Waytoblissinthre 00 Ashm
Waytoblissinthre 00 Ashm
Waytoblissinthre 00 Ashm
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0.
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.3 ELIAS A5HMOLE
'
^) I) I
II
I *>^'
O *y 3 THE
Way toBlifs.
a_^
IN THREE B O Wl K S.
•Xy^J
{^e^.
^^^^S
^tcd by John Grifmond for Nath. Bmk^ at the
*
jlfigel in Corn-hill, 1658.
.V^IJ-?!].
.
ff'c'drWA
TO THE
READER.
T is now fomew hat above five years, fince P pu—
1 THEATRUM
blil'hed the firfi Part of my
CHEMICUM BRITANNICUM immedi- ;
To the Header,
And yet howbeit (becaufe fuch zit familiar unro, and ordinary
am.ong us) we confider them not. Tis a Dlfcoarfe fraught with
variety of excellent rational Matter, and fitted to the Learned
as well as meaner (7rf;>^oV;>/ Nay, fuch, as I boldly penwade
;
obtained
;
,
obtained thofe }^otfs (cfey being added to a Tra^fcrtpt of thii
•Work^ and both fairlywrkten with the *DoBors hand) from a ve-
ry intimate Friend (one extraordinary Learned, and a great Or-
nament of our Nation) I was. willing to make them fnlfUcI^
/alfo.
And now ( I confcfs) notwichftanding all this, I do not ex-.
pe(St, what I here fnblijhy (liould pleafe every Palate ; in re-
gard the F^f^ of i^(?;7j«^m/V7^; is very much fuitable to that of
Ul'toney, which fometimes palTeth currant, and at other times
is cryed down, or called in To this I conlider, how we are not
:
tborn with Fancies and ayiffetites, that telifli every thing alike
.and that 'tis as poflible to iliape a Coat for the Moon, as to Print
a Book that can pleafe every (jenim : fuch and fo various arc
the generality of our /«£-//«^fzWl Befides, I have often obfer-
ved,that Men, both ^//>and Learned^^^^z^z or affect notfome
^^iKSiOi Learnings and yet by z fecret willingnefs, or natural
force, are carried on in Admiration and Love of other Branches
th-reof And this I fuppofe partly growes from the negle6l of
;
E. ASH M O L E.
THE
The WAY to BLISSE.
B other
TheJVayto'Biifs. Lib. I.
Other Wights (or living Creatures) that he was made
tor fome notable end and purpofe above the reft and •,
World.
Then it is without the World, f^y you, and among
the bleifed Mindes [ or Spirits ] above and without
all : Neither yet have we found it for they be our
•,
ture.
Nor yet need we go to the lower and lefTer houfes
of Philofophy 5 where, as they be tainted and unfound
in other pieces of Learning, fo in matter of Manners,
they do not well to place our Bl i s s e in Hononr^ Plea-
fure^ Healthy or in fuch like outward things •, no, nor
to fet it in good Life alone, and Firtue,
Plato and Ariftotle, for their matchlefs underftanding
in Natural things, and Divine Lights in the good or-
der of Life and Manners, have been thefe many Ages
beft accepted with the beft, and followed in all things;
Therefore, in this high point of Manners which, we
B 2 have
4, ThWaytoMfs. Lib.F.
have in hand, let us fee what tbefe Men hold, and how
near i\\ty come to the right line of Truth^ whereof we
fpake before.
To begin with PUto^ the Spring of this Philofofhy^
his Bltfs^ as he difputes in PhiUbm^ as near as I could
gather, out of fo large and fcattered a fpeech, is no-
thing but Pleafure.
And yet this divine Man meaneth not, (left' you
fliould marvel ) with that Herd of Swine , (though
they were not the broachers of that foul Opinion, but
(d) cicer. tie
watered their Gardens, as (d) Tuliy faith, with other
Nat.DeorM -i-
jj^gj^j Springs) to fet open all the gates of theSenfes,
(f) Flat, in
again he faith in Theatetm^ (f) that ^ufiice and Holt-
ftefsy together with Wifdome^ makes m
like unto God.
to other < yea, (and that) in his own and all other mens
Underftanding < Then to encounter him with his wor-
thy Mafter, Plato If that were the beft Life, or the
•,
unto it.
(r) Hmdli.y*
i^inded towards them, as thofe grave Men were !o-
-u.i^t. \wzvds Heilen^ and often ufe their (diym^yir) Although
^riji.E-bicMb.
f^^y y^ j-f^^ij kindeonesy yet let them go.
Chap. II.
Cap.ll. ThefFaytomfs. 15
JNicstes of old, with fome ib) of late, that the Earth, (^) copemicusr
drawing Ships that pafs by loaden with Iron unto them ibi (4rf.'^''Et :
and yet we fee that this mighty Stone^ inptefenceo^ srrapio, Wo-
the Diamond^ the King of Stones, is put (g) out of
G^Jifedbende
office, and can do nothing. Magnet, nl. i.
cap.i.
(•?) Au^. de Civil. D »> Ub.iu cap. 4. P/i?j. yxf. H'rfl. Z/^. 57. crp 4.
Jul. Solin. Polyb. cnp.
6^. Uar.V.iling. in Scorp, Aurel. Aug. Chryf./ib.i. Albsrt. AUg. dcnb. Met, lib.i.c.i.
O. Ague, dc Nnt. fujji!. lib. cap.cf. card. Cufan. Epci. lib. 7.
narrow
i6 TheJfayio'Blifi. Lib.L
narrow Speech appointed, would fulFer any fuch out-
ridings. Let thefe few ferve to awake you, and call
your Wits together you fee thefe things, I fay, and
:
are never moved, but if you had never feen them, but
heard the (lories onely reported, what would you have
thought and faid ^
And becaufe no man fo well judgcth of himfelf, as
(^) ^'^^ ^^^!- of another : {k) Suppofe a plain and harmlefs People,
&'^^ fuch as thofe Indians were, had from the beginning
^rilclp^.^
ciceu de K.it. dwelt in a dark Cave under ground, (let it be the Centre^
Deor.iib.i.
jf you will) and at the laft one odde man more hardy
and wife than the reft, had, byftealth, crept out into
the light, and here by long travel and traffick with our
People, had feen and learned the Courfe and Nature
of things, which I have rehearfed unto you, and then
returning home, had fuddenly ftart up, and begun to
recount the Wonders which he had feen and learned 5
firft, that he found the Earth hanging round in the mid-
^'Vrnihf^^r!'\\.
othcr vntaTiS and instruments to be perceived, to hale
Scalii.Extt.^^t
and pull huge heaps of Water after her, as ihe pafled
up and down continually would they not ftiout, and
•,
iS TheW^aytoS/i/s. Lib. I.
thereof, fo thefc Men inhabit the edge & skirt o^Heavcft',
they dailySee and Work many wondrous things,which
you never faw nor made,becaure you never mounted fo-
high to come among them If any one chance to fly
:
Cuftom>
)
D 2 beft
zo 7belVayto'Blifs. Lib. I.
beft fort, by Wity Pains and Providence^ might come in-
to the appointed Busse, the reft ftand back for-
{n)Scv(yU. faken : (») Their Maze 2nd Plot is this firft they bide
•,
in Hermcr, Ub,
or at leaft lovers of the fame, their Riches ought to be
delap. Phyf.
fecret.cap 1. imployed in their own fervice, that is, to purchafe and
Theat. Chym.
win Wifdome and Vertue, and not fent out to wait upon,
vol. 4,
I know not what ftrangers , Honour and Pleafure 5
which as they be ftrangers, yea and dangerous ftrangers,
lying open (as all high things) to the blaft of Envy 5
fo, moft commonly, they will not be ruled, no more
than they which get them 5 and then rebelling againft
them, which are their Lords and Rulers, do overthrow
an happy Eftate.
Wherefore, what marvel is it though our Men did
thus, when they did no more than Wifdeme requires,
nor any more than all wife Men have ever taught
and followed ^ thinking , and callingit an heavenly
Mens ca';uf(]; is
hath laid down many found Renlons, why this Life [%'^iib.\o.c.ip.7.
beft, ai:id (o^hy wife men is^ and ought to be taken
Becaufe it is, faith he, the mod quiet Life, and fuUeft
ot true Delight, and with all things needful beft ftored,
for indeed wanteth nothing ; tor that as a Minde is
it
THE
u Lta'm cU^^^^^ ^^^"^dViwi
cm: nrf' ^^
;
Ch A p. I.
Of Long Life.
let us fee what is Long Life^ and how all Men may reach
unto it.
But why do we make fuch great hafte f we had need
be How and advifed in fo great a Matter, and to look,
before we venture upon fo long a Way, and of fo many
dayes Journey, that we be well provided and furnifhed
of all things •, wherein I hope, if I have not of my
own, or if after the thrifty manner, when I am well
ftored my felf, yet I borrow to prevent lending, al-
though I take upon truft fo much as fliall ferve this
turn, it fliall be no ftain to my Credit but rather deem-
•,
have others enjoy his Goodnefs, (that is, to be, and to ^'w.
(t) withdraw his hand herein) full of all kinde of ever- Ub.i'.c.i.
and work upon it felf, he forted out, and fundred away ^"^^* ^«'^<»'-
round about, a fine and lively piece (which they call }"c)'oceii.Luci,
Heaven) for the {c) Male, Mover and Workman 5 leaving ^^/'•i.
ftill the reft (as grofs and deadly j fit for the Female, to
fee get between them, and the great defire to be joyned ^ c>
again, and coupled together.
H£r«7 rfr-
Then, that there might be no number and confufion fenf. 'i.t.t'raa.
of Workmen, and doing Caufes, but all to flow from ''^ ?'«»'C
one Head, as he is One, he drew all force of Work- G:m-d%rn.
ing, and virtue of Begetting into one narrow xowxidp^^- adAnif, .-.
^•^'
Compafs, which we call the {e) Sun, from thence he j'"'"'-
^^/
(e) Oc(U. Luc. c.z. & Plat. PoU, & j.jl^it.ab initit. & Fernet, de abdit.rerum caiif.l.i. c.8.
fcnt
.
r^rr/r.u' ^^« ^^
^^^^^ ^^^"^' o^ ^P^^^ ^^ heavenly Fire-, in
K/rf. smii\c\ property and quality, for his CleanQe{s,Ligh£ and Fine-
nefs, ///?/-, and for his Moiftnefs withall T^»5?^^r4/f, as
(fkfr'^r^''''^"^
^^
lb A appears to him that bendeth his Minde upon \i*
(I) 7 *>7i If you doubt of his Moiftnefs , (tw) think nothing
7?^. Luc . made without Mingling, which is,by drawing in,(») and
«r/xj> <^»7.
^ breaking fmall together the whole fluff, when a dry
\1zL^Khod]\.l. ^^^^ draws out, and fcattereth the fine from the great,
c.xx.quitamm and thereby wafteth and narrowcth all things, making
^c>thii\g As for Example (/>) Dung hatcheth za^gge^
: -,
Z^uifs'JI'^'
K'ck.syji.phyf. and quickneth aoy thJBg apt to receive Life, whca
C.9.
(m) Sever. Dan. Id. mcd. c.9. {n) IJuifmenl tra£l. dit fal&de VEfpritdit Mond, /.i.c.y.
(o) yiriji.Hi^. An, i.H, t.».
warm
Cap.I. The Way to Mfs. 51
warm (/>) do it. What need we more (p) cirei. suk.
Afhes will never *r
then not one, nor yet many like things, left in both
thefc cafes they ihould ftand ftill the fame, and not
when they be ftirred by the Workman, rife, and ftrive,
and bruife and break one another fitly by contimaal
change, until they come at laft unto a confent, reft,
and ftay 5 And that upon fmall occafion the fame con-
fent might Jarre again, and come to change, thc^vifhcd
cmI and purpofe of the work. And therefore God
caft in at firft, the known (t) four fighting enemies ^ (0 octi. ut.
yet in the foft and open Stuff, there are but two of ^; \, ^ . .
them, (») Marth and Wattr in one mixture, fecn and l.l^'^}^'
/©xtant at the beginning, (w) before the painful Sod
^^^^ ^ y^u
draws and works out the reft, Fire out of Earth, and yivoi^t,
out of Water that breath-lili and windy thing called »om.ii.^.
' °
j^ (w) Ger.norn.
^5otnat,
t_
(x)
-r
It
t
there were much
.
Farth^
Inlhyf. Trifin.
little fTater^ r.c. rd.i.
and great .^^4f to mingle them, Jw
will (hew it i^M i*) ^^-^^' ^'*^>
and bear the fway It but fmall Heat upon the fame
:
Franc. s.Aibane ^^^> vvere made alike, without any feed fown, otherwife
Nut. Hip. cent, than by the great Seedfman of Heaven^ upon the com-
card.iv. vmet. in the fiozen Countries, for the great heat and fatnefs
Lib.j.c.n. ,.
Cdrdnn'.devarieTat.' l.'f.c'.jT.' ^
Di!hm.ir. hkflftn. defcnpt. Iflaitd.
of
Cap.I. The fFaj toMfj, ^
of the Waters and •, chiefly that upon the (limy and
hot Land of <^gypf) there are yet fome bloody and
Ci)card.s„ltf.
perfed Land-mghts (SiS Hares {d) ^ndCoates^dcc.) fo
' '*"
made and fafliioned.
But becaufe afterward the well- mingled and fat fine
Stuff, and the ftrong working Heat failed, (as it muft
needs in time) and yet the great £<?r^ would have the
continual flitting, change, and fucceflion hold-. The
fame two fit Caufes were duly kept, by continual fuc-
cefTion {e) within the Bodies of perfect Wights (the (e) p. bomus
y
Stuff in the She, and the Heat in Both) yen, and as far J^«^^^''/'»'«"'l-
as need required, in fceded Plants alfo.
Now we muft underftand as well, that this heavenlf
Souly (which when it is fo clothed with that windy Bo-
dy, is called Sfirit) not onely moveth, and worketh
with his Heat, but alfo (f) for Food wafteth the Stuff: (p^J'/J^l'^'fl
^' '^^ '^'
for nothing that is made, is able to bear up his ftate and ^
being, without his proper 2nd like food and fuftcnance. Mm. Paling.
Then, as ourgrofs Finhtte below (g) feedethupon \^^'^lll^luM
Weather and Wind, called ^/r, as upon his likeft meatj <» Mmocofm*
And as it, in his due place, is too thin andfcattered, ^''^•^•^•^•'^•^'
& '
quiefcit fimpii- duugeon, hft lliut up and chained, is not able to ftir and
''Tme^&vh-e
^''^^^ ^
'
^^^^ ^^ ^^^' ^^^^ ^^"'^ '^^''/ ^^ ^^"^^ ^"^ Softer,
fc7ns'vivmel with greater //^4^ upon it, there will arife a rooted and
^iz/w rff«?^. growing thing called a Plant better mingled., c^nd .^
'rJn.^ ^Xr. ^"^ further broken from the low and foul Be-
^"^^^^^^
Hcb. inp.iii. gtnntngs^ and the Life of Heaven fliall have more fcope,
Lku de
^^^ low:' Beginnings : whence it is, that when a Corfs is
fi'r
wa,Li.c'\i. confumed with 7="//-^, there are found fcarce (/) fix Oun-
avd. Subt. which finenefs of B^dy
(i;
^g3 q£ cWmMarth remaining 3
Cap.I. ^heWayto'Blifs. 35
gives occafion to the greateft freedom and quicknefs of
ih^Soul^ and ability to perform (as his duty of Life)
Moving and Perceiving ^ yea, and fliall I put in Under-
(landing alfo < for albeit God
hath inbreathed us with
another more fine and clean Mover called {m)Minde^ (m) st. Aib.ns.
J;
mighty heat of Heaven^ of an upright flature, znd pm.AnlLl 1!%,
carriage of himfelf, that this Divine Wit might be free '^7- &
from the clog of Fltjh ? when other Wights, from the l^^X 7''
contrary Caufe (which the gwCsznd earthly Leavings P^t.- M^ftadi
Cor Excrements ] of Hatr, Horn, Hoof^ and fuch like, de- ^'
-^^^''"^/'/f
^'*'^'''^'^'
clarej are quite otherwife difpofed, as we fee, towards
'
($; Fm. Licet, here below, fpringeth from the Mixture and (j) Tem-
rfcwr./.i.c.r.
per of the stuff and Beginningf : The Doings Making,
uo: ncb.Diai. ^"^ Working-Caufe that Makes, Mingles, Brocheth and
». dtAmore. fets all a running, to be a piece of the finer part of the
whole, parted, and packt up together in the Sun?
(0 ,«W- '*^-
(0 Of which finer part, fome remaining ftill in the
crsft. i^x»v* Raw and rude Stuff, fecretly hid and placed, other-
Sfndivog. de fomc morc freely, in the half- made Stuff, called Seed^
suip.in f.ii. and Seed yet more lively and in Man moft ac
in finer •,
(w) That no Wight can die y unlef all fall wherein he is Siv^rin. oaniu
-^
humane Reafon, to drawftill towards this one head and p^-^- J'^d. lib,
point of Truth tliough they feem to ft ray fome times, '^'J.j"""^^'
:
*^''^'
in our firft dayes Journey to Long Life^ unfolding firft ^,jj^^
What it is, and the Caufe thereof, and laftly the Com- ^^ *
one and the felf-fame thing in all places. But the Fat
Food of Life^ (which they call the firft Moifture^ and
the fineft piece of all the Seed lying hid and unfeen' in
the found parts of Wights , and yet by skill to be
fetched out, and fet before us) muft not onely be plen-
tiful and great in ftore, to match the feeding Soul^ but
alfo Faft and Fine, that by his Finenefs he may be both
friendly and like to Life^ and Aierj^ or rather t/£therial
(x) utmn^, (we muft (a:) wear thefe Words with handling) to keep
Now
40 TheJVayto'Blijs. Lib.1L
Now we know what Lofjg Life is, and the Caufe
thereof, let us fee whether all Men it or no ; and
reach
then which way they may reach it.
Ac the firft all Mankindt\ by the will 'and appoint-
ment of Kinde, was Sound and Lufly, and lived long 5
and all the fail and corruption now adayes (which falfly
feemeth a weak Condition of our Nature) crept in
through Diforder in our felves by little and little, and
fo by fowing ftill the like Children, it fpred it felf at
laft, deeply rooted over all, and made it, as it were, a
fes-, I will open and lay before them, both the forts,
^ '^'^'^^
and that we <^i<^ and might live long, but for our own '
have no Bloody and fmall Heat within them, as not need- ^" ^^'P^°-> ^^^^
ing any Cooler, have no /?r4/;. at all. Then, by z^-f^J:$r.
tain race and courfe of Kinde^ if that be true which all tm cahmfup-
Htlofophers and Lsaches hold, that a Man (h) hath the i"'"'^ ^"";
greateft 5r4/;/ ot znwtghts, it muft needs follow that rff««oWf>r.
he hath the greateft (lore of Heat alfo. But enter fur- ^- "^ ^'^'"^
]ther into them, and you (hall fee Man, by how much
Itcm.Tmf.'
.i..
rt'i ^ (i\)Ari(l.hih
^
,
hnmd. lib, . cap. i6. & .
--- , G mor
^z TheJVayto^lifs. Lib.IL
(\) ATI ft.
de more he goech beyond a Beaft in Wit^ (i) fo much to
TmLkemde ^^^'^ ^" ^^^^ abovc him : for Wit fpringeth out of the
rccoad. am Ln- cleamcfs of the Body, and this out of Hear^ as I will
fcr./.4.c.9.
prove in his place hereafter.
Arifi dfgenef. Now, if this firft point be done and granted, the
<inim.i.i.c.^, next is quickly made, even as one Match is made by
another: It (landing with the Juftice o( Nature that
makes nought in vain, to match this greedy JJeat with
(lore of good Meat , that is , of Fafl and Fine firft
Moifture , fuitably •, or elfe fure, faith HcracUtm , the
Officers of Juftice, the Furies, would foon apprehend
her.
To be fhort, both this , and that, and the third
iikewife, to wit, a clofe fine Body and all, is clear-
ed, be fo that a Man in making is moft far and
if it
this Decree, then once for all Conlider, and weigh but
this one Example : That albeit Man be more given
^)j:ard. Subt.
^^ j jQ Ly^^ ^.j^2j^ ^^y ^^^gj, j^^/^^/, and thereby drying
^i».»»f. 4
yp ^j^^ Body, plainly pareth oir more than any other,
•
Cap.I. 7heWayto'Blifs, 45
(both the Moifture that knits and holds the Framey and
that which i^^ds our Heat^ and this and all ) and fo •,
nuance.
But methinks 1 hear them whifper, that I forget my
felfj and the Bounds of my Long Life^ when I make
Men able to live as long, and longer than any Beafl : for
to the Hart and Camel^ which overtake the
let pafs
longeftlifeof omoldMeff'j fure the Ete^hant^ as we
have heard, goeth beyond the very bounds of Age
far
whom (w) Euripdes will have to (m)De mjiod.
efpecially the Ka,ven^
live Nine of our Ages. ^^^'^ 'jf'j^''^
Thefe may feem fore matters, but chiefly the laft ^7.^.4/.'' ^ *
uncurable, and yet they are indeed light and eafie, and P'«^ i'^- cur.
''^'"'*
the laft moft of all, I mean the Raven : for if there was ^"'''
never yet Man of found Judgement and Knowledge
in the wayes of Nature that allowed the Story ^ (and j^ri-
flotle by namecondemns it, when he giveth the Ele-
in) {n) ds iong.^_
fham all, and Man next to him)
the longeft Life of ^rev.vU. c.i.
FlatOj once a Foet^ and then a wife Phkfopher, (p) chafe inp.i$^.
them up and down in all places ^ and in one {ay^{j)Tky (q)pia.^oiz,J^.
be hefides themfelves rvhen they fit on their Mufes ftool^ ^- "^"^-p.
f-
and run like a Spring, paring out all that comes? Are LHd.v\ve^y&
they not in all wife Mens account the greateft Enemies ^^o'^- coqmtn.
44 7heJVayto^Bltfs. Lisif,
to Cod, good Manners, and ail right and true Know-
ledge, that ever the World or the Devil bred ^
But too far unawares, and it we muft of force
I flide
receive this aged Raven, yet perhaps there (hall be no
great hurt received and I cannot fee why wc may not
•,
^ii'iz^&c!°'
Matters, that thefews account was otherwife, even as
' &'
we, and almoft all other Nations make it. But if this
Vr. Hac\-a>eU^
ancient Story of our old holy Man be a thing in doubt,
^po..|.f.i.c^
or certainly untrue, and to be meant of Moneths, yet
Vet. Mexia de our Aged Raven may go with it, and the Father of that
fame
.
ion.
How then ^ I fay again, Methinks I feel {w) my(w/£^ffl^«e?
Minde ebbe and flow within me : and yet fuppofe it T«ur* Ava )^
true that the Beafl liveth fo many years. The Jjlanders x-<^'ra TAciya-
ix) of Zeil near Calecut ^ and the Inhabitants of the ^'"' soc.ap.
Hill {y) Atho,hoi\\ of them commonly and ufually reach Hf^!^^-"^'"'
our appointed time of one hundred and fifty Years, by Cx) c.ird. subt.
the-favour of thcy^/r onely, and ^t/Y where they dwelJ, ^'dl'-^H'
l^^f^.
taking befides, for ought I can know, the common race /.i. d.
and courfe ot the World: That we may lawfully - ^. ,
their children in Labour and Hardfbip, {e) mingled with (ej cird. Suk.
'•'^" '"^- '^^'^*
much Mirth and Sleep together (no fmall helps to Long
Life and Uealth^ as t£e Dieters ihemfelves confefs and
knowO But fol" this Meat and Diet (wherein thofe
Leaches offend and fail greatly) if they would confent
to take no Phjfick^ but in great danger caft in by mif-
fortune, (in which cafe the Beafis do not want their Re-
medies) never to drink Wine, the (hortner of Life 5
and to be ihort, not take any Meat and Drink that the
fire hath touched, (for it (f) funders the Fine from the (0 cird. subt.
Grofs, that is, the bcfl from the worfl, which we now ^*'" ''^^77.
choofe) but as Nature hath left them, and other Wights
life them. If thefe things, I fay, were duly kept and
performed, I am fully perfwaded within three or four
Generations and Off-fprings,it would come to pafs^that
we
4-8 IheJfayto'Blifs. Lib.II,
we ftiould fee this Peofle prove a
Nation of Giants^ not
onely pafling the age of Beajis, and the bounds of Long
X//<f afore- fee, but wholly recovering andreftoring all
^ '^'^'
ganthon^ {k) that lived a hundred and twenty years, and sirfv.Riwiekh
reigned eighty thereof-, nor yet that old Knight oi Hiftory of the
our Country, Sir Q) Allington^ yet twenty years JT^'''^''-^* ^•^•
older, but that itisfo ftrange in Nobility: that they (k) p/i«./.7.
came as near unto that kindly courfeof Life, as unto (^-^s. &
the goal and end of Lor,g Life. '^t^'bL
Then we fee at length, that it is not impofTible, as hifi. r<r. &
they fay,but an ordinary and eafie matter to ftrengthen ^.^^^•
the weak Nature of Mankinde^ to enlarge the ftraits hu "Bitlrimge^
of his Life^ and to lead him on ftill to the ancient Age^ ^j. c.^.inp.
^5^-
and Long Life appointed.
But 1 fee them ftart and fay, that like as {m) Cato'm r^) cUer. ai
Affairs of State,ufed to give Counfel (unwifely,though Attk.Li.cA.
never fo well) as if he had been in Platos Common-
Vi'ealth, and not in the Dregs of Romulus : fo I, in mat'
50 7hefFajtom/s. LiB.IIi
holden and led forth unto thofe bounds, and that end of
^^"^^ ^^^ Bxercife, each like his Kinde, and of his Na-
Torn. 'sfnV'
: J I. ture : As in
lone and fimple, or fubtile Bodies, (for it is
plain in the firft row, efpecially if they be Living, as
they term them, though all things indeed have Life and
Soul^zs we heard above j the Hot ones crave fiery Meat
and moving Exercife, Moift ones, as Wind and Watery
flowing Food and Exercife 5 Cold and Dry things like
and Earthly Suftenance, and Reft for Exercife, which is
"'alfo like, and preferves their State and Being.
But if all lone and fimple things are within the Com-
pafs of this Latv^ then Heaven may not be free nor
exempted 5,
Cap.I. JheWayto'Blifs. ji
exempted and they fpeak not altogether fondly that
5
fay, the Stan {0) feed upon the Sea^ and for that caufe, (o)Cdrd.cHfait:
by good advice of Nature^ the ocean fo rightly placed ^^^ ^^^w^^^-Pp.
'^'^'^^^^ '
bour, eafily to refine it, and turn it firft into Air^ and Dr. mci(wsii
then into «x£/^^r, a weaker like thing, and their proper
^f]'^{^^^^'
food. fc^'.i'. &
ManU.Afi.l.t.
& Ptol. in lib. eiroliMff. five qaadripart. ap. Cxi. Rbod. I. r. i j. & Sen. Nat. qiixji.L^,
C.16. & tlin. Nat. hiji,l.i.c.9. & Macroh. inSom. Scip»l.i,c,io. & S;it,l,l,C,il*
^ Qui. Mennes mr. vfUer. Li.cii. T,c. Vol.$. In p.j j8.
That this is fo, the hungry Souls (which are but Imps
flipt off the Heavenly Body) make it plain here below
unto us, when we fee them ftill unwilling to tarry, and
unable to live amongft us without Meat 5 as they be-
wray themfelves by the plain expencc and wafte of the
firft moiflure : Nay, take this one away , if you will
mark well, and all lieth on the Ground ^ Then there is
an old coyl and fighting here below, for Meat and Ex-
ercffe^ that is, for life and beings (which makes the caufe
for
Cap.!. TheJVayto'Blifs.
^
forExample^ and that near home ^ for the fiery frame
of Mans Body, {q) wlien the Satl^or: want of food fails ((\) Jouh.cuY.
with Air and this, foon after, thick and cold, that is,
•, x
fed alike, one may not be more proud, ftrong and able
than another, tofubdue the reft, and overthrow the
ftate. And thereof it is that To^j^on killeth, is, becaufe
it is extreme Cold and Dry, (for we may ftiut out all
/.f . f. J. in /).537. & cor. A^rip. deOcc. Phil. l.i. c.\9. in f.39. & Parch. Pdgrm.vol.i.
f-MPf- ^f the
Sultan of ombaya.
often proof for the one ^ I mean, that Art hath often,
by keeping off the fpoiling Enemy with a ftrong Coa-
trary, preferved and upheld a dead thing of flippery
flate, and foon decay, for ever as a {t) Corps by Balm, (t) vmceif. de
:
fible < to wit, by giving (lore of fit Food ftill to Life ^y.^'-
f^^'^^"- '^^*
and natural Heat, (for the other two helps of Meat and I'^s. '
weak and falling frame for ever C The Greeks hold, that S/g-/^^/!
our natural Heat and Life, becaufe it feeds upon zndg^teirard.inp.
waiheth the moft fine and unfeen Oyl (called firft Moi-
^*J^^^^^ ^
flure) daily, which no Food of Atr or Meat is fit and fine /.??.?. d"cx\
enough to repair, muff needs faint and fail withall, and ^ ^'''.^ro^w.
cannot be reflored Let us fee what may be faid to ''^jnun. Vcet
:
this, yea and bend all our force unto it for this is all. de ncond. aut
*,
and maintain this, his weak Like, that is. Air, cannot
be wanting and becaufe it, in his due place, is too thin
:
q,i4J.s.c.\9. anywhere-,
<^ fometimes and Toads in clofe Recks^ as {z) AgricoU 5
•,
A^^n. Dcpnof.
^ ^^^ ^^^^^ -^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^-^^^^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^^ AriftotU
{z)Lib.d'-Anim.fukerran.propcfifi:ni. (^) Hift, Aaim. l.^.c.i^, Vid. Card. Snbt.l.9.in
p.'^f'T. &
Ph I. judJib. dc C pnt. &
Sen >i:ii. qxxjl. L<i.c.6, & Ciccr.dc nut. Dcor. l.i.
&2inLdtAnm.pop.c.x'i, de Cynclii &
Pyraujlii.
reports.
Cap .1. The my to Mfs. 57
reports. But when that Heat on the other Cidc^ is great
and lively hke a Flame, as in, the hotter (If) Fijh^ and 00 sr. Aibi».
other-, no Wight can want trcih Air and Rnt Breathy ^^"'^
^'^'"*
both by his clearnefs to purge, and his weaker likenefs ' '
And thence it is, that in deep Mine- pits and Caves un-
der ground, where the Air is thick, corrupt and un-
kinde, for want of flowing, no Wight nor Light can draw
Breath and live, unlets by fly device the way be
found to move and nourifli the fame Atr and make it
kindly.
Then to draw near the Matter If the Stars do feed
•,
turn s but to nourifh Life and Heat it felf, ^^ther it felf ^^"^-^ ^^'^^'^h
^'
muft be the Food, even this So^y which is fo high, and *
Fhyftck : for the childe hath now received all that the
Workman can, and is put over for the reft, which is his
Nourifhment, unto his Mothers payment-, but what hath
ftie to give unto the food oiLife ? nought, as 1 (liewed,
Reafon, as the fame Ojl dropt in ftill into the Fire, aug-
ments both Food and Flame together yea, put cafe :
the fame natural Fire of ours, (hould not onely pair his
ftrength, for lack of Meat^ and flack his force, but abate
of bignefsalfo> as fome Phyficians hold, yet there were
no great hurt done ^ for this fecond fpark and flip of the
great and common Fire of Nature^ being a piece of the
finer part of the whole, (which is all one in all things j
and fellow to his Like in us, when it is made free and
loofe in this fine and t/£thereal Medicine y would reftore
the Heap and mend the Matter.
But how (hall we get the like fine Oyl and firfl: Mot-
jhre ? the Matter is driven fofar, that there is all the
hardnefs. I (hewed you the Pattern even 2s Nature
-,
got the fame before you, by the like Stujf and Seed^ and
by the like Heat and moving Workman : This by cer-
tain proof of all our Men is eafie to be found, even any
gentle, continual, equal, and moid, that is, any rotting
Hear. But the Seed feemcth hard and unable to be
matched, becaufe a kinde of ftrange and hid proportion
and temper of our Bodj^ (which no Man by conceit and
knowledge, much lefs by hand and workmanrtiip, can
reach and counterfeit, no not i^ he boiled all the Mix-
tures in all the Heats^ that all the Wits in the World
could devife) made it thus after his own fafhion.
Then, how if we take the fame frame and temper^
BOt
Cap.I. The IVay to "Blifs. 6i
not by us, but by Kinde proportioned, I mean, the fame
:Bloody Fleff) and Seedr if we will, (which the Man of
Germany choofethjand commendeth above all, and calls
it Mummia) would it not be very natural ^ for if the
(g) Leaches hold it good, if any part about us fail in (a) f«w. de
his duty, to corred and help him with the like part of a'^d.nmmcauf.
'"^*
fome Beafly palfing in that property as to mend faint- ',\'^''^'
•,
ing {h) Lufi^ with the rardoi a Luf^y Bea(l v the Womb (h; CroiL d:
that cannot hold, with the Womb oi ^a quick Conceive
^ifpef'''^'^ -^
'^'
confent, we might with our own parts finely drelTed ;^^j'"
ing, what is to be done < fhall we caft them off for un-
toward Chan^dtngs ^zs the fooliQi Women think < or elfc
^nlS'tu ^d f'l
^^^ ^^'^^^ ^"^ Aps^ as (i) Gden did the Germms ? No^
that were Inhumanity , Let us rather nouriOi them ftill
eafily and gently, hoping that they will one day prove
Men , and give it out unto them, That all the moft
Wife and Cunning Men in the World, I mean, all the
Hofts of Hermetifls^ have from Age to Age ever held
(but under Vails and Shadows fomewhat covertly) and
taught for certain, that fuch a firft fine 0)1^ whereof I
fpake, and which they call a Fifth Naturty Heaven^ or,
by a more fit name father^ is able alone to hold toge-
ther the brittle flatc of Man very long above the wont-
ed race, both in Life^ Health and Luftinefs. Nay, for
fear there be yet fome fufpicion left in their Authorities,
I will go further.
As many of the other fide of Greece ^ as had travel-
led in thefe Matters , and feen fomething, (though
not with Byes^ but in Minde^ I think) confefs the fame ;
as (befides them which perhaps I know not) Fernelitss
in part, and altogether Ficinm and Cardan^ (two as
wily and learned Men as any time hath of late brought
forth) do openly declare in their Writings. But if this
foft and eafie kinde of delivery will not yet fervc the
turn,
Cap.I. The Way to "Blifs. 6^
turn, and they muft feed their Eje as well as their Bellj,
as \,\{Q then let them tell me, by what
Pro'verb goes-,
diligence did (k) P/^?^ fo order Himfelf andfchoolhis rkjs.^.E^ig.
Body (to ufehis ownwordsj as he could be able to L-pf.ur.miot.
caufe Nature to end his dayes at his pleafure < And by $,16,17.
i
Departing upon the fame day Eighty one years after ^^^ ^5^.^^ .^
his Birth, to fulfill of purpofe Nine times Nine^ the vh.'pbt'/quam
mbft perfe(a Number ? Might he not have had fome /'•'^ ^e//. p;«-
'"^"^;
fuch Medicine ? Nay, is it not like he had, when he
was in (/) <!y£gyp ^mong the Friejis and Wife- men ^md ^^^
'* ^^^^f'^'^^*
brought home Learning from them < and when he
fpeaks fo much and often in difgrace of his own
Country (m^Phjftckj though ////'/'^fr^/f^ him felf then {mjvJatoin
^<^^^'^''"''^'
reigned < But it is for certain written in divers of our
Records^ that many of thofe wife z.£gjptians ^ the
Springs of this Water of Ltfcy have before and fince
Plato^ by the felf-fame Water, kept themfelves twice
as long as Flato^ if I might bring in their Witnefs,
or if this whole proof, (which I like full ill) were
not counted by the Art of proof: unskilful.
Then let this one Example told by {n)Cardan^d. Mm (r)) card, var.
allo^ved among them;, ferve for all; That one Galium ^"^^'^I?*
of late, Charles the Fifth his P^y/Ia^;?, by this Heaven Hieron.RuL.t:
of ours, befet with Stars^ (as fome do term it) that is, ^' "^'l^'^ ''"^'^
^•^•*''«^75^
increafed with the Spirits of Herbsy by an eafie feat
put into her, preferved himfelf in lufty fort, until a
hundred and twenty four Years. Neither think that
Mixture better than our fingle O;/, (though Lnlly^Ru-
fefcijje, Paraeelfm^ and fome others allow it foj but ra-
ther worfe in Reafon, for too much Heat in a weak and
loofe Body worfe, I mean for Leng Life^ by his over-
•,
Chap. I L
Of Health.
^^•'^'^°*
to have fo continued for the fpace of one hundred and
five years together, and fuch like Stories are to be found
enough, if we might flay to feek them Some are con-
:
tented for all but Air and Meat^ but thefe they fay have
often feeds of Difeafes lie hid in" them, unable to be
fore-feen or prevented and as we finde thofe Meats
:
that make the finefl (hew (as Wine and Sugar^ and fuch
enticing Baits) to have hid in them mofl hurtful drofs
and dregs in the bottom-, fothe Air^ when it feems
the befl and lightefl, yet is fometime infeded and poi-
foned with a venomous Breath, fent ond thrufl into it,
either from below, or from the Stars of Heaven 5 and
as the caufe is hid and unknown unto us, fo the hurt im-
poffible to b^ warded and prevented.
Jf I iifl to let my Speech run out at large, efpecially
K in
• 66 The Way to Mfs. Lib.IL
in other Mms
grounds I could finde that Dhifion
•,
little.
de gii incauti, (s) yet the things arc good and profperous, and by
ProJ^er.i.'.z.f. knowledge of the Stars, and thdv Race,
we may pre-
4^?«p.i73,
p^^.^ ^^^ felves and prevent all Now for the lower In-
:
we not ihun the luring Baits of our Diet, and take fuch
Meat asmoft temperate and near our Nature ? and
is
then drefs the fame, after the moft kindly and whol-
fome
Cap.II. Ihe Way to Wtfu 67
Tome manner, feafoning it well with Labour^ Mirth and
Steef .<*
And to be plain, ^\d I not ftiew befoi'e, what a
Jewel of Health it were, to ufe all raw and temperate
Meats ? Or, becaufe we be Wife and Virtuous, and
this Diet perhaps would change our Nature^ and bring
it down towards the ground, and a Beaftly kinde ^ we
K 2 fages
'
6Z rhelVaytomtfs. LibIL
fages to and fro, their greedinefs in pulling and holding^
and a hundred fuch like means, fubjed to great mif-
chanceSj have brought in as many mifchiefs •,Whereas
Nature^ the great expelier of her Unhkes and Bnemus^
if file had her free choice and liberty, would otherwife
with eafe, and without hurt, expel thofe Leavings tt^^Q-
cially fo fmall a number of the better fort, in fo clean a
X)/W. Nay, fee the malice of thofe Parts (thofe Parts
are A//7/, G4// and i?^w) if there be not fufficient flore
of other foul Meat at hand,like a poifoned and purging
Medicine J they ufe to draw good Juyces, and to make
food of them.
Wherefore Ariflotle^ the wily Spy of Nature, as if he
bad been made in. this matter, (hewing the need arid ufe
of the greater Entrails and Bowels of Wights^ faith very
(x) 7)e part, truly and wifely, (?) The Heart and Liver as the Spying of
amm. .3.C.
j^^^^ ^^^ -p^^j ^^ y^ needful for all Wights ^ adding to
.
f' 145!
*&' When by a flrange and hidden Virtue, they bereave the
Ahx.abAUxat. jBeafls thereof that graze upon them : Nay, that the
dter-gen.^.c.
j^^i^ ^5 HQt oHcly idle^ but hurtful withall^ Experience
even.
Cap.l I. Thi Way to %lifu 69
even our felves hath caught ic,in the Tr^rks light Foet-
in
7nen^ I fay, (I know not by what Example, except it
were the want ot the fame in the Camel^ making that
Bcafl able to travel an hundred miles a day, and fo with-
out drink fitteen dayes together) being in their Child-
hood prove thereby the mofl Light,
gelt of their Milty
Swift, Sound and Faffing Footmen in the World.
As for the Reins ^ the Urine drawers , as drinklefs
Wights have none at all To fome Men have but one of
•,
within us, cuid the fineft and firft Moiflure in the Body 5
Cap.II. TheTVayto'Blifs. yi
be a fine aiery and fiery Frame.
Then the Air it felf, efpecially when it is evermore
(as the wet Sun- beams declare) fo fprinkled with fome
fine forreign Fatnefs 5 (Omayfeem fufficient food to (^^l^i^-f^'^-'r.
But if all that would not ferve the turn, and we mufl
needs receive in Meat at the common Gate, yet we may
let it pafs no further than the Gate, and make the Sto- ^^^ ,.
p .
mach in the Mouth (which was the ufe oF fome holy moio'^^piwlnlL
men^ if) as he doth witnefs) and fo provide enough, '/'•''^•i- ^'"« ?•
both for i://^ and ^m';^^/^, and a great deal better for '^^^'(^^'5^,
our
j% IheWdyto'BUfs. Lib.U.
our Health than we do, becaufe the cleaner part alone
fhall be received \ and moreover, as he faith, for the
clean difpatch of that our ordinary trouble and annoy-
ance, which your reverence will not fuffer me to name
(although I might, among Phjftcians) but they know
my meaning.
But not need to feek (hifts and holes, if we
it lliall
will believe the German^ that we may eafily Faft all our
Life (though it be many Years together^ without all
kinde of Meat^ and fo cut off all doubts and dangers of
Difcafes thereof fpringing, for he faith in the firft Book
^I!mx"^^', ^^ ^^^ ^'^^ te) opinions y that. He knetv feme holy Men,
rorn.6. tn p. y. that hddfafied and lived witheut all Food^ for twenty years
^ ^ .
dc hu qui dlii Jtnc al. vixcrunty l.i. & Th? admirable a.-rd nfmorable H'iff. of our Time by
J: Goiilrt-t, Eig^apj d by Ed: Grimjio?:, in p. 3 J i, 353- & p. '^'^9. & deinccps. & Car.
BoviU.Eptjl. adNu. GiUnbiifia.
all maybe fpaied, why not our iif f^^ as well:' Let us
another Nature^ brings them in, that we may well be- ^ra.c.ii.
lieve the like in this matter of Meat we have in hand :
fee Galen^ and his loft and fine Company with him, and
ihofe with a long train of Caters and Cooks after them,
loaden with all kinde of dainty Brngs^ ftand forth and
(k}) Fr\ s Aih. cry, {.o) They have thefe many A^es^ devoured heap of
de ninm nt. Jiooks, and took cndie/s pains in
f arching out the Natures-
Science. I. in
of fwgle Medicines^ and making Mixtures of the fame,
and yet could hardly cure fome Agues ^ and other lefi Dif'
safes : But for the four Stagers^ to mt^ the Gouty Leprofie^
D) opfie, and F ailing- ftcknef^j the) could never heal them^
and have for Oracles fet them down incurable.
What were beft to be done in this matter <. What
ihall we fet weight of fo many great Mens
againft the
Authorities ? Marry, put them in Ballance, as we have
^wi/f'?' \!fub
^^"^ hitherto, and weigh them with Truth and Reafon.
'&'
fine. ' But where fhall we finde it, fay they < As it is every
Fernei. de abd,, Deep, fo
^^ere (as (/>) Democritfis faid j drowned in the
.1.
2j^ jjj jj^^j Mutter it is fcattered all about, and largely (pred
withall 'j
Cap.ll. ThelV'ayto'Bllfs. 75
withall ^ for there be three things, and every one full
oi under- branches belonging to this ^^/and way of
Htaling: The fir ft is knowledge of the Difea^es : ihe
Tecond is the Remedies againft them
and the third of :
the Mark they (hoot at, and gotten t\\Q great ^.n^gemrai
M E D c N E curing with eafe all Difeafes they think
I I J •,
propefincr».
^^^ ^^^^ j ^^ ^^^ flander them, for this is no Caufe,
I could eafily prove, if this place would admit fuch a
Volume. Wherefore, let us follow the true and right
t/£gyptians^ and leave Paracelfe in this ill Matter, or
light one, if it were good and fpend all our care and
•,
indeed the German (let us give him his due praife) hath
utterly flain the Grecian Phyfick, and herein done much
for Mankinde, by defcrying and difpatching our clofe
and fecret Enemy ^ which under colour of friendfhip, and
fighting againfl our Enemies, hath this long time be-
traid us, and done us much mifchief which thing one :
are dulled and weal^ned, and make one blockifli thing, 1 80.
which Nature cafteth out for an unlike and unkindly r
r .
dead thing, which they call a Leaving (or Excrement.) hUqui Tu'ji,^
But in cafe it be of more ftrength and power than our aliment, vixc-
Enemy, then it quite deft roys, devours and turns him ""'^''^'^*'^^*
into his own Nature 5-— And this Confumer is either like
the
^8 TheJfayto'Biifs. Lib.II.
the thing that hurts US In which fore, even as every
*,
v.>i'^.ded\Ycr.
Planner, As dry Sticks and 7owe^ and Vinegar quench
*
wilde Ftres^ or other fat Fircs^ before Water whofe fat-
'^
hi'i.u'
nefs teeds it, for the ftronger contrary quality quelling
and eating up the weaker doth any cold and dry
•, fo
(sv) Tern, de thing, 35 (rv) Bolc Armw^ Terra. Lemnia^ &c. cure a
ab.nr.cauf.i.i. and foare a great number of Cures done*,
rotten Pcifon^
c.\9.fnpA o.
^yj^jj-j^ ()Qgiy ^'Quife in word the Grxciaff Fhjfick taketh, -
8o rheJVaytom/s. Lib.IL
(which is a good time) could ever overtake him, no nor
yet come fo near,as to keep the fight of him whom they
had in chafe, and followed. Then,f-or thofe unfearchable
and iupernatural Caufes,(as they call them) if they flow
from unclean and wicked 5/?/>//j, (as fome think) they
are not the Stuf of the thing that hurts us, (though
they fometimes dwell in and poflfefs the Body) but windy
movers, workers and difturbcrsof the peace and good
order of our Bodies^ much like unto thofe fierce and
fudden changes of Weather, proceeding from the Stars
and working the like effed in Mens Bodies 5 fo that fitb
the neareft Caufe is Naturdly let the reft be what it will,
and the Cure be done by Natural Means ^ as we fee it
(y)Va.Y. iib.de fometimcs araongft us. And therefore (j) Paracelfe,
TUiof accuu. yj^Q pm-g j.)^g f^yij. [j^ ^YiQ p^itfj Qf fhe wicked Witch^ (a
above Nature) yet holds it curable with a
M'gicxlbu^!& thing as far
Mcdicme^ which they call a ^uintejjence Al-
quomodo in in- natural •,
An. cap. ^^. But if thofe Difeafes fpring (as fome or Learning
hold, and with Reafon) from neither of both thofe two
Roots
Cap.II. The fp'ay toMfs. 81
Rootsnamed, but from a foul and venomous Breathy
from a Poifoned temper of the Witches Bo-
fent forth
dy, through the Windows of hateful Ejes, for Thought
{b) ta(hioneth the Blood SLud Spirits almoft at his plea- C'') cor.A^rh:
*^'''
fure ^ then all the Caufes being ordinary, and agreeing ^\ J^^/^
(bear witn the tarrymg,it worth the handhng) taketh c.i. tnp.is^.
is
'•'^' '''^^'
ftedfaft view, not onely amazeth and benums a Weafel,
but alfo kills a young ChtUe : And by the fame means
the {d) Bcnummcr hurts the little Ftjh and takes his (d) rorpedo.
prey 5 but moft fiercely and mifchievoufly of all Crea- ^'^'/^•'^'i^'*""*'
tures in the World, the ivvo" Monpers in kinde, the "^"^'^d^
ie) Cockatrice and (/) Catoblcpas : Again, for that the p^'»-'-9- <^-4-.
Eye of a Menflruous Woman (as they (^) ail report) doth p;,//. ^!^„^^.
fpot the (7/4/ which it beholdeth: And moreover be- propricT.c.^9.
caufe(^j Pliny om of Tu/ly, forth of his Books which ^
.^^^^ ^
are loft belike, and many good ^«f^/?rj (/), telleth ofz/!'iX^^ ^
many Folk, that through a Poifoned Prerogative, which ^
a monftrous mark of a double-fighted Eye gave unto ^cmf'ti^c'i'l'.
them, were able to bewitch to death all thofe upon (0(0 Piinj'.
whom that Eye was angerly and furely fet and hftned ^'^•^" ^^^' :
But chiefly becaufe we fee them that ufe this wicked Ficin.dcvit,
Trade, to be by kinde ot a muddy and earth- like Tern- ^^- ^<""/'- '•^ '
^**^*
perature and Complexion, brought by Age, (as they c^
G. ViftdM. dt
Mund.op.v.9S$. & Bodm.dcsS order, l.i. c.6.inp.n6.
(g) plln.lj. c.t^. (h) Plin,
t.-j. c.i. (\) Au. Gell. noB. an. 1.9. c.4. & Rog. Bac. lib. demirtib. pot. an. &
not. cap.
^.T.C.yo/.<;. in p. ^97. & Gaud. Merula.m(t». l.i. c.z. & cor. Agrip. deOccPhiL
I. I.e. 19' p.40. & H. Salmuth, com. in Pancirol. novarep.Tir.i^ inp.6^<;,
.
M be
8i TheWaytomifs. Lib.II.
be moft commonly) and foul Diet, unto the
lone-life,
pitch of Melancholy^ that unto a cold and moift, dry
is,
fay for fiiame, thofe Helps and Remedies lie hid in NA"
ture^ too far for the Wit of Man to finde, unlefs we will
accufe our own floth and dulnefs for Nature hath
:
Cap.ll. IhelVaytdMfs. t^
hying >W
Upon it. AfickDr?^, to feek iA{6) Hcyh {o)Cnnnra^n.
'^'"''^^ '•^'
Und purge himfeifv and the Bear to do tbe ram6,(/')ah£i-
his long raft in Winter She leads the Pamkr {q) wheA
: Anft.hifl.anim.
C.6. &lib. de mirab. nufiidt. & B. Porta. Mag. naf.Li. c.\o. De hu omnibiii & mii'tb pin-
iibm vide Gcorg. Pijid. lib. dc Mand. Arnficio i^.9 \ j.
both to 5M
and Nature^ they doeafily fee and laugh
atj which know that in this hbour, they did notonefy
'
u^'/.'lfik!fe
help and remedy for the fame about him 5 for as the
Trees wh: chare Wings {ip) and Feet of Cantharidcsy the Fruit (xj of
"^^'^' (^)
^chrit ^Gumon
^^^^ ^^' ^^^" ^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^"^^ found out the thing
\Tp.9o, that hurts him, he may, by eafie skill, mingle and break
(w) Giierws J
|.j^e temper of the fame further,that is,make it ftronger,
as all, and may not ferve in ftead of all ^ and that is not ^,i,?. '^letaoh.
able to cure all Dtfeafes-- which thing weighed, and ^-4 ^^-s-
with difcourfe of Wit and Reafon fully reached, they
went topradife, and by the like (harpnefs of ^/>, they
found out as foon the kindly and ready way to drefs anid
make fit thofe three kindes of Medicines aforefaid,
which contain all the Art of Healing : All the reft are
but wafte Words, and grievous Toil, to tire a world of
Wits about a bootlefs Matter.
But efpecially they refted in that one the laft, whicb
is enough alone ^ and yec not without great fore-oift
D^cll'.i.i preferv e his State and Being, which is the parpofe of all
c^- things in the Wcrld, as it was faid above.
j'"'^'"'
'
!^J'j,
'
'•
Now, there is nothing fo like and near a perfed tem-
perature in the World, as the z^therad firfi Moifturc
traamio de Hty ot his Body, ;«//, even and temperate, fine and pier-
quinue^catAn chg^ dofe and lafiwg^ able as well to rule this little
P-*^+- World^ as the great Sun is able to govern the great
World. But what is he, fay they, that can fee the Di-
vine Art and Way whereby God made his great and
mighty Work ? Or if he faw it, learn and match it by
Imitation < None buthe whom God hath enlightned,
and unfealed his Eyes then (hall he eafily fpy the Waj
•,
which they do, and we may well call the ty£gypim (A) ride T,
id) Heaven And yet it is a way far beneath Hermes
'^
^^^ifnar.Lap.
other lelTer and bafer ufes 5 and that no Man fince the
firft Man hath ever yet been known to have found and
(f) fofephmmkes) kills the Man that handleth It, and (0 J^feph. ds
To come into the Bcdjj that coftly Poifon in {g) Nu- inp.-^io.
biay in one Grain weight kills a Man out of hand 5 yea, if^inp'iL..''
ftay but a quartet of an Hours working, and that one joMXeonMfi:
Grain divided will overcome ten Men* I hope you doubt 5'^^^- 'j; ''^
not but thele mighty Poijons^ it they were like m Na- Tom. 1. 1.6. c
me to the four great Difeafes^ and by little and little, in f^^"^- 7. »» r« t •
^^ '"
a proportion to be born by Nature to be fet upon them,
would be able eafily, by their great Jirength, to devout
and confume them, or elfe fure fuch heaps of Poifon
could not dwell fo long within us, but would put out
Life in a moment.
Now, what are thefe poifoned Vapours^ but moft
cold and dry Bodies^ wrought and broken by natural
mingling unto great finenejs and fMlene/ , by this
piercing fwiftly all about, and by thofe contrary quali-
ties overcoming ^ Then let us take the ftouteft Mhe-
rals, fuch as are called Middle Minerals by our Uen^ or
hard Juycesy by G. Agricola^ (to leave the Metals for a
better purpofe) be they Potfons^ as fome fay, or what
they be, I care not, and after we have by meer working
clenfed them, and ftripped off their clogs and hinde-
rances, broken and raifed them into a fine fubftance,
match them with their Likes^ the hurtful things in our
Bodies ^ they not let all the reft alone,and ftraight*
iliall
0) FamM.de ing the Loadflone (/) in the Oylof /r^;?, his proper food,
Tranfmiu. ny. they make him ten times ftrons^er, able to pull out a
rom6.inp.
^^-^^1 ^ Poft,and fuch like And by this kindly Pat- :
rb) Id. Afch'i- but for all other things (k) yea, and fome fo mighty,
:
dox.i. 7. rvm. as they will lift up an ox from the ground, and rent the
^' ^'^%
Arm of a Tra from the Body, as the />'i^/?^r himfelf
Vomcn in doth witnefs ^ who reports again, that he faw a Flcf}>
J.
i.j/in p.i%o. Mans Eye out or his Heaa^ and Lights w^ his T^jroat
^
, , and choked him.
Scribit AlbcY-
tHselfcmngtietcmquendcm quihomnum camcm noti feeus ac fcnum ad fe trahat. Joxch.
VaiiM. Comment, ad Jul. Sol'in poly. c. <jy. in p.3 14.
for then they would firft fall upon m, and let the Dif-
e^fes alone which heed is eafily taken in Minerals,
•,
rm.6.inp'!i7. ^^^ milde dew of Heaven^ as they call it, wrought firft
^
& by the Bec^ that cunning Beafl^ and then twice or thrice
^e^dml^'t^a
by the Difiillery will do the fame : that you may weigh
i.cAo'.inp.
'
with your felves,what not onely thefe,but other fiercer
ni- and (harper things, (as Salts ^ dec.) were like to do upon
Minerals : And by the way Confider, if fuch milde
things as Wifie and Bonej^ fo meanly prepared, are able
to fubdue in that fort the moft ff iff and tough things in
the World^ what they would, nay, what Minerals in their
higheft degree of dignity would do to the ftouteft Dif-
eafe that can grow in our Bodies,
But I wear the time in vain, to fpeak fo much about
fo fmall a matter ^ and yet-fuh all arc not of like Ca-
I will adde yet one familiar example
pacity, When a :
curable when Biff cerates ir) the Father oi them, was ^'^ Hipyocra.
--,
p6 7heWaytomfs. Lib.IL
eafei' of all pain , and their common Medicine Deaths
be quickly adminiftred. make the Patient
Firft they
fuffer thepuniQiment due to their own proud and floth-
ful Idlenefs, burthening his weak Stomachy with that
labour of loofing and fundering the ^/?^ from the^r^,
which they fliould before have taken in their Glailes
And then, by doing the fame often, they clean tire his
feeble Nature^ (as it would tire a Horfe) when as by drip-
ping off the foul and grofs Stuffs that dulls the work-
ing, and retaining the Firtue in a narrow flrong body,
they might do as much, and without hurt, at one time,
as they do now at Twenty: And laftly, becaufe their
Medicines applied are of fmaller power, and weaker
than the things that hurt us, they feed/nouri(h and
ftrengthen the Difeafe and Sicknefs,
But for all this, (to clofe up this Matter) if fome of
this Company and fide of Leaches have been and are
yet fometimes able to heal all Difeafes in our Bodj/y
(though with much ado,as you have heard)fave the four
Remedilefs, yea and thofe as well in their Spring, and
before their Ripenefs, as they themfelves report-, Is
there any proportion in Geometry (let Galen lay the
Meafures) why the German mighty Medicine^ which I
call the Ctire-the- great ^ paffing thefe iu power^, as much
the Kipenefs of a Difeafe is above the Spring, (hall
iis
to abide their Sentence, but (to the great hurt and lofs
o'i Mankinde) to go into willing Banifhment:— You
& onely no l^^an^ but a moft fierce and cruel Beaft ^ not fo
8. c.ii.
p/;». /.
£j ^Q jjg compared and matched any where, if you feek
jui.soiin.poiy all over, as with that mif-ihapen Monfter of India^
hi(i.c.6^. & (which Ariflotk defcribes and calls(n;)iW4»//V^^MJ which
t^tt'lT being by Kindcor Cuftom, (1 know not whether) very
greedy
.
Cap.II. IheWayto'Blifs. ^9
greedy upon Mans fltjh^ is with manifold and wonderful
helps iurnilhed and armed unto it firft with a Face like
•,
not the great grief and Envy I do bear, and always did,
to fee defert trodden down by fuch unworthinefs, and
ibme little hope bcfides, to hear of your amendment,
and fo of the return of the Truth and her honours out ot
banifliment , you (bould have found me, as I have been
long, and mean to be longer, quite dumb, and Tongue-
lefs, both in this and all other Matters.
Do not think I fpeak of Spight, or for hope of gain,
or for any fuch matter 5 There is no caufe,God knows,
I am no Phyftcia/j^ never was, nor ever mean to be 5
what I am , it m akes no nwtter. Let us go forward
O 2 Ch a p.
e
Chap. III.
Of Youth.
the third help and ftep to Blisse, that is, Touth^ was
not idle , nor out of Order. Then ^vhat is Touth ?
They know beft that have loft it It is the moit active,
•,
done.
But we had need be fure of this, that the flower of
//^^^ makes us Touj^g and flouriniing5and fure by proof
and experience, the beft afturance in the World Let •,
A D'''P[i' tcltitu'f
Youth and Age, (as 1 may term them) do clearly fol- a m.Atex.stro..
low the quicknefs or dulnefs of their in bred heat^ cau- s. in p. jj?.
fed by the two Seafons of Summer mA Winter 5 as ap- 7-;,^
c^pandu
pears in (y) /W///,where for the continual heat and moi- de'fen rmmy
fture and ^«wwfr of the Country^ no Plant feels Age, ^^'^^^'•^s-'^-m-
or fall of the Leaf, (that word is idle in thofe pjrts) fave ia'p'/iz!' u
Fen-greek, becaufe by a ftrange property belides the c>
Moreover, keep off that ftarving Cold, and cheriHi (2)^0^-/. uDi
the Life within, and you may htlp and amend Nature, P'pui (y)
and make any Plant flourirti and bear in Winter. How is
that < But an eafie matter, (.0 plant it in a Stove, and (a)T:o: Erafttd
cover the Root with Horfe-dung, and the reft with ^']^^'- i^^^f'-^v
Chafl^, and you fliall fee the proof, if not theproflt ,'»7'i8i/'^'"*'
worth your coft and travel. The fame is feen in Bc.rfls •,
he
Cap.I II. The Way to 'Bltfs. 103
he makes the MaU in all kindes, to be that which is
needs any gueffing, when the fame and Man for certain,
in plain Terms afTureth, That in that part of India^
where the Sun being right over their heads caffeth no
ihadow.
104- TheJfajto'Blifs. Lib.IL
lliidow, the Men are five Cubits and two handfuls high,
and live an hundred and thirty years, never waxing o/d^
and being when they Die, as in their middle ^ge^ and
chief Strength and Lujiinefs f what needed more words^
If.this Report be true, as we maynot eafily doubt of
fuch an Author^ then fure this matter is not impoflible,
as they would have it, but all Men^ if they lived in fuch
an ^/r, and took fo good race of Life as I defcribed,
.1
for as this haflneth the Fruit with tieat^ but kills the
-.J^,
(as
;
flor any otherwife than as his Force ferveth: (») So that (^) ,
Cok^iK
the Bartb muft needs be moft worn and loweft where k Hi^^'^lln^e^
lyeth within the compafle of his Walk, and fo rife by indCinfo.ni,
little and little on both fides without the Turnes^ until!
off 5 that is, under the Pins (which they call P^/^/) of
theWorld,
Then here, for the Coldnefte, the Earth is fit to thic-
ken the Ayre and breed Water, and for the bent and fal-
ling to fend it down to the wideft and loweft part
wher€ by the great ftrength o^Heat k is drawn upon
, heaps, and in great plenty and for this caafe, and the
•,
may Judge that this middle girdle where our Indians in-
habit, cannot be fo broyled and unfufFerable, (as fome
h^ve avowedj but in all reafon very milde and tempe-
rate5and think5that as the Sun meant to favour all parts
as much as may be , fo chiefly, and above all that ( as
Reafon, yea and Neceffity bound him) with which he
is beft acquainted. And as this is certain (by report of
all Authors) in all othei* things, yea and in Men^tQ\xQ\\ii\^
all other Gifts and Bleflings/o we may guelfe this one,
which we have in hand, was not skipt and left out info
large a Charter.
But for all this, and in good fadnelTe, (we have but ,
ple, like unto Mars^ (as we term itj and Valour it felf,
lofeth his Glory and BrightnelTe in Peace and Quiet-
nefle ^ So this Heat that rules our Bodjy though he be
no l^heWaytoMfs. Lib.IL
to) Plat, in ptM(fy{o) by tiiQ Example of the great World -^ very
ST^'f r, J well advifeth us ftill to move both j5^^/y andMi/d, aai
Precept, fttn. that together, it we mean to have them long to con-
fubfinm. tinue. And we find good by daily proof,
his counfell
they doe not for the moft part exercife their Bady^ to
lofe that quickly 5 whereas, quite contrary, the com-
mon fort,by reafon they move this much and that other
little, are a great while ifl-^ft;^ lufty,when tlieir Memorf
fe gone as quickly. rri m :
^f«V/ ^fiA/fiu
plainer, you fliall hear of one ftrange Example of a
forrowful young GentUmm of Itdly^ («) that being fain
rtv^lhjJI^
loiKhA v/fS- ifito.^he hands of FirMs, and laid wrapt in a Sail ready
vov. vind. ^o bs c^^ over- board, and within four and twenty hours
ciymp.^. fpace rekafed and fet at liberty, by great Grief and
Anim!fmmft.
^^^^' foi'cing his Heat to retire to the Heart his Caftle,
'
i/zp.2ri. made 'his Head white and aged in that fpace, and could
^ ^^ neyer get it turn again
° all his life , which was long
°
Treat, of an-
^f._„
°
cicnt and mo- «iLCi.
dcrnrimesilib.$,c\6. & Scali^.txcrc^iz. & Birt. ¥j'c\crm. Syft. Pbfpa l,^. c.17.
d^ Levin. Lmniia & Jo. Rudolph, Camirar. Syllfig^ mem. medic, cent. i. panic hIu 14,
^^tive mean in this place^ lell: our kbdar Jail into thetr
onely ufe to mark the fteps of Kinde^ and -her mofl T^"'- %^/'
ilrange and unwonted changes, batalfo-fet and venture t^ij^^^^^'^^^'
upon the like by ^^5
yea and to fafs further.> if xiny
-Reafon will carry them : and fo at length they come, I
know not how, nor whether by gacfs or knowledge, to
this Rule and certain <kound5 that it waspoilible for
toy -3/4;?, put out by forcible aad violent DeMi /fey »^-
tttral r,uttns to Rife and quicken again, andfo^ti* ^be i^e-
Q^ But
.
'inp.z:6.
^ to flay fome hot and bloody Wights ^ chat fpring not out
fcdMlcovcffee^^ nothing, but are bred by force of ^^^rf^and conjun-
jcM.de Santos (5tion of Male and Female^ and by the like kindly cor^
Hiji. o£tiiop.
i-yption, to raife them up again, and renew them, (as
pimfhPiigrim. (0 ^ ^'^^af bumt alive in a clofe Glafs, and fo rotted, and
VI Li. L9.C.1Z. then indofed in a (hell, to hatch it under a Me»y and re-
^jul'."^
^^^'
^0^^ f^^ ^^"^^ 5 ) ^^^ o^^^^ ^^^ ftr^nge proofs they
'
& ceafed not to make, until at laft they durft be bold to
that any Wight^ even a Man and all, might by the
c '^I'ublKe ^^^^K
fcJOT^S. 4.^/. fame courfe w^x young, and be born again ftill and live
7. c.i.fcii.6. for ever^rvi ik lojmi '
J«p.l3i7. •
flS- Of theSerptnt Cohvas, fethtmi torri.^. 1.6. c.Z. in p.ii4^. (c) T,v,-xcdf. lib. den^t,
nrHfn fcit de general. Ytr urn niit.Tom.6.inp.ioi.
ble 5 for I fee no Reafon but that the Story of the Sttake
may be full eafiiy true, becaufe it is bred by it felf, and
of more unfit Sn^ff in the fame manner^ And for the
. reft, all is one to Nature, if the Stuff and Place be meet
and currant, having chat her general Seedoi begetting,
(which I raid)was all one in all things^in her bofom evec
ready, and thereby making yet (as we heard beforej all
feeded Plants without feed, fomewhere 5 yea and per-
fe(5t Wights^ both Wacer and Land ones: And at firft,
when the 'uff ^nd Womb^ and her own Heat and all
"
ferved very fiily, having wrought -W4;? and all, fo.
But now why is ^eed given unto things < Becaufe
Nature tor want of the former helps (as they could not
laft torever) is not able, in all places, to work the raw
fluff of the beginnings fofar, to fuel- perfedion, unlefs
fhe finde both the flujf well dreft, and half made to
her hand and an hor Womb, like an artificial Fornace to
•,
help snd fet her foiwai'd: Well then, for this our mat-
ter, and manner of reftoring Man, let us call it to the
account of Reafon, and confider whi t is that ^eed ihit
makes Man, and the place where he is made What is :
vauceifjib.de ^^P^
^"^^^ kindly and throughly, but, Cure, more civilly
gcner. rV. nnu and religiouflv, in the due flace appointed for this is :
Ce) B! anm. I.
again, when we] U ano-
his Childe is (as {e) Arijlotle, faith
a. f.f.
j^g^ Himfelf, onely fevered and fet apart from himfelf.
But neither is this third kinde enough for us we muft •,
ing more than the one in the outfide, and lei's within
than the other for this Vv^ay doth not onely by a better
:
r4?."/T?p''* doubts no
whit of the Truth, but ventures at a Realon
4iz,^i^,&c. for it, (which becaufe it is both likely to be true, and
,, .^, J unfeemly to be
told, I will let it go) and voucheth the
Admirable and
7nmo,:,b. Hip. fame
,.
change
,.» ,
•'
af cuiTimsby niore ftrangely than the firft, and whereof no Man ever
J-OcHhrt^np.
^y^^ Q^ ^^^y ylgl^ ^ Reafon. (J:) The fame Man a-
p;;o<. BM^oth.gain faith, that the cruel Beaft Hyaena every year chan-
....- ...
varict. I. 3. r.
j
43. inp.yj.'
....^
&
,J .. . . .: , ;. i
(k) P//'. /. 8. f.30. S- Ovid. AUta'TJ. l.i^. O^pian: dcV^nat. l.^. &t/£Uan.l.l, &
c.z^. yiditime/iecoaiia. Fort, Ueer. cierccmdh'.aiiUq.laccrn^ l,i, r.^j.
mar-
;^
Even foj when our Natural Heat^ the Life of this little '"^''"- ^-^ •'^•5-
Worlds is faint and gone, the Body (brinks up, and is de-
faced V But bring again Heat into the parts, andiikewife
Money into the Bankrupts Coffers, and they (hall be
both lufty 3 and flouri(h again as much as ever they
did.
But haw may this //^4/ be brought again ^ To make
few
:
way and paiTage for Life, if (he lift to ftir and run her
ivonted race, (which fome think enougli of this matter)
but alfo fcsttcreth all about liei* due and defired Meat
"and firft >://7/y?«rf to draw her forward.
By which means our Life having gotten bot?hfeer fttll
'ftretrgth and livelinefs, and returned like t!hte Stm m
Summer into all our quarters, begins to work afrefli as
fhe did at firft
•, (for being the fame upon the fame, llie
muft needs dothe fame) knitting and bmding the weak
-and loofe ^opts and Simmy watering and concoding
all by good digeftion,and then the idleparts,like leaves,
•'-
\ i
'
,.
y.i j-i-
R ^^c^Urt Ap.
: I — ;
'
ii^ f—ri !
<
[.., '.> — i i —
'
. Ch a p. IV*
Of Kl CHE S.
T7"\7E are now come
to that point at laft, which
•^ V the Coldefi World looked for firft, the way to
Riches •, becaufe it is indeed the laft and loweft part,
QofQmg Servants J arid fo to be u fed j and yet very need-
ful, and not to be fpared in this bleffed Houjholdi, for
although we have all the helps of Long Lifc^ Health and
Xouth that may be, yet if we want the fervice of Riches^
Poverty will befiege us, and keep us under, and cut off
and hinder many goodly Deeds and Works of wi[dome>
and Virtue —
But what are Riches f for the World and
Philafophy agree not in this account No nor this with- :
(o)^ y^f T»»' ^^ ^^ ^^^^' ^^^ World (o) reckons ftore of Gold and 5/7-
'!r?.iT9v ^o\- i^^r to be -S/V^f^V Ariftotle^ tuou^h of needful things 5
fiXKii Ti^Uffi the Stoicks, enough of £arth and Jir : To begin here
iT/Tg""* ^^y ^^^^ °^ -^^^^^ ^"^ Lujline^) for our firft and perfed
Life appointed, befides the maims and hurts of P^ver-
tj^ which I right now touched.
jfriftotle is fomewhat ftrait alfo, for fo the Bea/is
are rich as well 5 If he had put in enough of things
needful
:
Cap.lll. TheWaytoMfs, 12
j
needfal for good Life, wherefore we were made, he
had faid much better, yet not all, for fo (hould*all the
bodily means and helps aforefaid be counted Riches, a
great deal too confufedly. Now
much lefs can we rate
the Golden- wealth right and true Riches^ {p) becaufe Z Cp) /infl.Poi.
Manm^ydk with hungerfor allthis 5 as he that fold '^* '"•?•
line.
fa'^'fl'cret
^^^v€. But fot that iV4/«rf meant tomakc moft per-
c!url'.voL^. it€t things in that kinde, which require long time tofi-
f-^n- niih them , (he chofe a moft fure and certain place,
Cu) card, subt,
fu) even the deep and hard Hock it felf not to the end •,
tj. mp.i9.o.
^Yie Earth might hide them as hurtful things, and lean
as (tp) Seneca faith very
Cw; Debenefic. upon them with all her weight,
i.7- c.iG.
ftvereljy or rather finely (for we know how he hunts af-
ter finenefs) like an Orator^ to whom it is granted to
lie a little in a Story, that he may bring it in the more
(x; conceff'Hm prettily, as the (x) Orafor himfelf confelTeth.
Jtock now iayes hold upon the j?«jfr, and by little and '-i*-
Cap.IV. IhelVaytoMfs. . nj
and hisScholar Theofhraft, and the late renowned A-
gricola^ holding hard the contrary, and the fanae fome-
time ftifly maintaining, I will as much as in me lyeth,
and my narrow bounds will fuflfer, endeavour to lay the
Reafons all down in order, which moved them to think
thus, and ftaied them in the fame opinion That Wtfe- ;
forae other of the learned fide, leaving out the middle '-^^ mcAr^cnK.
degrees,hold the very fame opinion-,which I.alfo thinke ^'z^'^^f^^'"'
true,if they?«j/f^ and heatesizs they are in hot Countries J zmboci^ i tc-
be good
° and taultleffe. i'f^'^ ^^'k-
filvcr.
llt.Qnynm A^oifdcdifcors.dd Mmhial.n>i,ylih. didiofcorit.^.e^. Qi)Cavd.fub:.! >:'w.;».iio;''
,
But
u8. JheJfayto'Blifs. Lib.II.
But the difputers will account this kind of Argu-
('P ^f ^^' nient unskilful!, and foone caft it off : Then (0 remove
c'6.&9.r'x.' ^^s cold that at laft came upon theii/^A^/Zand hardened
V01.1.& Ro- it, and itappeares to the eye nothing elfe but fuch an
c^r!& m'if, Sun and Man make a Man, and the reft have two work-
/,ii.f.4. ingand moving caufes, the Heat o[Heaven,znd the
breath of the Male-feed-, fo in this work o^ Metall,' there
is not onely the great and {0) generall begetting breath
, X- .r oi Heaven, but alfo the private and particular feed of
les. sacphti. the Earth their father.
c.^9-inp-^79' That there lacks a little £4A'/^toftay ^ck-ftlver^
ArifiotU*
Cap.lV. TheWaytoWils. 129
y^r//?tf^/^himrelf (beweth by a pretty like example He •,
faith the Bares blood flameth ftill when it is cold, ^?^ Dipnrt. a-
(f)
'"'"''"^** '^'^'
whereas others fland , becaufe it wants thole earthly
Streams which others have, to make it grow together, Hiff.an.L^. c,
leaves his running, before £4r^/> ruling binds and ftayes caUn. qugit
him. animimorei
caufe of his running. The firft is plain-, But there is as d;o«. zachm-
much £4r/^ in power, as^4/^rin ^ck-filver^ (albeit
rTrJ/ i
it feemsall^4/fr, for alittle^rfrr/^isasftrong asmuch?;i'/^.8oz.*
S this
ijo The Way to "Blifs. . Lib.II.
tbls is a certain fign thereof, that when we find by rea-
fon all other things, Earth or Water ruleth over
if cither
lifdcp.tdAm- fouiid in the deep and found Earthy where no Water run-
monKegmi:.\. ncth < Nay which way doe very Toads get into certain
& s.A.bxn.de
^Q^ks in Germany ) and Miljtone- Rocks in France^ even fo
Sit (S'^^' clofe that they cannot be fpyed, before they be (qi in
L:Hu{weU A- grinding, and break themfelves, as (x) George Amcola
the ftrongeft Battery that may be. CoU hinds and ga-
thers in theftuffe of both like and unlike, groffe and fine
together, without any clenfing or fundering But Me-
•,
gether, (f) the force oi Beat (as we fee the proof in all Cy)Arifl.Metc-
o^oi.i.^.c.7..
ihings) fliould cut the bands, and unmask the work a-
gain, which is not. To this, what Colour fprings from
Cold but his own wateriQi and earthy colour < That (z) (^) Nuifemcnt:
- if a thing be dyed with otherColours,we know flraight- (j^tif.^f^.ctj.
way where it had them. Befides,(4)C(?/df leaves no fmeli inp.i^.
behind it but Heat is the caufe of all fraells. Then, to
•,
^^rZ^feii'rb '
omit the fiery fmell of fome flones^ and fwect favour c.^. &
of others, and the variety of fent in juices ^0^ hapned T.Nonofitraa,
^^'^y^-'^-^-^'^f-
it that A/Zi/er found at J\/4r)i-^^^^ fmelt like Fiolets, as
AgricoU {{/) reporteth ^ That all Men feel the unplea- [hjoeNatSof-
fant fcent of Copper ^ and other bafe metals ? But mark ^'
^''^'fflT'
the pra(aice of the plain Men when they devife to judge c^ aid fubu.
ofai»^/>f below, {c) they take their aime at no better i-i>tp.iS6.
mark, then if by ^nting two fiones of the hill together, (^^^^^'^^'^^- P-
they feel a fmell o^Brimflone , becaufe they take this
'
the£f4T//;7^ofthe J^/er^rf// in their concodion. (d}card.fub. i.
To be fhort, doe but caft with your felves, (d) why 'i'^np.i^o. &
there be no Metals but in Rocks and Mountains^ unlefTe v'eu^^not^,
thefe unload them, and flioot them down into the Plain; mctd.x. &
and then, wherefore chiefly foul Metals in Cold, and
f^^l'^'f/*'
''<^^^"*
fine Siher and Gold^ befides Precious Stones in Hoc met.
Countries, and you (hall finde the caufe of this to be sendiv.Novum
the (e) difference of that purging and refining Heat^ and
^A^mUhr^
the clofeneffe of the PUce to keep In that heavenly heat^ hp.iii.
and barrenneffe withall, and emptinefleof Plants lo^p^^^^^f'^^-
draw it forth and fpend it. iV/f^''^'''
S 2 Some
y
(f)7o. p/r. fay to fuch, that this Heat is moft (f) mild and gentle
f!lut f"/ ^^^^y where, and there efpecially but bid them bring
•,
{h)Kic'b. Ai- Wherefore we may fafely fet down,(^) and build up-
fiictis cortuior
q^ ^W Mweralls are made with Heat^ and get
jf^ ^j^^j.
411. ward fhape and laft cover (as it were) of the work is put
*^^' ^^'
ffefs^ Clofenejs, and Colour ^that is, by thofe Hang-byes^
cAledAccidentSjfymn^ out from the degrees of Boyling Rii. LuLTimr.
'•'^•
and Concodion It is now time to go to build upon this
:
^:(^^'^^^'-
"^^'^
Matter, and to fhew how thefe lower and unclean /i/^-
tals may be mended, and changed into Silver and Gold^
Aichaii ft-
Q\Q2Xi and handfome, if we mean to cleanfe them fur-
^xum,TdvitA, ^hcr from the inward Filth and Drofrmefs,we muft take
fcorh., faigm. the fame courfe, but with greater force and skill, even
but ftedfaft for twocaufes, both for that there is neither vo!.l.p.^^s•
(r) entrance left for the Fire to pierce and divide the J^^
fiuffcj (and by divifion all things are fpoiledjnor yet any fca.pln.\.i.%.
grofs or greafy /wj^t-, the food of Fire remaining--*— c.-^.inp. c^i6.
^ick-ftlver^ as I faid, was clean at firft, and it it meet -pj^'l^y-^^,"^'
with a fine Bnmfiofte, to ftay and faften it, f which is of- pig. 701.
ten in hot Countreys) it ftraitway, ( I mean without a- ?*
^^
ny middle fteps) proveth Silvery and then GcU But f,ai.u^'Jt!u
:
clean and per fed, that is, until fuch time as that foul ..,,
n S \ 1 •• (U Solum au-
, •
have to fliorten the time fit for our ufe, two devices 5
one to breed Clofenefs, and the other to bring on good
Colour: The firft is a binding SkiU^iht next is a dy-
ing Cunning ^ for the fiift, let Nature ftill be our guide
and leader -, As fhe, in all her eafie changes, ufeth to
confume and raze out the weaker with the ftronger,
like fo we, if we mean to devour and confume all the
grofs and greafie ftuffe of the Metal, that when all is
r^ •
r l /
pbii max. T. c. (land any more about it s Do we not lee now ( z,) So^e,
i \
p.nuaif. in 2nd filthy cUth^ takes and eats up the filth as his Food
AUnH^LPbii. and Like meat, and leaves the Unlike Cloth clean and
fpotlcfs ^ Nay to come neerer, how doth Antimony
\'"*^e'tln'fr^'
lldlvh.ionix that fierce and foul Mineral, where he is fet on work
c 8. Tom. 6, in
yv[th Gold to clcanfc him, fearch and run all over the
^'••''- •
Metal,
:
make an open Metal clpfe and ftedfaft, yet allows this>"^/' ',^'^»'«:
**
matter;eafie And fith we are here, and he is fo re dy,' ^^^^^ ^'
•,
caufe the extreme and deadly feuds do fave the middle Joannes mh-
Mctd"
taliui
lus "fisfut. in H eron. Ofmi Lufiun. hiji. de reb. ab Em/in. r^ge gejlis. Verim Imc de
•culo cauiiUle de Hyacintho. (g) Card.fubt.lib.t.inf^.ji.
T 2 thing
14.0 TheJfayto'Blifs. Lib.IL
thing by their fighting. Is it then a Wonder if Iron
UhAe Ttn-
Therefore, to make up all •, ^uracelfe (i ) reporteth
(])
dnraFhf^co^ fot Certain, that in Carinthia they commonly turn C^/*-
rumc.^.Tum.6.
p^y j^j-q Silver ^ and this into Goldm Hungary Though :
Mp'i?
he names not the means whereby they madethofe ex-
.
•
•
'
"
• F \
I
Chap. V.
,ci J- ill .'>'.'.l;iV
"qLdm'%!u.- build any thing, our fclves to lay all the foundation ^ lee
Uniitfibi CO.-
yg ^^i^g [^g matter in hand again, that thofc two are the
fS/iM^r" very caufes and makers of this health of Mind, that is,
-uoiunt ixpiic. of Wi[dom and Virtue , and then teach the way to ap-
^"^''•''^^'•'^•3-
ply the remedies.
To begin with Wifdom, (for that Knowledge had ever
need to go before Doings) and therein to let pais all the
^ ..^ ^^,^ idle fubtilties about the difference between
i^m) Safieme
,
iTca^i^, 7!' and Prudence^ (if I may fo term it for once and ufe ic
Cn; D. Ani'iit. j^^ ^ 35 one of them to be feen in general (n) and
'''
where it is beft advifedjholdeth and teacheth,that, (cj)As
[^j^ ^f^
the foul andltfe of all things is all one of it felf^ and all (q/ ?iato in
'^*''*^''^-
from the dt'vers tempers ofBodtes ; fothe
the odds [prints ,^/>^
Btvtne ana immortal Mtnae proper unto Man, and Author (q; vintar. de
ef Wif^om and Virtue^ to be and one opm. ThU, J
W^fe, and alike Wife^
A^dthe fame in all points in all Men {as God from
pl]i^'^]^i-^^]_
whom it came^ is One and Wife) and to differ tvhen it is cm Aahiep.
dtvided and fent into fmdry places^ according totheNa- ^^^ ^ico/hnf,
Ures of the fame puces. {/) Even as many Rtvers palling tut. ad hom.
pCff.contcmp.^.
pavt.z.cap.\\y& II. (q) C^l. Khod.lib.i.c.-^j. Lipf. ce/it. 1 Ep. io. Joffiia di r:fu
. ^
ftitH.apudBurto/:. feu Dm. jun, de Melanch. part. i. ScCt.y.mmb. x. fubfttl. y. inp.l9.
in margin, (q) 6. Merida mmor.Ub. i.e. r. (r) P. Reins de ccel. agncult. lib. 4,.
^r) Hcm.inCUvi. (r) Aiifi. de fenf. dif fenfti.cap.j^. ^r> Sen. nat. tiHajl. L^. cap. zo,
(i) Dion. Arcopag.xxt. Hicr-arch. c. t 3.
through
144. ThelVayto'Blifs. Lib.II.
through many Grounds of fundry qualities do lightly
every one take a fundry Taint, Smack, and Nature
from the Ground^ though at firft they all fprang and
flowed from one Head and Fountain Or, more fitly, .•
(0 vh'o U ior as the Eye can {t) behold all things but her felf and
A'cUnadcu the Sfifij aod thofe it cannot fee, but in another thing fit
d;-i!tPhceL
to reprefent the figure-, (/O even fo the 3//r^, cannot
MJi^Mnndi. undeidand her felf, nor yet other Divine Matters, fo
well as in a like and comparifon ) As the Sun, I fay, :
qihioffrt m:.- intirs manner, (lie is fometimes idle, and never feeth
tm:im.m\i..
^|| j-^^jpas yea, nou^ht of all without the leave and
lun. Lie, ic help ot the Body.
-.itj.i.c.tr.
J h[s courfe therefore flie now taketh •, Sith fhe may
;not,ber felf ftep forth and range abroad, to fee things,
file craves and takes the help of the Soul miizs ki'-
U the
.1^6 TheJVayto'Biifs. Lib.II.
i%) Hippcc.ii the //f4r/jtbe fsi) middle of t\\tBody^ that by caft-
<^>' *??c*^ ing her Beames all about, and equally to all parts, (he
c^\^ndjn.^^%'^'^ give X/gkind i:/^ equally to all, as equidi-
an.ici.iib.\<. ftantfrom all And in the midft of the Hearty as the
:
^•'5-
onely mimoveable , and thereby to move others the
onely fit part of the Mody ^ for then fure the Mmde,
(i; r.nt.jui'. being the inward Kernel, as rlato faith, {a) of the o-
cemiit.hoiip-
thet twOj the 5<?tf/ and the Spirit^ muft needs reft and
be rooted there alfo.
Seeing then the Mindc feeth and knoweth nothing
but by means of the5^«/ and his inward Wits and Spmts^
nor thefe, but by the help of the outward ones, called
the fve wits or Idejjengers nor neither of both,without
•,
Vbj v^de?. the parts where they lodge and reft then, {h) even as
:
hiin^r. bp. the parts of the Body ftand affeded and difpofed, fo
}eu
'
i:
^ou).
Cap.V. The iVay toMfs. 14,7
foul, and uneven, they can take nothing, nor yet repre*
fent them if they had them. Secondly, thefe Sfirits
had need be quick and lively, that is, hot, to be able by
their fvvift running to and fro , to reprefent and (hew
them all apace, and eafily, for the i^/w^^ doth all by
matching and laying things together.
That Heat is the caufe of ^ckmfs and ftirring of
the Spirits, appears in Sickmfs^ Age^ and found Sleefj e-
fpecially in Age and S/cknefs^ more cleerly than needs
any light of teaching. But how in Sleep ? when the
heat of the Spirits ferving Wit^ is either loaden with
the clogging Fumes and Breaths of the Stomachy or
fpent either with Labour, or with Sweat, and (till be-
holding ( for Reft abates Heat, as I ever faid) or elfe
lent tor a time unto his fellow- fervants, the Spirits of
Life for digeftion fake, then the Spirits of the Brain be
ftill and quiet, and outward and inward Senfes^ Wit^ and
{'c; sif^ri pag. (c) above) between them, foul or ftill of it felf 5 ( for
^^'
spirits are nor, as fome Leaches think, made of, but fed
with the breaths of our J\i^rfO but very fine, cleer and
lively, as all -W^;? grant of *y£ther. How then ^ Muft
it not needs follow, that the caufe of fail and want
all
in this cafe fpringeth from the Body^ and from that pare
efpecially where the Wits inhabit ^ It the naked Reafon,
brought in above, will not ferve to content this matter,
let usleade him forth clad with proof of Eye- fight and
Experiences,the plaineft, grcateft, mofl filling and fa-
tisfying Reafon in the World.
If Man alone doth pafTe all other Wights in mV, for
bis Aiery and Fiery temper above them, as we heard
before •,
"
and Fire are cleer and quick, when Earth and Water are
foul and flow, fo are the Wights vj{\qvq they bear the
fway, affeded both in ^/> and Bodj^ as appears indif-
ference between the Hart and the Toad^ and all other
wholfom and noifom Wights, To go further, (d) why (A) Wppoc i
rr,.if'ii&
are the Men fo grofs and rude, under the two Ptns of
f t"^
nefs,
,
,, . , ,
more (Iransrely before him (M Alexander, whofe Body^
Symnnf.Li. by his great Heal: and Dreug^ht^ was not onely moft
quxft. 6. iweet inhislife-tivne,butatfoable, lying dead above
^J^i cu-.'.
^hc Ground , in a hot Soil and Seafon, without any
Lvofub. fin. balming, alone to keep it felf frefh and fweet, without
all tainr and corruption many dayes together. But I
^'
J^i- J
ca\ Ri-o:". An^. wifer than Men , and the Sprits wifer then they
''uem Infml'e ^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ "^^^ ^^^'^ °^ all, for the odds and
^^^
socratc cffiYit degrees in the Heat ^ Droughth^ and CUarnefs of the
Anian.Epi^. HuCtl I)
^^^;^j, \ •} ]L'tl
1 4.C.I1. .
• '
,
(\) ^iios qui vacare m nfe piitat is ip^e mentis expersefi. Clc. dc NaWcar. iib.'z.
which fprung out from outward, light, and hang- by t-^'*^ "•''^^
^^^^
caufes, may
be cured when this being fo rooted m the
•,
unt.(oniy.i r^'-
JNaturc and iiifl mixture of the Seed^ (a mixture as ill as P-^n t.c. -o/. 3.
Now
,51 IheJVayto'Bltfs. Lib.1I.
Now then we fee the and errours of Kinde by
falles
all doubt and queftion, if that our moft fine, clear, and
'Manners And Cendittons^ as Plati> termeth it, all is one : l^/? ^e^/fs-
Thecaufe of Firtueis likewife fet out in the beginning, t/^cwjcv ^g«ro-
towit, A temperate Body ^hutlkkthQ Proof unto this '^*'\' ^/1 '"^
place, which is all the hardnePsin this cure of Lewdnefs.- T^* t^^\
for, it it be onCe known that Temperatentfs is the caufe "^^i^'^l^ ^^"^
'Oif^iriue^ \tc ("hall e^^fil/jby that temperate Medicine^
V^^Ti^Q-
To notable in the fpeech going before, purchafe and ^ei^^g. Anji.
procure the fame: And why that is fo, it hath been fo E-.hic.u.ce,
^'ofren worn before, that we may quite caft it off, and
leave it^being enough,in this place,ro prove that a tem-
"|>ei:at^ ftate of Body is the caufe and way to Firtfte^
•'
X2 But -
1S6 ThelVajtoMfs. Lib.II.
But firft letus fte~\yhethcr all Manners /low from the
^^^^ornot, and theuitrom what State and Condition
of the BoAj, Among them that have fearched the
Jieafon and Nature of things, the caufe of Manners is
laid upon, the Difpofition, either or Stars^ or of Mens
Bodies^ pr of their l^/feithus or thus framed, either
by the bent oi Nature ^,ot hf\x(t o^ iJi^/lome. Let us
fcan the matter, and yet briefly. They cannot flow
from the Will of the Mind of Man^ left all Men ibould
perforce be good againft our daily proof and experience^
becaufe the Mir^de pi it felfeas.coming from goodnefSjis
good, and alike go.od in all Me/^, as I faid before. And
fure no Cuftome'can alter and turn fo Divine and Right
a WiM to lewdnefs, but by great force of Neceflity,
which force cannot be fent and laid upon it by the Stars^
tor whether the Sujrs be Wights or no, they are all ( as
(n) vioth. En- 1 (hewed above) of one good (») drain and quality. --
nead.iMb.9. Qrif they Were not 5 or whatfoever they be either in
^
«-.i3. 2ii.
gg. j[-y^£^2nce or quality, they cannot touch the Mind im-
co-ffid. Agrip. mediately, but muft needs be let in by the loops of
u^l^zoiC^' ^^^ ^^^y* ^"^ ^^ change and difpofe the Body firft and
Mi7«,T^\r:) by means of this affect the Mind; for i( the Mind it
^ ' felf,afiner thing then the.y^4r/, cannot pierce out of
the Body, as we heard before, then much lefs ftiall they
make way to get in by themfelves, without the helps to
our 3//W allotted 5 and as thefe are all bodily, (I mean
the firft helps j fo the neereft caufe of Manners muft
needs flow from the Body And if the inward Spirits
:
Girdles of the Earthy they keep a mean, and hit the lib.^.cis.
midft, as they fay, both in Body and Manners, for that
^J^.i^'^^l'J^^
acquaintance with him, and his fellow- wanderers. quicunq^ prui^
nis nafcitur, in'--
domltus bcUii ) & mmis amMY. Ao. Siiveji, Girdd. Cambrens Tj>pog. Hiber, parti-
To
)y
G.Merui.Mcm. both the fuiidry tempers of the Bodies.^ when the Sod
in them, and AfW in us, is one in all.-- Then as the
lib.ucnp.i.
in P'ocemio.
f^\^[Q^ of their Manners change to and fro, upon the
Flejh tht^y feed upon.—- A man may range tar in this varier. 1.9.
and wife Philofophers give fo ftrait charge of care and i«^ 105.
heed the choice of Nurfes
in Is it not like, n.iy, in
• '"^^ ^^^; ^
their opinion, certain, that the ChilJ fucks in with their fy^y-
'J'^'^-
and all at once, when they flit out of tKs Lrfe^ to that
Heavenly place from whence they came : Neither arc
all
1^0 ^he JVayto "Blifs. LiB.IIi
^ , > .
, Wtts alike framed by {b) ufe and cuftome , but
all theu*
our Hearts will pant, and fail with fear 5 when a fair,
Lufi and his part will arife, whether we will or no, and
all incontinency fprings from that Root :
) then fure
the Bodj muft lay this force upon us. But how is this .*
In I /'i i -tm
Cap.I. 7he Way to m/s. itfj
phiio^ib.
firft:tomake his prayer-, how much more may we in
<^< dip^A?- fiich a world of doubts and dangers ^ And to defire of
9U< KQjfx. God that we may prove our queftion, not onely with
inprincip.
fufficient evidence, but with fuch difcretion alfo, that
tho(QMtn which can ufe it, and are worthy of it, may
fee the truth, and the reft may be blinded. '
jtujj had the iike^andnot diver i rntngltn^f. And for that all
thtngti if they were wrought to the tap and higheft offerfe-
Bii)n(as-they m:ty be) fiorved alike vMth all the Ftrtnei of
Heaven and Earthy Soul, Bodj^ Life, and ^HAlittef, Bat
thefe wayes are Ion?, cumber fome, and coftly, as well
as the reft, and I feek, you know, the moft ready,
near and €a{ie> which is Gold^ far above all other things
in the World. The Reafon is, becaufe N^tare (r) hath ^^j croHhts B.f-
-^
poured her felf wholly upon him,, and enfeoffed [)v:n'oi fiUcchymcayin:
far more, and greater gifts, both of (^) Soitl^ndBo^
'{d)^Lib Cccret
dj, then all the reft having given him not onely great m.ix. phiiofoph.
:
ftore of the heat of Heaven, but al fo the moft fine, tem-r g'^* ^^ ^^'^p^-
perate and lafting Body-, whereby, but elpecially by ^^J|J^!^8;^^
Reafon of his excceeding tough and lafting Body
wherein he wonderfully pafTeth all things , wee
have him halfe ready dreft to our hands,, and
brought.
:
"** '^'^'
pcrte(5tion, are both the moft tough and lafting^ and ^^^3.
fuWt^ of Heai/fhly Venm whereas 6n the other fide,
'j
rac.L%.c.i9. ipends 35 taft. And tor this that Heavenly Ftrtuc^ when
(vyKck rm. the ftuff hath long lain open under the hands of the Sjfi^
ii^-m-'-i-c.
^^^^ o^ jicaven it muft needs receive great ftore oF
-^
l\) Adfi. d- them, and hold them furely with his ftrength and
genemMnimd.
fQughnefs what Rea[on can ihew this more plainly.
•,
'^
& except you will call me to examples^ then bend your
'
m.i.s.c.io. £ars awhile, and mark the (/) E'epbam^ two years in
phii.p%jfit, making in his Mothers Womb, and a long time in
apudTHYcb. growing to his bed eftate and luftinefs, to reach the
higheft and be ft pitch in mortality ffor Man is immor-
f"^^SV*'^
^
tal) noi; onely by his jlrength and long life, which yoa
' '
(mj 3fo»wg«c heard before , but thro jgh {m) a kind Q\Wit and good
E[fiycs,i.i.c.
condiuons alfo drawing near to the Nature of Man-.
kind,
Confider again of Mice^ thofe little Vermint, how
foon they be bred, as, fometimes the £4r//^ creates
p^)Arifi.bi(i. them, fometimes the Mother without the Maicy (,n) by
«'»'^';6-f?7-
licking /4/r, and otherwiles (for a Wonder in Nature)
to;^ un.i.xo.
^^^y -^^ conceive and are big with Toung in their Mo-
(p)Hifi.art.kt.thershe\\y'^ Confider, I fay, how foon again they be
nlm/.l'.c!i6. teporteth-, who tells of:, {q) one-day Fly^ bred ina leaf
in the Fore- noon, at Midday fledge, and ever dying^t
night, with the fetting of the 5«». T ^
Cr} Vh.ix, €. i,n: Again,
;
Pliny (r) writeth of a child^ that within three
y^ars fpace, grew three Cubits, and was npw grown
* r'^'roiiT
admrZm^ to Mam eftate (which they call fHkrU[{f»).i>ni hafo
'
'
^•^5- .-.-.'•
T.' makes
Cap.l. 7hefVayto'Blifs. 169
wakes ppaftey as they fay, and within three years nfter
'..%.
his Limhs (lirunk up again, and he died .•Nay,he (/) faith, (0 i^^-f-^-
that the whole kind oiWomen^ amongft the Calinrians^
conceives at ^"^t years of Age, and lives but eight.
To cut off living Wight i^ and to come to Plants ^zne noc
Trcej^ the longer lived the better in ufe, for that long
growth and ripening ^ And among Treer^ doth not the
Oak^ (/; after his long growth to perfedion, (land, to (,) t^ickcm.
our great profit, even for ever almoftcf It is ftrange r#p'^i?ci.5-
that I fay, and yet fofephus («) writes of one, that '(.l^'cyjan,
ftoodfiom Abrahams time, to the razing oi Jerufdem^ fubt.Li.in.p.
two thoufand years at leaft, and God knows how long 533-
after that time it lafted. —
To be (hort, the bed Tree
of all that the £4^/^ brings forih, the Ctcffs of 7W/4,
(w) in one Ma»f age, fcarce begins to bear any fruit, [l^r^^l^'^l^)
and lafteth after that almoft pad all Ages wherefore f;»p 31^ •
^
^^^'^'f'^^^-
all, becaufeitisthcendof all, and fo far, in that point, /iXu
Z How
170 TheJVaytoMfs, Lib.III.
How is this < All tht beams oi Heaven fet forth from
a round and wide compafs, and like Lims in a Circle^
after they have travelled a greac wide way one from
(>,) Join de another, do meet at laft together jump (y) in the Navel
Meung com- of the Earth 5 yea, and with great force and ftrength
teTB% M<<r above all other sprit $ in other places, not onely by rea-
'vidt T.c. -vol. {on of the length of their journey (for all natural things,
^^^ ^'^^ further they go the more they mend their
^^'^!f 'm /T
Tmfnopn-V' pace) but chiefly becaufe the meeting in fucha ftrait.
Medico chym. .yith fuch abundance, they violently thruft, and throw
'/'
lit
^^^ beams falling upon the Stone {a) He^hxptes^ox the
qidiongovc- Steeple- faftiioned hurning-Clafs ^ thereby (liews fuch
nit impcte, fw ftrange and unwonted force, {h) to burn dry things,
for the found and clofe bodies that take the prin-
^'^n'dlclTi' ^^P^
m p. II.
*
ting
*
when as Plants and Wights dwelling in one place,
•,
^
. and out-fide of the ground aloft, where thefe Beams
^rtsLdtfoL and Breaths of Heaven are more fcarce. Hack and weak,
&c.c.i,p.i^. muft needs have, not onely Icfs ftore faintly put
upon them , but alfo thofe which they have , for
their loofe and foft ftuffe, quickly loft and foregone
again.
But
Cap.I. ThelVayto'Blifu 171
But if the edge of fome Mens Wits be too blunt and
dull to cut fo deeply into the Earthy to find this Mat'
ttr^ let them caft their eyes, and behold the dayly ex-
perience, how thefe Heavenly Sftrits in Minerals^ for all
they be fhut up and bound fo faft in the prifon of that
hard and fturdy Stuffe^ yet are able to (hew their force
as much , and work as mightily as the free Breaths
of other things enlarged in their foft and gentle Bodies,
It would not be amifs I think, to bring in a few and
fet before us, becaufe for the (loth of the Times paft,
and fpight of the Later Leaches^ thefe things have lain
for the moft part buried as they be, and hid from the
light and common knowledge.
Then, to pafs by the (d) Pearly that helpeth [woon- Wcmeiut.-
^'^'^•
irj^s, and withftands the plague oiPojfons 5 the (0 Sma-
"'['^J'
r4^^;/^ and f/)5'''«^^W^^ which keeps off the P/4^»^ like- &
Michel.
wife, and heals the wounds of f'enomous ftin^s^ and ma- fof'P^-
ny more iuch rare and worthy Fertues^vjmch they them- 17J.
felves grant, and give to precious Sto/fcs in their Wri- ^/»/,
tings, nay in their Broths, Pilis, and {g) Ele6fuaries let ]'o![Z'. ad
•,
Z 2 called
^
f 7g a y'c
^^^^^^ W
Salviati^ for the fpace of three miles com-
de nat. forum P^fs wrought and hewcn out of the ground very dain-
qua (ffliiunt tily, deferveth to be named, .nd delivered to the Me-
cjpaccio Anti- ground, and draw from thence all their Nature, jQuality^
cbitadi Po^-
porce^ and Virtue except a few of Copper efs Water, as
:
Hemn. Meiicin. defenf'Cup.ii. and Cmbden faith as much of the Bithi Jn Sbr»'f[<-ipy.tc,
ihofe
. ,
(i)And.BJclus Gold {a) the end and perfe<5lion of them all, which hath.
de icm.nnt. pafTed in that travel through the midft of them all
c. Ty.
{h) fo receiving and holding the Firtuts oi them all
(hjytde Alto.
Mofcn.Patric. with advantage ? What fay the Leaches to this matter i
Viiiet.de
ihisadDcun.l
lYiinf.
I.
They are loth to fay any thing,albeit their deeds fpeak
f.44.i« p. i\6i. enough, when they lay raw Gold to the out- fide ( c ) of
& \^t Mead, to\\tA\\\s Ache i, right (^)againft the Heart.^
Rofdr. abbrev.
T.c.l^ul.i. in
to comfort his fadnefs and treml^ling and when in fuch
•,
f. 699.
fort they apply it to fuch purpofes Again, why do
:
(c) Cii-dan.
they boil it in their (^d) Cullifes ? mix it with their
va.net at. Li.
C 44. (^) fills and hUBuaries f bid the Lexers fwallow it^&c.
(d; Jof.ph. Do they not feem to fmell his great and matchlefs
^uercitan.
H:imt. Med,
power againft Dffeafes , and marvellous comfort and
difenf.'*!^ wholfomnefs unto our Nature^ but that like rude and
u?^skilfulC<>^i^/, they know not how to drefs it^ But if
Seviiit. Dan.
id.Mcd.'ihU. they knew the Skill, they (hould fee it rife in Power and
cap.x'). Ftrtite, according to his degrees in Freedom •,and when
it came to the top, which I call the Sonne oi Gold^ ta
DiVi. Myliu!
optr. medico- prove Almighty, I mean within our compafs 5 for con-
ckym.pmfat. iider, Goldis now good and friendly above all unto us,
adB.iftlic.Pm-
lo'oph pirt.^,
forhis exceeding ft ore of comfortable tieatoi Heaven^
di Aid 9, (bining through the miftof a m oft fine and temperate
Bodj 5 Then what would it be, if thofe properties of
Bodj^
Cap.L ThemytoMfs, 175
Bodf^ were by great mingling and breaking Ci^iWStuffe\
refined and raifed in their kiad, an hundred degrees at
leaftc' (which our Art protelTeth^) and thofe lively
and piercing heaps of comfortable Spirits^ freed and
fet at liberty, and all thefe feated upon a moft mighty
Bodyj fubdumg all things 1 Is there any thing in the
World to be compared unto the marvellous Work which^
he would make in our Bodj < Could any of thefe ve-
ry violent and mortal Poifom, which I brought in above,
fo eafily and roundly deftroy, as this would help and
faveus^ But to come to the Point:' If that our Old,
Fine, Clofe and Ethereal 0/7, which they call a Fifth
N^iturejV/zs able alone, for the Reafons fet down in
their places, to breed and beget all thofe bleiTed bodily
gifts and properties, that is, Lajlifjgmfje^ Heahh, Touth^
and the two fprings of Wifdom and Virtue ^ Clearne^c
and Tsmferatencffe ^ How much more (liall this Sonne
oiGold^ the Medicine and Stone oi Hermes, and his-
off'fpring be fufficient and furnifhed for it 1
For firft, when his Soul and Heat of Heaven is much
more great and mighty, and his Body a more fine and
faft Oily that is, a more like and lafting Food of Life,.
Fifth
1 •j6 The Way to Mfs. Lib.III.
Fifth Ndttirtoilffine^QX fuch like, which I brought in
CH A P . II.
ANd
of Long-
we have
thus lightly run ovf r the former parr
Life ^ Healthy Teufh^ Clenrmffe, and T"*;r
which make up all good gifts of Brdfx^tt
ferateneQe^ \
mmcaTt.c.9' irs, in faying they turn the four foul Metals y Lead^Tinne^
T.c. r«/.i. in iron^ and Coffer into silver and G^ld^ mean plainly ac-
^ '''"'' cording to common fpeech, but ftill Riddle and double
J;^^;
the matter, undcrftanding the four Comfkxions of our
Bodj^
Cap.ir. TheWaytomfs, igj
Body, (which he bufieth himfelf to match with
thofe four Metals) into good form and temper chang-
ed And thefe to be the Silver and Gold which they
:
& '
ihewed before by their feeding and divers other ArgUf
FortunMcct.
^^^^^^
fpayfi-Xirhm
've-'O i>' fpo it. v'vettt. on. /. 3. c. 1 4, i f, &c. d^ Phti/i. Enneadi 6. 1. 7. c. I r. in p.705.
(c) Ariji. dea.ti^il.l.i.c.i. & Forpl^^'dc^VU. Li"C.i6.i/t p.iS9'& Algnvd.l. i, tmU.^.
c A.diamm^vegctJ'.
tii.L^M p. 199 cannot but li-ve ^ and we fee plainly the Difeafes^ Age,
^obh-Lvlvens ^nd Death o^^vQcloMS- ^tmes-, but moft clearly in the
efi. Torn. Licet. ^vQCiOMS Loa^-ft one (though he befoul iniight) which •
muTl'c^z'^*
per and like i^«><?^, whtn j^ickfilver or Garltke quite
deftroyeshkn, and pats out all his Life> Strength^ and ^
.
.
rience of that, when they fee them by thofe due and munlToTut
conftantfits, fo dangeroully voide their Leavings. Cam.i.Tom.i.
AgriccU (aith, (h) thu Salt- Peter, after that by drain- ^"^^
^
ing it hath loft its t afte and virtue, if it be laid open in nifcorf. dd,
the J^<?^t^^r, will within five or fix years fpace, srow ;^f''/"-^^''
^•
But admit thefe by the flight and canvafs of a crafty f.^jiI, 'dlltp.
Wit, may be fhifted off, yet they fliall never rid the next ^^>^'' r. f^<='^^t.
'"* ^*
that follows of Z^rf^, after he hath been taken out of ^'^^^"/"^
his proper Womb, where he was bred, and nouriibed,and & '
. falbioned into his form for our ufe requifite, yet, if it be ^^^P^"'J.-
J'"'- '*'
^^
laid in a moift place under ground, it will wax and grow 7.?.c!''i
J*
both in weight and bignefs, {k) by many good Authors, (^) ^^m ur-
yea, and by (k) Galen his own witnefs, which although f,ufi^o'^'
it be light otherwife,yet is of weight in this matter, be- CODc'va.',scv.
caufe maketh fo much againft his own caufe Nay, ^!i^/^''^\ "^"
it •,
mark what (/) C7. Agricola reports, that the fame hath cUuT mmk
been found true on the top of houfes, and ihewes where ^^'' onuph. ••'/'•
ifl) /. ^.de mr.foffUiHm. (mj Lib. defcntrat. rerum n.itural'nrn.Tom.eJn pr-o^.l^idc AUx. c.b
^^Irf.'euauf.
commoQ proof be received But they (n) will tay,thac
:
fubm.i.i. '
nothing doth fo that wmttthfeedi^ as many IVights and
'^l^%T'm-
^^^^^^ <^oe 5 and all Minerals •, No
man faith fo, thac
/f^5ptm!'Ji- ^"o^'^thvvhatis/^fi-, (<?) 5^f^is no grofTe thing that
fibiie.sendivog. may be feen with Eyes, but a fine and hot Heavenly
fattfmlu. ^e^P 2"^ g"^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^o^y ^^^^^^ ^^^^•' This was
c.^ proved to be not onely a branch and part dipt from the
(P) vcrdhes. :^hole Body^ but the whole it felf fometimes, as by
.^o. .33.
^^^^^ -^ j.y^g £^^j. beginnings^ and in Minerals^znd in iced-
Jul. soiin.po- lefTe Plants^ and Wights 5 and by Skill in all. There-
iyht(i. up.it,
£q^q ^i^gfals and slihive their ^^f^, and their whole
«. j^irro ^# ^- ^^^^ is their Seed,
*' by Nature^ they are wholly fowne and dky
Then, as
^'k1 f*^'^
wmc.roi^/;> and (orelfe«V^r-w^(>;/ (q) things would prove mor-
prifat.f'diniio. i^W) rife again the fame encreafed according to the
nother quite out, and turn him into his own (eU-fame
Ndiure or when by mixture both their Forces are bro-
•,
8io. '
^
ftrong Medicine^ {t) called Leaven^ of the beft wrought
& Flouer, which is Dough
and fuch another of /^/7/:,well
•,
^:Jil'J"rc,
mingled in the Cahes hag, named («) Rennet and how •,
all thofe that are profcfifed in the u4rt o£ changing^ yec Irlph'.Hibc' r.
I leave them,I fay jfor things too ftrange and far of my X)//h«cZ. I.e. II
purpofe-, here are many Waters and Earthy ^^^^^^ AUxTb aux.
am credibly informed by (^y) G, AgrtcoU and/ 4. A 9.
(^) others as good ^«/^^rj , are indued withthepro- , ,^ ,.
mirab. mundi. (\) De mtur.eorum qu^e eff, d tcrr.l.i. {%) (^ard.fubt. l.z.(^G. Merut.
mem. /. 5 f 4. (/ Matthiol. difcors.velj. 5 Je Viofcor. in procm.(^ Leaud.Albeni defcrit.
, .
de tutii Itilia. inf. ^9. (s' Cumbden faith at much of a IVelL in Leicejijhire neer Lutter-
worth , and Another near l^naresboroUgh in Tori^ihire. (^ Sen, mt. quxjU l.j.c. lo. (^
Foutan, de Meteor, c. 44. (a; De vArietat. /. z. c. 7. ^
Muifement Toem,Philofoph.
Bb The
iBd TheWayto'Blifs. Lib.III.
ThcTVdters and Earths which aftonifh things in that
order, are evermore, infcded and mixed with fome ve-
(c)PeMdt. ry ftrong stony jujce ^
{c) as Agrtcola^ faith 5 and
(O cmhien N^y, Kc) Plir^j faith that Stony- flix in Arcadia , goeth .
The Irifl}
without doubr, Mineral^ and as I
water is,
done.
She hath likcwife, and as well as Nature , (m) by a (m) Parauif.
Lead, and this into Twne eafily ; thele things Agrtcola ^e^WpHi IT
reporteth5and tells the way ofthe firfl.byConcodion iP) caid.de
only, but not of the fecond, which ^a'' acelfus CuppVi- ^"^^^''^^li
eih5(o) by purging him our way of binding with ber tut Mag. dc
fal Armoniak, I could fet down a way to turn Iron in [^* '"'^^^''''•
195?^'^"'^*
10 fuchff) Hcel'yk% would cwi Irert as faft as this will cut
B b 2 wood^
iS8 TheWaytoM/s. Lib.III.
mod, and bear out fmall fliot,bm that they are both
all
(q) tArifl, but one kinde, (q) one better purged then the othcr,as
*ltcfcoroi,
injjeed fo aje all the Mettals , though not fo nearly al-
'
iied.
Even fo I efteem of the filvcry and golden Cepprefs,
which Nature fomctimcs yields under ground , and
^r/ counterfeits by our binding and colouring Rules
above-fet, as Agricola and teacheth
tells Neither
:
UetitT.pbic low Nature in that ///''/ of Carpat ,' for they drain a
c'6.tom.6.p.
ftrong Lie from the Bra^n-(to/}e^thu is, they make
^''^*
(^. Copprefs- water {\von^\y ^ndkitxcly ^ and by ftceping
Cipiv. de their Irort in it , make very good Copper, Nay,
further Faracelf. (0 faith again, that in Cafien they
fiktiT^'ln
turn Lend alfo into Copper , and though he namech
'
p. 76.
1
(cj ve travf.
^Qj j^e means in that place , yet ocher where he
lom'Zinp!' doth , and teacheth how by Cofppris fundry wayes
2345135. iharpned, to turn both Lead and Iron into Copper In -^
cif.7.p.^50.Et7{ofar.Pl}ilof.ArtMurif.vol.z. inp.zi7,il^.
is gi'ven him into his crvn Nature , to make him wax and
G H A P,
.
CHAP. III.
s^tlnxA t'^ alike, about fourty weeks, or fuch a matter 5 yet the fe-
<^ cond is run much fooner, both becaufe now he is fofter
funi.t ^hen the firft feed, and cafier to be loofened, and alfo
(A) ride ^0, mightier and more able to turn the ivork over^ (^)fo that
^^ ^^ ^^^P ^""^ ^c^ves within the Number of ten {e) as
VY\fc'^^\^'
inp^fjs'f'^^' fomedolctthe bounds, (yet I think the midft between
(ej i^o/4r. decuplum a notable mean, although that
(^f>^ duflum and
Buc
^
(g) But if you think this to be too 11 .vj a courfc, let (g) RipiMM
us run to the next cncreafe by Nounlhment.whoCe grcut p^J-fy^^tj.
fpced and readincfs will cafily fupply all , and fill the j./n p.876.
biggcft dcfire in the world.
(ih) After the Son of Coldhzth been once fowen and (h) phu. 7^1-
raifed again, he is now able to work mightily and not '^^^- p^^^'<^-
was before, able to devour as much more , and all this ^^j"^j-//j,^ ^l'
other, and this to the next , until you make a long ^ 5<^ •^ £»
row and link of Rir^gs , clofe and faft , one hanging ^ccitu^Phil
upon another. //.i.ci.i6.
E^^'^lhmtlv
other fpoiling enemies^ before by long gentle and kind*
T.c.voi. 4. in ly Goncodion, all the foul and ^xohihffe was cleanfed
f •'>^9. and refined, and fo made apt to take good celour fas we
(m) Avic.trx- fee in Plants and all things j and to gather it felf up clofe
^acH/.(xd ut
together, and likewife to be weighty, for the much fine
vo'iA^np.^^i ftf{f^ in a narrow room (when Lead and (m) ^ick-fil-
^Ib.mjg.ii.s. i/frj Leavincfs floweth from the rawncfs) and laflly to
'Aulf[vo'^Un
^^ ft^tifaft and fafe from the fire, and all oihcx enemies^
;.4io.'
' becaufetherewasneitherany way of entrance, in fo
great
Chap.m. ThelVayto'Blifs. ip5
great clofcncfs, lefc, to make divifion and dilTolution,
that deftrudion nor yet any gxctLdc
is ;
ftt^jfe the food
of j?^f, remaining.
Wherefore we fee the near Neighbourhood o^Ma-
tals^znd e^finefsto be changed one into another(erpeci-
we work upon filver , which is
ally if half Gold alrea-
dy) when they warn nothing of G"^/^, but either long
gentle conco(^ion, or inftead thereof (becaufc we can-
nut tarry) a ftrong and fierce one anfwerable nnto it,-
firfttocleanfe out all that grofs and grca(iey?«jf^, and
then to bring colour upon it.
So that I cannot but wonder at ihofc Mcn^ if they be
learned, who, reproof of this ^n unknown, vouch
in
unfitnefs odhejfuffe^to be changed, faying, that Mettats
bcirig of fundry kmdesznd natures^ cannot be turned
before they be brought in to that y?^/'^ whereof they
were firft made and fafliioncd 5 which we do not when
we melt them, onely,and which is not each to be done.
It is a iign that, cither they never knew, or at that time
rcmemhred not the Nature o£ a Mettat^ or of the firft
^uffci, for if they mean the <7ref?4w (« fuppofed, firft, (n^*^/ wife-
empty, and naked /«/^, without fliape, but apt to re- "r%lf!i'",^Z.
ccwt ali,even that which is the mtdaU{o)\xtit of a thmg bratiie nawrce
marring (which our Men with Hypocrates well change- Anonym 'en^
f'p) T. Sow.
be not of fundry (/>) k/rides and beings^ (as they fay) buc
Ferrar. !Mxrg^. ^W one things differing by degrees oi baking^ Hke divers
pii'T^'c'if
*" ^^^ ^-^'^^ ^"^^^^^ living and eating Creatures. Again,
EtLZuKq.' that it hath fonrietimcspaifed (/) through a Purfe at a
/.a.c.ji. ki j4^r>s fide, and molten the Ccjne without hurting the
a fubtile and fpeedy J/rf found
Tit'cMcmf /^•<^^^^ becaufe fuch
i.i'c.i6. EC that rcfting ftay (0 to work on in the iWfrf4/, w'ichit
DuBart.onfe-
y^anted in the open foft and yeilding Leather-^ And
cond lOur dele r n
i j i c i i i
the Fier-jlj he doth live ana flourifh in the Fire when i^iin.i.io.c.e?
:
as, indeed, (;) Gold , as all other Mettalls , is cold and fZ'^li'l"'
waterifhfarfromthe^Wifof/'/r^. And yet ic is not ,r( /.4.m4.
the outward fliew of the Bodj alone that makes a y?^^^ (>') i^'^^s^.o-
Nature^ but fometimes the inward quality doth the MTfaiHerm-
decdoi Fire^ (if we fpeak at large, as the common tid.p.isi.
6',irLH /«&r. Cg"^ fo dangerous) upon the tackle of the Ship and fal-
^^.in^ 5 J. ling melts Ctf/^/^^r T^/Jf/, cJ'^. cometh of a heap of fuch
Fapours^ carried up by crofs windes^ (jrc. So by rub-
bing Miljfoms, Flwts^Bxid fuch like , we fee Fireaxifc
after the fame manner 5 and this is the manner of the
off'(pritfgo{ all /"/rf, others flow from this one, ftill
fowingjasit were, one another. But if the jiuff oi
this Fire be tough and hard , and then when it is
wrought into Fire^ it be moved again apace , it pro-
veth, for thefe two caufes, a marvellous hot, ficrcc,and
and violent fre , whence fpringcth all tne force of
Lightnings ^{ot it is nothing clfe but a heap of thick
and Brimftony vapours^{is fome hold with Reafon) by
thecoldnefsof the Cloud beaten up clofcin that Or-
der, and now being turned of a fudden into a larger
and thinner £/^w^;?^ than it was before, when it was
Earth and fvater^ his old place will not hold him, and
fo by the force of /Mature, driving for room and liber-
ty, he rents the C/W/ in that manner which we hear
in Thunder^ and burfteth out at laft a great and fwifc
pace, as we fee in Lightning, which [wtftmfs together
with the toughnefs of the fluff finely wrought,
makes up his violence , above all Ftres in the
world,
Nowforihe5tf» of CJ^/^and Hermes his Medicine^
what kinde oiFire is he, when he can be no fuch Ele-
mental extreme hoi and dry Fire /* for he is temperate
and hath all the qualities equal , and none working
above other',and yet, indeed, by reafon of the fine and
tough ^and therefore) mighty Body whereon they be
featedj they work in equality together , much more
for-
Cap. III. TheiVayto'Blifs. loi
forcibly then the extremely diftcmpcred, cold and dry
Pojfons can work alone, and as faft and fafter then they
.devour and deftroy temporate kodies ^ thefe do over-
throw the contrary : Then what a Fire he is I (hewed
before, how full ftuft with Heavenly /pints above all
things, and fo he is a Heavenly fire ^ which is much
more cffedual in power , and mightier in adion then
that other, by reafon of his exceeding rubtilenefs5able
to pierce through Recks and all things , where that
other (hall quickly ftay.
Admit it, fay you, if that Heavenly fire were quick,
free,andatfullliberty: But it is faft bound up in a
hard Bodji, Then I will tell you all the Reafon , bend
ihev ftick a Iiicle,call upon Jove by many names,to help ""^ ^'^ ^^'""
to (horc up the tall ofzverie^ or ftop a ^ap in the num> Zguml'luxi^
beri, fo they) when their ^if^iatedazled upon the view *"'""''"/"'/-
cth the other part unto her. Nay .view QunkfilverJr) ^0 Paraceif
as (he IS ftrange m all thmgs, fo m this vcf y wonderful : x jom.&,p.zy..
^tckftlver^Kiy, the Grandmother of our medicine^ znd
the fpring of all her goodnefs^ will quickly receive and
fwallow, either in heat or cold ^ her near friend and ve-
ry like, clean, fine, and temperate body of Gold ^ (and
therefore as the one is termed unripe Gold , fo the other
ripe ^ickfUver ^v/acn the reft (he refufcth,and beareth
aloot, 4S fouljgrofs, and unlike her Nature and this fl-
i^
(s) Ber.Tre- ihcftuf-^ and then for (s) the two great Heats I fpake of 5
viCr.c. vol.1,
-ind thirdlyjfor the wonderfull,fubtile, and ftrong pier-
'"^^^
cing and cutting w^tfr^OT4». But cfpecially, becaufc he
'
goeth not quite though with the work,as the Beaffs did,
but half way to the middle nature of his Father confi- :
CHAP. IV.
That Gold may he vproughtintofuch a fine oyl as we fpeak of,
condly, (x) where ail the Beginnings were in their ^^) Sendiveg,.
pure and naked mture.whkh they call a Fifth nature
7afdfj[ne%
which is no where fave inHeaveny and which were ^ 33. '
fecret.c.7. T. c. \iot
flomach , eafily confuming all other things , will
^'''•'^^''^•^^*' ever touch him: nay, which is ftrange, thegreatefl
fjfoylers in the world J^rf and his helpes are fo far from
cernis, & apud ing,as that, (a) not long hnce found under ground, bc-
eum compiiires
'iiosjib.i.c.9.
ly^Q^n iwojiluer Cups Italy m
then if he could ever
',
_
X14 ThelfaytoBUfs. Lib. III.
it divine and no natural rvork^ for wc fee ite-
may be a
vcrlaftingj —
Go to , be it fo: I will overtake them that
way too 5 for as we know, that which Arifiotle knew
not, that both Heaven and Earih by the fame divine
caufe that made them both^may be, and once muft be,
tnarredand changed 5 fowemay think that Gold^ al-
'
l2!-^agJna But what h that divine Patterne} & how fhal menhc
(d) Horat, like unto C70D?even bythe goodnef s ofGod,who hath,
^^ ^ ^^^^ above,left xX(Y:>pmern open in al places,6c ea-
7e)fJi' "Lt'f- ^
' fie to be feen,to them that feek to be like the main Pm-
tilil\.
p'lin. ii.17. ^f/;7,wereof wewere al made: And this,as//£^^£5'(f)
(f)
^Izivi'inilitit
faich,isgentle &witty/^/;4r^f/o»,wherewith he avow-
c. 4. & Aurei. eth both the great, &; this our little work made & wo-
/iugureushryf,
^^^ ^^i^^j [q ^q bg marred and unwoven againi to figure
p.' no. & Jul, unto us privily, that there is no great and cunning work
sotm. 'Toiyhin' performed byfuch rude and {mich-like violencc,as you
n*elnre'!defub. you may fo foften and bring undcrthis flout and noble
titu, 7. i^ ilone as he will yield to be handled at your pleafurc j
p. 2.53.
Nay
Chap. I V. The Way to 'Blifs. zi^
Nay by the flowing Tears of molten lead (a thing not
fo hot as may be) he will quite relent and melt with-
al ; Evenfowemayjudgeof c7oWj That albeit the
more roughly that it be handled, the lefs he ftoops,
as the nature of ftout things is, that there is a gentle
and heavenly skilly and a way to foften him and make
him willingly yield, and go to Corrruption^ though
this, as well as that, be not common and known a-
broad, as no rea{on it fliould.
But what need we fly with Arifiotle to any divine
IhelterpAsGoWwas made by a common courfeofiC/W,
andmuft dye and pcrifh the fame way • fothis skilloi
ours needs not be fetched from any hid and divine fe~ (h)Prov.it,i,
cret^ (whatloever our Men fay, to keep off the unwor- ^"^^^' 33» i<f.
thy) but from a plain ^r^, following the ordinary and Jgw^^V^.
daily ftcps of Nature in all her kindly worksdnd Chan- f^t. Harmn.
m. —Ill
Then mark and chew my words well, and /will J^*''*-<^^«^-
^^^- 4.
-.
(^) vmceij,
when it is loofcned very {k) ftrong and fierce.- /t ise-
lib. de vcxat. vcr more wrapt about him, and (o by contagion it
ftrikes, and enters, and pulls him after; and all in
^^'''^*^''J''if''^'
nels : here all the ivork is blinded 5 All the reft is eafie
Bend your mindcs I fay, I will tell you all the Ari\ En-
will unfold this fhort hid and dark matter^and yet Her-
tneticstly and Phtlofophicaffj,
im) As the Sun is the Father of all things , and the ^^^JJ^^'^'^^
Meon his mfe the Mother, (for he fends not down thefe /urlfVoi. u'
begetting Beams immediately, but through the belly of p.463 ^
the M(}on) and this double Seed is carried in a mnde and '^rt'lnp'^'^i.
Spirit into the Earthy to be made up and nourifhed fo :
our (») Sun hath his ^ife and Moon^though not in fundry pC"^^<Idf.'*ii.
Circles, but r(?)(^^4/w-//^r5 and both thefe are carried T.Cvoi.<}.in
in a spirit alfo* and put into a kindcly Furnace. P-J
^°-
^
To be more plam, this Seedoi Gold is his whole Bo- in Epilog. 12.
dy loofened and fofined with his own water ^ (I care not traaatmm.
how, but beft with his beloved , for eafe in working:) mLmtTe!'
There is all your ssufzn<i Preparation, A very contem- r.c.v.i.p.555.
Here ^^
ned trifle. the Fire: this Belly
is full of Bloodoi^ fP^^'f'^f
T'-^fx is *
r> ^-r t
-^
< lecret boon.
ftrange Nature^, It Earthy isand yet watery ^Atery^sind
{p) p. zoz if .
;:fr/.r" fo«.ha.n«er.
quam TAtme Aut fuiore invenUtur, Aran. Herm. phil. C^n.^S*
will take all things well, and then the reft I paifed by
long fince unregarded.
FINIS.
All gkry be ever aridonely to him that is^ that rvas, and