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<h2> CHAPTER XL——THAT THE RELISH FOR GOOD AND EVIL DEPENDS IN GREAT MEASURE UPON THE OPINION WE HAVE OF THEM </h2>
<p>Men (says an ancient Greek sentence)—[Manual of Epictetus, c. 10.]—
are tormented with the opinions they have of things and not by the things
themselves. It were a great victory obtained for the relief of our
miserable human condition, could this proposition be established for
certain and true throughout. For if evils have no admission into us but by
the judgment we ourselves make of them, it should seem that it is, then,
in our own power to despise them or to turn them to good. If things
surrender themselves to our mercy, why do we not convert and accommodate
them to our advantage? If what we call evil and torment is neither evil
nor torment of itself, but only that our fancy gives it that quality, it
is in us to change it, and it being in our own choice, if there be no
constraint upon us, we must certainly be very strange fools to take arms
for that side which is most offensive to us, and to give sickness, want,
and contempt a bitter and nauseous taste, if it be in our power to give
them a pleasant relish, and if, fortune simply providing the matter, 'tis
for us to give it the form. Now, that what we call evil is not so of
itself, or at least to that degree that we make it, and that it depends
upon us to give it another taste and complexion (for all comes to one),
let us examine how that can be maintained.</p>
<p>If the original being of those things we fear had power to lodge itself in
us by its own authority, it would then lodge itself alike, and in like
manner, in all; for men are all of the same kind, and saving in greater
and less proportions, are all provided with the same utensils and
instruments to conceive and to judge; but the diversity of opinions we
have of those things clearly evidences that they only enter us by
composition; one person, peradventure, admits them in their true being,
but a thousand others give them a new and contrary being in them. We hold
death, poverty, and pain for our principal enemies; now, this death, which
some repute the most dreadful of all dreadful things, who does not know
that others call it the only secure harbour from the storms and tempests
of life, the sovereign good of nature, the sole support of liberty, and
the common and prompt remedy of all evils? And as the one expect it with
fear and trembling, the others support it with greater ease than life.
That one complains of its facility:</p>
<p>"Mors! utinam pavidos vitae subducere nolles.<br/>
Sed virtus to sola daret!"<br/>
["O death! wouldst that thou might spare the coward, but that<br/>
valour alone should pay thee tribute."—Lucan, iv. 580.]<br/></p>
<p>Now, let us leave these boastful courages. Theodorus answered Lysimachus,
who threatened to kill him, "Thou wilt do a brave feat," said he, "to
attain the force of a cantharides." The majority of philosophers are
observed to have either purposely anticipated, or hastened and assisted
their own death. How many ordinary people do we see led to execution, and
that not to a simple death, but mixed with shame and sometimes with
grievous torments, appear with such assurance, whether through firm
courage or natural simplicity, that a man can discover no change from
their ordinary condition; settling their domestic affairs, commending
themselves to their friends, singing, preaching, and addressing the
people, nay, sometimes sallying into jests, and drinking to their
companions, quite as well as Socrates?</p>
<p>One that they were leading to the gallows told them they must not take him
through such a street, lest a merchant who lived there should arrest him
by the way for an old debt. Another told the hangman he must not touch his
neck for fear of making him laugh, he was so ticklish. Another answered
his confessor, who promised him he should that day sup with our Lord, "Do
you go then," said he, "in my room [place]; for I for my part keep fast
to-day." Another having called for drink, and the hangman having drunk
first, said he would not drink after him, for fear of catching some evil
disease. Everybody has heard the tale of the Picard, to whom, being upon
the ladder, they presented a common wench, telling him (as our law does
some times permit) that if he would marry her they would save his life;
he, having a while considered her and perceiving that she halted: "Come,
tie up, tie up," said he, "she limps." And they tell another story of the
same kind of a fellow in Denmark, who being condemned to lose his head,
and the like condition being proposed to him upon the scaffold, refused
it, by reason the girl they offered him had hollow cheeks and too sharp a
nose. A servant at Toulouse being accused of heresy, for the sum of his
belief referred himself to that of his master, a young student, prisoner
with him, choosing rather to die than suffer himself to be persuaded that
his master could err. We read that of the inhabitants of Arras, when Louis
XI. took that city, a great many let themselves be hanged rather than they
would say, "God save the King." And amongst that mean-souled race of men,
the buffoons, there have been some who would not leave their fooling at
the very moment of death. One that the hang man was turning off the ladder
cried: "Launch the galley," an ordinary saying of his. Another, whom at
the point of death his friends had laid upon a bed of straw before the
fire, the physician asking him where his pain lay: "Betwixt the bench and
the fire," said he, and the priest, to give him extreme unction, groping
for his feet which his pain had made him pull up to him: "You will find
them," said he, "at the end of my legs." To one who being present exhorted
him to recommend himself to God: "Why, who goes thither?" said he; and the
other replying: "It will presently be yourself, if it be His good
pleasure." "Shall I be sure to be there by to-morrow night?" said he. "Do,
but recommend yourself to Him," said the other, "and you will soon be
there." "I were best then," said he, "to carry my recommendations myself."</p>
<p>In the kingdom of Narsingah to this day the wives of their priests are
buried alive with the bodies of their husbands; all other wives are burnt
at their husbands' funerals, which they not only firmly but cheerfully
undergo. At the death of their king, his wives and concubines, his
favourites, all his officers, and domestic servants, who make up a whole
people, present themselves so gaily to the fire where his body is burnt,
that they seem to take it for a singular honour to accompany their master
in death. During our late wars of Milan, where there happened so many
takings and retakings of towns, the people, impatient of so many changes
of fortune, took such a resolution to die, that I have heard my father say
he there saw a list taken of five-and-twenty masters of families who made
themselves away in one week's time: an incident somewhat resembling that
of the Xanthians, who being besieged by Brutus, fell—men, women, and
children—into such a furious appetite of dying, that nothing can be
done to evade death which they did not to avoid life; insomuch that Brutus
had much difficulty in saving a very small number.—["Only fifty were
saved."—Plutarch, Life of Brutus, c. 8.]</p>
<p>Every opinion is of force enough to cause itself to be espoused at the
expense of life. The first article of that valiant oath that Greece took
and observed in the Median war, was that every one should sooner exchange
life for death, than their own laws for those of Persia. What a world of
people do we see in the wars betwixt the Turks and the Greeks, rather
embrace a cruel death than uncircumcise themselves to admit of baptism? An
example of which no sort of religion is incapable.</p>
<p>The kings of Castile having banished the Jews out of their dominions,
John, King of Portugal, in consideration of eight crowns a head, sold them
a retreat into his for a certain limited time, upon condition that the
time fixed coming to expire they should begone, and he to furnish them
with shipping to transport them into Africa. The day comes, which once
lapsed they were given to understand that such as were afterward found in
the kingdom should remain slaves; vessels were very slenderly provided;
and those who embarked in them were rudely and villainously used by the
passengers, who, besides other indignities, kept them cruising upon the
sea, one while forwards and another backwards, till they had spent all
their provisions, and were constrained to buy of them at so dear a rate
and so long withal, that they set them not on shore till they were all
stripped to the very shirts. The news of this inhuman usage being brought
to those who remained behind, the greater part of them resolved upon
slavery and some made a show of changing religion. Emmanuel, the successor
of John, being come to the crown, first set them at liberty, and
afterwards altering his mind, ordered them to depart his country,
assigning three ports for their passage. He hoped, says Bishop Osorius, no
contemptible Latin historian of these later times, that the favour of the
liberty he had given them having failed of converting them to
Christianity, yet the difficulty of committing themselves to the mercy of
the mariners and of abandoning a country they were now habituated to and
were grown very rich in, to go and expose themselves in strange and
unknown regions, would certainly do it. But finding himself deceived in
his expectation, and that they were all resolved upon the voyage, he cut
off two of the three ports he had promised them, to the end that the
length and incommodity of the passage might reduce some, or that he might
have opportunity, by crowding them all into one place, the more
conveniently to execute what he had designed, which was to force all the
children under fourteen years of age from the arms of their fathers and
mothers, to transport them from their sight and conversation, into a place
where they might be instructed and brought up in our religion. He says
that this produced a most horrid spectacle the natural affection betwixt
the parents and their children, and moreover their zeal to their ancient
belief, contending against this violent decree, fathers and mothers were
commonly seen making themselves away, and by a yet much more rigorous
example, precipitating out of love and compassion their young children
into wells and pits, to avoid the severity of this law. As to the
remainder of them, the time that had been prefixed being expired, for want
of means to transport them they again returned into slavery. Some also
turned Christians, upon whose faith, as also that of their posterity, even
to this day, which is a hundred years since, few Portuguese can yet rely;
though custom and length of time are much more powerful counsellors in
such changes than all other constraints whatever. In the town of
Castelnaudari, fifty heretic Albigeois at one time suffered themselves to
be burned alive in one fire rather than they would renounce their
opinions.</p>
<p>"Quoties non modo ductores nostri, sed universi etiam exercitus,<br/>
ad non dubiam mortem concurrerunt?"<br/>
["How often have not only our leaders, but whole armies, run to a<br/>
certain and manifest death."—Cicero, Tusc. Quaes., i. 37.]<br/></p>
<p>I have seen an intimate friend of mine run headlong upon death with a real
affection, and that was rooted in his heart by divers plausible arguments
which he would never permit me to dispossess him of, and upon the first
honourable occasion that offered itself to him, precipitate himself into
it, without any manner of visible reason, with an obstinate and ardent
desire of dying. We have several examples in our own times of persons,
even young children, who for fear of some little inconvenience have
despatched themselves. And what shall we not fear, says one of the
ancients—[Seneca, Ep., 70.]—to this purpose, if we dread that
which cowardice itself has chosen for its refuge?</p>
<p>Should I here produce a long catalogue of those, of all sexes and
conditions and sects, even in the most happy ages, who have either with
great constancy looked death in the face, or voluntarily sought it, and
sought it not only to avoid the evils of this life, but some purely to
avoid the satiety of living, and others for the hope of a better condition
elsewhere, I should never have done. Nay, the number is so infinite that
in truth I should have a better bargain on't to reckon up those who have
feared it. This one therefore shall serve for all: Pyrrho the philosopher
being one day in a boat in a very great tempest, shewed to those he saw
the most affrighted about him, and encouraged them, by the example of a
hog that was there, nothing at all concerned at the storm. Shall we then
dare to say that this advantage of reason, of which we so much boast, and
upon the account of which we think ourselves masters and emperors over the
rest of all creation, was given us for a torment? To what end serves the
knowledge of things if it renders us more unmanly? if we thereby lose the
tranquillity and repose we should enjoy without it? and if it put us into
a worse condition than Pyrrho's hog? Shall we employ the understanding
that was conferred upon us for our greatest good to our own ruin; setting
ourselves against the design of nature and the universal order of things,
which intend that every one should make use of the faculties, members, and
means he has to his own best advantage?</p>
<p>But it may, peradventure, be objected against me: Your rule is true enough
as to what concerns death; but what will you say of indigence? What will
you, moreover, say of pain, which Aristippus, Hieronimus, and most of the
sages have reputed the worst of evils; and those who have denied it by
word of mouth have, however, confessed it in effect? Posidonius being
extremely tormented with a sharp and painful disease, Pompeius came to
visit him, excusing himself that he had taken so unseasonable a time to
come to hear him discourse of philosophy. "The gods forbid," said
Posidonius to him, "that pain should ever have the power to hinder me from
talking," and thereupon fell immediately upon a discourse of the contempt
of pain: but, in the meantime, his own infirmity was playing his part, and
plagued him to purpose; to which he cried out, "Thou mayest work thy will,
pain, and torment me with all the power thou hast, but thou shalt never
make me say that thou art an evil." This story that they make such a
clutter withal, what has it to do, I fain would know, with the contempt of
pain? He only fights it with words, and in the meantime, if the shootings
and dolours he felt did not move him, why did he interrupt his discourse?
Why did he fancy he did so great a thing in forbearing to confess it an
evil? All does not here consist in the imagination; our fancies may work
upon other things: but here is the certain science that is playing its
part, of which our senses themselves are judges:</p>
<p>"Qui nisi sunt veri, ratio quoque falsa sit omnis."<br/>
["Which, if they be not true, all reasoning may also be false.<br/>
—"Lucretius, iv. 486.]<br/></p>
<p>Shall we persuade our skins that the jerks of a whip agreeably tickle us,
or our taste that a potion of aloes is vin de Graves? Pyrrho's hog is here
in the same predicament with us; he is not afraid of death, 'tis true, but
if you beat him he will cry out to some purpose. Shall we force the
general law of nature, which in every living creature under heaven is seen
to tremble under pain? The very trees seem to groan under the blows they
receive. Death is only felt by reason, forasmuch as it is the motion of an
instant;</p>
<p>"Aut fuit, aut veniet; nihil est praesentis in illa."<br/>
["Death has been, or will come: there is nothing of the present in<br/>
it."—Estienne de la Boetie, Satires.]<br/>
"Morsque minus poenae, quam mora mortis, habet;"<br/>
["The delay of death is more painful than death itself."<br/>
—Ovid, Ep. Ariadne to Theseus, v. 42.]<br/></p>
<p>a thousand beasts, a thousand men, are sooner dead than threatened. That
also which we principally pretend to fear in death is pain, its ordinary
forerunner: yet, if we may believe a holy father:</p>
<p>"Malam mortem non facit, nisi quod sequitur mortem."<br/>
["That which follows death makes death bad."<br/>
—St. Augustin, De Civit. Dei, i. ii.]<br/></p>
<p>And I should yet say, more probably, that neither that which goes before
nor that which follows after is at all of the appurtenances of death.</p>
<p>We excuse ourselves falsely: and I find by experience that it is rather
the impatience of the imagination of death that makes us impatient of
pain, and that we find it doubly grievous as it threatens us with death.
But reason accusing our cowardice for fearing a thing so sudden, so
inevitable, and so insensible, we take the other as the more excusable
pretence. All ills that carry no other danger along with them but simply
the evils themselves, we treat as things of no danger: the toothache or
the gout, painful as they are, yet being not reputed mortal, who reckons
them in the catalogue of diseases?</p>
<p>But let us presuppose that in death we principally regard the pain; as
also there is nothing to be feared in poverty but the miseries it brings
along with it of thirst, hunger, cold, heat, watching, and the other
inconveniences it makes us suffer, still we have nothing to do with
anything but pain. I will grant, and very willingly, that it is the worst
incident of our being (for I am the man upon earth who the most hates and
avoids it, considering that hitherto, I thank God, I have had so little
traffic with it), but still it is in us, if not to annihilate, at least to
lessen it by patience; and though the body and the reason should mutiny,
to maintain the soul, nevertheless, in good condition. Were it not so, who
had ever given reputation to virtue; valour, force, magnanimity, and
resolution? where were their parts to be played if there were no pain to
be defied?</p>
<p>"Avida est periculi virtus."<br/>
["Courage is greedy of danger."—Seneca, De Providentia, c. 4]<br/></p>
<p>Were there no lying upon the hard ground, no enduring, armed at all
points, the meridional heats, no feeding upon the flesh of horses and
asses, no seeing a man's self hacked and hewed to pieces, no suffering a
bullet to be pulled out from amongst the shattered bones, no sewing up,
cauterising and searching of wounds, by what means were the advantage we
covet to have over the vulgar to be acquired? 'Tis far from flying evil
and pain, what the sages say, that of actions equally good, a man should
most covet to perform that wherein there is greater labour and pain.</p>
<p>"Non est enim hilaritate, nec lascivia, nec risu, aut joco<br/>
comite levitatis, sed saepe etiam tristes firmitate et<br/>
constantia sunt beati."<br/>
["For men are not only happy by mirth and wantonness, by laughter<br/>
and jesting, the companion of levity, but ofttimes the serious sort<br/>
reap felicity from their firmness and constancy."<br/>
—Cicero, De Finib. ii. 10.]<br/></p>
<p>And for this reason it has ever been impossible to persuade our
forefathers but that the victories obtained by dint of force and the
hazard of war were not more honourable than those performed in great
security by stratagem or practice:</p>
<p>"Laetius est, quoties magno sibi constat honestum."<br/>
["A good deed is all the more a satisfaction by how much the more<br/>
it has cost us"—Lucan, ix. 404.]<br/></p>
<p>Besides, this ought to be our comfort, that naturally, if the pain be
violent, 'tis but short; and if long, nothing violent:</p>
<p>"Si gravis, brevis;<br/>
Si longus, levis."<br/></p>
<p>Thou wilt not feel it long if thou feelest it too much; it will either put
an end to itself or to thee; it comes to the same thing; if thou canst not
support it, it will export thee:</p>
<p>["Remember that the greatest pains are terminated by death; that<br/>
slighter pains have long intermissions of repose, and that we are<br/>
masters of the more moderate sort: so that, if they be tolerable,<br/>
we bear them; if not, we can go out of life, as from a theatre, when<br/>
it does not please us"—Cicero, De Finib. i. 15.]<br/></p>
<p>That which makes us suffer pain with so much impatience is the not being
accustomed to repose our chiefest contentment in the soul; that we do not
enough rely upon her who is the sole and sovereign mistress of our
condition. The body, saving in the greater or less proportion, has but one
and the same bent and bias; whereas the soul is variable into all sorts of
forms; and subject to herself and to her own empire, all things
whatsoever, both the senses of the body and all other accidents: and
therefore it is that we ought to study her, to inquire into her, and to
rouse up all her powerful faculties. There is neither reason, force, nor
prescription that can anything prevail against her inclination and choice.
Of so many thousands of biases that she has at her disposal, let us give
her one proper to our repose and conversation, and then we shall not only
be sheltered and secured from all manner of injury and offence, but
moreover gratified and obliged, if she will, with evils and offences. She
makes her profit indifferently of all things; error, dreams, serve her to
good use, as loyal matter to lodge us in safety and contentment. 'Tis
plain enough to be seen that 'tis the sharpness of our mind that gives the
edge to our pains and pleasures: beasts that have no such thing, leave to
their bodies their own free and natural sentiments, and consequently in
every kind very near the same, as appears by the resembling application of
their motions. If we would not disturb in our members the jurisdiction
that appertains to them in this, 'tis to be believed it would be the
better for us, and that nature has given them a just and moderate temper
both to pleasure and pain; neither can it fail of being just, being equal
and common. But seeing we have enfranchised ourselves from her rules to
give ourselves up to the rambling liberty of our own fancies, let us at
least help to incline them to the most agreeable side. Plato fears our too
vehemently engaging ourselves with pain and pleasure, forasmuch as these
too much knit and ally the soul to the body; whereas I rather, quite
contrary, by reason it too much separates and disunites them. As an enemy
is made more fierce by our flight, so pain grows proud to see us truckle
under her. She will surrender upon much better terms to them who make head
against her: a man must oppose and stoutly set himself against her. In
retiring and giving ground, we invite and pull upon ourselves the ruin
that threatens us. As the body is more firm in an encounter, the more
stiffly and obstinately it applies itself to it, so is it with the soul.</p>
<p>But let us come to examples, which are the proper game of folks of such
feeble force as myself; where we shall find that it is with pain as with
stones, that receive a brighter or a duller lustre according to the foil
they are set in, and that it has no more room in us than we are pleased to
allow it:</p>
<p>"Tantum doluerunt, quantum doloribus se inseruerunt."<br/>
["They suffered so much the more, by how much more they gave way to<br/>
suffering."—St. Augustin, De Civit. Dei, i. 10.]<br/></p>
<p>We are more sensible of one little touch of a surgeon's lancet than of
twenty wounds with a sword in the heat of fight. The pains of
childbearing, said by the physicians and by God himself to be great, and
which we pass through with so many ceremonies—there are whole
nations that make nothing of them. I set aside the Lacedaemonian women,
but what else do you find in the Swiss among our foot-soldiers, if not
that, as they trot after their husbands, you see them to-day carry the
child at their necks that they carried yesterday in their bellies? The
counterfeit Egyptians we have amongst us go themselves to wash theirs, so
soon as they come into the world, and bathe in the first river they meet.
Besides so many wenches as daily drop their children by stealth, as they
conceived them, that fair and noble wife of Sabinus, a patrician of Rome,
for another's interest, endured alone, without help, without crying out,
or so much as a groan, the bearing of twins.—[Plutarch, On Love, c.
34.]—A poor simple boy of Lacedaemon having stolen a fox (for they
more fear the shame of stupidity in stealing than we do the punishment of
the knavery), and having got it under his coat, rather endured the tearing
out of his bowels than he would discover his theft. And another offering
incense at a sacrifice, suffered himself to be burned to the bone by a
coal that fell into his sleeve, rather than disturb the ceremony. And
there have been a great number, for a sole trial of virtue, following
their institutions, who have at seven years old endured to be whipped to
death without changing their countenance. And Cicero has seen them fight
in parties, with fists, feet, and teeth, till they have fainted and sunk
down, rather than confess themselves overcome:</p>
<p>["Custom could never conquer nature; she is ever invincible; but we<br/>
have infected the mind with shadows, delights, negligence, sloth;<br/>
we have grown effeminate through opinions and corrupt morality."<br/>
—Cicero, Tusc. Quaes., v. 27.]<br/></p>
<p>Every one knows the story of Scaevola, that having slipped into the
enemy's camp to kill their general, and having missed his blow, to repair
his fault, by a more strange invention and to deliver his country, he
boldly confessed to Porsenna, who was the king he had a purpose to kill,
not only his design, but moreover added that there were then in the camp a
great number of Romans, his accomplices in the enterprise, as good men as
he; and to show what a one he himself was, having caused a pan of burning
coals to be brought, he saw and endured his arm to broil and roast, till
the king himself, conceiving horror at the sight, commanded the pan to be
taken away. What would you say of him that would not vouchsafe to respite
his reading in a book whilst he was under incision? And of the other that
persisted to mock and laugh in contempt of the pains inflicted upon him;
so that the provoked cruelty of the executioners that had him in handling,
and all the inventions of tortures redoubled upon him, one after another,
spent in vain, gave him the bucklers? But he was a philosopher. But what!
a gladiator of Caesar's endured, laughing all the while, his wounds to be
searched, lanced, and laid open:</p>
<p>["What ordinary gladiator ever groaned? Which of them ever changed<br/>
countenance? Which of them not only stood or fell indecorously?<br/>
Which, when he had fallen and was commanded to receive the stroke of<br/>
the sword, contracted his neck."—Cicero, Tusc. Quaes., ii. 17.]<br/></p>
<p>Let us bring in the women too. Who has not heard at Paris of her that
caused her face to be flayed only for the fresher complexion of a new
skin? There are who have drawn good and sound teeth to make their voices
more soft and sweet, or to place the other teeth in better order. How many
examples of the contempt of pain have we in that sex? What can they not
do, what do they fear to do, for never so little hope of an addition to
their beauty?</p>
<p>"Vallere queis cura est albos a stirpe capillos,<br/>
Et faciem, dempta pelle, referre novam."<br/>
["Who carefully pluck out their grey hairs by the roots, and renew<br/>
their faces by peeling off the old skin."—Tibullus, i. 8, 45.]<br/></p>
<p>I have seen some of them swallow sand, ashes, and do their utmost to
destroy their stomachs to get pale complexions. To make a fine Spanish
body, what racks will they not endure of girding and bracing, till they
have notches in their sides cut into the very quick, and sometimes to
death?</p>
<p>It is an ordinary thing with several nations at this day to wound
themselves in good earnest to gain credit to what they profess; of which
our king, relates notable examples of what he has seen in Poland and done
towards himself.—[Henry III.]—But besides this, which I know
to have been imitated by some in France, when I came from that famous
assembly of the Estates at Blois, I had a little before seen a maid in
Picardy, who to manifest the ardour of her promises, as also her
constancy, give herself, with a bodkin she wore in her hair, four or five
good lusty stabs in the arm, till the blood gushed out to some purpose.
The Turks give themselves great scars in honour of their mistresses, and
to the end they may the longer remain, they presently clap fire to the
wound, where they hold it an incredible time to stop the blood and form
the cicatrice; people that have been eyewitnesses of it have both written
and sworn it to me. But for ten aspers—[A Turkish coin worth about a
penny]—there are there every day fellows to be found that will give
themselves a good deep slash in the arms or thighs. I am willing, however,
to have the testimonies nearest to us when we have most need of them; for
Christendom furnishes us with enough. After the example of our blessed
Guide there have been many who have crucified themselves. We learn by
testimony very worthy of belief, that King St. Louis wore a hair-shirt
till in his old age his confessor gave him a dispensation to leave it off;
and that every Friday he caused his shoulders to be drubbed by his priest
with five small chains of iron which were always carried about amongst his
night accoutrements for that purpose.</p>
<p>William, our last Duke of Guienne, the father of that Eleanor who
transmitted that duchy to the houses of France and England, continually
for the last ten or twelve years of his life wore a suit of armour under a
religious habit by way of penance. Foulke, Count of Anjou, went as far as
Jerusalem, there to cause himself to be whipped by two of his servants,
with a rope about his neck, before the sepulchre of our Lord. But do we
not, moreover, every Good Friday, in various places, see great numbers of
men and women beat and whip themselves till they lacerate and cut the
flesh to the very bones? I have often seen it, and 'tis without any
enchantment; and it was said there were some amongst them (for they go
disguised) who for money undertook by this means to save harmless the
religion of others, by a contempt of pain, so much the greater, as the
incentives of devotion are more effectual than those of avarice. Q.
Maximus buried his son when he was a consul, and M. Cato his when praetor
elect, and L. Paulus both his, within a few days one after another, with
such a countenance as expressed no manner of grief. I said once merrily of
a certain person, that he had disappointed the divine justice; for the
violent death of three grown-up children of his being one day sent him,
for a severe scourge, as it is to be supposed, he was so far from being
afflicted at the accident, that he rather took it for a particular grace
and favour of heaven. I do not follow these monstrous humours, though I
lost two or three at nurse, if not without grief, at least without
repining, and yet there is hardly any accident that pierces nearer to the
quick. I see a great many other occasions of sorrow, that should they
happen to me I should hardly feel; and have despised some, when they have
befallen me, to which the world has given so terrible a figure that I
should blush to boast of my constancy:</p>
<p>"Ex quo intelligitur, non in natura, sed in opinione,<br/>
esse aegritudinem."<br/>
["By which one may understand that grief is not in nature, but in<br/>
opinion."—Cicero, Tusc. Quaes., iii. 28.]<br/></p>
<p>Opinion is a powerful party, bold, and without measure. Who ever so
greedily hunted after security and repose as Alexander and Caesar did
after disturbance and difficulties? Teres, the father of Sitalces, was
wont to say that "when he had no wars, he fancied there was no difference
betwixt him and his groom." Cato the consul, to secure some cities of
Spain from revolt, only interdicting the inhabitants from wearing arms, a
great many killed themselves:</p>
<p>"Ferox gens, nullam vitam rati sine armis esse."<br/>
["A fierce people, who thought there was no life without war."<br/>
—Livy, xxxiv. 17.]<br/></p>
<p>How many do we know who have forsaken the calm and sweetness of a quiet
life at home amongst their acquaintance, to seek out the horror of
unhabitable deserts; and having precipitated themselves into so abject a
condition as to become the scorn and contempt of the world, have hugged
themselves with the conceit, even to affectation. Cardinal Borromeo, who
died lately at Milan, amidst all the jollity that the air of Italy, his
youth, birth, and great riches, invited him to, kept himself in so austere
a way of living, that the same robe he wore in summer served him for
winter too; he had only straw for his bed, and his hours of leisure from
affairs he continually spent in study upon his knees, having a little
bread and a glass of water set by his book, which was all the provision of
his repast, and all the time he spent in eating.</p>
<p>I know some who consentingly have acquired both profit and advancement
from cuckoldom, of which the bare name only affrights so many people.</p>
<p>If the sight be not the most necessary of all our senses, 'tis at least
the most pleasant; but the most pleasant and most useful of all our
members seem to be those of generation; and yet a great many have
conceived a mortal hatred against them only for this, that they were too
pleasant, and have deprived themselves of them only for their value: as
much thought he of his eyes that put them out. The generality and more
solid sort of men look upon abundance of children as a great blessing; I,
and some others, think it as great a benefit to be without them. And when
you ask Thales why he does not marry, he tells you, because he has no mind
to leave any posterity behind him.</p>
<p>That our opinion gives the value to things is very manifest in the great
number of those which we do, not so much prizing them, as ourselves, and
never considering either their virtues or their use, but only how dear
they cost us, as though that were a part of their substance; and we only
repute for value in them, not what they bring to us, but what we add to
them. By which I understand that we are great economisers of our expense:
as it weighs, it serves for so much as it weighs. Our opinion will never
suffer it to want of its value: the price gives value to the diamond;
difficulty to virtue; suffering to devotion; and griping to physic. A
certain person, to be poor, threw his crowns into the same sea to which so
many come, in all parts of the world, to fish for riches. Epicurus says
that to be rich is no relief, but only an alteration, of affairs. In
truth, it is not want, but rather abundance, that creates avarice. I will
deliver my own experience concerning this affair.</p>
<p>I have since my emergence from childhood lived in three sorts of
conditions. The first, which continued for some twenty years, I passed
over without any other means but what were casual and depending upon the
allowance and assistance of others, without stint, but without certain
revenue. I then spent my money so much the more cheerfully, and with so
much the less care how it went, as it wholly depended upon my
overconfidence of fortune. I never lived more at my ease; I never had the
repulse of finding the purse of any of my friends shut against me, having
enjoined myself this necessity above all other necessities whatever, by no
means to fail of payment at the appointed time, which also they have a
thousand times respited, seeing how careful I was to satisfy them; so that
I practised at once a thrifty, and withal a kind of alluring, honesty. I
naturally feel a kind of pleasure in paying, as if I eased my shoulders of
a troublesome weight and freed myself from an image of slavery; as also
that I find a ravishing kind of satisfaction in pleasing another and doing
a just action. I except payments where the trouble of bargaining and
reckoning is required; and in such cases; where I can meet with nobody to
ease me of that charge, I delay them, how scandalously and injuriously
soever, all I possibly can, for fear of the wranglings for which both my
humour and way of speaking are so totally improper and unfit. There is
nothing I hate so much as driving a bargain; 'tis a mere traffic of
cozenage and impudence, where, after an hour's cheapening and hesitating,
both parties abandon their word and oath for five sols' abatement. Yet I
always borrowed at great disadvantage; for, wanting the confidence to
speak to the person myself, I committed my request to the persuasion of a
letter, which usually is no very successful advocate, and is of very great
advantage to him who has a mind to deny. I, in those days, more jocundly
and freely referred the conduct of my affairs to the stars, than I have
since done to my own providence and judgment. Most good managers look upon
it as a horrible thing to live always thus in uncertainty, and do not
consider, in the first place, that the greatest part of the world live so:
how many worthy men have wholly abandoned their own certainties, and yet
daily do it, to the winds, to trust to the inconstant favour of princes
and of fortune? Caesar ran above a million of gold, more than he was
worth, in debt to become Caesar; and how many merchants have begun their
traffic by the sale of their farms, which they sent into the Indies,</p>
<p>"Tot per impotentia freta."<br/>
["Through so many ungovernable seas."—Catullus, iv. 18.]<br/></p>
<p>In so great a siccity of devotion as we see in these days, we have a
thousand and a thousand colleges that pass it over commodiously enough,
expecting every day their dinner from the liberality of Heaven. Secondly,
they do not take notice that this certitude upon which they so much rely
is not much less uncertain and hazardous than hazard itself. I see misery
as near beyond two thousand crowns a year as if it stood close by me; for
besides that it is in the power of chance to make a hundred breaches to
poverty through the greatest strength of our riches —there being
very often no mean betwixt the highest and the lowest fortune:</p>
<p>"Fortuna vitrea est: turn, quum splendet, frangitur,"<br/>
["Fortune is glass: in its greatest brightness it breaks."<br/>
—Ex Mim. P. Syrus.]<br/></p>
<p>and to turn all our barricadoes and bulwarks topsy-turvy, I find that, by
divers causes, indigence is as frequently seen to inhabit with those who
have estates as with those that have none; and that, peradventure, it is
then far less grievous when alone than when accompanied with riches. These
flow more from good management than from revenue;</p>
<p>"Faber est suae quisque fortunae"<br/>
["Every one is the maker of his own fortune."<br/>
—Sallust, De Repub. Ord., i. I.]<br/></p>
<p>and an uneasy, necessitous, busy, rich man seems to me more miserable than
he that is simply poor.</p>
<p>"In divitiis mopes, quod genus egestatis gravissimum est."<br/>
["Poor in the midst of riches, which is the sorest kind of poverty."<br/>
—Seneca, Ep., 74.]<br/></p>
<p>The greatest and most wealthy princes are by poverty and want driven to
the most extreme necessity; for can there be any more extreme than to
become tyrants and unjust usurpers of their subjects' goods and estates?</p>
<p>My second condition of life was to have money of my own, wherein I so
ordered the matter that I had soon laid up a very notable sum out of a
mean fortune, considering with myself that that only was to be reputed
having which a man reserves from his ordinary expense, and that a man
cannot absolutely rely upon revenue he hopes to receive, how clear soever
the hope may be. For what, said I, if I should be surprised by such or
such an accident? And after such-like vain and vicious imaginations, would
very learnedly, by this hoarding of money, provide against all
inconveniences; and could, moreover, answer such as objected to me that
the number of these was too infinite, that if I could not lay up for all,
I could, however, do it at least for some and for many. Yet was not this
done without a great deal of solicitude and anxiety of mind; I kept it
very close, and though I dare talk so boldly of myself, never spoke of my
money, but falsely, as others do, who being rich, pretend to be poor, and
being poor, pretend to be rich, dispensing their consciences from ever
telling sincerely what they have: a ridiculous and shameful prudence. Was
I going a journey? Methought I was never enough provided: and the more I
loaded myself with money, the more also was I loaded with fear, one while
of the danger of the roads, another of the fidelity of him who had the
charge of my baggage, of whom, as some others that I know, I was never
sufficiently secure if I had him not always in my eye. If I chanced to
leave my cash-box behind me, O, what strange suspicions and anxiety of
mind did I enter into, and, which was worse, without daring to acquaint
anybody with it. My mind was eternally taken up with such things as these,
so that, all things considered, there is more trouble in keeping money
than in getting it. And if I did not altogether so much as I say, or was
not really so scandalously solicitous of my money as I have made myself
out to be, yet it cost me something at least to restrain myself from being
so. I reaped little or no advantage by what I had, and my expenses seemed
nothing less to me for having the more to spend; for, as Bion said, the
hairy men are as angry as the bald to be pulled; and after you are once
accustomed to it and have once set your heart upon your heap, it is no
more at your service; you cannot find in your heart to break it: 'tis a
building that you will fancy must of necessity all tumble down to ruin if
you stir but the least pebble; necessity must first take you by the throat
before you can prevail upon yourself to touch it; and I would sooner have
pawned anything I had, or sold a horse, and with much less constraint upon
myself, than have made the least breach in that beloved purse I had so
carefully laid by. But the danger was that a man cannot easily prescribe
certain limits to this desire (they are hard to find in things that a man
conceives to be good), and to stint this good husbandry so that it may not
degenerate into avarice: men still are intent upon adding to the heap and
increasing the stock from sum to sum, till at last they vilely deprive
themselves of the enjoyment of their own proper goods, and throw all into
reserve, without making any use of them at all. According to this rule,
they are the richest people in the world who are set to guard the walls
and gates of a wealthy city. All moneyed men I conclude to be covetous.
Plato places corporal or human goods in this order: health, beauty,
strength, riches; and riches, says he, are not blind, but very
clear-sighted, when illuminated by prudence. Dionysius the son did a very
handsome act upon this subject; he was informed that one of the Syracusans
had hid a treasure in the earth, and thereupon sent to the man to bring it
to him, which he accordingly did, privately reserving a small part of it
only to himself, with which he went to another city, where being cured of
his appetite of hoarding, he began to live at a more liberal rate; which
Dionysius hearing, caused the rest of his treasure to be restored to him,
saying, that since he had learned to use it, he very willingly returned it
back to him.</p>
<p>I continued some years in this hoarding humour, when I know not what good
demon fortunately put me out of it, as he did the Syracusan, and made me
throw abroad all my reserve at random, the pleasure of a certain journey I
took at very great expense having made me spurn this fond love of money
underfoot; by which means I am now fallen into a third way of living (I
speak what I think of it), doubtless much more pleasant and regular, which
is, that I live at the height of my revenue; sometimes the one, sometimes
the other may perhaps exceed, but 'tis very little and but rarely that
they differ. I live from hand to mouth, and content myself in having
sufficient for my present and ordinary expense; for as to extraordinary
occasions, all the laying up in the world would never suffice. And 'tis
the greatest folly imaginable to expect that fortune should ever
sufficiently arm us against herself; 'tis with our own arms that we are to
fight her; accidental ones will betray us in the pinch of the business. If
I lay up, 'tis for some near and contemplated purpose; not to purchase
lands, of which I have no need, but to purchase pleasure:</p>
<p>"Non esse cupidum, pecunia est; non esse emacem, vertigal est."<br/>
["Not to be covetous, is money; not to be acquisitive, is revenue."<br/>
—Cicero, Paradox., vi. 3.]<br/></p>
<p>I neither am in any great apprehension of wanting, nor in desire of any
more:</p>
<p>"Divinarum fructus est in copia; copiam declarat satietas."<br/>
["The fruit of riches is in abundance; satiety declares abundance."<br/>
—Idem, ibid., vi. 2.]<br/></p>
<p>And I am very well pleased that this reformation in me has fallen out in
an age naturally inclined to avarice, and that I see myself cleared of a
folly so common to old men, and the most ridiculous of all human follies.</p>
<p>Feraulez, a man that had run through both fortunes, and found that the
increase of substance was no increase of appetite either to eating or
drinking, sleeping or the enjoyment of his wife, and who on the other side
felt the care of his economics lie heavy upon his shoulders, as it does on
mine, was resolved to please a poor young man, his faithful friend, who
panted after riches, and made him a gift of all his, which were
excessively great, and, moreover, of all he was in the daily way of
getting by the liberality of Cyrus, his good master, and by the war;
conditionally that he should take care handsomely to maintain and
plentifully to entertain him as his guest and friend; which being
accordingly done, they afterwards lived very happily together, both of
them equally content with the change of their condition. 'Tis an example
that I could imitate with all my heart; and I very much approve the
fortune of the aged prelate whom I see to have so absolutely stripped
himself of his purse, his revenue, and care of his expense, committing
them one while to one trusty servant, and another while to another, that
he has spun out a long succession of years, as ignorant, by this means, of
his domestic affairs as a mere stranger.</p>
<p>The confidence in another man's virtue is no light evidence of a man's
own, and God willingly favours such a confidence. As to what concerns him
of whom I am speaking, I see nowhere a better governed house, more nobly
and constantly maintained than his. Happy to have regulated his affairs to
so just a proportion that his estate is sufficient to do it without his
care or trouble, and without any hindrance, either in the spending or
laying it up, to his other more quiet employments, and more suitable both
to his place and liking.</p>
<p>Plenty, then, and indigence depend upon the opinion every one has of them;
and riches no more than glory or health have other beauty or pleasure than
he lends them by whom they are possessed.</p>
<p>Every one is well or ill at ease, according as he so finds himself; not he
whom the world believes, but he who believes himself to be so, is content;
and in this alone belief gives itself being and reality. Fortune does us
neither good nor hurt; she only presents us the matter and the seed, which
our soul, more powerful than she, turns and applies as she best pleases;
the sole cause and sovereign mistress of her own happy or unhappy
condition. All external accessions receive taste and colour from the
internal constitution, as clothes warm us, not with their heat, but our
own, which they are fit to cover and nourish; he who would shield
therewith a cold body, would do the same service for the cold, for so snow
and ice are preserved. And, certes, after the same manner that study is a
torment to an idle man, abstinence from wine to a drunkard, frugality to
the spendthrift, and exercise to a lazy, tender-bred fellow, so it is of
all the rest. The things are not so painful and difficult of themselves,
but our weakness or cowardice makes them so. To judge of great, and high
matters requires a suitable soul; otherwise we attribute the vice to them
which is really our own. A straight oar seems crooked in the water it does
not only import that we see the thing, but how and after what manner we
see it.</p>
<p>After all this, why, amongst so many discourses that by so many arguments
persuade men to despise death and to endure pain, can we not find out one
that helps us? And of so many sorts of imaginations as have so prevailed
upon others as to persuade them to do so, why does not every one apply
some one to himself, the most suitable to his own humour? If he cannot
digest a strong-working decoction to eradicate the evil, let him at least
take a lenitive to ease it:</p>
<p>["It is an effeminate and flimsy opinion, nor more so in pain than<br/>
in pleasure, in which, while we are at our ease, we cannot bear<br/>
without a cry the sting of a bee. The whole business is to commend<br/>
thyself."—Cicero, Tusc. Quaes., ii. 22.]<br/></p>
<p>As to the rest, a man does not transgress philosophy by permitting the
acrimony of pains and human frailty to prevail so much above measure; for
they constrain her to go back to her unanswerable replies: "If it be ill
to live in necessity, at least there is no necessity upon a man to live in
necessity": "No man continues ill long but by his own fault." He who has
neither the courage to die nor the heart to live, who will neither resist
nor fly, what can we do with him?</p>
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