>\n   tribulation is sent him to keep him from the pride of his holiness! Let<br \/>\n   men leave that kind of comfort hardly to St. Paul, till their living be<br \/>\n   like his. But of the rest men may well take great comfort and good<br \/>\n   besides.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    X<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: The third kind of tribulation, uncle, remaineth now&#8211;that is,<br \/>\n   that which is sent a man by God, and not for his sin either committed<br \/>\n   or which otherwise would come, and therefore is not medicinable, but is<br \/>\n   sent for exercise of our patience and increase of our merit, and<br \/>\n   therefore better than medicinable. Though it be, as you say (and as<br \/>\n   indeed it is) better for the man than any of the other two kinds in<br \/>\n   another world, where the reward shall be received, yet I cannot see by<br \/>\n   what reason a man can in this world, where the tribulation is suffered,<br \/>\n   take any more comfort in it than in any of the other twain that are<br \/>\n   sent him for his sin. For he cannot here know whether it be sent him<br \/>\n   for sin before committed, or for sin that otherwise should befall, or<br \/>\n   for increase of merit and reward after to come. For every man hath<br \/>\n   cause enough to fear and think that his sin already past hath deserved<br \/>\n   it, and that it is not without peril for a man to think otherwise.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This that you say, cousin, hath place of truth in far the most<br \/>\n   part of men. And therefore must they not envy nor disdain, since they<br \/>\n   may take in their tribulation sufficient consolation for their part,<br \/>\n   that some other who is more worthy may take yet a great deal more. For,<br \/>\n   as I told you, cousin, though the best must confess himself a sinner,<br \/>\n   yet there are many men&#8211;though to the multitude, few&#8211;who for the kind<br \/>\n   of their living and the clearness of their conscience may well and<br \/>\n   without sin have a good hope that God sendeth them some great grief for<br \/>\n   the exercise of their patience and for increase of their merit. This<br \/>\n   appeareth not only by St. Paul, in the place before remembered, but<br \/>\n   also by the holy man Job, who in sundry places of his disputations with<br \/>\n   his burdensome comforters forbore not to say that the clearness of his<br \/>\n   own conscience declared and showed to himself that he deserved not that<br \/>\n   sore tribulation that he then had. Howbeit, as I told you before, I<br \/>\n   will not advise every man at adventure to be bold upon this manner of<br \/>\n   comfort. But yet know I some men such that I would dare, for their more<br \/>\n   ease and comfort in their great and grievous pains, to put them in<br \/>\n   right good hope that God sendeth it unto them not so much for their<br \/>\n   punishment as for exercise of their patience.<\/p>\n<p>   And some tribulations are there, also, that grow upon such causes that<br \/>\n   in those cases I would never forbear but always would, without any<br \/>\n   doubt, give that counsel and comfort to any man.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: What causes, good uncle, are those?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Marry, cousin, wheresoever a man falleth in tribulation for<br \/>\n   the maintenance of justice or for the defence of God&#8217;s cause. For if I<br \/>\n   should happen to find a man who had long lived a very virtuous life,<br \/>\n   and had at last happened to fall into the Turks&#8217; hands; and if he there<br \/>\n   did abide by the truth of his faith and, with the suffering of all<br \/>\n   kinds of torments taken upon his body, still did teach and testify the<br \/>\n   truth; and if I should in his passion give him spiritual comfort&#8211;might<br \/>\n   I be bold to tell him no further but that he should take patience in<br \/>\n   his pain, and that God sendeth it to him for his sin, and that he is<br \/>\n   well worthy to have it, though it were yet much more? He might then<br \/>\n   well answer me, and other such comforters, as Job answered his:<br \/>\n   &#8220;Burdensome and heavy comforters be you.&#8221; Nay, I would not fail to bid<br \/>\n   him boldly, while I should see him in his passion, to cast sin and hell<br \/>\n   and purgatory and all upon the devil&#8217;s pate, and doubt not but&#8211;as, if<br \/>\n   he gave over his hold, all his merit would be lost and he would be<br \/>\n   turned to misery&#8211;so if he stand and persevere still in the confession<br \/>\n   of his faith, all his whole pain shall turn all into glory.<\/p>\n<p>   Yea, more shall I yet say than this. If there were a Christian man who<br \/>\n   had among those infidels committed a very deadly crime, such as would<br \/>\n   be worthy of death, not only by their laws but by Christ&#8217;s too (as<br \/>\n   manslaughter, or adultery, or other such thing); and if when he were<br \/>\n   taken he were offered pardon of his life upon condition that he should<br \/>\n   forsake the faith of Christ; and if this man would now rather suffer<br \/>\n   death than so do&#8211;should I comfort him in his pain only as I would a<br \/>\n   malefactor? Nay, this man, though he would have died for his sin, dieth<br \/>\n   now for Christ&#8217;s sake, since he might live still if he would forsake<br \/>\n   him. The bare patient taking of his death would have served for the<br \/>\n   satisfaction of his sin&#8211;through the merit of Christ&#8217;s passion, I mean,<br \/>\n   without help of which no pain of our own could be satisfactory. But now<br \/>\n   shall Christ, for his forsaking of his own life in the honour of his<br \/>\n   faith, forgive the pain of all his sins, of his mere liberality, and<br \/>\n   accept all the pain of his death for merit of reward in heaven, and<br \/>\n   shall assign no part of it to the payment of his debt in purgatory, but<br \/>\n   shall take it all as an offering and requite it all with glory. And<br \/>\n   this man among Christian men, although he had been before a devil,<br \/>\n   nothing would I doubt afterward to take him for a martyr.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, good uncle, methinketh this is said marvellous well.<br \/>\n   And it specially delighteth and comforteth me to hear it, because of<br \/>\n   our principal fear that I first spoke of, the Turk&#8217;s cruel incursion<br \/>\n   into this country of ours.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Cousin, as for the matter of that fear, I purpose to touch it<br \/>\n   last of all. Nor meant I here to speak of it, had it not been that the<br \/>\n   vehemency of your objection brought it in my way. But otherwise I would<br \/>\n   rather have put instead some example of those who suffer tribulation<br \/>\n   for maintenance of right and justice, and choose rather to take harm<br \/>\n   than to do wrong in any manner of matter. For surely if a man may&#8211;as<br \/>\n   indeed he may&#8211;have great comfort in the clearness of his conscience,<br \/>\n   who hath a false crime put upon him and by false witness proved upon<br \/>\n   him, and who is falsely punished and put to worldly shame and pain for<br \/>\n   it; a hundred times more comfort may he have in his heart who, where<br \/>\n   white is called black and right is called wrong, abideth by the truth<br \/>\n   and is persecuted for justice.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Then if a man sue me wrongfully for my own land, in which I<br \/>\n   myself have good right, it is a comfort yet to defend it well, since<br \/>\n   God shall give me thanks for it?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Nay nay, cousin, nay, there walk you somewhat wide. For there<br \/>\n   you defend your own right for your temporal avail. But St. Paul<br \/>\n   counseleth, &#8220;Defend not yourselves, my more dear friends,&#8221; and our<br \/>\n   Saviour counseleth, &#8220;If a man will strive with thee at the law and take<br \/>\n   away thy coat, leave him thy gown too.&#8221; The defence therefore of our<br \/>\n   own right asketh no reward. Say you speed well, if you get leave; look<br \/>\n   hardly for no thanks!<\/p>\n<p>   But on the other hand, if you do as St. Paul biddeth, &#8220;Seek not for<br \/>\n   your own profit but for other folk&#8217;s&#8221; and defend therefore of pity a<br \/>\n   poor widow or a poor fatherless child, and rather suffer sorrow by some<br \/>\n   strong extortioner than suffer them to take wrong; or if you be a judge<br \/>\n   and have such zeal to justice that you will abide tribulation by the<br \/>\n   malice of some mighty man rather than judge wrong for his favour&#8211;such<br \/>\n   tribulations, lo, are those that are better than only medicinable. And<br \/>\n   every man upon whom they fall may be bold so to reckon them, and in his<br \/>\n   deep trouble may well say to himself the words that Christ hath taught<br \/>\n   him for his comfort, &#8220;Blessed be the merciful men, for they shall have<br \/>\n   mercy given them. Blessed be they that suffer persecution for justice,<br \/>\n   for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Here is a high comfort, lo, for those that are in this case. And their<br \/>\n   own conscience can show it to them, and can fill their hearts so full<br \/>\n   with spiritual joy that the pleasure may far surmount the heaviness and<br \/>\n   grief of all their temporal trouble. But God&#8217;s nearer cause of faith<br \/>\n   against the Turks hath yet a far surpassing comfort that by many<br \/>\n   degrees far excelleth this. And that, as I have said, I purpose to<br \/>\n   treat last. And for this time this sufficeth concerning the special<br \/>\n   comfort that men may take in this third kind of tribulation.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XI<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Of truth, good uncle, albeit that every one of these kinds of<br \/>\n   tribulations have cause of comfort in them, as you have well declared,<br \/>\n   if men will so consider them, yet hath this third kind above all a<br \/>\n   special prerogative therein.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That is undoubtedly true. But yet even the most base kind of<br \/>\n   them all, good cousin, hath more causes of comfort than I have spoken<br \/>\n   of yet.<\/p>\n<p>   For I have, you know, in that kind that is sent us for our sin, spoken<br \/>\n   of no other comfort yet but twain: one that it refraineth us from sin<br \/>\n   that otherwise we would fall in; and one that it serveth us, through<br \/>\n   the merit of Christ&#8217;s passion, as a means by which God keepeth us from<br \/>\n   hell and serveth for the satisfaction of such pain as we should<br \/>\n   otherwise endure in purgatory. Howbeit, there is therein another great<br \/>\n   cause of joy besides this. For surely those pains here sent us for our<br \/>\n   sin, in whatsoever wise they happen to us (be our sin never so sore nor<br \/>\n   never so open and evident unto ourselves and all the world too), yet if<br \/>\n   we pray for grace to take them meekly and patiently; and if, confessing<br \/>\n   to God that it is far too little for our fault, we beseech him<br \/>\n   nevertheless, since we shall come hence so void of all good works for<br \/>\n   which we should have any reward in heaven, to be not only so merciful<br \/>\n   to us as to take our present tribulation in relief of our pains in<br \/>\n   purgatory, but also so gracious unto us as to take our patience therein<br \/>\n   for a matter of merit and reward in heaven; I verily trust&#8211;and nothing<br \/>\n   doubt it&#8211;that God shall of his high bounty grant us our boon.<\/p>\n<p>   For as in hell pain serveth only for punishment without any manner of<br \/>\n   purging, because all possibility of purging is past; and as in<br \/>\n   purgatory punishment serveth only for purging, because the place of<br \/>\n   deserving is past; so while we are yet in this world in which is our<br \/>\n   place and our time of merit and well-deserving, the tribulation that is<br \/>\n   sent us for our sin here shall, if we faithfully so desire, beside the<br \/>\n   cleansing and purging of our pain, serve us also for increase of<br \/>\n   reward. And so shall, I suppose and trust in God&#8217;s goodness, all such<br \/>\n   penance and good works as a man willingly performeth, enjoined by his<br \/>\n   ghostly father in confession, or which he willingly further doth of his<br \/>\n   own devotion beside. For though man&#8217;s penance, with all the good works<br \/>\n   that he can do, be not able to satisfy of themselves for the least sin<br \/>\n   that we do, yet the liberal goodness of God, through the merit of<br \/>\n   Christ&#8217;s bitter passion&#8211;without which all our works could never<br \/>\n   satisfy so much as a spoonful to a great vesselful in comparison with<br \/>\n   the merit and satisfaction that Christ has merited and satisfied for us<br \/>\n   himself&#8211;this liberal goodness of God, I say, shall yet at our faithful<br \/>\n   instance and request cause our penance and tribulation patiently taken<br \/>\n   in this world to serve us in the other world both for release and<br \/>\n   reward, tempered after such rate as his high goodness and wisdom shall<br \/>\n   see best for us, whereof our blind mortality cannot here imagine nor<br \/>\n   devise the stint.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus hath yet even the first and most base kind of tribulation,<br \/>\n   though not fully so great as the second and very far less than the<br \/>\n   third, far greater cause of comfort yet than I spoke of before.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XII<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, good uncle, this pleaseth me very well. But yet are<br \/>\n   there, you know, some of these things now brought in question. For as<br \/>\n   for any pain due for our sin, to be diminished in purgatory by the<br \/>\n   patient sufferance of tribulation here, there are, you know, many who<br \/>\n   utterly deny that, and affirm for a sure truth that there is no<br \/>\n   purgatory at all. And then, if they say true, is the cause of the<br \/>\n   comfort gone, if the comfort that we should take be but in vain and<br \/>\n   needless.<\/p>\n<p>   They say, you know, also that men merit nothing at all, but God giveth<br \/>\n   all for faith alone, and that it would be sin and sacrilege to look for<br \/>\n   reward in heaven either for our patience and glad suffering for God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   sake, or for any other good deed. And then is there gone, if this be<br \/>\n   thus, the other cause of our further comfort too.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Cousin, if some things were as they be not, then should some<br \/>\n   things be as they shall not! I cannot indeed deny that some men have of<br \/>\n   late brought up some such opinions, and many more than these besides,<br \/>\n   and have spread them abroad. And it is a right heavy thing to see such<br \/>\n   variousness in our belief rise and grow among ourselves, to the great<br \/>\n   encouragement of the common enemies of us all, whereby they have our<br \/>\n   faith in derision and catch hope to overwhelm us all. Yet do three<br \/>\n   things not a little comfort my mind. The first is that, in some<br \/>\n   communications had of late together, there hath appeared good<br \/>\n   likelihood of some good agreement to grow together in one accord of our<br \/>\n   faith. The second is that in the meanwhile, till this may come to pass,<br \/>\n   contentions, disputations, and uncharitable behaviour are prohibited<br \/>\n   and forbidden in effect upon all parties&#8211;all such parties, I mean, as<br \/>\n   fell before to fight for it. The third is that in Germany, for all<br \/>\n   their diverse opinions, yet as they agree together in profession of<br \/>\n   Christ&#8217;s name, so agree they now together in preparation of a common<br \/>\n   power, in defence of Christendom against our common enemy the Turk. And<br \/>\n   I trust in God that this shall not only help us here to strengthen us<br \/>\n   in this war, but also that, as God hath caused them to agree together<br \/>\n   in the defence of his name, so shall he graciously bring them to agree<br \/>\n   together in the truth of his faith. Therefore will I let God work, and<br \/>\n   leave off contention. And I shall now say nothing but that with which<br \/>\n   they who are themselves of the contrary mind shall in reason have no<br \/>\n   cause to be discontented.<\/p>\n<p>   First, as for purgatory: Though they think there be none, yet since<br \/>\n   they deny not that all the corps of Christendom for so many hundred<br \/>\n   years have believed the contrary, and among them all the old<br \/>\n   interpreters of scripture from the apostles&#8217; days down to our time,<br \/>\n   many of whom they deny not for holy saints, these men must, of their<br \/>\n   courtesy, hold my poor fear excused, that I dare not now believe them<br \/>\n   against all those. And I beseech our Lord heartily for them, that when<br \/>\n   they depart out of this wretched world, they find no purgatory at<br \/>\n   all&#8211;provided God keep them from hell!<\/p>\n<p>   As for the merit of man in his good works, neither are those who deny<br \/>\n   it fully agreed among themselves, nor is there any man almost of them<br \/>\n   all that, since they began to write, hath not somewhat changed and<br \/>\n   varied from himself. And far the more part are thus far agreed with us:<br \/>\n   Like as we grant them that no good work is worth aught toward heaven<br \/>\n   without faith; and that no good work of man is rewardable in heaven of<br \/>\n   its own nature, but through the mere goodness of God, who is pleased to<br \/>\n   put so high a price upon so poor a thing; and that this price God<br \/>\n   setteth through Christ&#8217;s passion, and also because they are his own<br \/>\n   works with us (for no man worketh good works toward God unless God work<br \/>\n   with him); and as we grant them also that no man may be proud of his<br \/>\n   works for his own imperfect working, because in all that he may do he<br \/>\n   can do God no good, but is an unprofitable servant, and doth but his<br \/>\n   bare duty&#8211;as we, I say, grant them these things, so this one thing or<br \/>\n   twain do they grant us in turn: That men are bound to work good works<br \/>\n   if they have time and power, and that whosoever worketh in true faith<br \/>\n   most, shall be most rewarded. But then they add to this that all his<br \/>\n   reward shall be given him for his faith alone and nothing for his works<br \/>\n   at all, because his faith is the thing, they say, that forceth him to<br \/>\n   work well. I will not strive with them for this matter now. But yet I<br \/>\n   trust to the great goodness of God, that if the question hang on that<br \/>\n   narrow point, since Christ saith in the scripture in so many places<br \/>\n   that men shall in heaven be rewarded for their works, he shall never<br \/>\n   suffer our souls&#8211;who are but mean-witted men and can understand his<br \/>\n   words only as he himself hath set them and as old holy saints have<br \/>\n   construed them before and as all Christian people this thousand year<br \/>\n   have believed&#8211;to be damned for lack of perceiving such a sharp subtle<br \/>\n   thing. Especially since some men who have right good wits, and are<br \/>\n   beside that right well learned, too, can in no wise perceive for what<br \/>\n   cause or why these folk who take away the reward from good works and<br \/>\n   give that reward all whole to faith alone, give the reward to faith<br \/>\n   rather than to charity. For this grant they themselves, that faith<br \/>\n   serveth of nothing unless she be accompanied by her sister charity. And<br \/>\n   then saith the scripture, too, &#8220;Of these three virtues, faith, hope,<br \/>\n   and charity, of all these three, the greatest is charity.&#8221; And<br \/>\n   therefore it seemeth as worthy to have the thanks as faith. Howbeit, as<br \/>\n   I said, I will not strive for it, nor indeed as our matter standeth I<br \/>\n   shall not greatly need to do so. For if they say that he who suffereth<br \/>\n   tribulation and martyrdom for the faith shall have high reward, not for<br \/>\n   his work but for his well-working faith, yet since they grant that have<br \/>\n   it he shall, the cause of high comfort in the third kind of tribulation<br \/>\n   standeth. And that is, you know, the effect of all my purpose.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, good uncle, this is truly driven and tried unto the<br \/>\n   uttermost, it seemeth to me. And therefore I pray you proceed at your<br \/>\n   leisure.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XIII<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Cousin, it would be a long work to peruse every comfort that a<br \/>\n   man may well take in tribulation. For as many comforts, you know, may a<br \/>\n   man take thereof, as there be good commodities therein. And of those<br \/>\n   there are surely so many that it would be very long to rehearse and<br \/>\n   treat of them. But meseemeth we cannot lightly better perceive what<br \/>\n   profit and commodity, and thereby what comfort, they may take of it who<br \/>\n   have it, than if we well consider what harm the lack of it is, and<br \/>\n   thereby what discomfort the lack should be to them that never have it.<\/p>\n<p>   So is it now that all holy men agree, and all the scripture is full,<br \/>\n   and our own experience proveth before our eyes, that we are not come<br \/>\n   into this wretched world to dwell here. We have not, as St. Paul saith,<br \/>\n   our dwelling-city here, but we are seeking for the city that is to<br \/>\n   come. And St. Paul telleth us that we do seek for it, because he would<br \/>\n   put us in mind that we should seek for it, as good folk who fain would<br \/>\n   come thither. For surely whosoever setteth so little by it that he<br \/>\n   careth not to seek for it, it will I fear be long ere he come to it,<br \/>\n   and marvellous great grace if ever he come thither. &#8220;Run,&#8221; saith St.<br \/>\n   Paul, &#8220;so that you may get it.&#8221; If it must then be gotten with running,<br \/>\n   when shall he come at it who lifteth not one step toward it?<\/p>\n<p>   Now, because this world is, as I tell you, not our eternal dwelling,<br \/>\n   but our little-while wandering, God would that we should use it as folk<br \/>\n   who were weary of it. And he would that we should in this vale of<br \/>\n   labour, toil, tears, and misery not look for rest and ease, game,<br \/>\n   pleasure, wealth, and felicity. For those who do so fare like a foolish<br \/>\n   fellow who, going towards his own house where he should be wealthy,<br \/>\n   would for a tapster&#8217;s pleasure become a hostler by the way, and die in<br \/>\n   a stable, and never come home.<\/p>\n<p>   And would God that those that drown themselves in the desire of this<br \/>\n   world&#8217;s wretched wealth, were not yet more fools than he! But alas,<br \/>\n   their folly as far surpasseth the foolishness of that silly fellow as<br \/>\n   there is difference between the height of heaven and the very depth of<br \/>\n   hell. For our Saviour saith, &#8220;Woe may you be that laugh now, for you<br \/>\n   shall wail and weep.&#8221; And &#8220;There is a time of weeping,&#8221; saith the<br \/>\n   scripture, &#8220;and there is a time of laughing.&#8221; But, as you see, he<br \/>\n   setteth the weeping time before, for that is the time of this wretched<br \/>\n   world, and the laughing time shall come after in heaven. There is also<br \/>\n   a time of sowing and a time of reaping, too. Now must we in this world<br \/>\n   sow, that we may in the other world reap. And in this short sowing time<br \/>\n   of this weeping world, must we water our seed with the showers of our<br \/>\n   tears. And then shall we have in heaven a merry laughing harvest<br \/>\n   forever. &#8220;They went forth and sowed their seeds weeping,&#8221; saith the<br \/>\n   prophet. But what, saith he, shall follow thereof? &#8220;They shall come<br \/>\n   again more than laughing, with great joy and exultation, with their<br \/>\n   handfuls of corn in their hands.&#8221; Lo, they that in their going home<br \/>\n   towards heaven sow their seeds with weeping, shall at the day of<br \/>\n   judgment come to their bodies again with everlasting plentiful<br \/>\n   laughing. And to prove that this life is no laughing time, but rather<br \/>\n   the time of weeping, we find that our Saviour himself wept twice or<br \/>\n   thrice, but never find we that he laughed so much as once. I will not<br \/>\n   swear that he never did, but at least he left us no example of it. But<br \/>\n   on the other hand, he left us example of weeping.<\/p>\n<p>   Of weeping have we matter enough, both for our own sins and for other<br \/>\n   folk&#8217;s, too. For surely so should we do&#8211;bewail their wretched sins,<br \/>\n   and not be glad to detract them nor envy them either. Alas, poor souls,<br \/>\n   what cause is there to envy them who are ever wealthy in this world,<br \/>\n   and ever out of tribulation? Of them Job saith, &#8220;They lead all their<br \/>\n   days in wealth, and in a moment of an hour descend into their graves<br \/>\n   and are painfully buried in hell.&#8221; St. Paul saith unto the Hebrews that<br \/>\n   those whom God loveth he chastiseth, &#8220;And he scourgeth every son of his<br \/>\n   that he receiveth.&#8221; St. Paul saith also, &#8220;By many tribulations must we<br \/>\n   go into the kingdom of God.&#8221; And no marvel, for our Saviour Christ said<br \/>\n   of himself unto his two disciples that were going into the village of<br \/>\n   Emaus, &#8220;Know you not that Christ must suffer and so go into his<br \/>\n   kingdom?&#8221; And would we who are servants look for more privilege in our<br \/>\n   master&#8217;s house than our master himself? Would we get into his kingdom<br \/>\n   with ease, when he himself got not into his own but by pain? His<br \/>\n   kingdom hath he ordained for his disciples, and he saith unto us all,<br \/>\n   &#8220;If any man will be my disciple, let him learn of me to do as I have<br \/>\n   done, take his cross of tribulation upon his back and follow me.&#8221; He<br \/>\n   saith not here, lo, &#8220;Let him laugh and make merry.&#8221; Now if heaven serve<br \/>\n   but for Christ&#8217;s disciples, and if they be those who take their cross<br \/>\n   of tribulation, when shall these folk come there who never have<br \/>\n   tribulation? And if it be true, as St. Paul saith, that God chastiseth<br \/>\n   all them that he loveth and scourgeth every child whom he receiveth,<br \/>\n   and that to heaven shall not come but such as he loveth and receiveth,<br \/>\n   when shall they come thither whom he never chastiseth, nor never doth<br \/>\n   vouchsafe to defile his hands upon them or give them so much as one<br \/>\n   lash? And if we cannot (as St. Paul saith we cannot) come to heaven but<br \/>\n   by many tribulations, how shall they come thither who never have none<br \/>\n   at all? Thus see we well, by the very scripture itself, how true the<br \/>\n   words are of old holy saints, who with one voice (in a manner) say all<br \/>\n   one thing&#8211;that is, that we shall not have continual wealth both in<br \/>\n   this world and in the other too. And therefore those who in this world<br \/>\n   without any tribulation enjoy their long continual course of<br \/>\n   never-interrupted prosperity have a great cause of fear and discomfort<br \/>\n   lest they be far fallen out of God&#8217;s favour, and stand deep in his<br \/>\n   indignation and displeasure. For he never sendeth them tribulation,<br \/>\n   which he is ever wont to send them whom he loveth. But they that are in<br \/>\n   tribulation, I say, have on the other hand a great cause to take in<br \/>\n   their grief great inward comfort and spiritual consolation.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XIV<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, good uncle, this seemeth so indeed. Howbeit, yet<br \/>\n   methinketh that you say very sore in some things concerning such<br \/>\n   persons as are in continual prosperity. And they are, you know, not a<br \/>\n   few; and they are also those who have the rule and authority of this<br \/>\n   world in their hand. And I know well that when they talk with such<br \/>\n   great learned men as can, I suppose, tell the truth; and when they ask<br \/>\n   them whether, while they make merry here in earth all their lives, they<br \/>\n   may not yet for all that have heaven afterwards too; they do tell them<br \/>\n   &#8220;Yes, yes,&#8221; well enough. For I have heard them tell them so myself.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I suppose, good cousin, that no very wise man, and especially<br \/>\n   none that is also very good, will tell any man fully of that fashion.<br \/>\n   But surely such as so say to them, I fear me that they flatter them<br \/>\n   thus either for lucre or for fear.<\/p>\n<p>   Some of them think, peradventure, thus: &#8220;This man maketh much of me<br \/>\n   now, and giveth me money also to fast and watch and pray for him. But<br \/>\n   so, I fear me, would he do no more, if I should go tell him now that<br \/>\n   all that I do for him will not serve him unless he go fast and watch<br \/>\n   and pray for himself too. And if I should add thereto and say further<br \/>\n   that I trust my diligent intercession for him may be the means that God<br \/>\n   should the sooner give him grace to amend, and fast and watch and pray<br \/>\n   and take affliction in his own body, for the bettering of his sinful<br \/>\n   soul, he would be wonderous wroth with that. For he would be loth to<br \/>\n   have any such grace at all as should make him go leave off any of his<br \/>\n   mirth, and so sit and mourn for his sin.&#8221; Such mind as this, lo, have<br \/>\n   some of those who are not unlearned, and have worldly wit at will, who<br \/>\n   tell great men such tales as perilously beguile them. For the flatterer<br \/>\n   who so telleth them would, if he told a true tale, jeopard to lose his<br \/>\n   lucre.<\/p>\n<p>   Some are there also who tell them such tales for consideration of<br \/>\n   another fear. For seeing the man so sore set on his pleasure that they<br \/>\n   despair of any amendment of his, whatsoever they should say to him; and<br \/>\n   then seeing also that the man doth no great harm, but of a courteous<br \/>\n   nature doth some good men some good; they pray God themselves to send<br \/>\n   him grace. And so they let him lie lame still in his fleshly lusts, at<br \/>\n   the pool that the gospel speaketh of, beside the temple, in which they<br \/>\n   washed the sheep for the sacrifice, and they tarry to see the water<br \/>\n   stirred. And when his good angel, coming from God, shall once begin to<br \/>\n   stir the water of his heart, and move him to the lowly meekness of a<br \/>\n   simple sheep, then if he call them to him they will tell him another<br \/>\n   tale, and help to bear him and plunge him into the pool of penance over<br \/>\n   the hard ears! But in the meanwhile, for fear lest if he would wax<br \/>\n   never the better he would wax much the worse; and from gentle, smooth,<br \/>\n   sweet, and courteous, might wax angry, rough, froward, and sour, and<br \/>\n   thereupon be troublous and tedious to the world to make fair weather<br \/>\n   with; they give him fair words for the while and put him in good<br \/>\n   comfort, and let him for the rest take his own chance.<\/p>\n<p>   And so deal they with him as the mother doth sometimes with her child,<br \/>\n   when the little boy will not rise in time for her, but will lie<br \/>\n   slug-abed, and when he is up weepeth because he has lain so long,<br \/>\n   fearing to be beaten at school for his late coming thither. She telleth<br \/>\n   him then that it is but early days, and he shall come in time enough,<br \/>\n   and she biddeth him, &#8220;Go, good son. I warrant thee, I have sent to thy<br \/>\n   master myself. Take thy bread and butter with thee&#8211;thou shalt not be<br \/>\n   beaten at all!&#8221; And thus, if she can but send him merry forth at the<br \/>\n   door, so that he weep not in her sight at home, she careth not much if<br \/>\n   he be taken tardy and beaten when he cometh to school.<\/p>\n<p>   Surely thus, I fear me, fare many friars and state&#8217;s chaplains too, in<br \/>\n   giving comfort to great men when they are both loth to displease them.<br \/>\n   I cannot commend their doing thus, but surely I fear me thus they do.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XV<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: But, good uncle, though some do thus, this answereth not the<br \/>\n   full matter. For we see that the whole church in the common service<br \/>\n   uses divers collects in which all men pray, specially for the princes<br \/>\n   and prelates, and generally every man for others and for himself too,<br \/>\n   that God would vouchsafe to send them all perpetual health and<br \/>\n   prosperity. And I can see no good man praying God to send another<br \/>\n   sorrow, nor are there such prayers put in the priests&#8217; breviaries, as<br \/>\n   far as I can hear. And yet if it were as you say, good uncle, that<br \/>\n   perpetual prosperity were so perilous to the soul, and tribulation also<br \/>\n   so fruitful, then meseemeth every man would be bound of charity not<br \/>\n   only to pray God send his neighbour sorrow, but also to help thereto<br \/>\n   himself. And when folk were sick, they would be bound not to pray God<br \/>\n   send them health, but when they came to comfort them, they should say,<br \/>\n   &#8220;I am glad, good friend, that you are so sick&#8211;I pray God keep you long<br \/>\n   therein!&#8221; And neither should any man give any medicine to another nor<br \/>\n   take any medicine himself neither. For by the diminishing of the<br \/>\n   tribulation he taketh away part of the profit from his soul, which can<br \/>\n   with no bodily profit be sufficiently recompensed.<\/p>\n<p>   And also this you know well, good uncle, that we read in holy scripture<br \/>\n   of men that were wealthy and rich and yet were good withal. Solomon<br \/>\n   was, you know, the richest and most wealthy king that any man could in<br \/>\n   his time tell of, and yet was he well beloved with God. Job also was no<br \/>\n   beggar, perdy, nor no wretch otherwise. Nor did he lose his riches and<br \/>\n   his wealth because God would not that his friend should have wealth,<br \/>\n   but rather for the show of his patience, to the increase of his merit<br \/>\n   and the confusion of the devil. And, for proof that prosperity may<br \/>\n   stand with God&#8217;s favour, &#8220;God restored Job double of all&#8221; that ever he<br \/>\n   lost, and gave him afterward long life to take his pleasure long.<br \/>\n   Abraham was also, you know, a man of great substance, and so continued<br \/>\n   all his life in honour and wealth. Yea, and when he died, too, he went<br \/>\n   unto such wealth that when Lazarus died in tribulation and poverty, the<br \/>\n   best place that he came to was that rich man&#8217;s bosom!<\/p>\n<p>   Finally, good uncle, this we find before our eyes, and every day we<br \/>\n   prove it by plain experience that many a man is right wealthy and yet<br \/>\n   therewith right good, and many a miserable wretch is as evil as he is<br \/>\n   wretched. And therefore it seemeth hard, good uncle, that between<br \/>\n   prosperity and tribulation the matter should go thus, that tribulation<br \/>\n   should be given always by God to those that he loveth, for a sign of<br \/>\n   salvation, and prosperity sent for displeasure, as a token of eternal<br \/>\n   damnation.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XVI<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I said not, cousin, that for an undoubted rule, worldly<br \/>\n   prosperity were always displeasing to God or tribulation evermore<br \/>\n   wholesome to every man&#8211;or else I meant not to say it. For well I know<br \/>\n   that our Lord giveth in this world unto either sort of folk either sort<br \/>\n   of fortune. &#8220;He maketh his sun to shine both upon the good and the bad,<br \/>\n   and his rain to fall both on the just and on the unjust.&#8221; And on the<br \/>\n   other hand, &#8220;he scourgeth every son that he receiveth,&#8221; yet he beateth<br \/>\n   not only good folk that he loveth, but &#8220;there are many scourges for<br \/>\n   sinners&#8221; also. He giveth evil folk good fortune in this world to call<br \/>\n   them by kindness&#8211;and, if they thereby come not, the more is their<br \/>\n   unkindness. And yet where wealth will not bring them, he giveth them<br \/>\n   sometimes sorrow. And some who in prosperity cannot creep forward to<br \/>\n   God, in tribulation they run toward him apace. &#8220;Their infirmities were<br \/>\n   multiplied,&#8221; saith the prophet, &#8220;and after that they made haste.&#8221; To<br \/>\n   some that are good men, God sendeth wealth here also; and they give him<br \/>\n   great thanks for his gift, and he rewardeth them for the thanks too. To<br \/>\n   some good folk he sendeth sorrow, and they thank him for that too. If<br \/>\n   God should give the goods of this world only to evil folk, then would<br \/>\n   men think that God were not the Lord thereof. If God would give the<br \/>\n   goods only to good men, then would folk take occasion to serve him but<br \/>\n   for them. Some will in wealth fall into folly: &#8220;When man was in honour,<br \/>\n   his understanding failed him; then was he compared with beasts and made<br \/>\n   like unto them.&#8221; Some men with tribulation will fall into sin, and<br \/>\n   therefore saith the prophet, &#8220;God will not leave the rod of the wicked<br \/>\n   men upon the lot of righteous men, lest the righteous peradventure<br \/>\n   extend and stretch out their hands to iniquity.&#8221; So I deny not that<br \/>\n   either state, wealth or tribulation, may be matter of virtue and matter<br \/>\n   of vice also.<\/p>\n<p>   But this is the point, lo, that standeth here in question between you<br \/>\n   and me: not whether every prosperity be a perilous token, but whether<br \/>\n   continual wealth in this world without any tribulation be a fearful<br \/>\n   sign of God&#8217;s indignation. And therefore this mark that we must shoot<br \/>\n   at, set up well in our sight, we shall now aim for the shot and<br \/>\n   consider how near toward, or how far off, your arrows are from the<br \/>\n   mark.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Some of my bolts, uncle, will I now take up myself, and<br \/>\n   readily put them under my belt again! For some of them, I see well, are<br \/>\n   not worth the aiming. And no great marvel that I shoot wide, while I<br \/>\n   somewhat mistake the mark.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Those that make toward the mark and light far too short, when<br \/>\n   they are shot, shall I take up for you.<\/p>\n<p>   To prove that perpetual wealth should be no evil token, you say first<br \/>\n   that for princes and prelates, and every man for others, we pray all<br \/>\n   for perpetual prosperity, and that in the common prayers of the church,<br \/>\n   too.<\/p>\n<p>   Then say you secondly, that if prosperity were so perilous and<br \/>\n   tribulation so profitable, every man ought to pray God to send others<br \/>\n   sorrow.<\/p>\n<p>   Thirdly, you furnish your objections with examples of Solomon, Job, and<br \/>\n   Abraham.<\/p>\n<p>   And fourthly, in the end of all, you prove by experience of our own<br \/>\n   time daily before our face, that some wealthy folk are good and some<br \/>\n   needy ones very wicked. That last bolt, since I say the same myself, I<br \/>\n   think you will be content to take up, it lieth so far wide.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: That will I, with a good will, uncle.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Well, do so, then, cousin, and we shall aim for the rest.<\/p>\n<p>   First must you, cousin, be sure that you look well to the mark, and<br \/>\n   that you cannot do so unless you know what tribulation is. For since<br \/>\n   that is one of the things that we principally speak of, unless you<br \/>\n   consider well what it is, you may miss the mark again.<\/p>\n<p>   I suppose now that you will agree that tribulation is every such thing<br \/>\n   as troubleth and grieveth a man either in body or mind, and is as it<br \/>\n   were the prick of a thorn, a bramble, or a briar thrust into his flesh<br \/>\n   or into his mind. And surely, cousin, the prick that very sore pricketh<br \/>\n   the mind surpasseth in pain the grief that paineth the body, almost as<br \/>\n   far as doth a thorn sticking in the heart surpass and exceed in pain<br \/>\n   the thorn that is thrust in the heel.<\/p>\n<p>   Now cousin, if tribulation be this that I call it, then shall you soon<br \/>\n   consider this: There are more kinds of tribulation peradventure than<br \/>\n   you thought on before. And thereupon it followeth also, since every<br \/>\n   kind of tribulation is an interruption of wealth, that prosperity<br \/>\n   (which is but another name for wealth) may be discontinued by more ways<br \/>\n   than you would before have thought. Then say I thus unto you, cousin:<br \/>\n   Since tribulation is not only such pangs as pain the body, but every<br \/>\n   trouble also that grieveth the mind, many good men have many<br \/>\n   tribulations that every man marketh not, and consequently their wealth<br \/>\n   is interrupted when other men are not aware. For think you, cousin,<br \/>\n   that the temptations of the devil, the world, and the flesh, soliciting<br \/>\n   the mind of a good man unto sin, are not a great inward trouble and<br \/>\n   grief to his heart? To such wretches as care not for their conscience,<br \/>\n   but like unreasonable beasts follow their foul affections, many of<br \/>\n   these temptations are no trouble at all, but matter of their bodily<br \/>\n   pleasure. But unto him, cousin, that standeth in dread of God, the<br \/>\n   tribulation of temptation is so painful that, to be rid of it or to be<br \/>\n   sure of the victory, he would gladly give more than half his substance,<br \/>\n   be it never so great. Now if he who careth not for God think that this<br \/>\n   trouble is but a trifle, and that with such tribulation prosperity is<br \/>\n   not interrupted, let him cast in his mind if he himself come upon a<br \/>\n   fervent longing for something which he cannot get (as a good man will<br \/>\n   not), as perchance his pleasure of some certain good woman who will not<br \/>\n   be caught. And then let him tell me whether the ruffle of his desire<br \/>\n   shall not so torment his mind that all the pleasures that he can take<br \/>\n   beside shall, for lack of that one, not please him a pin! And I dare be<br \/>\n   bold to warrant him that the pain in resisting, and the great fear of<br \/>\n   falling, that many a good man hath in his temptation, is an anguish and<br \/>\n   a grief every deal as great as this.<\/p>\n<p>   Now I say further, cousin, that if this be true, as indeed it is, that<br \/>\n   such trouble is tribulation, and thereby consequently an interruption<br \/>\n   of prosperous wealth, no man meaneth precisely to pray for another to<br \/>\n   keep him in continual prosperity without any manner of discontinuance<br \/>\n   or change in this world. For that prayer, without other condition added<br \/>\n   or implied, would be inordinate and very childish. For it would be to<br \/>\n   pray either that they should never have temptation, or else that if<br \/>\n   they had they might follow and fulfil their affection. Who would dare,<br \/>\n   good cousin, for shame or for sin, for himself or any other man, to<br \/>\n   make this kind of prayer?<\/p>\n<p>   Besides this, cousin, the church, you know, well adviseth every man to<br \/>\n   fast, to watch, and to pray, both for taming of his fleshly lusts and<br \/>\n   also to mourn and lament his sin before committed and to bewail his<br \/>\n   offence done against God, as they did at the city of Nineve, and as the<br \/>\n   prophet David did for his sin put affliction to his flesh. And when a<br \/>\n   man so doth, cousin, is this no tribulation to him because he doth it<br \/>\n   himself? For I know you would agree that it would be, if another man<br \/>\n   did it against his will. Then is tribulation, you know, tribulation<br \/>\n   still, though it be taken well in worth. Yea, and though it be taken<br \/>\n   with very right good will, yet is pain, you know, pain, and therefore<br \/>\n   so is it, though a man do it himself. Then, since the church adviseth<br \/>\n   every man to take tribulation for his sin, whatsoever words you find in<br \/>\n   any prayer, they never mean, do you be fast and sure, to pray God to<br \/>\n   keep every good man (nor every bad man neither) from every kind of<br \/>\n   tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   Now he who is not in a certain kind of tribulation, as peradventure in<br \/>\n   sickness or in loss of goods, is not yet out of tribulation. For he may<br \/>\n   have his ease of body or mind disquieted (and thereby his wealth<br \/>\n   interrupted) with another kind of tribulation, as is either temptation<br \/>\n   to a good man, or voluntary affliction, either of body by penance or of<br \/>\n   mind by contrition and heaviness for his sin and offence against God.<br \/>\n   And thus I say that for precise perpetual wealth and prosperity in this<br \/>\n   world&#8211;that is to say, for the perpetual lack of all trouble and<br \/>\n   tribulation&#8211;no wise man prayeth either for himself or for any man<br \/>\n   else. And thus I answer your first objection.<\/p>\n<p>   Now before I meddle with your second, your third will I join to this.<br \/>\n   For upon this answer will the solution of your examples fittingly<br \/>\n   depend.<\/p>\n<p>   As for Solomon, he was, as you say, all his days a marvellous wealthy<br \/>\n   king, and much was he beloved with God, I know, in the beginning of his<br \/>\n   reign. But that the favour of God continued with him, as his prosperity<br \/>\n   did, that cannot I tell, and therefore will I not warrant it. But<br \/>\n   surely we see that his continual wealth made him fall into wanton<br \/>\n   folly, first in multiplying wives to a horrible number, contrary to the<br \/>\n   commandment of God, given in the law of Moses, and secondly in taking<br \/>\n   to wife among others some who were infidels, contrary to another<br \/>\n   commandment of God&#8217;s written law. Also we see that finally, by means of<br \/>\n   his infidel wife, he fell into maintenance of idolatry himself. And of<br \/>\n   this we find no amendment or repentance, as we find of his father. And<br \/>\n   therefore, though he were buried where his father was, yet whether he<br \/>\n   went to the rest that his father did, through some secret sorrow for<br \/>\n   his sin at last&#8211;that is to say, by some kind of tribulation&#8211;I cannot<br \/>\n   tell, and am content therefore to trust well and pray God that he did<br \/>\n   so. But surely we are not so sure, and therefore the example of Solomon<br \/>\n   can very little serve you. For you might as well lay it for a proof<br \/>\n   that God favoureth idolatry as that he favoureth prosperity; for<br \/>\n   Solomon was, you know, in both.<\/p>\n<p>   As for Job, since our question hangeth upon prosperity that is<br \/>\n   perpetual, the wealth of Job, which was interrupted with so great<br \/>\n   adversity, can, as you yourself see, serve you for no example. And that<br \/>\n   God gave him here in this world all things double that he lost, little<br \/>\n   toucheth my matter, which denieth not prosperity to be God&#8217;s gift, and<br \/>\n   given to some good men, too; namely, to such as have tribulation too.<\/p>\n<p>   But in Abraham, cousin, I suppose is all your chief hold, because you<br \/>\n   not only show riches and prosperity perpetual in him through the course<br \/>\n   of all his whole life in this world, but after his death also. Lazarus,<br \/>\n   that poor man, who lived in tribulation and died for pure hunger and<br \/>\n   thirst, had after his death his place of comfort and rest in<br \/>\n   Abraham&#8217;s&#8211;that wealthy man&#8217;s&#8211;bosom. But here must you consider that<br \/>\n   Abraham had not such continual prosperity but what it was discontinued<br \/>\n   with divers tribulations.<\/p>\n<p>   Was it nothing to him, think you, to leave his own country, and at<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s sending to go into a strange land, which God promised him and his<br \/>\n   seed forever, but in all his life he gave him never a foot? Was it no<br \/>\n   trouble, that his cousin Loth and himself were fain to part company,<br \/>\n   because their servants could not agree together? Though he recovered<br \/>\n   Loth again from the three kings, was his capture no trouble to him,<br \/>\n   think you, in the meanwhile? Was the destruction of the five cities no<br \/>\n   heaviness to his heart? Any man would think so, who readeth in the<br \/>\n   story what labour he made to save them. His heart was, I daresay, in no<br \/>\n   little sorrow, when he was fain to let Abimelech the king have his<br \/>\n   wife. Though God provided to keep her undefiled and turned all to<br \/>\n   wealth, yet it was no little woe to him in the meantime. What continual<br \/>\n   grief was it to his heart, many a long day, that he had no child<br \/>\n   begotten of his own body? He that doubteth thereof shall find in<br \/>\n   Genesis Abraham&#8217;s own moan made to God. No man doubteth but Ismael was<br \/>\n   great comfort unto him at his birth; and was it no grief, then, when he<br \/>\n   must cast out the mother and the child both? As for Isaac, who was the<br \/>\n   child of the promise, although God kept his life, that was unlooked<br \/>\n   for. Yet while the loving father bound him and went about to behead him<br \/>\n   and offer him up in sacrifice, who but himself can conceive what<br \/>\n   heaviness his heart had then? I should suppose (since you speak of<br \/>\n   Lazarus) that Lazarus&#8217; own death panged him not so sore. Then, as<br \/>\n   Lazarus&#8217; pain was patiently borne, so was Abraham&#8217;s taken not only<br \/>\n   patiently but&#8211;which is a thing much more meritorious&#8211;of obedience<br \/>\n   willingly. And therefore, even if Abraham had not far excelled Lazarus<br \/>\n   in merit of reward (as he did indeed) for many other things besides,<br \/>\n   and especially for that he was a special patriarch of the faith, yet<br \/>\n   would he have far surpassed him even by the merit of that tribulation<br \/>\n   well taken here for God&#8217;s sake too. And so serveth for your purpose no<br \/>\n   man less than Abraham!<\/p>\n<p>   But now, good cousin, let us look a little longer here upon the rich<br \/>\n   Abraham and Lazarus the poor. And as we shall see Lazarus set in wealth<br \/>\n   somewhat under the rich Abraham, so shall we see another rich man lie<br \/>\n   full low beneath Lazarus, crying and calling out of his fiery couch<br \/>\n   that Lazarus might, with a drop of water falling from his finger&#8217;s end,<br \/>\n   a little cool and refresh the tip of his burning tongue. Consider well<br \/>\n   now what Abraham answered to the rich wretch: &#8220;Son, remember that thou<br \/>\n   hast in thy life received wealth, and Lazarus likewise pain, but now<br \/>\n   receiveth he comfort, and thou sorrow, pain, and torment.&#8221; Christ<br \/>\n   described his wealth and his prosperity: gay and soft apparel with<br \/>\n   royal delicate fare, continually day by day. &#8220;He did fare royally every<br \/>\n   day,&#8221; saith our Saviour; his wealth was continual, lo, no time of<br \/>\n   tribulation between. And Abraham telleth him the same tale, that he had<br \/>\n   taken his wealth in this world, and Lazarus likewise his pain, and that<br \/>\n   they had now changed each to the clean contrary&#8211;poor Lazarus from<br \/>\n   tribulation into wealth, and the rich man from his continual prosperity<br \/>\n   into perpetual pain. Here was laid expressly to Lazarus no very great<br \/>\n   virtue by name, nor to this rich glutton no great heinous crime but the<br \/>\n   taking of his continual ease and pleasure, without any tribulation or<br \/>\n   grief, of which grew sloth and negligence to think upon the poor man&#8217;s<br \/>\n   pain. For that ever he himself saw Lazarus and knew that he died for<br \/>\n   hunger at his door, that laid neither Christ nor Abraham to his charge.<br \/>\n   And therefore, cousin, this story of which, by occasion of Abraham and<br \/>\n   Lazarus, you put me in remembrance, well declareth what peril there is<br \/>\n   in continual worldly wealth; and contrariwise what comfort cometh of<br \/>\n   tribulation. And thus, as your other examples of Solomon and Job<br \/>\n   nothing for the matter further you, so your example of rich Abraham and<br \/>\n   poor Lazarus hath not a little hindered you.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XVII<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Surely, uncle, you have shaken my examples sorely, and have in<br \/>\n   your aiming of your shot removed me these arrows, methinketh, further<br \/>\n   off from the mark than methought they stuck when I shot them! And I<br \/>\n   shall therefore now be content to take them up again.<\/p>\n<p>   But meseemeth surely that my second shot may stand. For of truth, if<br \/>\n   every kind of tribulation be so profitable that it be good to have it,<br \/>\n   as you say it is, then I cannot see why any man should either wish, or<br \/>\n   pray, or do any manner of thing to have any kind of tribulation<br \/>\n   withdrawn either from himself or from any friend of his.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I think indeed tribulation so good and profitable that I might<br \/>\n   doubt, as you do, why a man might labour and pray to be delivered of<br \/>\n   it, were it not that God, who teacheth us the one, teacheth us also the<br \/>\n   other. For as he biddeth us take our pain patiently, and exhort our<br \/>\n   neighbours to do also the same, so biddeth he us also not forbear to do<br \/>\n   our best to remove the pain from us both. And then, since it is God who<br \/>\n   teacheth both, I shall not need to break my brain in devising wherefore<br \/>\n   he would bid us to do both, the one seeming opposed to the other.<\/p>\n<p>   If he send the scourge of scarcity and great famine, he will that we<br \/>\n   shall bear it patiently; but yet will he that we shall eat our meat<br \/>\n   when we can get it. If he send us the plague of pestilence, he will<br \/>\n   that we shall patiently take it; but yet will he that we let blood, and<br \/>\n   lay plasters to draw it and ripen it, and lance it, and get it away.<br \/>\n   Both these points teacheth God in scripture, in more than many places.<br \/>\n   Fasting is better than eating, and hath more thanks of God, and yet<br \/>\n   will God that we shall eat. Praying is better than drinking, and much<br \/>\n   more pleasing to God, and yet will God that we shall drink. Keeping<br \/>\n   vigil is much more acceptable to God than sleeping, and yet will God<br \/>\n   that we shall sleep. God hath given us our bodies here to keep, and<br \/>\n   will that we maintain them to do him service with, till he send for us<br \/>\n   hence.<\/p>\n<p>   Now we cannot tell surely how much tribulation may mar the body or<br \/>\n   peradventure hurt the soul also. Therefore the apostle, after he had<br \/>\n   commanded the Corinthians to deliver to the devil the abominable<br \/>\n   fornicator who forbore not the bed of his own father&#8217;s wife, yet after<br \/>\n   he had been a while accursed and punished for his sin, the apostle<br \/>\n   commanded them charitably to receive him again and give him<br \/>\n   consolation, &#8220;that the greatness of his sorrow should not swallow him<br \/>\n   up.&#8221; And therefore, when God sendeth the tempest, he will that the<br \/>\n   shipmen shall get them to their tackling and do the best they can for<br \/>\n   themselves, that the sea eat them not up. For help ourselves as well as<br \/>\n   we can, he can make his plague as sore and as long-lasting as he<br \/>\n   himself please.<\/p>\n<p>   And as he will that we do for ourselves, so will he that we do for our<br \/>\n   neigbour too. And he will that we shall in this world have pity on each<br \/>\n   other and not be sine affectione, for which the apostle rebuketh them<br \/>\n   that lack their tender affection here. So of charity we should be sorry<br \/>\n   too for the pain of those upon whom, for necessary cause, we ourselves<br \/>\n   be driven to put it. And whosoever saith that for pity of his<br \/>\n   neighbour&#8217;s soul he will have no pity of his body, let him be sure<br \/>\n   that, as St. John saith, &#8220;He that loveth not his neighbour whom he<br \/>\n   seeth, loveth but little God, whom he seeth not,&#8221; so he who hath no<br \/>\n   pity on the pain that he seeth his neighbour feel before him, pitieth<br \/>\n   little (whatsoever he say) the pain of his soul that he seeth not.<\/p>\n<p>   Yet God sendeth us also such tribulation sometimes because it is his<br \/>\n   pleasure to have us pray unto him for help. And therefore, the<br \/>\n   scripture telleth that, when St. Peter was in prison, the whole church<br \/>\n   without intermission prayed incessantly for him, and at their fervent<br \/>\n   prayer God by miracle delivered him. When the disciples in the tempest<br \/>\n   stood in fear of drowning, they prayed unto Christ and said, &#8220;Save us,<br \/>\n   Lord, we perish,&#8221; and then at their prayer he shortly ceased the<br \/>\n   tempest. And now see we proved often that in sore weather or sickness<br \/>\n   by general processions God giveth gracious help. And many a man in his<br \/>\n   great pain and sickness, by calling upon God is marvellously made<br \/>\n   whole. This is the goodness of God who, because in wealth we remember<br \/>\n   him not, but forget to pray to him, sendeth us sorrow and sickness to<br \/>\n   force us to draw toward him, and compelleth us to call upon him and<br \/>\n   pray for release of our pain. When we learn thereby to know him and to<br \/>\n   pray to him, we take a good occasion to fall afterward into further<br \/>\n   grace.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XVIII<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, good uncle, with this good answer I am well content.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Yea, cousin, but many men are there with whom God is not<br \/>\n   content! For they abuse this great high goodness of his, whom neither<br \/>\n   fair treating nor hard handling can cause to remember their maker. But<br \/>\n   in wealth they are wanton and forget God and follow their pleasure, and<br \/>\n   when God with tribulation draweth them toward him, then wax they mad<br \/>\n   and draw back as much as ever they can, and run and seek help at any<br \/>\n   other hand rather than at his. Some for comfort seek to the flesh, some<br \/>\n   to the world, and some to the devil himself.<\/p>\n<p>   Consider some man who in worldly prosperity is very dull and hath<br \/>\n   stepped deep into many a sore sin; which sins, when he did them, he<br \/>\n   counted for part of his pleasure. God, willing of his goodness to call<br \/>\n   the man to grace, casteth a remorse into his mind, after his first<br \/>\n   sleep, and maketh him lie a little while and bethink him. Then<br \/>\n   beginneth he to remember his life, and from that he falleth to think<br \/>\n   upon his death, and how he must leave all his worldly wealth within a<br \/>\n   while behind here in this world, and walk hence alone, he knows not<br \/>\n   whither. Nor knows he how soon he shall take his journey thither, nor<br \/>\n   can he tell what company he shall meet there. And then beginneth he to<br \/>\n   think that it would be good to make sure and to be merry, so that he be<br \/>\n   wise therewith, lest there happen to be indeed such black bugbears as<br \/>\n   folk call devils, whose torments he was wont to take for poet&#8217;s tales.<br \/>\n   Those thoughts, if they sink deep, are a sore tribulation. And surely,<br \/>\n   if he takes hold of the grace that God therein offereth him, his<br \/>\n   tribulation is wholesome. And it shall be full comforting to remember<br \/>\n   that God by this tribulation calleth him and biddeth him come home, out<br \/>\n   of the country of sin that he was bred and brought up so long in, and<br \/>\n   come into the land of behest that floweth milk and honey. And then if<br \/>\n   he follow this calling, as many a one full well doth, joyful shall his<br \/>\n   sorrow be. And glad shall he be to change his life, to leave his wanton<br \/>\n   pleasures and do penance for his sins, bestowing his time upon some<br \/>\n   better business.<\/p>\n<p>   But some men, now, when this calling of God causeth them to be sad,<br \/>\n   they are loth to leave their sinful lusts that hang in their hearts,<br \/>\n   especially if they have any kind of living such that they must needs<br \/>\n   leave it off or fall deeper into sin, or if they have done so many<br \/>\n   great wrongs that they have many amends to make if they follow God,<br \/>\n   which must diminish much their money. Then are these folk, alas,<br \/>\n   woefully bewrapped, for God pricketh them of his great goodness still.<br \/>\n   And the grief of this great pang pincheth them at the heart, and of<br \/>\n   wickedness they wry away. And from this tribulation they turn to their<br \/>\n   flesh for help, and labour to shake off this thought. And then they<br \/>\n   mend their pillow and lay their head softer and essay to sleep. And<br \/>\n   when that will not be, then they talk a while with those who lie by<br \/>\n   them. If that cannot be either, then they lie and long for day, and get<br \/>\n   them forth about their worldly wretchedness, the matter of their<br \/>\n   prosperity, and the selfsame sinful things with which they displease<br \/>\n   God most. And at length, when they have many times behaved in this<br \/>\n   manner, God utterly casteth them off. And then they set naught by<br \/>\n   either God or devil. &#8220;When the sinner cometh even into the depth, then<br \/>\n   he contemneth,&#8221; and setteth naught by anything, saving worldly fear<br \/>\n   that may befall by chance, or that needs must, he knoweth well, befall<br \/>\n   once by death.<\/p>\n<p>   But alas, when death cometh, then cometh again his sorrow. Then will no<br \/>\n   soft bed serve, nor no company make him merry. Then must he leave his<br \/>\n   outward worship and comfort of his glory, and lie panting in his bed as<br \/>\n   it were on a pine bench. Then cometh his fear of his evil life and of<br \/>\n   his dreadful death. Then cometh his torment, his cumbered conscience<br \/>\n   and fear of his heavy judgment. Then the devil draweth him to despair<br \/>\n   with imagination of hell, and suffereth him not then to take it for a<br \/>\n   fable&#8211;and yet, if he do, then the wretch findeth it no fable. Ah, woe<br \/>\n   worth the time, that folk think not of this in time!<\/p>\n<p>   God sometimes sendeth a man great trouble in his mind, and great<br \/>\n   tribulation about his worldly goods, because he would of his goodness<br \/>\n   take his delight and confidence from them. And yet the man withdraweth<br \/>\n   no part of his foolish fancies, but falleth more fervently to them than<br \/>\n   before, and setteth his whole heart, like a fool, more upon them. And<br \/>\n   then he betaketh him all to the devices of his worldly counsellors, and<br \/>\n   without any counsel of God or any trust put in him, maketh many wise<br \/>\n   ways&#8211;or so he thinks, but all turn at length to folly, and one subtle<br \/>\n   drift driveth another to naught.<\/p>\n<p>   Some have I see even in their last sickness, set up in their deathbed,<br \/>\n   underpropped with pillows, take their playfellows to them and comfort<br \/>\n   themselves with cards. And this, they said, did ease them well, to put<br \/>\n   fancies out of their heads. And what fancies, think you? Such as I told<br \/>\n   you right now, of their own lewd life and peril of their soul, of<br \/>\n   heaven and of hell, that irked them to think of. And therefore they<br \/>\n   cast it out with cards, playing as long as ever they might, till the<br \/>\n   pure pangs of death pulled their heart from their play, and put them in<br \/>\n   such a case that they could not reckon their game. And then their<br \/>\n   gamesters left them and slyly slunk away, and it was not long ere they<br \/>\n   galped up the ghost. And what game they came then to, that God knoweth<br \/>\n   and not I. I pray God it were good, but I fear it very sore.<\/p>\n<p>   Some men are there also that do as did King Saul, and in their<br \/>\n   tribulation go seek unto the devil. This king had commanded all those<br \/>\n   to be destroyed who used the false abominable superstition of this<br \/>\n   ungracious witchcraft and necromancy. And yet fell he to such folly<br \/>\n   afterwards himself, that ere he went to battle he sought unto a witch<br \/>\n   and besought her to raise up a dead man to tell him how he should fare.<br \/>\n   Now God had showed him by Samuel before that he should come to naught,<br \/>\n   and he went about no amendment, but waxed worse and worse, so that God<br \/>\n   would not look to him. And when he sought by the prophet to have answer<br \/>\n   of God, there came no answer to him, which he thought strange. And<br \/>\n   because he was not heard by God at his pleasure, he made suit to the<br \/>\n   devil, desiring a woman by witchcraft to raise up the dead Samuel. But<br \/>\n   he had such success thereof as commonly they have who in their business<br \/>\n   meddle with such matters. For an evil answer had he, and an evil<br \/>\n   fortune thereafter&#8211;his army discomfited and himself slain. And as it<br \/>\n   is rehearsed in Paralipomenon, the tenth chapter of the first book, one<br \/>\n   cause of his fall was for lack of trust in God, for which he left off<br \/>\n   taking counsel of God and fell to seek counsel of the witch, against<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s prohibition in the law and against his own good deed by which he<br \/>\n   punished and put out all witches so short a time before. Such fortune<br \/>\n   let them look for, who play the same part! I see many do so, who in a<br \/>\n   great loss send to seek a conjurer to get their belongings again. And<br \/>\n   marvellous things there they see, sometimes, but never great of their<br \/>\n   good. And many a silly fool is there who, when he lies sick, will<br \/>\n   meddle with no physic in no manner of wise, nor send his urine to no<br \/>\n   learned man, but will send his cap or his hose to a wisewoman,<br \/>\n   otherwise called a witch. Then sendeth she word back that she hath<br \/>\n   spied in his hose where, when he took no heed, he was taken with a<br \/>\n   spirit between two doors as he went in the twilight. But the spirit<br \/>\n   would not let him feel it for five days after, and it hath all the<br \/>\n   while festered in his body, and that is the grief that paineth him so<br \/>\n   sore. But let him go to no leechcraft nor any manner of physic&#8211;other<br \/>\n   than good meat and strong drink&#8211;for medicines would pickle him up. But<br \/>\n   he shall have five leaves of valerian that she enchanted with a charm<br \/>\n   and gathered with her left hand. Let him fasten those five leaves to<br \/>\n   his right thumb by a green thread&#8211;not bind it fast, but let it hang<br \/>\n   loose. He shall never need to change it, provided it fall not away, but<br \/>\n   let it hang till he be whole and he shall need it no more. In such wise<br \/>\n   witches, and in such mad medicines, have many fools a great deal more<br \/>\n   faith than in God.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus, cousin, as I tell you, all these folk who in their<br \/>\n   tribulation call not upon God, but seek for their ease and help<br \/>\n   elsewhere&#8211;to the flesh and the world, and to the flinging fiend&#8211;the<br \/>\n   tribulation that God&#8217;s goodness sendeth them for good, they themselves<br \/>\n   by their folly turn into their harm. And those who, on the other hand,<br \/>\n   seek unto God therein, both comfort and profit they greatly take<br \/>\n   thereby.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XIX<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I like well, good uncle, all your answers therein. But one<br \/>\n   doubt yet remaineth there in my mind, which ariseth upon this answer<br \/>\n   that you make. And when that doubt is solved, I will, mine own good<br \/>\n   uncle, encumber you no further for this time. For methinketh that I do<br \/>\n   you very much wrong to give you occasion to labour yourself so much in<br \/>\n   matter of some study, with long talking at once. I will therefore at<br \/>\n   this time move you but one thing, and seek some other time at your<br \/>\n   greater ease for the rest.<\/p>\n<p>   My doubt, good uncle, is this: I perceive well by your answers,<br \/>\n   gathered and considered together, that you will well agree that a man<br \/>\n   may both have worldly wealth and yet well go to God; and that, on the<br \/>\n   other hand, a man may be miserable and live in tribulation and yet go<br \/>\n   to the devil. And as a man may please God by patience in adversity, so<br \/>\n   may he please God by thanks given in prosperity. Now since you grant<br \/>\n   these things to be such that either of them both may be matter of<br \/>\n   virtue or else matter of sin, matter of damnation or matter of<br \/>\n   salvation, they seem neither good nor bad of their own nature, but<br \/>\n   things of themselves equal and indifferent, turning to good or to the<br \/>\n   contrary according as they be taken. And then if this be thus, I can<br \/>\n   perceive no cause why you should give the pre-eminence unto<br \/>\n   tribulation, or wherefore you should reckon more cause of comfort in it<br \/>\n   than in prosperity, but rather a great deal less&#8211;in a manner, by half.<\/p>\n<p>   For in prosperity a man is well at ease, and may also, by giving thanks<br \/>\n   to God, get good unto his soul; whereas in tribulation, though he may<br \/>\n   merit by patience (as the other, in abundance of worldly wealth, may<br \/>\n   merit by thanks), yet lacketh he much comfort that the wealthy man<br \/>\n   hath, in that he is sore grieved with heaviness and pain. Besides, a<br \/>\n   wealthy man, well at ease, may pray to God quietly and merrily with<br \/>\n   alacrity and great quietness of mind, whereas he who lieth groaning in<br \/>\n   his grief cannot endure to pray nor can he hardly think upon anything<br \/>\n   but his pain.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: To begin, cousin, where you leave off: The prayers of him that<br \/>\n   is in wealth and him that is in woe, if the men be both wicked, are<br \/>\n   both alike. For neither hath the one desire to pray, nor the other<br \/>\n   either. And as one is hindered with his pain, so is the other with his<br \/>\n   pleasure&#8211;saving that pain stirreth a man sometimes to call upon God in<br \/>\n   his grief, though he be right bad, whereas pleasure pulleth his mind<br \/>\n   another way, though he be good enough.<\/p>\n<p>   And this point I think there are few that can, if they say true, say<br \/>\n   that they find it otherwise. For in tribulation (which cometh, you<br \/>\n   know, in sundry kinds) any man that is not a dull beast or a desperate<br \/>\n   wretch calleth upon God, not hoverly but right heartily, and setteth<br \/>\n   his heart full whole upon his request, so sore he longeth for ease and<br \/>\n   help of his heaviness. But when we are wealthy and well at our ease,<br \/>\n   while our tongue pattereth upon our prayers apace&#8211;good God, how many<br \/>\n   mad ways our mind wandereth the while!<\/p>\n<p>   Yet I know well that in some tribulation there is such sore sickness or<br \/>\n   other grievous bodily pain that it would be hard for a man to say a<br \/>\n   longer prayer of matins. And yet some who lie dying say full devoutly<br \/>\n   the seven psalms and other prayers with the priest at their anointing.<br \/>\n   But those who for the grief of their pain cannot endure to do it, or<br \/>\n   who are more tender and lack that strong heart and stomach that some<br \/>\n   others have, God requireth no such long prayers of them. But the<br \/>\n   lifting up of their heart alone, without any words at all, is more<br \/>\n   acceptable to him from one in such a state, than long service so said<br \/>\n   as folk usually say it in health. The martyrs in their agony made no<br \/>\n   long prayers aloud, but one inch of such a prayer, so prayed in that<br \/>\n   pain, was worth a whole ell or more, even of their own prayers, prayed<br \/>\n   at some other time.<\/p>\n<p>   Great learned men say that Christ, albeit that he was true God, and as<br \/>\n   God was in eternal equal bliss with his Father, yet as man merited not<br \/>\n   only for us but for himself too. For proof of this they lay in these<br \/>\n   words the authority of St. Paul: &#8220;Christ hath humbled himself, and<br \/>\n   became obedient unto the death, and that unto the death of the cross;<br \/>\n   for which thing God hath also exalted him and given him a name which is<br \/>\n   above all names, that in the name of Jesus every knee be bowed, both of<br \/>\n   the celestial creatures and of the terrestrial and of the infernal too,<br \/>\n   and that every tongue shall confess that our lord Jesus Christ is in<br \/>\n   the glory of God his Father.&#8221; Now if it be so as these great learned<br \/>\n   men say, upon such authorities of holy scripture, that our Saviour<br \/>\n   merited as man, and as man deserved reward not for us only but for<br \/>\n   himself also; then were there in his deeds, it seemeth, sundry degrees<br \/>\n   and differences of deserving. His washing of the disciples&#8217; feet was<br \/>\n   not, then, of like merit as his passion, nor his sleep of like merit as<br \/>\n   his vigil and his prayer&#8211;no, nor his prayers peradventure all of like<br \/>\n   merit, either. But though there was not, nor could be, in his most<br \/>\n   blessed person any prayer but was excellent and incomparably surpassing<br \/>\n   the prayer of any mere creature, yet his own were not all alike, but<br \/>\n   one far above another. And then if it thus be, of all his holy prayers,<br \/>\n   the chief seemeth me those that he made in his great agony and pain of<br \/>\n   his bitter passion. The first was when he thrice fell prostrate in his<br \/>\n   agony, when the heaviness of his heart with fear of death at hand, so<br \/>\n   painful and so cruel as he well beheld it, made such a fervent<br \/>\n   commotion in his blessed body that the bloody sweat of his holy flesh<br \/>\n   dropped down on the ground. The others were the painful prayers that he<br \/>\n   made upon the cross, where, for all the torment that he hanged in&#8211;of<br \/>\n   beating, nailing, and stretching out all his limbs, with the wresting<br \/>\n   of his sinews and breaking of his tender veins, and the sharp crown of<br \/>\n   thorns so pricking him into the head that his blessed blood streamed<br \/>\n   down all his face&#8211;in all these hideous pains, in all their cruel<br \/>\n   despites, yet two very devout and fervent prayers he made. One was for<br \/>\n   the pardon of those who so dispiteously put him to his pain, and the<br \/>\n   other about his own deliverance, commending his own soul to his holy<br \/>\n   Father in heaven. These prayers of his, made in his most pain, among<br \/>\n   all that ever he made, reckon I for the chief. And these prayers of our<br \/>\n   Saviour at his bitter passion, and of his holy martyrs in the fervour<br \/>\n   of their torment, shall serve us to see that there is no prayer made at<br \/>\n   pleasure so strong and effectual as that made in tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   Now come I to the reasoning you make, when you tell me that I grant you<br \/>\n   that both in wealth and in woe a man may be wicked and offend God, in<br \/>\n   the one by impatience and in the other by fleshly lust. And on the<br \/>\n   other hand, both in tribulation and prosperity too, a man may also do<br \/>\n   very well and deserve thanks of God by thanksgiving to God for his gift<br \/>\n   of riches, worship, and wealth, as well as for his gift of need and<br \/>\n   penury, imprisonment, sickness, and pain. And therefore you cannot see<br \/>\n   why I should give any pre-eminence in comfort unto tribulation, but you<br \/>\n   would rather allow prosperity for the thing more comforting. And that<br \/>\n   not a little, but in manner by double, since therein hath the soul<br \/>\n   comfort and the body too&#8211;the soul by thanksgiving unto God for his<br \/>\n   gifts, and the body by being well at ease&#8211;whereas the person pained in<br \/>\n   tribulation taketh no comfort but in his soul alone.<\/p>\n<p>   First, as for your double comfort, cousin, you may cut off the one! For<br \/>\n   a man in prosperity, though he be bound to thank God for his gifts,<br \/>\n   wherein he feeleth ease, and may be glad also that he giveth thanks to<br \/>\n   God; yet hath he little cause of comfort in that he taketh his ease<br \/>\n   here, unless you wish to call by the name of comfort the sensual<br \/>\n   feeling of bodily pleasure. I deny not that sometimes men so take it,<br \/>\n   when they say, &#8220;This good drink comforteth well mine heart.&#8221; But<br \/>\n   comfort, cousin, is properly taken, by them that take it right, rather<br \/>\n   for the consolation of good hope that men take in their heart, of some<br \/>\n   good growing toward them, than for a present pleasure with which the<br \/>\n   body is delighted and tickled for a while.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, though a man without patience can have no reward for his pain, yet<br \/>\n   when his pain is patiently taken for God&#8217;s sake and his will conformed<br \/>\n   to God&#8217;s pleasure therein, God rewardeth the sufferer in proportion to<br \/>\n   his pain. And this thing appeareth by many a place in scripture, some<br \/>\n   of which I have showed you and yet shall I show you more. But never<br \/>\n   found I any place in scripture that I remember in which, though a rich<br \/>\n   man thanked God for his gifts, our Lord promised him any reward in<br \/>\n   heaven for the very reason that he took his ease and his pleasures<br \/>\n   here. And therefore, since I speak only of such comfort as is true<br \/>\n   comfort indeed, by which a man hath hope of God&#8217;s favour and remission<br \/>\n   of his sins, with diminishing of his pain in purgatory or else reward<br \/>\n   in heaven; and since such comfort cometh of tribulation well taken, but<br \/>\n   not of pleasure even though it be well taken; therefore of your comfort<br \/>\n   that you double by prosperity, you may, as I told you, very well cut<br \/>\n   away the half.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, why I give prerogative in comfort unto tribulation far above<br \/>\n   prosperity, though a man may do well in both, of this will I show you<br \/>\n   causes two or three. First, as I before have at length showed you out<br \/>\n   of all question, continual wealth interrupted with no tribulation is a<br \/>\n   very discomfortable token of everlasting damnation. Thereupon it<br \/>\n   followeth that tribulation is one cause of comfort unto a man&#8217;s heart,<br \/>\n   in that it dischargeth him of the discomfort that he might of reason<br \/>\n   take of overlong-lasting wealth. Another is, that the scripture much<br \/>\n   commendeth tribulation as occasion of more profit than wealth and<br \/>\n   prosperity, not only to those who are therein but to those who resort<br \/>\n   unto them too. And therefore saith Ecclesiastes, &#8220;Better is it to go to<br \/>\n   the house of weeping and wailing for some man&#8217;s death, than to the<br \/>\n   house of a feast; for in that house of heaviness is a man put in<br \/>\n   remembrance of the end of every man, and while he liveth he thinketh<br \/>\n   what shall come after.&#8221; And after yet he further saith, &#8220;The heart of<br \/>\n   wise men is where heaviness is, and the heart of fools is where there<br \/>\n   is mirth and gladness.&#8221; And verily, where you shall hear worldly mirth<br \/>\n   seem to be commended in scripture, it is either commonly spoken, as in<br \/>\n   the person of some worldly-disposed people, or else understood of<br \/>\n   spiritual rejoicing, or else meant of some small moderate refreshing of<br \/>\n   the mind against a heavy and discomfortable dullness.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, prosperity was promised to the children of Israel in the old law<br \/>\n   as a special gift of God, because of their imperfection at that time,<br \/>\n   to draw them to God with gay things and pleasant, as men, to make<br \/>\n   children learn, give them cake-bread and butter. For, as the scripture<br \/>\n   maketh mention, that people were much after the manner of children in<br \/>\n   lack of wit and in waywardness. And therefore was their master Moses<br \/>\n   called Pedagogus, that is, a teacher of children or (as they call such<br \/>\n   a one in the grammar schools) an &#8220;usher&#8221; or &#8220;master of the petits.&#8221;<br \/>\n   For, as St. Paul saith, &#8220;the old law brought nothing unto perfection.&#8221;<br \/>\n   And God also threateneth folk with tribulation in this world for sin,<br \/>\n   not because worldly tribulation is evil, but that we should well beware<br \/>\n   of the sickness of sin for fear of the thing to follow. For that thing,<br \/>\n   though it be indeed a very good wholesome thing if we take it well, is<br \/>\n   yet, because it is painful, the thing that we are loth to have. But<br \/>\n   this I say yet again and again, that the scripture undoubtedly so<br \/>\n   commandeth tribulation as far the better thing in this world toward the<br \/>\n   getting of the true good that God giveth in the world to come, that in<br \/>\n   comparison it utterly discommendeth this worldly wretched wealth and<br \/>\n   discomfortable comfort. For to what other thing tend the words of<br \/>\n   Ecclesiastes that I rehearsed to you now, that it is better to be in<br \/>\n   the house of heaviness than to be at a feast? Whereto tendeth this<br \/>\n   comparison of his, that the wise man&#8217;s heart draweth thither where folk<br \/>\n   are in sadness, and the heart of a fool is where he may find mirth?<br \/>\n   Whereto tendeth this threat of the wise man, that he who delighteth in<br \/>\n   wealth shall fall into woe? &#8220;Laughter,&#8221; saith he, &#8220;shall be mingled<br \/>\n   with sorrow, and the end of mirth is taken up with heaviness.&#8221; And our<br \/>\n   Saviour saith himself, &#8220;Woe be to you that laugh, for you shall weep<br \/>\n   and wail.&#8221; But he saith, on the other hand, &#8220;Blessed are they that weep<br \/>\n   and wail, for they shall be comforted.&#8221; And he saith to his disciples,<br \/>\n   &#8220;The world shall rejoice and you shall be sorry, but your sorrow shall<br \/>\n   be turned into joy.&#8221; And so it is now, as you well know, and the mirth<br \/>\n   of many who then were in joy is now turned all to sorrow. And thus you<br \/>\n   see plainly by scripture that, in matter of true comfort, tribulation<br \/>\n   is as far above prosperity as the day is about the night.<\/p>\n<p>   Another pre-eminence of tribulation over wealth, in occasion of merit<br \/>\n   and reward, shall well appear upon certain considerations well marked<br \/>\n   in them both. Tribulation meriteth in patience and in the obedient<br \/>\n   conforming of the man&#8217;s will unto God, and in thanks given to God for<br \/>\n   his visitation. If you reckon me now, against these, many other good<br \/>\n   deeds that a wealthy man may do&#8211;as, by riches to give alms, or by<br \/>\n   authority to labour in doing many men justice&#8211;or if you find further<br \/>\n   any other such thing; first, I say that the patient person in<br \/>\n   tribulation hath, in all these virtues of a wealthy man, an occasion of<br \/>\n   merit which the wealthy man hath not. For it is easy for the person who<br \/>\n   is in tribulation to be well willing to do the selfsame thing if he<br \/>\n   could. And then shall his good will, where the power lacketh, go very<br \/>\n   near to the merit of the deed. But the wealthy man, now, is not in a<br \/>\n   like position with regard to the will of patience and conformity and<br \/>\n   thanks given to God for tribulation. For the wealthy man is not so<br \/>\n   ready to be content to be in tribulation, which is the occasion of the<br \/>\n   sufferer&#8217;s deserving, as the troubled person is to be content to be in<br \/>\n   prosperity, to do the good deeds that the wealthy man doth. Besides<br \/>\n   this, all that the wealthy man doth, though he could not do them<br \/>\n   without those things that are counted for wealth and called by that<br \/>\n   name&#8211;as, not do great alms without great riches, nor do these many men<br \/>\n   right by his labour without great authority&#8211;yet may he do these things<br \/>\n   being not in wealth indeed. As where he taketh his wealth for no wealth<br \/>\n   and his riches for no riches, and in heart setteth by neither one, but<br \/>\n   secretly liveth in a contrite heart and a penitential life, as many<br \/>\n   times did the prophet David, being a great king, so that worldly wealth<br \/>\n   was no wealth to him. And therefore worldly wealth is not of necessity<br \/>\n   the cause of these good deeds, since he may do them (and he doth them<br \/>\n   best, indeed) to whom the thing that worldly folk call wealth is yet,<br \/>\n   for his godly-set mind, withdrawn from the delight thereof, no pleasure<br \/>\n   nor wealth at all.<\/p>\n<p>   Finally, whenever the wealthy man doth those good virtuous deeds, if we<br \/>\n   rightly consider the nature of them, we shall perceive that in the<br \/>\n   doing of them he doth ever, for the ratio and proportion of those<br \/>\n   deeds, diminish the matter of his worldly wealth. In giving great alms,<br \/>\n   he parteth with a certain amount of his worldly goods, which are in<br \/>\n   that amount the matter of his wealth. In labouring about the doing of<br \/>\n   many good deeds, his labour diminisheth his quiet and his rest, and to<br \/>\n   that extent it diminisheth his wealth, if pain and wealth be each<br \/>\n   contrary to the other, as I think you will agree that they are. Now,<br \/>\n   whosoever then will well consider the thing, he shall, I doubt not,<br \/>\n   perceive and see that in these good deeds that the wealthy man doth,<br \/>\n   though it be his wealth that maketh him able to do them, yet in so far<br \/>\n   as he doth them he departeth in that proportion from the nature of<br \/>\n   wealth toward the nature of some tribulation. And therefore even in<br \/>\n   those good deeds themselves that prosperity doth, the prerogative in<br \/>\n   goodness of tribulation above wealth doth appear.<\/p>\n<p>   Now if it happen that some man cannot perceive this point because the<br \/>\n   wealthy man, for all his alms, abideth rich still, and for all his good<br \/>\n   labour abideth still in his authority, let him consider that I speak<br \/>\n   only according to proportion. And because the proportion of all that he<br \/>\n   giveth of his goods is very little in respect of what he leaveth,<br \/>\n   therefore is the reason haply with some folk little perceived. But if<br \/>\n   it were so that he went on giving until he had given out all, and left<br \/>\n   himself nothing, then would even a blind man see it. For as he would be<br \/>\n   come from riches to poverty, so would he be willingly fallen from<br \/>\n   wealth into tribulation. And in respect of labour and rest, the same<br \/>\n   would be true. Whosoever can consider this, shall see that, in every<br \/>\n   good deed done by the wealthy man, the matter is proportionately the<br \/>\n   same.<\/p>\n<p>   Then, since we have somewhat weighed the virtues of prosperity, let us<br \/>\n   consider on the other hand the afore-named things that are the matter<br \/>\n   of merit and reward in tribulation&#8211;that is, patience, conformity, and<br \/>\n   thanksgiving. Patience the wealthy man hath not, in so far as he is<br \/>\n   wealthy. For if he be pinched in any point in which he taketh patience,<br \/>\n   to that extent he suffereth some tribulation. And so not by his<br \/>\n   prosperity but by his tribulation hath he that merit. It is the same if<br \/>\n   we would say that the wealthy man hath another virtue instead of<br \/>\n   patience&#8211;that is, the keeping of himself from pride and such other<br \/>\n   sins as wealth would bring him to. For the resisting of such motions<br \/>\n   is, as I before told you, without any doubt a diminishing of fleshly<br \/>\n   wealth, and is a very true kind (and one of the most profitable kinds)<br \/>\n   of tribulation. So all that good merit groweth to the wealthy man not<br \/>\n   by his wealth but by the diminishing of his wealth with wholesome<br \/>\n   tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   The most colour of comparison is in the other two; that is, in the<br \/>\n   conformity of man&#8217;s will unto God, and in thanks given unto God. For as<br \/>\n   the good man, in tribulation sent him by God, conformeth his will to<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s will in that behalf, and giveth God thanks for it; so doth the<br \/>\n   wealthy man, in his wealth which God giveth him, conform his will to<br \/>\n   God in that point, since he is well content to take it as his gift, and<br \/>\n   giveth God also right hearty thanks for it. And thus, as I said, in<br \/>\n   these two things can you catch the most colour to compare the wealthy<br \/>\n   man&#8217;s merit with the merit of tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   But yet that they be not matches, you may soon see by this: For no one<br \/>\n   can conform his will unto God&#8217;s in tribulation and give him thanks for<br \/>\n   it, but such a man as hath in that point a very specially good<br \/>\n   disposition. But he that is truly wicked, or hath in his heart but very<br \/>\n   little good, may well be content to take wealth at God&#8217;s hand, and say,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Marry, I thank you, sir, for this with all my heart, and I will not<br \/>\n   fail to love you well&#8211;while you let me fare no worse!&#8221; Confitebitur<br \/>\n   tibi, cum benefeceris ei. Now, if the wealthy man be very good, yet, in<br \/>\n   conformity of his will and thanksgiving to God for his wealth, his<br \/>\n   virtue is not like to that of him who doth the same in tribulation.<br \/>\n   For, as the philosophers said very well of old, &#8220;virtue standeth in<br \/>\n   things of hardness and difficulty.&#8221; And then, as I told you, it is much<br \/>\n   less hard and less difficult, by a great deal, to be content and<br \/>\n   conform our will to God&#8217;s will and to give him thanks, too, for our<br \/>\n   ease than for our pain, for our wealth and for our woe. And therefore<br \/>\n   the conforming of our will to God&#8217;s and the thanks that we give him for<br \/>\n   our tribulation are more worthy of thanks in return, and merit more<br \/>\n   reward in the very fast wealth and felicity of heaven, than our<br \/>\n   conformity and our thanksgiving for our worldly wealth here.<\/p>\n<p>   And this thing saw the devil, when he said to our Lord of Job that it<br \/>\n   was no marvel if Job had a reverent fear unto God&#8211;God had done so much<br \/>\n   for him, and kept him in prosperity. But the devil knew well that it<br \/>\n   was a hard thing for Job to be so loving, and so to give thanks to God,<br \/>\n   in tribulation and adversity. And therefore was he glad to get leave of<br \/>\n   God to put him in tribulation, and trusted thereby to cause him to<br \/>\n   murmur and grudge against God with impatience. But the devil had there<br \/>\n   a fall in his own turn, for the patience of Job in the short time of<br \/>\n   his adversity got him much more favour and thanks of God, and more is<br \/>\n   he renowned and commended in scripture for that, than for all the<br \/>\n   goodness of his long prosperous life. Our Saviour saith himself, also,<br \/>\n   that if we say well by them or yield them thanks who do us good, we do<br \/>\n   no great thing, and therefore can we with reason look for no great<br \/>\n   thanks in return.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus have I showed you, lo, no little pre-eminence that tribulation<br \/>\n   hath in merit, and therefore no little pre-eminence of comfort in hope<br \/>\n   of heavenly reward, above the virtues (the merit and cause of good hope<br \/>\n   and comfort) that come of wealth and prosperity.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XX<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, good cousin, to finish our talking for this time, lest I<br \/>\n   should be too long a hindrance to your other business:<\/p>\n<p>   If we lay first, for a sure ground, a very fast faith, whereby we<br \/>\n   believe to be true all that the scripture saith (understood truly, as<br \/>\n   the old holy doctors declare it and as the spirit of God instructeth<br \/>\n   his Catholic church), then shall we consider tribulation as a gracious<br \/>\n   gift of God, a gift that he specially gave his special friends; a thing<br \/>\n   that in scripture is highly commended and praised; a thing of which the<br \/>\n   contrary, long continued, is perilous; a thing which, if God send it<br \/>\n   not, men have need to put upon themselves and seek by penance; a thing<br \/>\n   that helpeth to purge our past sins; a thing that preserveth us from<br \/>\n   sins that otherwise would come; a thing that causeth us to set less by<br \/>\n   the world; a thing that much diminisheth our pains in purgatory; a<br \/>\n   thing that much increaseth our final reward in heaven; the thing with<br \/>\n   which all his apostles followed him thither; the thing to which our<br \/>\n   Saviour exhorteth all men; the thing without which he saith we be not<br \/>\n   his disciples; the thing without which no man can get to heaven.<\/p>\n<p>   Whosoever thinketh on these things, and remembereth them well, shall in<br \/>\n   his tribulation neither murmur nor grudge. But first shall he by<br \/>\n   patience take his pain in worth, and then shall he grow in goodness and<br \/>\n   think himself well worthy of tribulation. And then shall he consider<br \/>\n   that God sendeth it for his welfare, and thereby shall be moved to give<br \/>\n   God thanks for it. Therewith shall his grace increase, and God shall<br \/>\n   give him such comfort by considering that God is in his trouble<br \/>\n   evermore near to him&#8211;for &#8220;God is near,&#8221; saith the prophet, &#8220;to them<br \/>\n   that have their heart in trouble&#8221;&#8211;that his joy thereof shall diminish<br \/>\n   much of his pain. And he shall not seek for vain comfort elsewhere, but<br \/>\n   shall specially trust in God and seek help of him, submitting his own<br \/>\n   will wholly to God&#8217;s pleasure. And he shall pray to God in his heart,<br \/>\n   and pray his friends pray for him, and especially the priests, as St.<br \/>\n   James biddeth. And he shall begin first with confession and make him<br \/>\n   clean to God and ready to depart, and be glad to go to God, putting<br \/>\n   purgatory to his pleasure. If we thus do, this dare I boldly say, we<br \/>\n   shall never live here the less by half an hour, but we shall with this<br \/>\n   comfort find our hearts lightened, and thereby the grief of our<br \/>\n   tribulation lessened, and the more likelihood to recover and to live<br \/>\n   the longer.<\/p>\n<p>   Now if God will that we shall go hence, then doth he much more for us.<br \/>\n   For he who taketh this way cannot go but well. For of him who is loth<br \/>\n   to leave this wretched world, mine heart is much in fear lest he did<br \/>\n   not well. Hard it is for him to be welcome who cometh against his will,<br \/>\n   who saith unto God when he cometh to fetch him, &#8220;Welcome, my<br \/>\n   Maker&#8211;spite of my teeth!&#8221; But he that so loveth him that he longeth to<br \/>\n   go to him, my heart cannot give me but he shall be welcome, albeit that<br \/>\n   he come ere he be well purged. For &#8220;Charity covereth a multitude of<br \/>\n   sins,&#8221; and &#8220;He that trusteth in God cannot be confounded.&#8221; And Christ<br \/>\n   saith, &#8220;He that cometh to me, I will not cast him out.&#8221; And therefore<br \/>\n   let us never make our reckoning of long life. Let us keep it while we<br \/>\n   can, because God hath so commanded, but if God give the occasion that<br \/>\n   with his good will we may go, let us be glad of it and long to go to<br \/>\n   him. And then shall hope of heaven comfort our heaviness, and out of<br \/>\n   our transitory tribulation shall we go to everlasting glory&#8211;to which,<br \/>\n   good cousin, I pray God bring us both!<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Mine own good uncle, I pray God reward you, and at this time I<br \/>\n   will no longer trouble you. I fear I have this day done you much<br \/>\n   tribulation with my importunate objections, of very little substance.<br \/>\n   And you have even showed me an example of patience, in bearing my folly<br \/>\n   so long. And yet I shall be so bold as to seek some time to talk<br \/>\n   further of the rest of this most profitable matter of tribulation,<br \/>\n   which you said you reserved to treat of last of all.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Let that be surely very shortly, cousin, while this is fresh<br \/>\n   in mind.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I trust, good uncle, so to put this in remembrance that it<br \/>\n   shall never be forgotten with me. Our Lord send you such comfort as he<br \/>\n   knoweth to be best!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This is well said, good cousin, and I pray the same for you<br \/>\n   and for all our other friends who have need of comfort&#8211;for whom, I<br \/>\n   think, more than for yourself, you needed some counsel.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I shall, with this good counsel that I have heard from you, do<br \/>\n   them some comfort, I trust in God&#8211;to whose keeping I commit you!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: And I you, also. Farewell, mine own good cousin.<\/p>\n<p>   ______________________________<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    BOOK TWO<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: It is no little comfort to me, good uncle, that as I came in<br \/>\n   here I heard from your folk that since my last being here you have had<br \/>\n   meetly good rest (God be thanked), and your stomach somewhat more come<br \/>\n   to you. For verily, albeit I had heard before that, in respect of the<br \/>\n   great pain that for a month&#8217;s space had held you, you were, a little<br \/>\n   before my last coming to you, somewhat eased and relieved&#8211;for<br \/>\n   otherwise would I not for any good cause have put you to the pain of<br \/>\n   talking so much as you then did&#8211;yet after my departing from you,<br \/>\n   remembering how long we tarried together, and that we were all that<br \/>\n   while talking, and that all the labour was yours, in talking so long<br \/>\n   together without interpausing between (and that of matter studious and<br \/>\n   displeasant, all of disease and sickness and other pain and<br \/>\n   tribulation), I was in good faith very sorry and not a little wroth<br \/>\n   with myself for mine own oversight, that I had so little considered<br \/>\n   your pain. And very feared I was, till I heard otherwise, lest you<br \/>\n   should have waxed weaker and more sick thereafter. But now I thank our<br \/>\n   Lord, who hath sent the contrary. For a little casting back, in this<br \/>\n   great age of yours, would be no little danger and peril.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Nay, nay, good cousin&#8211;to talk much, unless some other pain<br \/>\n   hinder me, is to me little grief. A foolish old man is often as full of<br \/>\n   words as a woman. It is, you know, as some poets paint us, all the joy<br \/>\n   of an old fool&#8217;s life to sit well and warm with a cup and a roasted<br \/>\n   crabapple, and drivel and drink and talk!<\/p>\n<p>   But in earnest, cousin, our talking was to me great comfort, and<br \/>\n   nothing displeasing at all. For though we commoned of sorrow and<br \/>\n   heaviness, yet the thing we chiefly thought upon was not the<br \/>\n   tribulation itself but the comfort that may grow thereon. And therefore<br \/>\n   am I now very glad that you are come to finish up the rest.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Of truth, my good uncle, it was comforting to me, and hath<br \/>\n   been since to some other of your friends, to whom, as my poor wit and<br \/>\n   remembrance would serve me, I did report and rehearse (and not<br \/>\n   needlessly) your most comforting counsel. And now come I for the rest,<br \/>\n   and am very joyful that I find you so well refreshed and so ready<br \/>\n   thereto. But this one thing, good uncle, I beseech you heartily. If I,<br \/>\n   for delight to hear you speak in the matter, forget myself and you<br \/>\n   both, and put you to too much pain, remember your own ease. And when<br \/>\n   you wish to leave off, command me to go my way and seek some other<br \/>\n   time.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Forsooth, cousin, if a man were very weak, many words spoken<br \/>\n   (as you said right now) without interpausing, would peradventure at<br \/>\n   length somewhat weary him. And therefore wished I the last time, after<br \/>\n   you were gone (when I felt myself, to say the truth, even a little<br \/>\n   weary), that I had not so told you a long tale alone, but that we had<br \/>\n   more often interchanged words, and parted the talking between us, with<br \/>\n   more often interparling upon your part, in such manner as learned men<br \/>\n   use between the persons whom they devise, disputing in their feigned<br \/>\n   dialogues. But yet in that point I soon excused you and laid the lack<br \/>\n   where I found it, and that was even upon mine own neck.<\/p>\n<p>   For I remembered that between you and me it fared as it did once<br \/>\n   between a nun and her brother. Very virtuous was this lady, and of a<br \/>\n   very virtuous place and enclosed religion. And therein had she been<br \/>\n   long, in all which time she had never seen her brother, who was<br \/>\n   likewise very virtuous too, and had been far off at a university, and<br \/>\n   had there taken the degree of Doctor of Divinity. When he was come<br \/>\n   home, he went to see his sister, as one who highly rejoiced in her<br \/>\n   virtue. So came she to the grate that they call, I believe, the<br \/>\n   locutory, and after their holy watchword spoken on both sides, after<br \/>\n   the manner used in that place, each took the other by the tip of the<br \/>\n   finger, for no hand could be shaken through the grate. And forthwith my<br \/>\n   lady began to give her brother a sermon of the wretchedness of this<br \/>\n   world, and frailty of the flesh, and the subtle sleights of the wicked<br \/>\n   fiend, and gave him surely good counsel (saving somewhat too long) how<br \/>\n   he should be well wary in his living and master well his body for the<br \/>\n   saving of his soul. And yet, ere her own tale came to an end, she began<br \/>\n   to find a little fault with him and said, &#8220;In good faith, brother, I do<br \/>\n   somewhat marvel that you, who have been at learning so long and are a<br \/>\n   doctor and so learned in the law of God, do not now at our meeting<br \/>\n   (since we meet so seldom) to me who am your sister and a simple<br \/>\n   unlearned soul, give of your charity some fruitful exhortation. For I<br \/>\n   doubt not but you can say some good thing yourself.&#8221; &#8220;By my troth, good<br \/>\n   sister,&#8221; quoth her brother, &#8220;I cannot, for you! For your tongue hath<br \/>\n   never ceased, but said enough for us both.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And so, cousin, I remember that when I was once fallen in, I left you<br \/>\n   little space to say aught between. But now will I therefore take<br \/>\n   another way with you, for of our talking I shall drive you to the one<br \/>\n   half.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Now, forsooth, uncle, this was a merry tale! But now, if you<br \/>\n   make me talk the one half, then shall you be contented far otherwise<br \/>\n   than was of late a kinswoman of your own&#8211;but which one I will not tell<br \/>\n   you; guess her if you can! Her husband had much pleasure in the manner<br \/>\n   and behaviour of another honest man, and kept him therefore much<br \/>\n   company, so that he was at his mealtime the more often away from home.<br \/>\n   So happed it one time that his wife and he together dined or supped<br \/>\n   with that neighbour of theirs, and then she made a merry quarrel with<br \/>\n   him for making her husband so good cheer outside that she could not<br \/>\n   keep him at home. &#8220;Forsooth, mistress,&#8221; quoth he (for he was a dry<br \/>\n   merry man), &#8220;in my company no thing keepeth him but one. Serve him with<br \/>\n   the same, and he will never be away from you.&#8221; &#8220;What gay thing may that<br \/>\n   be?&#8221; quoth our cousin then. &#8220;Forsooth, mistress,&#8221; quoth he, &#8220;your<br \/>\n   husband loveth well to talk, and when he sitteth with me, I let him<br \/>\n   have all the words.&#8221; &#8220;All the words?&#8221; quoth she, &#8220;marry, than am I<br \/>\n   content! He shall have all the words with good will, as he hath ever<br \/>\n   had. But I speak them all myself, and give them all to him, and for<br \/>\n   aught I care for them, so shall he have them all. But otherwise to say<br \/>\n   that he shall have them all, you shall keep him still rather than he<br \/>\n   get the half!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Forsooth, cousin, I can soon guess which of our kin she was. I<br \/>\n   wish we had none, for all her merry words, who would let their husbands<br \/>\n   talk less!<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, she is not so merry but what she is equally good.<br \/>\n   But where you find fault, uncle, that I speak not enough: I was in good<br \/>\n   faith ashamed that I spoke so much and moved you such questions as (I<br \/>\n   found upon your answer) might better have been spared, they were of so<br \/>\n   little worth. But now, since I see you be so well content that I shall<br \/>\n   not forbear boldly to show my folly, I will be no more so shamefast but<br \/>\n   will ask you what I like.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    I<\/p>\n<p>   And first, good uncle, ere we proceed further, I will be bold to move<br \/>\n   you one thing more of that which we talked of when I was here before.<br \/>\n   For when I revolved in my mind again the things that were concluded<br \/>\n   here by you, methought you would in no wise wish that in any<br \/>\n   tribulation men should seek for comfort in either worldly things or<br \/>\n   fleshly. And this opinion of yours, uncle, seemeth somewhat hard, for a<br \/>\n   merry tale with a friend refresheth a man much, and without any harm<br \/>\n   delighteth his mind and amendeth his courage and his stomach, so that<br \/>\n   it seemeth but well done to take such recreation. And Solomon saith, I<br \/>\n   believe, that men should in heaviness give the sorry man wine, to make<br \/>\n   him forget his sorrow. And St. Thomas saith that proper pleasant<br \/>\n   talking, which is called eutrapelia, is a good virtue, serving to<br \/>\n   refresh the mind and make it quick and eager to labour and study again,<br \/>\n   whereas continual fatigue would make it dull and deadly.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Cousin, I forgot not that point, but I longed not much to<br \/>\n   touch it. For neither might I well utterly forbear it, where it might<br \/>\n   befall that it should not hurt; and on the other hand, if it should so<br \/>\n   befall, methought that it should little need to give any man counsel to<br \/>\n   it&#8211;folk are prone enough to such fancies of their own mind! You may<br \/>\n   see this by ourselves who, coming now together to talk of as earnest<br \/>\n   sad matter as men can devise, were fallen yet even at the first into<br \/>\n   wanton idle tales. And of truth, cousin, as you know very well, I<br \/>\n   myself am by nature even half a gigglot and more. I wish I could as<br \/>\n   easily mend my fault as I well know it, but scant can I refrain it, as<br \/>\n   old a fool as I am. Howbeit, I will not be so partial to my fault as to<br \/>\n   praise it.<\/p>\n<p>   But since you ask my mind in the matter, as to whether men in<br \/>\n   tribulation may not lawfully seek recreation and comfort themselves<br \/>\n   with some honest mirth (first agreed that our chief comfort must be in<br \/>\n   God and that with him we must begin and with him continue and with him<br \/>\n   end also), that a man should take now and then some honest worldly<br \/>\n   mirth, I dare not be so sore as utterly to forbid it. For good men and<br \/>\n   well learned have in some cases allowed it, especially for the<br \/>\n   diversity of divers men&#8217;s minds. Otherwise, if we were also such as<br \/>\n   would God we were (and such as natural wisdom would that we should be,<br \/>\n   and is not clean excusable that we be not indeed), I would then put no<br \/>\n   doubt but that unto any man the most comforting talking that could be<br \/>\n   would be to hear of heaven. Whereas now, God help us, our wretchedness<br \/>\n   is such that in talking a while of it, men wax almost weary. And, as<br \/>\n   though to hear of heaven were a heavy burden, they must refresh<br \/>\n   themselves afterward with a foolish tale. Our affection toward heavenly<br \/>\n   joys waxeth wonderfully cold. If dread of hell were as far gone, very<br \/>\n   few would fear God, but that yet sticketh a little in our stomachs.<br \/>\n   Mark me, cousin, at the sermon, and commonly toward the end, somewhat<br \/>\n   the preacher speaketh of hell and heaven. Now, while he preacheth of<br \/>\n   the pains of hell, still they stay and give him the hearing. But as<br \/>\n   soon as he cometh to the joys of heaven, they are busking them backward<br \/>\n   and flockmeal fall away.<\/p>\n<p>   It is in the soul somewhat as it is in the body: There are some who are<br \/>\n   come, either by nature or by evil custom, to that point where a worse<br \/>\n   thing sometimes more steadeth them than a better. Some men, if they be<br \/>\n   sick, can away with no wholesome meat, nor no medicine can go down with<br \/>\n   them, unless it be tempered for their fancy with something that maketh<br \/>\n   the meat or the medicine less wholesome than it should be. And yet,<br \/>\n   while it will be no better, we must let them have it so.<\/p>\n<p>   Cassian (that very virtuous man) rehearseth in a certain conference of<br \/>\n   his that a certain holy father, in making of a sermon, spoke of heaven<br \/>\n   and heavenly things so celestially that much of his audience, with the<br \/>\n   sweet sound of it, began to forget all the world and fall asleep. When<br \/>\n   the father beheld this, he dissembled their sleeping and suddenly said<br \/>\n   to them, &#8220;I shall tell you a merry tale.&#8221; At that word they lifted up<br \/>\n   their heads and hearkened unto that, and afterward (their sleep being<br \/>\n   therewith broken) heard him tell on of heaven again. In what wise that<br \/>\n   good father rebuked then their untoward minds&#8211;so dull to the thing<br \/>\n   that all our life we labour for, and so quick and eager toward other<br \/>\n   trifles&#8211;I neither bear in mind nor shall here need to rehearse. But<br \/>\n   thus much of that matter sufficeth for our purpose, that whereas you<br \/>\n   demand of me whether in tribulation men may not sometimes refresh<br \/>\n   themselves with worldly mirth and recreation, I can only say that he<br \/>\n   who cannot long endure to hold up his head and hear talking of heaven<br \/>\n   unless he be now and then between refreshed (as though heaven were<br \/>\n   heaviness!) with a merry foolish tale, there is none other remedy but<br \/>\n   you must let him have it. Better would I wish it, but I cannot help it.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, by mine advice, let us at least make those kinds of recreation<br \/>\n   as short and as seldom as we can. Let them serve us but for sauce, and<br \/>\n   make themselves not our meat. And let us pray unto God&#8211;and all our<br \/>\n   good friends for us&#8211;that we may feel such a savour in the delight of<br \/>\n   heaven that in respect of the talking of its joys, all worldly<br \/>\n   recreation may be but a grief to think on. And be sure, cousin, that if<br \/>\n   we might once purchase the grace to come to that point, we never found<br \/>\n   of worldly recreation so much comfort in a year as we should find in<br \/>\n   the bethinking us of heaven for less than half an hour.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: In faith, uncle, I can well agree to this, and I pray God<br \/>\n   bring us once to take such a savour in it. And surely, as you began the<br \/>\n   other day, by faith must we come to it, and to faith by prayer.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, I pray you, good uncle, vouchsafe to proceed in our principal<br \/>\n   matter.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    II<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Cousin, I have bethought me somewhat upon this matter since we<br \/>\n   were last together. And I find it a thing that, if we should go some<br \/>\n   way to work, would require many more days to treat of than we should<br \/>\n   haply find for it in so few as I myself believe that I have yet to<br \/>\n   live. For every time is not alike with me. Among them, there are many<br \/>\n   painful, in which I look every day to depart; my mending days come very<br \/>\n   seldom and are very shortly done.<\/p>\n<p>   For surely, cousin, I cannot liken my life more fitly now than to the<br \/>\n   snuff of a candle that burneth within the candlestick&#8217;s nose. For the<br \/>\n   snuff sometimes burneth down so low that whosoever looketh on it would<br \/>\n   think it were quite out, and yet suddenly lifteth up a flame half an<br \/>\n   inch above the nose and giveth a pretty short light again, and thus<br \/>\n   playeth divers times till at last, ere it be looked for, out it goeth<br \/>\n   altogether. So have I, cousin, divers such days together as every day<br \/>\n   of them I look even to die, and yet have I then after that some such<br \/>\n   few days again as you yourself see me now to have, in which a man would<br \/>\n   think that I might yet well continue. But I know my lingering not<br \/>\n   likely to last long, but out will go my snuff suddenly some day within<br \/>\n   a while. And therefore will I, with God&#8217;s help, seem I never so well<br \/>\n   amended, nevertheless reckon every day for my last. For though, to the<br \/>\n   repressing of the bold courage of blind youth, there is a very true<br \/>\n   proverb that &#8220;as soon cometh a young sheep&#8217;s skin to the market as an<br \/>\n   old,&#8221; yet this difference there is at least between them: that as the<br \/>\n   young man may hap sometimes to die soon, so the old man can never live<br \/>\n   long.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, cousin, in our matter here, leaving out many things that<br \/>\n   I would otherwise treat of, I shall for this time speak but of very<br \/>\n   few. Howbeit, if God hereafter send me more such days, then will we,<br \/>\n   when you wish, further talk of more.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    III<\/p>\n<p>   All manner of tribulation, cousin, that any man can have, as far as for<br \/>\n   this time cometh to my mind, falleth under some one at least of these<br \/>\n   three kinds: Either it is such as he himself willingly taketh; or,<br \/>\n   secondly, such as he willingly suffereth; or, finally, such as he<br \/>\n   cannot put from him.<\/p>\n<p>   This third kind I purpose not to speak of now much more, for there<br \/>\n   shall suffice, for the time, those things that we treated between us<br \/>\n   the other day. What kind of tribulation this is, I am sure you yourself<br \/>\n   perceive. For sickness, imprisonment, loss of goods, loss of friends,<br \/>\n   or such bodily harm as a man hath already caught and can in no wise<br \/>\n   avoid&#8211;these things and such like are the third kind of tribulation<br \/>\n   that I speak of, which a man neither willingly taketh in the beginning,<br \/>\n   nor can (though he would) afterward put away.<\/p>\n<p>   Now think I that, just as no comfort can serve to the man who lacketh<br \/>\n   wit and faith, whatsoever counsel be given, so to those who have both I<br \/>\n   have, as for this kind, said in manner enough already. And considering<br \/>\n   that suffer it he must, since he can by no manner of means put it from<br \/>\n   him, the very necessity is half counsel enough to take it in good worth<br \/>\n   and bear it patiently, and rather of his patience to take both ease and<br \/>\n   thanks than by fretting and fuming to increase his present pain, and<br \/>\n   afterward by murmur and grudge to fall in further danger of displeasing<br \/>\n   God with his froward behaviour.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet, albeit that I think that what has been said sufficeth, yet<br \/>\n   here and there I shall in the second kind show some such comfort as<br \/>\n   shall well serve unto this last kind too.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    IV<\/p>\n<p>   The first kind also will I shortly pass over, too. For the tribulation<br \/>\n   that a man willingly taketh himself, which no man putteth upon him<br \/>\n   against his own will, is, you know as well as I (for it was somewhat<br \/>\n   touched the last day), such affliction of the flesh or expense of his<br \/>\n   goods as a man taketh himself or willingly bestoweth in punishment of<br \/>\n   his own sin and for devotion to God.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, in this tribulation needeth he no man to comfort him. For no man<br \/>\n   troubleth him but himself, who feeleth how far forth he may<br \/>\n   conveniently bear, and of reason and good discretion shall not pass<br \/>\n   that&#8211;and if any doubt arise therein, it is counsel that he needeth and<br \/>\n   not comfort. And so the courage that kindleth his heart and enflameth<br \/>\n   it for God&#8217;s sake and his soul&#8217;s health shall, by the same grace that<br \/>\n   put it in his mind, give him such comfort and joy therein that the<br \/>\n   pleasure of his soul shall surpass the pain of his body.<\/p>\n<p>   Yea, and while he hath in heart also some great heaviness for his sin,<br \/>\n   yet when he considereth the joy that shall come of it, his soul shall<br \/>\n   not fail to feel then that strange state which my body felt once in a<br \/>\n   great fever.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: What strange state was that, uncle?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Forsooth, cousin, even in this same bed, it is now more than<br \/>\n   fifteen years ago, I lay in a tertian fever. And I had passed, I<br \/>\n   believe, three or four fits, when afterward there fell on me one fit<br \/>\n   out of course, so strange and so marvellous that I would in good faith<br \/>\n   have thought it impossible. For I suddenly felt myself verily both hot<br \/>\n   and cold throughout all my body; not in one part the one and in another<br \/>\n   part the other&#8211;for it would have been, you know, no very strange thing<br \/>\n   to feel the head hot while the hands were cold&#8211;but the selfsame parts,<br \/>\n   I say, so God save my soul, I sensibly felt (and right painfully, too)<br \/>\n   all in one instant both hot and cold at once.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By my faith, uncle, this was a wonderful thing, and such as I<br \/>\n   never heard happen to any other man in my days. And few men are there<br \/>\n   out of whose mouths I could have believed it.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Courtesy, cousin, peradventure hindereth you from saying that<br \/>\n   you believe it not yet of my mouth, neither! And surely, for fear of<br \/>\n   that, you should not have heard it of me neither, had there not another<br \/>\n   thing happed me soon thereafter.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I pray you, what was that, good uncle?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Forsooth, cousin, this: I asked a physician or twain, who then<br \/>\n   considered how this should be possible, and they both twain told me<br \/>\n   that it could not be so, but that I was fallen into some slumber and<br \/>\n   dreamed that I felt it so.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This hap, hold I, little caused you to tell that tale more<br \/>\n   boldly!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: No, cousin, that is true, lo. But then happed there another: A<br \/>\n   young girl here in this town, whom a kinsman of hers had begun to teach<br \/>\n   physic, told me that there was such a kind of fever indeed.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By our Lady, uncle, save for the credence of you, the tale<br \/>\n   would I not yet tell again upon that hap of the maid! For though I know<br \/>\n   her now for such that I durst well believe her, it might hap her very<br \/>\n   well at that time to lie, because she would that you should take her<br \/>\n   for learned.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Yea, but then happed there yet another hap thereon, cousin,<br \/>\n   that a work of Galen, &#8220;De differentiis febrium,&#8221; is ready to be sold in<br \/>\n   the booksellers&#8217; shops, in which work she showed me then the chapter<br \/>\n   where Galen saith the same.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Marry, uncle, as you say, that hap happed well. And that maid<br \/>\n   had, as hap was, in that one point more learning than had both your<br \/>\n   physicians besides&#8211;and hath, I believe, at this day in many points<br \/>\n   more.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: In faith, so believe I too. She is very wise and well learned,<br \/>\n   and very virtuous too.<\/p>\n<p>   But see now what age is: lo, I have been so long in my tale that I have<br \/>\n   almost forgotten for what purpose I told it. Oh, now I remember me: As<br \/>\n   I say, just as I myself felt my body then both hot and cold at once, so<br \/>\n   he who is contrite and heavy for his sin shall have cause to be both<br \/>\n   glad and sad, and shall indeed be both twain at once. And he shall do<br \/>\n   as I remember holy St. Jerome biddeth&#8211;&#8220;Both be thou sorry,&#8221; saith he,<br \/>\n   &#8220;and be thou also of thy sorrow joyful.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And thus, as I began to say, to him that is in this tribulation&#8211;that<br \/>\n   is, in fruitful heaviness and penance for his sin&#8211;shall we need to<br \/>\n   give none other comfort than only to remember and consider well the<br \/>\n   goodness of God&#8217;s excellent mercy, that infinitely surpasseth the<br \/>\n   malice of all men&#8217;s sins. By that mercy he is ready to receive every<br \/>\n   man, and did spread his arms abroad upon the cross, lovingly to embrace<br \/>\n   all those who will come. And by that mercy he even there accepted the<br \/>\n   thief at his last end, who turned not to God till he might steal no<br \/>\n   longer, and yet maketh more feast in heaven for one who turneth from<br \/>\n   sin than for ninety-nine good men who sinned not at all.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore of that first kind of tribulation will I make no longer<br \/>\n   tale.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    V<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, uncle, this is very great comfort unto that kind of<br \/>\n   tribulation. And so great, also, that it may make many a man bold to<br \/>\n   abide in his sin even unto his end, trusting to be then saved as that<br \/>\n   thief was.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Very sooth you say, cousin, that some wretches are there who<br \/>\n   so abuse the great goodness of God that the better he is the worse in<br \/>\n   return are they. But, cousin, though there be more joy made of his<br \/>\n   turning who from the point of perdition cometh to salvation, for pity<br \/>\n   that God had and all his saints of the peril of perishing that the man<br \/>\n   stood in, yet is he not set in like state in heaven as he should have<br \/>\n   been if he had lived better before. Unless it so befall that he live so<br \/>\n   well afterward and do so much good that he outrun, in the shorter time,<br \/>\n   those good folk that yet did so much in much longer. This is proved in<br \/>\n   the blessed apostle St. Paul, who of a persecutor became an apostle,<br \/>\n   and last of all came in unto that office, and yet in the labour of<br \/>\n   sowing the seed of Christ&#8217;s faith outran all the rest so far that he<br \/>\n   forbore not to say of himself, &#8220;I have laboured more than all the rest<br \/>\n   have.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But yet, my cousin, though I doubt not that God be so merciful unto<br \/>\n   those who, at any time of their life, turn and ask his mercy and trust<br \/>\n   in it, though it be at the last end of a man&#8217;s life; and that he hireth<br \/>\n   him as well for heaven who cometh to work in his vineyard toward night<br \/>\n   at such time as workmen leave work, and goeth home, being then willing<br \/>\n   to work if time should serve, as he hireth him who cometh in the<br \/>\n   morning; yet may no man upon the trust of this parable be bold all his<br \/>\n   life to lie still in sin. For let him remember that no man goeth into<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s vineyard but he who is called thither. Now he who, in hope to be<br \/>\n   called toward the night, will sleep out the morning and drink out the<br \/>\n   day, is full likely to pass at night unspoken to. And then shall he<br \/>\n   with ill rest go supperless to bed!<\/p>\n<p>   They tell of one who was wont always to say that all the while he lived<br \/>\n   he would do what he pleased, for three words when he died should make<br \/>\n   all safe enough. But then it so happed that long ere he was old his<br \/>\n   horse once stumbled upon a broken bridge. And as he laboured to recover<br \/>\n   him, when he saw that it would not be, but that down into the flood<br \/>\n   headlong he must go, in sudden dismay he cried out in the falling,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Have all to the devil!&#8221; And there was he drowned with his three words<br \/>\n   ere he died, whereon his hope hung all his wretched life.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore let no man sin in hope of grace, for grace cometh but at<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s will, and that state of mind may be the hindrance that grace of<br \/>\n   fruitful repenting shall never after be offered him, but that he shall<br \/>\n   either graceless go linger on careless, or with a care that is<br \/>\n   fruitless shall fall into despair.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    VI<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, uncle, in this point methinketh you say very well.<br \/>\n   But then are there some again who say on the other hand that we shall<br \/>\n   need no heaviness for our sins at all, but need only change our intent<br \/>\n   and purpose to do better, and for all that is passed take no thought at<br \/>\n   all. And as for fasting and other affliction of the body, they say we<br \/>\n   should not do it save only to tame the flesh when we feel it wax wanton<br \/>\n   and begin to rebel. For fasting, they say, serveth to keep the body in<br \/>\n   temperance, but to fast for penance or to do any other good work,<br \/>\n   almsdeed or other, toward satisfaction for our own sins&#8211;this thing<br \/>\n   they call plain injury to the passion of Christ, by which alone our<br \/>\n   sins are forgiven freely without any recompense of our own. And they<br \/>\n   say that those who would do penance for their own sins look to be their<br \/>\n   own Christs, and pay their own ransoms, and save their souls<br \/>\n   themselves. And with these reasons in Saxony many cast fasting off, and<br \/>\n   all other bodily affliction, save only where need requireth to bring<br \/>\n   the body to temperance. For no other good, they say, can it do to<br \/>\n   ourselves, and then to our neighbour can it do none at all. And<br \/>\n   therefore they condemn it for superstitious folly. Now, heaviness of<br \/>\n   heart and weeping for our sins, this they reckon shame almost, and<br \/>\n   womanish childishness&#8211;howbeit, God be thanked, their women wax there<br \/>\n   now so mannish that they are not so childish, nor so poor of spirit,<br \/>\n   but what they can sin on as men do and be neither afraid nor ashamed<br \/>\n   nor weep for their sins at all.<\/p>\n<p>   And surely, mine uncle, I have marvelled the less ever since I heard<br \/>\n   the manner of their preachers there. For, as you remember, when I was<br \/>\n   in Saxony these matters were (in a manner) but in a mammering. Luther<br \/>\n   was not then wedded yet, nor religious men out of their habits, but<br \/>\n   those that would be of the sect were suffered freely to preach what<br \/>\n   they would unto the people. And forsooth I heard a religious man there<br \/>\n   myself&#8211;one that had been reputed and taken for very good, and who, as<br \/>\n   far as the folk perceived, was of his own living somewhat austere and<br \/>\n   sharp. But his preaching was wonderful! Methinketh I hear him yet, his<br \/>\n   voice so loud and shrill, his learning less than mean. But whereas his<br \/>\n   matter was much part against fasting and all affliction for any<br \/>\n   penance, which he called men&#8217;s inventions, he ever cried out upon them<br \/>\n   to keep well the laws of Christ, let go their childish penance, and<br \/>\n   purpose then to mend and seek nothing to salvation but the death of<br \/>\n   Christ. &#8220;For he is our justice, and he is our Saviour and our whole<br \/>\n   satisfaction for all our deadly sins. He did full penance for us all<br \/>\n   upon his painful cross, he washed us there all clean with the water of<br \/>\n   his sweet side, and brought us out of the devil&#8217;s danger with his dear<br \/>\n   precious blood. Leave therefore, leave, I beseech you, these inventions<br \/>\n   of men, your foolish Lenten fasts and your childish penance! Diminish<br \/>\n   never Christ&#8217;s thanks nor look to save yourselves! It is Christ&#8217;s<br \/>\n   death, I tell you, that must save us all&#8211;Christ&#8217;s death, I tell you<br \/>\n   yet again, and not our own deeds. Leave your own fasting, therefore,<br \/>\n   and lean to Christ alone, good Christian people, for Christ&#8217;s dear<br \/>\n   bitter passion!&#8221; Now, so loud and shrill he cried &#8220;Christ&#8221; in their<br \/>\n   ears, and so thick he came forth with Christ&#8217;s bitter passion, and that<br \/>\n   so bitterly spoken with the sweat dropping down his cheeks, that I<br \/>\n   marvelled not that I saw the poor women weep. For he made my own hair<br \/>\n   stand up upon my head.<\/p>\n<p>   And with such preaching were the people so taken in that some fell to<br \/>\n   break their fast on the fasting days, not of frailty or of malice<br \/>\n   first, but almost of devotion, lest they should take from Christ the<br \/>\n   thanks of his bitter passion. But when they were awhile nursled in that<br \/>\n   point first, they could afterward abide and endure many things more,<br \/>\n   for which, if he had begun with them, they would have pulled him down.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Cousin, God amend that man, whatsoever he be, and God keep all<br \/>\n   good folk from such manner of preachers! One such preacher much more<br \/>\n   abuseth the name of Christ and of his bitter passion than do five<br \/>\n   hundred gamblers who in their idle business swear and foreswear<br \/>\n   themselves by his holy bitter passion at dice. They carry the minds of<br \/>\n   the people from perceiving their craft by the continual naming of the<br \/>\n   name of Christ, and crying his passion so shrill into their ears that<br \/>\n   they forget that the Church hath ever taught them that all our penance<br \/>\n   without Christ&#8217;s passion would not be worth a pea. And they make the<br \/>\n   people think that we wish to be saved by our own deeds, without<br \/>\n   Christ&#8217;s death; whereas we confess that his passion alone meriteth<br \/>\n   incomparably more for us than all our own deeds do, but that it is his<br \/>\n   pleasure that we shall also take pain ourselves with him. And therefore<br \/>\n   he biddeth all who will be his disciples to take their crosses on their<br \/>\n   backs as he did, and with their crosses follow him.<\/p>\n<p>   And where they say that fasting serveth but for temperance to tame the<br \/>\n   flesh and keep it from wantonness, I would in good faith have thought<br \/>\n   that Moses had not been so wild that for the taming of his flesh he<br \/>\n   should have need to fast whole forty days together. No, not Hely<br \/>\n   neither. Nor yet our Saviour himself, who began the Lenten forty-days<br \/>\n   fast&#8211;and the apostles followed, and all Christendom hath kept it&#8211;that<br \/>\n   these folk call now so foolish. King Achab was not disposed to be<br \/>\n   wanton in his flesh, when he fasted and went clothed in sackcloth and<br \/>\n   all besprent with ashes. No more was the king in Nineveh and all the<br \/>\n   city, but they wailed and did painful penance for their sin to procure<br \/>\n   God to pity them and withdraw his indignation. Anna, who in her<br \/>\n   widowhood abode so many years with fasting and praying in the temple<br \/>\n   till the birth of Christ, was not, I suppose, in her old age so sore<br \/>\n   disposed to the wantonness of the flesh that she fasted for all that.<br \/>\n   Nor St. Paul, who fasted so much, fasted not all for that, neither. The<br \/>\n   scripture is full of places that prove fasting to be not the invention<br \/>\n   of man but the institution of God, and to have many more profits than<br \/>\n   one. And that the fasting of one man may do good unto another, our<br \/>\n   Saviour showeth himself where he saith that some kind of devils cannot<br \/>\n   be cast out of one man by another &#8220;without prayer and fasting.&#8221; And<br \/>\n   therefore I marvel that they take this way against fasting and other<br \/>\n   bodily penance.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet much more I marvel that they mislike the sorrow and heaviness<br \/>\n   and displeasure of mind that a man should take in thinking of his sin.<br \/>\n   The prophet saith, &#8220;Tear your hearts and not your clothes.&#8221; And the<br \/>\n   prophet David saith, &#8220;A contrite heart and an humbled&#8221;&#8211;that is to say,<br \/>\n   a heart broken, torn, and laid low under foot with tribulation of<br \/>\n   heaviness for his sins&#8211;&#8220;shalt thou not, good Lord, despise.&#8221; He saith<br \/>\n   also of his own contrition, &#8220;I have laboured in my wailing; I shall<br \/>\n   every night wash my bed with my tears, my couch will I water.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But why should I need in this matter to lay forth one place or twain?<br \/>\n   The scripture is full of those places, by which it plainly appeareth<br \/>\n   that God looketh of duty, not only that we should amend and be better<br \/>\n   in the time to come, but also that we should be sorry and weep and<br \/>\n   bewail our sins committed before. And all the old holy doctors be full<br \/>\n   and whole of that opinion, that men must have for their sins contrition<br \/>\n   and sorrow in heart.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    VII<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, uncle, this thing yet seemeth to me a somewhat sore<br \/>\n   sentence, not because I think otherwise but that there is good cause<br \/>\n   and great wherefore a man should so sorrow, but because of truth<br \/>\n   sometimes a man cannot be sorry and heavy for his sin that he hath<br \/>\n   done, though he never so fain would. But though he can be content for<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s sake to forbear it thenceforth, yet not only can he not weep for<br \/>\n   every sin that is past, but some were haply so wanton that when he<br \/>\n   happeth to remember them he can scantly forbear to laugh.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, if contrition and sorrow of heart be so requisite of necessity to<br \/>\n   remission, many a man should stand, it seemeth, in a very perilous<br \/>\n   state.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Many so should indeed, cousin, and indeed many do so. And the<br \/>\n   old saints write very sore on this point. Howbeit, &#8220;the mercy of God is<br \/>\n   above all his works,&#8221; and he standeth bound to no common rule. &#8220;And he<br \/>\n   knoweth the frailty of this earthen vessel that is of his own making,<br \/>\n   and is merciful and hath pity and compassion upon our feeble<br \/>\n   infirmities,&#8221; and shall not exact of us above the thing that we can do.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet, cousin, he who findeth himself in that state, let him give God<br \/>\n   thanks that he is no worse, in that he is minded to do well hereafter.<br \/>\n   But in that he cannot be sorry for his sin passed, let him be sorry at<br \/>\n   least that he is no better. And as St. Jerome biddeth him who sorroweth<br \/>\n   in his heart for sin to be glad and rejoice in his sorrow, so would I<br \/>\n   counsel him who cannot be sad for his sin to be sorry at least that he<br \/>\n   cannot be sorry!<\/p>\n<p>   Besides this, though I would in no wise that any man should despair,<br \/>\n   yet would I counsel such a man while that affection lasteth not to be<br \/>\n   bold of courage, but to live in double fear: First, because it is a<br \/>\n   token either of faint faith or of a dull diligence. For surely if we<br \/>\n   believe in God, and therewith deeply consider his high majesty, with<br \/>\n   the peril of our sin and the great goodness of God also, then either<br \/>\n   dread should make us tremble and break our stony heart, or love should<br \/>\n   for sorrow relent it into tears. Besides this, because, since so little<br \/>\n   misliking of our old sin is an affection not very pure and clean, and<br \/>\n   since no unclean thing shall enter into heaven, I can scantly believe<br \/>\n   but it shall be cleansed and purified before we come there. And<br \/>\n   therefore would I further give one in that state the counsel which<br \/>\n   Master Gerson giveth every man: that since the body and the soul<br \/>\n   together make the whole man, the less affliction he feeleth in his<br \/>\n   soul, the more pain in recompense let him put upon his body, and purge<br \/>\n   the spirit by the affliction of the flesh. And he who so doth, I dare<br \/>\n   lay my life, shall have his hard heart afterward relent into tears, and<br \/>\n   his soul in a wholesome heaviness and heavenly gladness too&#8211;especially<br \/>\n   if he join therewith faithful prayer, which must be joined with every<br \/>\n   good thing.<\/p>\n<p>   But, cousin, as I told you the other day, in these matters with these<br \/>\n   new men I will not dispute, but surely for mine own part I cannot well<br \/>\n   hold with them. For as far as mine own poor wit can perceive, the holy<br \/>\n   scripture of God is very plain against them, and the whole corps of<br \/>\n   Christendom in every Christan region. And the very places in which they<br \/>\n   dwell themselves have ever unto their own days clearly believed against<br \/>\n   them and all the old holy doctors have evermore taught against them,<br \/>\n   and all the old holy interpreters have construed against them. And<br \/>\n   therefore if these men have now perceived so late that the scripture<br \/>\n   hath been misunderstood all this while, and that of all those old holy<br \/>\n   doctors no man could understand it, then am I too old at this age to<br \/>\n   begin to study it now! And I dare not in no wise trust these men&#8217;s<br \/>\n   learning, cousin, since I cannot see nor perceive any cause wherefore I<br \/>\n   should think that these men might not now in the understanding of<br \/>\n   scripture as well be deceived themselves as they would have us believe<br \/>\n   all those others have been, all this while before.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, cousin, if it so be that their way be not wrong, but that they<br \/>\n   have found out so easy a way to heaven as to take no thought, but make<br \/>\n   merry, nor take no penance at all, but sit them down and drink well for<br \/>\n   our Saviour&#8217;s sake&#8211;set cockahoop and fill all the cups at once, and<br \/>\n   then let Christ&#8217;s passion pay for all the scot&#8211;I am not he who will<br \/>\n   envy their good hap. But surely, counsel dare I give no man to<br \/>\n   adventure that way with them. But those who fear lest that way be not<br \/>\n   sure, and take upon themselves willingly tribulation of penance&#8211;what<br \/>\n   comfort they do take, and well may take therein, that have I somewhat<br \/>\n   told you already. And since these other folk sit so merry with such<br \/>\n   tribulation, we need talk to them, you know, of no such manner of<br \/>\n   comfort.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore of this kind of tribulation will I make an end.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    VIII<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, good uncle, so may you well do, for you have brought<br \/>\n   it unto a very good pass.<\/p>\n<p>   And now, I pray you, come to the other kind, of which you purposed<br \/>\n   always to treat last.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That shall I, cousin, very gladly do. The other kind is the<br \/>\n   one which I rehearsed second, and (sorting out the other two) have kept<br \/>\n   for the last. This second kind of tribulation is, you know, of those<br \/>\n   who willingly suffer tribulation, though of their own choice they took<br \/>\n   it not at first.<\/p>\n<p>   This kind, cousin, we shall divide into twain; the first we might call<br \/>\n   temptation, the second persecution. But here must you consider that I<br \/>\n   mean not every kind of persecution, but only that kind which, though<br \/>\n   the sufferer would be loth to fall in, yet will he rather abide it and<br \/>\n   suffer than, by flying from it, fall into the displeasure of God or<br \/>\n   leave God&#8217;s pleasure unprocured. Howbeit, if we well consider these two<br \/>\n   things, temptation and persecution, we may find that either of them is<br \/>\n   incident into the other. For both by temptation the devil persecuteth<br \/>\n   us, and by persecution the devil also tempteth us. And as persecution<br \/>\n   is tribulation to every man, so is temptation tribulation to a good<br \/>\n   man. Now, though the devil, our spiritual enemy, fight against man in<br \/>\n   both, yet this difference hath the common temptation from the<br \/>\n   persecution: Temptation is, as it were, the fiend&#8217;s snare, and<br \/>\n   persecution his plain open fight. And therefore will I now call all<br \/>\n   this kind of tribulation here by the name of temptation, and that shall<br \/>\n   I divide into two parts. The first shall I call the devil&#8217;s snares, the<br \/>\n   other his open fight.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    IX<\/p>\n<p>   To speak of every kind of temptation particularly, by itself, would be,<br \/>\n   you know, in a manner an infinite thing. For under that, as I told you,<br \/>\n   fall persecutions and all. And the devil hath a thousand subtle ways of<br \/>\n   his snares, and of his open fight as many sundry poisoned darts. He<br \/>\n   tempteth us by the world, he tempteth us by our own flesh; he tempteth<br \/>\n   us by pleasure, he tempteth us by pain; he tempteth us by our foes, he<br \/>\n   tempteth us by our own friends&#8211;and, under colour of kindred, he maketh<br \/>\n   many times our nearest friends our most foes. For, as our Saviour said,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Inimici hominis domestici eius.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But in all manner of so diverse temptations, one marvellous comfort is<br \/>\n   that, the more we be tempted, the gladder have we cause to be. For, as<br \/>\n   St. James saith, &#8220;Esteem and take it, my brethren, for a thing of all<br \/>\n   joy when you fall into diverse and sundry manner of temptations.&#8221; And<br \/>\n   no marvel, for there is in this world set up (as it were) a game of<br \/>\n   wrestling, in which the people of God come in on the one side, and on<br \/>\n   the other side come mighty strong wrestlers and wily&#8211;that is, the<br \/>\n   devils, the cursed proud damned spirits. For it is not our flesh alone<br \/>\n   that we must wrestle with, but with the devil too. &#8220;Our wrestling is<br \/>\n   not here,&#8221; saith St. Paul, &#8220;against flesh and blood, but against the<br \/>\n   princes and potentates of these dark regions, against the spiritual<br \/>\n   wicked ghosts of the air.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But as God hath prepared a crown for those who on his side give his<br \/>\n   adversary the fall, so he who will not wrestle shall have none. For, as<br \/>\n   St. Paul saith, &#8220;There shall no man have the crown but he who<br \/>\n   contendeth for it according to the law of the game.&#8221; And then, as holy<br \/>\n   St. Bernard saith, how couldst thou fight or wrestle for it, if there<br \/>\n   were no challenger against thee who would provoke thee thereto? And<br \/>\n   therefore may it be a great comfort, as St. James saith, to every man<br \/>\n   who feeleth himself challenged and provoked by temptation. For thereby<br \/>\n   perceiveth he that it cometh to his course to wrestle, which shall be,<br \/>\n   unless he willingly play the coward or the fool, the matter of his<br \/>\n   eternal reward.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    X<\/p>\n<p>   But now must this needs be to man an inestimable comfort in all<br \/>\n   temptation if his faith fail him not: that is, that he may be sure that<br \/>\n   God is always ready to give him strength against the devil&#8217;s might and<br \/>\n   wisdom against the devil&#8217;s snares.<\/p>\n<p>   For, as the prophet saith, &#8220;My strength and my praise is our Lord, he<br \/>\n   hath been my safeguard.&#8221; And the scripture saith, &#8220;Ask wisdom of God<br \/>\n   and he shall give it thee,&#8221; in order &#8220;that you may espy,&#8221; as St. Paul<br \/>\n   saith, &#8220;and perceive all the crafts.&#8221; A great comfort may this be in<br \/>\n   all kinds of temptation, that God hath so his hand upon him who is<br \/>\n   willing to stand and will trust in him and call upon him, that he hath<br \/>\n   made him sure by many faithful promises in holy scripture that either<br \/>\n   he shall not fall or, if he sometimes through faintness of faith<br \/>\n   stagger and hap to fall, yet if he call upon God betimes his fall shall<br \/>\n   be no sore bruising to him. But as the scripture saith, &#8220;The just man,<br \/>\n   though he fall, shall not be bruised, for our Lord holdeth under his<br \/>\n   hand.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   The prophet expresseth a plain comfortable promise of God against all<br \/>\n   temptations where he saith, &#8220;Whoso dwelleth in the help of the highest<br \/>\n   God, he shall abide in the protection or defence of the God of heaven.&#8221;<br \/>\n   Who dwelleth, now, good cousin, in the help of the high God? Surely, he<br \/>\n   who through a good faith abideth in the trust and confidence of God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   help, and neither, for lack of that faith and trust in his help,<br \/>\n   falleth desperate of all help, nor departeth from the hope of his help<br \/>\n   to seek himself help (as I told you the other day) from the flesh, the<br \/>\n   world, or the devil.<\/p>\n<p>   Now he then who by fast faith and sure hope dwelleth in God&#8217;s help, and<br \/>\n   hangeth always upon that hope, never falling from it, he shall, saith<br \/>\n   the prophet, ever dwell and abide in God&#8217;s defence and protection. That<br \/>\n   is to say, while he faileth not to believe well and hope well, God will<br \/>\n   never fail in all temptation to defend him. For unto such a faithful<br \/>\n   well-hoping man the prophet in the same psalm saith further, &#8220;With his<br \/>\n   shoulders shall he shadow thee, and under his feathers shalt thou<br \/>\n   trust.&#8221; Lo, here hath every faithful man a sure promise that in the<br \/>\n   fervent heat of temptation or tribulation&#8211;for, as I have said divers<br \/>\n   times before, each is in such wise incident to the other that the devil<br \/>\n   useth every tribulation for temptation to bring us to impatience, and<br \/>\n   thereby to murmur and grudge and blasphemy; and every kind of<br \/>\n   temptation, to a good man who fighteth against it and will not follow<br \/>\n   it, is a very painful tribulation. In the fervent heat, I say<br \/>\n   therefore, of every temptation, God giveth the faithful man who hopeth<br \/>\n   in him the shadow of his holy shoulders. His shoulders are broad and<br \/>\n   large enough to cool and refresh the man in that heat, and in every<br \/>\n   tribulation he putteth them for a defence between. And then what weapon<br \/>\n   of the devil may give us any deadly wound, while that impenetrable<br \/>\n   shield of the shoulder of God standeth always between?<\/p>\n<p>   Then goeth the verse further, and saith unto such a faithful man,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Thine hope shall be under his feathers.&#8221; That is, for the good hope<br \/>\n   thou hast in his help, he will take thee so near him into his<br \/>\n   protection that, as the hen, to keep her young chickens from the kite,<br \/>\n   nestled them together under her wings, so from the devil&#8217;s claws&#8211;the<br \/>\n   ravenous kite of this dark air&#8211;will the God of heaven gather the<br \/>\n   faithful trusting folk near unto his own sides, and set them in surety,<br \/>\n   very well and warm, under the covering of his heavenly wings. And of<br \/>\n   this defence and protection, our Saviour spoke himself unto the Jews,<br \/>\n   as mention is made in the twenty-third chapter of St. Matthew, to whom<br \/>\n   he said in this wise: &#8220;Jerusalem, Jerusalem, that killest the prophets<br \/>\n   and stonest unto death them that are sent to thee, how often would I<br \/>\n   have gathered thee together, as the hen gathereth her chickens under<br \/>\n   her wings, and thou wouldst not.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Here are, cousin Vincent, words of no little comfort unto every<br \/>\n   Christian man. For by them we may see with what tender affection God of<br \/>\n   his great goodness longeth to gather us under the protection of his<br \/>\n   wings, and how often like a loving hen he clucketh home unto him even<br \/>\n   those chickens of his that wilfully walk abroad into the kite&#8217;s danger<br \/>\n   and will not come at his clucking, but ever, the more he clucketh for<br \/>\n   them, the farther they go from him. And therefore can we not doubt<br \/>\n   that, if we will follow him and with faithful hope come running to him,<br \/>\n   he shall in all matter of temptation take us near unto him and set us<br \/>\n   even under his wing. And then are we safe, if we will tarry there, for<br \/>\n   against our will no power can pull us thence, nor hurt our souls there.<br \/>\n   &#8220;Set me near unto thee,&#8221; saith the prophet, &#8220;and fight against me whose<br \/>\n   hand that will.&#8221; And to show the great safeguard and surety that we<br \/>\n   shall have while we sit under his heavenly feathers, the prophet saith<br \/>\n   yet a great deal further, &#8220;In velamento alarum tuarum exaltabo.&#8221; That<br \/>\n   is, that we shall not only sit in safeguard when we sit by his sweet<br \/>\n   side under his holy wing, but we shall also under the covering of his<br \/>\n   heavenly wings with great exultation rejoice.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XI<\/p>\n<p>   Now, in the two next verses following, the prophet briefly<br \/>\n   comprehendeth four kinds of temptations, and therein all the<br \/>\n   tribulation that we shall now speak of, and also some part of that<br \/>\n   which we have spoken of before. And therefore I shall peradventure<br \/>\n   (unless any further thing fall in our way) with treating of those two<br \/>\n   verses, finish and end all our matter.<\/p>\n<p>   The prophet saith in the ninetieth psalm, &#8220;Scuto circumdabit te veritas<br \/>\n   eius; non timebis a timore nocturno, a sagitta volante in die, a<br \/>\n   negotio perambulante in tenebris, ab incurso et demonio meridiano. The<br \/>\n   truth of God shall compass thee about with a shield, you shall not be<br \/>\n   afraid of the night&#8217;s fear, nor of the arrow flying in the day, nor of<br \/>\n   business walking about in the darknesses, nor of the incursion or<br \/>\n   invasion of the devil in the midday.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   First, cousin, in these words &#8220;the truth of God shall compass thee<br \/>\n   about with a shield,&#8221; the prophet for the comfort of every good man in<br \/>\n   all temptation and in all tribulation, besides those other things that<br \/>\n   he said before&#8211;that the shoulders of God should shadow them and that<br \/>\n   also they should sit under his wing&#8211;here saith he further that the<br \/>\n   truth of God shall compass thee with a shield. That is, as God hath<br \/>\n   faithfully promised to protect and defend those that faithfully will<br \/>\n   dwell in the trust of his help, so will he truly perform it. And thou<br \/>\n   who art such a one, the truth of his promise will defend thee not with<br \/>\n   a little round buckler that scantly can cover the head, but with a long<br \/>\n   large shield that covereth all along the body. This shield is made (as<br \/>\n   holy St. Bernard saith) broad above with the Godhead and narrow beneath<br \/>\n   with the Manhood, so that it is our Saviour Christ himself. And yet is<br \/>\n   this shield not like other shields of the world, which are so made that<br \/>\n   while they defend one part the man may be wounded upon another. But<br \/>\n   this shield is such that, as the prophet saith, it shall round about<br \/>\n   enclose and compass thee, so that thine enemy shall hurt thy soul on no<br \/>\n   side. For &#8220;with a shield,&#8221; saith he, &#8220;shall his truth environ and<br \/>\n   compass thee round about.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And then incontinently following, to the intent that we should see that<br \/>\n   it is not without necessity that the shield of God should compass us<br \/>\n   about upon every side, he showeth in what wise we are environed by the<br \/>\n   devil upon every side with snares and assaults, by four kinds of<br \/>\n   temptations and tribulations. Against all this compass of temptations<br \/>\n   and tribulations that round-compassing shield of God&#8217;s truth shall so<br \/>\n   defend us and keep us safe that we shall need to dread none of them at<br \/>\n   all.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XII<\/p>\n<p>   First, he saith, &#8220;thou shalt not be afraid of the fear of the night.&#8221;<br \/>\n   By the night is there in scripture sometimes understood tribulation, as<br \/>\n   appeareth in the thirty-fourth chapter of Job: &#8220;God hath known the<br \/>\n   works of them, and therefore shall he bring night upon them,&#8221; that is,<br \/>\n   tribulation for their wickedness. And well you know that the night is<br \/>\n   of its own nature discomfortable and full of fear. And therefore by the<br \/>\n   night&#8217;s fear here I understand the tribulation by which the devil,<br \/>\n   through the sufference of God, either by himself or by others who are<br \/>\n   his instruments, tempteth good folk to impatience as he did Job. But he<br \/>\n   who, as the prophet saith, dwelleth and continueth faithfully in the<br \/>\n   hope of God&#8217;s help, shall so be clipped in on every side with the<br \/>\n   shield of God that he shall have no need to be afraid of such<br \/>\n   tribulation as is here called the night&#8217;s fear. And it may be also<br \/>\n   fittingly called the night&#8217;s fear for two causes: One, because many<br \/>\n   times, unto him who suffereth, the cause of his tribulation is dark and<br \/>\n   unknown. And therein it varieth and differeth from that tribulation by<br \/>\n   which the devil tempteth a man with open fight and assault for a known<br \/>\n   good thing from which he would withdraw him, or for some known evil<br \/>\n   thing into which he would drive him by force of such persecution.<br \/>\n   Another cause for which it is called the night&#8217;s fear may be because<br \/>\n   the night is so far out of courage, and naturally so casteth folk into<br \/>\n   fear, that their fancy doubleth their fear of everything of which they<br \/>\n   perceive any manner of dread, and maketh them often think that it were<br \/>\n   much worse than indeed it is.<\/p>\n<p>   The prophet saith in the psalter, &#8220;Thou hast, good Lord, set the<br \/>\n   darkness and made was the night, and in the night walk all the beasts<br \/>\n   of the woods, the whelps of the lions roaring and calling unto God for<br \/>\n   their meat.&#8221; Now, though the lions&#8217; whelps walk about roaring in the<br \/>\n   night and seek for their prey, yet can they not get such meat as they<br \/>\n   would always, but must hold themselves content with such as God<br \/>\n   suffereth to fall in their way. And though they be not aware of it, yet<br \/>\n   of God they ask it and of him they have it. And this may be comfort to<br \/>\n   all good men in their night&#8217;s fear, that though they fall in their dark<br \/>\n   tribulation into the claws of the devil or the teeth of those lions&#8217;<br \/>\n   whelps, yet all that they can do shall not pass beyond the body, which<br \/>\n   is but as the garment of the soul. For the soul itself, which is the<br \/>\n   substance of the man, is so surely fenced in round about with the<br \/>\n   shield of God, that as long as he will abide faithfully in the hope of<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s help the lions&#8217; whelp shall not be able to hurt it. For the great<br \/>\n   Lion himself could never be suffered to go further in the tribulation<br \/>\n   of Job than God from time to time gave him leave.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore the deep darkness of the midnight maketh men who stand<br \/>\n   out of faith and out of good hope in God to be in far the greater fear<br \/>\n   in their tribulation, for lack of the light of faith, by which they<br \/>\n   might perceive that the uttermost of their peril is a far less thing<br \/>\n   than they take it for. But we are so wont to set so much by our body,<br \/>\n   which we see and feel, and in the feeding and fostering of which we set<br \/>\n   out delight and our wealth; and so little (alas) and so seldom we think<br \/>\n   upon our soul, because we cannot see that but by spiritual<br \/>\n   understanding, and most especially by the eye of our faith (in the<br \/>\n   meditation of which we bestow, God knows, little time), that the loss<br \/>\n   of our body we take for a sorer thing and for a great deal greater<br \/>\n   tribulation than we do the loss of our soul. Our Saviour biddeth us not<br \/>\n   fear those lions&#8217; whelps that can but kill our bodies and when that is<br \/>\n   done have no further thing in their power with which they can do us<br \/>\n   harm, but he biddeth us stand in dread of him who when he hath slain<br \/>\n   the body is able then beside to cast the soul into everlasting fire.<br \/>\n   Yet are we so blind in the dark night of tribulation, for lack of full<br \/>\n   and fast belief of God&#8217;s word, that, whereas in the day of prosperity<br \/>\n   we very little fear God for our soul, our night&#8217;s fear of adversity<br \/>\n   maketh us very sore to fear the lion and his whelps for dread of loss<br \/>\n   of our bodies. And whereas St. Paul in sundry places telleth us that<br \/>\n   our body is but the garment of the soul, yet the faintness of our faith<br \/>\n   in the scripture of God maketh us, with the night&#8217;s fear of<br \/>\n   tribulation, not only to dread the loss of our body more than that of<br \/>\n   our soul&#8211;that is, of the clothing more than of the substance that is<br \/>\n   clothed therewith&#8211;but also of the very outward goods that serve for<br \/>\n   the clothing of the body. And much more foolish are we in that dark<br \/>\n   night&#8217;s fear than would be a man who would forget the saving of his<br \/>\n   body for fear of losing his old rain-beaten cloak, that is but the<br \/>\n   covering of his gown or his coat. Now, consider further yet, that the<br \/>\n   prophet in the afore-remembered verses saith that in the night there<br \/>\n   walk not only the lions&#8217; whelps but also &#8220;all the beasts of the wood.&#8221;<br \/>\n   Now, you know that if a man walk through the wood in the night, many<br \/>\n   things can make him afraid of which in the day he would not be afraid a<br \/>\n   whit. For in the night every bush, to him that waxeth once afraid,<br \/>\n   seemeth a thief.<\/p>\n<p>   I remember that when I was a young man, I was once in the war with the<br \/>\n   king then my master (God absolve his soul) and we were camped within<br \/>\n   the Turk&#8217;s ground many a mile beyond Belgrade&#8211;would God it were ours<br \/>\n   now as it was then! But so happed it that in our camp about midnight<br \/>\n   there suddenly rose a rumour and a cry that the Turk&#8217;s whole army was<br \/>\n   secretly stealing upon us. Therewith our whole host was warned to arm<br \/>\n   them in haste and set themselves in array to fight. And then were<br \/>\n   runners of ours, who had brought those sudden tidings, examined more<br \/>\n   leisurely by the council, as to what surety or what likelihood they had<br \/>\n   perceived. And one of them said that by the glimmering of the moon he<br \/>\n   had espied and perceived and seen them himself, coming on softly and<br \/>\n   soberly in a long range, all in good order, not one farther forth than<br \/>\n   the other in the forefront, but as even as a third, and in breadth<br \/>\n   farther than he could see the length. His fellows, being examined, said<br \/>\n   that he had somewhat pricked forth before them, and came back so fast<br \/>\n   to tell it to them that they thought it rather time to make haste and<br \/>\n   giving warning to the camp than to go nearer unto them. For they were<br \/>\n   not so far off but what they had yet themselves somewhat an imperfect<br \/>\n   sight of them, too. Thus stood we on watch all the rest of the night,<br \/>\n   evermore hearkening when we should hear them come, but &#8220;Hush, stand<br \/>\n   still! Methink I hear a trampling,&#8221; so that at last many of us thought<br \/>\n   we heard them ourselves too. But when the day was sprung, and we saw no<br \/>\n   one, out was our runner sent again, and some of our captains with him,<br \/>\n   to show whereabout was the place in which he had perceived them. And<br \/>\n   when they came thither, they found that the great fearful army of the<br \/>\n   Turks, so soberly coming on, turned (God be thanked) into a fair long<br \/>\n   hedge standing even stone-still.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus fareth it in the night&#8217;s fear of tribulation, in which the<br \/>\n   devil, to bear down and overwhelm with dread the faithful hope that we<br \/>\n   should have in God, casteth in our imagination much more fear than<br \/>\n   cause. For since there walk in that night not only the lion&#8217;s whelps<br \/>\n   but all the beasts of the wood beside, the beast that we hear roar in<br \/>\n   the dark night of tribulation, and fear for a lion, we sometimes find<br \/>\n   well afterward in the way that it was no lion at all, but a silly rude<br \/>\n   roaring ass. And sometimes the thing that on the sea seemeth a rock is<br \/>\n   indeed nothing else but a mist. Howbeit, as the prophet saith, he that<br \/>\n   faithfully dwelleth in the hope of God&#8217;s help, the shield of his truth<br \/>\n   shall so fence him round about that, be it an ass or a colt or a lion&#8217;s<br \/>\n   whelp, or a rock of stone or a mist, the night&#8217;s fear thereof shall be<br \/>\n   nothing to dread.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XIII<\/p>\n<p>   Therefore find I that in the night&#8217;s fear one great part is the fault<br \/>\n   of pusillanimity; that is, of faint and feeble stomach, by which a man<br \/>\n   for faint heart is afraid where he needeth not. By reason of this, he<br \/>\n   flieth oftentime for fear of something of which, if he fled not, he<br \/>\n   should take no harm. And a man doth sometimes by his fleeing make an<br \/>\n   enemy bold on him, who would, if he fled not but dared abide, give over<br \/>\n   and fly from him.<\/p>\n<p>   This fault of pusillanimity maketh a man in his tribulation first, for<br \/>\n   feeble heart, impatient. And afterward oftentimes it driveth him by<br \/>\n   impatience into a contrary affection, making him frowardly stubborn and<br \/>\n   angry against God, and thereby to fall into blasphemy, as do the damned<br \/>\n   souls in hell. This fault of pusillanimity and timorous mind hindereth<br \/>\n   a man also many times from doing many good things which, if he took a<br \/>\n   good stomach to him in the trust of God&#8217;s help, he would be well able<br \/>\n   to do. But the devil casteth him in a cowardice and maketh him take it<br \/>\n   for humility to think himself unfit and unable to do them. And<br \/>\n   therefore he leaveth undone the good thing of which God offereth him<br \/>\n   occasion and to which he had made him fit.<\/p>\n<p>   But such folk have need to lift up their hearts and call upon God, and<br \/>\n   by the counsel of other good spiritual folk to cast away the cowardice<br \/>\n   of their own conceiving which the night&#8217;s fear by the devil hath framed<br \/>\n   in their fancy. And they have need to look in the gospel upon him who<br \/>\n   laid up his talent and left it unoccupied and therefore utterly lost<br \/>\n   it, with a great reproach of his pusillanimity, but which he had<br \/>\n   thought to have excused himself, in that he was afraid to put it forth<br \/>\n   into use and occupy it.<\/p>\n<p>   And all this fear cometh by the devil&#8217;s drift, wherein he taketh<br \/>\n   occasion of the faintness of our good and sure trust in God. And<br \/>\n   therefore let us faithfully dwell in the good hope of his help, and<br \/>\n   then shall the shield of his truth so compass us about that of this<br \/>\n   night&#8217;s fear we shall have no fear at all.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XIV<\/p>\n<p>   This pusillanimity bringeth forth, by the night&#8217;s fear, a very timorous<br \/>\n   daughter, a silly wretched girl and ever whining, who is called<br \/>\n   Scrupulosity, or a scrupulous conscience.<\/p>\n<p>   This girl is a good enough maidservant in a house, never idle but ever<br \/>\n   occupied and busy. But albeit she hath a very gentle mistress who<br \/>\n   loveth her well and is well content with what she doth&#8211;or, if all be<br \/>\n   not well (as all cannot always be well), is content to pardon her as<br \/>\n   she doth others of her fellows, and letteth her know that she will do<br \/>\n   so&#8211;yet can this peevish girl never cease whining and puling for fear<br \/>\n   lest her mistress be always angry with her and she shall severely be<br \/>\n   chidden. Would her mistress, think you, be likely to be content with<br \/>\n   this condition? Nay, surely not.<\/p>\n<p>   I knew such a one myself, whose mistress was a very wise woman and (a<br \/>\n   thing which is in women very rare) very mild also and meek, and liked<br \/>\n   very well such service as she did her in the house. But she so much<br \/>\n   misliked this continual discomfortable fashion of hers that she would<br \/>\n   sometimes say, &#8220;Eh, what aileth this girl? The elvish urchin thinketh I<br \/>\n   were a devil, I do believe. Surely if she did me ten times better<br \/>\n   service than she doth, yet with this fantastical fear of hers I would<br \/>\n   be loth to have her in mine house.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Thus fareth, lo, the scrupulous person, who frameth himself many times<br \/>\n   double the fear that he hath cause, and many times a great fear where<br \/>\n   there is no cause at all. And of that which is indeed no sin, he maketh<br \/>\n   a venial one. And that which is venial, he imagineth to be deadly&#8211;and<br \/>\n   yet, for all that, he falleth into them, since they are of their nature<br \/>\n   such as no man long liveth without. And then he feareth that he is<br \/>\n   never fully confessed nor fully contrite, and then that his sins be<br \/>\n   never fully forgiven him. And then he confesseth and confesseth again,<br \/>\n   and cumbereth himself and his confessor both. And then every prayer<br \/>\n   that he saith, though he say it as well as the frail infirmity of the<br \/>\n   man will suffer, yet he is not satisfied unless he say it again, and<br \/>\n   yet after that again. And when he hath said the same thing thrice, as<br \/>\n   little is he satisfied with the last time as the first. And then is his<br \/>\n   heart evermore in heaviness, unquiet, and fear, full of doubt and<br \/>\n   dullness, without comfort or spiritual consolation.<\/p>\n<p>   With this night&#8217;s fear the devil sore troubleth the mind of many a<br \/>\n   right good man, and that doth he to bring him to some great evil. For<br \/>\n   he will, if he can, drive him so much to the fearful minding of God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   rigorous justice, that he will keep him from the comfortable<br \/>\n   remembrance of God&#8217;s great mighty mercy, and so make him do all his<br \/>\n   good works wearily and without consolation or quickness.<\/p>\n<p>   Moreover, he maketh him take for a sin something that is not one, and<br \/>\n   for a deadly sin one that is but venial, to the intent that when he<br \/>\n   shall fall into them he shall, by reason of his scruple, sin where<br \/>\n   otherwise he would not, or sin mortally (because his conscience, in<br \/>\n   doing the deed, so told him) where otherwise indeed he would have<br \/>\n   offended only venially.<\/p>\n<p>   Yes, and further, the devil longeth to make all his good works and<br \/>\n   spiritual exercises so painful and so tedious to him, that, with some<br \/>\n   other subtle suggestion or false wily doctrine of a false spiritual<br \/>\n   liberty, he should be easily conveyed from that evil fault into one<br \/>\n   much worse, for the false ease and pleasure that he should suddenly<br \/>\n   find therein. And then should he have his conscience as wide and large<br \/>\n   afterward as ever it was narrow and straight before. For better is yet,<br \/>\n   of truth, a conscience a little too narrow than a little too large.<\/p>\n<p>   My mother had, when I was a little boy, a good old woman who took care<br \/>\n   of her children. They called her Mother Maud&#8211;I daresay you have heard<br \/>\n   of her?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yea, yea, very much.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: She was wont, when she sat by the fire with us, to tell us who<br \/>\n   were children many childish tales. But as Pliny saith that there is no<br \/>\n   book lightly so bad but that a man may pick some good thing out of it,<br \/>\n   so think I that there is almost no tale so foolish but that yet in one<br \/>\n   matter or another, it may hap to serve to some purpose.<\/p>\n<p>   For I remember me that among others of her foolish tales, she told us<br \/>\n   once that the ass and the wolf came upon a time to confession to the<br \/>\n   fox. The poor ass came to shrift in Shrovetide, a day or two before Ash<br \/>\n   Wednesday. But the wolf would not come to confession till he saw first<br \/>\n   Palm Sunday past, and then he put it off yet further until Good Friday.<\/p>\n<p>   The fox asked the ass, before he began &#8220;Benedicite,&#8221; wherefore he came<br \/>\n   to confession so soon, before Lent began. The poor beast answered him<br \/>\n   that it was for fear of deadly sin, if he should lose his part of any<br \/>\n   of those prayers that the priests in the cleansing days pray for them<br \/>\n   who are then confessed already. Then in his shrift he had a marvellous<br \/>\n   grudge in his inward conscience, that he had one day given his master a<br \/>\n   cause of anger in that, with his rude roaring before his master arose,<br \/>\n   he had wakened him out of his sleep and bereaved him of his rest. The<br \/>\n   fox, for that fault, like a good discreet confessor, charged him to do<br \/>\n   so no more, but to lie still and sleep like a good son himself until<br \/>\n   his master were up and ready to go to work, and so should he be sure<br \/>\n   that he should wake him no more.<\/p>\n<p>   To tell you all the poor ass&#8217;s confession, it would be a long work. For<br \/>\n   everything that he did was deadly sin with him, the poor soul was so<br \/>\n   scrupulous. But his wise wily confessor accounted them for trifles (as<br \/>\n   they were) and swore afterward to the badger that he was so weary to<br \/>\n   sit so long and hear him that, saving for the sake of manners, he had<br \/>\n   rather have sat all that time at breakfast with a good fat goose. But<br \/>\n   when it came to the giving of the penance, the fox found that the most<br \/>\n   weighty sin in all his shrift was gluttony. And therefore he discreetly<br \/>\n   gave him in penance that he should never for greediness of his food do<br \/>\n   any other beast any harm or hindrance. And then he should eat his food<br \/>\n   and worry no more.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, as good Mother Maud told us, when the wolf came to Father Reynard<br \/>\n   (that was, she said, the fox&#8217;s name) to confession upon Good Friday,<br \/>\n   his confessor shook his great pair of beads at him, almost as big as<br \/>\n   bowling balls, and asked him wherefore he came so late. &#8220;Forsooth,<br \/>\n   Father Reynard,&#8221; quoth he, &#8220;I must needs tell you the truth&#8211;I come,<br \/>\n   you know, for that. I dared not come sooner for fear lest you would,<br \/>\n   for my gluttony, have given me in penance to fast some part of this<br \/>\n   Lent.&#8221; &#8220;Nay, nay,&#8221; quoth Father Fox, &#8220;I am not so unreasonable, for I<br \/>\n   fast none of it myself. For I may say to thee, son, between us twain<br \/>\n   here in confession, it is no commandment of God, this fasting, but an<br \/>\n   invention of man. The priests make folk fast, and then put them to<br \/>\n   trouble about the moonshine in the water, and do but make folk fools.<br \/>\n   But they shall make me no such fool, I warrant thee, son, for I ate<br \/>\n   flesh all this Lent, myself. Howbeit indeed, because I will not be<br \/>\n   occasion of slander, I ate it secretly in my chamber, out of sight of<br \/>\n   all such foolish brethren as for their weak scrupulous conscience would<br \/>\n   wax offended by it. And so would I counsel you to do.&#8221; &#8220;Forsooth,<br \/>\n   Father Fox,&#8221; quoth the wolf, &#8220;and so, thank God, I do, as near as I<br \/>\n   can. For when I go to my meal, I take no other company with me but such<br \/>\n   sure brethren as are of mine own nature, whose consciences are not<br \/>\n   weak, I warrant you, but their stomachs are as strong as mine.&#8221; &#8220;Well,<br \/>\n   then, no matter,&#8221; quoth Father Fox. But when he heard afterward, by his<br \/>\n   confession, that he was so great a ravener that he devoured and spent<br \/>\n   sometimes so much victuals at a meal that the price of them would well<br \/>\n   keep some poor man with his wife and children almost all the week, then<br \/>\n   he prudently reproved that point in him, and preached him a sermon of<br \/>\n   his own temperance. For he never used, he said, to pass the value of<br \/>\n   sixpence at a meal&#8211;no, nor even that much, &#8220;For when I bring home a<br \/>\n   goose,&#8221; quoth he, &#8220;it is not out of the poulterer&#8217;s shop, where folk<br \/>\n   find them with their feathers ready plucked and see which is the<br \/>\n   fattest, and yet for sixpence buy and choose the best; but out of the<br \/>\n   housewife&#8217;s house, at first hand, which can supply them somewhat<br \/>\n   cheaper, you know, than the poulterer can. Nor yet can I be suffered to<br \/>\n   see them plucked, and stand and choose them by day, but am fain by<br \/>\n   night to take one at adventure. And when I come home, I am fain to do<br \/>\n   the labour to pluck it myself too. Yet, for all this, though it be but<br \/>\n   lean and, I know, not well worth a groat, it serveth me sometimes both<br \/>\n   for dinner and for supper too. As for the fact that you live of ravine,<br \/>\n   I can find no fault in that. You have used it so long that I think you<br \/>\n   can do no otherwise, and therefore it would be folly to forbid it to<br \/>\n   you&#8211;and, to say the truth, against good conscience too. For live you<br \/>\n   must, I know, and other craft know you none, and therefore, as reason<br \/>\n   is, must you live by that. But yet, you know, too much is too much, and<br \/>\n   measure is a merry mean, which I perceive by your shrift you have never<br \/>\n   used to keep. And therefore surely this shall be your penance, that you<br \/>\n   shall all this year never pass the price of sixpence at a meal, as near<br \/>\n   as your conscience can guess the price.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Their shrift have I told you, as Mother Maud told it to us. But now<br \/>\n   serveth for our matter the conscience of them both in the true<br \/>\n   performing of their penance. The poor ass after his shrift, when he<br \/>\n   waxed an-hungered, saw a sow lie with her pigs, well lapped in new<br \/>\n   straw. And he drew near and thought to have eaten of the straw, but<br \/>\n   anon his scrupulous conscience began therein to grudge him. For since<br \/>\n   his penance was that, for greediness of his good, he should do nobody<br \/>\n   else any harm, he thought he might not eat one straw there lest, for<br \/>\n   lack of that straw, some of those pigs might hap to die for cold. So he<br \/>\n   held still his hunger until someone brought him food. But when he was<br \/>\n   about to fall to it, then fell he yet into a far further scruple. For<br \/>\n   then it came in his mind that he should yet break his penance if he<br \/>\n   should eat any of that either, since he was commanded by his ghostly<br \/>\n   father that he should not, for his own food, hinder any other beast.<br \/>\n   For he thought that if he ate not that food, some other beast might hap<br \/>\n   to have it. And so should he, by the eating of it, peradventure hinder<br \/>\n   another. And thus stayed he still fasting till, when he told the cause,<br \/>\n   his ghostly father came and informed him better, and then he cast off<br \/>\n   that scruple and fell mannerly to his meal, and was a right honest ass<br \/>\n   many a fair day after.<\/p>\n<p>   The wolf now, coming from shrift clean absolved from his sins, went<br \/>\n   about to do as a certain shrewish wife once told her husband that she<br \/>\n   would do, when she came from shrift. &#8220;Be merry, man,&#8221; quoth she now,<br \/>\n   &#8220;for this day, I thank God, I was well shriven. And I purpose now<br \/>\n   therefore to leave off all mine old shrewishness and begin even<br \/>\n   afresh!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Ah, well, uncle, can you report her so? That word I heard her<br \/>\n   speak, but she said it in sport to make her goodman laugh.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Indeed, it seemed she spoke it half in sport. For in that she<br \/>\n   said she would cast away all her old shrewishness, therein I daresay<br \/>\n   she sported. But in that she said she would begin it all afresh, her<br \/>\n   husband found that in good earnest!<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Well, I shall tell her what you say, I warrant you.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Then will you make me make my word good!<\/p>\n<p>   But whatsoever she did, at least so fared now this wolf, who had cast<br \/>\n   out in confession all his old ravine. For then hunger pricked him<br \/>\n   forward so that, as the shrewish wife said, he should begin all afresh.<br \/>\n   But yet the prick of conscience withdrew him and held him back, because<br \/>\n   he would not, for breaking of his penance, take any prey for his<br \/>\n   mealtide that should pass the price of sixpence.<\/p>\n<p>   It happed him then, as he walked prowling for his gear about, that he<br \/>\n   came where a man had, a few days before, cast off two old lean and lame<br \/>\n   horses, so sick that no flesh was there left upon them. And the one,<br \/>\n   when the wolf came by, could scant stand on his legs, and the other was<br \/>\n   already dead and his skin ripped off and carried away. And as he looked<br \/>\n   upon them suddenly, he was first about to feed upon them and whet his<br \/>\n   teeth upon their bones. But as he looked aside, he spied a fair cow in<br \/>\n   an enclosure, walking with her young calf by her side. And as soon as<br \/>\n   he saw them, his conscience began to grudge him against both those two<br \/>\n   horses. And then he sighed and said to himself, &#8220;Alas, wicked wretch<br \/>\n   that I am, I had almost broken my penance ere I was aware! For yonder<br \/>\n   dead horse, because I never sad a dead horse sold in the market, even<br \/>\n   if I should die for it, I cannot guess, to save my sinful soul, what<br \/>\n   price I should set on him. But in my conscience I set him far above<br \/>\n   sixpence, and therefore I dare not meddle with him. Now, then, yonder<br \/>\n   live horse is in all likelihood worth a great deal of money. For horses<br \/>\n   are dear in this country&#8211;especially such soft amblers, for I see by<br \/>\n   his pace he trotteth not, nor can scant shift a foot. And therefore I<br \/>\n   may not meddle with him, for he very far passeth my sixpence. But cows<br \/>\n   this country hath enough, while money have they very little. And<br \/>\n   therefore, considering the plenty of the cows and the scarcity of the<br \/>\n   money, yonder foolish cow seemeth unto me, in my conscience, worth not<br \/>\n   past a groat, if she be worth so much. Now then, her calf is not so<br \/>\n   much as she, by half. And therefore, since the cow is in my conscience<br \/>\n   worth but fourpence, my conscience cannot serve me, for sin of my soul,<br \/>\n   to appraise her calf above twopence. And so pass they not sixpence<br \/>\n   between them both. And therefore may I well eat them twain at this one<br \/>\n   meal and break not my penance at all.&#8221; And so thereupon he did, without<br \/>\n   any scruple of conscience.<\/p>\n<p>   If such beasts could speak now, as Mother Maud said they could then,<br \/>\n   some of them would, I daresay, tell a tale almost as wise as this! Save<br \/>\n   for the diminishing of old Mother Maud&#8217;s tale, a shorter sermon would<br \/>\n   have served. But yet, as childish as the parable is, in this it serveth<br \/>\n   for our purpose: that the night&#8217;s fear of a somewhat scrupulous<br \/>\n   conscience, though it be painful and troublous to him who hath it, as<br \/>\n   this poor ass had here, is yet less harm than a conscience that is<br \/>\n   over-large. And less harm is it than a conscience such as a man pleases<br \/>\n   to frame himself for his own fancy&#8211;now drawing it narrow, now<br \/>\n   stretching it in breadth, after the manner of a leather thong&#8211;to serve<br \/>\n   on every side for his own commodity, as did here the wily wolf.<\/p>\n<p>   But such folk are out of tribulation, and comfort need they none, and<br \/>\n   therefore are they out of our matter. But he who is in the night&#8217;s fear<br \/>\n   of his own scrupulous conscience, let him well beware, as I said, that<br \/>\n   the devil draw him not, for weariness of the one, into the other, and<br \/>\n   while he would fly from Scilla draw him into Charibdis. He must do as<br \/>\n   doth a ship coming into a haven in the mouth of which lie secret rocks<br \/>\n   under the water on both sides. If by mishap he be entered in among them<br \/>\n   that are on the one side, and cannot tell how to get out, he must get a<br \/>\n   substantial clever pilot who can so conduct him from the rocks on that<br \/>\n   side that yet he bring him not into those that are on the other side,<br \/>\n   but can guide him in the mid way. Let them, I say therefore, who are in<br \/>\n   the troublous fear of heir own scrupulous conscience, submit the rule<br \/>\n   of their conscience to the counsel of some other good man, who after<br \/>\n   the variety and the nature of the scruples may temper his advice.<\/p>\n<p>   Yea, although a man be very well learned himself, yet if he be in this<br \/>\n   state let him learn the custom used among physicians. For if one of<br \/>\n   them be never so learned, yet in his own disease and sickness he never<br \/>\n   useth to trust all to himself, but sendeth for such of his fellows as<br \/>\n   he knoweth to be able, and putteth himself in their hands. This he doth<br \/>\n   for many considerations, and one of the causes is fear. For upon some<br \/>\n   tokens in his own sickness he may conceive a great deal more fear than<br \/>\n   needeth, and then it would be good for his health if for the time he<br \/>\n   knew no such thing at all.<\/p>\n<p>   I knew once in this town one of the most learned men in that profession<br \/>\n   and the most expert, and the most famous too, and him who did the<br \/>\n   greatest cures upon other men. And yet when he was himself once very<br \/>\n   sore sick, I heard his fellows who then took care of him&#8211;every one of<br \/>\n   whom would, in his own disease, have used his help before that of any<br \/>\n   other man&#8211;wish that yet, while his own sickness was so sore, he had<br \/>\n   known no physic at all. He took so great heed unto every suspicious<br \/>\n   token, and feared so far the worst, that his fear did him sometimes<br \/>\n   much more harm than the sickness gave him cause.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, as I say, whosoever hath such a trouble of his<br \/>\n   scrupulous conscience, let him for a while forbear the judgment of<br \/>\n   himself, and follow the counsel of some other man whom he knoweth for<br \/>\n   well learned and virtuous. And especially in the place of confession,<br \/>\n   for these is God specially present with his grace assisting the<br \/>\n   sacrament. And let him not doubt to quiet his mind and follow what he<br \/>\n   is there bidden, and think for a while less of the fear of God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   justice, and be more merry in remembrance of his mercy, and persevere<br \/>\n   in prayer for grace, and abide and dwell faithfully in the sure hope of<br \/>\n   his help. And then shall he find, without any doubt, that the shield of<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s truth shall, as the prophet saith, so compass him about, that he<br \/>\n   shall not dread this night&#8217;s fear of scrupulosity, but shall have<br \/>\n   afterward his conscience established in good quiet and rest.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XV<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, good uncle, you have in my mind well declared these<br \/>\n   kinds of the night&#8217;s fear.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Surely, cousin, but yet are there many more than I can either<br \/>\n   remember or find. Howbeit, one yet cometh now to my mind, of which I<br \/>\n   thought not before, and which is yet in mine opinion. That is, cousin,<br \/>\n   where the devil tempteth a man to kill and destroy himself.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Undoubtedly this kind of tribulation is marvellous and<br \/>\n   strange. And the temptation is of such a sort that some men have the<br \/>\n   opinion that those who once fall into that fantasy can never fully cast<br \/>\n   it off.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Yes, yes, cousin, many a hundred, and else God forbid. But the<br \/>\n   thing that maketh men so to say is that, of those who finally do<br \/>\n   destroy themselves, there is much speech and much wondering, as it is<br \/>\n   well worthy. But many a good man and woman hath sometime&#8211;yea, for some<br \/>\n   years, once after another&#8211;continually been tempted to do it, and yet<br \/>\n   hath, by grace and good counsel, well and virtuously withstood that<br \/>\n   temptation, and been in conclusion clearly delivered of it. And their<br \/>\n   tribulation is not known abroad and therefore not talked of.<\/p>\n<p>   But surely, cousin, a horrible sore trouble it is to any man or woman<br \/>\n   whom the devil tempteth with that temptation. Many have I heard of, and<br \/>\n   with some have I talked myself, who have been sore cumbered with it,<br \/>\n   and I have marked not a little the manner of them.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I pray you, good uncle, show me somewhat of such things as you<br \/>\n   perceive therein. For first, whereas you call the kind of temptation<br \/>\n   the daughter of pusillanimity and thereby so near of kin to the night&#8217;s<br \/>\n   fear, methinketh on the other hand that it is rather a thing that<br \/>\n   cometh of a great courage and boldness. For they dare with their own<br \/>\n   hands to put themselves to death, from which we see almost every man<br \/>\n   shrink and flee, and many of them we know by good proof and plain<br \/>\n   experience for men of great heart and excellent bold courage.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I said, Cousin Vincent, that of pusillanimity cometh this<br \/>\n   temptation, and very truth it is that indeed so it doth. But yet I<br \/>\n   meant not that only of faint heart and fear it cometh and growth<br \/>\n   always. For the devil tempteth sundry folk by sundry ways.<\/p>\n<p>   But I spoke of no other kind of that temptation save only that one<br \/>\n   which is the daughter that the devil begetteth upon pusillanimity,<br \/>\n   because those other kinds of temptation fall not under the nature of<br \/>\n   tribulation and fear, and therefore fall they far out of our matter<br \/>\n   here. They are such temptations as need only counsel, and not comfort<br \/>\n   or consolation, because the persons tempted with them are not troubled<br \/>\n   in their mind with that kind of temptation. but are very well content<br \/>\n   both in the tempting and in the following. For some have there been,<br \/>\n   cousin, such that they have been tempted to do it by means of a foolish<br \/>\n   pride, and some by means of anger, without any fear at all&#8211;and very<br \/>\n   glad to go thereto, I deny not. But if you think that none fall into it<br \/>\n   by fear, but that they have all a mighty strong stomach, that shall you<br \/>\n   well see to be the contrary. And that peradventure in those of whom you<br \/>\n   would think the stomach more strong and their heart and courage most<br \/>\n   bold.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yet is it marvel to me, uncle, that it should be as you say it<br \/>\n   is&#8211;that this temptation is unto them that do it for pride or anger no<br \/>\n   tribulation, or that they should not need, in so great a distress and<br \/>\n   peril, both of body and soul to be lost, no manner of good ghostly<br \/>\n   comfort.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Let us therefore, cousin, consider an example or two, for<br \/>\n   thereby shall we better perceive it.<\/p>\n<p>   There was here in Buda in King Ladilaus&#8217; days, a good poor honest man&#8217;s<br \/>\n   wife. This woman was so fiendish that the devil, perceiving her nature,<br \/>\n   put her in the mind that she should anger her husband so sore that she<br \/>\n   might give him occasion to kill her, and then should he be hanged<br \/>\n   because of her.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This was a strange temptation indeed! What the devil should<br \/>\n   she be the better then?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Nothing, but that it eased her shrewish stomach beforehand, to<br \/>\n   think that her husband should be hanged afterward. And peradventure, if<br \/>\n   you look about the world and consider it well, you shall find more such<br \/>\n   stomachs than a few. Have you never heard a furious body plainly say<br \/>\n   that, to see such-and-such man have a mischief, he would with good will<br \/>\n   be content to lie as long in hell as God liveth in heaven?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, and some such have I heard.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This mind of his was not much less mad than hers, but rather<br \/>\n   perhaps the more mad of the twain. For the woman peradventure did not<br \/>\n   cast so far peril therein.<\/p>\n<p>   But to tell you now to what good pass her charitable purpose came: As<br \/>\n   her husband (the man was a carpenter) stood hewing with his chip axe<br \/>\n   upon a piece of timber, she began after her old guise to revile him so<br \/>\n   that he waxed wroth at last, and bade her get herself in or he would<br \/>\n   lay the helm of his axe about her back. And he said also that it would<br \/>\n   be little sin even with that axe head to chop off the unhappy head of<br \/>\n   hers that carried such an ungracious tongue in it. At that word the<br \/>\n   devil took his time and whetted her tongue against her teeth. And when<br \/>\n   it was well sharpened she swore to him in very fierce anger, &#8220;By the<br \/>\n   mass, whoreson husband, I wish thou wouldst! Here lieth my head, lo,&#8221;<br \/>\n   and with that down she laid her head upon the same timber log. &#8220;If thou<br \/>\n   smite it not off, I beshrew thine whoreson&#8217;s heart!&#8221; With that,<br \/>\n   likewise as the devil stood at her elbow, so stood (as I heard say) his<br \/>\n   good angel at his, and gave him ghostly courage and bade him be bold<br \/>\n   and do it. And so the good man up with his chip axe and at a chop he<br \/>\n   chopped off her head indeed.<\/p>\n<p>   There were other folk standing by, who had a good sport to hear her<br \/>\n   chide, but little they looked for this chance, till it was done ere<br \/>\n   they could stop it. They said they heard her tongue babble in her head,<br \/>\n   and call, &#8220;Whoreson, whoreson!&#8221; twice after the head was off the body.<br \/>\n   At least, thus they all reported afterward unto the king, except only<br \/>\n   one, and that was a woman, and she said that she heard it not.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, this was a wonderful work! What became, uncle, of<br \/>\n   the man?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: The king gave him his pardon.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, he might in conscience do no less.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: But then was there almost made a statute that in such a case<br \/>\n   there should never after be granted a pardon, but (if the truth were<br \/>\n   able to be proved) no husband should need any pardon, but should have<br \/>\n   leave by the law to follow the example of that carpenter, and do the<br \/>\n   same.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: How happed it, uncle, that that good law was left unmade?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: How happed it? As it happeth, cousin, that many more be left<br \/>\n   unmade as well as that one, and almost as good as it too, both here and<br \/>\n   in other countries&#8211;and sometimes some that are worse be made in their<br \/>\n   stead. But they say that the hindrance of that law was the queen&#8217;s<br \/>\n   grace, God forgive her soul! It was the greatest thing, I daresay, that<br \/>\n   she had to answer for, good lady, when she died. For surely, save for<br \/>\n   that one thing, she was a full blessed woman.<\/p>\n<p>   But letting now that law pass, this temptation in procuring her own<br \/>\n   death was unto this carpenter&#8217;s wife no tribulation at all, as far as<br \/>\n   men could ever perceive. For she liked well to think upon it, and she<br \/>\n   even longed for it. And therefore if she had before told you or me her<br \/>\n   intent, and that she would so fain bring it so to pass, we could have<br \/>\n   had no occasion to comfort her, as one that were in tribulation. But<br \/>\n   marry, counsel her we might, as I told you before, to refrain and amend<br \/>\n   that malicious devilish intent.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, that is truth. But such as are well willing to do any<br \/>\n   purpose that is so shameful, they will never tell their intent to<br \/>\n   nobody, for very shame.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Some will not, indeed. And yet are there some again who, be<br \/>\n   their intent never so shameful, find some yet whom their heart serveth<br \/>\n   them to make of their counsel therein.<\/p>\n<p>   Some of my folk here can tell you that no longer ago than even<br \/>\n   yesterday, someone who came out of Vienna told us, among other talking,<br \/>\n   that a rich widow (but I forgot to ask him where it happened), having<br \/>\n   all her life a high proud mind and a malicious one&#8211;as those two<br \/>\n   virtues are wont always to keep company together&#8211;was at dispute with<br \/>\n   another neighbour of hers in the town. And on a time she made of her<br \/>\n   counsel a poor neighbour of hers, whom she thought she might induce,<br \/>\n   for money, to follow her intent. With him she secretly spoke, and<br \/>\n   offered him ten ducats for his labour, to do so much for her as in a<br \/>\n   morning early to come to her house and with an axe unknown privily<br \/>\n   strike off her head. And when he had done so, he was to convey the<br \/>\n   bloody axe into the house of him with whom she was at dispute, in such<br \/>\n   manner as it might be thought that he had murdered her for malice. And<br \/>\n   then she thought she should be taken for a martyr. And yet had she<br \/>\n   farther devised that another sum of money should afterward be sent to<br \/>\n   Rome, and there should be measures made to the Pope that she might in<br \/>\n   all haste be canonized!<\/p>\n<p>   This poor man promised, but intended not to perform it. Howbeit, when<br \/>\n   he deferred it, she provided the axe herself. And he appointed with her<br \/>\n   the morning when he should come and do it, and thereupon into her house<br \/>\n   he came. But then set he such other folk as he wished should know of<br \/>\n   her mad fancy, in such place appointed as they might well hear her and<br \/>\n   him talk together. And after he had talked with her so much as he<br \/>\n   thought was enough, he made her lie down, and took up the axe in his<br \/>\n   own hand. And with the other hand he felt the edge, and found a fault<br \/>\n   that it was not sharp, and that therefore he would in no wise do it,<br \/>\n   till he had ground it sharp. He could not otherwise, he said, for pity,<br \/>\n   it would put her to so much pain. And so, full sore against her will,<br \/>\n   for that time she kept her head still. But because she would no more<br \/>\n   suffer any more to deceive her and put her off with delays, ere it was<br \/>\n   very long thereafter, she hung herself with her own hands.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, here was a tragical story, whereof I never heard the<br \/>\n   like.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Forsooth, the party who told it to me swore that he knew it<br \/>\n   for a truth. And he is, I promise you, such as I reckon for right<br \/>\n   honest and of substantial truth.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, here she forbore not, as shameful an intent as she had, to make<br \/>\n   someone of her counsel&#8211;and yet, I remember, another too, whom she<br \/>\n   trusted with the money that should procure her canonization. And here I<br \/>\n   believe that her temptation came not of fear but of high malice and<br \/>\n   pride. And then was she so glad in that pleasant device that, as I told<br \/>\n   you, she took it for no tribulation. And therefore comforting of her<br \/>\n   could have no place. But if men should give her anything toward her<br \/>\n   help, it must have been, as I told you, good counsel.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, as I said, this kind of temptation to a man&#8217;s own<br \/>\n   destruction, which requireth counsel, and is outside tribulation, was<br \/>\n   outside of our matter, which is to treat of comfort in tribulation.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XVI<\/p>\n<p>   But lest you might reject both these examples, thinking they were but<br \/>\n   feigned tales, I shall put you in remembrance of one which I reckon you<br \/>\n   yourself have read in the Conferences of Cassian. And if you have not,<br \/>\n   there you may soon find it. For I myself have half forgotten the thing,<br \/>\n   it is so long since I read it.<\/p>\n<p>   But thus much I remember: He telleth there of one who was many days a<br \/>\n   very special holy man in his living, and, among the other virtuous<br \/>\n   monks and anchorites that lived there in the wilderness, was<br \/>\n   marvellously much esteemed. Yet some were not all out of fear lest his<br \/>\n   revelations (of which he told many himself) would prove illusions of<br \/>\n   the devil. And so it proved afterwards indeed, for the man was by the<br \/>\n   devil&#8217;s subtle suggestions brought into such a high spiritual pride<br \/>\n   that in conclusion the devil brought him to that horrible point that he<br \/>\n   made him go kill himself.<\/p>\n<p>   And, as far as my mind giveth me now, without new sight of the book, he<br \/>\n   brought him to it by this persuasion: He made him believe that it was<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s will that he should do so, and that thereby he should go straight<br \/>\n   to heaven. And if it were by that persuasion, with which he took very<br \/>\n   great comfort in his own mind himself, then was it, as I said, out of<br \/>\n   our case, and he needed not comfort but counsel against giving credence<br \/>\n   to the devil&#8217;s persuasion. But marry, if he made him first perceive how<br \/>\n   he had been deluded and then tempted him to his own death by shame and<br \/>\n   despair, then it was within our matter. For then was his temptation<br \/>\n   fallen down from pride to pusillanimity, and was waxed that kind of the<br \/>\n   night&#8217;s fear that I spoke of. And in such fear a good part of the<br \/>\n   counsel to be given him should have need to stand in good comforting,<br \/>\n   for then was he brought into right sore tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   But, as I was about to tell you, strength of heart and courage are<br \/>\n   there none in that deed, not only because true strength (as it hath the<br \/>\n   name of virtue in a reasonable creature) can never be without prudence,<br \/>\n   but also because, as I said, even in them that seem men of most<br \/>\n   courage, it shall well appear to them that well weigh the matter that<br \/>\n   the mind whereby they be led to destroy themselves groweth of<br \/>\n   pusillanimity and very foolish fear.<\/p>\n<p>   Take for example Cato of Utica, who in Africa killed himself after the<br \/>\n   great victory that Julius Caesar had. St. Austine well declareth in his<br \/>\n   work De civitate Dei that there was no strength nor magnanimity in his<br \/>\n   destruction of himself, but plain pusillanimity and impotency of<br \/>\n   stomach. For he was forced to do it because his heart was too feeble to<br \/>\n   bear the beholding of another man&#8217;s glory or the suffering of other<br \/>\n   worldly calamities that he feared should fall on himself. So that, as<br \/>\n   St. Austine well proveth, that horrible deed is no act of strength, but<br \/>\n   an act of a mind either drawn from the consideration of itself with<br \/>\n   some fiendish fancy, in which the man hath need to be called home with<br \/>\n   good counsel; or else oppressed by faint heart and fear, in which a<br \/>\n   good part of the counsel must stand in lifting up his courage with good<br \/>\n   consolation and comfort.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore if we found any such religious person as was that father<br \/>\n   whom Cassian writeth of, who were of such austerity and apparent<br \/>\n   ghostly living as he was, and reputed by those who well knew him for a<br \/>\n   man of singular virtue; and if it were perceived that he had many<br \/>\n   strange visions appearing unto him; and if after that it should now be<br \/>\n   perceived that the man went about secretly to destroy<br \/>\n   himself&#8211;whosoever should hap to come to the knowledge of it and<br \/>\n   intended to do his best to hinder it, he must first find the means to<br \/>\n   search and find out the manner and countenance of the man. He must see<br \/>\n   whether he be lightsome, glad, and joyful or dumpish, heavy, and sad,<br \/>\n   and whether he go about it as one that were full of the glad hope of<br \/>\n   heaven, or as one who had his breast stuffed full of tediousness and<br \/>\n   weariness of the world. If he were found to be of the first fashion, it<br \/>\n   would be a token that the devil had, by his fantastical apparitions,<br \/>\n   puffed him up in such a childish pride that he hath finally persuaded<br \/>\n   him, by some illusion showed him for the proof, that God&#8217;s pleasure is<br \/>\n   that he shall for his sake with his own hands kill himself.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Now, if a man so found it, uncle, what counsel should he give<br \/>\n   him then?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That would be somewhat out of our purpose, cousin, since (as I<br \/>\n   told you before) the man would not be in sorrow and tribulation, of<br \/>\n   which our matter speaketh, but in a perilous merry mortal temptation.<br \/>\n   So that if we should, beside our matter that we have in hand, enter<br \/>\n   into that too, we might make a longer work between both than we could<br \/>\n   well finish this day. Howbeit, to be short, it is soon seen that in<br \/>\n   such a case the sum and effect of the counsel must (in a manner) rest<br \/>\n   in giving him warning of the devil&#8217;s sleights. And that must be done<br \/>\n   under such a sweet pleasant manner that the man should not abhor to<br \/>\n   hear it. For while it could not lightly be otherwise that the man were<br \/>\n   rocked and sung asleep by the devil&#8217;s craft, and his mind occupied as<br \/>\n   it were in a delectable dream, he should never have good audience of<br \/>\n   him who would rudely and boisterously shog him and wake him, and so<br \/>\n   shake him out of it. Therefore must you fair and easily touch him, and<br \/>\n   with some pleasant speech awake him, so that he wax not wayward, as<br \/>\n   children do who are waked ere they wish to rise.<\/p>\n<p>   But when a man hath first begun with his praise (for if he be proud you<br \/>\n   shall much better please him with a commendation than with a dirge)<br \/>\n   then, after favour won therewith, a man may little by little insinuate<br \/>\n   the doubt of such revelations&#8211;not at first as though it were for any<br \/>\n   doubt of his, but of some other man&#8217;s, that men in some other places<br \/>\n   talk of. And peradventure it shall not miscontent him to say that great<br \/>\n   perils may fall therein, in another man&#8217;s case than his own, and he<br \/>\n   shall begin to preach upon it. Or, if you were a man that had not so<br \/>\n   very great scrupulous conscience of a harmless lie devised to do good<br \/>\n   with (the kind which St. Austine, though he take it always for sin, yet<br \/>\n   he taketh but for venial; and St. Jerome, as by divers places in his<br \/>\n   books appeareth, taketh not fully for that much), then may you feign<br \/>\n   some secret friend of yours to be in such a state. And you may say that<br \/>\n   you yourself somewhat fear his peril, and have made of charity this<br \/>\n   voyage for his sake, to ask this good father&#8217;s counsel.<\/p>\n<p>   And in the communication, upon these words of St. John, &#8220;Give not<br \/>\n   credence to every spirit, but prove the spirits whether they be of<br \/>\n   God,&#8221; and these words of St. Paul, &#8220;The angel of Satan transfigureth<br \/>\n   himself into the angel of light,&#8221; you shall take occasion (the better<br \/>\n   if they hap to come in on his side), but yet not lack occasion neither<br \/>\n   if those texts, for lack of his offer, come in upon your own&#8211;occasion,<br \/>\n   I say, you shall not lack to enquire by what sure and undeceivable<br \/>\n   tokens a man may discern the true revelations from the false illusions.<br \/>\n   A man shall find many such tokens both here and there in divers other<br \/>\n   authors and all together in divers goodly treatises of that good godly<br \/>\n   doctor, Master John Gerson, entitled De probatione spirituum. As,<br \/>\n   whether the party be natural in manner or seem anything fantastical.<br \/>\n   Or, whether the party be poor-spirited or proud. The pride will<br \/>\n   somewhat appear by his delight in his own praise; or if, of wiliness,<br \/>\n   or of another pride for to be praised of humility, he refused to hear<br \/>\n   of that, yet any little fault found in himself, or diffidence declared<br \/>\n   and mistrust of his own revelations and doubtful tokens told, wherefore<br \/>\n   he himself should fear lest they be the devil&#8217;s illusion&#8211;such things,<br \/>\n   as Master Gerson saith, will make him spit out somewhat of his spirit,<br \/>\n   if the devil lie in his breast. Or if the devil be yet so subtle that<br \/>\n   he keep himself close in his warm den and blow out never a hot word,<br \/>\n   yet it is to be considered what end his revelations tend to&#8211;whether to<br \/>\n   any spiritual profit to himself or other folk, or only to vain marvels<br \/>\n   and wonders. Also, whether they withdraw him from such other good<br \/>\n   virtuous business as, by the common rule of Christendom or any of the<br \/>\n   rules of his profession, he was wont to use or bound to be occupied in.<br \/>\n   Or whether he fall into any singularity of opinions against the<br \/>\n   scripture of God, or against the common faith of Christ&#8217;s Catholic<br \/>\n   Church. Many other tokens are spoken of in the work of Master Gerson,<br \/>\n   by which to consider whether the person, neither having revelations of<br \/>\n   God nor illusions from the devil, do feign his revelations himself,<br \/>\n   either for winning of money or worldly favour, and delude the people<br \/>\n   withal.<\/p>\n<p>   But now for our purpose: If, among any of the marks by which the true<br \/>\n   revelations may be known from false illusions, that man himself bring<br \/>\n   forth, for one mark, the doing or teaching of anything against the<br \/>\n   scripture of God or the common faith of the church, you may enter into<br \/>\n   the special matter, in which he can never well flee from you. Or else<br \/>\n   may you yet, if you wish, feign that your secret friend, for whose sake<br \/>\n   you come to him for counsel, is brought to that mind by a certain<br \/>\n   apparition showed unto him, as he himself saith, by an angel&#8211;as you<br \/>\n   fear, by the devil. And that he cannot as yet be otherwise persuaded by<br \/>\n   you but that the pleasure of God is that he shall go kill himself. And<br \/>\n   that he believeth if he do so he shall then be thereby so specially<br \/>\n   participant of Christ&#8217;s passion that he shall forthwith be carried up<br \/>\n   with angels into heaven. And that he is so joyful for this that he<br \/>\n   firmly purposeth upon it, no less glad to do it than another man would<br \/>\n   be glad to avoid it. And therefore may you desire his good counsel to<br \/>\n   instruct you with some substantial good advice, with which you may turn<br \/>\n   him from this error, that he be not, under hope of God&#8217;s true<br \/>\n   revelation, destroyed in body and soul by the devil&#8217;s false illusion.<\/p>\n<p>   If he will in this thing study and labour to instruct you, the things<br \/>\n   that he himself shall find, of his own invention, though they be less<br \/>\n   effectual, shall peradventure more work with him toward his own<br \/>\n   amendment (since he shall, of likelihood, better like them) than shall<br \/>\n   things double so substantial that were told him by another man. If he<br \/>\n   be loth to think upon that side, and therefore shrink from the matter,<br \/>\n   then is there no other way but to venture to fall into the matter after<br \/>\n   the plain fashion, and tell what you hear, and give him counsel and<br \/>\n   exhortation to the contrary. Unless you wish to say that thus and thus<br \/>\n   hath the matter been reasoned already between your friend and you. And<br \/>\n   therein may you rehearse such things as should prove that the vision<br \/>\n   which moveth him is no true revelation, but a very false illusion.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, uncle, I well allow that a man should, in this thing<br \/>\n   as well as in every other in which he longeth to do another man good,<br \/>\n   seek such a pleasant way that the party should be likely to like his<br \/>\n   communication, or at least to take it well in worth. And he should not<br \/>\n   enter in unto it in such a way that he whom he would help should abhor<br \/>\n   him and be loth to hear him, and therefore take no profit by him.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, uncle, if it come, by the one way or the other, to the point<br \/>\n   where he will or shall hear me; what be the effectual means with which<br \/>\n   I should by my counsel convert him?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: All those by which you may make him perceive that he is<br \/>\n   deceived, and that his visions are no godly revelations but very<br \/>\n   devilish illusion. And those reasons must you gather of the man, of the<br \/>\n   matter, and of the law of God, or of some one of these.<\/p>\n<p>   Of the man may you gather them, if you can peradventure show him that<br \/>\n   in such-and-such a point he is waxed worse since such revelations have<br \/>\n   haunted him than he was before&#8211;as, in those who are deluded, whosoever<br \/>\n   be well acquainted with them shall well mark and perceive. For they wax<br \/>\n   more proud, more wayward, more envious, suspicious, misjudging and<br \/>\n   depraving other men, with the delight of their own praise, and such<br \/>\n   other spiritual vices of the soul.<\/p>\n<p>   Of the matter may you gather, if it has happened that his revelations<br \/>\n   before have proved false, or if they be strange things rather than<br \/>\n   profitable ones. For that is a good mark between God&#8217;s miracles and the<br \/>\n   devil&#8217;s wonders. For Christ and his saints have their miracles always<br \/>\n   tending to fruit and profit. The devil and his witches and<br \/>\n   necromancers, all their wonderful works tend to no fruitful end, but to<br \/>\n   a fruitless ostentation and show, as it were a juggler who would for a<br \/>\n   show before the people play feats of skill at a feast.<\/p>\n<p>   Of the law of God you must draw your reasons in showing by the<br \/>\n   scripture that the thing which he thinketh God biddeth by his angel,<br \/>\n   God hath by his own mouth forbidden. And that is, you know well, in the<br \/>\n   case that we speak of, so easy to find that I need not to rehearse it<br \/>\n   to you. For among the Ten Commandments there is plainly forbidden the<br \/>\n   unlawful killing of any man, and therefore of himself, as (St. Austine<br \/>\n   saith) all the church teacheth, unless he himself be no man.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This is very true, good uncle, nor will I dispute upon any<br \/>\n   glossing of that prohibition. But since we find not the contrary but<br \/>\n   that God may dispense with that commandment himself, and both license<br \/>\n   and command also, if he himself wish, any man to go kill either another<br \/>\n   man or himself, this man who is now by such a marvellous vision induced<br \/>\n   to believe that God so biddeth him, and therefore thinketh himself in<br \/>\n   that case discharged of that prohibition and charged with the contrary<br \/>\n   commandment&#8211;with what reason can we make him perceive that his vision<br \/>\n   is but an illusion and not a true revelation?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Nay, Cousin Vincent, you shall in this case not need to ask<br \/>\n   those reasons of me. But taking the scripture of God for a ground for<br \/>\n   this matter, you know very well yourself that you shall go somewhat a<br \/>\n   shorter way to work if you ask this question of him: Since God hath<br \/>\n   forbidden once the thing himself, though he may dispense with it if he<br \/>\n   will, yet since the devil may feign himself God and with a marvellous<br \/>\n   vision delude one, and make as though God did it; and since the devil<br \/>\n   is also more likely to speak against God&#8217;s commandment than God against<br \/>\n   his own; you shall have good cause, I say, to demand of the man himself<br \/>\n   whereby he knoweth that his vision is God&#8217;s true revelation and not the<br \/>\n   devil&#8217;s false delusion.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Indeed, uncle, I think that would be a hard question to him.<br \/>\n   Can a man, uncle, have in such a thing even a very sure knowledge of<br \/>\n   his own mind?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Yea, cousin, God may cast into the mind of a man, I suppose,<br \/>\n   such an inward light of understanding that he cannot fail but be sure<br \/>\n   thereof. And yet he who is deluded by the devil may think himself as<br \/>\n   sure and yet be deceived indeed. And such a difference is there in a<br \/>\n   manner between them, as between the sight of a thing while we are awake<br \/>\n   and look thereon, and the sight with which we see a thing in our sleep<br \/>\n   while we dream thereof.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This is a pretty similitude, uncle, in this thing! And then is<br \/>\n   it easy for the monk that we speak of to declare that he knoweth his<br \/>\n   vision for a true revelation and not a false delusion, if there be so<br \/>\n   great a difference between them.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Not so easy yet, cousin, as you think it would be. For how can<br \/>\n   you prove to me that you are awake?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Marry, lo, do I not now wag my hand, shake my head, and stamp<br \/>\n   with my foot here on the floor?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Have you never dreamed ere this that you have done the same?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yes, that have I, and more too than that. For I have ere this<br \/>\n   in my sleep dreamed that I doubted whether I were asleep or awake, and<br \/>\n   have in good faith thought that I did thereupon even the same things<br \/>\n   that I do now indeed, and thereby determined that I was not asleep. And<br \/>\n   yet have I dreamed in good faith further, that I have been afterward at<br \/>\n   dinner and there, making merry with good company, have told the same<br \/>\n   dream at the table and laughed well at it, to think that while I was<br \/>\n   asleep I had by such means of moving the parts of my body and<br \/>\n   considering thereof, so verily thought myself awake!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: And will you not now soon, think you, when you wake and rise,<br \/>\n   laugh as well at yourself when you see that you lie now in your warm<br \/>\n   bed asleep again, and dream all this time, while you believe so verily<br \/>\n   that you are awake and talking of these matters with me?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: God&#8217;s Lord, uncle, you go now merrily to work with me indeed,<br \/>\n   when you look and speak so seriously and would make me think I were<br \/>\n   asleep!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: It may be that you are, for anything that you can say or do<br \/>\n   whereby you can, with any reason that you make, drive me to confess<br \/>\n   that you yourself be sure of the contrary. For you cannot do or say<br \/>\n   anything now whereby you are sure to be awake but what you have ere<br \/>\n   this, or hereafter may, think yourself as surely to do the selfsame<br \/>\n   thing indeed while you be all the while asleep and do nothing but lie<br \/>\n   dreaming.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Well, well, uncle, though I have ere this thought myself awake<br \/>\n   while I was indeed asleep, yet for all this I know well enough that I<br \/>\n   am awake now. And so do you too, though I cannot find the words by<br \/>\n   which I may with reason force you to confess it, without your always<br \/>\n   driving me off by the example of my dream.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Meseemeth, cousin, this is very true. And likewise meseemeth<br \/>\n   the manner and difference between some kind of true revelations and<br \/>\n   some kind of false illusions is like that which standeth between the<br \/>\n   things that are done awake and the things that in our dreams seem to be<br \/>\n   done when we are sleeping. That is, he who hath that kind of revelation<br \/>\n   from God is as sure of the truth as we are of our own deeds while we<br \/>\n   are awake. And he who is deluded by the devil is in such wise deceived<br \/>\n   as they are by their dream, and worse, too. And yet he reckoneth<br \/>\n   himself for the time as sure as the other, saving that one believeth<br \/>\n   falsely, the other truly knoweth. But I say not, cousin, that this kind<br \/>\n   of sure knowledge cometh in every kind of revelation. For there are<br \/>\n   many kinds, of which it would be too long to talk now. But I say that<br \/>\n   God doth certainly send some such to a man in some thing, or may.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yet then this religious man of whom we speak, when I show him<br \/>\n   the scripture against his revelation and therefore call it an illusion,<br \/>\n   may bid me with reason go mind my own affairs. For he knoweth well and<br \/>\n   surely himself that his revelation is very good and true and not any<br \/>\n   false illusion, since for all the general commandment of God in the<br \/>\n   scripture, God may dispense where he will and when he will, and may<br \/>\n   command him to do the contrary. For he commanded Abraham to kill his<br \/>\n   own son, and Sampson had, by inspiration of God, commandment to kill<br \/>\n   himself by pulling down the house upon his own head at the feast of the<br \/>\n   Philistines.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, if I would then do as you bade me right now, tell him that such<br \/>\n   apparitions may be illusions, and since God&#8217;s word is in the scripture<br \/>\n   against him plain for the prohibition, he must perceive the truth of<br \/>\n   his revelation whereby I may know it is not a false illusion; then<br \/>\n   shall he in turn bid me tell him whereby I can prove myself to be awake<br \/>\n   and talk with him and not be asleep and dream so, since in my dream I<br \/>\n   may as surely think so as I know that I do so. And thus shall he drive<br \/>\n   me to the same bay to which I would bring him.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This is well said, cousin, but yet could he not escape you so.<br \/>\n   For the dispensation of God&#8217;s common precept, which dispensation he<br \/>\n   must say that he hath by his private revelation, is a thing of such<br \/>\n   sort as showeth itself naught and false. For it never hath any example<br \/>\n   like, since the world began until now, that ever man hath read or heard<br \/>\n   of, among faithful people commended.<\/p>\n<p>   First, as for Abraham, concerning the death of his son: God intended it<br \/>\n   not, but only tempted the towardness of the father&#8217;s obedience. As for<br \/>\n   Sampson, all men make not the matter very sure whether he be saved or<br \/>\n   not, but yet therein some matter and cause appeareth. For the<br \/>\n   Philistines being enemies of God and using Sampson for their<br \/>\n   mocking-stock in scorn of God, it is well likely that God gave him the<br \/>\n   mind to bestow his own life upon the revenging of the displeasure that<br \/>\n   those blasphemous Philistines did unto God. And that appeareth clear<br \/>\n   enough by this: that though his strength failed him when he lacked his<br \/>\n   hair, yet had he not, it seemeth, that strength evermore at hand while<br \/>\n   he had his hair, but only at such times as it pleased God to give it to<br \/>\n   him. This thing appeareth by these words, that the scripture in some<br \/>\n   place of that matter saith, &#8220;The power or might of God rushed into<br \/>\n   Sampson.&#8221; And so therefore, since this thing that he did in the pulling<br \/>\n   down of the house was done by the special gift of strength then at that<br \/>\n   point given him by God, it well declareth that the strength of God, and<br \/>\n   with it the spirit of God, entered into him for it.<\/p>\n<p>   St. Austine also rehearseth that certain holy virtuous virgins, in time<br \/>\n   of persecution, being pursued by God&#8217;s enemies the infidels to be<br \/>\n   deflowered by force, ran into a water and drowned themselves rather<br \/>\n   than be bereaved of their virginity. And, albeit that he thinketh it is<br \/>\n   not lawful for any other maid to follow their example, but that she<br \/>\n   should suffer another to do her any manner of violence by force and<br \/>\n   commit sin of his own upon her against her will, rather than willingly<br \/>\n   and thereby sinfully herself to become a homicide of herself; yet he<br \/>\n   thinketh that in them it happened by the special instinct of the spirit<br \/>\n   of God, who, for causes seen to himself, would rather that they should<br \/>\n   avoid it with their own temporal death than abide the defiling and<br \/>\n   violation of their chastity.<\/p>\n<p>   But now this good man neither hath any of God&#8217;s enemies to be revenged<br \/>\n   on by his own death, nor any woman who violently pursues him to bereave<br \/>\n   him by force of his virginity! And we never find that God proved any<br \/>\n   man&#8217;s obedient mind by the commandment of his own slaughter of himself.<br \/>\n   Therefore is both his case plainly against God&#8217;s open precept, and the<br \/>\n   dispensation strange and without example, no cause appearing nor well<br \/>\n   imaginable. Unless he would think that God could neither any longer<br \/>\n   live without him, nor could take him to him in such wise as he doth<br \/>\n   other men, but must command him to come by a forbidden way, by which,<br \/>\n   without other cause, we never heard that ever he bade any man else<br \/>\n   before.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, you think that, if you should after this bid him tell you by what<br \/>\n   way he knoweth that his intent riseth upon a true revelation and not<br \/>\n   upon a false illusion, he in turn would bid you tell him by what means<br \/>\n   you know that you are talking with him well awake and not dreaming it<br \/>\n   asleep. You may answer him that for men thus to talk together as you do<br \/>\n   and to prove and perceive that they do so, by the moving of themselves,<br \/>\n   with putting the question unto themselves for their pleasure, and<br \/>\n   marking and considering it, is in waking a daily common thing that<br \/>\n   every man doth or can do when he will, and when they do it, they do it<br \/>\n   but for pleasure. But in sleep it happeneth very seldom that men dream<br \/>\n   that they do so, and in the dream they never put the question except<br \/>\n   for doubt. And you may tell him that, since this revelation is such<br \/>\n   also as happeneth so seldom and oftener happeneth that men dream of<br \/>\n   such than have such indeed, therefore it is more reasonable that he<br \/>\n   show you how he knoweth, in such a rare thing and a thing more like a<br \/>\n   dream, that he himself is not asleep, than that you, in such a common<br \/>\n   thing among folk that are awake and so seldom happening in a dream,<br \/>\n   should need to show him whereby you know that you be not asleep.<\/p>\n<p>   Besides this, he to whom you should show it seeth himself and<br \/>\n   perceiveth the thing that he would bid you prove. But the thing that he<br \/>\n   would make you believe&#8211;the truth of his revelation which you bid him<br \/>\n   prove&#8211;you see not that he knoweth it well himself. And therefore, ere<br \/>\n   you believe it against the scripture, it would be well consonant unto<br \/>\n   reason that he should show you how he knoweth it for a true waking<br \/>\n   revelation and not a false dreaming delusion.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Then shall he peradventure answer me that whether I believe<br \/>\n   him or not maketh to him no matter; the thing toucheth himself and not<br \/>\n   me, and he himself is in himself as sure that it is a true revelation<br \/>\n   as that he can tell that he dreameth not but talketh with me awake.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Without doubt, cousin, if he abide at that point and can by no<br \/>\n   reason be brought to do so much as doubt, nor can by no means be<br \/>\n   shogged out of his dead sleep, but will needs take his dream for a very<br \/>\n   truth, and&#8211;as some men rise by night and walk about their chamber in<br \/>\n   their sleep&#8211;will so rise and hang himself; I can then see no other way<br \/>\n   but either bind him fast in his bed, or else essay whether that might<br \/>\n   hap to help him with which, the common tale goeth, a carver&#8217;s wife<br \/>\n   helped her husband in such a frantic fancy. When, upon a Good Friday,<br \/>\n   he would needs have killed himself for Christ as Christ did for him,<br \/>\n   she said to him that it would then be fitting for him to die even after<br \/>\n   the same fashion. And that might not be by his own hands, but by the<br \/>\n   hand of another; for Christ, perdy, killed not himself. And because her<br \/>\n   husband would take no counsel (for that would he not, in no wise), she<br \/>\n   offered him that for God&#8217;s sake she would secretly crucify him herself<br \/>\n   upon a great cross that he had made to nail a new-carved crucifix upon.<br \/>\n   And he was very glad thereof. Yet then she bethought her that Christ<br \/>\n   was bound to a pillar and beaten first, and afterward crowned with<br \/>\n   thorns. Thereupon, when she had by his own assent bound him fast to a<br \/>\n   post, she left not off beating, with holy exhortation to suffer, so<br \/>\n   much and so long that ere ever she left work and unbound him (praying<br \/>\n   nevertheless, that she might put on his head, and drive well down, a<br \/>\n   crown of thorns that she had wrought for him and brought him), he said<br \/>\n   he thought this was enough for that year. He would pray God to forbear<br \/>\n   him of the rest till Good Friday came again! But when it came again the<br \/>\n   next years, then was his desire past; he longed to follow Christ no<br \/>\n   further.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Indeed, uncle, if this help him not, then will nothing help<br \/>\n   him, I suppose.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: And yet, cousin, the devil may peradventure make him, toward<br \/>\n   such a purpose, first gladly suffer other pain; yea, and diminish his<br \/>\n   feeling in it, too, that he may thereby the less fear his death. And<br \/>\n   yet are peradventure sometimes such things and many more to be essayed.<br \/>\n   For as the devil may hap to make him suffer, so may he hap to miss,<br \/>\n   namely if his friends fall to prayer for him against his temptation.<br \/>\n   For that can he himself never do, while he taketh it for none.<\/p>\n<p>   But, for conclusion: If the man be surely proved so inflexibly set upon<br \/>\n   the purpose to destroy himself, as being commanded by God to do so,<br \/>\n   that no good counsel that men can give him nor any other thing that men<br \/>\n   may do to him can refrain him, but that he would surely shortly kill<br \/>\n   himself; then except only good prayer made by his friends for him, I<br \/>\n   can find no further shift but either to have him ever in sight or to<br \/>\n   bind him fast in his bed.<\/p>\n<p>   And so must he needs of reason be content to be ordered. For though he<br \/>\n   himself may take his fancy for a true revelation, yet since he cannot<br \/>\n   make us perceive it for such, likewise as he thinketh himself by his<br \/>\n   secret commandment bound to follow it, so must he needs agree that,<br \/>\n   since it is against the plain open prohibition of God, we are bound by<br \/>\n   the plain open precept to keep him from it.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: In this point, uncle, I can go no further. But now, if he<br \/>\n   were, on the other hand, perceived to intend his destruction and go<br \/>\n   about it with heaviness of heart and thought and dullness&#8211;what way<br \/>\n   would there be to be used to him then?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Then would his temptation, as I told you before, be properly<br \/>\n   pertaining to our matter, for then would he be in a sore tribulation<br \/>\n   and a very perilous. For then would it be a token that the devil had<br \/>\n   either, by bringing him into some great sin, brought him into despair,<br \/>\n   or peradventure, by his revelations being found false and reproved or<br \/>\n   by some secret sin of his being deprehended and divulged, had cast him<br \/>\n   both into despair of heaven through fear and into a weariness of this<br \/>\n   life for shame. For then he seeth his estimation lost among other folk<br \/>\n   of whose praise he was wont to be proud.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, cousin, in such a case as this, the man is to be fairly<br \/>\n   handled and sweetly, and with tender loving words to be put in good<br \/>\n   courage, and comforted in all that men goodly can. Here must they put<br \/>\n   him in mind that, if he despair not, but pull up his courage and trust<br \/>\n   in God&#8217;s great mercy, he shall have in conclusion great cause to be<br \/>\n   glad of this fall. For before he stood in greater peril than he was<br \/>\n   aware of, while he took himself for better than he was. And God, for<br \/>\n   favour that he beareth him, hath suffered him to fall deep into the<br \/>\n   devil&#8217;s danger, to make him thereby know what he was while he took<br \/>\n   himself for so sure. And therefore, as he suffered him then to fall for<br \/>\n   a remedy against over-bold pride, so will God now&#8211;if the man meek<br \/>\n   himself, not with fruitless despair but with fruitful penance&#8211;so set<br \/>\n   him up again upon his feet and so strengthen him with his grace, that<br \/>\n   for this one fall that the devil hath given him he shall give the devil<br \/>\n   a hundred.<\/p>\n<p>   And here must he be put in remembrance of Mary Magdalene, of the<br \/>\n   prophet David, and especially of St. Peter, whose high bold courage<br \/>\n   took a foul fall. And yet because he despaired not of God&#8217;s mercy, but<br \/>\n   wept and called upon it, how highly God took him into his favour again<br \/>\n   is well testified in his holy scripture and well known through<br \/>\n   Christendom.<\/p>\n<p>   And now shall it be charitably done if some good virtuous folk, such as<br \/>\n   he himself somewhat esteemeth and hath afore longed to stand in<br \/>\n   estimation with, do resort sometimes to him, not only to give him<br \/>\n   counsel but also to ask advice and counsel of him in some cases of<br \/>\n   their own conscience. For so may they let him perceive that they esteem<br \/>\n   him now no less, but rather more than they did before, since they think<br \/>\n   him now by this fall better expert of the devil&#8217;s craft and so not only<br \/>\n   better instructed himself but also better able to give good advice and<br \/>\n   counsel to others. This thing will, to my mind, well amend and lift up<br \/>\n   his courage from the peril of that desperate shame.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Methinketh, uncle, that this would be a perilous thing. For it<br \/>\n   may peradventure make him set the less by his fall, and thereby it may<br \/>\n   cast him into his first pride or into his other sin again, the falling<br \/>\n   in to which drove him into this despair.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I do not mean, cousin, that every fool should at adventure<br \/>\n   fall in hand with him, for so might it happen to do harm indeed.<\/p>\n<p>   But, cousin, if a learned physician have a man in hand, he can well<br \/>\n   discern when and how long some certain medicine is necessary which, if<br \/>\n   administered at another time or at that time over-long continued, might<br \/>\n   put the patient in peril. If he have his patient in an ague, for the<br \/>\n   cure of which he needeth his medicines in their working cold, yet he<br \/>\n   may hap, ere that fever be full cured, to fall into some other disease<br \/>\n   such that, unless it were helped with hot medicine, would be likely to<br \/>\n   kill the body before the fever could be cured. The physician then would<br \/>\n   for the while have his most care to the cure of that thing in which<br \/>\n   would be the most present peril. And when that were once out of<br \/>\n   jeopardy, he would do then the more exact diligence afterward about the<br \/>\n   further cure of the fever.<\/p>\n<p>   And likewise, if a ship be in peril to fall into Scilla, the fear of<br \/>\n   falling into Charibdis on the other side shall never hinder any wise<br \/>\n   master thereof from drawing himself from Scilla toward Charibdis first,<br \/>\n   in all that ever he can. But when he hath himself once so far away from<br \/>\n   Scilla that he seeth himself safe out of that danger, then will he<br \/>\n   begin to take good heed to keep himself well from the other.<\/p>\n<p>   And likewise, while this man is falling down to despair and to the<br \/>\n   final destruction of himself, a good wise spiritual leech will first<br \/>\n   look unto that, and by good comfort lift up his courage. And when he<br \/>\n   seeth that peril well past, he will care for the cure of his other<br \/>\n   faults afterward. Howbeit, even in the giving of his comfort, he may<br \/>\n   find ways enough in such wise to temper his words that the men may take<br \/>\n   occasion of good courage and yet far from occasion of new relapse into<br \/>\n   his former sin. For the great part of his counsel shall be to encourage<br \/>\n   him to amendment, and that is, perdy, far from falling into sin again.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I think, uncle, that folk fall into this ungracious mind,<br \/>\n   through the devil&#8217;s temptation, by many more means than one.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That is, cousin, very true. For the devil taketh his occasions<br \/>\n   as he seeth them fall convenient for him. Some he stirreth to it for<br \/>\n   weariness of themselves after some great loss, some for fear of<br \/>\n   horrible bodily harm, and some (as I said) for fear of worldly shame.<\/p>\n<p>   One I knew myself who had been long reputed for a right honest man, who<br \/>\n   was fallen into such a fancy that he was well near worn away with it.<br \/>\n   But what he was tempted to do, that would he tell no man. But he told<br \/>\n   me that he was sore cumbered and that it always ran in his mind that<br \/>\n   folk&#8217;s fancies were fallen from him, and that they esteemed not his wit<br \/>\n   as they were wont to do, but ever his mind gave him that the people<br \/>\n   began to take him for a fool. And folk of truth did not so at all, but<br \/>\n   reputed him both for wise and honest.<\/p>\n<p>   Two others I knew who were marvellous afraid that they would kill<br \/>\n   themselves, and could tell me no cause wherefore they so feared it<br \/>\n   except that their own mind so gave them. Neither had they any loss nor<br \/>\n   no such thing toward them, nor none occasion of any worldly shame (the<br \/>\n   one was in body very well liking and lusty), but wondrous weary were<br \/>\n   they both twain of that mind. And always they thought that they would<br \/>\n   not do it for anything, and nevertheless they feared they would. And<br \/>\n   wherefore they so feared neither of them both could tell. And the one,<br \/>\n   lest he should do it, desired his friends to bind him.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This is, uncle, a marvellous strange manner.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Forsooth, cousin, I suppose many of them are in this case.<\/p>\n<p>   The devil, as I said before, seeketh his occasions. For as St. Peter<br \/>\n   saith, &#8220;Your adversary the devil as a roaring lion goeth about seeking<br \/>\n   whom he may devour.&#8221; He marketh well, therefore, the state and<br \/>\n   condition that every man standeth in, not only concerning these outward<br \/>\n   things (lands, possessions, goods, authority, fame, favour, or hatred<br \/>\n   of the world), but also men&#8217;s complexions within them&#8211;health or<br \/>\n   sickness, good humours or bad, by which they be light-hearted or<br \/>\n   lumpish, strong-hearted or faint and feeble of spirit, bold and hardy<br \/>\n   or timorous and fearful of courage. And according as these things<br \/>\n   minister him matter of temptation, so useth he himself in the manner of<br \/>\n   his temptation.<\/p>\n<p>   Now likewise as in such folk as are full of young warm lusty blood and<br \/>\n   other humours exciting the flesh to filthy voluptuous living, the devil<br \/>\n   useth to make those things his instruments in tempting them and<br \/>\n   provoking them to it; and as, where he findeth some folk full of hot<br \/>\n   blood and choler, he maketh those humours his instruments to set their<br \/>\n   hearts on fire in wrath and fierce furious anger; so where he findeth<br \/>\n   some folk who, through some dull melancholy humours, are naturally<br \/>\n   disposed to fear, he casteth sometimes such a fearful imagination into<br \/>\n   their mind that without help of God they can never cast it out of their<br \/>\n   heart.<\/p>\n<p>   Some, at the sudden falling of some horrible thought into their mind,<br \/>\n   have not only had a great abomination at it (which abomination they<br \/>\n   well and virtuously had), but the devil, using their melancholy humour<br \/>\n   and thereby their natural inclination to fear for his instruments, hath<br \/>\n   caused them to conceive therewith such a deep dread besides that they<br \/>\n   think themselves with that abominable thought to be fallen into such an<br \/>\n   outrageous sin that they are ready to fall into despair of grace,<br \/>\n   believing that God hath given them over for ever. Whereas that thought,<br \/>\n   were it never so horrible and never so abominable, is yet unto those<br \/>\n   who never like it, but ever still abhor it and strive still against it,<br \/>\n   matter of conflict and merit and not any sin at all.<\/p>\n<p>   Some have, with holding a knife in their hand, suddenly thought upon<br \/>\n   the killing of themselves, and forthwith, in devising what a horrible<br \/>\n   thing it would be if they should mishap to do so, have fallen into a<br \/>\n   fear that they would do so indeed. And they have, with long and often<br \/>\n   thinking thereon, imprinted that fear so sore in their imagination,<br \/>\n   that some of them have not afterwards cast it off without great<br \/>\n   difficulty. And some could never in their life be rid of it, but have<br \/>\n   afterward in conclusion miserably done it indeed. But like as, where<br \/>\n   the devil useth the blood of a man&#8217;s own body toward his purpose in<br \/>\n   provoking him to lechery, the man must and doth with grace and wisdom<br \/>\n   resist it; so must the man do whose melancholy humours and devil<br \/>\n   abuseth, toward the casting of such a desperate dread into his heart.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I pray you, uncle, what advice would be to be given him in<br \/>\n   such a case?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Surely, methinketh his help standeth in two things: counsel<br \/>\n   and prayer.<\/p>\n<p>   First, as concerning counsel: Like as it may be that he hath two things<br \/>\n   that hold him in his temptation; that is, some evil humours of his own<br \/>\n   body, and the cursed devil that abuseth them to his pernicious purpose,<br \/>\n   so must he needs against them twain the counsel of two manner of folk;<br \/>\n   that is, physicians for the body and physicians for the soul. The<br \/>\n   bodily physician shall consider what abundance of these evil humours<br \/>\n   the man hath, that the devil maketh his instruments, in moving the man<br \/>\n   toward that fearful affection. And he shall proceed by fitting diet and<br \/>\n   suitable medicines to resist them, as well as by purgations to<br \/>\n   disburden the body of them.<\/p>\n<p>   Let no man think it strange that I would advise a man to take counsel<br \/>\n   for the body, in such spiritual suffering. For since the body and the<br \/>\n   soul are so knit and joined together that they both make between them<br \/>\n   one person, the distemperance of either one engendereth sometimes the<br \/>\n   distemperance of both twain. And therefore I would advise every man in<br \/>\n   every sickness of the body to be shriven and to seek of a good<br \/>\n   spiritual physician the sure health of his soul. For this shall not<br \/>\n   only serve against peril that may peradventure grow further by that<br \/>\n   sickness than in the beginning men think were likely, but the comfort<br \/>\n   of it (and God&#8217;s favour increasing with it) shall also do the body<br \/>\n   good. For this cause the blessed apostle St. James exhorteth men in<br \/>\n   their bodily sickness to call in the priests, and saith that it shall<br \/>\n   do them good both in body and soul. So likewise would I sometimes<br \/>\n   advise some men, in some sickness of the soul, besides their spiritual<br \/>\n   leech, to take also some counsel of the physician for the body. Some<br \/>\n   who are wretchedly disposed, and yet long to be more vicious than they<br \/>\n   are, go to physicians and apothecaries and enquire what things may<br \/>\n   serve them to make them more lusty to their foul fleshly delight. And<br \/>\n   would it then be any folly, on the other hand, if he who feeleth<br \/>\n   himself against his will much moved unto such uncleanness, should<br \/>\n   enquire of the physician what things, without diminishing his health,<br \/>\n   would be suitable for the diminishing of such foul fleshly motion?<\/p>\n<p>   Of spiritual counsel, the first is to be shriven, that the devil have<br \/>\n   not the more power upon him by reason of his other sins.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I have heard some say, uncle, that when such folk have been at<br \/>\n   shrift, their temptation hath been the more hot upon them than it was<br \/>\n   before.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That think I very well, but that is a special token that<br \/>\n   shrift is wholesome for them, since the devil is most wroth with it.<br \/>\n   You find, in some places in the gospel, that the devil did most trouble<br \/>\n   the person whom he possessed when he saw that Christ would cast him<br \/>\n   out. Otherwise, we must let the devil do what he will, if we fear his<br \/>\n   anger, for with every good deed will he wax angry.<\/p>\n<p>   Then is it in his shrift to be told him that he not only feareth more<br \/>\n   than he needeth, but also feareth where he needeth not. And besides<br \/>\n   that, he is sorry for a thing for which, unless he will willingly turn<br \/>\n   his good into his harm, he hath more cause to be glad.<\/p>\n<p>   First, if he have cause to fear, yet feareth he more than he needeth.<br \/>\n   For there is no devil so diligent to destroy him as God is to preserve<br \/>\n   him; nor no devil so near him to do him harm as God is to do him good.<br \/>\n   Nor are all the devils in hell so strong to invade and assault him as<br \/>\n   God is to defend him if he distrust him not but faithfully put his<br \/>\n   trust in him.<\/p>\n<p>   He feareth also where he needeth not. For he dreadeth that he were out<br \/>\n   of God&#8217;s favour, because such horrible thoughts fall into his mind, but<br \/>\n   he must understand that while they fall into his mind against his will<br \/>\n   they are not imputed unto him.<\/p>\n<p>   He is, finally, sad of that of which he may be glad. For since he<br \/>\n   taketh such thoughts displeasantly, and striveth and fighteth against<br \/>\n   them, he hath thereby a good token that he is in God&#8217;s favour, and that<br \/>\n   God assisteth him and helpeth him. And he may make himself sure that so<br \/>\n   will God never cease to do, unless he himself fail and fall from him<br \/>\n   first. And beside that, this conflict that he hath against the<br \/>\n   temptation shall, if he will not fall where he need not, be an occasion<br \/>\n   of his merit and of a right great reward in heaven. And the pain that<br \/>\n   he taketh therein shall for so much, as Master Gerson well showeth,<br \/>\n   stand him in stead of his purgatory.<\/p>\n<p>   The manner of the fight against temptation must stand in three things:<br \/>\n   that is, in resisting, and in contemning, and in the invocation of<br \/>\n   help.<\/p>\n<p>   Resist must a man for his own part with reason, considering what a<br \/>\n   folly it would be to fall where he need not, since he is not driven to<br \/>\n   it in avoiding of any other pain or in hope of winning any manner of<br \/>\n   pleasure, but contrariwise he would by that fall lose everlasting bliss<br \/>\n   and fall into everlasting pain. And if it were in avoiding of other<br \/>\n   great pain, yet could he avoid none so great thereby as the one he<br \/>\n   should thereby fall into.<\/p>\n<p>   He must also consider that a great part of this temptation is in effect<br \/>\n   but the fear of his own fancy, the dread that he hath lest he shall<br \/>\n   once be driven to it. For he may be sure that (unless he himself will,<br \/>\n   of his own folly) all the devils in hell can never drive him to it, but<br \/>\n   his own foolish imagination may. For it fareth in his temptation like a<br \/>\n   man going over a high bridge who waxeth so afraid, through his own<br \/>\n   fancy, that he falleth down indeed, when he would otherwise be able<br \/>\n   enough to pass over without any danger. For a man upon such a bridge,<br \/>\n   if folk call upon him, &#8220;You fall, you fall!&#8221; may fall with the fancy<br \/>\n   that he taketh thereof; although, if folk looked merrily upon him and<br \/>\n   said, &#8220;There is no danger therein,&#8221; he would pass over the bridge well<br \/>\n   enough&#8211;and he would not hesitate to run upon it, if it were but a foot<br \/>\n   from the ground. So, in this temptation, the devil findeth the man of<br \/>\n   his own foolish fancy afraid and then crieth in the ear of his heart,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Thou fallest, thou fallest!&#8221; and maketh the foolish man afraid that he<br \/>\n   should, at every foot, fall indeed. And the devil so wearieth him with<br \/>\n   that continual fear, if he give the ear of his heart to him, that at<br \/>\n   last he withdraweth his mind from due remembrance of God, and then<br \/>\n   driveth him to that deadly mischief indeed. Therefore, like as, against<br \/>\n   the vice of the flesh, the victory standeth not all in the fight, but<br \/>\n   sometimes also in the flight (saving that it is indeed a part of a wise<br \/>\n   warrior&#8217;s fight to flee from his enemies&#8217; traps), so must a man in this<br \/>\n   temptation too, not only resist it always with reasoning against it,<br \/>\n   but sometimes set it clear at right naught and cast it off when it<br \/>\n   cometh and not once regard it so much as to vouchsafe to think thereon.<\/p>\n<p>   Some folk have been clearly rid of such pestilent fancies with very<br \/>\n   full contempt of them, making a cross upon their hearts and bidding the<br \/>\n   devil avaunt. And sometimes they laugh him to scorn too, and then turn<br \/>\n   their mind unto some other matter. And when the devil hath seen that<br \/>\n   they have set so little by him, after certain essays, made in such<br \/>\n   times as he thought most fitting, he hath given that temptation quite<br \/>\n   over. And this he doth not only because the proud spirit cannot endure<br \/>\n   to be mocked, but also lest, with much tempting the man to the sin to<br \/>\n   which he could not in conclusion bring him, he should much increase his<br \/>\n   merit.<\/p>\n<p>   The final fight is by invocation of help unto God, both praying for<br \/>\n   himself and desiring others also to pray for him&#8211;both poor folk for<br \/>\n   his alms and other good folk of their charity, especially good priests<br \/>\n   in that holy sacred service of the Mass. And not only them but also his<br \/>\n   own good angel and other holy saints such as his devotion specially<br \/>\n   doth stand unto. Or, if he be learned, let him use then the litany,<br \/>\n   with the holy suffrages that follow, which is a prayer in the church of<br \/>\n   marvellous old antiquity. For it was not made first, as some believe,<br \/>\n   by that holy man St. Gregory (which opinion arose from the fact that,<br \/>\n   in the time of a great pestilence in Rome, he caused the whole city to<br \/>\n   go in solemn procession with it), but it was in use in the church many<br \/>\n   years before St. Gregory&#8217;s days, as well appeareth by the books of<br \/>\n   other holy doctors and saints, who were dead hundreds of years before<br \/>\n   St. Gregory was born.<\/p>\n<p>   And holy St. Bernard giveth counsel that every man should make suit<br \/>\n   unto angels and saints to pray for him to God in the things that he<br \/>\n   would have furthered by his holy hand. If any man will stick at that,<br \/>\n   and say it needs not, because God can hear us himself; and will also<br \/>\n   say that it is perilous to do so because (they say) we are not so<br \/>\n   counseled by scripture, I will not dispute the matter here. He who will<br \/>\n   not do it, I hinder him not to leave it undone. But yet for mine own<br \/>\n   part, I will as well trust to the counsel of St. Bernard, and reckon<br \/>\n   him for as good and as well learned in scripture, as any man whom I<br \/>\n   hear say the contrary. And better dare I jeopard my soul with the soul<br \/>\n   of St. Bernard than with that of him who findeth that fault in his<br \/>\n   doctrine.<\/p>\n<p>   Unto God himself every good man counseleth to have recourse above all.<br \/>\n   And, in this temptation, to have special remembrance of Christ&#8217;s<br \/>\n   passion, and pray him for the honour of his death, the ground of man&#8217;s<br \/>\n   salvation, to keep this person thus tempted form that damnable death.<\/p>\n<p>   Special verses may be drawn out of the psalter, against the devil&#8217;s<br \/>\n   wicked temptations&#8211;as, for example, &#8220;Exsurgat Deus et dissipentur<br \/>\n   inimici eius, et fugiant qui oderunt eum a facie eius,&#8221; and many<br \/>\n   others&#8211;which in such horrible temptation are pleasing to God and to<br \/>\n   the devil very terrible. But none is more terrible nor more odious to<br \/>\n   the devil than the words with which our Saviour drove him away himself:<br \/>\n   &#8220;Vade Sathana.&#8221; And no prayer is more acceptable unto God, nor more<br \/>\n   effectual in its matter, than those words which our Saviour hath taught<br \/>\n   us himself, &#8220;Ne nos inducas in tentationem, sed libera nos a malo.&#8221; And<br \/>\n   I doubt not, by God&#8217;s grace, but that he who in such a temptation will<br \/>\n   use good counsel and prayer and keep himself in good virtuous business<br \/>\n   and good virtuous company and abide in the faithful hope of God&#8217;s help,<br \/>\n   he shall have the truth of God (as the prophet saith in the verse afore<br \/>\n   rehearsed) so compass him about with a shield that he shall not need to<br \/>\n   dread this night&#8217;s fear of this wicked temptation.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus will I finish this piece of the night&#8217;s fear. And glad am<br \/>\n   I that we are past it, and come once unto the day, to those other<br \/>\n   words of the prophet, &#8220;A sagitta volante in die.&#8221; For methinketh<br \/>\n   I have made it a long night!<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, uncle, so have you, but we have not slept in it, but<br \/>\n   been very well occupied. But now I fear that unless you make here a<br \/>\n   pause till you have dined, you shall keep yourself from your dinner<br \/>\n   over-long.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Nay, nay, cousin, for I broke my fast even as you came in. And<br \/>\n   also you shall find this night and this day like a winter day and a<br \/>\n   winter night. For as the winter hath short days and long nights, so<br \/>\n   shall you find that I made you not this fearful night so long but what<br \/>\n   I shall make you this light courageous day as short.<\/p>\n<p>   And so shall the matter require well of itself indeed. For in these<br \/>\n   words of the prophet, &#8220;The truth of God shall compass thee round about<br \/>\n   with a shield from the arrow flying in the day,&#8221; I understand the arrow<br \/>\n   of pride, with which the devil tempteth a man, not in the night (that<br \/>\n   is, in tribulation and adversity), for that time is too discomfortable<br \/>\n   and too fearful for pride, but in the day (that is, in prosperity), for<br \/>\n   that time is full of lightsome pleasure and courage. But surely this<br \/>\n   worldly prosperity in which a man so rejoiceth and of which the devil<br \/>\n   maketh him so proud, is but a very short winter day. For we begin, many<br \/>\n   full poor and cold, and up we fly like an arrow shot into the air. And<br \/>\n   yet when we be suddenly shot up into the highest, ere we be well warm<br \/>\n   there, down we come unto the cold ground again. And then even there<br \/>\n   stick we still. And yet for the short while that we be upward and<br \/>\n   aloft&#8211;Lord, how lusty and how proud we be, buzzing above busily, as a<br \/>\n   bumblebee flieth about in summer, never aware that she shall die in<br \/>\n   winter! And so fare many of us, God help us. For in the short winter<br \/>\n   day of worldly wealth and prosperity, this flying arrow of the devil,<br \/>\n   this high spirit of pride, shot out of the devil&#8217;s bow and piercing<br \/>\n   through our heart, beareth us up in our affection aloft into the<br \/>\n   clouds, where we think we sit on the rainbow and overlook the world<br \/>\n   under us, accounting in the regard of our own glory such other poor<br \/>\n   souls as were peradventure wont to be our fellows for silly poor<br \/>\n   pismires and ants.<\/p>\n<p>   But though this arrow of pride fly never so high in the clouds, and<br \/>\n   though the man whom it carrieth up so high be never so joyful thereof,<br \/>\n   yet let him remember that, be this arrow never so light, it hath yet a<br \/>\n   heavy iron head. And therefore, fly it never so high, down must it<br \/>\n   needs come, and on the ground must it light. And sometimes it falleth<br \/>\n   not in a very cleanly place, but the pride turneth into rebuke and<br \/>\n   shame and there is then all the glory gone.<\/p>\n<p>   Of this arrow speaketh the wise man in the fifth chapter of the book of<br \/>\n   Wisdom, where he saith in the person of them that in pride and vanity<br \/>\n   passed the time of this present life, and after that so spent, passed<br \/>\n   hence into hell: &#8220;What hath pride profited us? Or what good hath the<br \/>\n   glory of our riches done unto us? Passed are all those things like a<br \/>\n   shadow . . . or like an arrow shot out into the place appointed; the<br \/>\n   air that was divided is forthwith returned unto the place, and in such<br \/>\n   wise closed together again that the way is not perceived in which the<br \/>\n   arrow went. And in like wise we, as soon as we were born, are forthwith<br \/>\n   vanished away, and have left no token of any good virtue behind us, but<br \/>\n   are consumed and wasted and come to naught in our malignity. They, lo,<br \/>\n   that have lived here in sin, such words have they spoken when they lay<br \/>\n   in hell.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Here shall you, good cousin, consider, that whereas the scripture here<br \/>\n   speaketh of the arrow shot into its place appointed or intended, in the<br \/>\n   shooting of this arrow of pride there be divers purposings and<br \/>\n   appointings. For the proud man himself hath no certain purpose or<br \/>\n   appointment at any mark, butt, or prick upon earth, at which he<br \/>\n   determineth to shoot and there to stick and tarry. But ever he shooteth<br \/>\n   as children do, who love to shoot up cop-high, to see how high their<br \/>\n   arrow can fly up. But now doth the devil intend and appoint a certain<br \/>\n   mark, surely set in a place into which he purposeth&#8211;fly this arrow<br \/>\n   never so high and the proud heart on it&#8211;to have them both alight at<br \/>\n   last, and that place is in the very pit of hell. There is set the<br \/>\n   devil&#8217;s well-acquainted prick and his very just mark. And with his<br \/>\n   pricking shaft of pride he hath by himself a plain proof and experience<br \/>\n   that down upon this prick (unless it be stopped by some grace of God on<br \/>\n   the way) the soul that flieth up with it can never fail to fall. For<br \/>\n   when he himself was in heaven and began to fly cop-high, with the lusty<br \/>\n   light flight of pride, saying, &#8220;I will fly up above the stars and set<br \/>\n   my throne on the sides of the north, and will be like unto the<br \/>\n   Highest,&#8221; long ere he could fly up half so high as he said in his heart<br \/>\n   that he would, he was turned from a bright glorious angel into a dark<br \/>\n   deformed devil, and from flying any further upward, down was he thrown<br \/>\n   into the deep dungeon of hell.<\/p>\n<p>   Now may it, peradventure, cousin, seem that, since this kind of<br \/>\n   temptation of pride is no tribulation or pain, all this that we speak<br \/>\n   of this sorrow of pride flying forth in the day of prosperity, would be<br \/>\n   beside our matter.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, mine uncle, and so seemed it unto me. And somewhat was<br \/>\n   I minded so to say to you, too, saving that, whether it were properly<br \/>\n   pertaining to the present matter or somewhat digressing from it,<br \/>\n   methought it was good matter and such as I had no wish to leave.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: But now must you consider, cousin, that though prosperity be<br \/>\n   contrary to tribulation, yet unto many a good man the devil&#8217;s<br \/>\n   temptation to pride in prosperity is a greater tribulation, and more<br \/>\n   hath need of good comfort and good counsel both, than he who never felt<br \/>\n   it would believe. And that is the thing, cousin, that maketh me speak<br \/>\n   of it as of a thing proper to this matter. For, cousin, as it is a<br \/>\n   right hard thing to touch pitch and never defile the fingers, to put<br \/>\n   flax unto fire and yet keep them from burning, to keep a serpent in thy<br \/>\n   bosom and yet be safe from stinging, to put young men with young women<br \/>\n   without danger of foul fleshly desire&#8211;so it is hard for any person,<br \/>\n   either man or woman, in great worldly wealth and much prosperity, so to<br \/>\n   withstand the suggestions of the devil and occasions given by the world<br \/>\n   that they keep themselves from the deadly danger of ambitious glory.<br \/>\n   And if a man fall into it, there followeth upon it a whole flood of all<br \/>\n   unhappy mischief: arrogant manner, high solemn bearing, overlooking the<br \/>\n   poor in word and countenance, displeasant and disdainful behaviour,<br \/>\n   ravine, extortion, oppression, hatred and cruelty.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, many a good man, cousin, come into great authority, casteth in his<br \/>\n   mind the peril of such occasions of pride as the devil taketh of<br \/>\n   prosperity to make his instruments of, with which to move men to such<br \/>\n   high point of presumption as engendereth so many great evils. And,<br \/>\n   feeling the devil therewith offering him suggestions to it, he is sore<br \/>\n   troubled therewith. And some fall so afraid of it that even in the day<br \/>\n   of prosperity they fall into the night&#8217;s fear of pusillanimity, and<br \/>\n   they leave the things undone in which they might use themselves well.<br \/>\n   And mistrusting the aid and help of God in holding them upright in<br \/>\n   their temptations, whereby for faint heart they leave off good business<br \/>\n   in which they would be well occupied. And, under pretext (as it seemeth<br \/>\n   to themselves) of humble heart and meekness, and of serving God in<br \/>\n   contemplation and silence, they seek their own ease and earthly rest<br \/>\n   unawares. And with this, if it be so, God is not well content.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, if it be so that a man, by the experience that he hath of<br \/>\n   himself, perceiveth that in wealth and authority he doth his own soul<br \/>\n   harm, and cannot do the good that to his part appertaineth; but seeth<br \/>\n   the things that he should set his hands to sustain, decay through his<br \/>\n   default and fall to ruin under him, and seeth that to the amendment<br \/>\n   thereof he leaveth his own duty undone; then would I in any wise advise<br \/>\n   him to leave off that thing&#8211;be it spiritual benefice that he have,<br \/>\n   parsonage or bishopric, or temporal office and authority&#8211;and rather<br \/>\n   give it over quite and draw himself aside and serve God, than to take<br \/>\n   the worldly worship and commodity for himself, with incommodity of<br \/>\n   those whom his duty would be to profit.<\/p>\n<p>   But, on the other hand, he may not see the contrary but what he may do<br \/>\n   his duty conveniently well, and may fear nothing but that the<br \/>\n   temptations of ambition and pride may peradventure turn his good<br \/>\n   purpose and make him decline unto sin. I deny not that it is well done<br \/>\n   to stand always in moderate fear, for the scripture saith, &#8220;Blessed is<br \/>\n   the man that is always fearful,&#8221; and St. Paul saith, &#8220;He that standeth,<br \/>\n   let him look that he fall not.&#8221; Yet is over-much fear perilous and<br \/>\n   draweth toward the mistrust of God&#8217;s gracious help. This immoderate<br \/>\n   fear and faint heart holy scripture forbiddeth, saying, &#8220;Be not<br \/>\n   feeble-hearted or timorous.&#8221; Let such a man therefore temper his fear<br \/>\n   with good hope, and think that since God hath set him in that place (if<br \/>\n   he think that God have set him in it), God will assist him with his<br \/>\n   grace to use it well. Howbeit, if he came to it by simony or some such<br \/>\n   other evils means, then that would be one good reason wherefore he<br \/>\n   should rather leave it off. But otherwise let him continue in his good<br \/>\n   business. And, against the devil&#8217;s provocation unto evil, let him bless<br \/>\n   himself and call unto God and pray, and look that the devil tempt him<br \/>\n   not to lean the more toward the contrary.<\/p>\n<p>   Let him pity and comfort those who are in distress and affliction. I<br \/>\n   mean not that he should let every malefactor pass forth unpunished, and<br \/>\n   freely run out and rob at random. But in his heart let him be sorry to<br \/>\n   see that of necessity, for fear of decaying the common weal, men are<br \/>\n   driven to put malefactors to pain. And yet where he findeth good tokens<br \/>\n   and likelihood of amendment, there let him help all that he can that<br \/>\n   mercy may be had. There shall never lack desperately disposed wretched<br \/>\n   enough besides, upon whom, as an example, justice can proceed. Let him<br \/>\n   think, in his own heart, that every poor beggar is his fellow.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: That will be very hard, uncle, for an honourable man to do,<br \/>\n   when he beholdeth himself richly apparelled and the beggar rigged in<br \/>\n   his rags.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: If there were here, cousin, two men who were both beggars, and<br \/>\n   afterward a great rich man would take one unto him, and tell him that<br \/>\n   for a little time he would have him in his house, and thereupon arrayed<br \/>\n   him in silk and gave him a great bag by his side, filled even with<br \/>\n   gold, but giving him this catch therewith: that, within a little while,<br \/>\n   out he should go in his old rags again, and bear never a penny with<br \/>\n   him&#8211;if this beggar met his fellow now, while his gay gown was on,<br \/>\n   might he not, for all his gay gear, take him for his fellow still? And<br \/>\n   would he not be a very fool if, for a wealth of a few weeks, he would<br \/>\n   think himself far his better?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yes, uncle, if the difference in their state were no other.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Surely, cousin, methinketh that in this world, between the<br \/>\n   richest and the most poor, the difference is scant so much. For let the<br \/>\n   highest look on the most base, and consider how they both came into<br \/>\n   this world. And then let him consider further that, howsoever rich he<br \/>\n   be now, he shall yet, within a while&#8211; peradventure less than one<br \/>\n   week&#8211;walk out again as poor as that beggar shall. And then, by my<br \/>\n   troth, methinketh this rich man much more than mad if, for the wealth<br \/>\n   of a little while&#8211;haply less than one week&#8211;he reckon himself in<br \/>\n   earnest any better than the beggar&#8217;s fellow.<\/p>\n<p>   And less than thus can no man think, who hath any natural wit and well<br \/>\n   useth it. But now a Christian man, cousin, who hath the light of faith,<br \/>\n   he cannot fail to think much further in this thing. For he will think<br \/>\n   not only upon his bare coming hither and his bare going hence again,<br \/>\n   but also the dreadful judgment of God, and upon the fearful pains of<br \/>\n   hell and the inestimable joys of heaven. And in the considering of<br \/>\n   these things, he will call to remembrance that peradventure when this<br \/>\n   beggar and he are both departed hence, the beggar may be suddenly set<br \/>\n   up in such royalty that well were he himself that ever was he born if<br \/>\n   he might be made his fellow. And he who well bethinketh him, cousin,<br \/>\n   upon these things, I verily think that the arrow of pride flying forth<br \/>\n   in the day of worldly wealth shall never so wound his heart that ever<br \/>\n   it shall bear him up one foot.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, to the intent that he may think on such things the better, let<br \/>\n   him use often to resort to confession. And there let him open his heart<br \/>\n   and, by the mouth of some virtuous ghostly father, have such things<br \/>\n   often renewed in his remembrance. Let him also choose himself some<br \/>\n   secret solitary place in his own house, as far from noise and company<br \/>\n   as he conveniently can, and thither let him sometimes secretly resort<br \/>\n   alone, imagining himself as one going out of the world even straight<br \/>\n   unto the giving up his reckoning unto God of his sinful living. There,<br \/>\n   before an altar or some pitiful image of Christ&#8217;s bitter passion, the<br \/>\n   beholding of which may put him in remembrance of the thing and move him<br \/>\n   to devout compassion, let him then kneel down or fall prostrate as at<br \/>\n   the feet of almighty God, verily believing him to be there invisibly<br \/>\n   present, as without any doubt he is. There let him open his heart to<br \/>\n   God and confess his faults, such as he can call to mind, and pray God<br \/>\n   for forgiveness. Let him call to remembrance the benefits that God hath<br \/>\n   given him, either in general among other men or privately to himself,<br \/>\n   and give him humble hearty thanks for them. There let him declare unto<br \/>\n   God the temptations of the devil, the suggestions of the flesh, the<br \/>\n   occasions of the world&#8211;and of his worldly friends, much worse many<br \/>\n   times in drawing a man from God than are his most mortal enemies, as<br \/>\n   our Saviour witnesseth himself where he saith, &#8220;The enemies of a man<br \/>\n   are they that are his own familiars.&#8221; There let him lament and bewail<br \/>\n   unto God his own frailty, negligence, and sloth in resisting and<br \/>\n   withstanding of temptation; his readiness and proneness to fall into<br \/>\n   it. There let him lamentably beseech God, of his gracious aid and help,<br \/>\n   to strengthen his infirmity&#8211;both to keep him from falling and, when he<br \/>\n   by his own fault misfortuneth to fall, then with the helping hand of<br \/>\n   his merciful grace to lift him up and set him on his feet in the state<br \/>\n   of his grace again. And let this man not doubt but that God heareth him<br \/>\n   and granteth him gladly his boon.<\/p>\n<p>   And so, dwelling in the faithful trust of God&#8217;s help, he shall well use<br \/>\n   his prosperity, and persevere in his good profitable business, and<br \/>\n   shall have the truth of God so compass him about with a shield of his<br \/>\n   heavenly defence that he shall not need to dread of the devil&#8217;s arrow<br \/>\n   flying in the day of worldly wealth.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, uncle, I like this good counsel well. And I should<br \/>\n   think that those who are in prosperity and take such order therein, may<br \/>\n   do much good both to themselves and to other folk.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I beseech our Lord, cousin, to put this and better in the mind<br \/>\n   of every man who needeth it.<\/p>\n<p>   And now will I touch one word or twain of the third temptation, of<br \/>\n   which the prophet speaketh in these words: &#8220;From the business walking<br \/>\n   in the darknesses.&#8221; And then will we call for our dinner, leaving the<br \/>\n   last temptation&#8211;that is, &#8220;from the incursion and the devil of the<br \/>\n   midday&#8221;&#8211;till afternoon. And then shall we with that, God willing, make<br \/>\n   an end of all this matter.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Our Lord reward you, good uncle, for your good labour with me.<br \/>\n   But, for our Lord&#8217;s sake, take good heed, uncle, that you forbear not<br \/>\n   your dinner over-long.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Fear not that, cousin, I warrant you, for this piece will I<br \/>\n   make you but short.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XVII<\/p>\n<p>   The prophet saith in the said psalm, &#8220;He that dwelleth in the faithful<br \/>\n   hope of God&#8217;s help, he shall abide in the protection or safeguard of<br \/>\n   God in heaven. And thou who art such a one, the truth of him shall so<br \/>\n   compass thee about with a shield, that thou shalt not be afraid of the<br \/>\n   business walking about in the darknesses.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;Negotium, the business,&#8221; is here, cousin, the name of the devil who is<br \/>\n   ever full of busy-ness in tempting folk to much evil business. His time<br \/>\n   of tempting is in the darknesses. For you know well that beside the<br \/>\n   full night, which is the deep dark, there are two times of darkness,<br \/>\n   the one ere the morning wax light, the other when the evening waxeth<br \/>\n   dark. Two times of like darkness are there also in the soul of man: the<br \/>\n   one ere the light of grace be well sprung up in the heart, the other<br \/>\n   when the light of grace beginneth out of the heart to walk fast away.<br \/>\n   In these two darknesses this devil who is called Business busily<br \/>\n   walketh about, and he carrieth about with him such foolish folk as will<br \/>\n   follow him and setteth them to work with many a manner of bumbling<br \/>\n   business.<\/p>\n<p>   He setteth some, I say, to seek the pleasures of the flesh in eating,<br \/>\n   drinking, and other filthy delight. And some he setteth about incessant<br \/>\n   seeking for these worldly goods. And of such busy folk whom this devil<br \/>\n   called Business, walking about in the darknesses, setteth to work with<br \/>\n   such business, our Saviour saith in the gospel, &#8220;He that walketh in<br \/>\n   darknesses knoweth not whither he goeth.&#8221; And surely in such a state<br \/>\n   are they&#8211;they neither know which way they go, nor whither. For verily<br \/>\n   they walk round about as it were in a round maze; when they think<br \/>\n   themselves at an end of their business, they are but at the beginning<br \/>\n   again. For is not the going about the serving of the flesh a business<br \/>\n   that hath no end, but evermore from the end cometh to the beginning<br \/>\n   again? Go they never so full-fed to bed, yet evermore on the morrow, as<br \/>\n   new they are to be fed again as they were the day before. Thus fareth<br \/>\n   it by the belly; thus fareth it by those parts that are beneath the<br \/>\n   belly. And as for covetousness, it fareth like the fire&#8211;the more wood<br \/>\n   there cometh to it, the more fervent and the more greedy it is.<\/p>\n<p>   But now hath this maze a centre or middle place, into which these busy<br \/>\n   folk are sometimes conveyed suddenly when they think they are not yet<br \/>\n   far from the brink. The centre or middle place of this maze is hell.<br \/>\n   And into that place are these busy folk who with this devil of business<br \/>\n   walk about in this busy maze, in the darkness, sometimes suddenly<br \/>\n   conveyed, unaware whither they are going. And that may be even while<br \/>\n   they think that they have not walked far from the beginning, and that<br \/>\n   they have yet a great way to walk about before they should come to the<br \/>\n   end. But of these fleshly folk walking in this busy pleasant maze the<br \/>\n   scripture declareth the end: &#8220;They lead their life in pleasure, and at<br \/>\n   a pop down they descend into hell.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Of the covetous man saith St. Paul, &#8220;They that long to be rich do fall<br \/>\n   into temptation and into the snare of the devil, and into many<br \/>\n   unprofitable and harmful desires, which drown men into death and<br \/>\n   destruction.&#8221; Lo, here in the middle place of this busy maze, the snare<br \/>\n   of the devil, the place of perdition and destruction, in which they<br \/>\n   fall and are caught and drowned ere they are aware!<\/p>\n<p>   The covetous rich man also that our Saviour speaketh of in the gospel,<br \/>\n   who had so great plenty of corn that his barns would not receive it,<br \/>\n   but intended to make his barns larger, and said unto himself that he<br \/>\n   would make merry many days&#8211;he thought, you know, that he had a great<br \/>\n   way yet to walk. But God said unto him, &#8220;Fool, this night shall they<br \/>\n   take thy soul from thee, and then all these goods that thou hast<br \/>\n   gathered, whose shall they be?&#8221; Here, you see, he fell suddenly into<br \/>\n   the deep centre of this busy maze, so that he was fallen full into it<br \/>\n   ere ever he had thought he should have come near to it.<\/p>\n<p>   Now this I know very well: Those who are walking about in this busy<br \/>\n   maze take not their business for any tribulation. And yet are there<br \/>\n   many of them as sore wearied in it, and sore panged and pained, their<br \/>\n   pleasures being so short, so little, and so few, and their displeasures<br \/>\n   and their griefs so great, so continual, and so many. It maketh me<br \/>\n   think on a good worshipful man who, when he divers times beheld what<br \/>\n   pain his wife took in tightly binding up her hair to make her a fair<br \/>\n   large forehead, and with tightly bracing in her body to make her middle<br \/>\n   small (both twain to her great pain) for the pride of a little foolish<br \/>\n   praise, he said unto her, &#8220;Forsooth, madam, if God give you not hell,<br \/>\n   he shall do you a great wrong. For it must needs be your own very<br \/>\n   right, for you buy it very dear and take very great pain therefore!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Those who now lie in hell for their wretched living here do now<br \/>\n   perceive their folly in the more pain that they took here for the less<br \/>\n   pleasure. There confess they now their folly, and cry out, &#8220;We have<br \/>\n   been wearied in the way of wickedness.&#8221; And yet, while they were<br \/>\n   walking in that way, they would not rest themselves, but ran on still<br \/>\n   in their weariness, and put themselves still unto more pain and more,<br \/>\n   for a little childish pleasure, short and soon gone. For that they took<br \/>\n   all that labour and pain, beside the everlasting pain that followed it<br \/>\n   for their further advantage afterward. So help me God, but I verily<br \/>\n   think many a man buyeth hell here with so much pain that he might have<br \/>\n   bought heaven with less than half!<\/p>\n<p>   But yet, as I say, while these fleshly and worldly busy folk are<br \/>\n   walking about in this round busy maze of the devil called Business who<br \/>\n   walketh about in these two times of darkness, their wits are so<br \/>\n   bewitched by the secret enchantment of the devil that they mark not the<br \/>\n   great long miserable weariness and pain that the devil maketh them take<br \/>\n   and endure about naught. And therefore they take it for no tribulation,<br \/>\n   so that they need no comfort. And therefore it is not for their sakes<br \/>\n   that I speak of all this, saving that it may serve them for counsel<br \/>\n   toward the perceiving of their own foolish misery, through the help of<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s grace, beginning to shine upon them again. But there are very<br \/>\n   good folk and virtuous who are in the daylight of grace, and yet the<br \/>\n   devil tempteth them busily to such fleshly delight. And since they see<br \/>\n   plenty of worldly substance fall unto them, and feel the devil in like<br \/>\n   wise busily tempt them to set their hearts upon it, they are sore<br \/>\n   troubled therewith. And they begin to fear thereby that they are not<br \/>\n   with God in the light but with this devil that the prophet calleth<br \/>\n   Negotium&#8211;that is to say, Business&#8211;walking about in the two times of<br \/>\n   darknesses.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, as I said before of those good folk and gracious who are in<br \/>\n   the worldly wealth of great power and authority and thereby fear the<br \/>\n   devil&#8217;s arrow of pride, so say I now here again of these who stand in<br \/>\n   dread of fleshly foul sin and covetousness: they do well to stand ever<br \/>\n   in moderate fear, lest with waxing over-bold and setting the thing<br \/>\n   over-light, they might peradventure mishap to fall in thereto. Yet,<br \/>\n   since they are but tempted with it and follow it not, to vex and<br \/>\n   trouble themselves sorely with the fear of loss of God&#8217;s favour is<br \/>\n   without necessity and not always without peril. For, as I said before,<br \/>\n   it withdraweth the mind of a man far from the spiritual consolation of<br \/>\n   the good hope that he should have in God&#8217;s help. And as for those<br \/>\n   temptations, as long as he who is tempted followeth them not, the fight<br \/>\n   against them serveth him for matter of merit and reward in heaven, if<br \/>\n   he not only flee the deed, the consent, and the delectation, but also<br \/>\n   (so far as he conveniently can) flee from all occasions of them.<\/p>\n<p>   And this point is in those fleshly temptations a thing easy to perceive<br \/>\n   and plain enough. But in worldly business pertaining unto covetousness<br \/>\n   the thing is somewhat more dark and there is more difficulty in the<br \/>\n   perceiving. And very great troublous fear of it doth often arise in the<br \/>\n   hearts of very good folk, when the world falleth fast unto them,<br \/>\n   because of the sore words and terrible threats that God in holy<br \/>\n   scripture speaketh against those who are rich. As, where St. Paul<br \/>\n   saith, &#8220;They that will be rich fall into temptation, and into the snare<br \/>\n   of the devil.&#8221; And where our Saviour saith himself, &#8220;It is more easy<br \/>\n   for a camel&#8221;&#8211;or, as some say, &#8220;for a great cable rope,&#8221; for &#8220;camelus&#8221;<br \/>\n   so signifieth in the Greek tongue&#8211;&#8220;to go through a needle&#8217;s eye than<br \/>\n   for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   No marvel, now, if good folk who fear God take occasion of great dread<br \/>\n   at so dreadful words, when they see the worldly goods fall to them. And<br \/>\n   some stand in doubt whether it be lawful for them to keep any goods or<br \/>\n   not. But evermore, in all those places of scripture, the having of the<br \/>\n   worldly goods is not the thing that is rebuked and threatened, but the<br \/>\n   affection that the haver unlawfully beareth to them. For where St. Paul<br \/>\n   saith, &#8220;they that will be made rich,&#8221; he speaketh not of the having but<br \/>\n   of the will and desire and affection to have, and the longing for it.<br \/>\n   For that cannot be lightly without sin. For the thing that folk sore<br \/>\n   long for, they will make many shifts to get and jeopard themselves for.<\/p>\n<p>   And to declare that the having of riches is not forbidden, but the<br \/>\n   inordinate affection of the mind sore set upon them, the prophet saith,<br \/>\n   &#8220;If riches flow unto you, set not your heart thereupon.&#8221; And albeit<br \/>\n   that our Lord, by the said example of the camel or cable rope to come<br \/>\n   through the needle&#8217;s eye, said that it is not only hard but also<br \/>\n   impossible for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven, yet he<br \/>\n   declared that though the rich man cannot get into heaven of himself,<br \/>\n   yet God, he said, can get him in well enough. For unto men he said it<br \/>\n   was impossible, but not unto God, for &#8220;unto God,&#8221; he said, &#8220;all things<br \/>\n   are possible.&#8221; And yet, beside that, he told of which manner of rich<br \/>\n   man he meant, who could not get into the kingdom of heaven, saying, &#8220;My<br \/>\n   babes, how hard is it for them that put their trust and confidence in<br \/>\n   their money, to enter into the kingdom of God!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This is, I suppose, uncle, very true&#8211;and otherwise God<br \/>\n   forbid! For otherwise the world would be in a full hard state, if every<br \/>\n   rich man were in such danger and peril.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That would it be, cousin, indeed. And so I suppose it is yet.<br \/>\n   For I fear me that to the multitude there are very few who long not<br \/>\n   sorely to be rich. And of those who so long to be, there are also very<br \/>\n   few reserved who set not their heart very sorely thereon.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This is, uncle, I fear me, very true, but yet not the thing<br \/>\n   that I was about to speak of. But the thing that I would have said was<br \/>\n   this: I cannot well perceive (the world being such as it is, and so<br \/>\n   many poor people in it) how any man can be rich, and keep himself rich,<br \/>\n   without danger of damnation for it.<\/p>\n<p>   For all the while he seeth so many poor people who lack, while he<br \/>\n   himself hath wherewith to give them. And their necessity he is bound in<br \/>\n   such case of duty to relieve, while he hath wherewith to do so&#8211;so far<br \/>\n   forth that holy St. Ambrose saith that whosoever die for default, where<br \/>\n   we might help them, we kill them. I cannot see but that every rich man<br \/>\n   hath great cause to stand in great fear of damnation, nor can I<br \/>\n   perceive, as I say, how he can be delivered of that fear as long as he<br \/>\n   keepeth his riches. And therefore, though he might keep his riches if<br \/>\n   there lacked poor men and yet stand in God&#8217;s favour therewith, as<br \/>\n   Abraham did and many another holy rich man since; yet with such an<br \/>\n   abundance of poor men as there is now in every country, any man who<br \/>\n   keepeth any riches must needs have an inordinate affection unto it,<br \/>\n   since he giveth it not out unto the poor needy persons, as the duty of<br \/>\n   charity bindeth and constraineth him to.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus, uncle, in this world at this day, meseemeth your comfort unto<br \/>\n   good men who are rich, and are troubled with fear of damnation for the<br \/>\n   keeping, can very scantly serve.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Hard is it, cousin, in many manner of things, to bid or<br \/>\n   forbid, affirm or deny, reprove or approve, a matter nakedly proposed<br \/>\n   and put forth; or precisely to say &#8220;This thing is good,&#8221; or &#8220;This thing<br \/>\n   is evil,&#8221; without consideration of the circumstances.<\/p>\n<p>   Holy St. Austine telleth of a physician who gave a man in a certain<br \/>\n   disease a medicine that helped him. The selfsame man at another time in<br \/>\n   the selfsame disease took the selfsame medicine himself, and had of it<br \/>\n   more harm than good. This he told the physician, and asked him how the<br \/>\n   harm should have happened. &#8220;That medicine,&#8221; quoth he, &#8220;did thee no good<br \/>\n   but harm because thou tookest it when I gave it thee not.&#8221; This answer<br \/>\n   St. Austine very well approveth, because, though the medicine were the<br \/>\n   same, yet might there be peradventure in the sickness some such<br \/>\n   difference as the patient perceived not&#8211;yea, or in the man himself, or<br \/>\n   in the place, or in the time of the year. Many things might make the<br \/>\n   hindrance, for which the physician would not then have given him the<br \/>\n   selfsame medicine that he gave him before.<\/p>\n<p>   To peruse every circumstance that might, cousin, in this matter be<br \/>\n   touched, and were to be considered and weighed, would indeed make this<br \/>\n   part of this devil of Business a very busy piece of work and a long<br \/>\n   one! But I shall open a little the point that you speak of, and shall<br \/>\n   show you what I think therein, with as few words as I conveniently can.<br \/>\n   And then will we go to dinner.<\/p>\n<p>   First, cousin, he who is a rich man and keepeth all his goods, he hath,<br \/>\n   I think, very good cause to be very afraid indeed. And yet I fear me<br \/>\n   that such folk fear the least. For they are very far from the state of<br \/>\n   good men, since, if they keep all, they are then very far from charity,<br \/>\n   and do, as you know well, either little alms or none at all.<\/p>\n<p>   But now our question, cousin, is not in what case that rich man<br \/>\n   standeth who keepeth all, but whether we should suffer men to stand in<br \/>\n   a perilous dread and fear for the keeping of any great part. For if, by<br \/>\n   the keeping of so much as maketh a rich man still, they stand in the<br \/>\n   state of damnation, then are the curates bound to tell them so plainly,<br \/>\n   according to the commandment of God given unto them all in the person<br \/>\n   of Ezechiel: &#8220;If, when I say to the wicked man, &#8216;Thou shalt die,&#8217; thou<br \/>\n   do not show it unto him, nor speak unto him that he may be turned from<br \/>\n   his wicked way and live, he shall soothly die in his wickedness and his<br \/>\n   blood shall I require of thine hand.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But, cousin, though God invited men unto the following of himself in<br \/>\n   wilful poverty, by the leaving of everything at once for his sake&#8211;as<br \/>\n   the thing by which, being out of solicitude of worldly business and far<br \/>\n   from the desire of earthly commodities, they may the more speedily get<br \/>\n   and attain the state of spiritual perfection, and the hungry desire and<br \/>\n   longing for celestial things&#8211;yet doth he not command every man to do<br \/>\n   so upon the peril of damnation. For where he saith, &#8220;He that forsaketh<br \/>\n   not all that ever he hath, cannot be my disciple,&#8221; he declareth well,<br \/>\n   by other words of his own in the selfsame place a little before, what<br \/>\n   he meaneth. For there saith he more, &#8220;He that cometh to me, and hateth<br \/>\n   not his father, and his mother, and his wife, and his children, and his<br \/>\n   brethren, and his sisters, yea and his own life too, cannot be my<br \/>\n   disciple.&#8221; Here meaneth our Saviour Christ that no one can be his<br \/>\n   disciple unless he love him so far above all his kin, and above his own<br \/>\n   life, too, that for the love of him, rather than forsake him, he shall<br \/>\n   forsake them all. And so meaneth he by those other words that whosoever<br \/>\n   do not so renounce and forsake all that ever he hath in his own heart<br \/>\n   and affection, so that he will lose it all and let it go every whit,<br \/>\n   rather than deadly to displease God with the reserving of any one part<br \/>\n   of it, he cannot be Christ&#8217;s disciple. For Christ teacheth us to love<br \/>\n   God above all things, and he loveth not God above all things who,<br \/>\n   contrary to God&#8217;s pleasure, keepeth anything that he hath. For he<br \/>\n   showeth himself to set more by that thing than by God, since he is<br \/>\n   better content to lose God than it. But, as I said, to give away all,<br \/>\n   or that no man should be rich or have substance, that find I no<br \/>\n   commandment of.<\/p>\n<p>   There are, as our Saviour saith, in the house of his father many<br \/>\n   mansions. And happy shall he be who shall have the grace to dwell even<br \/>\n   in the lowest. It seemeth verily by the gospel that those who for God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   sake patiently suffer penury, shall not only dwell in heaven above<br \/>\n   those who live here in plenty in earth, but also that heaven in some<br \/>\n   manner of wise more properly belongeth unto them and is more especially<br \/>\n   prepared for them than it is for the rich. For God in the gospel<br \/>\n   counseleth the rich folk to buy (in a manner) heaven of them, where he<br \/>\n   saith unto the rich men, &#8220;Make yourselves friends of the wicked riches,<br \/>\n   that when you fail here they may receive you into everlasting<br \/>\n   tabernacles.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But now, although this be thus, in respect of the riches and the<br \/>\n   poverty compared together, yet if a rich man and a poor man be both<br \/>\n   good men, there may be some other virtue beside in which the rich man<br \/>\n   may peradventure so excel that he may in heaven be far above that poor<br \/>\n   man who was here on earth in other virtues far under him. And the proof<br \/>\n   appeareth clear in Lazarus and Abraham.<\/p>\n<p>   Nor I say not this to the intent to comfort rich men in heaping up<br \/>\n   riches, for a little comfort will bend them enough thereto. They are<br \/>\n   not so proud-hearted and obstinate but what they would, I daresay, with<br \/>\n   right little exhortation be very conformable to that counsel! But I say<br \/>\n   this for those good men to whom God giveth substance, and the mind to<br \/>\n   dispose it well, and yet not the mind to give it all away at once, but<br \/>\n   for good causes to keep some substance still. Let them not despair of<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s favour for not doing the thing which God hath given them no<br \/>\n   commandment of, nor drawn them to by any special calling.<\/p>\n<p>   Zachaeus, lo, who climbed up into the tree, for desire that he had to<br \/>\n   behold our Saviour: at such a time as Christ called aloud unto him and<br \/>\n   said, &#8220;Zachaeus, make haste and come down, for this day must I dwell in<br \/>\n   thy house,&#8221; he was glad and touched inwardly with special grace to the<br \/>\n   profit of his soul. All the people murmured much that Christ would call<br \/>\n   him and be so familiar with him as, of his own offer, to come unto his<br \/>\n   house. For they knew him for the chief of the publicans, who were<br \/>\n   custom-men or toll-gatherers of the Emperor&#8217;s duties, all which whole<br \/>\n   company were among the people sore infamous for ravine, extortion, and<br \/>\n   bribery. And then Zachaeus not only was the chief of the fellowship but<br \/>\n   also was grown greatly rich, whereby the people accounted him in their<br \/>\n   own opinion for a man very sinful and wicked. Yet he forthwith, by the<br \/>\n   instinct of the spirit of God, in reproach of all such temerarious bold<br \/>\n   and blind judgment, given upon a man whose inward mind and sudden<br \/>\n   change they cannot see, shortly proved them all deceived. And he proved<br \/>\n   that our Lord had, at those few words outwardly spoken to him, so<br \/>\n   wrought in his heart within that whatsoever he was before, he was then,<br \/>\n   unawares to them all, suddenly waxed good. For he made haste and came<br \/>\n   down, and gladly received Christ, and said, &#8220;Lo, Lord, the one half of<br \/>\n   my goods here I give unto poor people. And yet, over that, if I have in<br \/>\n   anything deceived any man, here am I ready to recompense him fourfold<br \/>\n   as much.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This was, uncle, a gracious hearing. But yet I marvel me<br \/>\n   somewhat, wherefore Zachaeus used his words in that manner of order.<br \/>\n   For methinketh he should first have spoken of making restitution unto<br \/>\n   those whom he had beguiled, and then spoken of giving his alms<br \/>\n   afterward. For restitution is, you know, duty, and a thing of such<br \/>\n   necessity that in respect of restitution almsdeed is but voluntary.<br \/>\n   Therefore it might seem that to put men in mind of their duty in making<br \/>\n   restitution first, and doing their alms afterward, Zachaeus would have<br \/>\n   spoken more fittingly if he had said first that he would make every man<br \/>\n   restitution whom he had wronged, and then give half in alms of that<br \/>\n   which remained afterward. For only that might he call clearly his own.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This is true, cousin, where a man hath not enough to suffice<br \/>\n   for both. But he who hath, is not bound to leave his alms ungiven to<br \/>\n   the poor man who is at hand and peradventure calleth upon him, till he<br \/>\n   go seek up all his creditors and all those whom he hath wronged&#8211;who<br \/>\n   are peradventure so far asunder that, leaving the one good deed undone<br \/>\n   the while, he may, before they come together, change that good intent<br \/>\n   again and do neither the one nor the other. It is good always to be<br \/>\n   doing some good out of hand, while we think on it; grace shall the<br \/>\n   better stand with us and increase also, to go the further in the other<br \/>\n   afterward.<\/p>\n<p>   And this I would answer, if the man had there done the one out of<br \/>\n   hand&#8211;the giving, I mean, of half in alms&#8211;and not so much as spoken of<br \/>\n   restitution till afterward. Whereas now, though he spoke the one in<br \/>\n   order before the other (and yet all at one time) it remained still in<br \/>\n   his liberty to put them both in execution, after such order as he<br \/>\n   should then think expedient. But now, cousin, did the spirit of God<br \/>\n   temper the tongue of Zachaeus in the utterance of these words in such<br \/>\n   wise that it may well appear that the saying of the wise man is<br \/>\n   verified in them, where he saith, &#8220;To God it belongeth to govern the<br \/>\n   tongue.&#8221; For here, when he said that he would give half of his goods<br \/>\n   unto poor people and yet beside that not only recompense any man whom<br \/>\n   he had wronged but more than recompense him by three times as much<br \/>\n   again, he doubly reproved the false suspicion of the people. For they<br \/>\n   accounted him for so evil that they reckoned in their mind all his<br \/>\n   goods wrongly gotten, because he was grown to substance in that office<br \/>\n   that was commonly misused with extortion. But his words declared that<br \/>\n   he was deep enough in his reckoning so that, if half his goods were<br \/>\n   given away, he would yet be well able to yield every man his due with<br \/>\n   the other half&#8211;and yet leave himself no beggar either, for he said not<br \/>\n   he would give away all.<\/p>\n<p>   Would God, cousin, that every rich Christian man who is reputed right<br \/>\n   worshipful&#8211;yea, and (which yet, to my mind, is more) reckoned for<br \/>\n   right honest, too&#8211;would and could do the thing that little Zachaeus,<br \/>\n   that same great publican, were he Jew or were he paynim, said that he<br \/>\n   would do: that is, with less than half his goods, to recompense every<br \/>\n   man whom he had wronged four times as much. Yea, yea, cousin, as much<br \/>\n   for as much, hardly! And then they who receive it shall be content, I<br \/>\n   dare promise for them, to let the other thrice-as-much go, and forgive<br \/>\n   it. Because that was one of the hard points of the old law, whereas<br \/>\n   Christian men must be full of forgiving, and not require and exact<br \/>\n   their amends to the uttermost.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, for our purpose here: He promised neither to give away all nor<br \/>\n   to become a beggar&#8211;no, nor yet to leave off his office either. For,<br \/>\n   albeit that he had not used it before peradventure in every point so<br \/>\n   pure as St. John the Baptist had taught them the lesson: &#8220;Do no more<br \/>\n   than is appointed unto you,&#8221; yet he might both lawfully use his<br \/>\n   substance that he intended to reserve, and lawfully might use his<br \/>\n   office, too, in receiving the prince&#8217;s duty, according to Christ&#8217;s<br \/>\n   express commandment, &#8220;Give the Emperor those things that are his,&#8221;<br \/>\n   refusing all extortion and bribery besides. Yet our Lord, well<br \/>\n   approving his good purpose, and exacting no further of him concerning<br \/>\n   his worldly behaviour, answered and said, &#8220;This day is health come to<br \/>\n   this house, for he too is the son of Abraham.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But now I forget not, cousin, that in effect you conceded to me thus<br \/>\n   far: that a man may be rich and yet not out of the state of grace, nor<br \/>\n   out of God&#8217;s favour. Howbeit, you think that, though it may be so in<br \/>\n   some time or in some other place, yet at this time and in this place,<br \/>\n   or any other such in which there be so many poor people, upon whom you<br \/>\n   think they are bound to bestow their goods, they can keep no riches<br \/>\n   with conscience.<\/p>\n<p>   Verily, cousin, if that reason would hold, I daresay the world was<br \/>\n   never such anywhere that any man might have kept any substance without<br \/>\n   the danger of damnation. For since Christ&#8217;s days to the world&#8217;s end, we<br \/>\n   have the witness of his own word that there hath never lacked poor men<br \/>\n   nor ever shall. For he said himself, &#8220;Poor men shall you always have<br \/>\n   with you, unto whom, when you will, you may do good.&#8221; So that, as I<br \/>\n   tell you, if your rule should hold, then I suppose there would be no<br \/>\n   place, in no time, since Christ&#8217;s days hitherto, nor I think in as long<br \/>\n   before that either, nor never shall there be hereafter, in which any<br \/>\n   man could abide rich without the danger of eternal damnation, even for<br \/>\n   his riches alone, though he demeaned himself never so well.<\/p>\n<p>   But, cousin, men of substance must there be. For otherwise shall you<br \/>\n   have more beggars, perdy, than there are, and no man left able to<br \/>\n   relieve another. For this I think in my mind a very sure conclusion: If<br \/>\n   all the money that is in this country were tomorrow brought together<br \/>\n   out of every man&#8217;s hand and laid all upon one heap, and then divided<br \/>\n   out unto every man alike, it would be on the morrow after worse than it<br \/>\n   was the day before. For I suppose that when it were all equally thus<br \/>\n   divided among all, the best would be left little better then than<br \/>\n   almost a beggar is now. And yet he who was a beggar before, all that he<br \/>\n   shall be the richer for, that he should thereby receive, shall not make<br \/>\n   him much above a beggar still. But many a one of the rich men, if their<br \/>\n   riches stood but in movable substance, shall be safe enough from<br \/>\n   riches, haply for all their life after!<\/p>\n<p>   Men cannot, you know, live here in this world unless some one man<br \/>\n   provide a means of living for many others. Every man cannot have a ship<br \/>\n   of his own, nor every man be a merchant without a stock. And these<br \/>\n   things, you know, must needs be had. Nor can every man have a plough by<br \/>\n   himself. And who could live by the tailor&#8217;s craft, if no man were able<br \/>\n   to have a gown made? Who could live by masonry, or who could live a<br \/>\n   carpenter, if no man were able to build either church or house? Who<br \/>\n   would be the makers of any manner of cloth, if there lacked men of<br \/>\n   substance to set sundry sorts to work? Some man who hath not two ducats<br \/>\n   in his house would do better to lose them both and leave himself not a<br \/>\n   farthing, but utterly lose all his own, rather than that some rich man<br \/>\n   by whom he is weekly set to work should lose one half of his money. For<br \/>\n   then would he himself be likely to lack work. For surely the rich man&#8217;s<br \/>\n   substance is the wellspring of the poor man&#8217;s living. And therefore<br \/>\n   here would it fare by the poor man as it fared by the woman in one of<br \/>\n   ?sop&#8217;s fables. She had a hen that laid her every day a golden egg, till<br \/>\n   on a day she thought she would have a great many eggs at once. And<br \/>\n   therefore she killed her hen and found but one or twain in her belly,<br \/>\n   so that for a few she lost many.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, cousin, to come to your doubt how it can be that a man may<br \/>\n   with conscience keep riches with him, when he seeth so many poor men on<br \/>\n   whom he may bestow them. Verily, that might he not with conscience do,<br \/>\n   if he must bestow it upon as many as he can. And so much of truth every<br \/>\n   rich man do, if all the poor folk that he seeth are so specially by<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s commandment committed unto his charge alone that, because our<br \/>\n   Saviour said, &#8220;Give to every man who asketh thee,&#8221; therefore he is<br \/>\n   bound to give out still to every beggar who will ask him, as long as<br \/>\n   any penny lasteth in his purse. But verily, cousin, that saying hath<br \/>\n   (as St. Austine saith other places in scripture have) need of<br \/>\n   interpretation. For, as holy St. Austine saith, though Christ say,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Give to every man who asketh thee,&#8221; he saith not yet, &#8220;Give them all<br \/>\n   that they will ask thee.&#8221; But surely they would be the same, if he<br \/>\n   meant to bind me by commandment to give every man without exception<br \/>\n   something. For so should I leave myself nothing.<\/p>\n<p>   Our Saviour, in that place of the sixth chapter of St. Luke, speaketh<br \/>\n   both of the contempt that we should have in heart of these worldly<br \/>\n   things, and also of the manner that men should use toward their<br \/>\n   enemies. For there he biddeth us love our enemies, give good words for<br \/>\n   evil, and not only suffer injuries patiently (both the taking away of<br \/>\n   our goods and harm done unto our body), but also be ready to suffer the<br \/>\n   double, and over that to do good in return to those who do us the harm.<br \/>\n   And among these things he biddeth us give to every man who asketh,<br \/>\n   meaning that when we can conveniently do a man good, we should not<br \/>\n   refuse it, whatsoever manner of man he may be, though he were our<br \/>\n   mortal enemy, if we see that unless we help him ourselves, the person<br \/>\n   of that man should stand in peril of perishing. And therefore saith St.<br \/>\n   Paul, &#8220;If thine enemy be in hunger, give him meat.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But now, though I be bound to give every manner of man in some manner<br \/>\n   of his necessity, were he my friend or my foe, Christian man or<br \/>\n   heathen, yet am I not bound alike unto all men, nor unto any many in<br \/>\n   every case alike. But, as I began to tell you, the differences of the<br \/>\n   circumstances make great change in the matter. St. Paul saith, &#8220;He that<br \/>\n   provideth not for those that are his, is worse than an infidel.&#8221; Those<br \/>\n   are ours who are belonging to our charge, either by nature or by law,<br \/>\n   or any commandment of God. By nature, as our children; by law, as our<br \/>\n   servants in our household. Albeit these two sorts be not ours all<br \/>\n   alike, yet would I think that the least ours of the twain&#8211;that is, the<br \/>\n   servants&#8211;if they need, and lack, we are bound to look to them and<br \/>\n   provide for their need, and see, so far as we can, that they lack not<br \/>\n   the things that should serve for their necessity while they dwell in<br \/>\n   our service. Meseemeth also that if they fall sick in our service, so<br \/>\n   that they cannot do the service that we retain them for, yet may we not<br \/>\n   in any wise turn them out of doors and cast them up comfortless, while<br \/>\n   they are not able to labour and help themselves. For this would be a<br \/>\n   thing against all humanity. And surely, if a man were but a wayfarer<br \/>\n   whom I received into my house as a guest, if he fell sick there and his<br \/>\n   money be gone, I reckon myself bound to keep him still, and rather to<br \/>\n   beg about for his relief than to cast him out in that condition to the<br \/>\n   peril of his life, whatsoever loss I should happen to sustain in the<br \/>\n   keeping of him. For when God hath by such chance sent him to me and<br \/>\n   there once matched me with him, I reckon myself surely charged with him<br \/>\n   until I may, without peril of his life, be well and conveniently<br \/>\n   discharged of him.<\/p>\n<p>   By God&#8217;s commandment our parents are in our charge, for by nature we<br \/>\n   are in theirs. Since, as St. Paul saith, it is not the children&#8217;s part<br \/>\n   to provide for the parents but the parents&#8217; to provide for the<br \/>\n   children. Provide, I mean, conveniently&#8211;good learning or good<br \/>\n   occupations to get their living by, with truth and the favour of<br \/>\n   God&#8211;but not to make provision for them of such manner of living as<br \/>\n   they should live the worse toward God for. But rather, if they see by<br \/>\n   their manner that too much would make them wicked, the father should<br \/>\n   then give them a great deal less. But although nature put not the<br \/>\n   parents in the children&#8217;s charge, yet not only God commandeth but the<br \/>\n   order of nature compelleth, that the children should both in reverent<br \/>\n   behaviour honour their father and mother, and also in all their<br \/>\n   necessity maintain them. And yet, as much as God and nature both bind<br \/>\n   us to the sustenance of our father, his need may be so little (though<br \/>\n   it be somewhat) and another man&#8217;s so great, that both nature and God<br \/>\n   also would that I should, in such unequal need, relieve that urgent<br \/>\n   necessity of a stranger&#8211;yea, my foe, and God&#8217;s enemy too, the very<br \/>\n   Turk or Saracen&#8211;before a little need, and unlikely to do great harm,<br \/>\n   in my father and my mother too. For so ought they both twain themselves<br \/>\n   to be well content that I should.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, cousin, outside of such extreme need well perceived and known<br \/>\n   unto myself, I am not bound to give to every beggar who will ask; nor<br \/>\n   to believe every imposter that I meet in the street who will say<br \/>\n   himself that he is very sick; nor to reckon all the poor folk committed<br \/>\n   by God only so to my charge alone, that no other man should give them<br \/>\n   anything of his until I have first given out all mine. Nor am I bound<br \/>\n   either to have so evil opinion of all other folk save myself as to<br \/>\n   think that, unless I help, the poor folk shall all fail at once, for<br \/>\n   God hath left in all this quarter no more good folk now but me! I may<br \/>\n   think better of my neighbours and worse of myself than that, and yet<br \/>\n   come to heaven, by God&#8217;s grace, well enough.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Marry, uncle, but some man will peradventure be right content,<br \/>\n   in such cases, to think his neighbours very charitable, to the intent<br \/>\n   that he may think himself at liberty to give nothing at all.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That is, cousin, very true. Some will be content either to<br \/>\n   think so, or to make as though they thought so. But those are they who<br \/>\n   are content to give naught because they are naught! But our question<br \/>\n   is, cousin, not of them, but of good folk who, by the keeping of<br \/>\n   worldly goods, stand in great fear to offend God. For the quieting of<br \/>\n   their conscience speak we now, to the intent that they may perceive<br \/>\n   what manner of having of worldly goods, and keeping of them, may stand<br \/>\n   with the state of grace.<\/p>\n<p>   Now think I, cousin, that if a man keep riches about him for a glory<br \/>\n   and royalty of the world, taking a great delight in the consideration<br \/>\n   of it and liking himself for it, and taking him who is poorer for the<br \/>\n   lack of it as one far worse than himself, such a mind is very vain<br \/>\n   foolish pride and such a man is very wicked indeed. But on the other<br \/>\n   hand, there may be a man&#8211;such as would God there were many!&#8211;who hath<br \/>\n   no love unto riches, but having it fall abundantly unto him, taketh for<br \/>\n   his own part no great pleasure of it, but, as though he had it not,<br \/>\n   keepeth himself in like abstinence and penance privily as he would do<br \/>\n   in case he had it not. And, in such things as he doth openly, he may<br \/>\n   bestow somewhat more liberally upon himself in his house after some<br \/>\n   manner of the world, lest he should give other folk occasion to marvel<br \/>\n   and muse and talk of his manner and misreport him for a hypocrite. And<br \/>\n   therein, between God and him, he may truly protest and testify, as did<br \/>\n   the good queen Hester, that he doth it not for any desire thereof in<br \/>\n   the satisfying of his own pleasure, but would with as good will or<br \/>\n   better forbear the possession of riches, saving them&#8211;as perhaps in<br \/>\n   keeping a good household in good Christian order and fashion, and in<br \/>\n   setting other folk to work with such things as they gain their living<br \/>\n   the better by his means. If there be such a man, his having of riches<br \/>\n   methinketh I might in a manner match in merit with another man&#8217;s<br \/>\n   forsaking of all. Or so would it be if there were no other<br \/>\n   circumstances more pleasing unto God added further unto the forsaking<br \/>\n   besides, as perhaps for the more fervent contemplation by reason of the<br \/>\n   solicitude of all worldly business being left off, which was the thing<br \/>\n   that made Mary Magdalene&#8217;s part the better. For otherwise would Christ<br \/>\n   have given her much more thanks to go about and be busy in the helping<br \/>\n   her sister Martha to dress his dinner, than to take her stool and sit<br \/>\n   down at her ease and do naught.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, if he who hath these goods and riches by him, have not haply fully<br \/>\n   so perfect a mind, but somewhat loveth to keep himself from lack; and<br \/>\n   if he be not, so fully as a pure Christian fashion requireth,<br \/>\n   determined to abandon his pleasure&#8211;well, what will you more? The man<br \/>\n   is so much the less perfect than I would that he were, and haply than<br \/>\n   he himself would wish, if it were as easy to be it as to wish it. But<br \/>\n   yet is he not forthwith in the state of damnation, for all that. No<br \/>\n   more than every man is forthwith in a state of damnation who, forsaking<br \/>\n   all and entering into religion, is not yet always so clear purified<br \/>\n   from worldly affections as he himself would very fain that he were, and<br \/>\n   much bewaileth that he is not. Many a man, who hath in the world<br \/>\n   willingly forsaken the likelihood of right worshipful offices, hath<br \/>\n   afterward had much ado to keep himself from the desire of the office of<br \/>\n   cellarer or sexton, to bear yet at least some rule and authority,<br \/>\n   though it were but among the bellies. But God is more merciful to man&#8217;s<br \/>\n   imperfection&#8211;if the man know it, and acknowledge it, and mislike it,<br \/>\n   and little by little labour to amend it&#8211;than to reject and cast off to<br \/>\n   the devil him who, according as his frailty can bear and suffer, hath a<br \/>\n   general intent and purpose to please him and to prefer or set by<br \/>\n   nothing in this world before him.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, cousin, to make an end of this piece withal&#8211;of this<br \/>\n   devil, I mean, whom the prophet calleth &#8220;Business walking in the<br \/>\n   darknesses&#8221;: If a man have a mind to serve God and please him, and<br \/>\n   would rather lose all the goods he hath than wittingly to do deadly<br \/>\n   sin; and if he would, without murmur or grudge, give it every whit away<br \/>\n   in case God should so command him, and intend to take it patiently if<br \/>\n   God would take it from him; and if he would be glad to use it unto<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s pleasure, and do his diligence to know and be taught what manner<br \/>\n   of using of it God would be pleased with; and if he be glad to follow<br \/>\n   therein, from time to time, the counsel of good virtuous men, though he<br \/>\n   neither give away all at once, nor give to every man who asketh him<br \/>\n   neither; and though every man should fear and think in this world that<br \/>\n   all the good that he doth or can do is a great deal too little&#8211;yet,<br \/>\n   for all that fear, let that man dwell in the faithful hope of God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   help! And then shall the truth of God so compass him about, as the<br \/>\n   prophet saith, with a shield, that he shall not so need to dread the<br \/>\n   snares and the temptations of this devil whom the prophet calleth<br \/>\n   &#8220;Business walking about in the darknesses.&#8221; But he shall, for all the<br \/>\n   having of riches and worldly substance, so avoid his snares and<br \/>\n   temptations, that he shall in conclusion, by the great grace and<br \/>\n   almighty mercy of God, get into heaven well enough.<\/p>\n<p>   And now was I, cousin, after this piece thus ended, about to bid them<br \/>\n   bring in our dinner. But now shall I not need to, lo, for here they<br \/>\n   come with it already.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, good uncle, God disposeth and timeth your matter and<br \/>\n   your dinner both, I trust. For the end of your good tale&#8211;for which our<br \/>\n   Lord reward you!&#8211;and the beginning here of your good dinner too (from<br \/>\n   which it would be more than pity that you should any longer have<br \/>\n   tarried) meet even at the close together.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Well, cousin, now will we say grace. And then for a while will<br \/>\n   we leave talking and essay how our dinner shall please us, and how fair<br \/>\n   we can fall to feeding. After that, you know my customary guise (for<br \/>\n   &#8220;manner&#8221; I cannot call it, because the guise is unmannerly) to bid you<br \/>\n   not farewell but steal away from you to sleep. But you know I am not<br \/>\n   wont to sleep long in the afternoon, but even a little to forget the<br \/>\n   world. And when I wake, I will again come to you. And then is, God<br \/>\n   willing, all this long day ours, in which we shall have time enough to<br \/>\n   talk much more than shall suffice for the finishing of this one part of<br \/>\n   our matter that now alone remaineth.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I pray you, good uncle, keep your customary manner, for<br \/>\n   &#8220;manner&#8221; may you call it well enough. For as it would be against good<br \/>\n   manners to look that a man should kneel down for courtesy when his knee<br \/>\n   is sore, so is it very good manners that a man of your age (aggrieved<br \/>\n   with such sundry sicknesses besides, that suffer you not always to<br \/>\n   sleep when you should) should not let his sleep slip away but should<br \/>\n   take it when he can. And I will, uncle, in the meanwhile steal from<br \/>\n   you, too, and speed a little errand and return to you again.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Stay as long as you will, and when you have dined go at your<br \/>\n   pleasure. But I pray you, tarry not long.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: You shall not need, uncle, to put me in mind of that, I would<br \/>\n   so fain have up the rest of our matter.<\/p>\n<p>   ______________________________<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    BOOK THREE<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I have tarried somewhat the longer, uncle, partly because I<br \/>\n   was loth to come over-soon, lest my soon-coming might have happed to<br \/>\n   have made you wake too soon. But I tarried especially for the reason<br \/>\n   that I was delayed by someone who showed me a letter, dated at<br \/>\n   Constantinople, by which it appeareth that the great Turk prepareth a<br \/>\n   marvellous mighty army. And yet whither he will go with it, that can<br \/>\n   there yet no man tell. But I fear in good faith, uncle, that his voyage<br \/>\n   shall be hither. Howbeit, he who wrote the letter saith that it is<br \/>\n   secretly said in Constantinople that a great part of his army shall be<br \/>\n   shipped and sent either into Naples or into Sicily.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: It may fortune, cousin, that the letter of a Venetian, dated<br \/>\n   at Constantinople, was devised at Venice. From thence come there some<br \/>\n   letters&#8211;and sometimes from Rome, too, and sometimes also from some<br \/>\n   other places&#8211;all stuffed full of such tidings that the Turk is ready<br \/>\n   to do some great exploit. These tidings they blow about for the<br \/>\n   furtherance of some such affairs as they have themselves then in hand.<\/p>\n<p>   The Turk hath also so many men of arms in his retinue at his continual<br \/>\n   charge that, lest they should lie still and do nothing, but<br \/>\n   peradventure fall in devising of some novelties among themselves, he is<br \/>\n   fain yearly to make some assembly and some changing of them from one<br \/>\n   place unto another, and part some asunder, that they wax not over-well<br \/>\n   acquainted by dwelling over-long together. By these ways also, he<br \/>\n   maketh those that he intendeth suddenly to invade indeed, to look the<br \/>\n   less for it, and thereby to make the less preparation before. For they<br \/>\n   see him so many times make a great visage of war when he intendeth it<br \/>\n   not, but then, at one time or another, they suddenly feel it when they<br \/>\n   fear it not.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, cousin, it is of very truth full likely that into this realm<br \/>\n   of Hungary he will not fail to come. For neither is there any country<br \/>\n   throughout Christendom that lieth so convenient for him, nor never was<br \/>\n   there any time till now in which he might so well and surely win it.<br \/>\n   For now we call him in ourselves, God save us, as ?sop telleth that the<br \/>\n   sheep took in the wolf among them to keep them from the dogs.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Then are there, good uncle, all those tribulations very like<br \/>\n   to fall upon us here, that I spoke of in the beginning of our first<br \/>\n   communication here the other day.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Very truth it is, cousin, that so there will of likelihood in<br \/>\n   a while, but not forthwith all at first. For since he cometh under the<br \/>\n   colour of aid for the one against the other, he will somewhat see the<br \/>\n   proof before he fully show himself. But in conclusion, if he be able to<br \/>\n   get it for that one, you shall see him so handle it that he shall not<br \/>\n   fail to get it from him, and that forthwith out of hand, ere ever he<br \/>\n   suffer him to settle himself over-sure therein.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yet say they, uncle, that he useth not to force any man to<br \/>\n   forsake his faith.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Not any man, cousin? They say more than they can make good,<br \/>\n   those who tell you so. He maketh a solemn oath, among the ceremonies of<br \/>\n   that feast in which he first taketh upon him his authority, that he<br \/>\n   will diminish the faith of Christ, in all that he possibly can, and<br \/>\n   dilate the faith of Mahomet. But yet hath he not used to force every<br \/>\n   whole country at once to forsake their faith. For of some countries<br \/>\n   hath he been content only to take a tribute yearly and let them then<br \/>\n   live as they will. Out of some he taketh the whole people away,<br \/>\n   dispersing them for slaves among many sundry countries of his, very far<br \/>\n   from their own, without any sufferance of regress. In some countries,<br \/>\n   so great and populous that they cannot well be carried and conveyed<br \/>\n   thence, he destroyeth the gentlefolk and giveth the lands partly to<br \/>\n   such as he bringeth and partly to such as willingly will deny their<br \/>\n   faith, and keepeth the others in such misery that they might as well<br \/>\n   (in a manner) be dead at once. In rest he suffereth else no Christian<br \/>\n   man almost, but those that resort as merchants or those that offer<br \/>\n   themselves to serve him in his war.<\/p>\n<p>   But as for those Christian countries that he useth not only for<br \/>\n   tributaries, as he doth Chios, Cyprus, or Crete, but reckoneth for<br \/>\n   clear conquest and utterly taketh for his own, as Morea, Greece, and<br \/>\n   Macedonia, and such others&#8211;and as I verily think he will Hungary, if<br \/>\n   he get it&#8211;in all those he useth Christian people after sundry<br \/>\n   fashions. He letteth them dwell there, indeed, because they would be<br \/>\n   too many to carry all away, and too many to kill them all, too, unless<br \/>\n   he should either leave the land dispeopled and desolate or else, from<br \/>\n   some other countries of his own, should convey the people thither<br \/>\n   (which would not be well done) to people that land with. There, lo,<br \/>\n   those who will not be turned from their faith, of which God&#8211;lauded be<br \/>\n   his holy name!&#8211;keepeth very many, he suffereth to dwell still in<br \/>\n   peace. But yet is their peace for all that not very peaceable. For he<br \/>\n   suffereth them to have no lands of their own, honourable offices they<br \/>\n   bear none; with occasions of his wars, he plucketh them unto the bare<br \/>\n   bones with taxes and tallages. Their children he chooseth where he will<br \/>\n   in their youth, and taketh them from their parents, conveying them<br \/>\n   whither he will, where their friends never see them after, and abuseth<br \/>\n   them as he will. Some young maidens he maketh harlots, some young men<br \/>\n   he bringeth up in war, and some young children he causeth to be<br \/>\n   gelded&#8211;not their stones cut out as the custom was of old, but their<br \/>\n   whole members cut off by the body; how few escape and live he little<br \/>\n   careth, for he will have enough! And all whom he so taketh young, to<br \/>\n   any use of his own, are betaken unto such Turks or false renegades to<br \/>\n   keep, that they are turned from the faith of Christ every one. Or else<br \/>\n   they are so handled that, as for this world, they come to an evil end.<br \/>\n   For, besides many other contumelies and despites that the Turks and the<br \/>\n   false renegade Christians many times do to good Christian people who<br \/>\n   still persevere and abide by the faith, they find the means sometimes<br \/>\n   to make some false knaves say that they heard such-and-such a Christian<br \/>\n   man speak opprobrious words against Mahomet. And upon that point,<br \/>\n   falsely testified, they will take occasion to compel him to forsake the<br \/>\n   faith of Christ and turn to the profession of their shameful<br \/>\n   superstitious sect, or else will they put him to death with cruel<br \/>\n   intolerable torments.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Our Lord, uncle, for his mighty mercy, keep those wretches<br \/>\n   hence! For, by my troth, if they hap to come hither, methinketh I see<br \/>\n   many more tokens than one that we shall have some of our own folk here<br \/>\n   ready to fall in with them.<\/p>\n<p>   For as before a great storm the sea beginneth sometimes to work and<br \/>\n   roar in itself, ere ever the winds wax boisterous, so methinketh I hear<br \/>\n   at mine ear some of our own here among us, who within these few years<br \/>\n   could no more have borne the name of Turk than the name of devil, begin<br \/>\n   now to find little fault in them&#8211;yea, and some to praise them little<br \/>\n   by little, as they can, more glad to find faults at every state of<br \/>\n   Christendom: priests, princes, rites, ceremonies, sacraments, laws, and<br \/>\n   customs spiritual, temporal, and all.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: In good faith, cousin, so begin we to fare here indeed, and<br \/>\n   that but even now of late. For since the title of the crown hath come<br \/>\n   in question, the good rule of this realm hath very sore decayed, as<br \/>\n   little a while as it is. And undoubtedly Hungary shall never do well as<br \/>\n   long as men&#8217;s minds hearken after novelty and have their hearts hanging<br \/>\n   upon a change. And much the worse I like it, when their words walk so<br \/>\n   large toward the favour of the Turk&#8217;s sect, which they were ever wont<br \/>\n   to have in so great abomination, as every true-minded Christian<br \/>\n   man&#8211;and Christian woman, too&#8211;must have.<\/p>\n<p>   I am of such age as you see, and verily from as far as I can remember,<br \/>\n   it hath been marked and often proved true, that when children in Buda<br \/>\n   have fallen in a fancy by themselves to draw together and in their<br \/>\n   playing make as it were corpses carried to church, and sing after their<br \/>\n   childish fashion the tune of the dirge, great death hath followed<br \/>\n   shortly thereafter. And twice or thrice I can remember in my day when<br \/>\n   children in divers parts of this realm have gathered themselves in<br \/>\n   sundry companies and made as it were troops and battles. And after<br \/>\n   their battles in sport, in which some children have yet taken great<br \/>\n   hurt, there hath fallen true battle and deadly war indeed. These tokens<br \/>\n   were somewhat like your example of the sea, since they are tokens going<br \/>\n   before, of things that afterward follow, through some secret motion or<br \/>\n   instinct of which the cause is unknown.<\/p>\n<p>   But, by St. Mary, cousin, these tokens like I much worse&#8211;these tokens,<br \/>\n   I say, not of children&#8217;s play nor of children&#8217;s songs, but old knaves&#8217;<br \/>\n   large open words, so boldly spoken in the favour of Mahomet&#8217;s sect in<br \/>\n   this realm of Hungary, which hath been ever hitherto a very sure key of<br \/>\n   Christendom. And without doubt if Hungary be lost and the Turk have it<br \/>\n   once fast in his possession, he shall, ere it be long afterward, have<br \/>\n   an open ready way into almost all the rest of Christendom. Though he<br \/>\n   win it not all in a week, the great part will be won, I fear me, within<br \/>\n   very few years after.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: But yet evermore I trust in Christ, good uncle, that he shall<br \/>\n   not suffer that abominable sect of his mortal enemies in such wise to<br \/>\n   prevail against his Christian countries.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That is very well said, cousin. Let us have our sure hope in<br \/>\n   him, and then shall we be very sure that we shall not be deceived. For<br \/>\n   we shall have either the thing that we hope for, or a better thing in<br \/>\n   its stead. For, as for the thing itself that we pray for and hope to<br \/>\n   have, God will not always send it to us. And therefore, as I said in<br \/>\n   our first communication, in all things save only for heaven, our prayer<br \/>\n   and our hope may never be too precise, although the thing may be lawful<br \/>\n   to ask.<\/p>\n<p>   Verily, if we people of the Christian nations were such as would God we<br \/>\n   were, I would little fear all the preparations that the great Turk<br \/>\n   could make. No, nor yet, being as bad as we are, I doubt not at all but<br \/>\n   that in conclusion, however base Christendom be brought, it shall<br \/>\n   spring up again, till the time be come very near to the day of<br \/>\n   judgment, some tokens of which methinketh are not come yet. But<br \/>\n   somewhat before that time shall Christendom be straitened sore, and<br \/>\n   brought into so narrow a compass that, according to Christ&#8217;s words,<br \/>\n   &#8220;When the Son of Man shall come again&#8221;&#8211;that is, to the day of general<br \/>\n   judgment&#8211;&#8220;thinkest thou that he shall find faith in the earth?&#8221; as who<br \/>\n   should say, &#8220;but a little.&#8221; For, as appeareth in the Apocalypse and<br \/>\n   other places of scripture, the faith shall be at that time so far faded<br \/>\n   that he shall, for the love of his elect, lest they should fall and<br \/>\n   perish too, abridge those days and accelerate his coming. But, as I<br \/>\n   say, methinketh I miss yet in my mind some of those tokens that shall,<br \/>\n   by the scripture, come a good while before that. And among others, the<br \/>\n   coming in of the Jews and the dilating of Christendom again before the<br \/>\n   world come to that strait. So I say that for mine own mind I have<br \/>\n   little doubt that this ungracious sect of Mahomet shall have a foul<br \/>\n   fall, and Christendom spring and spread, flower and increase again.<br \/>\n   Howbeit, the pleasure and comfort shall they see who shall be born<br \/>\n   after we are buried, I fear me, both twain. For God giveth us great<br \/>\n   likelihood that for our sinful wretched living he goeth about to make<br \/>\n   these infidels, who are his open professed enemies, the sorrowful<br \/>\n   scourge of correction over evil Christian people who should be faithful<br \/>\n   and who are of truth his falsely professing friends.<\/p>\n<p>   And surely, cousin, albeit that methinketh I see divers evil tokens of<br \/>\n   this misery coming to us, yet can there not, to my mind, be a worse<br \/>\n   prognostication of it than this ungracious token that you note here<br \/>\n   yourself. For undoubtedly, cousin, this new manner of men&#8217;s favourable<br \/>\n   fashion in their language toward these ungracious Turks declareth<br \/>\n   plainly not only that their minds give them that hither shall he come,<br \/>\n   but also that they can be content both to live under him and, beside<br \/>\n   that, to fall from the true faith of Christ into Mahomet&#8217;s false<br \/>\n   abominable sect.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, mine uncle, as I go about more than you, so must I<br \/>\n   needs hear more (which is a heavy hearing in mine ear) the manner of<br \/>\n   men in this matter, which increaseth about us here&#8211;I trust that in<br \/>\n   other places of this realm, by God&#8217;s grace, it is otherwise. But in<br \/>\n   this quarter here about us, many of these fellows who are fit for the<br \/>\n   war were wont at first, as it were in sport, to talk as though they<br \/>\n   looked for a day when, with a turn to the Turk&#8217;s faith, they should be<br \/>\n   made masters here of true Christian men&#8217;s bodies and owners of all<br \/>\n   their goods. And, in a while after that, they began to talk so half<br \/>\n   between game and earnest&#8211;and now, by our Lady, not far from fair flat<br \/>\n   earnest indeed.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Though I go out but little, cousin, yet hear I sometimes&#8211;when<br \/>\n   I say little!&#8211;almost as much as that. But since there is no man to<br \/>\n   whom we can complain for redress, what remedy is there but patience,<br \/>\n   and to sit still and hold our peace? For of these two who strive which<br \/>\n   of them both shall reign over us&#8211;and each of them calleth himself<br \/>\n   king, and both twain put the people to pain&#8211;one is, as you know well,<br \/>\n   too far from our quarter here to help us in this behalf. And the other,<br \/>\n   since he looketh for the Turk&#8217;s aid, either will not, or (I suppose)<br \/>\n   dare not find any fault with them that favour the Turk and his sect.<br \/>\n   For of natural Turks this country lacketh none now; they are living<br \/>\n   here under divers pretexts, and of everything they advertise the great<br \/>\n   Turk full surely. And therefore, cousin, albeit that I would advise<br \/>\n   every man to pray still and call unto God to hold his gracious hand<br \/>\n   over us and keep away this wretchedness if his pleasure be, yet would I<br \/>\n   further advise every good Christian body to remember and consider that<br \/>\n   it is very likely to come. And therefore I would advise him to make his<br \/>\n   reckoning and count his pennyworths before, and I would advise every<br \/>\n   man (and every woman, too) to appoint with God&#8217;s help in their own mind<br \/>\n   beforehand what they intend to do if the very worst should befall.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    I<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Well fare your heart, good uncle, for this good counsel of<br \/>\n   yours! For surely methinketh that this is marvellous good.<\/p>\n<p>   But yet heard I once a right learned and very good man say that it<br \/>\n   would be great folly, and very perilous too, if a man should think upon<br \/>\n   any such thing or imagine any such question in his mind, for fear of<br \/>\n   double peril that may follow thereupon. For he shall be likely to<br \/>\n   answer himself that he will rather suffer any painful death than<br \/>\n   forsake his faith, and by that bold appointment should he fall into the<br \/>\n   fault of St. Peter, who of oversight made a proud promise and soon had<br \/>\n   a foul fall. Or else would he be likely to think that rather than abide<br \/>\n   the pain he would forsake God indeed, and by that mind should he sin<br \/>\n   deadly through his own folly, whereas he needeth not do so, since he<br \/>\n   shall peradventure never come in the peril to be put thereto. And<br \/>\n   therefore it would be most wisdom never to think upon any such manner<br \/>\n   of question.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I believe well, cousin, that you have heard some men who would<br \/>\n   so say. For I can show almost as much as that left in writing by a very<br \/>\n   good man and a great solemn doctor. But yet, cousin, although I should<br \/>\n   happen to find one or two more, as good men and as well learned too,<br \/>\n   who would both twain say and write the same, yet would I not fear for<br \/>\n   my part to counsel my friend to the contrary.<\/p>\n<p>   For, cousin, if his mind answer him as St. Peter answered Christ, that<br \/>\n   he will rather die than forsake him, though he say therein more unto<br \/>\n   himself than he should be peradventure able to make good if it came to<br \/>\n   the point, yet I perceive not that he doth in that thought any deadly<br \/>\n   displeasure unto God. For St. Peter, though he said more than he could<br \/>\n   perform, yet in his so saying offended not God greatly neither. But his<br \/>\n   offence was when he did not afterward so well as he said before. But<br \/>\n   now may this man be likely never to fall in the peril of breaking that<br \/>\n   appointment, since of some ten thousand that shall so examine<br \/>\n   themselves, never one shall fall in the peril. And yet for them to have<br \/>\n   that good purpose all their life seemeth me no more harm in the<br \/>\n   meanwhile than for a poor beggar who hath never a penny to think that,<br \/>\n   if he had great substance, he would give great alms for God&#8217;s sake.<\/p>\n<p>   But now is all the peril if the man answer himself that he would in<br \/>\n   such case rather forsake the faith of Christ with his mouth and keep it<br \/>\n   still in his heart than for the confessing of it to endure a painful<br \/>\n   death. For by this mind he falleth in deadly sin, which he never would<br \/>\n   have fallen in if he had never put himself the question. But in good<br \/>\n   faith methinketh that he who, upon that question put unto himself by<br \/>\n   himself, will make himself that answer, hath the habit of faith so<br \/>\n   faint and so cold that, for the better knowledge of himself and of his<br \/>\n   necessity to pray for more strength of grace, he had need to have the<br \/>\n   question put to him either by himself or by some other man.<\/p>\n<p>   Besides this, to counsel a man never to think on that question is, to<br \/>\n   my mind, as reasonable as the medicine that I have heard taught someone<br \/>\n   for the toothache: to go thrice about a churchyard, and never think on<br \/>\n   a fox-tail! For if the counsel be not given them, it cannot serve them.<br \/>\n   And if it be given them, it must put the point of the matter in their<br \/>\n   mind. And forthwith to reject it, and think therein neither one thing<br \/>\n   nor the other, is a thing that may be sooner bidden than obeyed.<\/p>\n<p>   I think also that very few men can escape it. For though they would<br \/>\n   never think on it by themselves, yet in one place or another where they<br \/>\n   shall happen to come in company, they shall have the question by<br \/>\n   adventure so proposed and put forth that&#8211;like as, while a man heareth<br \/>\n   someone talking to him, he can close his eyes if he will, but he cannot<br \/>\n   make himself sleep&#8211;so shall they, whether they will or not, think one<br \/>\n   thing or the other therein.<\/p>\n<p>   Finally, when Christ spoke so often and so plain of the matter, that<br \/>\n   every man should, upon pain of damnation, openly confess his faith if<br \/>\n   men took him and by dread of death would drive him to the contrary, it<br \/>\n   seemeth me (in a manner) implied that we are bound conditionally to<br \/>\n   have evermore that mind&#8211;actually sometimes, and evermore<br \/>\n   habitually&#8211;that if the case should so befall, then with God&#8217;s help so<br \/>\n   we would do. And thus much methinketh necessary, for every man and<br \/>\n   woman to be always of this mind and often to think thereon. And where<br \/>\n   they find, in the thinking thereon, that their hearts shudder and<br \/>\n   shrink in the remembrance of the pain that their imagination<br \/>\n   representeth to the mind, then must they call to mind and remember the<br \/>\n   great pain and torment that Christ suffered for them, and heartily pray<br \/>\n   for grace that, if the case should so befall, God should give them<br \/>\n   strength to stand. And thus, with exercise of such meditation, through<br \/>\n   men should never stand full out of fear of falling, yet must they<br \/>\n   persevere in good hope and in full purpose of standing.<\/p>\n<p>   And this seemeth to me, cousin, so far forth the mind that every<br \/>\n   Christian man and woman must needs have, that methinketh every curate<br \/>\n   should often counsel all his parishioners, beginning in their tender<br \/>\n   youth, to know this point and think on it, and little by little from<br \/>\n   their very childhood accustom them sweetly and pleasantly in the<br \/>\n   meditation thereof. Thereby the goodness of God shall not fail so to<br \/>\n   inspire the grace of his Holy Spirit into their hearts, in reward of<br \/>\n   that virtuous diligence, that through such actual meditation he shall<br \/>\n   confirm them in such a sure habit of spiritual faithful strength, that<br \/>\n   all the devils in hell, with all the wrestling that they can make,<br \/>\n   shall never be able to wrest it out of their heart.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By my troth, uncle, methinketh that you say very well.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I say surely, cousin, as I think. And yet all this have I said<br \/>\n   concerning them that dwell in such places that they are never like in<br \/>\n   their lives to come in the danger to be put to the proof. Howbeit, many<br \/>\n   a man may think himself far from it, who yet may fortune to come to it<br \/>\n   by some chance or other, either for the truth of faith or for the truth<br \/>\n   of justice, which go almost all alike.<\/p>\n<p>   But now you and I, cousin, and all our friends here, are far in another<br \/>\n   point. For we are so likely to fall in the experience of it soon, that<br \/>\n   it would have been more timely for us, all other things set aside, to<br \/>\n   have devised upon this matter, and firmly to have settled ourselves<br \/>\n   upon a false point long ago, than to begin to commune and counsel upon<br \/>\n   it now.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: In good faith, uncle, you say therein very truth, and would<br \/>\n   God it had come sooner in my mind. But yet is it better late than<br \/>\n   never. And I trust God shall yet give us respite and time. And that we<br \/>\n   lose no part thereof, uncle, I pray you proceed now with your good<br \/>\n   counsel therein.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Very gladly, cousin, shall I now go forth in the fourth<br \/>\n   temptation, which alone remaineth to be treated of, and properly<br \/>\n   pertaineth wholly unto this present purpose.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    II<\/p>\n<p>   The fourth temptation, cousin, that the prophet speaketh of in the<br \/>\n   fore-remembered psalm is plain open persecution. And it is touched in<br \/>\n   these words: &#8220;Ab incursu et demonio meridiano.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And of all his temptations, this is the most perilous, the most bitter,<br \/>\n   the most sharp, and the most rigorous. For in other temptations he<br \/>\n   useth either pleasant allectives unto sin, or other secret sleights and<br \/>\n   snares; and cometh in the night and stealeth on in the dark unaware; or<br \/>\n   in some other part of the day flieth and passeth by like an arrow; so<br \/>\n   shaping himself sometimes in one fashion, sometimes in another, and<br \/>\n   dissimulating himself and his high mortal malice, that a man is thereby<br \/>\n   so blinded and beguiled that he cannot sometimes perceive well what he<br \/>\n   is. But in this temptation, this plain open persecution for the faith,<br \/>\n   he cometh even in the very midday&#8211;that is, even upon those who have a<br \/>\n   high light of faith shining in their hearts&#8211;and he openly suffereth<br \/>\n   himself to be perceived so plainly, by his fierce malicious persecution<br \/>\n   against the faithful Christians, for hatred of Christ&#8217;s true Catholic<br \/>\n   faith, that no man having faith can doubt what he is. For in this<br \/>\n   temptation he showeth himself such as the prophet nameth him, &#8220;the<br \/>\n   midday devil,&#8221; so lightsomely can he be seen with the eye of the<br \/>\n   faithful soul, by his fierce furious assault and incursion. For<br \/>\n   therefore saith the prophet that the truth of God shall compass that<br \/>\n   man round about who dwelleth in the faithful hope of his help with a<br \/>\n   shield &#8220;from the incursion and the devil of the midday,&#8221; because this<br \/>\n   kind of persecution is not a wily temptation but a furious force and a<br \/>\n   terrible incursion. In other of his temptations, he stealeth on like a<br \/>\n   fox, but in this Turk&#8217;s persecution for the faith, he runneth on<br \/>\n   roaring with assault like a ramping lion.<\/p>\n<p>   This temptation is, of all temptations, also the most perilous. For in<br \/>\n   temptations of prosperity he useth only delectable allectives to move a<br \/>\n   man to sin; and in other kinds of tribulation and adversity he useth<br \/>\n   only grief and pain to pull a man into murmuring, impatience, and<br \/>\n   blasphemy. But in this kind of persecution for the faith of Christ he<br \/>\n   useth both twain&#8211;that is, both his allectives of quiet and rest by<br \/>\n   deliverance from death and pain, with other pleasures also of this<br \/>\n   present life, and besides that the terror and infliction of intolerable<br \/>\n   pain and torment.<\/p>\n<p>   In other tribulation&#8211;as loss, or sickness, or death of our<br \/>\n   friends&#8212;though the pain be peradventure as great and sometimes<br \/>\n   greater too, yet is not the peril nowhere nigh half so much. For in<br \/>\n   other tribulations, as I said before, that necessity that the man must<br \/>\n   perforce abide and endure the pain, wax he never so wroth and impatient<br \/>\n   with it, is a great reason to move him to keep his patience in it and<br \/>\n   be content with it and thank God for it and of necessity make a virtue,<br \/>\n   that he may be rewarded for it. But in this temptation, this<br \/>\n   persecution for the faith&#8211;I mean not by fight in the field, by which<br \/>\n   the faithful man standeth at his defence and putteth the faithless in<br \/>\n   half the fear and half the harm too; but I mean where he is taken and<br \/>\n   held, and may for the forswearing or denying of his faith be delivered<br \/>\n   and suffered to live in rest and some in great worldly wealth also. In<br \/>\n   this case, I say, since he needeth not to suffer this trouble and pain<br \/>\n   unless he will, there is a marvellous great occasion for him to fall<br \/>\n   into the sin that the devil would drive him to&#8211;that is, the forsaking<br \/>\n   of the faith.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, I say, of all the devil&#8217;s temptations, this temptation,<br \/>\n   this persecution for the faith, is the most perilous.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: The more perilous, uncle, this temptation is&#8211;as indeed, of<br \/>\n   all the temptations, the most perilous it is&#8211;the more need have those<br \/>\n   who stand in peril of it to be well armed against it beforehand, with<br \/>\n   substantial advice and good counsel. For so may we the better bear that<br \/>\n   tribulation when it cometh, with the comfort and consolation thereof,<br \/>\n   and the better withstand the temptation.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: You say, Cousin Vincent, therein very truth. And I am content<br \/>\n   therefore to fall in hand with it.<\/p>\n<p>   But forasmuch, cousin, as methinketh that of this tribulation you are<br \/>\n   somewhat more afraid than I&#8211;and of truth somewhat more excusable it is<br \/>\n   in you than it would be in me, mine age considered and the sorrow that<br \/>\n   I have suffered already, with some other considerations upon my part<br \/>\n   besides&#8211;rehearse you therefore the griefs and pains that you think in<br \/>\n   this tribulation possible to fall unto you. And I shall against each of<br \/>\n   them give you counsel and rehearse you such occasion of comfort and<br \/>\n   consolation as my poor wit and learning can call unto my mind.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: In good faith, uncle, I am not wholly afraid in this case only<br \/>\n   for myself, but well you know I have cause to care also for many<br \/>\n   others, and that folk of sundry sorts, men and women both, and that not<br \/>\n   all of one age.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: All that you have cause to fear for, cousin, for all of them,<br \/>\n   have I cause to fear with you, too, since almost all your kinsfolk are<br \/>\n   likewise kin to me. Howbeit, to say the truth, every man hath cause in<br \/>\n   this case to fear both for himself and for every other. For since, as<br \/>\n   the scripture saith, &#8220;God hath given every man care and charge of his<br \/>\n   neighbour,&#8221; there is no man who hath any spark of Christian love and<br \/>\n   charity in his breast but what, in a matter of such peril as this is,<br \/>\n   in which the soul of man standeth in so great danger to be lost, he<br \/>\n   must needs care and take thought not only for his friends but also for<br \/>\n   his very foes. We shall therefore, cousin, not rehearse your harms or<br \/>\n   mine that may befall in this persecution, but all the great harms in<br \/>\n   general, as near as we can call to mind, that may happen unto any man.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    III<\/p>\n<p>   Since a man is made of the body and the soul, all the harm that any man<br \/>\n   can take, it must needs be in one of these two, either immediately or<br \/>\n   by the means of some such thing as serveth for the pleasure, welfare,<br \/>\n   or commodity of one of these two.<\/p>\n<p>   As for the soul first, we shall need no rehearsal of any harm that may<br \/>\n   attain to it by this kind of tribulation, unless by some inordinate<br \/>\n   love and affection that the soul bear to the body, she consent to slide<br \/>\n   from the faith and thereby do herself harm. Now there remains the body,<br \/>\n   and these outward things of fortune which serve for the maintenance of<br \/>\n   the body and minister matter of pleasure to the soul also, through the<br \/>\n   delight that she hath in the body for the while that she is matched<br \/>\n   with it.<\/p>\n<p>   Consider first the loss of those outward things, as being somewhat less<br \/>\n   in weight than the body itself. What may a man lose in them, and<br \/>\n   thereby what pain may he suffer?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: He may lose, uncle, money, plate, and other movable substance<br \/>\n   (of which I should somewhat lose myself); then, offices and authority;<br \/>\n   and finally all the lands of his inheritance for ever that he himself<br \/>\n   and his heirs perpetually might otherwise enjoy. And of all these<br \/>\n   things, uncle, you know well that I myself have some&#8211;little, in<br \/>\n   respect of that which some others have here, but yet somewhat more than<br \/>\n   he who hath most here would be well content to lose.<\/p>\n<p>   Upon the loss of these things follow neediness and poverty; the pain of<br \/>\n   lacking, the shame of begging (of which twain I know not which is the<br \/>\n   most wretched necessity); besides, the grief and heaviness of heart, in<br \/>\n   beholding good men and faithful and his dear friends bewrapped in like<br \/>\n   misery, and ungracious wretches and infidels and his mortal enemies<br \/>\n   enjoying the commodities that he himself and his friends have lost.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, for the body very few words should serve us. For therein I see<br \/>\n   none other harm but loss of liberty, labour, imprisonment, and painful<br \/>\n   and shameful death.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: There needeth not much more, cousin, as the world is now. For<br \/>\n   I fear me that less than a fourth part of this will make many a man<br \/>\n   sore stagger in his faith, and some fall quite from it, who yet at this<br \/>\n   day, before he come to the proof, thinketh himself that he would stand<br \/>\n   very fast. And I beseech our Lord that all those who so think, and who<br \/>\n   would yet when they were brought to the point fall from the faith for<br \/>\n   fear or pain, may get of God the grace to think still as they do and<br \/>\n   not to be brought to the essay, where pain or fear would show them, as<br \/>\n   it showed St. Peter, how far they are deceived now.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, cousin, against these terrible things, what way shall we take<br \/>\n   in giving men counsel of comfort? If the faith were in our days as<br \/>\n   fervent as it hath been ere this in times past, little counsel and<br \/>\n   little comfort would suffice. We should not much need with words and<br \/>\n   reasoning to extenuate and diminish the vigour and asperity of the<br \/>\n   pains. For of old times, the greater and the more bitter the pain were,<br \/>\n   the more ready was the fervour of faith to suffer it. And surely,<br \/>\n   cousin, I doubt little in my mind but what, if a man had in his heart<br \/>\n   so deep a desire and love&#8211;longing to be with God in heaven, to have<br \/>\n   the fruition of his glorious face&#8211;as had those holy men who are<br \/>\n   martyrs in old time, he would no more now stick at the pain that he<br \/>\n   must pass between than those old holy martyrs did at that time. But<br \/>\n   alas, our faint and feeble faith, with our love to God less than<br \/>\n   lukewarm because of the fiery affection that we bear to our own filthy<br \/>\n   flesh, maketh us so dull in the desire of heaven that the sudden dread<br \/>\n   of every bodily pain woundeth us to the heart and striketh our devotion<br \/>\n   dead. And therefore hath every man, cousin, as I said before, much the<br \/>\n   more need to think upon this thing many a time and oft aforehand, ere<br \/>\n   any such peril befall, by much devising upon it before they see cause<br \/>\n   to fear it. Since the thing shall not appear so terrible unto them,<br \/>\n   reason shall better enter, and through grace working with their<br \/>\n   diligence, engender and set sure, not a sudden slight affection of<br \/>\n   suffering for God&#8217;s sake, but, by a long continuance, a strong<br \/>\n   deep-rooted habit&#8211;not like a reed ready to wave with every wind, nor<br \/>\n   like a rootless tree scantly set up on end in a loose heap of light<br \/>\n   sand, that will with a blast or two be blown down.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    IV<\/p>\n<p>   Let us now consider, cousin, these causes of terror and dread that you<br \/>\n   have recited, which in his persecution for the faith this midday devil<br \/>\n   may, by these Turks, rear against us to make his incursion with. For so<br \/>\n   shall we well perceive, weighing them well with reason, that, albeit<br \/>\n   they be indeed somewhat, yet (every part of the matter pondered) they<br \/>\n   shall well appear in conclusion things not so much to be dreaded and<br \/>\n   fled from as they do suddenly seem to folk at the first sight.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    V<\/p>\n<p>   First let us begin at the outward goods, which are neither the proper<br \/>\n   goods of the soul nor those of the body, but are called the goods of<br \/>\n   fortune, and serve for the sustenance and commodity of man for the<br \/>\n   short season of this present life, as worldly substance, offices,<br \/>\n   honour, and authority.<\/p>\n<p>   What great good is there in these things of themselves, that they<br \/>\n   should be worthy so much as to bear the name by which the world, of a<br \/>\n   worldly favour, customarily calleth them? For if the having of strength<br \/>\n   make a man strong, and the having of heat make a man hot, and the<br \/>\n   having of virtue make a man virtuous, how can these things be verily<br \/>\n   and truly &#8220;goods,&#8221; by the having of which he who hath them may as well<br \/>\n   be worse as better&#8211;and, as experience proveth, more often is worse<br \/>\n   than better? Why should a man greatly rejoice in that which he daily<br \/>\n   seeth most abound in the hands of many who are wicked? Do not now this<br \/>\n   great Turk and his pashas in all these advancements of fortune surmount<br \/>\n   very far above a Christian estate, and any lords living under him? And<br \/>\n   was there not, some twenty years ago, the great Sultan of Syria, who<br \/>\n   many a year together bore himself as high as the great Turk, and<br \/>\n   afterward in one summer unto the great Turk that whole empire was lost?<br \/>\n   And so may all his empire now&#8211;and shall hereafter, by God&#8217;s grace&#8211;be<br \/>\n   lost into Christian men&#8217;s hands likewise, when Christian people shall<br \/>\n   be amended and grow in God&#8217;s favour again. But since whole kingdoms and<br \/>\n   mighty great empires are of so little surety to stand, but are so soon<br \/>\n   transferred from one man unto another, what great thing can you or<br \/>\n   I&#8211;yea, or any lord, the greatest in this land&#8211;reckon himself to have,<br \/>\n   by the possession of a heap of silver or gold? For they are but white<br \/>\n   and yellow metal, not so profitable of their own nature, save for a<br \/>\n   little glittering, as the rude rusty metal of iron.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    VI<\/p>\n<p>   Lands and possessions many men esteem much more yet than money, because<br \/>\n   the lands seem not so casual as money is, or plate. For though their<br \/>\n   other substance may be stolen and taken away, yet evermore they think<br \/>\n   that their land will lie still where it lay. But what are we the better<br \/>\n   that our land cannot be stirred, but will lie still where it lay, since<br \/>\n   we ourselves may be removed and not suffered to come near it? What<br \/>\n   great difference is there to us, whether our substance be movable or<br \/>\n   unmovable, since we be so movable ourselves that we may be removed from<br \/>\n   them both and lose them both twain? Yet sometimes in the money is the<br \/>\n   surety somewhat more. For when we be fain ourselves to flee, we may<br \/>\n   make shift to carry some of our money with us, whereas of our land we<br \/>\n   cannot carry one inch.<\/p>\n<p>   If our land be a thing of more surety than our money, how happeth it<br \/>\n   then that in this persecution we are more afraid to lose it? For if it<br \/>\n   be a thing of more surety, then can it not so soon be lost. In the<br \/>\n   transfer of these two great empires&#8211;Greece first, since I myself was<br \/>\n   born, and after Syria, since you were born too&#8211;the land was lost<br \/>\n   before the money was found!<\/p>\n<p>   Oh, Cousin Vincent, if the whole world were animated with a reasonable<br \/>\n   soul, as Plato thought it were, and if it had wit and understanding to<br \/>\n   mark and perceive everything, Lord God, how the ground on which a<br \/>\n   prince buildeth his palace would loud laugh its lord to scorn, when it<br \/>\n   saw him proud of his possession and heard him boast himself that he and<br \/>\n   his blood are for ever the very lords and owners of the land! For then<br \/>\n   would the ground think the while, to itself, &#8220;Ah, thou poor soul, who<br \/>\n   thinkest thou wert half a god, and art amid thy glory but a man in a<br \/>\n   gay gown! I who am the ground here, over whom thou are so proud, have<br \/>\n   had a hundred such owners of me as thou callest thyself, more than ever<br \/>\n   thou hast heard the names of. And some of them who went proudly over<br \/>\n   mine head now lie low in my belly, and my side lieth over them. And<br \/>\n   many a one shall, as thou does now, call himself mine owner after thee,<br \/>\n   who shall neither be kin to thy blood nor have heard any word of thy<br \/>\n   name.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Who owned your village, cousin, three thousand years ago?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Three thousand, uncle? Nay, nay, in any king, Christian or<br \/>\n   heathen, you may strike off a third part of that well enough&#8211;and, as<br \/>\n   far as I know, half of the rest, too. In far fewer years than three<br \/>\n   thousand it may well fortune that a poor ploughman&#8217;s blood may come up<br \/>\n   to a kingdom, and a king&#8217;s right royal kin on the other hand fall down<br \/>\n   to the plough and cart, and neither that king know that ever he came<br \/>\n   from the cart, nor that carter know that ever he came from the crown.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: We find, Cousin Vincent, in full ancient stories many strange<br \/>\n   changes as marvellous as that, come about in the compass of very few<br \/>\n   years, in effect. And are such things then in reason so greatly to be<br \/>\n   set by, that we should esteem the loss so great, when we see that in<br \/>\n   keeping them our surety is so little?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Marry, uncle, but the less surety we have to keep it, since it<br \/>\n   is a great commodity to have it, so much more the loth we are to forgo<br \/>\n   it.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That reason shall I, cousin, turn against yourself. For if it<br \/>\n   be so as you say, that since the things be commodious, the less surety<br \/>\n   that you see you have of keeping them, the more cause you have to be<br \/>\n   afraid of losing them; then on the other hand the more a thing is of<br \/>\n   its nature such that its commodity bringeth a man little surety and<br \/>\n   much fear, that thing of reason the less we have cause to love. And<br \/>\n   then, the less cause we have to love a thing, the less cause have we to<br \/>\n   care for it or fear its loss, or be loth to go from it.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    VII<\/p>\n<p>   We shall yet, cousin, consider in these outward goods of fortune&#8211;as<br \/>\n   riches, good name, honest estimation, honourable fame, and<br \/>\n   authority&#8211;in all these things we shall, I say, consider that we love<br \/>\n   them and set by them either as things commodious unto us for the state<br \/>\n   and condition of this present life, or else as things that we purpose<br \/>\n   by the good use of them to make matter of our merit, with God&#8217;s help,<br \/>\n   in the life to come.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us then first consider them as things set by and beloved for the<br \/>\n   pleasure and commodity of them for this present life.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    VIII<\/p>\n<p>   Now, as for riches, if we consider it well, the commodity that we take<br \/>\n   of it is not so great as our own foolish affection and fancy maketh us<br \/>\n   imagine it. I deny not that it maketh us go much more gay and glorious<br \/>\n   in sight, garnished in silk&#8211;but wool is almost as warm! It maketh us<br \/>\n   have great plenty of many kinds of delicate and delicious victuals, and<br \/>\n   thereby to make more excess&#8211;but less exquisite and less superfluous<br \/>\n   fare, with fewer surfeits and fewer fevers too, would be almost as<br \/>\n   wholesome! Then, the labour in getting riches, the fear in keeping<br \/>\n   them, and the pain in parting from them, do more than counterweight a<br \/>\n   great part of all the pleasure and commodity that they bring.<\/p>\n<p>   Besides this, riches are the thing that taketh many times from its<br \/>\n   master all his pleasure and his life, too. For many a man is slain for<br \/>\n   his riches. And some keep their riches as a thing pleasant and<br \/>\n   commodious for their life, take none other pleasure of it in all their<br \/>\n   life than as though they bore the key of another man&#8217;s coffer. For they<br \/>\n   are content to live miserably in neediness all their days, rather than<br \/>\n   to find it in their heart to diminish their hoard, they have such a<br \/>\n   fancy to look thereon. Yea, and some men, for fear lest thieves should<br \/>\n   steal it from them, are their own thieves and steal it from themselves.<br \/>\n   For they dare not so much as let it lie where they themselves may look<br \/>\n   on it, but put it in a pot and hide it in the ground, and there let it<br \/>\n   lie safe till they die&#8211;and sometimes seven years thereafter. And if<br \/>\n   the pot had been stolen away from that place five years before the<br \/>\n   man&#8217;s death, then all the same five years he lived thereafter, thinking<br \/>\n   always that his pot lay safe still, since he never occupied it<br \/>\n   afterward, what had he been the poorer?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By my troth, uncle, not one penny, for aught that I perceive.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    IX<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Let us now consider good name, honest estimation, and<br \/>\n   honourable fame. For these three things are of their own nature one,<br \/>\n   and take their differences in effect only of the manner of the common<br \/>\n   speech in diversity of degree. For a good name may a man have, be he<br \/>\n   never so poor. Honest estimation, in the common understanding of the<br \/>\n   people, belongeth not unto any man but him that is taken for one of<br \/>\n   some countenance and possessions, and among his neighbours had in some<br \/>\n   reputation. In the word of &#8220;honourable fame,&#8221; folk conceive the renown<br \/>\n   of great estates, much and far spoken of, by reason of their laudable<br \/>\n   acts.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, all this gear, used as a thing pleasant and commodious for this<br \/>\n   present life, may seem pleasant to him who fasteneth his fancy thereon.<br \/>\n   But of the nature of the thing itself I perceive no great commodity<br \/>\n   that it hath&#8211;I say of the nature of the thing itself, because it may<br \/>\n   by chance be some occasion of some commodity. For it may hap that for<br \/>\n   the good name the poor man hath, or for the honest estimation that a<br \/>\n   man of some possessions and substance standeth in among his neighbours,<br \/>\n   or for the honourable fame with which a great estate is renowned&#8211;it<br \/>\n   may hap, I say, that some man, bearing them the better, will therefore<br \/>\n   do them some good. And yet, as for that, like as it may sometimes so<br \/>\n   hap (and sometimes doth so hap indeed), so may it hap sometimes on the<br \/>\n   other hand (and on the other hand so it sometimes happeth indeed) that<br \/>\n   such folk are envied and hated by others, and as readily take harm by<br \/>\n   them who envy and hate them as they take good by them that love them.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, to speak of the thing itself in its own proper nature, what is<br \/>\n   it but a blast of another man&#8217;s mouth, as soon past as spoken? He who<br \/>\n   setteth his delight on it, feedeth himself but with wind; be he never<br \/>\n   so full, he hath little substance therein. And many times shall he much<br \/>\n   deceive himself. For he shall think that many praise him who never<br \/>\n   speak word of him. And they that do, say yet much less than he thinketh<br \/>\n   and far more seldom too. For they spend not all the day, he may be<br \/>\n   sure, in talking of him alone. And those who so commend him the most<br \/>\n   will yet, I daresay, in every four-and-twenty hours, shut their eyes<br \/>\n   and forget him once! Besides this, while one speaketh well of him in<br \/>\n   one place, another sitteth and saith as ill of him in another. And<br \/>\n   finally, some who most praise him in his presence, behind his back mock<br \/>\n   him as fast and loud laugh him to scorn, and sometimes slily to his own<br \/>\n   face, too. And yet are there some fools so fed with this foolish fancy<br \/>\n   of fame that they rejoice and glory to think how they are continually<br \/>\n   praised all about, as though all the world did nothing else, day nor<br \/>\n   night, but ever sit and sing &#8220;Sanctus sanctus, sanctus&#8221; upon them!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    X<\/p>\n<p>   And into this pleasant frenzy of much foolish vainglory are there some<br \/>\n   men brought sometimes by those whom they themselves do (in a manner)<br \/>\n   hire to flatter them. And they would not be content if a man should do<br \/>\n   otherwise, but would be right angry&#8211;not only if a man told them truth<br \/>\n   when they do evil indeed, but also if they praise it but slenderly.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, uncle, this is very truth. I have been ere this, and<br \/>\n   not very long ago, where I saw so proper experience of this point that<br \/>\n   I must stop your tale long enough to tell you mine.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I pray you, cousin, tell on.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: When I was first in Germany, uncle, it happed me to be<br \/>\n   somewhat favoured by a great man of the church and a great estate, one<br \/>\n   of the greatest in all that country there. And indeed, whosoever could<br \/>\n   spend as much as he could for one thing and another, would be a right<br \/>\n   great estate in any country of Christendom. But vainglorious was he,<br \/>\n   very far above all measure. And that was great pity, for it did harm<br \/>\n   and made him abuse many great gifts that God had given him. Never was<br \/>\n   he satiated with hearing his own praise.<\/p>\n<p>   So happed it one day, that he had in a great audience made an oration<br \/>\n   in a certain manner, in which he liked himself so well that at his<br \/>\n   dinner he thought he sat on thorns till he might hear how those who sat<br \/>\n   with him at his board would commend it. He sat musing a while,<br \/>\n   devising, as I thought afterward, upon some pretty proper way to bring<br \/>\n   it in withal. And at last, for lack of a better, lest he should have<br \/>\n   forborne the matter too long, he brought it even bluntly forth and<br \/>\n   asked us all who sat at his board&#8217;s end&#8211;for at his own place in the<br \/>\n   midst there sat but himself alone&#8211;how well we liked his oration that<br \/>\n   he had made that day. But in faith, uncle, when that problem was once<br \/>\n   proposed, till it was full answered, no man, I believe, ate one morsel<br \/>\n   of meat more&#8211;every man was fallen in so deep a study for the finding<br \/>\n   of some exquisite praise. For he who should have brought out but a<br \/>\n   vulgar and common commendation, would have thought himself shamed for<br \/>\n   ever. Ten said we our sentences, by row as we sat, from the lowest unto<br \/>\n   the highest in good order, as though it had been a great matter of the<br \/>\n   common weal in a right solemn council. When it came to my part&#8211;I say<br \/>\n   it not, uncle, for a boast&#8211;methought that, by our Lady, for my part, I<br \/>\n   quit myself well enough! And I liked myself the better because<br \/>\n   methought that, being but a foreigner, my words went yet with some<br \/>\n   grace in the German tongue, in which, letting my Latin alone, it<br \/>\n   pleased me to show my skill. And I hoped to be liked the better because<br \/>\n   I saw that he who sat next to me, and should say his sentence after me,<br \/>\n   was an unlearned priest, for he could speak no Latin at all. But when<br \/>\n   he came forth for his part with my lord&#8217;s commendation, the wily fox<br \/>\n   had been so well accustomed in court to the craft of flattery that he<br \/>\n   went beyond me by far. And then might I see by him what excellence a<br \/>\n   right mean wit may come to in one craft, if in all his life he studieth<br \/>\n   and busieth his wit about no more but that one. But I made afterward a<br \/>\n   solemn vow unto myself that if ever he and I were matched together at<br \/>\n   that board again, when we should fall to our flattery I would flatter<br \/>\n   in Latin, that he might contend with me no more. For though I could be<br \/>\n   content to be outrun by a horse, yet would I no more abide it to be<br \/>\n   outrun by an ass.<\/p>\n<p>   But, uncle, here began now the game: he that sat highest and was to<br \/>\n   speak last, was a great beneficed man, and not only a doctor but also<br \/>\n   somewhat learned indeed in the laws of the church. A world was it to<br \/>\n   see how he marked every man&#8217;s word who spoke before him! And it seemed<br \/>\n   that the more proper every word was, the worse he liked it, for the<br \/>\n   cumbrance that he had to study out a better one to surpass it. The man<br \/>\n   even sweated with the labour, so that he was fain now and then to wipe<br \/>\n   his face. Howbeit, in conclusion, when it came to his course, we who<br \/>\n   had spoken before him had so taken up all among us before that we had<br \/>\n   not left him one wise word to speak afterward.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Alas, good man&#8211;among so many of you, some good fellow should<br \/>\n   have lent him one!<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: It needed not, as it happened, uncle. For he found out such a<br \/>\n   shift that in his flattering he surpassed us all.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Why, what said he, cousin?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By our Lady, uncle, not one word. But he did as I believe<br \/>\n   Pliny telleth of Apelles the painter, in the picture that he painted of<br \/>\n   the sacrifice and death of Iphigenia, in the making of the sorrowful<br \/>\n   countenances of the noble men of Greece who beheld it. He reserved the<br \/>\n   countenance of King Agamemnon her father for the last, lest, if he made<br \/>\n   his visage before, he must in some of the others afterward either have<br \/>\n   made the visage less dolorous than he could, and thereby have forborne<br \/>\n   some part of his praise, or, doing the uttermost of his craft, might<br \/>\n   have happed to make some other look more heavily for the pity of her<br \/>\n   pain than her own father, which would have been yet a far greater fault<br \/>\n   in his painting. When he came, therefore, to the making of her father&#8217;s<br \/>\n   face last of all, he had spent out so much of his craft and skill that<br \/>\n   he could devise no manner of new heavy cheer and countenance for him<br \/>\n   but what he had made there aleady in some of the others a much more<br \/>\n   heavy one before. And therefore, to the intent that no man should see<br \/>\n   what manner of countenance it was that her father had, the painter was<br \/>\n   fain to paint him holding his face in his handkerchief!<\/p>\n<p>   The like pageant (in a manner) played us there this good ancient<br \/>\n   honourable flatterer. For when he saw that he could find no words of<br \/>\n   praise that would surpass all that had been spoken before already, the<br \/>\n   wily fox would speak never a word. But as one who were ravished<br \/>\n   heavenward with the wonder of the wisdom and eloquence that my lord&#8217;s<br \/>\n   grace had uttered in that oration, he set up a long sigh with an &#8220;Oh!&#8221;<br \/>\n   from the bottom of his breast, and held up both his hands, and lifted<br \/>\n   up his head, and cast up his eyes into the welkin, and wept.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Forsooth, cousin, he played his part very properly. But was<br \/>\n   that great prelate&#8217;s oration, cousin, at all praiseworthy? For you can<br \/>\n   tell, I see well. For you would not, I suppose, play as Juvenal merrily<br \/>\n   describeth the blind senator, one of the flatterers of Tiberius the<br \/>\n   emperor, who among the rest so magnified the great fish that the<br \/>\n   emperor had sent for them to show them. This blind senator&#8211;Montanus, I<br \/>\n   believe they called him&#8211;marvelled at the fish as much as any that<br \/>\n   marvelled most. And many things he spoke of it, with some of his words<br \/>\n   directed unto it, looking himself toward his left side, while the fish<br \/>\n   lay on his right side! You would not, I am sure, cousin, have taken<br \/>\n   upon you to praise it so, unless you had heard it.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I heard it, uncle, indeed, and, to say the truth, it was not<br \/>\n   to dispraise. Howbeit, surely, somewhat less praise might have served<br \/>\n   it&#8211;less by a great deal more than half. But this I am sure: had it<br \/>\n   been the worst that ever was made, the praise would not have been the<br \/>\n   less by one hair. For those who used to praise him to his face never<br \/>\n   considered how much the thing deserved, but how great a laud and praise<br \/>\n   they themselves could give his good Grace.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Surely, cousin, as Terence saith, such folk make men of fools<br \/>\n   even stark mad. And much cause have their lords to be right angry with<br \/>\n   them.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: God hath indeed, and is, I daresay. But as for their lords,<br \/>\n   uncle, if they would afterward wax angry with them for it, they would,<br \/>\n   to my mind, do them very great wrong. For it is one of the things that<br \/>\n   they specially keep them for. For those who are of such vainglorious<br \/>\n   mind, be they lords or be they meaner men, can be much better contented<br \/>\n   to have their devices commended than amended. And though they require<br \/>\n   their servant and their friend never so specially to tell them the very<br \/>\n   truth, yet shall he better please them if he speak them fair than if he<br \/>\n   telleth them the truth.<\/p>\n<p>   For they be in the condition that Marciall speaketh of in an epigram,<br \/>\n   unto a friend of his who required his judgment how he liked his verses,<br \/>\n   but prayed him in any wise to tell him even the very truth. To him,<br \/>\n   Marciall made answer in this wise:<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;The very truth of me thou dost require.<br \/>\n   The very truth is this, my friend dear:<br \/>\n   The very truth thou wouldst not gladly hear.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And in good faith, uncle, the selfsame prelate that I told you my tale<br \/>\n   of&#8211;I dare be bold to swear it, I know it so surely&#8211;had one time drawn<br \/>\n   up a certain treaty that was to serve for a league between that country<br \/>\n   and a great prince. In this treaty he himself thought that he had<br \/>\n   devised his articles so wisely and composed them so well, that all the<br \/>\n   world would approve them. Thereupon, longing sore to be praised, he<br \/>\n   called unto him a friend of his, a man well learned and of good<br \/>\n   worship, and very well expert in those matters, as one who had been<br \/>\n   divers times ambassador for that country and had made many such<br \/>\n   treaties himself. When he gave him the treaty and he had read it, he<br \/>\n   asked him how he liked it, and said, &#8220;But I pray you heartily, tell me<br \/>\n   the very truth.&#8221; And that he spake so heartily that the other thought<br \/>\n   he would fain have heard the truth, and in that trust he told him a<br \/>\n   fault in the treaty. And at the hearing of it he swore in great anger,<br \/>\n   &#8220;By the mass, thou art a very fool!&#8221; The other afterward told me that<br \/>\n   he would never tell him the truth again.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Without question, cousin, I cannot greatly blame him. And thus<br \/>\n   they themselves make every man mock them, flatter them, and deceive<br \/>\n   them&#8211;those, I say, who are of such a vainglorious mind. For if they be<br \/>\n   content to hear the truth, let them then make much of those who tell<br \/>\n   them the truth, and withdraw their ears from them who falsely flatter<br \/>\n   them, and they shall be more truly served than with twenty requests<br \/>\n   praying men to tell them true.<\/p>\n<p>   King Ladislaus&#8211;our Lord absolve his soul!&#8211;used much this manner among<br \/>\n   his servants. When one of them praised any deed of his or any quality<br \/>\n   in him, if he perceived that they said but the truth he would let it<br \/>\n   pass by uncontrolled. But when he saw that they set a gloss on it for<br \/>\n   his praise of their own making besides, then would he shortly say unto<br \/>\n   them, &#8220;I pray thee, good fellow, when thou sayest grace at my board,<br \/>\n   never bring in a Gloria Patri without a sicut erat. Any act that ever I<br \/>\n   did, if thou report it again to mine honour with a Gloria Patri, never<br \/>\n   report it but with a sicut erat&#8211;that is, even as it was and none<br \/>\n   otherwise. And lift me not up with lies, for I love it not.&#8221; If men<br \/>\n   would use this way with them that this noble king used, it would<br \/>\n   diminish much of their false flattery.<\/p>\n<p>   I can well approve that men should commend such things as they see<br \/>\n   praiseworthy in other men&#8211;keeping them within the bounds of truth&#8211;to<br \/>\n   give them the greater courage to the increase of them. For men keep<br \/>\n   still in that point one quality of children, that praise must prick<br \/>\n   them forth. But better it were to do well and look for none. Howbeit,<br \/>\n   those who cannot find it in their hearts to commend another man&#8217;s good<br \/>\n   deed show themselves either envious or else of nature very cold and<br \/>\n   dull. But without question, he who putteth his pleasure in the praise<br \/>\n   of the people hath but a foolish fancy. For if his finger do but ache<br \/>\n   of a hot blain, a great many men&#8217;s mouths blowing out his praise will<br \/>\n   scantly do him, among them all, so much ease as to have one boy blow on<br \/>\n   his finger!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XI<\/p>\n<p>   Let us now consider likewise what great worldly wealth ariseth unto men<br \/>\n   by great offices and authority&#8211;to those worldly-disposed people, I<br \/>\n   say, who desire them for no better purpose. For of those who desire<br \/>\n   them for better, we shall speak after anon.<\/p>\n<p>   The great thing that they all chiefly like therein is that they may<br \/>\n   bear a rule, command and control other men, and live uncommanded and<br \/>\n   uncontrolled themselves. And yet this commodity took I so little heed<br \/>\n   of, that I never was aware it was so great, until a good friend of ours<br \/>\n   merrily told me once that his wife once in a great anger taught it to<br \/>\n   him. For when her husband had no desire to grow greatly upward in the<br \/>\n   world, nor would labour for office of authority, and beside that<br \/>\n   forsook a right worshipful office when it was offered him, she fell in<br \/>\n   hand with him, he told me. And she all berated him, and asked him,<br \/>\n   &#8220;What will you do, that you will not put yourself forth as other folk<br \/>\n   do? Will you sit by the fire and make goslings in the ashes with a<br \/>\n   stick, as children do? Would God I were a man&#8211;look what I would do!&#8221;<br \/>\n   &#8220;Why, wife,&#8221; quoth her husband, &#8220;what would you do?&#8221; &#8220;What? By God, go<br \/>\n   forward with the best! For, as my mother was wont to say&#8211;God have<br \/>\n   mercy on her soul&#8211;it is evermore better to rule than to be ruled. And<br \/>\n   therefore, by God, I would not, I warrant you, be so foolish as to be<br \/>\n   ruled where I might rule.&#8221; &#8220;By my troth, wife,&#8221; quoth her husband, &#8220;in<br \/>\n   this I daresay you say truth, for I never found you willing to be ruled<br \/>\n   yet.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Well, uncle, I follow you now, well enough! She is indeed a<br \/>\n   stout master-woman. And in good faith, for aught that I can see, even<br \/>\n   that same womanish mind of hers is the greatest commodity that men<br \/>\n   reckon upon in offices of authority.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: By my troth, and methinketh there are very few who attain any<br \/>\n   great commodity therein. For first there is, in every kingdom, but one<br \/>\n   who can have an office of such authority that no man may command him or<br \/>\n   control him. No officer can stand in that position but the king<br \/>\n   himself; he only, uncontrolled or uncommanded, may control and command<br \/>\n   all. Now, of all the rest, each is under him. And yet almost every one<br \/>\n   is under more commanders and controllers, too, than one. And many a man<br \/>\n   who is in a great office commandeth fewer things and less labour to<br \/>\n   many men who are under him than someone that is over him commandeth him<br \/>\n   alone.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yet it doth them good, uncle, that men must make courtesy to<br \/>\n   them and salute them with reverence and stand bareheaded before them,<br \/>\n   or unto some of them peradventure kneel, too.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Well, cousin, in some part they do but play at gleek&#8211;they<br \/>\n   receive reverence, and to their cost they pay honour again therefor.<br \/>\n   For except, as I said, a king alone, the greatest in authority under<br \/>\n   him receiveth not so much reverence from any man as according to reason<br \/>\n   he himself doth honour to the king. Nor twenty men&#8217;s courtesies do him<br \/>\n   not so much pleasure as his own once kneeling doth him pain if his knee<br \/>\n   hap to be sore. And I once knew a great officer of the king&#8217;s to<br \/>\n   say&#8211;and in good faith I believe he said but as he thought&#8211;that twenty<br \/>\n   men standing bareheaded before him kept not his head half so warm as to<br \/>\n   keep on his own cap. And he never took so much ease with their being<br \/>\n   bareheaded before him, as he once caught grief with a cough that came<br \/>\n   upon him by standing long bareheaded before the king.<\/p>\n<p>   But let it be that these commodities be somewhat, such as they be. Yet<br \/>\n   then consider whether any incommodities be so joined with them that a<br \/>\n   man might almost as well lack both as have both. Goeth everything<br \/>\n   evermore as every one of them would have it? That would be as hard as<br \/>\n   to please all the people at once with one weather, since in one house<br \/>\n   the husband would have fair weather for his corn and his wife would<br \/>\n   have rain for her leeks! So those who are in authority are not all<br \/>\n   evermore of one mind, but sometimes there is variance among them,<br \/>\n   either for the respect of profit or the contention of rule, or for<br \/>\n   maintenance of causes, sundry parts for their sundry friends, and it<br \/>\n   cannot be that both the parties can have their own way. Nor often are<br \/>\n   they content who see their conclusions fail, but they take the missing<br \/>\n   of their intent ten times more displeasantly than poor men do. And this<br \/>\n   goeth not only for men of mean authority, but unto the very greatest.<br \/>\n   The princes themselves cannot have, you know, all their will. For how<br \/>\n   would it be possible, since almost every one of them would, if he<br \/>\n   could, be lord over all the rest? Then many men, under their princes in<br \/>\n   authority, are in such a position that many bear them privy malice and<br \/>\n   envy in heart. And many falsely speak them full fair and praise them<br \/>\n   with their mouth, who when there happeth any great fall unto them, bark<br \/>\n   and bite upon them like dogs.<\/p>\n<p>   Finally, there is the cost and charge, the danger and peril of war, in<br \/>\n   which their part is more than a poor man&#8217;s is, since that matter<br \/>\n   dependeth more upon them. And many a poor ploughman may sit still by<br \/>\n   the fire while they must arise and walk.<\/p>\n<p>   And sometimes their authority falleth by change of their master&#8217;s mind.<br \/>\n   And of that we see daily, in one place or another, such examples and so<br \/>\n   many that the parable of that philosopher can lack no testimony, who<br \/>\n   likened the servants of great princes unto the counters with which men<br \/>\n   do reckon accounts. For like as that counter that standeth sometimes<br \/>\n   for a farthing is suddenly set up and standeth for a thousand pound,<br \/>\n   and afterward as soon is set down beneath to stand for a farthing<br \/>\n   again; so fareth it sometimes with those who seek the way to rise and<br \/>\n   grow up in authority by the favour of great princes&#8211;as they rise up<br \/>\n   high, so fall they down again as low.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, though a man escape all such adventures, and abide in great<br \/>\n   authority till he die, yet then at least every man must leave at last.<br \/>\n   And that which we call &#8220;at last&#8221; hath no very long time to it. Let a<br \/>\n   man reckon his years that are past of his age ere ever he can get up<br \/>\n   aloft; and let him, when he hath it first in his fist, reckon how long<br \/>\n   he shall be likely to live thereafter; and I daresay that then the most<br \/>\n   part shall have little cause to rejoice. They shall see the time likely<br \/>\n   to be so short that their honour and authority by nature shall endure,<br \/>\n   beside the manifold chances by which they may lose it sooner. And then,<br \/>\n   when they see that they must needs leave it&#8211;the thing which they did<br \/>\n   much more set their hearts upon than ever they had reasonable<br \/>\n   cause&#8211;what sorrow they take for it, that shall I not need to tell you.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus it seemeth unto me, cousin, in good faith, that since in the<br \/>\n   having of authority the profit is not great, and the displeasures<br \/>\n   neither small nor few; and since of the losing there are so many sundry<br \/>\n   chances and by no means a man can keep it long; and since to part from<br \/>\n   it is such a painful grief: I can see no very great cause for which, as<br \/>\n   a high worldly commodity, men should greatly desire it.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XII<\/p>\n<p>   And thus far have we considered hitherto, in these outward goods that<br \/>\n   are called the gifts of fortune, only the slender commodity that<br \/>\n   worldly-minded men have by them. But now, if we consider further what<br \/>\n   harm to the soul they take by them who desire them only for the<br \/>\n   wretched wealth of this world, then shall we well perceive how far more<br \/>\n   happy is he who well loseth them than he who ill findeth them.<\/p>\n<p>   These things are such as are of their own nature indifferent&#8211;that is,<br \/>\n   of themselves neither good nor bad&#8211;but are matter that may serve to<br \/>\n   the one or the other according as men will use them. Yet need we little<br \/>\n   doubt but that for those who desire them only for their worldly<br \/>\n   pleasure and for no further godly purpose the devil shall soon turn<br \/>\n   them from things indifferent and make them things very evil. For though<br \/>\n   they be indifferent of their nature, yet cannot the use of them lightly<br \/>\n   stand indifferent, but must be determinately either good or bad. And<br \/>\n   therefore he who desireth them only for worldly pleasure, desireth them<br \/>\n   not for any good. And for better purpose than he desireth them, to<br \/>\n   better use is he not likely to put them. And therefore will he use them<br \/>\n   not unto good but consequently to evil.<\/p>\n<p>   And for example, first consider it in riches, and in him who longeth<br \/>\n   for them as for things of temporal commodity and not for any godly<br \/>\n   purpose. What good they shall do him, St. Paul declareth, when he<br \/>\n   writeth unto Timothy, &#8220;They that long to be rich fall into temptation<br \/>\n   and into the snare of the devil, and into many desires unprofitable and<br \/>\n   noxious, which drown men into death and into perdition.&#8221; And the holy<br \/>\n   scripture saith also in the twenty-fourth chapter of the Proverbs, &#8220;He<br \/>\n   that gathereth treasures shall be shoved into the snares of death.&#8221; So<br \/>\n   that whereas God saith by the mouth of St. Paul that they shall fall<br \/>\n   into the devil&#8217;s snare, he saith in the other place that they shall be<br \/>\n   pushed and shoved in by violence. And of truth, while a man desireth<br \/>\n   riches not for any good godly purpose but only for worldly wealth, it<br \/>\n   must needs be that he shall have little conscience in the getting. But,<br \/>\n   by all evil ways that he can invent, shall he labour to get them. And<br \/>\n   then shall he either niggardly heap them up together, which is, as you<br \/>\n   well know, damnable; or else shall he wastefully misspend them upon<br \/>\n   worldly pomp, pride, and gluttony, with occasion of many sins more, and<br \/>\n   that is yet much more damnable.<\/p>\n<p>   As for fame and glory desired only for worldly pleasure, they do unto<br \/>\n   the soul inestimable harm. For they set men&#8217;s hearts upon high devices<br \/>\n   and desires of such things as are immoderate and outrageous. And by<br \/>\n   help of false flatterers, they puff up a man in pride and make a<br \/>\n   brittle man&#8211;lately made of earth, that shall again shortly be laid<br \/>\n   full low in earth and there lie and rot and turn again into earth&#8211;take<br \/>\n   himself in the meantime for a god here upon earth and think to win<br \/>\n   himself to be lord of all the earth. This maketh battles between these<br \/>\n   great princes, with much trouble to much people, and great effusion of<br \/>\n   blood, and one king looking to reign in five realms, who cannot well<br \/>\n   rule one. For how many hath now this great Turk? And yet he aspireth to<br \/>\n   more. And those that he hath, he ordereth evilly&#8211;and yet he ordereth<br \/>\n   himself worst.<\/p>\n<p>   Then, offices of authority: If men desire them only for their worldly<br \/>\n   fancies, who can look that ever they shall occupy them well, and not<br \/>\n   rather abuse their authority and do thereby great hurt? For then shall<br \/>\n   they fall from indifference and maintain false suits for their friends.<br \/>\n   And they shall bear up their servants, and such as depend upon them,<br \/>\n   with bearing down of other innocent folk, who are not so able to do<br \/>\n   hurt as easy to take harm. Then the laws that are made against<br \/>\n   malefactors shall they make, as an old philosopher said, to be much<br \/>\n   like unto cobwebs, in which the little gnats and flies stick still and<br \/>\n   hang fast, but the great humble-bees break them and fly quite through.<br \/>\n   And then the laws that are made as a buckler in the defence of<br \/>\n   innocents, those shall they make serve for a sword to cut and sore<br \/>\n   wound them with&#8211;and therewith wound they their own souls sorer.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus you see, cousin, that of all these outward goods which men<br \/>\n   call the goods of fortune, there is never one that, unto those who long<br \/>\n   for it not for any godly purpose but only for their worldly welath,<br \/>\n   hath any great commodity to the body. And yet are they all, beside<br \/>\n   that, very deadly destruction unto the soul.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XIII<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, good uncle, this thing is so plainly true that no man<br \/>\n   can with any good reason deny it. But I think also, uncle, that no man<br \/>\n   will do so. For I see no man who will confess, for very shame, that he<br \/>\n   desireth riches, honour, renown, and offices of authority only for his<br \/>\n   worldly pleasure. For every man would fain seem as holy as a horse. And<br \/>\n   therefore will every man say&#8211;and would it were so believed, too&#8211;that<br \/>\n   he desireth these things, though for his worldly wealth a little so,<br \/>\n   yet principally to merit thereby through doing some good with them.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This is, cousin, very surely so, that so doth every man say.<br \/>\n   But first he who in the desire of these things hath his respect unto<br \/>\n   his worldly wealth, as you say, &#8220;but a little so,&#8221; so much as he<br \/>\n   himself thinketh but a little, may soon prove a great deal too much.<br \/>\n   And many men will say so, too, who have principal respect unto their<br \/>\n   worldly commodity, and toward God little or none at all. And yet they<br \/>\n   pretend the contrary, and that unto their own harm. For &#8220;God cannot be<br \/>\n   mocked.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And some peradventure know not well their own affection themselves. But<br \/>\n   there lieth more imperfection secretly in their affection than they<br \/>\n   themselves are well aware of, which only God beholdeth. And therefore<br \/>\n   saith the prophet unto God, &#8220;Mine imperfection have thine eyes beheld.&#8221;<br \/>\n   And therefore the prophet prayeth, &#8220;From mine hidden sins cleanse thou<br \/>\n   me, good Lord.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But now, cousin, this tribulation of the Turk: If he so persecute us<br \/>\n   for the faith that those who will forsake their faith shall keep their<br \/>\n   goods, and those shall lose their goods who will not leave their<br \/>\n   faith&#8211;lo, this manner of persecution shall try them like a touchstone.<br \/>\n   For it shall show the feigned from the true-minded, and it shall also<br \/>\n   teach them who think they mean better than they do indeed, better to<br \/>\n   discern themselves. For there are some who think they mean well, while<br \/>\n   they frame themselves a conscience, and ever keep still a great heap of<br \/>\n   superfluous substance by them, thinking ever still that they will<br \/>\n   bethink themselves upon some good deed on which they will well bestow<br \/>\n   it once&#8211;or else that their executors shall! But now, if they lie not<br \/>\n   unto themselves, but keep their goods for any good purpose to the<br \/>\n   pleasure of God indeed, then shall they, in this persecution, for the<br \/>\n   pleasure of God in keeping his faith, be glad to depart from them.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, as for all these things&#8211;the loss, I mean, of all these<br \/>\n   outward things that men call the gifts of fortune&#8211;this is, methinketh,<br \/>\n   in this Turk&#8217;s persecution for the faith, consolation great and<br \/>\n   sufficient: Every man who hath them either setteth by them for the<br \/>\n   world or for God. He who setteth by them for the world hath, as I have<br \/>\n   showed you, little profit by them to the body and great harm unto the<br \/>\n   soul. And therefore, he might well, if he were wise, reckon that he won<br \/>\n   by the loss, although he lost them but by some common cause. And much<br \/>\n   more happy can he then be, since he loseth them by such a meritorious<br \/>\n   means. And on the other hand, he who keepeth them for some good<br \/>\n   purpose, intending to bestow them for the pleasure of God, the loss of<br \/>\n   them in this Turk&#8217;s persecution for keeping of the faith can be no<br \/>\n   manner of grief to him. For by so parting from them he bestoweth them<br \/>\n   in such wise unto God&#8217;s pleasure that at the time when he loseth them<br \/>\n   by no way could he bestow them unto his high pleasure better. For<br \/>\n   though it would have been peradventure better to have bestowed them<br \/>\n   well before, yet since he kept them for some good purpose he would not<br \/>\n   have left them unbestowed if he had foreknown the chance. But being now<br \/>\n   prevented so by persecution that he cannot bestow them in that other<br \/>\n   good way that he would have, yet since he parteth from them because he<br \/>\n   will not part from the faith, though the devil&#8217;s escheator violently<br \/>\n   take them from him, yet willingly giveth he them to God.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XIV<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: In good faith, good uncle, I can deny none of this. And<br \/>\n   indeed, unto those who were despoiled and robbed by the Turk&#8217;s<br \/>\n   overrunning of the country, and all their substance movable and<br \/>\n   unmovable bereft and lost already, their persons only fled and safe, I<br \/>\n   think that these considerations&#8211;considering also that, as you lately<br \/>\n   said, their sorrow could not amend their chance&#8211;might unto them be<br \/>\n   good occasion of comfort, and cause them, as you said, to make a virtue<br \/>\n   of necessity.<\/p>\n<p>   But in the case, uncle, that we now speak of, they have yet their<br \/>\n   substance untouched in their own hands, and the keeping or the losing<br \/>\n   shall both hang in their own hands, by the Turk&#8217;s offer, upon the<br \/>\n   retaining or the renouncing of the Christian faith. Here, uncle, I find<br \/>\n   it, as you said, that this temptation is most sore and most perilous.<br \/>\n   For I fear me that we shall find few of such as have much to lose who<br \/>\n   shall find it in their hearts so suddenly to forsake their goods, with<br \/>\n   all those other things before rehearsed on which their worldly wealth<br \/>\n   dependeth.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That fear I much, cousin, too. But thereby shall it well<br \/>\n   appear, as I said, that, seemed they never so good and virtuous before,<br \/>\n   and flattered they themselves with never so gay a gloss of good and<br \/>\n   gracious purpose that they kept their goods for, yet were their hearts<br \/>\n   inwardly in the deep sight of God not sound and sure such as they<br \/>\n   should be (and as peradventure some had themselves thought they were)<br \/>\n   but like a puff-ring of Paris&#8211;hollow, light, and counterfeit indeed.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet, they being even such, this would I fain ask one of them. And I<br \/>\n   pray you, cousin, take you his person upon you, and in this case answer<br \/>\n   for him. &#8220;What hindereth you,&#8221; would I ask, &#8220;your Lordship,&#8221; (for we<br \/>\n   will take no small man for an example in this part, nor him who would<br \/>\n   have little to lose, for methinketh such a one who would cast away God<br \/>\n   for a little, would be so far from all profit, that he would not be<br \/>\n   worth talking with). &#8220;What hindereth you,&#8221; I say, therefore, &#8220;that you<br \/>\n   be not gladly content, without any deliberation at all, in this kind of<br \/>\n   persecution, rather than to leave your faith, to let go all that ever<br \/>\n   you have at once?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Since you put it unto me, uncle, to make the matter more<br \/>\n   plain, that I should play that great man&#8217;s part who is so wealthy and<br \/>\n   hath so much to lose, albeit that I cannot be very sure of another<br \/>\n   man&#8217;s mind, nor of what another man would say, yet as far as mine own<br \/>\n   mind can conjecture, I shall answer in his person what I think would be<br \/>\n   his hindrance. And therefore to your question I answer that there<br \/>\n   hindereth me the thing that you yourself may lightly guess: the losing<br \/>\n   of the many commodities which I now have&#8211;riches and substance, lands<br \/>\n   and great possessions of inheritance, with great rule and authority<br \/>\n   here in my country. All of which things the great Turk granteth me to<br \/>\n   keep still in peace and have them enhanced, too, if I will forsake the<br \/>\n   faith of Christ. Yea, I may say to you, I have a motion secretly made<br \/>\n   me further, to keep all this yet better cheap; that is, not to be<br \/>\n   compelled utterly to forsake Christ nor all the whole Christian faith,<br \/>\n   but only some such parts of it as may not stand with Mahomet&#8217;s law. And<br \/>\n   only granting Mahomet for a true prophet and serving the Turk truly in<br \/>\n   his wars against all Christian kings, I shall not be hindered to praise<br \/>\n   Christ also, and to call him a good man, and worship and serve him too.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Nay, nay, my lord&#8211;Christ hath not so great need of your<br \/>\n   Lordship as, rather than to lose your service, he would fall at such<br \/>\n   covenants with you as to take your service at halves, to serve him and<br \/>\n   his enemy both! He hath given you plain warning already by St. Paul<br \/>\n   that he will have in your service no parting-fellow: &#8220;What fellowship<br \/>\n   is there between light and darkness? Between Christ and Belial?&#8221; And he<br \/>\n   hath also plainly told you himself by his own mouth, &#8220;No man can serve<br \/>\n   two lords at once.&#8221; He will have you believe all that he telleth you,<br \/>\n   and do all that he biddeth you, and forbear all that he forbiddeth you,<br \/>\n   without any manner of exception. Break one of his commandments, and you<br \/>\n   break all. Forsake one point of his faith, and you forsake all, as for<br \/>\n   any thanks that you get of him for the rest. And therefore, if you<br \/>\n   devise, as it were, indentures between God and you&#8211;what you will do<br \/>\n   for him and what you will not do, as though he should hold himself<br \/>\n   content with such service of yours as you yourself care to appoint<br \/>\n   him&#8211;if you make, I say, such indentures, you shall seal both the parts<br \/>\n   yourself, and you get no agreement thereto from him.<\/p>\n<p>   And this I say: Though the Turk would make such an appointment with you<br \/>\n   as you speak of, and would, when he had made it, keep it&#8211;whereas he<br \/>\n   would not, I warrant you, leave you so when he had once brought you so<br \/>\n   far forth. But he would, little by little, ere he left you, make you<br \/>\n   deny Christ altogether and take Mahomet in his stead. And so doth he in<br \/>\n   the beginning, when he will not have you believe him to be God. For<br \/>\n   surely, if he were not God, he would be no good man either, since he<br \/>\n   plainly said he was God. But through he would go never so far forth<br \/>\n   with you, yet Christ will, as I said, not take your service by halves,<br \/>\n   but will that you shall love him with all your whole heart. And<br \/>\n   because, while he was living here fifteen hundred years ago, he foresaw<br \/>\n   this mind of yours that you have now, with which you would fain serve<br \/>\n   him in some such fashion that you might keep your worldly substance<br \/>\n   still, but rather forsake his service than put all your substance from<br \/>\n   you, he telleth you plainly fifteen hundred years ago with his own<br \/>\n   mouth that he will have no such service of you, saying, &#8220;You cannot<br \/>\n   serve both God and your riches together.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, this thing being established for a plain conclusion,<br \/>\n   which you must needs grant if you have faith&#8211;and if you be gone from<br \/>\n   that ground of faith already, then is all our disputation, you know, at<br \/>\n   an end. For how should you then rather lose your goods than forsake<br \/>\n   your faith, if you have lost your faith and let it go already? This<br \/>\n   point, I say, therefore, being put first for a ground, between us both<br \/>\n   twain agreed, that you have yet the faith still and intend to keep it<br \/>\n   always still in your heart, and are only in doubt whether you will lose<br \/>\n   all your worldly substance rather than forsake your faith in your word<br \/>\n   alone; now shall I reply to the point of your answer, wherein you tell<br \/>\n   me the lothness of the loss and the comfort of the keeping hinder you<br \/>\n   from forgoing your goods and move you rather to forsake your faith.<\/p>\n<p>   I let pass all that I have spoken of the small commodity of them unto<br \/>\n   your body and of the great harm that the having of them doth to your<br \/>\n   soul. And since the promise of the Turk, made unto you for the keeping<br \/>\n   of them, is the thing that moveth you and maketh you thus to doubt, I<br \/>\n   ask you first whereby you know that, when you have done all that he<br \/>\n   will have you do against Christ, to the harm of your soul&#8211;whereby know<br \/>\n   you, I say, that he will keep you his promise in these things that he<br \/>\n   promiseth you concerning the retaining of your well-beloved worldly<br \/>\n   wealth, for the pleasure of your body?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: What surety can a man have of such a great prince except his<br \/>\n   promise, which for his own honour it cannot become him to break?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I have known him, and his father before him too, to break more<br \/>\n   promises than five, as great as this is that he should here make with<br \/>\n   you. Who shall come and cast it in his teeth, and tell him it is a<br \/>\n   shame for him to be so fickle and so false of his promise? And then<br \/>\n   what careth he for those words that he knoweth well he shall never<br \/>\n   hear? Not very much, though they were told him too!<\/p>\n<p>   If you might come afterward and complain your grief unto his own person<br \/>\n   yourself, you should find him as shamefast as a friend of mine, a<br \/>\n   merchant, once found the Sultan of Syria. Being certain years about his<br \/>\n   merchandise in that country, he gave to the Sultan a great sum of money<br \/>\n   for a certain office for him there for the while. But he had scantly<br \/>\n   granted him this and put it in his hand when, ere ever it was worth<br \/>\n   aught to him, the Sultan suddenly sold it to another of his own sect,<br \/>\n   and put our Hungarian out. Then came he to him and humbly put him in<br \/>\n   remembrance of his grant, spoken with his own mouth and signed with his<br \/>\n   own hand. Thereunto the Sultan answered him, with a grim countenance,<br \/>\n   &#8220;I will have thee know, good-for-nothing, that neither my mouth nor<br \/>\n   mine hand shall be master over me, to bind all my body at their<br \/>\n   pleasure. But I will be lord and master over them both, that whatsoever<br \/>\n   the one say and the other write, I will be at mine own liberty to do<br \/>\n   what I like myself, and ask them both no leave. And therefore, go get<br \/>\n   thee hence out of my countries, knave!&#8221; Think you now, my lord, that<br \/>\n   Sultan and this Turk, being both of one false sect, you may not find<br \/>\n   them both alike false of their promise?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: That must I needs jeopard, for other surety can there none be<br \/>\n   had.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: An unwise jeoparding, to put your soul in peril of damnation<br \/>\n   for the keeping of your bodily pleasures, and yet without surety to<br \/>\n   jeopard them too!<\/p>\n<p>   But yet go a little further, lo. Suppose me that you might be very sure<br \/>\n   that the Turk would break no promise with you. Are you then sure enough<br \/>\n   to retain all your substance still?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yea, then.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: What if a man should ask you how long?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: How long? As long as I live.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Well, let it be so, then. But yet, as far as I can see, though<br \/>\n   the great Turk favour you never so much and let you keep your goods as<br \/>\n   long as ever you live, yet if it hap that you be this day fifty years<br \/>\n   old, all the favour he can show you cannot make you one day younger<br \/>\n   tomorrow. But every day shall you wax older than the day before, and<br \/>\n   then within a while must you, for all his favour, lose all.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Well, a man would be glad, for all that, to be sure not to<br \/>\n   lack while he liveth.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Well, then, if the great Turk give you your goods, can there<br \/>\n   then in all your life none other take them from you again?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, I suppose not.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: May he not lose this country again unto Christian men, and<br \/>\n   you, with the taking of this way, fall in the same peril then that you<br \/>\n   would now eschew?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, I think that if he get it once, he will never lose<br \/>\n   it after again in our days.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Yes, by God&#8217;s grace. But yet if he lose it after our day,<br \/>\n   there goeth your children&#8217;s inheritance away again! But be it now that<br \/>\n   he could never lose it; could none take your substance from you then?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: No, in good faith, none.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: No, none at all? Not God?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: God? Why, yes, perdy. Who doubteth of that?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Who? Marry, he who doubteth whether there be any God or no.<br \/>\n   And that there lacketh not some such, the prophet testifieth where he<br \/>\n   said, &#8220;The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God.&#8221; With the<br \/>\n   mouth the most foolish will forbear to say it unto other folk, but in<br \/>\n   the heart they forbear not to say it softly to themselves. And I fear<br \/>\n   me there be many more such fools than every man would think. And they<br \/>\n   would not hesitate to say it openly, too, if they forbore it not more<br \/>\n   for dread or for shame of men than for any fear of God. But now those<br \/>\n   who are so frantic foolish as to think there were no God, and yet in<br \/>\n   their words confess him, though (as St. Paul saith) in their deeds they<br \/>\n   deny him&#8211;we shall let them pass till it please God to show himself<br \/>\n   unto them, either inwardly, in time, by his merciful grace, or else<br \/>\n   outwardly, but over-late for them, by his terrible judgment.<\/p>\n<p>   But unto you, my Lord, since you believe and confess, as a wise man<br \/>\n   should, that though the Turk keep you his promise in letting you keep<br \/>\n   your substance, because you do him pleasure in the forsaking of your<br \/>\n   faith, yet God, whose faith you forsake, and thereby do him<br \/>\n   displeasure, may so take them from you that the great Turk, with all<br \/>\n   the power he hath, is not able to keep you them&#8211;why will you be so<br \/>\n   unwise with the loss of your soul to please the great Turk for your<br \/>\n   goods, since you know well that God whom you displease therewith may<br \/>\n   take them from you too?<\/p>\n<p>   Besides this, since you believe there is a God, you cannot but believe<br \/>\n   also that the great Turk cannot take your goods from you without his<br \/>\n   will or sufferance, no more than the devil could from Job. And think<br \/>\n   you then that, if he will suffer the Turk to take away your goods<br \/>\n   albeit that by the keeping and confessing of his faith you please him,<br \/>\n   he will, when you displease him by forsaking his faith, suffer you to<br \/>\n   rejoice or enjoy any benefit of those goods that you get or keep<br \/>\n   thereby?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: God is gracious, and though men offend him, yet he suffereth<br \/>\n   them many times to live in prosperity long after.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Long after? Nay, by my troth, that doth he no man! For how can<br \/>\n   that be, that he should suffer you to live in prosperity long after,<br \/>\n   when your whole life is but short in all-together, and either almost<br \/>\n   half of it or more than half, you think yourself, I daresay, spent out<br \/>\n   already before? Can you burn out half a short candle, and then have a<br \/>\n   long one left of the rest?<\/p>\n<p>   There cannot in this world be a worse mind than for a man to delight<br \/>\n   and take comfort in any commodity that he taketh by sinful means. For<br \/>\n   it is the very straight way toward the taking of boldness and courage<br \/>\n   in sin, and finally to falling into infidelity and thinking that God<br \/>\n   careth not or regardeth not what things men do here nor of what mind we<br \/>\n   be. But unto such-minded folk speaketh holy scripture in this wise:<br \/>\n   &#8220;Say not, I have sinned and yet there hath happed me none harm, for God<br \/>\n   suffereth before he strike.&#8221; But, as St. Austine saith, the longer he<br \/>\n   tarrieth ere he strike, the sorer is the stroke when he striketh.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, if you will do well, reckon yourself very sure that when<br \/>\n   you deadly displease God for the getting or the keeping of your goods,<br \/>\n   God shall not suffer those goods to do you good. But either he shall<br \/>\n   shortly take them from you, or else suffer you to keep them for a<br \/>\n   little while to your more harm and afterward, when you least look for<br \/>\n   it, take you away from them.<\/p>\n<p>   And then, what a heap of heaviness will there enter into your heart,<br \/>\n   when you shall see that you shall so suddenly go from your goods and<br \/>\n   leave them here in the earth in one place, and that your body shall be<br \/>\n   put in the earth in another place, and&#8211;which then shall be the most<br \/>\n   heaviness of all&#8211;when you shall fear (and not without great cause)<br \/>\n   that your soul first forthwith, and after that at the final judgment<br \/>\n   your body, shall be driven down deep toward the centre of the earth<br \/>\n   into the fiery pit and dungeon of the devil of hell, there to tarry in<br \/>\n   torment, world without end! What goods of this world can any man<br \/>\n   imagine, the pleasure and commodity of which could be such in a<br \/>\n   thousand years as to be able to recompense that intolerable pain that<br \/>\n   there is to be suffered in one year? Yea, or in one day or one hour,<br \/>\n   either? And then what a madness is it, for the poor pleasure of your<br \/>\n   worldly goods of so few years, to cast yourself both body and soul into<br \/>\n   the everlasting fire of hell, which is not diminished by the amount of<br \/>\n   a moment by lying there the space of a hundred thousand years?<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore our Saviour, in few words, concluded and confuted all<br \/>\n   these follies of those who, for the short use of this worldly<br \/>\n   substance, forsake him and his faith and sell their souls unto the<br \/>\n   devil for ever. For he saith, &#8220;What availeth it a man if he won all the<br \/>\n   whole world, and lost his soul?&#8221; This would be, methinketh, cause and<br \/>\n   occasion enough, to him who had never so much part of this world in his<br \/>\n   hand, to be content rather to lose it all than for the retaining or<br \/>\n   increasing of his worldly goods to lose and destroy his soul.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This is, good uncle, in good faith very true. And what other<br \/>\n   thing any of them who would not for this be content, have to allege in<br \/>\n   reason for the defence of their folly, that can I not imagine. I care<br \/>\n   not in this matter to play the part any longer, but I pray God give me<br \/>\n   the grace to play the contrary part in deed. And I pray that I may<br \/>\n   never, for any goods or substance of this wretched world, forsake my<br \/>\n   faith toward God either in heart or tongue. And I trust in his great<br \/>\n   goodness that so I never shall.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XV<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Methinketh, cousin, that this persecution shall not only, as I<br \/>\n   said before, try men&#8217;s hearts when it cometh and make them know their<br \/>\n   own affections&#8211;whether they have a corrupt greedy covetous mind or<br \/>\n   not&#8211;but also the very fame and expectation of it may teach them this<br \/>\n   lesson, ere ever the thing fall upon them itself. And this may be to<br \/>\n   their no little fruit, if they have the wit and the grace to take it in<br \/>\n   time while they can. For now may they find sure places to lay their<br \/>\n   treasure in, so that all the Turk&#8217;s army shall never find it out.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Marry, uncle, that way they will not forget, I warrant you, as<br \/>\n   near as their wits will serve them. But yet have I known some who have<br \/>\n   ere this thought that they had hid their money safe and sure enough,<br \/>\n   digging it full deep in the ground, and yet have missed it when they<br \/>\n   came again and found it digged out and carried away to their hands.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Nay, from their hands, I think you would say. And it was no<br \/>\n   marvel. For some such have I known, too, but they have hid their goods<br \/>\n   foolishly in such place as they were well warned before that they<br \/>\n   should not. And that were they warned by him whom they well knew for<br \/>\n   such a one as knew well enough what would come of it.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Then were they more than mad. But did he tell them too where<br \/>\n   they should have hid it, to make it sure?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Yea, by St. Mary, did he! For else he would have told them but<br \/>\n   half a tale. But he told them a whole tale, bidding them that they<br \/>\n   should in no wise hide their treasure in the ground. And he showed them<br \/>\n   a good cause, for there thieves dig it out and steal it away.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Why, where should they hide it, then, said he? For thieves may<br \/>\n   hap to find it out in any place.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Forsooth, he counselled them to hide their treasure in heaven<br \/>\n   and there lay it up, for there it shall lie safe. For thither, he said,<br \/>\n   there can no thief come, till he have left his theft and become a true<br \/>\n   man first. And he who gave this counsel knew well enough what he said,<br \/>\n   for it was our Saviour himself, who in the sixth chapter of St. Matthew<br \/>\n   saith, &#8220;Hoard not up your treasures in earth, where the rust and the<br \/>\n   moth fret it out and where thieves dig it out and steal it away. But<br \/>\n   hoard up your treasures in heaven, where neither the rust nor the moth<br \/>\n   fret them out, and where thieves dig them not out nor steal them away.<br \/>\n   For where thy treasure is, there is thine heart too.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   If we would well consider these words of our Saviour Christ, methinketh<br \/>\n   we should need no more counsel at all, nor no more comfort either,<br \/>\n   concerning the loss of our temporal substance in this Turk&#8217;s<br \/>\n   persecution for the faith. For here our Lord in these words teacheth us<br \/>\n   where we may lay up our substance safe, before the persecution come. If<br \/>\n   we put it into the poor men&#8217;s bosoms, there shall it lie safe, for who<br \/>\n   would go search a beggar&#8217;s bag for money? If we deliver it to the poor<br \/>\n   for Christ&#8217;s sake, we deliver it unto Christ himself. And then what<br \/>\n   persecutor can there be, so strong as to take it out of his hand?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: These things, uncle, are undoubtedly so true that no man can<br \/>\n   with words wrestle therewith. But yet ever there hangeth in a man&#8217;s<br \/>\n   heart a lothness to lack a living!<\/p>\n<p>      [YOU ARE HERE]<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: There doth indeed, in theirs who either never or but seldom<br \/>\n   hear any good counsel against it, or who, when they hear it, hearken to<br \/>\n   it but as they would to an idle tale, rather for a pastime or for the<br \/>\n   sake of manners than for any substantial intent and purpose to follow<br \/>\n   good advice and take any fruit by it. But verily, if we would lay not<br \/>\n   only our ear but also our heart to it, and consider that the saying of<br \/>\n   our Saviour Christ is not a poet&#8217;s fable or a harper&#8217;s song but the<br \/>\n   very holy word of almighty God himself, we would be full sore ashamed<br \/>\n   of ourselves&#8211;and well we might! And we would be full sorry too, when<br \/>\n   we felt in our affection those words to have in our hearts no more<br \/>\n   strength and weight but what we remain still of the same dull mind as<br \/>\n   we did before we heard them.<\/p>\n<p>   This manner of ours, in whose breasts the great good counsel of God no<br \/>\n   better settleth nor taketh no better root, may well declare to us that<br \/>\n   the thorns and briars and brambles of our worldly substance grow so<br \/>\n   thick and spring up so high in the ground of our hearts that they<br \/>\n   strangle, as the Gospel saith, the word of God that was sown therein.<br \/>\n   And therefore is God a very good lord unto us, when he causeth, like a<br \/>\n   good husbandman, his folk to come on the field&#8211;for the persecutors are<br \/>\n   his folk, to this purpose&#8211;and with their hooks and their<br \/>\n   stocking-irons to grub up these wicked weeds and bushes of our earthly<br \/>\n   substance and carry them quite away from us, that the word of God sown<br \/>\n   in our hearts may have room there, and a glade round about for the warm<br \/>\n   sun of grace to come to it and make it grow. For surely those words of<br \/>\n   our Saviour shall we find full true, &#8220;Where thy treasure is, there is<br \/>\n   also thine heart.&#8221; If we lay up our treasure in earth, in earth shall<br \/>\n   be our hearts. If we send our treasure into heaven, in heaven shall we<br \/>\n   have our hearts. And surely, the greatest comfort any man can have in<br \/>\n   his tribulation is to have his heart in heaven.<\/p>\n<p>   If thine heart were indeed out of this world and in heaven, all the<br \/>\n   kinds of torments that all this world could devise could put thee to no<br \/>\n   pain here. Let us then send our hearts hence thither in such a manner<br \/>\n   as we may, by sending hither our worldly substance hence. And let us<br \/>\n   never doubt but we shall, that once done, find our hearts so conversant<br \/>\n   in heaven, with the glad consideration of our following the gracious<br \/>\n   counsel of Christ, that the comfort of his Holy Spirit, inspired in us<br \/>\n   for that, shall mitigate, diminish, assuage, and (in a manner) quench<br \/>\n   the great furious fervour of the pain that we shall happen to have by<br \/>\n   his loving sufferance of our further merit in our tribulation.<\/p>\n<p>   If we saw that we should be within a while driven out of this land, and<br \/>\n   fain to fly into another, we would think that a man were mad who would<br \/>\n   not be content to forbear his goods here for the while and send them<br \/>\n   before him into that land where he saw he should live all the rest of<br \/>\n   his life. So may we verily think yet ourselves much more mad&#8211;seeing<br \/>\n   that we are sure it cannot be long ere we shall be sent, spite of our<br \/>\n   teeth, out of this world&#8211;if the fear of a little lack or the love to<br \/>\n   see our goods here about us and the lothness to part from them for this<br \/>\n   little while that we may keep them here, shall be able to keep us from<br \/>\n   the sure sending them before us into the other world. For we may be<br \/>\n   sure to live there wealthily with them if we send them thither, or else<br \/>\n   shortly leave them here behind us and then stand in great jeopardy<br \/>\n   there to live wretches for ever.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: In good faith, good uncle, methinketh that concerning the loss<br \/>\n   of these outward things, these considerations are so sufficient<br \/>\n   comforts, that for mine own part I would methinketh desire no more,<br \/>\n   save only grace well to remember them.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XVI<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Much less than this may serve, cousin, with calling and<br \/>\n   trusting upon God&#8217;s help, without which much more than this cannot<br \/>\n   serve. But the fervour of the Christian faith so sore fainteth nowadays<br \/>\n   and decayeth, coming from hot unto luke-warm and from luke-warm almost<br \/>\n   to key-cold, that men must now be fain to lay many dry sticks to it, as<br \/>\n   to a fire that is almost out, and use much blowing at it.<\/p>\n<p>   But else I think, by my troth, that unto a warm faithful man one thing<br \/>\n   alone, of which we have spoken yet no word, would be comfort enough in<br \/>\n   this kind of persecution, against the loss of all his goods.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: What thing may that be, uncle?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: In good faith, cousin, even the bare remembrance of the<br \/>\n   poverty that our Saviour willingly suffered for us. For I verily<br \/>\n   suppose that if there were a great king who had so tender love for a<br \/>\n   servant of his that he had, to help him out of danger, forsaken and<br \/>\n   lost all his worldly wealth and royalty and become poor and needy for<br \/>\n   his sake, that servant could scantly be found who would be of such a<br \/>\n   base unnatural heart that if he himself came afterward to some<br \/>\n   substance he would not with better will lose it all again than<br \/>\n   shamefully to forsake such a master.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, as I say, I surely suppose that if we would well<br \/>\n   remember and inwardly consider the great goodness of our Saviour toward<br \/>\n   us, when we were not yet his poor sinful servants but rather his<br \/>\n   adversaries and his enemies, and what wealth of this world he willingly<br \/>\n   forsook for our sakes&#8211;for he was indeed universal king of this world,<br \/>\n   and so having the power in his own hand to have used it if he had<br \/>\n   wished, instead of which, to make us rich in heaven, he lived here in<br \/>\n   neediness and poverty all his life and neither would have authority nor<br \/>\n   keep either lands or goods. If we would remember this, the deep<br \/>\n   consideration and earnest advisement of this one point alone would be<br \/>\n   able to make any true Christian man or woman well content rather for<br \/>\n   his sake in return to give up all that ever God hath lent them (and<br \/>\n   lent them he hath, all that they have) than unkindly and unfaithfully<br \/>\n   to forsake him. And him they forsake if, for fear, they forsake the<br \/>\n   confessing of his Christian faith.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, to finish this piece withal, concerning the dread of<br \/>\n   losing our outward worldly goods, let us consider the slender commodity<br \/>\n   that they bring; with what labour they are bought; what a little while<br \/>\n   they abide with whomsoever they abide with longest; what pain their<br \/>\n   pleasure is mingled with; what harm the love of them doth unto the<br \/>\n   soul; what loss is in the keeping if Christ&#8217;s faith is refused for<br \/>\n   them; what winning is in the loss, if we lose them for God&#8217;s sake; how<br \/>\n   much more profitable they are when well given than when ill kept; and<br \/>\n   finally what ingratitude it would be if we would not forsake them for<br \/>\n   Christ&#8217;s sake rather than for them to forsake Christ unfaithfully, who<br \/>\n   while he lived for our sake forsook all the world, beside the suffering<br \/>\n   of shameful and painful death, of which we shall speak afterward.<\/p>\n<p>   If we will consider well these things, I say, and will pray God with<br \/>\n   his holy hand to print them in our hearts, and will abide and dwell<br \/>\n   still in the hope of his help, his truth shall, as the prophet saith,<br \/>\n   so compass us about with a shield that we shall not need to be afraid<br \/>\n   of this incursion of this midday devil&#8211;this plain open persecution of<br \/>\n   the Turk&#8211;for any loss that we can take by the bereaving from us of our<br \/>\n   wretched worldly goods. For their short and small pleasure in this life<br \/>\n   forborne, we shall be with heavenly substance everlastingly recompensed<br \/>\n   by God, in joyful bliss and glory.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XVII<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, uncle, as for these outward goods, you have said<br \/>\n   enough. No man can be sure what strength he shall have or how faint and<br \/>\n   feeble he may find himself when he shall come to the point, and<br \/>\n   therefore I can make no warranty of myself, seeing that St. Peter so<br \/>\n   suddenly fainted at a woman&#8217;s word and so cowardly forsook his master,<br \/>\n   for whom he had so boldly fought within so few hours before, and by<br \/>\n   that fall in forsaking well perceived that he had been too rash in his<br \/>\n   promise and was well worthy to take a fall for putting so full trust in<br \/>\n   himself. Yet in good faith methinketh now (and God will, I trust, help<br \/>\n   me to keep this thought still) that if the Turk should take all that I<br \/>\n   have, unto my very shirt, unless I would forsake my faith, and should<br \/>\n   offer it all to me again with five times as much if I would fall into<br \/>\n   his sect, I would not once stick at it&#8211;rather to forsake it every<br \/>\n   whit, than to forsake any point of Christ&#8217;s holy faith.<\/p>\n<p>   But surely, good uncle, when I bethink me further on the grief and the<br \/>\n   pain that may turn unto my flesh, here find I the fear that forceth my<br \/>\n   heart to tremble.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Neither have I cause to marvel at that, nor have you, cousin,<br \/>\n   cause to be dismayed for it. The great horror and fear that our Saviour<br \/>\n   had in his own flesh, against his painful passion, maketh me little to<br \/>\n   marvel. And I may well make you take this comfort, too, that for no<br \/>\n   such manner of grudging felt in your sensual parts, the flesh shrinking<br \/>\n   in the meditation of pain and death, your reason shall give over, but<br \/>\n   resist it and manly master it. And though you would fain fly from the<br \/>\n   painful death and be loth to come to it, yet may the meditation of our<br \/>\n   Saviour&#8217;s great grievous agony move you. And he himself shall, if you<br \/>\n   so desire him, not fail to work with you therein, and to get and give<br \/>\n   you the grace to submit and conform your will unto his, as he did his<br \/>\n   unto his Father. And thereupon shall you be so comforted with the<br \/>\n   secret inward inspiration of his Holy Spirit, as he was with the<br \/>\n   personal presence of that angel who after his agony came and comforted<br \/>\n   him. And so shall you as his true disciple follow him, and with good<br \/>\n   will, without grudge, do as he did, and take your cross of pain and<br \/>\n   suffering upon your back and die for the truth with him, and thereby<br \/>\n   reign with him crowned in eternal glory.<\/p>\n<p>   And this I say to give you warning of the truth, to the intent that<br \/>\n   when a man feeleth such a horror of death in his heart, he should not<br \/>\n   thereby stand in outrageous fear that he were falling. For many such a<br \/>\n   man standeth, for all that fear, full fast, and finally better abideth<br \/>\n   the brunt, when God is so good unto him as to bring him to it and<br \/>\n   encourage him therein, than doth some other man who in the beginning<br \/>\n   feeleth no fear at all. And yet may he never be brought to the brunt,<br \/>\n   and most often so it is. For God, having many mansions, and all<br \/>\n   wonderful wealthful, in his Father&#8217;s house, exalteth not every good man<br \/>\n   up to the glory of a martyr. But foreseeing their infirmity, that<br \/>\n   though they be of good will before and peradventure of right good<br \/>\n   courage too, they would yet play St. Peter if they were brought to the<br \/>\n   point, and thereby bring their souls into the peril of eternal<br \/>\n   damnation, he provideth otherwise for them before they come there. And<br \/>\n   he findeth a way that men shall not have the mind to lay any hands upon<br \/>\n   them, as he found for his disciples when he himself was willingly<br \/>\n   taken. Or else, if they set hands on them, he findeth a way that they<br \/>\n   shall have no power to hold them, as he found for St. John the<br \/>\n   Evangelist, who let his sheet fall from him, upon which they caught<br \/>\n   hold, and so fled himself naked away and escaped from them. Or, though<br \/>\n   they hold them and bring them to prison too, yet God sometimes<br \/>\n   delivereth them hence, as he did St. Peter. And sometimes he taketh<br \/>\n   them to him out of the prison into heaven, and suffereth them not to<br \/>\n   come to their torment at all, as he hath done by many a good holy man.<br \/>\n   And some he suffereth to be brought into the torments and yet suffereth<br \/>\n   them not to die in them, but to live many years afterward and die their<br \/>\n   natural death, as he did by St. John the Evangelist and by many another<br \/>\n   more, as we may well see both by sundry stories and in the epistles of<br \/>\n   St. Ciprian also. And therefore, which way God will take with us, we<br \/>\n   cannot tell.<\/p>\n<p>   But surely, if we be true Christian men, this can we well tell: that<br \/>\n   without any bold warranty of ourselves or foolish trust in our own<br \/>\n   strength, we are bound upon pain of damnation not to be of the contrary<br \/>\n   mind but what we will with his help, however loth we feel in our flesh<br \/>\n   thereto, rather than forsake him or his faith before the world&#8211;which<br \/>\n   if we do, he hath promised to forsake us before his Father and all his<br \/>\n   holy company of heaven&#8211;rather, I say, than we would do so, we would<br \/>\n   with his help endure and sustain for his sake all the tormentry that<br \/>\n   the devil with all his faithless tormentors in this world would devise.<br \/>\n   And then, if we be of this mind, and submit our will unto his, and call<br \/>\n   and pray for his grace, we can tell well enough that he will never<br \/>\n   suffer them to put more upon us than his grace will make us able to<br \/>\n   bear, but will also with their temptation provide for us a sure way.<br \/>\n   For &#8220;God is faithful,&#8221; saith St. Paul, &#8220;who suffereth you not to be<br \/>\n   tempted above what you can bear, but giveth also with the temptation a<br \/>\n   way out.&#8221; For either, as I said, he will keep us out of their hands,<br \/>\n   though he before suffered us to be afraid of them to prove our faith<br \/>\n   (that we may have, by the examination of our mind, some comfort in hope<br \/>\n   of his grace and some fear of our own frailty to drive us to call for<br \/>\n   grace), or else, if we call into their hands, provided that we fall not<br \/>\n   from the trust of him nor cease to call for his help, his truth shall,<br \/>\n   as the prophet saith, so compass us about with a shield that we shall<br \/>\n   not need to fear this incursion of this midday devil. For these Turks<br \/>\n   his tormentors, who shall enter this land and persecute us, shall<br \/>\n   either not have the power to touch our bodies at all, or else the short<br \/>\n   pain that they shall put into our bodies shall turn us to eternal<br \/>\n   profit both in our souls and in our bodies too. And therefore, cousin,<br \/>\n   to begin with, let us be of good comfort. For we are by our faith very<br \/>\n   sure that holy scripture is the very word of God, and that the word of<br \/>\n   God cannot but be true. And we see by the mouth of his holy prophet and<br \/>\n   by the mouth of his blessed apostle also that God hath made us faithful<br \/>\n   promise that he will not suffer us to be tempted above our power, but<br \/>\n   will both provide a way out for us and also compass us round about with<br \/>\n   his shield and defend us that we shall have no cause to fear this<br \/>\n   midday devil with all his persecution. We cannot therefore but be very<br \/>\n   sure (unless we are very shamefully cowardous of heart and out of<br \/>\n   measure faint in faith toward God, and in love less than luke-warm or<br \/>\n   waxed even key-cold) we may be very sure, I say, either that God will<br \/>\n   not suffer the Turks to invade this land; or that, if they do, God<br \/>\n   shall provide such resistance that they shall not prevail; or that, if<br \/>\n   they prevail, yet if we take the way that I have told you we shall by<br \/>\n   their persecution take little harm or rather none harm at all, but that<br \/>\n   which shall seem harm indeed be to us no harm at all but good. For if<br \/>\n   God make us and keep us good men, as he hath promised to do if we pray<br \/>\n   well therefore, then saith holy scripture, &#8220;Unto good folk all things<br \/>\n   turn them to good.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, cousin, since God knoweth what shall happen and not we,<br \/>\n   let us in the meanwhile with a good hope in the help of God&#8217;s grace<br \/>\n   have a good purpose of standing sure by his holy faith against all<br \/>\n   persecutions. And if we should hereafter, either for fear or pain or<br \/>\n   for lack of his grace lost in our own default, mishap to decline from<br \/>\n   his good purpose&#8211;which our Lord forbid&#8211;yet we would have won the<br \/>\n   well-spent time beforehand, to the diminishment of our pain, and God<br \/>\n   would also be much the more likely to lift us up after our fall and<br \/>\n   give us his grace again. Howbeit, if this persecution come, we are, by<br \/>\n   this meditation and well-continued intent and purpose beforehand, the<br \/>\n   better strengthened and confirmed, and much more likely to stand<br \/>\n   indeed. And if it so fortune, as with God&#8217;s grace at men&#8217;s good prayers<br \/>\n   and amendment of our evil lives it may well fortune, that the Turks<br \/>\n   shall either be well withstood and vanquished or peradventure not<br \/>\n   invade us at all, then shall we, perdy, by this good purpose get<br \/>\n   ourselves of God a very good cheap thank!<\/p>\n<p>   And on the other hand, while we now think on it&#8211;and not to think on<br \/>\n   it, in so great likelihood of it, I suppose no wise man can&#8211;if we<br \/>\n   should for the fear of worldly loss or bodily pain, framed in our own<br \/>\n   minds, think that we would give over and to save our goods and lives<br \/>\n   forsake our Saviour by denial of his faith, then whether the Turks come<br \/>\n   or come not, we are meanwhile gone from God. And then if they come not<br \/>\n   indeed, or come and are driven to flight, what a shame should that be<br \/>\n   to us, before the face of God, in so shameful cowardly wise to forsake<br \/>\n   him for fear of that pain that we never felt or that never was<br \/>\n   befalling us!<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By my troth, uncle, I thank you. Methinketh that though you<br \/>\n   never said more in the matter, yet have you, even with this that you<br \/>\n   have spoken here already of the fear of bodily pain in this<br \/>\n   persecution, marvellously comforted mine heart.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I am glad, cousin, if your heart have taken comfort thereby.<br \/>\n   But if you so have, give God the thanks and not me, for that work is<br \/>\n   his and not mine. For neither am I able to say any good thing except by<br \/>\n   him, nor can all the good words in the world&#8211;no, not the holy words of<br \/>\n   God himself, and spoken also with his own holy mouth&#8211;profit a man with<br \/>\n   the sound entering at his ear, unless the Spirit of God also inwardly<br \/>\n   work in his soul. But that is his goodness ever ready to do, unless<br \/>\n   there be hindrance through the untowardness of our own froward will.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XVIII<\/p>\n<p>   And now, being somewhat in comfort and courage before, we may the more<br \/>\n   quietly consider everything, which is somewhat more hard and difficult<br \/>\n   to do when the heart is before taken up and oppressed with the<br \/>\n   troublous affection of heavy sorrowful fear. Let us therefore examine<br \/>\n   now the weight and the substance of those bodily pains which you<br \/>\n   rehearsed before as the sorest part of this persecution. They were, if<br \/>\n   I remember you right, thraldom, imprisonment, and painful and shameful<br \/>\n   death. And first let us, as reason is, begin with the thraldom, for<br \/>\n   that was, as I remember it, the first.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I pray you, good uncle, say then somewhat of that. For<br \/>\n   methinketh, uncle, that captivity is a marvellous heavy thing, namely<br \/>\n   when they shall (as they most commonly do) carry us far from home into<br \/>\n   a strange unknown land.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I cannot deny that some grief it is, cousin, indeed. But yet,<br \/>\n   as for me, it is not half so much as it would be if they could carry me<br \/>\n   out into any such unknown country that God could not know where nor<br \/>\n   find the means to come at me!<\/p>\n<p>   But now in good faith, cousin, if my migration into a strange country<br \/>\n   were any great grief unto me, the fault should be much in myself. For<br \/>\n   since I am very sure that whithersoever man convey me, God is no more<br \/>\n   verily here than he shall be there, if I get (as I can, if I will) the<br \/>\n   grace to set mine whole heart upon him and long for nothing but him, it<br \/>\n   can then make no matter to my mind, whether they carry me hence or<br \/>\n   leave me here. And then, if I find my mind much offended therewith,<br \/>\n   that I am not still here in mine own country, I must consider that the<br \/>\n   cause of my grief is mine own wrong imagination, whereby I beguile<br \/>\n   myself with an untrue persuasion, thinking that this were mine own<br \/>\n   country. Whereas in truth it is not so, for, as St. Paul saith, &#8220;We<br \/>\n   have here no city nor dwelling-country at all, but we seek for one that<br \/>\n   we shall come to.&#8221; And in whatsoever country we walk in this world, we<br \/>\n   are but as pilgrims and wayfaring men. And if I should take any country<br \/>\n   for mine own, it must be the country to which I come and not the<br \/>\n   country from which I came. That country, which shall be to me then for<br \/>\n   a while so strange, shall yet perdy be no more strange to me&#8211;nor<br \/>\n   longer strange to me, neither&#8211;than was mine own native country when<br \/>\n   first I came into it. And therefore if my being far from hence be very<br \/>\n   grievous to me, and I find it a great pain that I am not where I wish<br \/>\n   to be, that grief shall in great part grow for lack of sure setting and<br \/>\n   settling my mind in God, where it should be. And when I mend that fault<br \/>\n   of mine, I shall soon ease my grief.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, as for all the other griefs and pains that are in captivity,<br \/>\n   thraldom, and bondage, I cannot deny that many there are and great.<br \/>\n   Howbeit, they seem yet somewhat the more&#8211;what say I, &#8220;somewhat- I may<br \/>\n   say a great deal the more&#8211;because we took our former liberty for a<br \/>\n   great deal more than indeed it was.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us therefore consider the matter thus: Captivity, bondage, or<br \/>\n   thraldom, what is it but the violent restraint of a man, being so<br \/>\n   subdued under the dominion, rule, and power of another that he must do<br \/>\n   whatever the other please to command him, and may not do at his liberty<br \/>\n   such things as he please himself? Now, when we shall be carried away by<br \/>\n   a Turk and be fain to be occupied about such things as he please to set<br \/>\n   us, we shall lament the loss of our liberty and think we bear a heavy<br \/>\n   burden of our servile condition. And we shall have, I grant well, many<br \/>\n   times great occasion to do so. But yet we should, I suppose, set<br \/>\n   somewhat the less by it, if we would remember well what liberty that<br \/>\n   was that we lost, and take it for no larger than it was indeed. For we<br \/>\n   reckon as though we might before do what we would, but in that we<br \/>\n   deceive ourselves. For what free man is there so free that he can be<br \/>\n   suffered to do what he please? In many things God hath restrained us by<br \/>\n   his high commandment&#8211;so many, that of those things which we would<br \/>\n   otherwise do, I daresay it be more than half. Howbeit, because (God<br \/>\n   forgive us) we forbear so little for all that, but do what we please as<br \/>\n   though we heard him not, we reckon our liberty never the less. But then<br \/>\n   is our liberty much restrained by the laws made by man, for the quiet<br \/>\n   and politic governance of the people. And these too would, I suppose,<br \/>\n   hinder our liberty but little, were it not for the fear of the<br \/>\n   penalties that fall thereupon. Look then, whether other men who have<br \/>\n   authority over us never command us some business which we dare not but<br \/>\n   do, and therefore often do it full sore against our wills. Some such<br \/>\n   service is sometimes so painful and so perilous too, that no lord can<br \/>\n   command his bondsmen worse, and seldom doth command him half so sore.<br \/>\n   Let every free man who reckoneth his liberty to stand in doing what he<br \/>\n   please, consider well these points, and I daresay he shall then find<br \/>\n   his liberty much less than he took it for before.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet have I left untouched the bondage that almost every man is in<br \/>\n   who boasteth himself for free&#8211;the bondage, I mean, of sin. And that it<br \/>\n   be a true bondage, I shall have our Saviour himself to bear me good<br \/>\n   record. For he saith, &#8220;Every man who committeth sin is the thrall, or<br \/>\n   the bondsman, of sin.&#8221; And then if this be thus (as it must needs be,<br \/>\n   since God saith it is so), who is there then who can make so much boast<br \/>\n   of his liberty that he should take it for so sore a thing and so<br \/>\n   strange to become through chance of war, bondsman unto a man, since he<br \/>\n   is already through sin become willingly thrall and bondsman unto the<br \/>\n   devil?<\/p>\n<p>   Let us look well how many things, and of what vile wretched sort, the<br \/>\n   devil driveth us to do daily, through the rash turns of our blind<br \/>\n   affections, which we are fain to follow, for our faultful lack of<br \/>\n   grace, and are too feeble to refrain. And then shall we find in our<br \/>\n   natural freedom our bondservice such that never was there any man lord<br \/>\n   of any so vile a bondsman that he ever would command him to so shameful<br \/>\n   service. And let us, in the doing of our service to the man that we be<br \/>\n   slave unto, remember what we were wont to do about the same time of day<br \/>\n   while we were at our free liberty before, and would be well likely, if<br \/>\n   we were at liberty, to do again. And we shall peradventure perceive<br \/>\n   that it were better for us to do this business than that. Now we shall<br \/>\n   have great occasion of comfort, if we consider that our servitude,<br \/>\n   though in the account of the world it seem to come by chance of war,<br \/>\n   cometh unto us yet in very deed by the provident hand of God, and that<br \/>\n   for our great good if we will take it well, both in remission of sins<br \/>\n   and also as matter of our merit.<\/p>\n<p>   The greatest grief that is in bondage or captivity, I believe, is this:<br \/>\n   that we are forced to do such labour as with our good will we would<br \/>\n   not. But then against that grief, Seneca teacheth us a good remedy:<br \/>\n   &#8220;Endeavour thyself evermore that thou do nothing against thy will, but<br \/>\n   the things that we see we shall needs do, let us always put our good<br \/>\n   will thereto.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: That is soon said, uncle, but it is hard to do.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Our froward mind maketh every good thing hard, and that to our<br \/>\n   own more hurt and harm. But in this case, if we will be good Christian<br \/>\n   men, we shall have great cause gladly to be content, for the great<br \/>\n   comfort that we may take thereby. For we remember that in the patient<br \/>\n   and glad doing of our service unto that man for God&#8217;s sake, according<br \/>\n   to his high commandment by the mouth of St. Paul, &#8220;Servi obedite<br \/>\n   dominis carnalibus,&#8221; we shall have our thanks and our whole reward of<br \/>\n   God.<\/p>\n<p>   Finally, if we remember the great humble meekness of our Saviour Christ<br \/>\n   himself&#8211;that he, being very almighty God, &#8220;humbled himself and took<br \/>\n   the form of a bondsman or slave,&#8221; rather than that his Father should<br \/>\n   forsake us&#8211;we may think ourselves very ungrateful caitiffs (and very<br \/>\n   frantic fools, too) if, rather than to endure this worldly bondage for<br \/>\n   awhile, we would forsake him who hath by his own death delivered us out<br \/>\n   of everlasting bondage to the devil, and who will for our short bondage<br \/>\n   give us everlasting liberty.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Well fare you, good uncle, this is very well said! Albeit that<br \/>\n   bondage is a condition that every man of any spirit would be very glad<br \/>\n   to eschew and very loth to fall in, yet have you well made it so open<br \/>\n   that it is a thing neither so strange nor so sore as it before seemed<br \/>\n   to me. And specially is it far from such as any man who hath any wit<br \/>\n   should, for fear of it, shrink from the confession of his faith. And<br \/>\n   now, therefore, I pray you, speak somewhat of imprisonment.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XIX<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That shall I, cousin, with good will. And first, if we could<br \/>\n   consider what thing imprisonment is of its own nature methinketh we<br \/>\n   should not have so great horror of it. For of itself it is, perdy, but<br \/>\n   a restraint of liberty, which hindereth a man from going whither he<br \/>\n   would.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yes, by St. Mary, uncle, but methinketh it is much more sorry<br \/>\n   than that. For beside the hindrance and restraint of liberty, it hath<br \/>\n   many more displeasures and very sore griefs knit and adjoined to it.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That is, cousin, very true indeed. And those pains, among many<br \/>\n   sorer than those, thought I not afterward to forget. Howbeit, I purpose<br \/>\n   now to consider first imprisonment as imprisonment alone, without any<br \/>\n   other incommodity besides. For a man may be imprisoned, perdy, and yet<br \/>\n   not set in the stocks or collared fast by the neck. And a man may be<br \/>\n   let walk at large where he will, and yet have a pair of fetters fast<br \/>\n   riveted on his legs. For in this country, you know, and Seville and<br \/>\n   Portugal too, so go all the slaves. Howbeit, because for such things<br \/>\n   men&#8217;s hearts have such horror of it, albeit that I am not so mad as to<br \/>\n   go about to prove that bodily pain were no pain, yet since it is<br \/>\n   because of this manner of pains that we so especially abhor the state<br \/>\n   and condition of prisoners, methinketh we should well perceive that a<br \/>\n   great part of our horror groweth of our own fancy. Let us call to mind<br \/>\n   and consider the state and condition of many other folk in whose state<br \/>\n   and condition we would wish ourselves to stand, taking them for no<br \/>\n   prisoners at all, who stand yet for all that in many of the selfsame<br \/>\n   points that we abhor imprisonment for. Let us therefore consider these<br \/>\n   things in order. First, those other kinds of grief that come with<br \/>\n   imprisonment are but accidents unto it. And yet they are neither such<br \/>\n   accidents as be proper unto it, since they may almost all befall man<br \/>\n   without it; nor are they such accidents as be inseparable from it,<br \/>\n   since imprisonment may fall to a man and none of them therein. We will,<br \/>\n   I say, therefore begin by considering what manner of pain or<br \/>\n   incommodity we should reckon imprisonment to be of itself and of its<br \/>\n   own nature alone. And then in the course of our communication, you<br \/>\n   shall as you please increase and aggravate the cause of your horror<br \/>\n   with the terror of those painful accidents.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I am sorry that I did interrupt your tale, for you were about,<br \/>\n   I see well, to take an orderly way therein. And as you yourself have<br \/>\n   devised, so I beseech you proceed. For though I reckon imprisonment<br \/>\n   much the sorer thing by sore and hard handling therein, yet reckon I<br \/>\n   not the imprisonment of itself any less than a thing very tedious,<br \/>\n   although it were used in the most favourable manner that it possibly<br \/>\n   could be.<\/p>\n<p>   For, uncle, if a great prince were taken prisoner upon the field, and<br \/>\n   in the hand of a Christian king, such as are accustomed, in such cases,<br \/>\n   for the consideration of their former estate and mutable chance of war,<br \/>\n   to show much humanity to them, and treat them in very favourable<br \/>\n   wise&#8211;for these infidel emperors handle oftentimes the princes that<br \/>\n   they take more villainously than they do the poorest men, as the great<br \/>\n   Tamberlane kept the great Turk, when he had taken him, to tread on his<br \/>\n   back always when he leapt on horseback. But, as I began to say, by the<br \/>\n   example of a prince taken prisoner, were the imprisonment never so<br \/>\n   favourable, yet it would be, to my mind, no little grief in itself for<br \/>\n   a man to be penned up, though not in a narrow chamber. But although his<br \/>\n   walk were right large and right fair gardens in it too, it could not<br \/>\n   but grieve his heart to be restrained by another man within certain<br \/>\n   limits and bounds, and lose the liberty to be where he please.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This is, cousin, well considered of you. For in this you<br \/>\n   perceive well that imprisonment is, of itself and of its own very<br \/>\n   nature alone, nothing else but the retaining of a man&#8217;s person within<br \/>\n   the circuit of a certain space, narrower or larger as shall be limited<br \/>\n   to him, restraining his liberty from going further into any other<br \/>\n   place.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Very well said, methinketh.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Yet I forgot, cousin, to ask you one question.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: What is that, uncle?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This, lo: If there be two men kept in two several chambers of<br \/>\n   one great castle, of which two chambers the one is much larger than the<br \/>\n   other, are they prisoners both, or only the one who has the less room<br \/>\n   to walk in?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: What question is it, uncle, but that they are both prisoners,<br \/>\n   as I said myself before, although the one lay fast locked in the stocks<br \/>\n   and the other had all the whole castle to walk in?<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Methinketh verily, cousin, that you say the truth. And then,<br \/>\n   if imprisonment be such a thing as you yourself here agree it is&#8211;that<br \/>\n   is, but a lack of liberty to go whither we please&#8211;now would I fain<br \/>\n   know of you what one man you know who is at this day out of prison?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: What one man, uncle? Marry, I know almost none other! For<br \/>\n   surely I am acquainted with no prisoner, that I remember.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Then I see well that you visit poor prisoners seldom.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: No, by my troth, uncle, I cry God mercy. I send them sometimes<br \/>\n   mine alms, but by my troth I love not to come myself where I should see<br \/>\n   such misery.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: In good faith, Cousin Vincent (though I say it before you) you<br \/>\n   have many good qualities, but surely (though I say that before you,<br \/>\n   too) that is not one of them. If you would amend it, then should you<br \/>\n   have yet the more good qualities by one&#8211;and peradventure the more by<br \/>\n   three or four. For I assure you it is hard to tell how much good it<br \/>\n   doth to a man&#8217;s soul, the personal visiting of poor prisoners.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, since you can name me none of them that are in prison, I pray<br \/>\n   you name me some one of all those whom you are, you say, better<br \/>\n   acquainted with&#8211;men, I mean, who are out of prison. For I know,<br \/>\n   methinketh, as few of them as you know of the others.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: That would, uncle, be a strange case. For every man is out of<br \/>\n   prison who may go where he will, though he be the poorest beggar in the<br \/>\n   town. And, in good faith, uncle (because you reckon imprisonment so<br \/>\n   small a matter of itself) meseemeth the poor beggar who is at his<br \/>\n   liberty and may walk where he will is in better case than is a king<br \/>\n   kept in prison, who cannot go but where men give him leave.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Well, cousin, whether every way-walking beggar be, by this<br \/>\n   reason, out of prison or no, we shall consider further when you will.<br \/>\n   But in the meanwhile I can by this reason see no prince who seemeth to<br \/>\n   be out of prison. For if the lack of liberty to go where a man will, be<br \/>\n   imprisonment, as you yourself say it is, then is the great Turk, by<br \/>\n   whom we fear to be put in prison, in prison already himself, for he may<br \/>\n   not go where he will. For if he could he would go into Portugal, Italy,<br \/>\n   Spain, France, Germany, and England, and as far in the other direction<br \/>\n   too&#8211;both into Prester John&#8217;s land and into the Grand Cham&#8217;s too.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, the beggar that you speak of, if he be (as you say he is) by<br \/>\n   reason of his liberty to go where he will, in much better case than a<br \/>\n   king kept in prison, because he cannot go but where men give him leave;<br \/>\n   then is that beggar in better case, not only than a prince in prison<br \/>\n   but also than many a prince out of prison too. For I am sure there is<br \/>\n   many a beggar who may without hindrance walk further upon other men&#8217;s<br \/>\n   ground than many a prince at his best liberty may walk upon his own.<br \/>\n   And as for walking out abroad upon other men&#8217;s, that prince might be<br \/>\n   withstood and held fast, where that beggar, with his bag and staff,<br \/>\n   might be suffered to go forth and keep on his way.<\/p>\n<p>   But forasmuch, cousin, as neither the beggar nor the prince is at free<br \/>\n   liberty to walk where they will, but neither of them would be suffered<br \/>\n   to walk in some places without men withstanding them and saying them<br \/>\n   nay; therefore if imprisonment be, as you grant it is, a lack of<br \/>\n   liberty to go where we please, I cannot see but the beggar and the<br \/>\n   prince, whom you reckon both at liberty, are by your own reason<br \/>\n   restrained in prison both.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yea, but uncle, both the one and the other have way enough to<br \/>\n   walk&#8211;the one in his own ground and the other in other men&#8217;s, or in the<br \/>\n   common highway, where they may both walk till they be weary of walking<br \/>\n   ere any man say them nay.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: So may, cousin, that king who had, as you yourself put the<br \/>\n   case, all the whole castle to walk in. And yet you deny not that he is<br \/>\n   prisoner for all that&#8211;though not so straitly kept, yet as verily<br \/>\n   prisoner as he that lieth in the stocks.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: But they may go at least to every place that they need, or<br \/>\n   that is commodious for them, and therefore they do not wish to go<br \/>\n   anywhere but where they may. And therefore they are at liberty to go<br \/>\n   where they will.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I need not, cousin, to spend the time about impugning every<br \/>\n   part of this answer. Let pass by that, though a prisoner were brought<br \/>\n   with his keeper into every place where need required, yet since he<br \/>\n   might not when he wished go where he wished for his pleasure alone, he<br \/>\n   would be, as you know well, a prisoner still. And let pass over also<br \/>\n   that it would be needful for this beggar, and commodious for this king,<br \/>\n   to go into divers places where neither of them may come. And let pass<br \/>\n   also that neither of them is lightly so temperately determined by what<br \/>\n   they both fain would so do indeed, if this reason of yours put them out<br \/>\n   of prison and set them at liberty and made them free, as I will well<br \/>\n   grant it doth if they so do indeed&#8211;that is, if they have no will to go<br \/>\n   anywhere but where they may go indeed.<\/p>\n<p>   Then let us look on our other prisoners enclosed within a castle, and<br \/>\n   we shall find that the straitest kept of them both, if he get the<br \/>\n   wisdom and grace to quiet his mind and hold himself content with that<br \/>\n   place, and not long (as a woman with child longeth for her desires) to<br \/>\n   be gadding out anywhere else, is by the same reason of yours, while his<br \/>\n   will is not longing to be anywhere else, he is, I say, at his free<br \/>\n   liberty to be where he will. And so he is out of prison too.<\/p>\n<p>   And, on the other hand, if, though his will be not longing to be<br \/>\n   anywhere else, yet because if his will so were he should not be so<br \/>\n   suffered, he is therefore not at his free liberty but a prisoner still,<br \/>\n   since your free beggar that you speak of and the prince that you call<br \/>\n   out of prison too, though they be (which I daresay few be) by some<br \/>\n   special wisdom so temperately disposed that they will have not the will<br \/>\n   to be anywhere but where they see that they may be suffered to be, yet,<br \/>\n   since if they did have that will they could not then be where they<br \/>\n   would, they lack the effect of free liberty and are both twain in<br \/>\n   prison too.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Well, uncle, if every man universally is by this reason in<br \/>\n   prison already, after the proper nature of imprisonment, yet to be<br \/>\n   imprisoned in this special manner which alone is commonly called<br \/>\n   imprisonment is a thing of great horror and fear, both for the<br \/>\n   straitness of the keeping and for the hard handling that many men have<br \/>\n   therein. Of all the griefs that you speak of, we feel nothing at all.<br \/>\n   And therefore every man abhorreth the one, and would be loth to come<br \/>\n   into it. And no man abhorreth the other, for they feel no harm and find<br \/>\n   no fault therein.<\/p>\n<p>   Therefore, uncle, in good faith, though I cannot find fitting answers<br \/>\n   with which to avoid your arguments, yet (to be plain with you and tell<br \/>\n   you the very truth) my mind findeth not itself satisfied on this point.<br \/>\n   But ever methinketh that these things, with which you rather convince<br \/>\n   and conclude me than induce a credence and persuade me that every man<br \/>\n   is in prison already, are but sophistical fancies, and that except<br \/>\n   those that are commonly called prisoners, other men are not in any<br \/>\n   prison at all.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Well fare thine heart, good Cousin Vincent! There was, in good<br \/>\n   faith, no word that you spoke since we first talked of these matters<br \/>\n   that I liked half so well as these that you speak now. For if you had<br \/>\n   assented in words and your mind departed unpersuaded, then, if the<br \/>\n   thing be true that I say, yet had you lost the fruit. And if it be<br \/>\n   peradventure false, and I myself deceived therein, then, since I should<br \/>\n   have supposed that you liked it too, you would have confirmed me in my<br \/>\n   folly. For, in good faith, cousin, such an old fool am I that this<br \/>\n   thing (in the persuading of which unto you I had thought I had quit me<br \/>\n   well, and yet which, when I have all done, appeareth to your mind but a<br \/>\n   trifle and sophistical fancy) I myself have so many years taken it for<br \/>\n   so very substantial truth that as yet my mind cannot give me to think<br \/>\n   it any other. But I would not play the part of that French priest who<br \/>\n   had so long used to say Dominus with the second syllable long that at<br \/>\n   least he thought it must needs be so, and was ashamed to say it short.<br \/>\n   So to the intent that you may the better perceive me and I may the<br \/>\n   better perceive myself, we shall here between us a little more consider<br \/>\n   the thing. So spit well on your hands boldly, and take good hold, and<br \/>\n   give it not over against your own mind, for then we would be never the<br \/>\n   nearer.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Nay, by my troth, uncle, that intend I not to do. Nor have I<br \/>\n   done it yet since we began. And that may you well perceive by some<br \/>\n   things which, without any great cause, save for the further<br \/>\n   satisfaction of my own mind, I repeated and debated again.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That guise, cousin, you must hold on boldly still. For I<br \/>\n   purpose to give up my part in this matter, unless I make you yourself<br \/>\n   perceive both that every man universally is a very prisoner in very<br \/>\n   prison&#8211;plainly, without any sophistry at all&#8211;and also that there is<br \/>\n   no prince living upon earth who is not in a worse case prisoner by this<br \/>\n   general imprisonment that I speak of, than is many a simple ignorant<br \/>\n   wretch by that special imprisonment that you speak of. And beside this,<br \/>\n   that in this general imprisonment that I speak of, men are for the time<br \/>\n   that they are in it, so sore handled and so hardly and in such painful<br \/>\n   wise, that men&#8217;s hearts have with reason great cause to abhor this hard<br \/>\n   handling that is in this imprisonment as sorely as they do the other<br \/>\n   that is in that.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By my troth, uncle, these things would I fain see well proved.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Tell me, then, cousin, first by your troth: If a man were<br \/>\n   attainted of treason or felony; and if, after judgment had been given<br \/>\n   of his death and it were determined that he should die, the time of his<br \/>\n   execution were only delayed till the king&#8217;s further pleasure should be<br \/>\n   known; if he were thereupon delivered to certain keepers and put up in<br \/>\n   a sure place out of which he could not escape&#8211;would this man be a<br \/>\n   prisoner, or not?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This man, quoth he? Yea, marry, that would he be in very deed,<br \/>\n   if ever man were!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: But now what if, for the time that were between his attainder<br \/>\n   and his execution, he were so favourably handled that he were suffered<br \/>\n   to do what he would, as he did while he was free&#8211;to have the use of<br \/>\n   his lands and his goods, and his wife and his children to have license<br \/>\n   to be with him, and his friends leave at liberty to resort unto him,<br \/>\n   and his servants not forbidden to abide about him. And add yet<br \/>\n   thereunto that the place were a great castle royal with parks and other<br \/>\n   pleasures in it, a very great circuit about. Yes, and add yet, if you<br \/>\n   like, that he were suffered to go and ride also, both when he wished<br \/>\n   and whither he wished; only this one point always provided and<br \/>\n   foreseen, that he should ever be surely seen to, and safely kept from<br \/>\n   escaping. So though he had never so much of his own will in the<br \/>\n   meanwhile (in all matters save escaping), yet he should well know that<br \/>\n   escape he could not, and that when he were called for, to execution and<br \/>\n   to death he should go.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, Cousin Vincent, what would you call this man? A prisoner, because<br \/>\n   he is kept for execution? Or no prisoner, because he is in the<br \/>\n   meanwhile so favourably handled and suffered to do all that he would,<br \/>\n   save escape? And I bid you not here be hasty in your answer, but advise<br \/>\n   it well that you grant no such thing in haste as you would afterward at<br \/>\n   leisure mislike, and think yourself deceived.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Nay, by my troth, uncle, this thing needeth no study at all,<br \/>\n   to my mind. But, for all this favour showed him and all this liberty<br \/>\n   lent him, yet being condemned to death, and being kept for it, and kept<br \/>\n   with sure watch laid upon him that he cannot escape, he is all that<br \/>\n   while a very plain prisoner still.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: In good faith, cousin, methinketh you say very true. But then<br \/>\n   one thing must I yet desire you, cousin, to tell me a little further.<br \/>\n   If there were another laid in prison for a brawl, and through the<br \/>\n   jailors&#8217; displeasure were bolted and fettered and laid in a low dungeon<br \/>\n   in the stocks, where he might lie peradventure for a while and abide in<br \/>\n   the meantime some pain but no danger of death at all, but that out<br \/>\n   again he should come well enough&#8211;which of these two prisoners would<br \/>\n   stand in the worse case? He that hath all this favour, or he that is<br \/>\n   thus hardly handled?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By our Lady, uncle, I believe that most men, if they should<br \/>\n   needs choose, had liefer be such prisoners in every point as he who so<br \/>\n   sorely lieth in the stocks, than in every point such as he who walketh<br \/>\n   at such liberty about the park.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Consider, then, cousin, whether this thing seem any sophistry<br \/>\n   to you that I shall show you now. For it shall be such as seemeth in<br \/>\n   good faith substantially true to me. And if it so happen that you think<br \/>\n   otherwise, I will be very glad to perceive which of us both is<br \/>\n   beguiled.<\/p>\n<p>   For it seemeth to me, cousin, first, that every man coming into this<br \/>\n   world here upon earth as he is created by God, so cometh he hither by<br \/>\n   the providence of God. Is this any sophistry first, or not?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Nay, verily, this is very substantial truth.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Now take I this, also, for very truth in my mind: that there<br \/>\n   cometh no man nor woman hither into the earth but what, ere ever they<br \/>\n   come alive into the world out of the mother&#8217;s womb, God condemneth them<br \/>\n   unto death by his own sentence and judgment, for the original sin that<br \/>\n   they bring with them, contracted in the corrupted stock of our<br \/>\n   forefather Adam. Is this, think you, cousin, verily thus or not?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: This is, uncle, very true indeed.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Then seemeth this true further unto me: that God hath put<br \/>\n   every man here upon the earth under so sure and so safe keeping that of<br \/>\n   all the whole people living in this wide world, there is neither man,<br \/>\n   woman, nor child&#8211;would they never so far wander about and seek it&#8211;who<br \/>\n   can possibly find any way by which they can escape from death. Is this,<br \/>\n   cousin, a fond imagined fancy, or is it very truth indeed?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Nay, this is no imagination, uncle, but a thing so clearly<br \/>\n   proved true that no man is so mad as to deny it.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Then need I say no more, cousin. For then is all the matter<br \/>\n   plain and open evident truth, which I said I took for truth. And it is<br \/>\n   yet a little more now than I told you before, when you took my proof<br \/>\n   yet but for a sophistical fancy, and said that, for all my reasoning<br \/>\n   that every man is a prisoner, yet you thought that, except those whom<br \/>\n   the common people call prisoners, there is else no man a very prisoner<br \/>\n   indeed. And now you grant yourself again for very substantial truth,<br \/>\n   that every man, though he be the greatest king upon earth, is set here<br \/>\n   by the ordinance of God in a place, be it never so large, yet a place,<br \/>\n   I say (and you say the same) out of which no man can escape. And you<br \/>\n   grant that every man is there put under sure and safe keeping to be<br \/>\n   readily set forth when God calleth for him, and that then he shall<br \/>\n   surely die. And is not then, cousin, by your own granting before, every<br \/>\n   man a very prisoner, when he is put in a place to be kept to be brought<br \/>\n   forth when he would not, and himself knows not whither?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Yes, in good faith, uncle, I cannot but well perceive this to<br \/>\n   be so.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This would be true, you know, even though a man were but taken<br \/>\n   by the arm and in a fair manner led out of this world unto his<br \/>\n   judgment. But now, we well know that there is no king so great but<br \/>\n   what, all the while he walketh here, walk he never so loose, ride he<br \/>\n   with never so strong an army for his defence, yet he himself is very<br \/>\n   sure&#8211;though he seek in the meantime some other pastime to put it out<br \/>\n   of his mind&#8211;yet is he very sure, I say, that escape he cannot. And<br \/>\n   very well he knoweth that he hath already sentence given upon him to<br \/>\n   die, and that verily die he shall. And though he hope for long respite<br \/>\n   of his execution, yet can he not tell how soon it will be. And<br \/>\n   therefore, unless he be a fool, he can never be without fear that,<br \/>\n   either on the morrow or on the selfsame day, the grisly cruel hangman<br \/>\n   Death, who from his first coming in hath ever hoved aloof and looked<br \/>\n   toward him, and ever lain in wait for him, shall amid all his royalty<br \/>\n   and all his main strength neither kneel before him nor make him any<br \/>\n   reverence, nor with any good manner desire him to come forth. But he<br \/>\n   shall rigorously and fiercely grip him by the very breast, and make all<br \/>\n   his bones rattle, and so by long and divers sore torments strike him<br \/>\n   stark dead in his prison. And then shall he cause his body to be cast<br \/>\n   into the ground in a foul pit in some corner of the same, there to rot<br \/>\n   and be eaten by the wretched worms of the earth, sending yet his soul<br \/>\n   out further into a more fearful judgment. Of that judgment at his<br \/>\n   temporal death his success is uncertain and therefore, though by God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   grace not out of good hope, for all that in the meanwhile in very sore<br \/>\n   dread and fear and peradventure in peril inevitable of eternal fire,<br \/>\n   too.<\/p>\n<p>   Methinketh therefore, cousin, that, as I told you, this keeping of<br \/>\n   every man in this wretched world for execution of death is a very plain<br \/>\n   imprisonment indeed. And it is, as I say, such that the greatest king<br \/>\n   is in this prison in much worse case, for all his wealth, than is many<br \/>\n   a man who, in the other imprisonment, is sore and hardly handled. For<br \/>\n   while some of those lie not there attainted nor condemned to death, the<br \/>\n   greatest man of this world and the most wealthy in this universal<br \/>\n   prison is laid in to be kept undoubtedly for death.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: But yet, uncle, in that case is the other prisoner too, for he<br \/>\n   is as sure that he shall die, perdy.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: This is very true, cousin, indeed, and well objected too. But<br \/>\n   then you must consider that he is not in danger of death by reason of<br \/>\n   the prison into which he is put peradventure but for a little brawl,<br \/>\n   but his danger of death is by the other imprisonment, by which he is<br \/>\n   prisoner in the great prison of this whole earth, in which prison all<br \/>\n   the princes of the world be prisoners as well as he.<\/p>\n<p>   If a man condemned to death were put up in a large prison, and while<br \/>\n   his execution were respited he were, for fighting with his fellows, put<br \/>\n   up in a strait place, part of that prison, then would he be in danger<br \/>\n   of death in that strait prison, but not by the being in that, for there<br \/>\n   is he but for the brawl. But his deadly imprisonment was the other&#8211;the<br \/>\n   larger, I say, into which he was put for death. So the prisoner that<br \/>\n   you speak of is, beside the narrow prison, a prisoner of the broad<br \/>\n   world, and all the princes of the world are prisoners there with him.<br \/>\n   And by that imprisonment both they and he are in like danger of death,<br \/>\n   not by that strait imprisonment that is commonly called imprisonment,<br \/>\n   but by that imprisonment which, because of the large walk, men call<br \/>\n   liberty&#8211;and which you therefore thought but a sophistical fancy to<br \/>\n   prove it a prison at all!<\/p>\n<p>   But now may you, methinketh, very plainly perceive that this whole<br \/>\n   earth is not only for all the whole of mankind a very plain prison<br \/>\n   indeed, but also that all men without exception (even those that are<br \/>\n   most at their liberty in it, and reckon themselves great lords and<br \/>\n   possessors of very great pieces of it, and thereby wax with wantonness<br \/>\n   so forgetful of their state that they think they stand in great wealth)<br \/>\n   do stand for all that indeed, by reason of their imprisonment in this<br \/>\n   large prison of the whole earth, in the selfsame condition that the<br \/>\n   others do stand who, in the narrow prisons which alone are called<br \/>\n   prisons, and which alone are reputed prisons in the opinion of the<br \/>\n   common people, stand in the most fearful and in the most odious<br \/>\n   case&#8211;that is, condemned already to death.<\/p>\n<p>   And now, cousin, if this thing that I tell you seem but a sophistical<br \/>\n   fancy of your mind, I would be glad to know what moveth you so to<br \/>\n   think. For, in good faith, as I have told you twice, I am no wiser but<br \/>\n   what I verily think that it is very plain truth indeed.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XX<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: In good faith, uncle, thus far I not only cannot make<br \/>\n   resistance against it with any reason, but also I see very clearly<br \/>\n   proved that it cannot be otherwise. For every man must be in this world<br \/>\n   a very prisoner, since we are all put here into a sure hold to be kept<br \/>\n   till we be put unto execution, as folk all already condemned to death.<\/p>\n<p>   But yet, uncle, the strait-keeping, collaring, bolting, and stocking,<br \/>\n   with lying on straw or on the cold ground (which manner of hard<br \/>\n   handling is used in these special imprisonments that alone are commonly<br \/>\n   called by that name) must needs make that imprisonment much more odious<br \/>\n   and dreadful than the general imprisonment with which we are every man<br \/>\n   universally imprisoned at large, walking where we will round about the<br \/>\n   wide world. For in this broad prison, outside of those narrow prisons,<br \/>\n   there is no such hard handling used with the prisoners.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I said, I think, cousin, that I purposed to prove to you<br \/>\n   further that in this general prison&#8211;the large prison, I mean, of this<br \/>\n   whole world&#8211;folk are, for the time that they are in it, as sore<br \/>\n   handled and as hardly, and wrenched and wrung and broken in such<br \/>\n   painful wise, that our hearts (save that we consider it not) have with<br \/>\n   reason good and great cause to grudge against the hard handling that<br \/>\n   there is in this prison&#8211;and, as far as pertaineth only to the respect<br \/>\n   of pain, as much horror to conceive against it&#8211;as against the other<br \/>\n   that there is in that one.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Indeed, uncle, it is true that you said you would prove this.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Nay, so much said I not, cousin! But I said that I would if I<br \/>\n   could, and if I could not, then would I therein give over my part. But<br \/>\n   I trust, cousin, that I shall not need to do that&#8211;the thing seemeth to<br \/>\n   me so plain.<\/p>\n<p>   For, cousin, not only the prince and king but also the chief jailor<br \/>\n   over this whole broad prison the world (though he have both angels and<br \/>\n   devils who are jailors under him) is, I take it, God. And that I<br \/>\n   suppose you will grant me, too.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: That will I not deny, uncle.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: If a man, cousin, be committed unto prison for no cause but to<br \/>\n   be kept, though there be never so great a charge against him, yet his<br \/>\n   keeper, if he be good and honest, is neither so cruel as to pain the<br \/>\n   man out of malice, nor so covetous as to put him to pain to make him<br \/>\n   seek his friends and pay for a pennyworth of ease. If the place be such<br \/>\n   that he is sure to keep him safe otherwise, or if he can get surety for<br \/>\n   the recompense of more harm than he seeth he should have if he escaped,<br \/>\n   he will never handle him in any such hard fashion as we most abhor<br \/>\n   imprisonment for. But marry, if the place be such that the keeper<br \/>\n   cannot otherwise be sure, then is he compelled to keep him to that<br \/>\n   extent the straiter. And also if the prisoner be unruly and fall to<br \/>\n   fighting with his fellows or do some other manner of ill turns, then<br \/>\n   useth the keeper to punish him in some such fashions as you yourself<br \/>\n   have spoken of.<\/p>\n<p>   Now, cousin, God&#8211;the chief jailor, as I say, of this broad prison the<br \/>\n   world&#8211;is neither cruel nor covetous. And this prison is also so sure<br \/>\n   and so subtly built that, albeit that it lieth open on every side<br \/>\n   without any wall in the world, yet, wander we never so far about in it,<br \/>\n   we shall never find the way to get out. So God neither needeth to<br \/>\n   collar us nor to stock us for any fear of our escaping away. And<br \/>\n   therefore, unless he see some other cause than only our keeping for<br \/>\n   death, he letteth us in the meanwhile, for as long as he pleases to<br \/>\n   respite us, walk about in the prison and do there what we will, using<br \/>\n   ourselves in such wise as he hath, by reason and revelation, from time<br \/>\n   to time told us his pleasure.<\/p>\n<p>   And hence it cometh, lo, that by reason of this favour for a time we<br \/>\n   wax, as I said, so wanton, that we forget where we are. And we think<br \/>\n   that we are lords at large, whereas we are indeed, if we would<br \/>\n   consider, even poor wretches in prison. For, of very truth, our very<br \/>\n   prison this earth is. And yet we apportion us out divers parts of it<br \/>\n   diversely to ourselves, part by covenants that we make among ourselves,<br \/>\n   and part by fraud and violence too. And we change its name from the<br \/>\n   odious name of prison, and call it our own land and our livelihood.<br \/>\n   Upon our prison we build; our prison we garnish with gold and make it<br \/>\n   glorious. In this prison they buy and sell; in this prison they brawl<br \/>\n   and chide. In this they run together and fight; in this they dice; in<br \/>\n   this they play at cards. In this they pipe and revel; in this they sing<br \/>\n   and dance. And in this prison many a man who is reputed right honest<br \/>\n   forbeareth not, for his pleasure in the dark, privily to play the<br \/>\n   knave.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus, while God our king and our chief jailor too, suffereth us and<br \/>\n   letteth us alone, we think ourselves at liberty. And we abhor the state<br \/>\n   of those whom we call prisoners, taking ourselves for no prisoners at<br \/>\n   all. In this false persuasion of wealth and forgetfulness of our own<br \/>\n   wretched state, which is but a wandering about for a while in this<br \/>\n   prison of this world, till we be brought unto the execution of death,<br \/>\n   we forget in our folly both ourselves and our jail, and our<br \/>\n   under-jailors the angels and devils both, and our chief jailor God<br \/>\n   too&#8211;God, who forgetteth not us, but seeth us all the while well<br \/>\n   enough. And being sore discontent to see so ill rule kept in the jail,<br \/>\n   he sendeth the hangman Death to put some to execution here and there,<br \/>\n   sometimes by the thousands at once. And he handleth many of the rest,<br \/>\n   whose execution he forbeareth yet unto a farther time, even as hardly<br \/>\n   and punisheth them as sorely, in this common prison of the world, as<br \/>\n   there are any handled in those special prisons which, for the hard<br \/>\n   handling used in them, you say your heart hath in such horror and so<br \/>\n   sore abhorreth.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: The rest will I not gainsay, for methinketh I see it so<br \/>\n   indeed. But that God, our chief jailor in this world, useth any such<br \/>\n   prisonly fashion of punishment, that point must I needs deny. For I see<br \/>\n   him neither lay any man in the stocks, nor strike fetters on his legs,<br \/>\n   nor so much as shut him up in a chamber, neither.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Is he no minstrel, cousin, who playeth not on a harp? Maketh<br \/>\n   no man melody but he who playeth on a lute? He may be a minstrel and<br \/>\n   make melody, you know, with some other instrument&#8211;a strange-fashioned<br \/>\n   one, peradventure, that never was seen before.<\/p>\n<p>   God, our chief jailor, as he himself is invisible, so useth he in his<br \/>\n   punishments invisible instruments. And therefore are they not of like<br \/>\n   fashion as those the other jailors use, but yet of like effect, and as<br \/>\n   painful in feeling as those. For he layeth one of his prisoners with a<br \/>\n   hot fever as ill at ease in a warm bed as the other jailor layeth his<br \/>\n   on the cold ground. He wringeth them by the brows with a migraine; he<br \/>\n   collareth them by the neck with a quinsy; he bolteth them by the arms<br \/>\n   with a palsy, so that they cannot lift their hands to their head; he<br \/>\n   manacleth their hands with the gout in their fingers; he wringeth them<br \/>\n   by the legs with the cramp in their shins; he bindeth them to the bed<br \/>\n   with the crick in the back; and he layeth one there at full length, as<br \/>\n   unable to rise as though he lay fast by the feet in the stocks.<\/p>\n<p>   A prisoner of another jail may sing and dance in his two fetters, and<br \/>\n   fear not his feet for stumbling at a stone, while God&#8217;s prisoner, who<br \/>\n   hath his one foot fettered with the gout, lieth groaning on a couch,<br \/>\n   and quaketh and crieth out if he fear that there would fall on his foot<br \/>\n   no more than a cushion.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, cousin, as I said, if we consider it well, we shall find<br \/>\n   this general prison of this whole earth a place in which the prisoners<br \/>\n   are as sore handled as they are in the other. And even in the other<br \/>\n   some make as merry too as there do some in this one, who are very merry<br \/>\n   at large out of that. And surely as we think ourselves out of prison<br \/>\n   now, so if there were some folk born and brought up in a prison, who<br \/>\n   never came on the wall or looked out at the door or heard of another<br \/>\n   world outside, but saw some, for ill turns done among themselves,<br \/>\n   locked up in a straiter room; and if they heard them alone called<br \/>\n   prisoners who were so served and themselves ever called free folk at<br \/>\n   large; the like opinion would they have there of themselves then as we<br \/>\n   have here of ourselves now. And when we take ourselves for other than<br \/>\n   prisoners now, verily are we now as deceived as those prisoners would<br \/>\n   be then.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I cannot, uncle, in good faith deny that you have performed<br \/>\n   all that you promised. But yet, since, for all this, there appeareth no<br \/>\n   more but that as they are prisoners so are we too, and that as some of<br \/>\n   them are sore handled so are some of us too; we know well, for all<br \/>\n   this, that when we come to those prisons we shall not fail to be in a<br \/>\n   straiter prison than we are now, and to have a door shut upon us where<br \/>\n   we have none shut upon us now. This shall we be sure of at least if<br \/>\n   there come no worse&#8211;and then there may come worse, you know well,<br \/>\n   since it cometh there so commonly. And therefore is it yet little<br \/>\n   marvel that men&#8217;s hearts grudge much against it.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Surely, cousin, in this you say very well. Howbeit, your words<br \/>\n   would have touched me somewhat the nearer if I had said that<br \/>\n   imprisonment were no displeasure at all. But the thing that I say,<br \/>\n   cousin, for our comfort in the matter, is that our fancy frameth us a<br \/>\n   false opinion by which we deceive ourselves and take it for sorer than<br \/>\n   it is. And that we do because we take ourselves for more free before<br \/>\n   than we were, and imprisonment for a stranger thing to us than it is<br \/>\n   indeed. And thus far, as I say, I have proved truth in very deed.<\/p>\n<p>   But now the incommodities that you repeat again&#8211;those, I say, that are<br \/>\n   proper to the imprisonment of its own nature; that is, to have less<br \/>\n   room to walk and to have the door shut upon us&#8211;these are, methinketh,<br \/>\n   so very slender and slight that in so great a cause as to suffer for<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s sake we might be sore ashamed so much as once to think upon them.<\/p>\n<p>   Many a good man there is, you know, who, without any force at all, or<br \/>\n   any necessity wherefor he should do so, suffereth these two things<br \/>\n   willingly of his own choice, with much other hardness more. Holy monks,<br \/>\n   I mean, of the Charterhouse order, such as never pass their cells save<br \/>\n   only to the church, which is set fast by their cells, and thence to<br \/>\n   their cells again. And St. Brigit&#8217;s order, and St. Clare&#8217;s much alike,<br \/>\n   and in a manner all enclosed religious houses. And yet anchorites and<br \/>\n   anchoresses most especially, all whose whole room is less than a good<br \/>\n   large chamber. And yet are they there as well content many long years<br \/>\n   together as are other men&#8211;and better, too&#8211;who walk about the world.<br \/>\n   And therefore you may see that the lothness of less room and the door<br \/>\n   shut upon us, since so many folk are so well content with them and will<br \/>\n   for God&#8217;s love choose to live so, is but a horror enhanced of our own<br \/>\n   fancy.<\/p>\n<p>   And indeed I knew a woman once who came into a prison, to visit of her<br \/>\n   charity a poor prisoner there. She found him in a chamber that was fair<br \/>\n   enough, to say the truth&#8211;at least, it was strong enough! But with mats<br \/>\n   of straw the prisoner had made it so warm, both under foot and round<br \/>\n   about the walls, that in these things, for the keeping of his health,<br \/>\n   she was on his behalf very glad and very well comforted. But among many<br \/>\n   other displeasures that for his sake she was sorry for, one she<br \/>\n   lamented much in her mind. And that was that he should have the chamber<br \/>\n   door made fast upon him by night, by the jailor who was to shut him in.<br \/>\n   &#8220;For, by my troth,&#8221; quoth she, &#8220;if the door should be shut upon me, I<br \/>\n   think it would stop up my breath!&#8221; At that word of hers the prisoner<br \/>\n   laughed in his mind&#8211;but he dared not laugh aloud or say anything to<br \/>\n   her, for indeed he stood somewhat in awe of her, and he had his food<br \/>\n   there in great part of her charity for alms. But he could not but laugh<br \/>\n   inwardly, for he knew well enough that she used to shut her own chamber<br \/>\n   door full surely on the inside every night, both door and windows too,<br \/>\n   and used not to open them all the long night. And what difference,<br \/>\n   then, as to the stopping of the breath, whether they were shut up<br \/>\n   within or without?<\/p>\n<p>   And so surely, cousin, these two things that you speak of are neither<br \/>\n   one of so great weight that in Christ&#8217;s cause they ought to move a<br \/>\n   Christian man. And one of the twain is so very childish a fancy, that<br \/>\n   in a matter almost of three chips (unless it were a chance of fire) it<br \/>\n   should never move any man.<\/p>\n<p>   As for those other accidents of hard handling, I am not so mad as to<br \/>\n   say that they are no grief, but I say that our fear may imagine them<br \/>\n   much greater grief than they are. And I say that such as they be, many<br \/>\n   a man endureth them&#8211;yea, and many a woman too&#8211;who afterward fareth<br \/>\n   full well.<\/p>\n<p>   And then would I know what determination we take&#8211;whether for our<br \/>\n   Saviour&#8217;s sake to suffer some pain in our bodies, since he suffered in<br \/>\n   his blessed body so great pain for us, or else to give him warning and<br \/>\n   be at a point utterly to forsake him rather than to suffer any pain at<br \/>\n   all? He who cometh in his mind unto this latter point&#8211;from which kind<br \/>\n   of unkindness God keep every man!&#8211;he needeth no comfort, for he will<br \/>\n   flee the need. And counsel, I fear, availeth him little, if grace be so<br \/>\n   far gone from him. But, on the other hand, if, rather than to forsake<br \/>\n   our Saviour, we determine ourselves to suffer any pain at all, I cannot<br \/>\n   then see that the fear of hard handling should anything stick with us<br \/>\n   and make us to shrink so that we would rather forsake his faith than<br \/>\n   suffer for his sake so much as imprisonment. For the handling is<br \/>\n   neither such in prison but what many men, and many women too, live with<br \/>\n   it many years and sustain it, and afterward yet fare full well. And yet<br \/>\n   it may well fortune that, beside the bare imprisonment, there shall<br \/>\n   happen to us no hard handling at all. Or else it may happen to us for<br \/>\n   only a short while&#8211;and yet, beside all this, peradventure not at all.<br \/>\n   And which of all these ways shall be taken with us, lieth all in his<br \/>\n   will for whom we are content to take it, and who for that intent of<br \/>\n   ours favoureth us and will suffer no man to put more pain to us than he<br \/>\n   well knoweth we shall be able to bear. For he himself will give us the<br \/>\n   strength for it, as you have heard his promise already by the mouth of<br \/>\n   St. Paul: &#8220;God is faithful, who suffereth you not to be tempted above<br \/>\n   what you may bear, but giveth also with the temptation a way out.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But now, if we have not lost our faith already before we come to<br \/>\n   forsake it for fear, we know very well by our faith that, by the<br \/>\n   forsaking of our faith, we fall into that state to be cast into the<br \/>\n   prison of hell. And that can we not tell how soon; but, as it may be<br \/>\n   that God will suffer us to live a while here upon earth, so may it be<br \/>\n   that he will throw us into that dungeon beneath before the time that<br \/>\n   the Turk shall once ask us the question. And therefore, if we fear<br \/>\n   imprisonment so sore, we are much more than mad if we fear not most the<br \/>\n   imprisonment that is far more sore. For out of that prison shall no man<br \/>\n   ever get, and in this other shall no man abide but a while.<\/p>\n<p>   In prison was Joseph while his brethren were at large; and yet<br \/>\n   afterward were his brethren fain to seek upon him for bread. In prison<br \/>\n   was Daniel, and the wild lions about him; and yet even there God kept<br \/>\n   him harmless and brought him safe out again. If we think that he will<br \/>\n   not do the like for us, let us not doubt that he will do for us either<br \/>\n   the like or better, for better may he do for us if he suffer us there<br \/>\n   to die. St. John the Baptist was, you know, in prison, while Herod and<br \/>\n   Herodias sat full merry at the feast, and the daughter of Herodias<br \/>\n   delighted them with her dancing, till with her dancing she danced off<br \/>\n   St. John&#8217;s head. And now sitteth he with great feast in heaven at God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   board, while Herod and Herodias full heavily sit in hell burning both<br \/>\n   twain, and to make them sport withal the devil with the damsel dance in<br \/>\n   the fire before them.<\/p>\n<p>   Finally, cousin, to finish this piece, our Saviour was himself taken<br \/>\n   prisoner for our sake. And prisoner was he carried, and prisoner was he<br \/>\n   kept, and prisoner was he brought forth before Annas, and prisoner from<br \/>\n   Annas carried unto Caiphas. Then prisoner was he carried from Caiphas<br \/>\n   unto Pilate, and prisoner was he sent from Pilate to King Herod, and<br \/>\n   prisoner from Herod unto Pilate again. And so was he kept as prisoner<br \/>\n   to the end of his passion. The time of his imprisonment, I grant you,<br \/>\n   was not long. But as for hard handling, which our hearts most abhor, he<br \/>\n   had as much in that short while as many men among them all in a much<br \/>\n   longer time. And surely, then, if we consider of what estate he was and<br \/>\n   also that he was prisoner in that wise for our sake, we shall, I think,<br \/>\n   unless we be worse than wretched beasts, never so shamefully play the<br \/>\n   ungrateful coward as sinfully to forsake him for fear of imprisonment.<\/p>\n<p>   Nor shall we be so foolish either as, by forsaking him, to give him the<br \/>\n   occasion to forsake us in turn. For so should we, with the avoiding of<br \/>\n   an easier prison, fall into a worse. And instead of the prison that<br \/>\n   cannot keep us long, we should fall into that prison out of which we<br \/>\n   can never come, though the short imprisonment should have won us<br \/>\n   everlasting liberty.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XXI<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, uncle, if we feared not further, beside<br \/>\n   imprisonment, the terrible dart of shameful and painful death, I would<br \/>\n   verily trust that, as for imprisonment, remembering these things which<br \/>\n   I have here heard from you (our Lord reward you for them!) rather than<br \/>\n   that I should forsake the faith of our Saviour, I would with help of<br \/>\n   grace never shrink at it.<\/p>\n<p>   But now are we come, uncle, with much work at last unto the last and<br \/>\n   uttermost point of the dread that maketh this incursion of this midday<br \/>\n   devil&#8211;this open invasion of the Turk and his persecution against the<br \/>\n   faith&#8211;seem so terrible unto men&#8217;s minds. Although the respect of God<br \/>\n   vanquish all the rest of the trouble that we have hitherto perused (as<br \/>\n   loss of goods, lands, and liberty), yet, when we remember the terror of<br \/>\n   shameful and painful death, that point suddenly putteth us in oblivion<br \/>\n   of all that should be our comfort. And we feel (all men, I fear me, for<br \/>\n   the most part) the fervour of our faith wax so cold and our hearts so<br \/>\n   faint that we find ourselves at the point of falling even for fear.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: I deny not, cousin, that indeed in this point is the sore<br \/>\n   pinch. And yet you see, for all this, that even this point too taketh<br \/>\n   increase or diminishment of dread according to the difference of the<br \/>\n   affections that are beforehand fixed and rooted in the mind&#8211;so much<br \/>\n   so, that you may see a man set so much by his worldly substance that he<br \/>\n   feareth less the loss of his life than the loss of lands. Yea, you may<br \/>\n   see a man abide deadly torment, such as some other man had rather die<br \/>\n   than endure, rather than to bring out the money that he hath hid. And I<br \/>\n   doubt not but that you have heard by right authentic stories of many<br \/>\n   men who (some for one cause, some for another) have not hesitated<br \/>\n   willingly to suffer death, divers in divers kinds, and some both with<br \/>\n   despiteful rebuke and painful torment too. And therefore, as I say, we<br \/>\n   may see that the affection of the mind toward the increase or decrease<br \/>\n   of dread maketh much of the matter.<\/p>\n<p>   Now the affections of men&#8217;s minds are imprinted by divers means. One<br \/>\n   way is by means of the bodily senses, moved by such things, pleasant or<br \/>\n   unpleasant, as are outwardly offered unto them through sensible worldly<br \/>\n   things. And this manner of receiving the impression of affections is<br \/>\n   common unto men and beasts. Another manner of receiving affections is<br \/>\n   by means of reason, which both ordinately tempereth those affections<br \/>\n   that the five bodily senses imprint, and also disposeth a man many<br \/>\n   times to some spiritual virtues very contrary to those affections that<br \/>\n   are fleshly and sensual. And those reasonable dispositions are<br \/>\n   spiritual affections, and proper to the nature of man, and above the<br \/>\n   nature of beasts. Now, as our ghostly enemy the devil enforceth himself<br \/>\n   to make us lean to the sensual affections and beastly, so doth almighty<br \/>\n   God of his goodness by his Holy Spirit inspire us good motions, with<br \/>\n   the aid and help of his grace, toward the other spiritual affections.<br \/>\n   And by sundry means he instructeth our reason to lean to them, and not<br \/>\n   only to receive them as engendered and planted in our soul, but also in<br \/>\n   such wise to water them with the wise advertisement of godly counsel<br \/>\n   and continual prayer, that they may become habitually radicated and<br \/>\n   surely take deep root therein. And according as the one kind of<br \/>\n   affection or the other beareth the strength in our heart, so are we<br \/>\n   stronger or feebler against the terror of death in this cause.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, cousin, will we essay to consider what things there are<br \/>\n   for which we have cause in reason to master the fearful affection and<br \/>\n   sensual. And though we cannot clean avoid it and put it away, yet will<br \/>\n   we essay in such wise to bridle it at least that it run not out so far<br \/>\n   like a headstrong horse that, in spite of our teeth, it carry us out<br \/>\n   unto the devil.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us therefore now consider and well weigh this thing that we dread<br \/>\n   so sore&#8211;that is, shameful and painful death.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XXII<\/p>\n<p>   And first I perceive well by these two things that you join unto<br \/>\n   &#8220;death&#8221;&#8211;that is, &#8220;shameful&#8221; and &#8220;painful&#8221;&#8211;that you would esteem death<br \/>\n   so much the less if it should come along without either shame or pain.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Without doubt, uncle, a great deal the less. But yet, though<br \/>\n   it should come without them both, by itself, I know well many a man<br \/>\n   would be for all that very loth to die.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That I believe well, cousin, and the more pity it is. For that<br \/>\n   affection happeth in very few without the cause being either lack of<br \/>\n   faith, lack of hope, or finally lack of wit.<\/p>\n<p>   Those who believe not the life to come after this, and think themselves<br \/>\n   here in wealth, are loth to leave this life, for then they think they<br \/>\n   lose all. And thence come the manifold foolish unfaithful words which<br \/>\n   are so rife in our many mouths: &#8220;This world we know, and the other we<br \/>\n   know not.&#8221; And some say in sport (and think in earnest), &#8220;The devil is<br \/>\n   not so black as he is painted,&#8221; and &#8220;Let him be as black as he will, he<br \/>\n   is no blacker than a crow!&#8221; with many such other foolish fancies of the<br \/>\n   same sort.<\/p>\n<p>   There are some who believe well enough but who, through lewdness of<br \/>\n   living, fall out of good hope of salvation. And then I very little<br \/>\n   marvel that they are loth to die. Howbeit, some who purpose to mend and<br \/>\n   would fain have some time left them longer to bestow somewhat better,<br \/>\n   may peradventure be loth to die also forthwith. And albeit that a very<br \/>\n   good will gladly to die and to be with God would be, to my mind, so<br \/>\n   thankful that it would be well able to purchase as full remission both<br \/>\n   of sin and pain as peradventure he would be like to purchase, if he<br \/>\n   lived, in many years&#8217; penance, yet will I not say but what such a kind<br \/>\n   of lothness to die may be approvable before God.<\/p>\n<p>   There are some also who are loth to die, who are yet very glad to die<br \/>\n   and long for to be dead.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: That would be, uncle, a very strange case!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: The case, I fear me, cousin, falleth not very often. But yet<br \/>\n   sometimes it doth, as where there is any man of that good mind that St.<br \/>\n   Paul was. For the longing that he had to be with God, he would fain<br \/>\n   have been dead, but for the profit of other folk he was content to live<br \/>\n   here in pain, and defer and forbear for the while his inestimable bliss<br \/>\n   in heaven: &#8220;Desiderium habens dissolvi et esse cum Christo, multo magis<br \/>\n   melius, permanere autem in carne, necessarium propter vos.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But of all these kinds of folk, cousin, who are loth to die (except for<br \/>\n   the first kind only, who lack faith), there is I suppose none who would<br \/>\n   hesitate, for the bare respect of death alone, unless the fear of shame<br \/>\n   or sharp pain joined unto death should be the hindrance, to depart<br \/>\n   hence with good will in this case of the faith. For he would well know<br \/>\n   by his faith that his death, taken for the faith, should cleanse him<br \/>\n   clean of all his sins and send him straight to heaven. And some of<br \/>\n   these (namely the last kind) are such that shame and pain both joined<br \/>\n   unto death would be unlikely to make them loathe death or fear death so<br \/>\n   sore but what they would suffer death in this case with good will,<br \/>\n   since they know well that the refusing of the faith, for any cause in<br \/>\n   this world (seemed the cause never so good), should yet sever them from<br \/>\n   God, with whom, save for other folk&#8217;s profit, they so fain would be.<br \/>\n   And charity it cannot be, for the profit of the whole world, deadly to<br \/>\n   displease him who made it.<\/p>\n<p>   Some are these, I say also, who are loth to die for lack of wit. Albeit<br \/>\n   that they believe in the world that is to come and hope also to come<br \/>\n   thither, yet they love so much the wealth of this world and such things<br \/>\n   as delight them therein, that they would fain keep them as long as ever<br \/>\n   they can, even with tooth and nail. And when they can be suffered in no<br \/>\n   wise to keep it longer, but death taketh them from it, then, if it can<br \/>\n   be no better, they will agree to be, as soon as they be hence, hauled<br \/>\n   up into heaven and be with God forthwith! These folk as as very idiot<br \/>\n   fools as he who had kept from his childhood a bag full of cherry<br \/>\n   stones, and cast such a fancy to it that he would not go from it for a<br \/>\n   bigger bag filled with gold.<\/p>\n<p>   These folk fare, cousin, as ?sop telleth in a fable that the snail did.<br \/>\n   For when Jupiter (whom the poets feign for the great god) invited all<br \/>\n   the poor worms of the earth unto a great solemn feast that it pleased<br \/>\n   him upon a time&#8211;I have forgotten upon what occasion&#8211;to prepare for<br \/>\n   them, the snail kept her at home and would not come. And when Jupiter<br \/>\n   asked her afterward wherefore she came not to his feast, where he said<br \/>\n   she would have been welcome and have fared well, and would have seen a<br \/>\n   goodly palace and been delighted with many goodly pleasures, she<br \/>\n   answered him that she loved no place so well as her own house. With<br \/>\n   this answer Jupiter waxed so angry that he said, since she loved her<br \/>\n   house so well, she should never after go from home, but should always<br \/>\n   afterward bear her house upon her back wheresoever she went. And so<br \/>\n   hath she ever done since, as they say. And at least I know well she<br \/>\n   doth so now and hath done so as long as I can remember.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, uncle, I should think the tale were not all feigned,<br \/>\n   for I think verily that so much of your tale is true!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: ?sop meant by that feigned fable to touch the folly of such<br \/>\n   folk as so set their fancy upon some small simple pleasure that they<br \/>\n   cannot find it in their heart to forbear it, either for the pleasure of<br \/>\n   a better man or for the gaining of a better thing. For by this foolish<br \/>\n   froward fashion they sometimes fall in great disgrace and take by it no<br \/>\n   little harm.<\/p>\n<p>   And surely such Christian folk as, by their foolish affection, which<br \/>\n   they have set like the snail upon their own house here on earth,<br \/>\n   cannot, for the lothness of leaving that house, find it in their hearts<br \/>\n   to go with good will to the great feast that God prepareth in heaven<br \/>\n   and of his goodness so graciously calleth them to&#8211;they are, I fear me,<br \/>\n   unless they mend that mind in time, like to be served as the snail was,<br \/>\n   and yet much worse too. For they are like to have their house here, the<br \/>\n   earth, bound fast on their backs for ever, and not to walk with it<br \/>\n   where they will, as the snail creepeth about with hers, but to lie fast<br \/>\n   bound in the midst of it with the foul fire of hell about them. For<br \/>\n   into this folly they bring themselves by their own fault, as the<br \/>\n   drunken man bringeth himself into drunkenness, whereby the evil that he<br \/>\n   doth in his drunkenness is not forgiven him for his folly, but to his<br \/>\n   pain is imputed to his fault.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Surely, uncle, this seemeth not unlikely, and by their fault<br \/>\n   they fall in such folly indeed. And yet, if this be folly indeed, then<br \/>\n   are some folk fools who think themselves right wise.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Who think themselves wise? Marry, I never saw a fool yet who<br \/>\n   thought himself other than wise! For as it is one spark of soberness<br \/>\n   left in a drunken head when he perceiveth himself to be drunk and<br \/>\n   getteth himself fair to bed, so if a fool perceive himself a fool that<br \/>\n   point is no folly but a little spark of wit.<\/p>\n<p>   But now, cousin, as for these kind of fools, who are loth to die for<br \/>\n   the love that they bear to their worldly fancies which they would, by<br \/>\n   their death, leave behind them and forsake: Those who would for that<br \/>\n   cause rather forsake the faith than die, would rather forsake it than<br \/>\n   lose their worldly goods, though there were no peril of death offered<br \/>\n   them at all. And then, as touching those who are of that mind, we have,<br \/>\n   you know, said as much as you yourself thought sufficient this<br \/>\n   afternoon here before.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Verily, uncle, that is very true. And now have you rehearsed,<br \/>\n   as far as I can remember, all the other kinds of them that would be<br \/>\n   loth to die for any other respect than the grievous qualities of shame<br \/>\n   and pain joined unto death. And of all these kinds, except the kind of<br \/>\n   infidelity&#8211;when no comfort can help, but only counsel to the attaining<br \/>\n   of faith, for faith must be presupposed to the receiving of comfort and<br \/>\n   had ready before, as you showed in the beginning of our communication<br \/>\n   the first day that we talked of the matter. But else, I say, except<br \/>\n   that one kind, there is none of the rest of those that were before<br \/>\n   untouched who would be likely to forsake their faith in this<br \/>\n   persecution for the fear and dread of death, save for those grievous<br \/>\n   qualities&#8211;pain, I mean, and shame&#8211;that they see well would come with<br \/>\n   it.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, uncle, I pray you, give us some comfort against those<br \/>\n   twain. For in good faith, if death should come without them, in such a<br \/>\n   case at this is, in which by the losing of this life we should find a<br \/>\n   far better, mine own reason giveth me that, save for the other griefs<br \/>\n   going before the change, no man who hath wit would anything stick at<br \/>\n   all.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Yes, peradventure suddenly they would, before they gather<br \/>\n   their wits unto them and well weigh the matter. But, cousin, those who<br \/>\n   will consider the matter well, reason, grounded upon the foundation of<br \/>\n   faith, shall show they very great substantial causes for which the<br \/>\n   dread of those grievous qualities that they see shall come with<br \/>\n   death&#8211;shame, I mean, and pain also&#8211;shall not so sore abash them as<br \/>\n   sinfully to drive them to that point. And for the proof thereof, let us<br \/>\n   first begin at the consideration of the shame.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XXIII<\/p>\n<p>   How can any faithful wise man dread death so sore, for any respect of<br \/>\n   shame, when his reason and his faith together can shortly make him<br \/>\n   perceive that there is no true shame in it at all? For how can that<br \/>\n   death be shameful that is glorious? Or how can it be anything but<br \/>\n   glorious to die for the faith of Christ, if we die both for the faith<br \/>\n   and in the faith, joined with hope and charity? For the scripture<br \/>\n   plainly saith, &#8220;Precious in the sight of God is the death of his<br \/>\n   saints.&#8221; Now if the death of his saints be glorious in the sight of<br \/>\n   God, it can never be shameful in very deed, however shameful it seem<br \/>\n   here in the sight of men. For here we may see and be sure that not only<br \/>\n   at the death of St. Stephen, to whom it pleased him to show himself<br \/>\n   with the heaven open over his head, but at the death also of every may<br \/>\n   who so dieth for the faith, God with his heavenly company beholdeth his<br \/>\n   whole passion and verily looketh on.<\/p>\n<p>   Now if it were so, cousin, that you should be brought through the broad<br \/>\n   high-street of a great long city; and if, all along the way that you<br \/>\n   were going, there were on one side of the way a rabble of ragged<br \/>\n   beggars and madmen, who would despise and dispraise you with all the<br \/>\n   shameful names that they could call you and all the villainous words<br \/>\n   that they could say to you; and if there were then, all along the other<br \/>\n   side of the same street where you should come by, a goodly company<br \/>\n   standing in a fair range, a row of wise and worshipful folk, lauding<br \/>\n   and commending you, more than fifteen times as many as that rabble of<br \/>\n   ragged beggars and railing madmen&#8211;would you willingly turn back,<br \/>\n   thinking that you went unto your shame, for the shameful jesting and<br \/>\n   railing of those mad foolish wretches? Or would you hold on your way<br \/>\n   with a good cheer and a glad heart, thinking yourself much honoured by<br \/>\n   the laud and approbation of that other honourable company?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Nay, by my troth, uncle, there is no doubt but that I would<br \/>\n   much regard the commendation of those commendable folk, and regard not<br \/>\n   a rush the railing of all those ribalds.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Then, cousin, no man who hath faith can account himself shamed<br \/>\n   here, by any manner of death that he suffereth for the faith of Christ.<br \/>\n   For however vile and shameful it seem in the sight here of a few<br \/>\n   worldly wretches, it is lauded and approved for very precious and<br \/>\n   honourable in the sight of God and all the glorious company of heaven,<br \/>\n   who as perfectly stand and behold it as those foolish people do. And<br \/>\n   they are in number more than a hundred to one; and of that hundred,<br \/>\n   every one a hundred times more to be regarded and esteemed than a<br \/>\n   hundred such whole rabbles of the other.<\/p>\n<p>   And now, if a man would be so mad as to be ashamed, for fear of the<br \/>\n   rebuke that he should have of such rebukeful beasts, to confess the<br \/>\n   faith of Christ, then, with fleeing from a shadow of shame, he would<br \/>\n   fall into a true shame&#8211;and a deadly painful shame indeed! For then<br \/>\n   hath our Saviour made a sure promise that he will show himself ashamed<br \/>\n   of that man before the Father of heaven and all his holy angels, saying<br \/>\n   in the ninth chapter of Luke, &#8220;He who is ashamed of me and my words, of<br \/>\n   him shall the Son of Man be ashamed when he shall come in the majesty<br \/>\n   of himself and of his Father and of his holy angels.&#8221; And what manner<br \/>\n   of shameful shame shall that be, then? If a man&#8217;s cheeks glow sometimes<br \/>\n   for shame in this world, they will fall on fire for shame when Christ<br \/>\n   shall show himself ashamed of them there!<\/p>\n<p>   The blessed apostles reckoned it for great glory to suffer for Christ&#8217;s<br \/>\n   faith the thing that we worldly wretched fools think to be villainy and<br \/>\n   shame. For they, when they were scourged, with despite and shame, and<br \/>\n   thereupon commanded to speak no more of the name of Christ, &#8220;went their<br \/>\n   way from the council joyful and glad that God had vouchsafed to do them<br \/>\n   the worship to suffer shameful despite for the name of Jesus.&#8221; And so<br \/>\n   proud were they of the shame and villainous pain put unto them, that<br \/>\n   for all the forbidding of that great council assembled, they ceased not<br \/>\n   every day to preach out the name of Jesus still&#8211;not only in the<br \/>\n   temple, out of which they were set and whipped for the same before, but<br \/>\n   also, to double it with, they went preaching the name about from house<br \/>\n   to house, too.<\/p>\n<p>   Since we regard so greatly the estimation of worldly folk, I wish that<br \/>\n   we would, among the many wicked things that they do, regard also some<br \/>\n   such as are good. For it is a manner among them, in many places, that<br \/>\n   some by handicraft, some by merchandise, some by other kinds of living,<br \/>\n   arise and come forward in the world. And commonly folk are in their<br \/>\n   youth set forth to suitable masters, under whom they are brought up and<br \/>\n   grow. But now, whensoever they find a servant such that he disdaineth<br \/>\n   to do such things as his master did while he was himself a servant,<br \/>\n   that servant every man accounteth for a proud unthrift, never like to<br \/>\n   come to good proof. Let us, lo, mark and consider this, and weigh it<br \/>\n   well withal: Our master Christ (who is not only the master, but the<br \/>\n   maker too, of all this whole world) was not so proud as to disdain for<br \/>\n   our sakes the most villainous and most shameful death, after the<br \/>\n   worldly count, that then was used in the world. And he endured the most<br \/>\n   despiteful mocking therewith, joined to the most grievous pain, as<br \/>\n   crowning him with sharp thorn, so that the blood ran down about his<br \/>\n   face. Then they gave him a reed in his hand for a sceptre, and kneeled<br \/>\n   down to him and saluted him like a king in scorn, and beat then the<br \/>\n   reed upon the sharp thorns about his holy head. Now our Saviour saith<br \/>\n   that the disciple or servant is not above his master. And therefore,<br \/>\n   since our master endured so many kinds of painful shame, very proud<br \/>\n   beasts may we well think ourselves if we disdain to do as our master<br \/>\n   did. And whereas he through shame ascended into glory, we would be so<br \/>\n   mad that we would rather fall into everlasting shame, both before<br \/>\n   heaven and hell, than for fear of a short worldly shame to follow him<br \/>\n   to everlasting glory.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XXIV<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: In good faith, uncle, as for the shame, you shall need to take<br \/>\n   no more pains. For I suppose surely that any man who hath reason in his<br \/>\n   head shall hold himself satisfied with this.<\/p>\n<p>   But, of truth, uncle, all the pinch is in the pain. For as for shame, I<br \/>\n   perceive well now that a man may with wisdom so master it that it shall<br \/>\n   nothing move him at all&#8211;so much so that it is become a common proverb<br \/>\n   in almost every country that &#8220;shame is as it is taken.&#8221; But, by God,<br \/>\n   uncle, all the wisdom in this world can never so master pain but that<br \/>\n   pain will be painful, in spite of all the wit in this world!<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Truth it is, cousin, that no man can, with all the reason he<br \/>\n   hath, in such wise change the nature of pain that in the having of pain<br \/>\n   he feel it not. For unless it be felt, perdy, it is no pain. And that<br \/>\n   is the natural cause, cousin, for which a man may have his leg stricken<br \/>\n   off at the knee and it grieve him not&#8211;if his head be off but half an<br \/>\n   hour before!<\/p>\n<p>   But reason may make a reasonable man not to shrink from it and refuse<br \/>\n   it to his more hurt and harm. Though he would not be so foolish as to<br \/>\n   fall into it without cause, yet upon good causes&#8211;either of gaining<br \/>\n   some kind of great profit or avoiding some kind of great loss, or<br \/>\n   eschewing thereby the suffering of far greater pain&#8211;he would be<br \/>\n   content and glad to sustain it for his far greater advantage and<br \/>\n   commodity.<\/p>\n<p>   And this doth reason alone in many cases, where it hath much less help<br \/>\n   to take hold of than it hath in this matter of faith. For you know well<br \/>\n   that to take a sour and bitter potion is great grief and displeasure,<br \/>\n   and to be lanced and have the flesh cut is no little pain. Now, when<br \/>\n   such things are to be ministered either to a child or to some childish<br \/>\n   man, they will by their own wills let their sickness and their sore<br \/>\n   grow, unto their more grief, till it become incurable, rather than<br \/>\n   abide the pain of the curing in time. And that for faint heart, joined<br \/>\n   with lack of discretion. But a man who hath more wisdom, though without<br \/>\n   cause he would no more abide the pain willingly than would the other,<br \/>\n   yet, since reason showeth him what good he shall have by the suffering,<br \/>\n   and what harm by refusing it, this maketh him well content and glad<br \/>\n   also to take it.<\/p>\n<p>   Now then, if reason alone be sufficient to move a man to take pain for<br \/>\n   the gaining of worldly rest or pleasure and for the avoiding of another<br \/>\n   pain (though the pain he take be peradventure more, yet to be endured<br \/>\n   but for a short season), why should not reason, grounded upon the sure<br \/>\n   foundation of faith, and helped toward also with the aid of God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   grace&#8211;as it ever is, undoubtedly, when folk for a good mind in God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   name come together, our Saviour saying himself, &#8220;Where there are two or<br \/>\n   three are gathered together in my name, there am I also even in the<br \/>\n   very midst of them.&#8221; Why should not then reason, I say, thus furthered<br \/>\n   with faith and grace, be much more able first to engender in us such an<br \/>\n   affection, and afterward, by long and deep meditation thereof, so to<br \/>\n   continue that affection that it shall turn into a habitual purpose,<br \/>\n   fast-rooted and deep, of patiently suffering the painful death of this<br \/>\n   body here in earth for the gaining of everlasting wealthy life in<br \/>\n   heaven and avoiding of everlasting painful death in hell?<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By my troth, uncle, I can find no words that should have any<br \/>\n   reason with them&#8211;faith being always presupposed, as you protested in<br \/>\n   the beginning, for a ground&#8211;words, I say, I can find none with which I<br \/>\n   might reasonably counter-plead this that you have said here already.<\/p>\n<p>   But yet I remember the fable that ?sop telleth of a great old hart that<br \/>\n   had fled from a little bitch, which had made pursuit after him and<br \/>\n   chased him so long that she had lost him, and (he hoped) more than half<br \/>\n   given him over. Having then some time to talk, and meeting with another<br \/>\n   of his fellows, he fell into deliberation with him as to what it were<br \/>\n   best for him to do&#8211;whether to run on still and fly farther from her,<br \/>\n   or to turn again and fight with her. The other hart advised him to fly<br \/>\n   no farther, lest the bitch might happen to find him again when he would<br \/>\n   be out of breath by the labour of farther fleeing, and thereby all out<br \/>\n   of strength too, and so would he be killed lying where he could not<br \/>\n   stir himself. Whereas, if he would turn and fight, he would be in no<br \/>\n   peril at all. &#8220;For the man with whom she hunteth,&#8221; he said, &#8220;is more<br \/>\n   than a mile behind her. And she is but a little body, scant half so<br \/>\n   much as thou, and thy horns can thrust her through before she can touch<br \/>\n   thy flesh, by more than ten times her tooth-length.&#8221; &#8220;By my troth,&#8221;<br \/>\n   quoth the other hart, &#8220;I like your counsel well, and methinketh that<br \/>\n   the thing is even soothly as you say. But I fear me that when I hear<br \/>\n   once that cursed bitch bark, I shall fall to my feet and forget all<br \/>\n   together. But yet, if you will go back with me, then methinketh we<br \/>\n   shall be strong enough against that one bitch between us both.&#8221; The<br \/>\n   other hart agreed, and they both appointed them thereon. But even as<br \/>\n   they were about to busk them forward to it, the bitch had found the<br \/>\n   scent again, and on she came yalping toward the place. And as soon as<br \/>\n   the harts heard her, off they went both twain apace!<\/p>\n<p>   And in good faith, uncle, even so I fear it would fare by myself and<br \/>\n   many others too. Though we think it reason, what you say, and in our<br \/>\n   minds agree that we should do as you say&#8211;yea, and peradventure think<br \/>\n   also that we would indeed do as you say&#8211;yet as soon as we should once<br \/>\n   hear those hell-hounds the Turks come yalping and howling upon us, our<br \/>\n   hearts should soon fall as clean from us as those other harts fled from<br \/>\n   the hounds.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Cousin, in those days that ?sop speaketh of, though those<br \/>\n   harts and other brute beasts had (if he say sooth) the power to speak<br \/>\n   and talk, and in their talking power to talk reason too, yet they never<br \/>\n   had given them the power to follow reason and rule themselves thereby.<br \/>\n   And in good faith, cousin, as for such things as pertain to the<br \/>\n   conducting of reasonable men to salvation, I think that without the<br \/>\n   help of grace men&#8217;s reasoning shall do little more. But then are we<br \/>\n   sure, as I said before, that if we desire grace, God is at such<br \/>\n   reasoning always present and very ready to give it. And unless men will<br \/>\n   afterward willingly cast it away, he is ever ready still to keep it and<br \/>\n   glad from time to time to increase it. And therefore our Lord biddeth<br \/>\n   us, by the mouth of the prophet, that we should not be like such<br \/>\n   brutish and unreasonable beasts as were those harts, and as are horses<br \/>\n   and mules: &#8220;Be not you like a horse and a mule, that hath no<br \/>\n   understanding.&#8221; And therefore, cousin, let us never dread but what, if<br \/>\n   we will apply our minds to the gathering of comfort and courage against<br \/>\n   our persecutions, and hear reason and let it sink into our heart and<br \/>\n   cast it not out again (nor vomit it up, nor even there choke it up and<br \/>\n   stifle it with pampering in and stuffing up our stomachs with a surfeit<br \/>\n   of worldly vanities), God shall so well work with it that we shall feel<br \/>\n   strength therein. And so we shall not in such wise have all such<br \/>\n   shameful cowardous hearts as to forsake our Saviour and thereby lose<br \/>\n   our own salvation and run into eternal fire for fear of death joined<br \/>\n   therein&#8211;though bitter and sharp, yet short for all that, and (in a<br \/>\n   manner) a momentary pain.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Every man, uncle, naturally grudgeth at pain, and is very loth<br \/>\n   to come to it.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That is very true, and no one biddeth any man to go run into<br \/>\n   it, unless he be taken and cannot flee. Then, we say that reason<br \/>\n   plainly telleth us that we should rather suffer and endure the less and<br \/>\n   the shorter pain here, than in hell the sorer and so far the longer<br \/>\n   too.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: I heard of late, uncle, where such a reason was made as you<br \/>\n   make me now, which reason seemed undoubted and inevitable to me. Yet<br \/>\n   heard I lately, as I say, a man answer it thus: He said that if a man<br \/>\n   in this persecution should stand still in the confession of his faith<br \/>\n   and thereby fall into painful tormentry, he might peradventure happen,<br \/>\n   for the sharpness and bitterness of the pain, to forsake our Saviour<br \/>\n   even in the midst of it, and die there with his sin, and so be damned<br \/>\n   forever. Whereas, by the forsaking of the faith in the beginning, and<br \/>\n   for the time&#8211;and yet only in word, keeping it still nevertheless in<br \/>\n   his heart&#8211;a man might save himself from that painful death and<br \/>\n   afterward ask mercy and have it, and live long and do many good deeds,<br \/>\n   and be saved as St. Peter was.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: That man&#8217;s reason, cousin, is like a three-footed stool&#8211;so<br \/>\n   tottering on every side that whosoever sits on it may soon take a foul<br \/>\n   fall. For these are the three feet of this tottering stool: fantastical<br \/>\n   fear, false faith, and false flattering hope.<\/p>\n<p>   First, it is a fantastical fear that the man conceiveth, that it should<br \/>\n   be perilous to stand in the confession of the faith at the beginning,<br \/>\n   lest he might afterward, through the bitterness of the pain, fall to<br \/>\n   the forsaking and so die there in the pain, out of hand, and thereby be<br \/>\n   utterly damned. As though, if a man were overcome by pain and so<br \/>\n   forsook his faith, God could not or would not as well give him grace to<br \/>\n   repent again, and thereupon give him forgiveness, as he would give it<br \/>\n   to him who forsook his faith in the beginning and set so little by God<br \/>\n   that he would rather forsake him than suffer for his sake any manner of<br \/>\n   pain at all! As though the more pain that a man taketh for God&#8217;s sake,<br \/>\n   the worse would God be to him! If this reason were not unreasonable,<br \/>\n   then should our Saviour not have said, as he did, &#8220;Fear not them that<br \/>\n   may kill the body, and after that have nothing that they can do<br \/>\n   further.&#8221; For he should, by this reason, have said, &#8220;Dread and fear<br \/>\n   them that may slay the body, for they may, by the torment of painful<br \/>\n   death (unless thou forsake me betimes in the beginning and so save thy<br \/>\n   life, and get of me thy pardon and forgiveness afterward) make thee<br \/>\n   peradventure forsake me too late, and so be damned forever.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   The second foot of this tottering stool is a false faith. For it is but<br \/>\n   a feigned faith for a man to say to God secretly that he believeth him,<br \/>\n   trusteth him, and loveth him, and then openly, where he should to God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   honour tell the same tale and thereby prove that he doth so, there to<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s dishonour flatter God&#8217;s enemies as much as in him is, and do them<br \/>\n   pleasure and worship, with the forsaking of God&#8217;s faith before the<br \/>\n   world. And such a one either is faithless in his heart too, or else<br \/>\n   knoweth well that he doth God this despite even before his own face.<br \/>\n   For unless he lack faith, he cannot but know that our Lord is<br \/>\n   everywhere present, and that, while he so shamefully forsaketh him, he<br \/>\n   full angrily looketh on.<\/p>\n<p>   The third foot of this tottering stool is false flattering hope. For<br \/>\n   since the thing that he doth, when he forsaketh his faith for fear, is<br \/>\n   forbidden by the mouth of God upon the pain of eternal death, though<br \/>\n   the goodness of God forgiveth many folk for the fault, yet to be bolder<br \/>\n   in offending for the hope of forgiving is a very false pestilent hope,<br \/>\n   with which a man flattereth himself toward his own destruction.<\/p>\n<p>   He who, in a sudden turn for fear or other affection, unadvisedly<br \/>\n   falleth, and after, in labouring to rise again, comforteth himself with<br \/>\n   hope of God&#8217;s gracious forgiveness, walketh in the ready way toward his<br \/>\n   salvation. But he who with the hope of God&#8217;s mercy to follow, doth<br \/>\n   encourage himself to sin, and thereby offendeth God first&#8211;I have no<br \/>\n   power to keep the hand of God from giving out his pardon where he will<br \/>\n   (nor would I if I could, but rather help to pray for it), but yet I<br \/>\n   very sorely fear that such a man may miss the grace to ask it in such<br \/>\n   effectual wise as to have it granted. Nor can I now instantly remember<br \/>\n   any example or promise expressed in holy scripture that the offender in<br \/>\n   such a case shall have the grace offered afterward, in such wise to<br \/>\n   seek for pardon that God, by his other promises of remission promised<br \/>\n   to penitents, would be bound himself to grant it. But this kind of<br \/>\n   presumption, under pretext of hope, seemeth rather to draw near on the<br \/>\n   one side (as despair doth, on the other) toward the abominable sin of<br \/>\n   blasphemy against the Holy Ghost. And against that sin, concerning<br \/>\n   either the impossibility or at least the great difficulty of<br \/>\n   forgiveness, our Saviour himself hath spoken in the twelfth chapter of<br \/>\n   St. Matthew and in the third chapter of St. Mark, where he saith that<br \/>\n   blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall never be forgiven, neither in<br \/>\n   this world nor in the world to come.<\/p>\n<p>   And where the man that you speak of took in his reason an example of<br \/>\n   St. Peter, who forsook our Saviour and got forgiveness afterward, let<br \/>\n   him consider again on the other hand that he forsook him not upon the<br \/>\n   boldness of such a sinful trust, but was overcome and vanquished by a<br \/>\n   sudden fear. And yet, by that forsaking, St. Peter won but little, for<br \/>\n   he did but delay his trouble for a little while, as you know well. For<br \/>\n   beside that, he repented forthwith very sorely that he had so done, and<br \/>\n   wept for it forthwith full bitterly. He came forth at the Whitsuntide<br \/>\n   ensuing, and confessed his Master again, and soon after that, he was<br \/>\n   imprisoned for it. And not ceasing so, he was thereupon sore scourged<br \/>\n   for the confession of his faith, and yet after that imprisoned again<br \/>\n   afresh. And, being from thence delivered, he stinted not to preach on<br \/>\n   still until, after manifold labours, travails, and troubles, he was in<br \/>\n   Rome crucified and with cruel torment slain.<\/p>\n<p>   And in like wise I think I might (in a manner) well warrant that no man<br \/>\n   who denieth our Saviour once and afterward attaineth remission shall<br \/>\n   escape through that denial one penny the cheaper, but that he shall,<br \/>\n   ere he come to heaven, full surely pay for it.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: He shall peradventure, uncle, afterward work it out in the<br \/>\n   fruitful works of penance, prayer, and almsdeed, done in true faith and<br \/>\n   due charity, and in such wise attain forgiveness well enough.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: All his forgiveness goeth, cousin, as you see well, but by<br \/>\n   &#8220;perhaps.&#8221; But as it may be &#8220;perhaps yea,&#8221; so may it be &#8220;perhaps nay,&#8221;<br \/>\n   and where is he then? And yet, you know, he shall never, by any manner<br \/>\n   of hap, hap finally to escape from death, for fear of which he forsook<br \/>\n   his faith.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: No, but he may die his natural death, and escape that violent<br \/>\n   death. And then he saveth himself from much pain and so winneth much<br \/>\n   ease. For a violent death is ever painful.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Peradventure he shall not avoid a violent death thereby, for<br \/>\n   God is without doubt displeased, and can bring him shortly to as<br \/>\n   violent a death by some other way.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, I see well that you reckon that whosoever dieth a natural<br \/>\n   death, dieth like a wanton even at his ease. You make me remember a man<br \/>\n   who was once in a light galley with us on the sea. While the sea was<br \/>\n   sore wrought and the waves rose very high, he lay tossed hither and<br \/>\n   thither, for he had never been to sea before. The poor soul groaned<br \/>\n   sore and for pain thought he would very fain be dead, and ever he<br \/>\n   wished, &#8220;Would God I were on land, that I might die in rest!&#8221; The waves<br \/>\n   so troubled him there, with tossing him up and down, to and fro, that<br \/>\n   he thought that trouble prevented him from dying, because the waves<br \/>\n   would not let him rest! But if he might get once to land, he thought he<br \/>\n   should then die there even at his ease.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Nay, uncle, this is no doubt, but that death is to every man<br \/>\n   painful. But yet is not the natural death so painful as the violent.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: By my troth, cousin, methinketh that the death which men<br \/>\n   commonly call &#8220;natural&#8221; is a violent death to every may whom it<br \/>\n   fetcheth hence by force against his will. And that is every man who,<br \/>\n   when he dieth, is loth to die and fain would yet live longer if he<br \/>\n   could.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, cousin, fain would I know who hath told you how small is the<br \/>\n   pain in the natural death! As far as I can perceive, those folk that<br \/>\n   commonly depart of their natural death have ever one disease and<br \/>\n   sickness or another. And if the pain of the whole week or twain in<br \/>\n   which they lie pining in their bed, were gathered together in so short<br \/>\n   a time as a man hath his pain who dieth a violent death, it would, I<br \/>\n   daresay, make double the pain that is his. So he who dieth naturally<br \/>\n   often suffereth more pain rather than less, though he suffer it in a<br \/>\n   longer time. And then would many a man be more loth to suffer so long,<br \/>\n   lingering in pain, than with a sharper pang to be sooner rid. And yet<br \/>\n   lieth many a man more days than one, in well-near as great pain<br \/>\n   continually, as is the pain that with the violent death riddeth the man<br \/>\n   in less than half an hour&#8211;unless you think that, whereas the pain is<br \/>\n   great to have a knife cut the flesh on the outside from the skin<br \/>\n   inward, the pain would be much less if the knife might begin on the<br \/>\n   inside and cut from the midst outward! Some we hear, on their deathbed,<br \/>\n   complain that they think they feel sharp knives cut in two their<br \/>\n   heartstrings. Some cry out and think they feel, within the brainpan,<br \/>\n   their head pricked even full of pins. And those who lie in a pleurisy<br \/>\n   think that, every time they cough, they feel a sharp sword snap them to<br \/>\n   the heart.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XXV<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, what need we to make any such comparison between the natural<br \/>\n   death and the violent, for the matter that we are in hand with here?<br \/>\n   Without doubt, he who forsaketh the faith of Christ for fear of the<br \/>\n   violent death, putteth himself in peril to find his natural death a<br \/>\n   thousand times more painful. For his natural death hath his everlasting<br \/>\n   pain so instantly knit to it, that there is not one moment of time<br \/>\n   between, but the end of the one is the beginning of the other, which<br \/>\n   never after shall have an end.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore was it not without great cause that Christ gave us so<br \/>\n   good warning before, when he said, as St. Luke in the twenty-second<br \/>\n   chapter rehearseth, &#8220;I say to you that are my friends, be not afraid of<br \/>\n   them that kill the body, and when that is done are able to do no more.<br \/>\n   But I shall show you whom you should fear. Fear him who, when he hath<br \/>\n   killed, hath in his power further to cast him whom he killeth into<br \/>\n   everlasting fire. So I say to you, be afraid of him.&#8221; God meaneth not<br \/>\n   here that we should not dread at all any man who can but kill the body,<br \/>\n   but he meaneth that we should not in such wise dread any such man that<br \/>\n   we should, for dread of them, displease him who can everlastingly kill<br \/>\n   both body and soul with a death ever-dying and that shall yet never<br \/>\n   die. And therefore he addeth and repeateth in the end again, the fear<br \/>\n   that we should have of him, and saith, &#8220;So I say to you, fear him.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   O good God, cousin, if a man would well weigh those words and let them<br \/>\n   sink down deep into his heart as they should do, and often bethink<br \/>\n   himself on them, it would (I doubt not) be able enough to make us set<br \/>\n   at naught all the great Turk&#8217;s threats, and esteem him not a straw. But<br \/>\n   we should be well content to endure all the pain that all the world<br \/>\n   could put upon us, for so short a while as all they were able to make<br \/>\n   us dwell in it, rather than, by shrinking from those pains (though<br \/>\n   never so sharp, yet but short), to cast ourselves into the pain of<br \/>\n   hell&#8211;a hundred thousand times more intolerable, and of which there<br \/>\n   shall never come an end. A woeful death is that death, in which folk<br \/>\n   shall evermore be dying and never can once be dead! For the scripture<br \/>\n   saith, &#8220;They shall call and cry for death, and death shall fly from<br \/>\n   them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   O, good Lord, if one of them were not put in choice of both, he would<br \/>\n   rather suffer the whole year together the most terrible death that all<br \/>\n   the Turks in Turkey could devise, than to endure for the space of half<br \/>\n   an hour the death that they lie in now. Into what wretched folly fall,<br \/>\n   then, those faithless or feeble-faithed folk, who, to avoid the pain<br \/>\n   that is so far the less and so short, fall instead into pain a thousand<br \/>\n   thousand times more horrible, and terrible torment of which they are<br \/>\n   sure they shall never have an end!<\/p>\n<p>   This matter, cousin, lacketh, I believe, only full faith or sufficient<br \/>\n   minding. For I think, on my faith, that if we have the grace verily to<br \/>\n   believe it and often to think well on it, the fear of all the Turk&#8217;s<br \/>\n   persecution&#8211;with all this midday devil were able to do in the forcing<br \/>\n   of us to forsake our faith&#8211;should never be able to turn us.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: By my troth, uncle, I think it is as you say. For surely, if<br \/>\n   we would often think on these pains of hell&#8211;as we are very loth to do,<br \/>\n   and purposely seek us childish pastimes to put such heavy things out of<br \/>\n   our thought&#8211;this one point alone would be able enough, I think, to<br \/>\n   make many a martyr.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XXVI<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Forsooth, cousin, if we were such as we should be, I would<br \/>\n   scant, for very shame, speak of the pains of hell in exhortation to the<br \/>\n   keeping of Christ&#8217;s faith. I would rather put us in mind of the joys of<br \/>\n   heaven, the pleasure of which we should be more glad to get than we<br \/>\n   should be to flee and escape all the pains of hell.<\/p>\n<p>   But surely God is marvellous merciful to us in the thing in which he<br \/>\n   may seem most rigorous. And that is (which many men would little think)<br \/>\n   in that he provided hell. For I suppose very surely, cousin, that many<br \/>\n   a man&#8211;and woman, too&#8211;of whom some now sit, and more shall hereafter<br \/>\n   sit, full gloriously crowned in heaven, had they not first been afraid<br \/>\n   of hell, would never have set foot toward heaven.<\/p>\n<p>   But yet undoubtedly, if we could conceive in our hearts the marvellous<br \/>\n   joys of heaven as well as we conceive the fearful pains of<br \/>\n   hell&#8211;howbeit, we can conceive neither one sufficiently. But if we<br \/>\n   could in our imagination approach as much toward the perceiving of the<br \/>\n   one as we may toward the consideration of the other, we would not fail<br \/>\n   to be far more moved and stirred to suffering for Christ&#8217;s sake in this<br \/>\n   world, for the winning of those heavenly joys than for the eschewing of<br \/>\n   all those infernal pains. But forasmuch as the fleshly pleasures are<br \/>\n   far less pleasant than the fleshly pains are painful, therefore we<br \/>\n   fleshly folk, who are so drowned in these fleshly pleasures and in the<br \/>\n   desire of them that we have almost no manner of savour or taste for any<br \/>\n   pleasure that is spiritual, we have no cause to marvel that our fleshly<br \/>\n   affections are more abated and refrained by the dread and terror of<br \/>\n   hell than spiritual affections are imprinted in us and pricked forward<br \/>\n   with the desire and joyful hope of heaven.<\/p>\n<p>   Howbeit, if we would set somewhat less by the filthy voluptuous<br \/>\n   appetites of the flesh, and would, by withdrawing from them, with help<br \/>\n   of prayer through the grace of God, draw nearer to the secret inward<br \/>\n   pleasure of the spirit, we should, by the little sipping that our<br \/>\n   hearts should have here now, and that instantaneous taste of it, have<br \/>\n   an estimation of the incomparable and uncogitable joy that we shall<br \/>\n   have (if we will) in heaven, by the very full draught thereof. For<br \/>\n   thereof it is written, &#8220;I shall be satiate&#8221; or satisfied, or fulfilled,<br \/>\n   &#8220;when thy glory, good Lord, shall appear,&#8221; that is, with the fruition<br \/>\n   of the sight of God&#8217;s glorious majesty face to face. And the desire,<br \/>\n   expectation, and heavenly hope thereof, shall more encourage us and<br \/>\n   make us strong to suffer and sustain for the love of God and salvation<br \/>\n   of our soul, than ever we could be made to suffer worldly pain here by<br \/>\n   the terrible dread of all the horrible pains that damned wretches have<br \/>\n   in hell.<\/p>\n<p>   Therefore in the meantime, for lack of such experimental taste as God<br \/>\n   giveth here sometimes to some of his special servants, to the intent<br \/>\n   that we may draw toward the spiritual exercise too&#8211;for which spiritual<br \/>\n   exercise God with that gift, as with an earnest-penny of their whole<br \/>\n   reward afterward in heaven, comforteth them here in earth&#8211;let us<br \/>\n   labour by prayer to conceive in our hearts such a fervent longing for<br \/>\n   them that we may, for attaining to them, utterly set at naught all<br \/>\n   fleshly delight, all worldly pleasures, all earthly losses, all bodily<br \/>\n   torment and pain. And let us do this, not so much with looking to have<br \/>\n   described what manner of joys they shall be, as with hearing what our<br \/>\n   Lord telleth us in holy scripture how marvellous great they shall be.<br \/>\n   Howbeit, some things are there in scripture expressed of the manner of<br \/>\n   the pleasures and joys that we shall have in heaven, as, &#8220;Righteous men<br \/>\n   shall shine as the sun and shall run about like sparkles of fire among<br \/>\n   reeds.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Now, tell some carnal-minded man of this manner of pleasure, and he<br \/>\n   shall take little pleasure in it, and say he careth not to have his<br \/>\n   flesh shine, he, nor like a spark of fire to skip about in the sky.<br \/>\n   Tell him that his body shall be impassible and never feel harm, and he<br \/>\n   will think then that he shall never be ahungered or athirst, and shall<br \/>\n   thereby forbear all his pleasure of eating and drinking, and that he<br \/>\n   shall never wish for sleep, and shall thereby lose the pleasure that he<br \/>\n   was wont to take in lying slug-abed. Tell him that men and women shall<br \/>\n   there live together as angels without any manner of mind or motion unto<br \/>\n   the carnal act of generation, and he will think that he shall thereby<br \/>\n   not use there his old filthy voluptuous fashion. He will say then that<br \/>\n   he is better at ease already, and would not give this world for that.<br \/>\n   For, as St. Paul saith, &#8220;A carnal man feeleth not the things that be of<br \/>\n   the spirit of God, for it is foolishness to him.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But the time shall come when these foul filthy pleasures shall be so<br \/>\n   taken from him that it shall abhor his heart once to think on them.<br \/>\n   Every man hath a certain shadow of this experience in the fervent grief<br \/>\n   of a sore painful sickness, when his stomach can scant abide to look<br \/>\n   upon any meat, and as for the acts of the other foul filthy lust, he is<br \/>\n   ready to vomit if he hap to think thereon. When a man shall after this<br \/>\n   life feel in his heart that horrible abomination, of which sickness<br \/>\n   hath here a shadow, at the remembrance of these voluptuous pleasures,<br \/>\n   for which he would here be loth to change with the joys of heaven: when<br \/>\n   he shall, I say, after this life, have his fleshly pleasures in<br \/>\n   abomination, and shall have there a glimmering (though far from a<br \/>\n   perfect sight) of those heavenly joys which here he set so little<br \/>\n   by&#8211;O, good God, how fain will he then be, with how good will and how<br \/>\n   gladly would he then give this whole world, if it were his, to have the<br \/>\n   feeling of some little part of those joys!<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore let us all who cannot now conceive such delight in the<br \/>\n   consideration of them as we should, have often in our eyes by reading,<br \/>\n   often in our ears by hearing, often in our mouths by rehearsing, often<br \/>\n   in our hearts by meditation and thinking, those joyful words of the<br \/>\n   holy scripture by which we learn how wonderful huge and great are those<br \/>\n   spiritual heavenly joys. Our carnal hearts have so feeble and so faint<br \/>\n   a feeling of them, and our dull worldly wits are so little able to<br \/>\n   conceive so much as a shadow of the right imagination! A shadow, I say,<br \/>\n   for, as for the thing as it is, not only can no fleshly carnal fancy<br \/>\n   conceive that, but beside that no spiritual person peradventure<br \/>\n   neither, so long as he is still living here in this world. For since<br \/>\n   the very essential substance of all the celestial joy standeth in the<br \/>\n   blessed beholding of the glorious Godhead face to face, no man may<br \/>\n   presume or look to attain it in this life. For God hath said so<br \/>\n   himself: &#8220;There shall no man here living behold me.&#8221; And therefore we<br \/>\n   may well know not only that we are, for the state of this life, kept<br \/>\n   from the fruition of the bliss of heaven, but also I think that the<br \/>\n   very best man living here upon earth&#8211;the best man, I mean, who is no<br \/>\n   more than man&#8211;cannot attain the right imagination of it; but those who<br \/>\n   are very virtuous are yet (in a manner) as far from it as a man born<br \/>\n   blind is from the right imagination of colours.<\/p>\n<p>   The words that St. Paul rehearseth of the prophet Isaiah, prophesying<br \/>\n   of Christ&#8217;s incarnation, may properly be verified of the joys of<br \/>\n   heaven: &#8220;Oculus non vidit, nec auris audivit, nec in cor hominis<br \/>\n   adscendit, quae preparavit Deus diligentibus se.&#8221; For surely, for this<br \/>\n   state of this world, the joys of heaven are by man&#8217;s mouth unspeakable,<br \/>\n   to man&#8217;s ears not audible, to men&#8217;s hearts uncogitable, so far excel<br \/>\n   they all that ever men have heard of, all that ever men can speak of,<br \/>\n   and all that men can by natural possibility think on.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet, whereas such be the joys of heaven that are prepared for every<br \/>\n   saved soul, our Lord saith yet, by the mouth of St. John, that he will<br \/>\n   give his holy martyrs who suffer for his sake many a special kind of<br \/>\n   joy. For he saith, &#8220;To him that overcometh, I shall give him to eat of<br \/>\n   the tree of life. And I shall confess his name before my Father and<br \/>\n   before his angels.&#8221; And also he saith, &#8220;Fear none of those things that<br \/>\n   thou shalt suffer . . . , but be faithful unto the death, and I shall<br \/>\n   give thee the crown of life. He that overcometh shall not be hurt of<br \/>\n   the second death.&#8221; And he saith also, &#8220;To him that overcometh will I<br \/>\n   give manna secret and hid. And I will give him a white suffrage, and in<br \/>\n   his suffrage a new name written, which no man knoweth but he that<br \/>\n   receiveth it.&#8221; They used of old in Greece, where St. John did write, to<br \/>\n   elect and choose men unto honourable offices, and every man&#8217;s assent<br \/>\n   was called his &#8220;suffrage,&#8221; which in some places was by voices and in<br \/>\n   some places by hands. And one kind of those suffrages was by certain<br \/>\n   things that in Latin are called calculi because, in some places, they<br \/>\n   used round stones for them. Now our Lord saith that unto him who<br \/>\n   overcometh he will give a white suffrage, for those that were white<br \/>\n   signified approving, as the black signified reproving. And in those<br \/>\n   suffrages did they use to write the name of him to whom they gave their<br \/>\n   vote. Now our Lord saith that to him who overcometh he will in the<br \/>\n   suffrage give him a new name, which no man knoweth but him who<br \/>\n   receiveth it. He saith also, &#8220;He that overcometh, I will make him a<br \/>\n   pillar in the temple of my God, and he shall go no more out thereof,<br \/>\n   and I shall write upon him the name of my God and the name of the city<br \/>\n   of my God, the new Jerusalem which descendeth from heaven from my God,<br \/>\n   and I shall write on him also my new name.&#8221; If we wished to enlarge<br \/>\n   upon this, and were able to declare these special gifts, with yet<br \/>\n   others that are specified in the second and third chapters of the<br \/>\n   Apocalypse, then would it appear how far those heavenly joys shall<br \/>\n   surmount above all the comfort that ever came in the mind of any man<br \/>\n   living here upon earth.<\/p>\n<p>   The blessed apostle St. Paul, who suffered so many perils and so many<br \/>\n   passions, saith of himself that he hath been &#8220;in many labours, in<br \/>\n   prisons oftener than others, in stripes above measure, at point of<br \/>\n   death often times; of the Jews had I five times forty stripes save one,<br \/>\n   thrice have I been beaten with rods, once was I stoned, thrice have I<br \/>\n   been in shipwreck, a day and a night was I in the depth of the sea; in<br \/>\n   my journeys oft have I been in peril of floods, in peril of thieves, in<br \/>\n   peril by the Jews, in perils by the pagans, in perils in the city, in<br \/>\n   perils in the desert, in perils in the sea, perils by false brethren,<br \/>\n   in labour and misery, in many nights&#8217; watch, in hunger and thirst, in<br \/>\n   many fastings, in cold and nakedness; beside those things that are<br \/>\n   outward, my daily instant labour, I mean my care and solicitude about<br \/>\n   all the churches,&#8221; and yet saith he more of his tribulations, which for<br \/>\n   the length I let pass. This blessed apostle, I say, for all these<br \/>\n   tribulations that he himself suffered in the continuance of so many<br \/>\n   years, calleth all the tribulations of this world but light and as<br \/>\n   short as a moment, in respect of the weighty glory that it winneth us<br \/>\n   after this world: &#8220;This same short and momentary tribulation of ours<br \/>\n   that is in this present time, worketh within us the weight of glory<br \/>\n   above measure on high, we beholding not these things that we see, but<br \/>\n   those things that we see not. For those things that we see are but<br \/>\n   temporal things, but those things that are not seen are eternal.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Now to this great glory no man can come headless. Our head is Christ,<br \/>\n   and therefore to him must we be joined, and as members of his must we<br \/>\n   follow him, if we wish to come thither. He is our guide to guide us<br \/>\n   thither, and he is entered in before us. And he therefore who will<br \/>\n   enter in after, &#8220;the same way that Christ walked, the same way must he<br \/>\n   walk.&#8221; And what was the way by which he walked into heaven? He himself<br \/>\n   showed what way it was that his Father had provided for him, when he<br \/>\n   said to the two disciples going toward the village of Emaus, &#8220;Knew you<br \/>\n   not that Christ must suffer passion, and by that way enter into his<br \/>\n   kingdom?&#8221; Who can for very shame desire to enter into the kingdom of<br \/>\n   Christ with ease, when he himself entered not into his own without<br \/>\n   pain?<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>    XXVII<\/p>\n<p>   Surely, cousin, as I said before, in bearing the loss of worldly goods,<br \/>\n   in suffering captivity, thraldom, and imprisonment, and in the glad<br \/>\n   sustaining of worldly shame, if we would in all those points deeply<br \/>\n   ponder the example of our Saviour himself, it would be sufficient of<br \/>\n   itself alone to encourage every true Christian man and woman to refuse<br \/>\n   none of all those calamities for his sake.<\/p>\n<p>   So say I now for painful death also: If we could and would with due<br \/>\n   compassion conceive in our minds a right imagination and remembrance of<br \/>\n   Christ&#8217;s bitter painful passion&#8211;of the many sore bloody strokes that<br \/>\n   the cruel tormentors gave him with rods and whips upon every part of<br \/>\n   his holy tender body; of the scornful crown of sharp thorns beaten down<br \/>\n   upon his holy head, so strait and so deep that on every part his<br \/>\n   blessed blood issued out and streamed down; of his lovely limbs drawn<br \/>\n   and stretched out upon the cross, to the intolerable pain of his<br \/>\n   sore-beaten veins and sinews, feeling anew, with the cruel stretching<br \/>\n   and straining, pain far surpassing any cramp in every part of his<br \/>\n   blessed body at once; of the great long nails then cruelly driven with<br \/>\n   the hammer through his holy hands and feet; of his body, in this<br \/>\n   horrible pain, lifted up and let hang, with all its weight bearing down<br \/>\n   upon the painful wounded places so grievously pierced with nails; and<br \/>\n   in such torment, without pity, but not without many despites, suffered<br \/>\n   to be pined and pained the space of more than three long hours, till he<br \/>\n   himself willingly gave up unto his Father his holy soul; after which<br \/>\n   yet, to show the mightiness of their malice, after his holy soul<br \/>\n   departed, they pierced his holy heart with a sharp spear, at which<br \/>\n   issued out the holy blood and water, whence his holy sacraments have<br \/>\n   inestimable secret strength&#8211;if we could, I say, remember these things,<br \/>\n   in such a way as would God that we would, I verily suppose that the<br \/>\n   consideration of his incomparable kindness could not fail so to inflame<br \/>\n   our key-cold hearts, and set them on fire with his love, that we should<br \/>\n   find ourselves not only content but also glad and desirous to suffer<br \/>\n   death for his sake who so marvellously lovingly forbore not to sustain<br \/>\n   so far passing painful death for ours.<\/p>\n<p>   Would God that we would here&#8211;to the shame of our cold affection toward<br \/>\n   God, in return for such fervent love and inestimable kindness of God<br \/>\n   toward us&#8211;would God we would, I say, but consider what hot affection<br \/>\n   many of these fleshly lovers have borne and daily bear to those upon<br \/>\n   whom they dote. How many of them have not stinted to jeopard their<br \/>\n   lives, and how many have willingly lost their lives indeed, without any<br \/>\n   great kindness showed them before&#8211;and afterward, you know, they could<br \/>\n   nothing win! But it contented and satisfied their minds that by their<br \/>\n   death their lover should clearly see how faithfully they loved. The<br \/>\n   delight thereof, imprinted in their fancy, not only assuaged their pain<br \/>\n   but also, they thought, outweighed it all. Of these affections, with<br \/>\n   the wonderful dolorous effects following upon them, not only old<br \/>\n   written stories, but beside that experience, I think, in every country,<br \/>\n   Christian and heathen both, giveth us proof enough. And is it not then<br \/>\n   a wonderful shame for us, for the dread of temporal death, to forsake<br \/>\n   our Saviour who willingly suffered so painful death rather than forsake<br \/>\n   us? Considering that, beside that, he shall for our suffering so highly<br \/>\n   reward us with everlasting wealth. Oh, if he who is content to die for<br \/>\n   his love, of whom he looketh afterward for no reward, and yet by his<br \/>\n   death goeth from her, might by his death be sure to come to her and<br \/>\n   ever after in delight and pleasure to dwell with her&#8211;such a love would<br \/>\n   not stint here to die for her twice! And what cold lovers are we then<br \/>\n   unto God, if, rather than die for him once, we will refuse him and<br \/>\n   forsake him forever&#8211;him who both died for us before, and hath also<br \/>\n   provided that, if we die here for him, we shall in heaven everlastingly<br \/>\n   both live and also reign with him! For as St. Paul saith, &#8220;If we suffer<br \/>\n   with him, we shall reign with him.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   How many Romans, how many noble hearts of other sundry countries, have<br \/>\n   willingly given their own lives and suffered great deadly pains and<br \/>\n   very painful deaths for their countries, to win by their death only the<br \/>\n   reward of worldly renown and fame! And should we, then, shrink to<br \/>\n   suffer as much for eternal honour in heaven and everlasting glory? The<br \/>\n   devil hath also some heretics so obstinate that they wittingly endure<br \/>\n   painful death for vain glory. And is it not then more than shame that<br \/>\n   Christ shall see his Catholics forsake his faith rather than suffer the<br \/>\n   same for heaven and true glory?<\/p>\n<p>   Would God, as I many times have said, that the remembrance of Christ&#8217;s<br \/>\n   kindness in suffering his passion for us, the consideration of hell<br \/>\n   that we shall fall in by forsaking him, and the joyful meditation of<br \/>\n   eternal life in heaven that we shall win with this short temporal death<br \/>\n   patiently taken for him, had so deep a place in our breast as reason<br \/>\n   would that they should&#8211;and as, if we would strive toward it and labour<br \/>\n   for it and pray for it, I verily think they would. For then should they<br \/>\n   so take up our mind and ravish it all another way, that, as a man hurt<br \/>\n   in a fray feeleth not sometimes his wound nor yet is aware of it, until<br \/>\n   his mind fall more thereon (so much so that sometimes another man<br \/>\n   telleth him that he hath lost a hand before he perceive it himself), so<br \/>\n   the mind ravished in the thinking deeply of those other<br \/>\n   things&#8211;Christ&#8217;s death, hell, and heaven&#8211;would be likely to diminish<br \/>\n   and put away four parts of the feeling of our painful death&#8211;either of<br \/>\n   the death or the pain. For of this am I very sure: If we had the<br \/>\n   fifteenth part of the love for Christ that he both had and hath for us,<br \/>\n   all the pain of this Turk&#8217;s persecution could not keep us from him, but<br \/>\n   there would be at this day as many martyrs here in Hungary as there<br \/>\n   have been before in other countries of old.<\/p>\n<p>   And I doubt not but that, if the Turk stood even here with all his<br \/>\n   whole army about him; and if every one of them all were ready at hand<br \/>\n   with all the terrible torments that they could imagine, and were<br \/>\n   setting their torments to us unless we would forsake the faith; and if<br \/>\n   to the increase of our terror they fell all at once in a shout, with<br \/>\n   trumpets, tabrets, and timbrels all blown up at once, and all their<br \/>\n   guns let go therewith to make us a fearful noise; if then, on the other<br \/>\n   hand, the ground should suddenly quake and rive atwain, and the devils<br \/>\n   should rise out of hell and show themselves in such ugly shape as<br \/>\n   damned wretches shall see them; and if, with that hideous howling that<br \/>\n   those hell-hounds should screech, they should lay hell open on every<br \/>\n   side round about our feet, so that as we stood we should look down into<br \/>\n   that pestilent pit and see the swarm of poor souls in the terrible<br \/>\n   torments there&#8211;we would wax so afraid of the sight that we should<br \/>\n   scantly remember that we saw the Turk&#8217;s host.<\/p>\n<p>   And in good faith, for all that, yet think I further this: If there<br \/>\n   might then appear the great glory of God, the Trinity in his high<br \/>\n   marvellous majesty, our Saviour in his glorious manhood sitting on the<br \/>\n   throne, with his immaculate mother and all that glorious company,<br \/>\n   calling us there unto them; and if our way should yet lie through<br \/>\n   marvellous painful death before we could come at them&#8211;upon the sight,<br \/>\n   I say, of that glory, I daresay there would be no man who once would<br \/>\n   shrink at death, but every man would run on toward them in all that<br \/>\n   ever he could, though there lay by the way, to kill us for malice, both<br \/>\n   all the Turk&#8217;s tormentors and all the devils.<\/p>\n<p>   And therefore, cousin, let us well consider these things, and let us<br \/>\n   have sure hope in the help of God. And then I doubt not but what we<br \/>\n   shall be sure that, as the prophet saith, the truth of his promise<br \/>\n   shall so compass us with a shield that we shall never need to fear. For<br \/>\n   either, if we trust in God well, and prepare us for it, the Turk shall<br \/>\n   never meddle with us; or else, if he do, he shall do us no harm but,<br \/>\n   instead of harm, inestimable good. Wherefore should we so sore now<br \/>\n   despair of God&#8217;s gracious help, unless we were such madmen as to think<br \/>\n   that either his power or his mercy were worn out already? For we see<br \/>\n   that so many a thousand holy martyrs, by his holy help, suffered as<br \/>\n   much before as any man shall be put to now. Or what excuse can we have<br \/>\n   by the tenderness of our flesh? For we can be no more tender than were<br \/>\n   many of them, among whom were not only men of strength, but also weak<br \/>\n   women and children. And since the strength of them all stood in the<br \/>\n   help of God; and since the very strongest of them all was never able to<br \/>\n   himself to stand against all the world, and with God&#8217;s help the<br \/>\n   feeblest of them all was strong enough so to stand; let us prepare<br \/>\n   ourselves with prayer, with our whole trust in his help, without any<br \/>\n   trust in our own strength. Let us think on it and prepare ourselves for<br \/>\n   it in our minds long before. Let us therein conform our will unto his,<br \/>\n   not desiring to be brought unto the peril of persecution (for it<br \/>\n   beseemeth a proud high mind to desire martyrdom) but desiring help and<br \/>\n   strength of God, if he suffer us to come to the stress&#8211;either being<br \/>\n   sought, found, and brought out against our wills, or else being by his<br \/>\n   commandment, for the comfort of our cure, bound to abide.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us fall to fasting, to prayer, and to almsdeed in time, and give<br \/>\n   unto God that which may be taken from us. If the devil put in our mind<br \/>\n   the saving of our land and our goods, let us remember that we cannot<br \/>\n   save them long. If he frighten us with exile and flying from our<br \/>\n   country, let us remember that we be born into the broad world, not to<br \/>\n   stick still in one place like a tree, and that whithersoever we go, God<br \/>\n   shall go with us. If he threaten us with captivity, let us answer him<br \/>\n   that it is better to be thrall unto a man for a while, for the pleasure<br \/>\n   of God, than, by displeasing God, to be perpetual thrall unto the<br \/>\n   devil. If he threaten us with imprisonment, let us tell him that we<br \/>\n   would rather be man&#8217;s prisoner a while here in earth than, by forsaking<br \/>\n   the faith, be his prisoners for ever in hell. If he put in our minds<br \/>\n   the terror of the Turks, let us consider his false sleight, for this<br \/>\n   tale he telleth us to make us forget him. But let us remember well<br \/>\n   that, in respect of himself, the Turks are but a shadow. And all that<br \/>\n   they can do can be but a flea-bite in comparison with the mischief that<br \/>\n   he goeth about. The Turks are but his tormentors, for he himself doth<br \/>\n   the deed. Our Lord saith in the Apocalypse, &#8220;The devil shall send some<br \/>\n   of you to prison, to tempt you.&#8221; He saith not that men shall, but that<br \/>\n   the devil shall, himself. For without question the devil&#8217;s own deed it<br \/>\n   is, to bring us by his temptation, with fear and force, into eternal<br \/>\n   damnation. And therefore saith St. Paul, &#8220;Our wrestling is not against<br \/>\n   flesh and blood,&#8221; etc.<\/p>\n<p>   Thus may we see that in such persecutions it is the midday devil<br \/>\n   himself that maketh such incursion upon us, by the men who are his<br \/>\n   ministers, to make us fall for fear. For until we fall he can never<br \/>\n   hurt us. And therefore saith St. James, &#8220;Stand against the devil and he<br \/>\n   shall flee from you.&#8221; For he never runneth upon a man to seize him with<br \/>\n   his claws until he see him down on the ground, willingly fallen<br \/>\n   himself. For his fashion is to set his servants against us, and by them<br \/>\n   to make us fall for fear or for impatience. And he himself in the<br \/>\n   meanwhile compasseth us, running and roaring like a ramping lion about<br \/>\n   us, looking to see who will fall, that he may then devour him. &#8220;Your<br \/>\n   adversary the devil,&#8221; saith St. Peter, &#8220;like a roaring lion, runneth<br \/>\n   about in circuit, seeking whom he may devour.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   The devil it is, therefore, who, if we will fall for fear of men, is<br \/>\n   ready to run upon us and devour us. And is it wisdom, then, to think so<br \/>\n   much upon the Turks that we forget the devil? What a madman would he be<br \/>\n   who, when a lion were about to devour him, would vouchsafe to regard<br \/>\n   the biting of a little fisting cur? Therefore, when he roareth out upon<br \/>\n   us by the threats of mortal men, let us tell him that with our inward<br \/>\n   eye we see him well enough, and intend to stand and fight with him,<br \/>\n   even hand to hand. If he threaten us that we be too weak, let us tell<br \/>\n   him that our captain Christ is with us, and that we shall fight with<br \/>\n   the strength of him who hath vanquished him already. And let us fence<br \/>\n   with faith, and comfort us with hope, and smite the devil in the face<br \/>\n   with the firebrand of charity. For surely, if we be of the tender<br \/>\n   loving mind that our Master was, and do not hate them that kill us but<br \/>\n   pity them and pray for them, with sorrow for the peril that they work<br \/>\n   unto themselves, then that fire of charity thrown in his face will<br \/>\n   strike the devil suddenly so blind that he cannot see where to fasten a<br \/>\n   stroke on us.<\/p>\n<p>   When we feel ourselves too bold, let us remember our own feebleness,<br \/>\n   and when we feel ourselves too faint, let us remember Christ&#8217;s<br \/>\n   strength. In our fear, let us remember Christ&#8217;s painful agony, that he<br \/>\n   himself would for our comfort suffer before his passion, to the intent<br \/>\n   that no fear should make us despair. And let us ever call for his help,<br \/>\n   such as he himself may please to send us. And then need we never doubt<br \/>\n   but that he shall either keep us from the painful death, or else<br \/>\n   strengthen us in it so that he shall joyously bring us to heaven by it.<br \/>\n   And then doth he much more for us than if he kept us from it. For God<br \/>\n   did more for poor Lazarus, in helping him patiently to die for hunger<br \/>\n   at the rich man&#8217;s door, than if he had brought to him at the door all<br \/>\n   the rich glutton&#8217;s dinner. So, though he be gracious to a man whom he<br \/>\n   delivereth out of painful trouble, yet doth he much more for a man if,<br \/>\n   through right painful death, he deliver him from this wretched world<br \/>\n   into eternal bliss. Whosoever shrinketh away from it by forsaking his<br \/>\n   faith, and falleth in the peril of everlasting fire, he shall be very<br \/>\n   sure to repent ere it be long after.<\/p>\n<p>   For I am sure that whensoever he falleth sick next, he will wish that<br \/>\n   he had been killed for Christ&#8217;s sake before. What folly is it, then, to<br \/>\n   flee for fear from that death which thou seest thou shalt shortly<br \/>\n   afterward wish thou hadst died! Yea, I daresay almost every good<br \/>\n   Christian man would very fain this day that yesterday he had been<br \/>\n   cruelly killed for Christ&#8217;s sake&#8211;even for the desire of heaven, though<br \/>\n   there were no hell. But to fear while the pain is coming, there is all<br \/>\n   our hindrance! But if, on the other hand, we would remember hell&#8217;s pain<br \/>\n   into which we fall while we flee from this, then this short pain should<br \/>\n   be no hindrance at all. And yet, if we were faithful, we should be more<br \/>\n   pricked forward by deep consideration of the joys of heaven, of which<br \/>\n   the apostle saith, &#8220;The passions of this time be not worthy to the<br \/>\n   glory that is to come, which shall be showed in us.&#8221; We should not, I<br \/>\n   believe, need much more in all this matter than one text of St. Paul,<br \/>\n   if we would consider it well. For surely, mine own good cousin,<br \/>\n   remember that if it were possible for me and you alone to suffer as<br \/>\n   much trouble as the whole world doth together, all that would not be<br \/>\n   worthy of itself to bring us to the joy which we hope to have<br \/>\n   everlastingly. And therefore, I pray you, let the consideration of that<br \/>\n   you put out all worldly trouble out of your heart, and also pray that<br \/>\n   it may do the same in me.<\/p>\n<p>   And even thus will I, good cousin, with these words, make a sudden end<br \/>\n   of mine whole tale, and bid you farewell. For now begin I to feel<br \/>\n   myself somewhat weary.<\/p>\n<p>   VINCENT: Forsooth, good uncle, this is a good end. And it is no marvel<br \/>\n   if you are waxed weary. For I have this day put you to so much labour<br \/>\n   that, save for the comfort that you yourself may take from having<br \/>\n   bestowed your time so well, and for the comfort that I have taken&#8211;and<br \/>\n   more shall, I trust&#8211;of your good counsel given, else would I be very<br \/>\n   sorry to have put you to so much pain.<\/p>\n<p>   But now shall our Lord reward and recompense you therefore, and many, I<br \/>\n   trust, shall pray for you. For to the intent that the more men may take<br \/>\n   profit of you, I purpose, uncle, as my poor wit and learning will serve<br \/>\n   me, to record your good counsel not only in our own language, but in<br \/>\n   the German tongue too.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus, praying God to give me, and all others who shall read it, the<br \/>\n   grace to follow your good counsel, I shall commit you to God.<\/p>\n<p>   ANTHONY: Since you be minded, cousin, to bestow so much labour on it, I<br \/>\n   would it had happed you to fetch the counsel at some wiser man, who<br \/>\n   could have given you better. But better men may add more things, and<br \/>\n   better also, thereto. And in the meantime, I beseech our Lord to<br \/>\n   breathe of his Holy Spirit into the reader&#8217;s breast, who inwardly may<br \/>\n   teach him in heart. For without him little availeth all that the mouths<br \/>\n   of the world would be able to teach in men&#8217;s ears.<\/p>\n<p>   And thus, good cousin, farewell, till God bring us together again,<br \/>\n   either here or in heaven. Amen.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>__________________________________________________________________ Title: Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation Creator(s): More, St. Thomas (1478-1535) Print Basis: Sheed &#038; Ward, 1951 Rights: Public Domain LC Subjects: Practical theology Practical religion. The Christian life Works of consolation and cheer __________________________________________________________________ Produced by David McClamrock DIALOGUE OF COMFORT AGAINST TRIBULATION by St. Thomas More with modifications to obsolete language by&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"twitterCardType":"","cardImageID":0,"cardImage":"","cardTitle":"","cardDesc":"","cardImageAlt":"","cardPlayer":"","cardPlayerWidth":0,"cardPlayerHeight":0,"cardPlayerStream":"","cardPlayerCodec":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-8611","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/8611","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=8611"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/8611\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=8611"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=8611"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=8611"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}