OF
A KING'S DUTY
IN HIS OFFICE.
THE SECOND BOOK
BUT as ye are clothed with two callings, so must ye be alike careful for the discharge of them both: that as ye are a good Christian, so ye may be a good King, discharging your Office (as I showed before) in the points of justice and Equity: which in two sundry ways ye must do: the one, in establishing and executing, (which is the life of the Law) good Laws among your people: the other, by your behavior in your own person, and with your servants, to teach your people by your example: for people are naturally inclined to counterfeit (like apes) their Prince's manners, according to the notable saying of Plato, expressed by the Poet
Componitur orbis
Regis ad exemplum, nec sic inflectere sensus
Humanos edicta valent, quam vita regentis.
For the part of making, and
executing of Laws, consider first the true difference betwixt a
lawful good King, and an usurping Tyrant, and ye shall the more
easily understand your duty herein: for contraria iuxta
seposita magis elucescunt. The one acknowledgeth himself
ordained for his people, having received from God a burden of
government, whereof he must be countable: the other thinketh his
people ordained for him, a prey to his passions and inordinate
appetites, as the fruits of his magnanimity: And therefore, as
their ends are directly contrary, so are their whole actions, as
means, whereby they press to attain to their ends. A good King,
thinking his highest honor to consist in the due discharge of his
calling, employeth all his study and pains, to procure and
maintain, by the making and execution of good Laws, the welfare
and peace of his people; and as their natural father and kindly
Master, thinketh his greatest contentment standeth in their
prosperity, and his greatest surety in having their hearts,
subjecting his own private affections and appetites to the weale
and standing of his Subjects, ever thinking the common interest
his chiefest particular: where by the contrary, an usurping
Tyrant, thinking his greatest honor and felicity to consist in
attaining per fas, vel nefas to his ambitious pretenses,
thinketh never himself sure, but by the dissension and factions
among his people, and counterfeiting the Saint while he once
creep in credit, will then (by inverting all good Laws to serve
only for his unruly private affections) frame the common-weale
ever to advance his particular: building his surety upon his
peoples misery: and in the end (as a step-father and an uncouth
hireling) make up his own hand upon the ruins of the Republic.
And according to their actions, so receive they their reward: For
a good King (after a happy and famous reign) dieth in peace,
lamented by his subjects, and admired by his neighbors; and
leaving a reverent renown behind him in earth, obtaineth the
Crown of eternal felicity in heaven. And although some of them
(which falleth out very rarely) may be cut off by the treason of
some unnatural subjects, yet liveth their fame after them, and
some notable plague faileth never to overtake the committers in
this life, besides their infamy to all posterity hereafter: Where
by the contrary, a Tyrant's miserable and infamous life, armeth
in end his own Subjects to become his burreaux: and although that
rebellion be ever unlawful on their part, yet is the world so
wearied of him, that his fall is little lamented by the rest of
his Subjects, and but smiled at by his neighbors. And besides the
infamous memory he leaveth behind him here, and the endless pain
he sustaineth hereafter, it oft falleth out, that the committers
not only escape unpunished, but farther, the fact will remain as
allowed by the Law in divers ages thereafter. It is easy then for
you (my Son) to make a choice of one of these two sorts of
rulers, by following the way of virtue to establish your
standing; yea, in case ye fell in the high way, yet should it be
with the honorable report, and just regret of all honest men.
And therefore to return to my purpose regarding the government of
your Subjects, by making and putting good Laws to execution; I
remit the making of them to your own discretion, as ye shall find
the necessity of new-rising corruptions to require them: for,
ex mais moribus bona leges nata sunt: besides, that in
this country, we have already more good Laws than are well
executed, and am only to insist in your form of government
concerning their execution. Only remember, that as Parliaments
have been ordained for making of Laws, so ye abuse not their
institution, in holding them for any men's particulars: For as a
Parliament is the most honorable and highest judgement in the
land (as being the King's head Court) if it be well used, which
is by making of good Laws in it; so is it the most unjust
judgement-seat that may be, being abused to men's particulars:
irrevocable decreits against particular parties, being given
therein under color of general Laws, and oft-times the Estates
not knowing themselves whom thereby they hurt. And therefore hold
no Parliaments, but for necessity of new Laws, which would be but
seldom: for few Laws and well put in execution, are best in a
well ruled common-weale. As for the matter of forfeitures, which
also are done in Parliament, it is not good meddling with these
things; but my advice is, ye forfeit none but for such odious
crimes as may make them unworthy ever to be restored again: And
for smaller offences, ye have other penalties sharp enough to be
used against them.
And as for the execution of good Laws, whereat I left, remember
that among the differences that I put betwixt the forms of the
government of a good King, and an usurping Tyrant; I shew how a
Tyrant would enter like a Saint while he found himself fast
underfoot, and then would suffer his unruly affections to burst
forth. Therefore be ye contrary at your first entry to your
Kingdom, to that Quinquennium Neronis, with his tender
hearted wish, Vellem nescirem literas, in giving the Law
full execution against all breakers thereof but exception. For
since ye come not to your reign precario, nor by conquest,
but by right and due descent; fear no uproars for doing of
justice, since ye may assure your self, the most part of your
people will ever naturally favor Justice: providing always, that
ye do it only for love to Justice, and not for satisfying any
particular passions of yours, under color thereof: otherwise, how
justly that ever the offender deserve it, ye are guilty of murder
before God: For ye must consider, that God ever looketh to your
inward intention in all your actions.
And when ye have by the severity of Justice once settled your
countries, and made them know that ye can strike, then may ye
thereafter all the days of your life mix Justice with Mercy,
punishing or sparing, as ye shall find the crime to have been
wilfully or rashly committed, and according to the by-past
behavior of the committer. For if otherwise ye declare your
clemency at the first, the offences would soon come to such
heaps, and the contempt of you grow so great, that when ye would
fall to punish, the number of them to be punished, would exceed
the innocent; and ye would be troubled to resolve whom-at to
begin: and against your nature would be compelled then to wrack
many, whom the chastisement of few in the beginning might have
preserved. But in this, my over-dear bought experience may serve
you for a sufficient lesson: For I confess, where I thought (by
being gracious at the beginning) to win all men's hearts to a
loving and willing obedience, I by the contrary found, the
disorder of the country, and the loss of my thanks to be all my
reward.
But as this severe justice of yours upon all offences would be
but for a time, (as I have already said) so is there some
horrible crimes that ye are bound in conscience never to forgive:
such as Witchcraft, wilful murder, Incest, (especially within the
degrees of consanguinity) Sodomy, poisoning, and false coin. As
for offences against your own person and authority, since the
fault concerneth your self, I remit to your own choice to punish
or pardon therein, as your heart serveth you, and according to
the circumstances of the turn, and the quality of the
committer.
Here would I also add another crime to be unpardonable, if I
should not be thought partial: but the fatherly love I bear you,
will make me break the bounds of shame in opening it unto you. It
is then, the false and irreverent writing or speaking of
malicious men against your Parents and Predecessors: ye know the
command in God's law, "Honour your Father and Mother:" and
consequently, since ye are the lawful magistrate, suffer not both
your Princes and your Parents to be dishonored by any;
especially, since the example also toucheth your self, in leaving
thereby to your successors, the measure of that which they shall
mete out again to you in your like behalf. I grant we have all
our faults, which, privately betwixt you and God, should serve
you for examples to meditate upon, and mend in your person; but
should not be a matter of discourse to others whatsoever. And
since ye are come of as honorable Predecessors as any Prince
living, repress the insolence of such, as under pretense to tax a
vice in the person, seek craftily to stain the race, and to steal
the affection of the people from their posterity: For how can
they love you, that hated them whom-of ye are come? Wherefore
destroy men innocent young sucking Wolves and Foxes, but for the
hatred they bear to their race? and why will a colt of a Courser
of Naples, give a greater price in a market, than an Ass-colt,
but for love of the race? It is therefore a thing monstrous, to
see a man love the child, and hate the Parents: as on the other
part, the infaming and making odious of the parent, is the
readiest way to bring the son in contempt. And for conclusion of
this point, I may also allege my own experience: For besides the
judgments of God, that with my eyes I have seen fall upon all
them that were chief traitors to my parents, I may justly affirm,
I never found yet a constant biding by me in all my straits, by
any that were of perfect age in my parents days, but only by such
as constantly bode by them; I mean specially by them that served
the Queen my mother: for so that I discharge my conscience to
you, my Son, in revealing to you the truth, I care not, what any
traitor or treason-allower think of it.
And although the crime of oppression be not in this rank of
unpardonable crimes, yet the over-common use of it in this
nation, as if it were a virtue, especially by the greatest rank
of subjects in the land, requireth the King to be a sharp
censurer thereof. Be diligent therefore to try, and awful to beat
down the homes of proud oppressors: embrace the quarrel of the
poor and distressed, as your own particular, thinking it your
greatest honor to repress the oppressors: care for the pleasure
of none, neither spare ye any pains in your own person, to see
their wrongs redressed: and remember of the honorable style given
to my grand-father of worthy memory, in being called the poor
man's King. And as the most part of a King's office, standeth
in deciding that question of Meum and Tuum, among
his subjects; so remember when ye sit in judgement, that the
Throne ye sit on is God's, as Moses saith, and sway
neither to the right hand nor to the left; either loving the
rich, or pitying the poor. justice should be blind and
friendless: it is not there ye should reward your friends, or
seek to cross your enemies.
Here now speaking of oppressors and of justice, the purpose
leadeth me to speak of Highland and Border oppressions. As for
the Highlands, I shortly comprehend them all in two sorts of
people: the one, that dwelleth in our main land, that are
barbarous for the most part, and yet mixed with some shew of
civility: the other, that dwelleth in the isles, and are wholly
barbarous, without any sort or shew of civility. For the first
sort, put straitly to execution the Laws made already by me
against their Over-lords, and the chiefest of their Clans, and it
will be no difficulty to subdue them. As for the other sort,
follow forth the course that I have intended, in planting
Colonies among them of answerable In-lands subjects, that within
short time may reform and civilize the best inclined among them;
rooting out or transporting the barbarous and stubborn sort, and
planting civility in their rooms.
But as for the Borders, because I know, if ye enjoy not this
whole Lie, according to God's right and your lineal descent, ye
will never get leave to brook this North and barrenest part
thereof; no, not your own head whereon the Crown should stand; I
need not in that case trouble you with them: for then they will
be the middest of the isle, and so as easily ruled as any part
thereof.
And that ye may the readier with wisdom and justice govern your
subjects, by knowing what vices they are naturally most inclined
to, as a good Physician, who must first know what peccant humours
his Patient naturally is most subject unto, before he can begin
his cure: I shall therefore shortly note unto you, the principal
faults that every rank of the people of this country is most
affected unto. And as for England, I will not speak before
of them, never having been among them, although I hope in that
God, who ever favoureth the right, before I die, to be as well
acquainted with their fashions.
As the whole Subjects of our country (by the ancient and
fundamental policy of our Kingdom) are divided into three
estates, so is every estate hereof generally subject to some
special vices; which in a manner by long habitude, are thought
rather virtue than vice among them; not that every particular man
in any of these ranks of men, is subject unto them, for there is
good and evil of all sorts; but that I mean, I have found by
experience, these vices to have taken greatest hold with these
ranks of men.
And first, that I prejudge not the Church of her ancient
privileges, reason would she should have the first place for
orders sake, in this catalogue.
The natural sickness that hath ever troubled, and been the decay
of all the Churches, since the beginning of the world, changing
the candlestick from one to another, as John saith, hath
been Pride, Ambition, and Avarice: and now last, these same
infirmities wrought the overthrow of the Popish Church, in this
country and divers others. But the reformation of Religion in
Scotland, being extraordinarily wrought by God, wherein
many things were inordinately done by a popular tumult and
rebellion, of such as blindly were doing the work of God, but
clogged with their own passions and particular respects, as well
appeared by the destruction of our themselves and not proceeding
from the Princes never as it did in our neighbour country of
England, as likewise in Denmark, and sundry parts
of Germany; some fiery spirited men in the ministry, got
such a guiding of the people at that time of confusion, as
finding the gust of government sweet, they began to fantasy to
themselves a Democratic form of government: and having (by the
iniquity of time) been over well baited upon the wrack, first of
my Grandmother, and next of mine own mother, and after usurping
the liberty of the time in my long minority, settled themselves
so fast upon that imagined as they fed themselves with the hope
to become Tribuni plebis: and so in a popular government
by leading the people by the nose, to bear the sway of all the
rule. And for this cause, there never rose faction in the time of
my minority, nor trouble since, but they that were upon that
factious part, were ever careful to persuade and allure these
unruly spirits among the ministry, to spouse that quarrel as
their own: where-through I was ofttimes calumniated in their
popular Sermons, not for any evil or vice in me, but because I
was a King, which they thought the highest evil. And because they
were ashamed to profess this quarrel, they were busy to look
narrowly in all my actions; and I warrant you a mote in my eye,
yea a false report, was matter enough for them to work upon: and
yet for all their cunning, whereby they pretended to distinguish
the lawfulness of the office, from the vice of the person, some
of them would sometimes snapper out well grossly with the truth
of their intentions, informing the people, that all Kings and
Princes were naturally enemies to the liberty of the Church, and
could never patiently bear the yoke of Christ: with such sound
doctrine fed they their flocks. And because the learned, grave,
and honest men of the ministry, were ever ashamed and offended
with their temerity and presumption, pressing by all good means
by their authority and example, to reduce them to a greater
moderation; there could be no way found out so meet in their
conceit, that were turbulent spirits among them, for maintaining
their plots, as parity in the Church: whereby the ignorants were
emboldened (as bards) to cry the learned, godly, and modest out
of it: parity the mother of confusion, and enemy to Unity, which
is the mother of order: For if by the example thereof, once
established in the Ecclesiastical government, the Politic and
civil estate should be drawn to the like, the great confusion
that thereupon would arise may easily be discerned. Take heed
therefore (my Son) to such Puritans, very pests in the Church and
Common-wealth, whom no deserts can oblige, neither oaths or
promises bind, breathing nothing but sedition and calumnies,
aspiring without measure, railing without reason, and making
their own imaginations (without any warrant of the word) the
square of their conscience. I protest before the great God, and
since I am here as upon my Testament, it is no place for me to
lie in, that ye shall never find with any Highland or
Border-thieves greater ingratitude, and more lies and vile
perjuries, than with these fanatic spirits: And suffer not the
principals of them to brook your land, if ye like to sit at rest;
except ye would keep them from trying your patience, as
Socrates did an evil wife. And for preservative against
their poison, entertain and advance the godly, learned and modest
men of the ministry, whom-of (God be praised) there lacketh not a
sufficient number: and by their provision to Bishoprics and
Benefices (annulling that vile act of Annexation, if ye find it
not done to your hand) ye shall not only banish their conceited
parity, whereof I have spoken, and their other imaginary grounds;
which can neither stand with the order of the Church, nor the
peace of a Commonwealth and well ruled Monarchy: but ye shall
also re-establish the old institution of three Estates in
Parliament, which can no otherwise be done: But in this I hope
(if God spare me days) to make you a fair entry, always where I
leave, follow ye my steps.
And to end my advice concerning the Church estate, cherish no man
more than a good Pastor, hate no man more than a proud Puritan;
thinking it one of your fairest styles, to be called a loving
nourish-father to the Church, seeing all the Churches within your
dominions planted with good Pastors, the Schools (the seminary of
the Church) maintained, the doctrine and discipline preserved in
purity, according to God's word, a sufficient provision for their
sustentation, a comely order in their policy, pride punished,
humility advanced, and they so to reverence their superiors, and
their flocks them, as the flourishing of your Church in piety,
peace, and learning, may be one of the chief points of your
earthly glory, being ever alike ware with both the extremities;
as well as ye repress the vain Puritan, so not to suffer proud
Papal Bishops: but as some for their qualities will deserve to be
preferred before others, so chain them with such bonds as may
preserve that estate from creeping to corruption.
The next estate now that by order cometh in purpose, according to
their ranks in Parliament, is the Nobility, although second in
rank, yet over far first in greatness and power, either to do
good or evil, as they are inclined.
The natural sickness that I have perceived this estate subject to
in my time, hath been, a feckless arrogant conceit of their
greatness and power; drinking in with their very nourish-milk,
that their honor stood in committing three points of iniquity: to
thrall by oppression, the meaner sort that dwelleth near them, to
their service and following, although they hold nothing of them:
to maintain their servants and dependents in any wrong, although
they be not answerable to the laws (for any body will maintain
his man in a right cause) and for any displeasure, that they
apprehend to be done unto them by their neighbour, to take up a
plain feud against him; and (without respect to God, King, or
common-weale) to bang it out bravely, he and all his kin, against
him and all his: yea they will think the King farre in their
common, in-case they agree to grant an assurance to a short day,
for keeping of the peace: where, by their natural duty, they are
obliged to obey the law, and keep the peace all the days of their
life, upon the peril of their very necks.
For remedy to these evils in their estate, teach your Nobility to
keep your laws as precisely as the meanest: fear not their
muttering or being discontented, as long as ye rule well; for
their pretended reformation of Princes taketh never effect, but
where evil government precedeth. Acquaint your self so with all
the honest men of your Barons and Gentlemen, and be in your
giving access so open and affable to every rank of honest
persons, as may make them ready without scarring at you, to make
their own suites to you themselves, and not to employ the great
Lords their intercessors; for intercession to Saints is Papistry:
so shall ye bring to a measure their monstrous backs. And for
their barbarous feuds, put the laws to due execution made by me
there-anent; beginning ever soonest at him that ye love best, and
is most obliged unto you; to make him an example to the rest. For
ye shall make all your reformations to begin at your elbow, and
so by degrees to flow to the extremities of the land. And rest
not, until ye root out these barbarous feuds; that their effects
may be as well smothered down, as their barbarous name is unknown
to any other nation: For if this Treatise were written either in
French or Latin, I could not get them named unto you but by
circumlocution. And for your easier abolishing of them, put
sharply to execution my laws made against Guns and traitorous
Pistolets; thinking in your heart, tearming in your speech, and
using by your punishments, all such as wear and use them, as
brigands and cut-throats.
On the other part, eschew the other extremity, in lightlying and
contemning your Nobility. Remember how that error brake the King
my grand-father's heart. But consider that virtue followeth
oftest noble blood: the worthiness of their ancestors craveth a
reverent regard to be had unto them: honour them therefore that
are obedient to the law among them, as Peers and Fathers of your
land: the more frequently that your Court can be garnished with
them, think it the more your honour; acquainting and employing
them in all your greatest affaires; sen it is, they must be your
arms and executers of your laws: and so use your self lovingly to
the obedient, and rigorously to the stubborn, as may make the
greatest of them to think, that the chiefest point of their
honour, standeth in striving with the meanest of the land in
humility towards you, and obedience to your Laws: beating ever in
their ears, that one of the principal points of service that ye
crave of them, is, in their persons to practice, and by their
power to procure due obedience to the Law, without the which, no
service they can make, can be agreeable unto you.
But the greatest hindrance to the execution of our Laws in this
country, are these heritable Sheriffdoms and Regalities, which
being in the hands of the great men, do wrack the whole
country:
For which I know no present remedy, but by taking the sharper
account of them in their Offices; using all punishment against
the slothful, that the Law will permit: and ever as they vaike,
for any offences committed by them, dispose them never heritably
again: pressing, with time, to draw it to the laudable custom of
England: which ye may the easier do, being King of both, as I
hope in God ye shall.
And as to the third and last estate, which is our Burghers (for
the small Barons are but an inferior part of the Nobility and of
their estate) they are composed of two sorts of men; Merchants
and Crafts-men: either of these sorts being subject to their own
infirmities.
The Merchants think the whole common-wealth ordained for making
them up; and accounting it their lawful game and trade, to enrich
themselves upon the loss of all the rest of the people, they
transport from us things necessary; bringing back sometimes
unnecessary things, and at other times nothing at all. They buy
for us the worst wares, and sell them at the dearest prices: and
albeit the victuals fall or rise of their prices, according to
the abundance or scantness thereof; yet the prices of their wares
ever rise, but never fall: being as constant in that their evil
custom, as if it were a settled Law for them. They are also the
special cause of the corruption of the coin, transporting all our
own, and bringing in foreign, upon what price they please to set
on it: For order putting to them, put the good Laws in execution
that are already made concerning these abuses; but especially do
three things: Establish honest, diligent, but few Searchers, for
many hands make slight work; and have an honest and diligent
Treasurer to take count of them: Permit and allure foreign
Merchants to trade here: so shall ye have best and best cheap
wares, not buying them at the third hand: And set every year down
a certain price of all things; considering first, how it is in
other countries: and the price being set reasonably down, if the
Merchants will not bring them home on the price, cry foreigners
free to bring them.
And because I have made mention here of the coin, make your money
of fine Gold and Silver; causing the people be payed with
substance, and not abused with number: so shall ye enrich the
common-wealth, and have a great treasure laid up in store, if ye
fall in wars or in any straits: For the making it baser, will
breed your commodity; but it is not to be used, but at a great
necessity.
And the Craftsmen think, we should be content with their work,
how bad and dear soever it be: and if they in any thing be
controlled, up goeth the blew-blanket (it is perceived as an
attack upon their privileges; Ed. note): But for their part,
take example by ENGLAND, how it hath flourished both in wealth
and policy, since the strangers Crafts-men came in among them:
Therefore not only permit, but allure strangers to come near
also; taking as strait order for repressing the mutinying of ours
at them, as was done in ENGLAND, at their first in-bringing
there.
But unto one fault is all the common people of this Kingdom
subject, as well burgh as land; which is, to judge and speak
rashly of their Prince, setting the Common-wealth upon four
props, as we call it; ever wearying of the present estate, and
desirous of novelties. For remedy whereof (besides the execution
of Laws that are to be used against irreverent speakers) I know
no better mean, than so to rule, as may justly stop their mouths
from all such idle and irreverent speeches; and so to prop the
weale of your people, with provident care for their good
government, that justly, Momus himself may have no ground
to grudge at: and yet so to temper and mix your severity with
mildness, that as the unjust railers may be restrained with a
reverent awe; so the good and loving Subjects, may not only hue
in surety and wealth, but be stirred up and invited by your
benign courtesies, to open their mouths in the just praise of
your so well moderated regiment. In respect whereof, and
therewith also the more to allure them to a common amity among
themselves, certain days in the year would be appointed, for
delighting the people with public spectacles of all honest games,
and exercise of arms: as also for convening of neighbours, for
entertaining friendship and hearthiness, by honest feasting and
merriness: For I cannot see what greater superstition can be in
making plays and lawful games in May, and good cheer at
Christmas, than in eating fish in Lent, and upon Fridays, the
Papists as well using the one as the other: so that always the
Sabbaths be kept holy, and no unlawful pastime be used: And as
this form of contenting the peoples minds, hath been used in all
well governed Republics: so will it make you to perform in your
government that old good sentence,
Omne tulit punctum, qui miscuit vtile dulci.
Ye see now (my Son) how for the
zeal I bear to acquaint you with the plain and single verity of
all things, I have not spared to be something Satyric, in
touching well quickly the faults in all the estates of my
kingdom: But I protest before God, I do it with the fatherly love
that I owe to them all; only hating their vices, whereof there is
a good number of honest men free in every estate.
And because, for the better reformation of all these abuses among
your estates, it will be a great help unto you, to be well
acquainted with the nature and humours of all your Subjects, and
to know particularly the estate of every part of your dominions;
would therefore counsel you, once in the year to visit the
principal parts of the country, ye shall be in for the time: and
because I hope ye shall be King of more countries than this; once
in the three years to visit all your Kingdoms; not trusting to
Viceroys, but hearing your self their complaints; and having
ordinary Counsels and justice-seats in every Kingdom, of their
own countrymen: and the principal matters ever to be decided by
your self when ye come in those parts.
Ye have also to consider, that ye must not only be careful to
keep your subjects, from receiving any wrong of others within;
but also ye must be careful to keep them from the wrong of any
foreign Prince without: since the sword is given you by God not
only to revenge upon your own subjects, the wrongs committed
amongst themselves; but further, to revenge and free them of
foreign injures done unto them: And therefore wars upon just
quarrels are lawful: but above all, let not the wrong cause be on
your side.
Use all other Princes, as your brethren, honestly and kindly:
Keep precisely your promise unto them, although to your hurt:
Strive with every one of them in courtesy and thankfulness: and
as with all men, so especially with them, be plain and truthful;
keeping ever that Christian rule, to do as ye would be done
to: especially in counting rebellion against any other
Prince, a crime against your own self, because of the
preparative. Supply not therefore, nor trust not other Princes
rebels; but pity and succor all lawful Princes in their troubles.
But if any of them will not notwithstanding whatsoever your good
deserts, to wrong you or your subjects, crave redress at leisure;
hear and do all reason: and if no offer that is lawful or
honourable, can make him to abstain, nor repair his wrong doing;
then for last refuge, commit the justness of your cause to God,
giving first honestly up with him, and in a public and honourable
form.
But omitting now to teach you the form of making wars, because
that art is largely treated of by many, and is better learned by
practice than speculation; I will only set down to you near a few
precepts therein. Let first the justness of your cause be your
greatest strength; and then omit not to use all lawful means for
backing of the same. Consult therefore with no Necromancer nor
false Prophet, upon the success of your wars, remembering on king
Saul's miserable end: but keep your land clean of all
South-sayers, according to the command in the Law of God,
dictated by Jeremiah. Neither commit your quarrel to be
tried by a Duel: for beside that generally all Duel appeareth to
be unlawful, committing the quarrel, as it were, to a lot;
whereof there is no warrant in the Scripture, since the
abrogating of the old Law: it is specially most unlawful in the
person of a King; who being a public person hath no power
therefore to dispose of himself, in respect, that to his
preservation or fall, the safety or wrack of the whole commonweal
is necessarily coupled, as the body is to the head.
Before ye take on war, play the wise Kings part described by
Christ; fore-seeing how ye may bear it out with all necessary
provision especially remember, that money is Neruus belli.
Choose old experimented Captains, and young able soldiers. Be
extremely strait and severe in martial Discipline, as well for
keeping of order, which is as requisite as hardiness in the wars,
and punishing of sloth, which at a time may put the whole army in
hazard; as likewise for repressing of mutinies, which in wars are
wonderful dangerous. And look to the Spaniard, whose great
success in all his wars, hath only come through straitness of
Discipline and order: for such errors may be committed in the
wars, as cannot be gotten mended again.
Be in your own person wakeful, diligent, and painful; using the
advice of such as are skilfulness in the craft, as ye must also
do in all other. Be homely with your soldiers as your companions,
for winning their hearts; and extremely liberal, for then is no
time of sparing. Be cold and foreseeing in devising, constant in
your resolutions, and forward and quick in your executions.
Fortify well your Camp, and assail not rashly without an
advantage: neither fear not lightly your enemy. Be curious in
devising stratagems, but always honestly: for of any thing they
work greatest effects in the wars, if secrecy be joined to
invention. And once or twice in your own person hazard your self
fairly; but, having acquired so the fame of courage and
magnanimity, make not a daily soldier of your self, exposing
rashly your person to every peril: but conserve your self
thereafter for the weale of your people, for whose sake ye must
more care for your self, than for your own.
And as I have counseled you to be slow in taking on a war, so
advise I you to be slow in peace-making. Before ye agree, look
that the ground of your wars be satisfied in your peace; and that
ye see a good surety for you and your people: otherwise a
honourable and just war is more tolerable, than a dishonorable
and dis-advantageous peace.
But it is not enough to a good King, by the scepter of good Laws
well execute to govern, and by force of arms to protect his
people; if he join not therewith his virtuous life in his own
person, and in the person of his Court and company; by good
example alluring his Subjects to the love of virtue, and hatred
of vice. And therefore (my Son) since all people are naturally
inclined to follow their Princes example (as I shewed you before)
let it not be said, that ye command others to keep the contrary
course to that, which in your own person ye practice, making so
your words and deeds to fight together: but by the contrary, let
your own life be a law-book and a mirror to your people; that
therein they may read the practice of their own Laws; and therein
they may see, by your image, what life they should lead.
And this example in your own life and person, I likewise divide
in two parts: The first, in the government of your Court and
followers, in all godliness and virtue: the next, in having your
own mind decked and enriched so with all virtuous qualifies, that
therewith ye may worthily rule your people: For it is not enough
that ye have and retain (as prisoners) within your self never so
many good qualities and virtues, except ye employ them, and set
them on work, for the weale of them that are committed to your
charge:
Virtutis enim laus omnis in actione consistit.
First then, as to the government
of your Court and followers, King David sets down the best
precepts, that any wise and Christian King can practice in that
point: For as ye ought to have a great care for the ruling well
of all your Subjects, so ought ye to have a double care for the
ruling well of your own servants; since unto them ye are both a
Politic and Economic governor. And as every one of the people
will delight to follow the example of any of the Courtiers, as
well in evil as in good; so what crime so horrible can there be
committed and over-seen in a Courtier, that will not be an
exemplary excuse for any other boldly to commit the like? And
therefore in two points have ye to take good heed concerning your
Court and household: first, in choosing them wisely; next, in
carefully ruling them whom ye have chosen.
It is an old and true saying, That a kindly cart-horse will never
become a good horse: for albeit good education and company be
great helps to Nature, and education be therefore most justly
called altera natura, yet is it evil to get out of the
flesh, that is bred in the bone, as the old proverb saith. Be
very ware then in making choice of your servants and company;
Nam Turpius eiicitur quam non admittitur hospes: and many
respects may lawfully let an admission, that will not be
sufficient causes of deprivation.
All your servants and Court must be composed partly of minors,
such as young Lords, to be brought up in your company, or Pages
and such like; and partly of men of perfect age, for serving you
in such rooms, as ought to be filled with men of wisdom and
discretion. For the first sort, ye can do no more, but choose
them within age, that are come of a good and virtuous kind, In
fide parentum, as Baptism is used: For though anima non
venit ex traduce, but is immediately created by God, and
infused from above; yet it is most certain, that virtue or vice
will oftentimes, with the heritage, be transferred from the
parents to the posterity, and run on a blood (as the Proverb is)
the sickness of the mind becoming as kindly to some races, as
these sicknesses of the body, that infect in the seed: Especially
choose such minors as are come of a true and honest race, and
have not had the house whereof they are descended, infected with
falsehood.
And as for the other sort of your company and servants, that
ought to be of perfect age; first see that they be of a good fame
and without blemish; otherwise, what can the people think, but
that ye have chosen a company unto you, according to your own
humour, and so have preferred these men, for the love of their
vices and crimes, that ye knew them to be guilty of? For the
people that see you not within, cannot judge of you, but
according to the outward appearance of your actions and company,
which only is subject to their sight: And next, see that they be
indued with such honest qualities, as are meet for such offices,
as ye ordain them to serve in; that your judgement may be known
in employing every man according to his gifts: And shortly,
follow good king David's counsel in the choice of your
servants, by setting your eyes upon the faithful and upright of
the land to dwell with you.
But here I must not forget to remember, and according to my
fatherly authority, to charge you to prefer specially to your
service, so many as have truly served me, and are able for it:
the rest, honourably to reward them, preferring their posterity
before others, as kindliest: so shall ye not only be best served,
(for if the haters of your parents cannot love you, as I shewed
before, it followeth of necessity their lovers must love you) but
further, ye shall make known your thankful memory of your father,
and procure the blessing of these old servants, in not missing
their old master in you; which otherwise would be turned in a
prayer for me, and a curse for you. Use them therefore when God
shall call me, as the testimonies of your affection towards me;
trusting and advancing those farthest, whom I found most
faithful: which ye must not discern by their rewards at my hand
(for rewards, as they are called Bona fortunce, so are
they subject unto fortune) but according to the trust I gave
them; having oft-times had better heart than hap to the rewarding
of sundry; And on the other part, as I wish you to declare your
constant love towards them that I loved, so desire I you to make
known in the same measure, your constant hatred to them that I
hated: I mean, bring not home, nor restore not such, as ye find
standing banished or fore-faulted by me. The contrary would
indicate in you over great a contempt of me, and lightness in
your own nature: for how can they be true to the Son, that were
false to the Father?
But to return to the purpose concerning the choice of your
servants, ye shall by this wise form of doing, eschew the
inconvenients, that in my minority I fell in, concerning the
choice of my servants: For by them that had the command where I
was brought up, were my servants put unto me; not choosing them
that were most meet to serve me, but whom they thought most meet
to serve their turn about me, as declared well in many of them at
the first rebellion raised against me, which compelled me to make
a great alteration among my servants. And yet the example of that
corruption made me to be long troubled there-after with
solicitors, recommending servants unto me, more for serving in
effect, their friends that put them in, than their master that
admitted them. Let my example then teach you to follow the rules
here set down, choosing your servants for your own use, and not
for the use of others; And since ye must be communis
parens to all your people, so choose your servants
indifferently out of all quarters; not respecting other mens
appetites, but their own qualities: For as ye must command all,
so reason would, ye should be served out of all, as ye please to
make choice.
But specially take good heed to the choice of your servants, that
ye prefer to the offices of the Crown and estate: for in other
offices ye have only to take heed to your own weale; but these
concern likewise the weale of your people, for the which ye must
be answerable to God. Choose then for all these Offices, men of
known wisdom, honesty, and good conscience; well practiced in the
points of the craft, that ye ordain them for, and free of all
factions and partialities; but specially free of that filthy vice
of Flattery, the pest of all Princes, and wrack of Republics: For
since in the first part of this Treatise, I fore-warned you to be
at war with your own inward flatterer filautiva, how much more should
ye be at war with outward flatterers, who are nothing so sib to
you, as your self is; by the selling of such counterfeit wares,
only pressing to ground their greatness upon your ruins? And
therefore be careful to prefer none, as ye will be answerable to
God but only for their worthiness: But specially choose honest,
diligent, mean, but responsible men, to be your receivers in
money matters: mean I say, that ye may when ye please, take a
sharp account of their intromission, without peril of their
breeding any trouble to your estate: for this oversight hath been
the greatest cause of my misthriving in money matters.
Especially, put never a foreigner, in any principal office of
estate: for that will never fail to stir up sedition and envy in
the country-men's hearts, both against you and him: But (as I
said before) if God provide you with more countries than this;
choose the born-men of every country, to be your chief counselors
therein.
And for conclusion of my advice addressing the choice of your
servants, delight to be served with men of the noblest blood that
may be had: for besides that their service shall breed you great
good-will and least envy, contrary to that of start-ups; ye shall
oft find virtue follow noble races, as I have said before
speaking of the Nobility.
Now, as to the other point, concerning your governing of your
servants when ye have chosen them; make your Court and company to
be a pattern of godliness and all honest virtues, to all the rest
of the people. Be a daily watch-man over your servants, that they
obey your laws precisely: For how can your laws be kept in the
country, if they be broken at your ear? Punishing the breach
thereof in a Courtier, more severely, than in the person of any
other of your subjects: and above all, suffer none of them (by
abusing their credit with you) to oppress or wrong any of your
subjects. Be homely or strange with them, as ye think their
behavior deserveth, and their nature may bear with. Think a
quarrellous man a pest in your company. Be careful ever to prefer
the gentlest natured and trustiest, to the most close Offices
about you, especially in your chamber. Suffer none about you to
meddle in any men's particulars, but like the Turks Janissaries,
let them know no father but you, nor particular but yours. And if
any will meddle in their kin or friends quarrels, give them their
leave: for since ye must be of no surname nor kin, but equal to
all honest men; it becometh you not to be followed with partial
or factious servants. Teach obedience to your servants, and not
to think themselves over-wise: and, as when any of them deserveth
it, ye must not spare to put them away, so, without a seen cause,
change none of them. Pay them, as all others your subjects, with
præmium or poena as they deserve, which is
the very ground-stone of good government. Employ every man as ye
think him qualified, but use not one in all things, lest he wax
proud, and be envied of his fellows. Love them best, that are
plainest with you, and disguise not the truth for all their kin:
suffer none to be evil tongued, nor backbiters of them they hate:
command a heartily and brotherly love among all them that serve
you. And shortly, maintain peace in your Court, banish envy,
cherish modesty, banish debased insolence, foster humility, and
repress pride: setting down such a comely and honourable order in
all the points of your service; that when strangers shall visit
your Court, they may with the Queen of Sheba, admire your
wisdom in the glory of your house; and comely order among your
servants.
But the principal blessing that ye can get of good company, will
stand in your marrying of a godly and virtuous wife: for she must
be nearer unto you, than any other company, being Flesh of
your flesh, and bone of your bone, as Adam said of
Eve. And because I know not but God may call me, before ye
be ready for Marriage; I will shortly set down to you here my
advice therein.
First of all consider, that Marriage is the greatest earthly
felicity or misery, that can come to a man, according as it
pleaseth God to bless or curse the same. Since then without the
blessing of GOD, ye cannot look for a happy success in Marriage,
ye must be careful both in your preparation for it, and in the
choice and usage of your wife, to procure the same. By your
preparation, I mean, that ye must keep your body clean and
unpolluted, till ye give it to your wife, whom-to only it
belongeth. For how can ye justly crave to be joined with a pure
virgin, if your body be polluted? why should the one half be
clean, and the other defiled? And although I know, fornication is
thought but a light and venial sin, by the most part of the
world, yet remember well what I said to you in my first Book
concerning conscience; and count every sin and breach of God's
law, not according as the vain world esteemeth of it, but as God
the judge and maker of the law accounteth of the same. Hear God
commanding by the mouth of Paul, to abstain from
fornication, declaring that the fornicator shall not
inherit the Kingdom of heaven: and by the mouth of
John, reckoning out fornication amongst other grievous
sins, that debarre the committers amongst dogs and swine, from
entry in that spiritual and heavenly Jerusalem. And consider,
if a man shall once take upon him, to count that light, which God
calleth heavy; and venial that, which God calleth grievous;
beginning first to measure any one sin by the rule of his lust
and appetites, and not of his conscience; what shall let him to
do so with the next, that his affections shall stir him to, the
like reason serving for all: and so to go forward till he place
his whole corrupted affections in God's room? And then what shall
come of him; but, as a man given over to his own filthy
affections, shall perish into them? And because we are all of
that nature, that closely related examples touch us nearest,
consider the difference of success that God granted in the
Marriages of the King my grand-father, and me your own father:
the reward of his incontinence, (proceeding from his evil
education) being the sudden death at one time of two pleasant
yong Princes; and a daughter only born to succeed to him, whom he
had never the chance, so much as once to see or bless before his
death: leaving a double curse behind him to the land, both a
Woman of sex, and a newborn babe of age to reign over them. And
as for the blessing God hath bestowed on me, in granting me both
a greater continence, and the fruits following there-upon, your
self, and kin folks to you, are (praise be to God) sufficient
witnesses: which, I hope the same God of his infinite mercy,
shall continue and increase, without repentance to me and my
posterity. Be not ashamed then, to keep clean your body, which is
the Temple of the holy Spirit, notwithstanding all vain
allurements to the contrary, discerning truly and wisely of every
virtue and vice, according to the true qualities thereof, and not
according to the vain conceits of men.
As for your choice in Marriage, respect chiefly the three causes,
wherefore Marriage was first ordained by God; and then join three
accessories, so far as they may be obtained, not derogating to
the principles.
The three causes it was ordained for, are, for staying of lust,
for procreation of children, and that man should by his Wife, get
a helper like himself. Defer not then to Marry till your age: for
it is ordained for quenching the lust of your youth: Especially a
King must in good time Marry for the weale of his people. Neither
Marry ye, for any accessory cause or worldly respects, a woman
unable, either through age, nature, or accident, for procreation
of children: for in a King that were a double fault, as well
against his own weale, as against the weale of his people.
Neither also Marry one of known evil conditions, or vicious
education: for the woman is ordained to be a helper, and not a
hinderer to man.
The three accessories, which as I have said, ought also to be
respected, without derogating to the principal causes, are
beauty, riches, and friendship by alliance, which are all
blessings of God. For beauty increaseth your love to your Wife,
contenting you the better with her, without caring for others:
and riches and great alliance, do both make her the abler to be a
helper unto you. But if over great respect being had to these
accessories, the principal causes be over-seen (which is over oft
practiced in the world) as of themselves they are a blessing
being well used; so the abuse of them will turn them in a curse.
For what can all these worldly respects avail, when a man shall
find himself coupled with a devil, to be one flesh with him, and
the half marrow in his bed? Then (though too late) shall he find
that beauty without bounty, wealth without wisdom, and great
friendship without grace and honesty; are but fair shows, and the
deceitful masques of infinite miseries.
But have ye respect, my Son, to these three special causes in
your Marriage, which flow from the first institution thereof,
& cætera omnia adijcientur vobis. And therefore
I would soonest have you to Marry one that were fully of your own
Religion; her rank and other qualities being agreeable to your
estate. For although that to my great regret, the number of any
Princes of power and account, professing our Religion, be but
very small; and that therefore this advice seems to be the more
strait and difficult: yet ye have deeply to weigh, and consider
upon these doubts, how ye and your wife can be of one flesh, and
keep unity betwixt you, being members of two opposite Churches:
disagreement in Religion bringeth ever with it, disagreement in
manners; and the dissension betwixt your Preachers and her's,
will breed and foster a dissension among your subjects, taking
their example from your family; besides the peril of the evil
education of your children. Neither pride you that ye will be
able to frame and make her as ye please: that deceived
Solomon the wisest King that ever was; the grace of
Perseverance, not being a flower that groweth in our garden.
Remember also that Marriage is one of the greatest actions that a
man doeth in all his time, especially in taking of his first
Wife: and if he Marry first basely beneath his rank, he will ever
be the less accounted of thereafter. And lastly, remember to
choose your Wife as I advised you to choose your servants: that
she be of a whole and clean race, not subject to the hereditary
sicknesses, either of the soul or the body: For if a man will be
careful to breed horses and dogs of good kinds, how much more
careful should he be, for the breed of his own loins? So shall ye
in your Marriage have respect to your conscience, honour, and
natural weale in your successors.
When ye are Married, keep inviolably your promise made to God in
your Manage; which standeth all in doing of one thing, and
abstaining from another: to treat her in all things as your wife,
and the half of your self; and to make your body (which then is
no more yours, but properly hers) common with none other. I trust
I need not to insist here to dissuade you from the filthy vice of
adultery: remember only what solemn promise ye make to God at
your Marriage: and since it is only by the force of that promise
that your children succeed to you, which otherwise they could not
do; equity and reason would, ye should keep your part thereof.
God is ever a severe avenger of all perjuries; and it is no oath
made in jest, that giveth power to children to succeed to great
kingdoms.
Have the King my grand-father's example before your eyes, who by
his adultery, bred the wrack of his lawful daughter and heir; in
begetting that bastard, who unnaturally rebelled, and procured
the ruin of his own Sovereign and sister. And what good her
posterity hath gotten since, of some of that unlawful generation,
Bothuell his treacherous attempts can bear witness. Keep
precisely then your promise made at Marriage, as ye would wish to
be partaker of the blessing therein.
And for your behavior to your Wife, the Scripture can best give
you counsel therein: Treat her as your own flesh, command her as
her Lord, cherish her as your helper, rule her as your pupil, and
please her in all things reasonable; but teach her not to be
curious in things that belong her not: Ye are the head, she is
your body; It is your office to command, and hers to obey; but
yet with such a sweet harmony, as she should be as ready to obey,
as ye to command; as willing to follow, as ye to go before; your
love being wholly knit unto her, and all her affections lovingly
bent to follow your will.
And to conclude, keep specially three rules with your Wife:
first, suffer her never to meddle with the Political government
of the Commonweal, but hold her at the Economic rule of the
house: and yet all to be subject to your direction: keep
carefully good and chaste company about her, for women are the
frailest sex; and be never both angry at once, but when ye see
her in passion, ye should with reason subdue yours: for both when
ye are settled, ye are meetest to judge of her errors; and when
she is come to her self, she may be best made to apprehend her
offence, and reverence your rebuke.
If God send you succession, be careful for their virtuous
education: love them as ye ought, but let them know as much of
it, as the gentleness of their nature will deserve; containing
them ever in a reverent love and fear of you. And in case it
please God to provide you to all these three Kingdoms, make your
eldest son Isaac, leaving him all your kingdoms; and
provide the rest with private possessions: Otherwise by dividing
your kingdoms, ye shall leave the seed of division and discord
among your posterity; as befell to this Ile, by the division and
assignment thereof, to the three sons of Brutus, Locrine,
Albanact, and Camber. But if God give you not
succession, defraud never the nearest by right, whatsoever
conceit ye have of the person: For Kingdoms are ever at God's
disposition, and in that case we are but live-renters, lying no
more in the King's, nor people's hands to dispossess the
righteous heir.
And as your company should be a pattern to the rest of the
people, so should your person be a lamp and mirror to your
company: giving light to your servants to walk in the path of
virtue, and representing unto them such worthy qualities, as they
should press to imitate.
I need not to trouble you with the particular discourse of the
four Cardinal virtues, it is so trodden a path: but I will
shortly say unto you; make one of them, which is Temperance,
Queen of all the rest within you. I mean not by the vulgar
interpretation of Temperance, which only consists in gustu
& tactu, by the moderating of these two senses: but, I
mean of that wise moderation, that first commanding your self,
shall as a Queen, command all the affections and passions of your
mind, and as a Physician, wisely mix all your actions according
thereto. Therefore, not only in all your affections and passions,
but even in your most virtuous actions, make ever moderation to
be the chief ruler: For although holiness be the first and most
requisite quality of a Christian, as proceeding from a feeling
fear and true knowledge of God: yet ye remember how in the
conclusion of my first book, I advised you to moderate all your
outward actions flowing there-from. The like say I now of
justice, which is the greatest virtue that properly belongeth to
a Kings office.
Use Justice, but with such moderation, as it turn not in Tyranny
: otherwise summum Jus, is summa iniuria. As for
example:
If a man of a known honest life, be invaded by brigands or
thieves for his purse, and in his own defence slay one of them,
they being both more in number, and also known to be debased and
insolent livers; where by the contrary, he was single alone,
being a man of sound reputation: yet because they were not at the
home, or there was no eye-witnesses present that could verify
their first invading of him, shall he therefore lose his head?
And likewise, by the lawburrows in our laws, men are prohibited
under great pecunial pains, from any wise invading or molesting
their neighbours person or bounds: if then his horse break the
halter, and pasture in his neighbours meadow, shall he pay two or
three thousand pounds for the wantonness of his horse, or the
weakness of his halter? Surely no: for laws are ordained as rules
of virtuous and social living, and not to be snares to trap your
good subjects: and therefore the law must be interpreted
according to the meaning, and not to the literal sense thereof:
Nam ratio est anima legis.
And as I said of justice, so say I of Clemency, Magnanimity,
Liberality, Constancy, Humility, and all other Princely virtues;
Nam in medjo stat virtus. And it is but the craft of the
Devil that falsely coloureth the two vices that are on either
side thereof with the borrowed titles of it, albeit in very deed
they have no affinity therewith and the two extremities
themselves, although they seem contrary, yet growing to the
height, run ever both in one: For in infinitis omnia
concurrunt; and what difference is betwixt extreme tyranny,
delighting to destroy all mankind; and extreme slackness of
punishment, permitting every man to tyrannize over his companion?
Or what differeth extreme prodigality, by wasting of all to
possess nothing; from extreme niggardness, by hoarding up all to
enjoy nothing; like the Ass that carrying victual on her back, is
like to starve for hunger, and will be glad of thistles for her
part? And what is betwixt the pride of a glorious
Nebuchadnezzar, and the preposterous humility of one of
the proud Puritans, claiming to their Parity, and crying, We are
all but vile worms, and yet will judge and give Law to their
King, but will be judged nor controlled by none? Surely there is
more pride under such a one's black bonnet, than under
Alexander the great his Diadem, as was said of
Diogenes in the like case.
But above all virtues, study to know well your own craft, which
is to rule your people. And when I say this, I bid you know all
crafts: For except ye know every one, how can ye control every
one, which is your proper office? Therefore besides your
education, it is necessary ye delight in reading, and seeking the
knowledge of all lawful things; but with these two restrictions:
first, that ye choose idle hours for it, not interrupting
therewith the discharge of your office: and next, that ye study
not for knowledge nakedly, but that your principal end be, to
make you able thereby to use your office; practicing according to
your knowledge in all the points of your calling: not like these
vain Astrologians, that study night and day on the course of the
stars, only that they may, for satisfying their curiosity, know
their course. But since all Arts and sciences are linked every
one with other, their greatest principles agreeing in one (which
moved the Poets to fame the nine Muses to be all sisters) study
them, that out of their harmony, ye may suck the knowledge of all
faculties; and consequently be on the counsel of all crafts, that
ye may be able to contain them all in order, as I have already
said: For knowledge and learning is a light burden, the weight
whereof will never press your shoulders.
First of all then, study to be well seen in the Scriptures, as I
remembered you in the first book; as well for the knowledge of
your own salvation, as that ye may be able to contain your Church
in their calling, as Custos vtriusque Tabuke. For the
ruling them well, is no small point of your office; taking
specially heed, that they vague not from their text in the
Pulpit: and if ever ye would have peace in your land, suffer them
not to meddle in that place with the estate or policy; but punish
severely the first that presumeth to it. Do nothing towards them
without a good ground and warrant, but reason not much with them:
for I have over-much surfeited them with that, and it is not
their fashion to yield. And suffer no conventions nor meetings
among Church-men, but by your knowledge and permission.
Next the Scriptures, study well your own Laws: for how can ye
discern by the thing ye know not? But press to draw all your Laws
and processes, to be as short and plain as ye can: assure your
self the longsomeness both of rights and processes, breedeth
their unsure looseness and obscurity, the shortest being ever
both the surest and plainest form, and the longsomeness serving
only for the enriching of the Advocates and Clerks, with the
spoil of the whole country: And therefore delight to haunt your
Session, and spy carefully their proceedings; taking good heed,
if any bribery may be tried among them, which cannot over
severely be punished. Spare not to go there, for gracing that far
any that ye favor, by your presence to procure them expedition of
Justice; although that should be specially done, for the poor
that cannot wait on, or are debarred by mightier parties. But
when ye are there, remember the throne is God's and not yours,
that ye sit in, and let no favor, nor whatsoever respects move
you from the right. Ye sit not there, as I shew before, for
rewarding of friends or servants, nor for crossing of contemners,
but only for doing of Justice. Learn also wisely to discern
between Justice and equity; and for pity of the poor, rob not the
rich, because he may better spare it, but give the little man the
larger coat if it be his; eschewing the error of young
Cyrus therein: For Justice, by the Law, giveth every man
his own; and equity in things judged, giveth every one that which
is meetest for him.
Be an ordinary sitter in your secret Counsel: that judicature is
only ordained for matters of estate, and repressing of insolent
oppressions. Make that judgement as compendious and plain as ye
can; and suffer no Advocates to be heard there with their
delayers, but let every party tell his own tale himself: and
weary not to hear the complaints of the oppressed, aut ne Rex
sis. Remit every thing to the ordinary judicature, for
eschewing of confusion: but let it be your own craft, to take a
sharp account of every man in his office.
And next the Laws, I would have you to be well versed in
authentic histories, and in the Chronicles of all nations, but
specially in our own histories (Ne sis peregrinus domi)
the example whereof most nearly concerns you: I mean not of such
infamous invectives, as Buchanan's or Knox's
Chronicles: and if any of these infamous libels remain until your
days, use the Law upon the keepers thereof: For in that point I
would have you a Pythagorist, to think that the very spirits of
these leading inciters of rebellion, have made transition in them
that hoards their books, or maintains their opinions; punishing
them, even as it were their authors risen again. But by reading
of authentic histories and Chronicles, ye shall learn experience
by Theoricke, applying the bypast things to the present estate,
quia nihil nouum sub sole: such is the continual
volubility of things earthly, according to the roundness of the
world, and revolution of the heavenly circles: which is expressed
by the wheels in Ezekiel's visions, and counterfeited by
the Poets in rota Fortunae. And likewise by the knowledge
of histories, ye shall know how to behave your self to all
Ambassadors and strangers; being able to discourse with them upon
the estate of their own country. And among all profane histories,
I must not omit most specially to recommend unto you, the
Commentaries of Caesar; both for the sweet flowing of the
stile, as also for the worthiness of the matter it self: For I
have ever been of that opinion, that of all the Ethnic Emperors,
or great Captains that ever were, he hath farthest excelled, both
in his practice, and in his precepts in martial affairs.
For the study of other liberal arts and sciences, I would have
you reasonably versed in them, but not pressing to be a
passe-master in any of them: for that cannot but distract you
from the points of your calling, as I shewed you before: and
when, by the enemy winning the town, ye shall be interrupted in
your demonstration, as Archimedes was; your people (I
think) will look very bluntly upon it. I grant it is meet ye have
some entrance, specially in the Mathematics; for the knowledge of
the art military, in situation of Camps, ordering of battles,
making Fortifications, placing of batteries, or such like. And
let not this your knowledge be dead without fruits, as Saint
James speaketh of Faith: but let it appear in your daily
conversation, and in all the actions of your life.
Embrace true magnanimity, not in being vindictive, which the
corrupted judgements of the world think to be true Magnanimity;
but by the contrary, in thinking your offender not worthy of your
wrath, ruling absolutely over your own passion, and triumphing in
the commanding your self to forgive: husbanding the effects of
your courage and wrath, to be rightly employed upon repelling of
injuries within, by revenge taking upon the oppressors; and in
revenging injuries without, by just wars upon foreign enemies.
And so, where ye find a notable injury, spare not to give course
to the torrents of your wrath. The wrath of a King, is like to
the roaring of a Lion.
Foster true Humility, in banishing pride, not only towards God
(considering ye differ not in stuff, but in use, and that only by
his ordinance, from the basest of your people) but also towards
your Parents. And if it fall out that my Wife shall out-live me,
as ever ye think to purchase my blessing, honour your mother: set
Beersheba in a throne on your right hand: offend her for
nothing, much less wrong her: remember her
Quce longa decem talent fastidia menses;
and that your flesh and blood is
made of her's: and begin not, like the young lords and Scottish
landowners, your first wars upon your Mother; but press earnestly
to deserve her blessing. Neither deceive your self with many that
say, they care not for their Parents curse, so they deserve it
not. O invert not the order of nature, by judging your superiors,
chiefly in your own particular! But assure your self, the
blessing or curse of the Parents, hath almost ever a Prophetic
power joined with it: and if there were no more, honour your
Parents, for the lengthening of your own days, as GOD in his Law
promiseth. Honour also them that are in loco Parentum unto
you, such as your governors, up-bringers, and Preceptors: be
thankful unto them and reward them, which is your duty and
honour.
But on the other part, let not this true humility stay your high
indignation to appear, when any great oppressors shall presume to
come in your presence; then frown as ye ought: And in-case they
use a color of Law in oppressing their poor ones, as over-many
do; that which ye cannot mend by Law, mend by the withdrawing of
your countenance from them: and once in the year cross them, when
their errands come in your way, recompensing the oppressor,
according to Christ's parable of the two debtors.
Keep true not only in your kindness towards honest men; but being
also inuicti animi against all adversities: not with that
Stoic insensible stupidity, wherewith many in our days, pressing
to win honour, in imitating that ancient sect, by their
inconstant behavior in their own lives, belie their profession.
But although ye are not a stoic, not to feel calamities; yet let
not the feeling of them, so over-rule and stupefy your reason, as
may stay you from taking and using the best resolution for
remedy, that can be found out.
Use true Liberality in rewarding the good, and bestowing frankly
for your honour and weale: but with that proportional discretion,
that every man may be served according to his measure, wherein
respect must be had to his rank, deserts, and necessity: And
provide how to have, but cast not away without cause. In special,
rule not by your Liberality the ordinary rents of your crown;
whereby the estate Royal of you, and your successors, must be
maintained, ne exhaurias fontem liberalitatis: for that
would ever be kept sacrosanctum & extra commercium:
otherwise, your Liberality would decline to Prodigality, in
helping others with your, and your successors hurt. And above
all, enrich not your self with exactions won your subjects; but
think the riches of your people your best treasure, by the sins
of offenders, where no prevention can avail, making justly your
commodity. And in-case necessity of wars, or other
extraordinaries compel you to lift Subsidies, do it as rarely as
ye can: employing it only to the use it was ordained for; and
using your self in that case, as fidus depositarius to
your people.
And principally, exercise true Wisdom; in discerning wisely
betwixt true and false reports; First, considering the nature of
the person reporter; Next, what interest he can have in the good
or evil of him, of whom he maketh the report; Thirdly, the
likelihood of the purpose it self; And last, the nature and
by-past life of the dilated person: and where ye find a tattler,
away with him. And although it be true, that a Prince can never
without secrecy do great things, yet it is better ofttimes to try
reports, than by credulity to foster suspicion upon an honest
man. For since suspicion is the Tyrants sickness, as the fruits
of an evil Conscience, potius in alteram partem peccato; I
mean, in not mistrusting one, whom-to no such dishonesty was
known before. But as for such as have slipped before, former
experience may justly breed prevention by fore-sight.
And to conclude my advice concerning your behavior in your
person; consider that GOD is the author of all virtue, having
imprinted in men's minds by the very light of nature, the love of
all moral virtues; as was seen by the virtuous hues of the old
Romans: and press then to shine as far before your people,
in all virtue and honesty; as in greatness of rank: that the use
thereof in all your actions, may turn, with time, to a natural
habitude in you; and as by their hearing of your Laws, so by
their sight of your person, both their eyes and their ears, may
lead and allure them to the love of virtue, and hatred of
vice.
End of the Second Book
| Bible Versions Main Page |
Introduction | The First Book | The Third Book |