Praise of Folly
ERASMUS OF ROTTERDAM
to his friend
THOMAS MORE, health:
As I was coming awhile since out of Italy for England, that I
might not waste all that time I was to sit on horseback in
foolish and illiterate fables, I chose rather one while to
revolve with myself something of our common studies, and other
while to enjoy the remembrance of my friends, of whom I left here
some no less learned than pleasant. Among these you, my More,
came first in my mind, whose memory, though absent yourself,
gives me such delight in my absence, as when present with you I
ever found in your company; than which, let me perish if in all
my life I ever met with anything more delectable. And therefore,
being satisfied that something was to be done, and that that time
was no wise proper for any serious matter, I resolved to make
some sport with the praise of folly. But who the devil put that
in your head? you'll say. The first thing was your surname of
More, which comes so near the word Moriae (folly) as you are far
from the thing. And that you are so, all the world will cleat
you. In the next place, I conceived this exercise of wit would
not be least approved by you; inasmuch as you are wont to be
delighted with such kind of mirth, that is to say, neither
unlearned, if I am not mistaken, not altogether insipid, and in
the whole course of your life have played the part of a
Democtitus. And though such is the excellence of your judgment
that it was even contrary to that of the people's, yet such is
your incredible ability and sweetness of temper that you both can
and delight to carry yourself to all men a man of all hours.
Wherefore you will not only with good will accept this small
declamation, but take upon you the defense of it, for as much as
being dedicated to you, it is now no longer mine but yours. But
perhaps there will not be wanting some wranglers that may cavil
and charge me, partly that these toys are lighter than may become
a divine, and partly more biting than may beseem the modesty of a
Christian, and consequently exclaim that I resemble the ancient
comedy, or another Lucian, and snarl at everything. But I would
have them whom the lightness or foolery of the argument may
offend to consider that mine is not the first of this kind, but
the same thing that has been often practiced even by great
authors: when Homer, so many ages since, did the like with the
battle of frogs and mice; Virgil, with the gnat and puddings;
Ovid, with the nut; when Polycrates and his corrector Isocrates
extolled tyranny; Glauco, injustice; Favorinus, deformity and the
quartan ague; Synescius, baldness; Lucian, the fly and flattery;
when Seneca made such sport with Claudius' canonizations;
Plutarch, with his dialogue between Ulysses and Gryllus; Lucian
and Apuleius, with the ass; and some other, I know not who, with
the hog that made his last will and testament, of which also even
St. Jerome makes mention. And therefore if they please, let them
suppose I played at tables for my diversion, or if they had
rather have it so, that I rode on a hobbyhorse. For what
injustice is it that when we allow every course of life its
recreation, that study only should have none? Especially when
such toys are not without their serious matter, and foolery is so
handled that the reader that is not altogether thick-skulled may
reap more benefit from it than from some men's crabbish and
specious arguments. As when one, with long study and great pains,
patches many pieces together on the praise of rhetoric or
philosophy; another makes a panegyric to a prince; another
encourages him to a war against the Turks; another tells you what
will become of the world after himself is dead; and another finds
out some new device for the better ordering of goat's wool: for
as nothing is more trifling than to treat of serious matters
triflingly, so nothing carries a better grace than so to
discourse of trifles as a man may seem to have intended them
least. For my own part, let other men judge of what I have
written; though yet, unless an overweening opinion of myself may
have made me blind in my own cause, I have praised folly, but not
altogether foolishly. And now to say somewhat to that other
cavil, of biting. This liberty was ever permitted to all men's
wits, to make their smart, witty reflections on the common errors
of mankind, and that too without offense, as long as this liberty
does not run into licentiousness; which makes me the more admire
the tender ears of the men of this age, that can away with solemn
titles. No, you'll meet with some so preposterously religious
that they will Sooner endure the broadest scoffs even against
Christ himself than hear the Pope or a prince be touched in the
least, especially if it be anything that concerns their profit;
whereas he that so taxes the lives of men, without naming anyone
in particular, whither, I pray, may he be said to bite, or rather
to teach and admonish? Or otherwise, I beseech you, under how
many notions do I tax myself? Besides, he that spares no sort of
men cannot be said to be angry with anyone in particular, but the
vices of all. And therefore, if there shall happen to be anyone
that shall say he is hit, he will but discover either his guilt
or fear. Saint Jerome sported in this kind with more freedom and
greater sharpness, not sparing sometimes men's very name. But I,
besides that I have wholly avoided it, I have so moderated my
style that the understanding reader will easily perceive my
endeavors herein were rather to make mirth than bite. Nor have I,
after the example of Juvenal, raked up that forgotten sink of
filth and ribaldry, but laid before you things rather ridiculous
than dishonest. And now, if there be anyone that is yet
dissatisfied, let him at least remember that it is no dishonor to
be discommended by Folly; and having brought her in speaking, it
was but fit that I kept up the character of the person. But why
do I run over these things to you, a person so excellent an
advocate that no man better defends his client, though the cause
many times be none of the best? Farewell, my best disputant More,
and stoutly defend your Moriae.
From the country,
the 5th of the Ides of June.
THE PRAISE OF FOLLY
An oration, of feigned matter, spoken by Folly in her own person
- At what rate soever the world talks of me (for I am not
ignorant what an ill report Folly has got, even among the most
foolish), yet that I am that she, that only she, whose deity
recreates both gods and men, even this is a sufficient argument,
that I no sooner stepped up to speak to this full assembly than
all your faces put on a kind of new and unwonted pleasantness. So
suddenly have you cleared your brows, and with so frolic and
hearty a laughter given me your applause, that in truth as many
of you as I behold on every side of me seem to me no less than
Homer's gods drunk with nectar and nepenthe; whereas before, you
sat as lumpish and pensive as if you had come from consulting an
oracle. And as it usually happens when the sun begins to show his
beams, or when after a sharp winter the spring breathes afresh on
the earth, all things immediately get a new face, new color, and
recover as it were a certain kind of youth again: in like manner
by but beholding me you have in an instant gotten another kind of
countenance; and so what the otherwise great rhetoricians with
their tedious and long-studied orations can hardly effect, to
wit, to remove the trouble of the mind, I have done it at once
with my single look.
- But if you ask me why I appear before you in this
strange dress, be pleased to lend me your ears, and I'll tell
you; not those ears, I mean, you carry to church, but abroad with
you, such as you are wont to prick up to jugglers, fools, and
buffoons, and such as our friend Midas once gave to Pan. For I am
disposed awhile to play the sophist with you; not of their sort
who nowadays boozle young men's heads with certain empty notions
and curious trifles, yet teach them nothing but a more than
womanish obstinacy of scolding: but I'll imitate those ancients
who, that they might the better avoid that infamous appellation
of sophi or wise chose rather to be called sophists. Their
business was to celebrate the praises of the gods and valiant
men. And the like encomium shall you hear from me, but neither of
Hercules nor Solon, but my own dear self, that is to say, Folly.
Nor do I esteem a rush that call it a foolish and insolent thing
to praise one's self. Be it as foolish as they would make it, so
they confess it proper: and what can be more than that Folly be
her own trumpet? For who can set me out better than myself,
unless perhaps I could be better known to another than to myself
? Though yet I think it somewhat more modest than the general
practice of our nobles and wise men who, throwing away all shame,
hire some flattering orator or lying poet from whose mouth they
may hear their praises, that is to say, mere lies; and yet,
composing themselves with a seeming modesty, spread out their
peacock's plumes and erect their crests, while this impudent
flatterer equals a man of nothing to the gods and proposes him as
an absolute pattern of all virtue that's wholly a stranger to it,
sets out a pitiful jay in other's feathers, washes the blackamoor
white, and lastly swells a gnat to an elephant. In short, I will
follow that old proverb that says, "He may lawfully praise
himself that lives far from neighbors." Though, by the way,
I cannot but wonder at the ingratitude, shall I say, or
negligence of men who, notwithstanding they honor me in the first
place and are willing enough to confess my bounty, yet not one of
them for these so many ages has there been who in some thankful
oration has set out the praises of Folly; when yet there has not
wanted them whose elaborate endeavors have extolled tyrants,
agues, flies, baldness, and such other pests of nature, to their
own loss of both time and sleep. And now you shall hear from me a
plain extemporary speech, but so much the truer. Nor would I have
you think it like the rest of orators, made for the ostentation
of wit; for these, as you know, when they have been beating their
heads some thirty years about an oration and at last perhaps
produce somewhat that was never their own, shall yet swear they
composed it in three days, and that too for diversion: whereas I
ever liked it best to speak whatever came first out.
- But let none of you expect from me that after the manner
of rhetoricians I should go about to define what I am, much less
use any division; for I hold it equally unlucky to circumscribe
her whose deity is universal, or make the least division in that
worship about which everything is so generally agreed. Or to what
purpose, think you, should I describe myself when I am here
present before you, and you behold me speaking? For I am, as you
see, that true and only giver of wealth whom the Greeks call
Moria, the Latins Stultitia, and our plain English Folly. Or what
need was there to have said so much, as if my very looks were not
sufficient to inform you who I am? Or as if any man, mistaking me
for wisdom, could not at first sight convince himself by my face
the true index of my mind? I am no counterfeit, nor do I carry
one thing in my looks and an other in my breast. No, I am in
every respect so like myself that neither can they dissemble me
who arrogate to themselves the appearance and title of wise men
and walk like asses in scarlet hoods, though after all their
hypocrisy Midas' ears will discover their master. A most
ungrateful generation of men that, when they are wholly given up
to my party, are yet publicly ashamed of the name, as taking it
for a reproach; for which cause, since in truth they are
morotatoi, fools, and yet would appear to the world to be wise
men and Thales, we'll even call them morosophous, wise fools.
- Nor will it be amiss also to imitate the rhetoricians of
our times, who think themselves in a manner gods if like horse
leeches they can but appear to be double-tongued, and believe
they have done a mighty act if in their Latin orations they can
but shuffle in some ends of Greek like mosaic work, though
altogether by head and shoulders and less to the purpose. And if
they want hard words, they run over some worm-eaten manuscript
and pick out half a dozen of the most old and obsolete to
confound their reader, believing, no doubt, that they that
understand their meaning will like it the better, out its
particular grace; for if there happen to be any mote ambitious
than others, they may give their applause with a smile, and, like
the ass, shake their ears, that they may be thought to understand
more than the rest of their neighbors.
- But to come to the purpose: I have given you my name,
but what epithet shall I add? What but that of the most foolish?
For by what more proper name can so great a goddess as Folly be
known to her disciples? And because it is not alike known to all
from what stock I am sprung, with the Muses' good leave I'll do
my endeavor to satisfy you. But yet neither the first Chaos,
Orcus, Saturn, or Japhet, nor any of those threadbare, musty gods
were my father, but Plutus, Riches; that only he, that is, in
spite of Hesiod, Homer, nay and Jupiter himself, divum pater
atque hominum rex, the father of gods and men, at whose single
beck, as heretofore, so at present, all things sacred and profane
are turned topsy-turvy. According to whose pleasure war, peace,
empire, counsels, judgments, assemblies, wedlocks, bargains,
leagues, laws, arts, all things light or serious--I want
breath--in short, all the public and private business of mankind
is governed; without whose help all that herd of gods of the
poets' making, and those few of the better sort of the rest,
either would not be at all, or if they were, they would be but
such as live at home and keep a poor house to themselves. And to
whomsoever he's an enemy, 'tis not Pallas herself that can
befriend him; as on the contrary he whom he favors may lead
Jupiter and his thunder in a string. This is my father and in him
I glory. Nor did he produce me from his brain, as Jupiter that
sour and ill-looked Pallas; but of that lovely nymph called
Youth, the most beautiful and galliard of all the rest. Not was
I, like that limping blacksmith, begot in the sad and irksome
bonds of matrimony. Yet, mistake me not, 'twas not that blind and
decrepit Plutus in Aristophanes that got me, but such as he was
in his full strength and pride of youth; and not that only, but
at such a time when he had been well heated with nectar, of which
he had, at one of the banquets of the gods, taken a dose
extraordinary.
- And as to the place of my birth, forasmuch as nowadays that is
looked upon as a main point of nobility, it was neither, like
Apollo's, in the floating Delos, nor Venus-like on the rolling
sea, nor in any of blind Homer's as blind caves: but in the
Fortunate Islands, where all things grew without plowing or
sowing; where neither labor, nor old age, nor disease was ever
heard of; and in whose fields neither daffodil, mallows, onions,
beans, and such contemptible things would ever grow, but, on the
contrary, rue, angelica, bugloss, marjoram, trefoils, roses,
violets, lilies, and all the gardens of Adonis invite both your
sight and your smelling. And being thus born, I did not begin the
world, as other children are wont, with crying; but straight
perched up and smiled on my mother. Nor do I envy to the great
Jupiter the goat, his nurse, forasmuch as I was suckled by two
jolly nymphs, to wit, Drunkenness, the daughter of Bacchus, and
Ignorance, of Pan. And as for such my companions and followers as
you perceive about me, if you have a mind to know who they are,
you are not like to be the wiser for me, unless it be in Greek:
this here, which you observe with that proud cast of her eye, is
Philautia, Self-love; she with the smiling countenance, that is
ever and anon clapping her hands, is Kolakia, Flattery; she that
looks as if she were half asleep is Lethe, Oblivion; she that
sits leaning on both elbows with her hands clutched together is
Misoponia, Laziness; she with the garland on her head, and that
smells so strong of perfumes, is Hedone, Pleasure; she with those
staring eyes, moving here and there, is Anoia, Madness; she with
the smooth skin and full pampered body is Tryphe, Wantonness;
and, as to the two gods that you see with them, the one is Komos,
Intemperance, the other Ecgretos hypnos, Dead Sleep. These, I
say, are my household servants, and by their faithful counsels I
have subjected all things to my dominion and erected an empire
over emperors themselves. Thus have you had my lineage,
education, and companions .
- And now, lest I may seem to have taken upon me the name
of goddess without cause, you shall in the next place understand
how far my deity extends, and what advantage by it I have brought
both to gods and men. For, if it was not unwisely said by
somebody, that this only is to be a god, to help men; and if they
are deservedly enrolled among the gods that first brought in corn
and wine and such other things as are for the common good of
mankind, why am not I of right the alpha, or first, of all the
gods? who being but one, yet bestow all things on all men. For
first, what is more sweet or more precious than life? And yet
from whom can it more properly be said to come than from me? For
neither the crab-favoured Pallas' spear nor the cloudgathering
Jupiter's shield either beget or propagate mankind; but even he
himself, the father of gods and king of men at whose very beck
the heavens shake, must lay by his forked thunder and those looks
wherewith he conquered the giants and with which at pleasure he
frightens the rest of the gods, and like a common stage player
put on a disguise as often as he goes about that, which now and
then he does, that is to say the getting of children: And the
Stoics too, that conceive themselves next to the gods, yet show
me one of them, nay the veriest bigot of the sect, and if he do
not put off his beard, the badge of wisdom, though yet it be no
more than what is common with him and goats; yet at least he must
lay by his supercilious gravity, smooth his forehead, shake off
his rigid principles, and for some time commit an act of folly
and dotage. In fine, that wise man whoever he be, if he intends
to have children, must have recourse to me. But tell me, I
beseech you, what man is that would submit his neck to the noose
of wedlock, if, as wise men should, he did but first truly weigh
the inconvenience of the thing? Or what woman is there would ever
go to it did she seriously consider either the peril of
child-bearing or the trouble of bringing them up? So then, if you
owe your beings to wedlock, you owe that wedlock to this my
follower, Madness; and what you owe to me I have already told
you. Again, she that has but once tried what it is, would she, do
you think, make a second venture if it were not for my other
companion, Oblivion? Nay, even Venus herself, notwithstanding
whatever Lucretius has said, would not deny but that all her
virtue were lame and fruitless without the help of my deity. For
out of that little, odd, ridiculous May-game came the
supercilious philosophers, in whose room have succeeded a kind of
people the world calls monks, cardinals, priests, and the most
holy popes. And lastly, all that rabble of the poets' gods, with
which heaven is so thwacked and thronged, that though it be of so
vast an extent, they are hardly able to crowd one by another.
- But I think it is a small matter that you thus owe your
beginning of life to me, unless I also show you that whatever
benefit you receive in the progress of it is of my gift likewise.
For what other is this? Can that be called life where you take
away pleasure? Oh! Do you like what I say? I knew none of you
could have so little wit, or so much folly, or wisdom rather, as
to be of any other opinion. For even the Stoics themselves that
so severely cried down pleasure did but handsomely dissemble, and
railed against it to the common people to no other end but that
having discouraged them from it, they might the more plentifully
enjoy it themselves. But tell me, by Jupiter, what part of man's
life is that that is not sad, crabbed, unpleasant, insipid,
troublesome, unless it be seasoned with pleasure, that is to say,
folly? For the proof of which the never sufficiently praised
Sophocles in that his happy elegy of us, "To know nothing is
the only happiness," might be authority enough, but that I
intend to take every particular by itself.
- And first, who knows not but a man's infancy is the
merriest part of life to himself, and most acceptable to others?
For what is that in them which we kiss, embrace, cherish, nay
enemies succor, but this witchcraft of folly, which wise Nature
did of purpose give them into the world with them that they might
the more pleasantly pass over the toil of education, and as it
were flatter the care and diligence of their nurses? And then for
youth, which is in such reputation everywhere, how do all men
favor it, study to advance it, and lend it their helping hand?
And whence, I pray, all this grace? Whence but from me? by whose
kindness, as it understands as little as may be, it is also for
that reason the higher privileged from exceptions; and I am
mistaken if, when it is grown up and by experience and discipline
brought to savor something like man, if in the same instant that
beauty does not fade, its liveliness decay, its pleasantness grow
fat, and its briskness fail. And by how much the further it runs
from me, by so much the less it lives, till it comes to the
burden of old age, not only hateful to others, but to itself
also. Which also were altogether insupportable did not I pity its
condition, in being present with it, and, as the poets' gods were
wont to assist such as were dying with some pleasant
metamorphosis, . help their decrepitness as much as in me lies by
bringing them back to a second childhood, from whence they are
not improperly called twice children. Which, if you ask me how I
do it, I shall not be shy in the point. I bring them to our River
Lethe (for its springhead rises in the Fortunate Islands, and
that other of hell is but a brook in comparison), from which, as
soon as they have drunk down a long forgetfulness, they wash away
by degrees the perplexity of their minds, and so wax young again.
- But perhaps you'll say they are foolish and doting.
Admit it; 'tis the very essence of childhood; as if to be such
were not to be a fool, or that that condition had anything
pleasant in it, but that it understood nothing. For who would not
look upon that child as a prodigy that should have as much wisdom
as a man?--according to that common proverb, "I do not like
a child that is a man too soon." Or who would endure a
converse or friendship with that old man who to so large an
experience of things had joined an equal strength of mind and
sharpness of judgment? And therefore for this reason it is that
old age dotes; and that it does so, it is beholding to me. Yet,
notwithstanding, is this dotard exempt from all those cares that
distract a wise man; he is not the less pot companion, nor is he
sensible of that burden of life which the more manly age finds
enough to do to stand upright under it. And sometimes too, like
Plautus' old man, he returns to his three letters, A.M.O., the
most unhappy of all things living, if he rightly understood what
he did in it. And yet, so much do I befriend him that I make him
well received of his friends and no unpleasant companion; for as
much as, according to Homer, Nestor's discourse was pleasanter
than honey, whereas Achilles' was both bitter and malicious; and
that of old men, as he has it in another place, florid. In which
respect also they have this advantage of children, in that they
want the only pleasure of the others' life, we'll suppose it
prattling. Add to this that old men are more eagerly delighted
with children, and they, again, with old men. "Like to
like," quoted the Devil to the collier. For what difference
between them, but that the one has more wrinkles and years upon
his head than the other? Otherwise, the brightness of their hair,
toothless mouth, weakness of body, love of mild, broken speech,
chatting, toying, forgetfulness, inadvertency, and briefly, all
other their actions agree in everything. And by how much the
nearer they approach to this old age, by so much they grow
backward into the likeness of children, until like them they pass
from life to death, without any weariness of the one, or sense of
the other.
- And now, let him that will compare the benefits they
receive by me, the metamorphoses of the gods, of whom I shall not
mention what they have done in their pettish humors but where
they have been most favorable: turning one into a tree, another
into a bird, a third into a grasshopper, serpent, or the like. As
if there were any difference between perishing and being another
thing! But I restore the same man to the best and happiest part
of his life. And if men would but refrain from all commerce with
wisdom and give up themselves to be governed by me, they should
never know what it were to be old, but solace themselves with a
perpetual youth. Do but observe our grim philosophers that are
perpetually beating their brains on knotty subjects, and for the
most part you'll find them grown old before they are scarcely
young. And whence is it, but that their continual and restless
thoughts insensibly prey upon their spirits and dry up their
radical moisture? Whereas, on the contrary, my fat fools are as
plump and round as a Westphalian hog, and never sensible of old
age, unless perhaps, as sometimes it rarely happens, they come to
be infected with wisdom, so hard a thing it is for a man to be
happy in all things. And to this purpose is that no small
testimony of the proverb, that says, "Folly is the only
thing that keeps youth at a stay and old age afar off;" as
it is verified in the Brabanders, of whom there goes this common
saying, "That age, which is wont to render other men wiser,
makes them the greater fools." And yet there is scarce any
nation of a more jocund converse, or that is less sensible of the
misery of old age, than they are. And to these, as in situation,
so for manner of living, come nearest my friends the Hollanders.
And why should I not call them mine, since they are so diligent
observers of me that they are commonly called by my name?--of
which they are so far from being ashamed, they rather pride
themselves in it. Let the foolish world then be packing and seek
out Medeas, Circes, Venuses, Auroras, and I know not what other
fountains of restoring youth. I am sure I am the only person that
both can, and have, made it good. 'Tis I alone that have that
wonderful juice with which Memnon's daughter prolonged the youth
of her grandfather Tithon. I am that Venus by whose favor Phaon
became so young again that Sappho fell in love with him. Mine are
those herbs, if yet there be any such, mine those charms, and
mine that fountain that not only restores departed youth but,
which is more desirable, preserves it perpetual. And if you all
subscribe to this opinion, that nothing is better than youth or
more execrable than age, I conceive you cannot but see how much
you are indebted to me, that have retained so great a good and
shut out so great an evil.
- But why do I altogether spend my breath in speaking of
mortals? View heaven round, and let him that will reproach me
with my name if he find any one of the gods that were not
stinking and contemptible were he not made acceptable by my
deity. Why is it that Bacchus is always a stripling, and
bushy-haired? but because he is mad, and drunk, and spends his
life in drinking, dancing, revels, and May games, not having so
much as the least society with Pallas. And lastly, he is so far
from desiring to be accounted wise that he delights to be
worshipped with sports and gambols; nor is he displeased with the
proverb that gave him the surname of fool, "A greater fool
than Bacchus;" which name of his was changed to Morychus,
for that sitting before the gates of his temple, the wanton
country people were wont to bedaub him with new wine and figs.
And of scoffs, what not, have not the ancient comedies thrown on
him? O foolish god, say they, and worthy to be born as you were
of your father's thigh! And yet, who had not rather be your fool
and sot, always merry, ever young, and making sport for other
people, than either Homer's Jupiter with his crooked counsels,
terrible to everyone; or old Pan with his hubbubs; or smutty
Vulcan half covered with cinders; or even Pallas herself, so
dreadful with her Gorgon's head and spear and a countenance like
bullbeef? Why is Cupid always portrayed like a boy, but because
he is a very wag and can neither do nor so much as think of
anything sober? Why Venus ever in her prime, but because of her
vanity with me? Witness that color of her hair, so resembling my
father, from whence she is called the golden Venus; and lastly,
ever laughing, if you give any credit to the poets, or their
followers the statuaries. What deity did the Romans ever more
religiously adore than that of Flora, the foundress of all
pleasure? Nay, if you should but diligently search the lives of
the most sour and morose of the gods out of Homer and the test of
the poets, you would find them all but so many pieces of Folly.
And to what purpose should I run over any of the other gods'
tricks when you know enough of Jupiter's loose loves? When that
chaste Diana shall so fat forget her sex as to be ever hunting
and ready to perish for Endymion? But I had rather they should
hear these things from Momus, from whom heretofore they were wont
to have their shares, till in one of their angry humors they
tumbled him, together with Ate, goddess of mischief, down
headlong to the earth, because his wisdom, forsooth, unseasonably
disturbed their happiness. Nor since that dares any mortal give
him harbor, though I must confess there wanted little but that he
had been received into the courts of princes, had not my
companion Flattery reigned in chief there, with whom and the
other there is no more correspondence than between lambs and
wolves. From whence it is that the gods play the fool with the
greater liberty and more content to themselves "doing all
things carelessly," as says Father Homer, that is to say,
without anyone to correct them. For what ridiculous stuff is
there which that stump of the fig tree Pripaus does not afford
them? What tricks and legerdemains with which Mercury does not
cloak his thefts? What buffoonery that Vulcan is not guilty of,
while one with his polt-foot, another with his smutched muzzle,
another with his impertinencies, he makes sport for the rest of
the gods? As also that old Silenus with his country dances,
Polyphemus footing time to his Cyclops hammers, the nymphs with
their jigs and satyrs with their antics; while Pan makes them all
twitter with some coarse ballad, which yet they had rather hear
than the Muses themselves, and chiefly when they are well
whittled with nectar. Besides, what should I mention what these
gods do when they are half drunk? Now by my troth, so foolish
that I myself can hardly refrain laughter. But in these matters
'twere better we remembered Harpocrates, lest some eavesdropping
god or other take us whispering that which Momus only has the
privilege of speaking at length.
- And therefore, according to Homer's example, I think it
high time to leave the gods to themselves, and look down a little
on the earth; wherein likewise you'll find nothing frolic or
fortunate that it owes not to me. So provident has that great
parent of mankind, Nature, been that there should not be anything
without its mixture and, as it were, seasoning of Folly. For
since according to the definition of the Stoics, wisdom is
nothing else than to be governed by reason, and on the contrary
Folly, to be given up to the will of our passions, that the life
of man might not be altogether disconsolate and hard to away
with, of how much more passion than reason has Jupiter composed
us? putting in, as one would say, "scarce half an ounce to a
pound." Besides, he has confined reason to a narrow corner
of the brain and left all the rest of the body to our passions;
has also set up, against this one, two as it were, masterless
tyrants--anger, that possesses the region of the heart, and
consequently the very fountain of life, the heart itself; and
lust, that stretches its empire everywhere. Against which double
force how powerful reason is let common experience declare,
inasmuch as she, which yet is all she can do, may call out to us
till she be hoarse again and tell us the rules of honesty and
virtue; while they give up the reins to their governor and make a
hideous clamor, till at last being wearied, he suffer himself to
be carried whither they please to hurry him.
- But forasmuch as such as are born to the business of the
world have some little sprinklings of reason more than the rest,
yet that they may the better manage it, even in this as well as
in other things, they call me to counsel; and I give them such as
is worthy of myself, to wit, that they take to them a wife--a
silly thing, God wot, and foolish, yet wanton and pleasant, by
which means the roughness of the masculine temper is seasoned and
sweetened by her folly. For in that Plato seems to doubt under
what genus he should put woman, to wit, that of rational
creatures or brutes, he intended no other in it than to show the
apparent folly of the sex. For if perhaps any of them goes about
to be thought wiser than the rest, what else does she do but play
the fool twice, as if a man should "teach a cow to
dance," "a thing quite against the hair." For as
it doubles the crime if anyone should put a disguise upon Nature,
or endeavor to bring her to that she will in no wise bear,
according to that proverb of the Greeks, "An ape is an ape,
though clad in scarlet;" so a woman is a woman still, that
is to say foolish, let her put on whatever viz'ard she please.
- But, by the way, I hope that sex is not so foolish as to
take offense at this, that I myself, being a woman, and Folly
too, have attributed folly to them. For if they weigh it tight,
they needs must acknowledge that they owe it to folly that they
are more fortunate than men. As first their beauty, which, and
that not without cause, they prefer before everything, since by
its means they exercise a tyranny even upon tyrants themselves;
otherwise, whence proceeds that sour look, rough skin, bushy
beard, and such other things as speak plain old age in a man, but
from that disease of wisdom? Whereas women's cheeks are ever
plump and smooth, their voice small, their skin soft, as if they
imitated a certain kind of perpetual youth. Again, what greater
thing do they wish in their whole lives than that they may please
the man? For to what other purpose are all those dresses, washes,
baths, slops, perfumes, and those several little tricks of
setting their faces, painting their eyebrows, and smoothing their
skins? And now tell me, what higher letters of recommendation
have they to men than this folly? For what is it they do not
permit them to do? And to what other purpose than that of
pleasure? Wherein yet their folly is not the least thing that
pleases; which so true it is, I think no one will deny, that does
but consider with himself, what foolish discourse and odd gambols
pass between a man and his woman, as often as he had a mind to be
gamesome? And so I have shown you whence the first and chiefest
delight of man's life springs.
- But there are some, you'll say, and those too none of
the youngest, that have a greater kindness for the pot than the
petticoat and place their chiefest pleasure in good fellowship.
If there can be any great entertainment without a woman at it,
let others look to it. This I am sure, there was never any
pleasant which folly gave not the relish to. Insomuch that if
they find no occasion of laughter, they send for "one that
may make it," or hire some buffoon flatterer, whose
ridiculous discourse may put by the gravity of the company. For
to what purpose were it to clog our stomachs with dainties,
junkets, and the like stuff, unless our eyes and ears, nay whole
mind, were likewise entertained with jests, merriments, and
laughter? But of these kind of second courses I am the only cook;
though yet those ordinary practices of our feasts, as choosing a
king, throwing dice, drinking healths, trolling it round, dancing
the cushion, and the like, were not invented by the seven wise
men but myself, and that too for the common pleasure of mankind.
The nature of all which things is such that the more of folly
they have, the more they conduce to human life, which, if it were
unpleasant, did not deserve the name of life; and other than such
it could not well be, did not these kind of diversions wipe away
tediousness, next cousin to the other.
- But perhaps there are some that neglect this way of
pleasure and rest satisfied in the enjoyment of their friends,
calling friendship the most desirable of all things, more
necessary than either air, fire, or water; so delectable that he
that shall take it out of the world had as good put out the sun;
and, lastly, so commendable, if yet that make anything to the
matter, that neither the philosophers themselves doubted to
reckon it among their chiefest good. But what if I show you that
I am both the beginning and end of this so great good also? Nor
shall I go about to prove it by fallacies, sorites, dilemmas, or
other the like subtleties of logicians, but after my blunt way
point out the thing as clearly as it were with my finger.
- And now tell me if to wink, slip over, be blind at, or
deceived in the vices of our friends, nay, to admire and esteem
them for virtues, be not at least the next degree to folly? What
is it when one kisses his mistress' freckle neck, another the
watt on her nose? When a father shall swear his squint-eyed child
is more lovely than Venus? What is this, I say, but mere folly?
And so, perhaps you'll cry it is; and yet 'tis this only that
joins friends together and continues them so joined. I speak of
ordinary men, of whom none are born without their imperfections,
and happy is he that is pressed with the least: for among wise
princes there is either no friendship at all, or if there be,
'tis unpleasant and reserved, and that too but among a very few
'twere a crime to say none. For that the greatest part of mankind
are fools, nay there is not anyone that dotes not in many things;
and friendship, you know, is seldom made but among equals. And
yet if it should so happen that there were a mutual good will
between them, it is in no wise firm nor very long lived; that is
to say, among such as are morose and more circumspect than needs,
as being eagle-sighted into his friends' faults, but so
blear-eyed to their own that they take not the least notice of
the wallet that hangs behind their own shoulders. Since then the
nature of man is such that there is scarce anyone to be found
that is not subject to many errors, add to this the great
diversity of minds and studies, so many slips, oversights, and
chances of human life, and how is it possible there should be any
true friendship between those Argus, so much as one hour, were it
not for that which the Greeks excellently call euetheian? And you
may render by folly or good nature, choose you whether. But what?
Is not the author and parent of all our love, Cupid, as blind as
a beetle? And as with him all colors agree, so from him is it
that everyone likes his own sweeterkin best, though never so
ugly, and "that an old man dotes on his old wife, and a boy
on his girl." These things are not only done everywhere but
laughed at too; yet as ridiculous as they are, they make society
pleasant, and, as it were, glue it together.
- And what has been said of friendship may more reasonably
be presumed of matrimony, which in truth is no other than an
inseparable conjunction of life. Good God! What divorces, or what
not worse than that, would daily happen were not the converse
between a man and his wife supported and cherished by flattery,
apishness, gentleness, ignorance, dissembling, certain retainers
of mine also! Whoop holiday! how few marriages should we have, if
the husband should but thoroughly examine how many tricks his
pretty little mop of modesty has played before she was married!
And how fewer of them would hold together, did not most of the
wife's actions escape the husband's knowledge through his neglect
or sottishness! And for this also you are beholden to me, by
whose means it is that the husband is pleasant to his wife, the
wife to her husband, and the house kept in quiet. A man is
laughed at, when seeing his wife weeping he licks up her tears.
But how much happier is it to be thus deceived than by being
troubled with jealousy not only to torment himself but set all
things in a hubbub! In fine, I am so necessary to the making of
all society and manner of life both delightful and lasting, that
neither would the people long endure their governors, nor the
servant his master, nor the master his footman, nor the scholar
his tutor, nor one friend another, nor the wife her husband, nor
the usurer the borrower, nor a soldier his commander, nor one
companion another, unless all of them had their interchangeable
failings, one while flattering, other while prudently conniving,
and generally sweetening one another with some small relish of
folly.
- And now you'd think I had said all, but you shall hear
yet greater things. Will he, I pray, love anyone that hates
himself ? Or ever agree with another who is not at peace with
himself? Or beget pleasure in another that is troublesome to
himself? I think no one will say it that is not more foolish than
Folly. And yet, if you should exclude me, there's no man but
would be so far from enduring another that he would stink in his
own nostrils, be nauseated with his own actions, and himself
become odious to himself; forasmuch as Nature, in too many things
rather a stepdame than a parent to us, has imprinted that evil in
men, especially such as have least judgment, that everyone
repents him of his own condition and admires that of others.
Whence it comes to pass that all her gifts, elegancy, and graces
corrupt and perish. For what benefit is beauty, the greatest
blessing of heaven, if it be mixed with affectation? What youth,
if corrupted with the severity of old age?
- Lastly, what is that in the whole business of a man's
life he can do with any grace to himself or others --for it is
not so much a thing of art, as the very life of every action,
that it be done with a good mien --unless this my friend and
companion, Self-love, be present with it? Nor does she without
cause supply me the place of a sister, since her whole endeavors
are to act my part everywhere. For what is more foolish than for
a man to study nothing else than how to please himself? To make
himself the object of his own admiration? And yet, what is there
that is either delightful or taking, nay rather what not the
contrary, that a man does against the hair? Take away this salt
of life, and the orator may even sit still with his action, the
musician with all his division will be able to please no man, the
player be hissed off the stage, the poet and all his Muses
ridiculous, the painter with his art contemptible, and the
physician with all his slip-slops go a-begging. Lastly, you will
be taken for an ugly fellow instead of youthful, and a beast
instead of a wise man, a child instead of eloquent, and instead
of a well-bred man, a clown. So necessary a thing it is that
everyone flatter himself and commend himself to himself before he
can be commended by others Lastly, since it is the chief point of
happiness "that a man is willing to be what he is," you
have further abridged in this my Self-love, that no man is
ashamed of his own face, no man of his own wit, no man of his own
parentage, no man of his own house, no man of his manner of
living, not any man of his own country; so that a Highlander has
no desire to change with an Italian, a Thracian with an Athenian,
not a Scythian for the Fortunate Islands. O the singular care of
Nature, that in so great a variety of things has made all equal!
Where she has been sometimes sparing of her gifts she has
recompensed it with the mote of self-love; though here, I must
confess, I speak foolishly, it being the greatest of all other
her gifts: to say nothing that no great action was ever attempted
without my motion, or art brought to perfection without my help.
- Is not war the very root and matter of all famed
enterprises? And yet what more foolish than to undertake it for I
know what trifles, especially when both parties are sure to lose
more than they get by the bargain? For of those that are slain,
not a word of them; and for the rest, when both sides are close
engaged "and the trumpets make an ugly noise," what use
of those wise men, I pray, that are so exhausted with study that
their thin, cold blood has scarce any spirits left? No, it must
be those blunt, fat fellows, that by how much the more they
exceed in courage, fall short in understanding. Unless perhaps
one had rather choose Demosthenes for a soldier, who, following
the example of Archilochius, threw away his arms and betook him
to his heels e'er he had scarce seen his enemy; as ill a soldier,
as happy an orator.
- But counsel, you'll say, is not of least concern in
matters of war. In a general I grant it; but this thing of
warring is not part of philosophy, but managed by parasites,
panders, thieves, cut-throats, plowmen, sots, spendthrifts, and
such other dregs of mankind, not philosophers; who how unapt they
are even for common converse, let Socrates, whom the oracle of
Apollo, though not so wisely, judged "the wisest of all men
living," be witness; who stepping up to speak somewhat, I
know not what, in public was forced to come down again well
laughed at for his pains. Though yet in this he was not
altogether a fool, that he refused the appellation of wise, and
returning it back to the oracle, delivered his opinion that a
wise man should abstain from meddling with public business;
unless perhaps he should have rather admonished us to beware of
wisdom if we intended to be reckoned among the number of men,
there being nothing but his wisdom that first accused and
afterwards sentenced him to the drinking of his poisoned cup. For
while, as you find him in Aristophanes, philosophizing about
clouds and ideas, measuring how far a flea could leap, and
admitting that so small a creature as a fly should make so great
a buzz, he meddled not with anything that concerned common life.
But his master being in danger of his head, his scholar Plato is
at hand, to wit that famous patron, that being disturbed with the
noise of the people, could not go through half his first
sentence. What should I speak of Theophrastus, who being about to
make an oration, became as dumb as if he had met a wolf in his
way, which yet would have put courage in a man of war? Or
Isocrates, that was so cowhearted that he dared never attempt it?
Or Tully, that great founder of the Roman eloquence, that could
never begin to speak without an odd kind of trembling, like a boy
that had got the hiccough; which Fabius interprets as an argument
of a wise orator and one that was sensible of what he was doing;
and while he says it, does he not plainly confess that wisdom is
a great obstacle to the true management of business? What would
become of them, think you, were they to fight it out at blows
that are so dead through fear when the contest is only with empty
words ?
- And next to these is cried up, forsooth, that goodly
sentence of Plato's, "Happy is that commonwealth where a
philosopher is prince, or whose prince is addicted to
philosophy." When yet if you consult historians, you'll find
no princes more pestilent to the commonwealth than where the
empire has fallen to some smatterer in philosophy or one given to
letters. To the truth of which I think the Catoes give sufficient
credit; of whom the one was ever disturbing the peace of the
commonwealth with his hair-brained accusations; the other, while
he too wisely vindicated its liberty, quite overthrew it. Add to
this the Bruti, Casii, nay Cicero himself, that was no less
pernicious to the commonwealth of Rome than was Demosthenes to
that of Athens. Besides M. Antoninus (that I may give you one
instance that there was once one good empetor; for with much ado
I can make it out) was become burdensome and hated of his
subjects upon no other score but that he was so great a
philosopher. But admitting him good, he did the commonwealth more
hurt in leaving behind him such a son as he did than ever he did
it good by his own government. For these kind of men that are so
given up to the study of wisdom are generally most unfortunate,
but chiefly in their children; Nature, it seems, so providently
ordering it, lest this mischief of wisdom should spread further
among mankind. For which reason it is manifest why Cicero's son
was so degenerate, and that wise Socrates' children, as one has
well observed, were more like their mother than their father,
that is to say, fools.
- However this were to be born with, if only as to public
employments they were "like a sow upon a pair of
organs," were they anything more apt to discharge even the
common offices of life. Invite a wise man to a feast and he'll
spoil the company, either with morose silence or troublesome
disputes. Take him out to dance, and you'll swear "a cow
would have done it better." Bring him to the theatre, and
his very looks are enough to spoil all, till like Cato he take an
occasion of withdrawing rather than put off his supercilious
gravity. Let him fall into discourse, and he shall make more
sudden stops than if he had a wolf before him. Let him buy, or
sell, or in short go about any of those things without there is
no living in this world, and you'll say this piece of wisdom were
rather a stock than a man, of so little use is he to himself,
country, or friends; and all because he is wholly ignorant of
common things and lives a course of life quite different from the
people; by which means it is impossible but that he contract a
popular odium, to wit, by reason of the great diversity of their
life and souls. For what is there at all done among men that is
not full of folly, and that too from fools and to fools? Against
which universal practice if any single one shall dare to set up
his throat, my advice to him is, that following the example of
Timon, he retire into some desert and there enjoy his wisdom to
himself.
- But, to return to my design, what power was it that drew
those stony, oaken, and wild people into cities but flattery? For
nothing else is signified by Amphion and Orpheus' harp. What was
it that, when the common people of Rome were like to have
destroyed all by their mutiny, reduced them to obedience? Was it
a philosophical oration? Least. But a ridiculous and childish
fable of the belly and the rest of the members. And as good
success had Themistocles in his of the fox and hedgehog. What
wise man's oration could ever have done so much with the people
as Sertorius' invention of his white hind? Or his ridiculous
emblem of pulling off a horse's tail hair by hair? Or as Lycurgus
his example of his two whelps? To say nothing of Minos and Numa,
both which ruled their foolish multitudes with fabulous
inventions; with which kind of toys that great and powerful
beast, the people, are led anyway. Again what city ever received
Plato's or Aristotle's laws, or Socrates' precepts? But, on the
contrary, what made the Decii devote themselves to the infernal
gods, or Q. Curtius to leap into the gulf, but an empty
vainglory, a most bewitching siren? And yet 'tis strange it
should be so condemned by those wise philosophers. For what is
more foolish, say they, than for a suppliant suitor to flatter
the people, to buy their favor with gifts, to court the applauses
of so many fools, to please himself with their acclamations, to
be carried on the people's shoulders as in triumph, and have a
brazen statue in the marketplace? Add to this the adoption of
names and surnames, those divine honors given to a man of no
reputation, and the deification of the most wicked tyrants with
public ceremonies; most foolish things, and such as one
Democritus is too little to laugh at. Who denies it? And yet from
this root sprang all the great acts of the heroes which the pens
of so many eloquent men have extolled to the skies. In a word,
this folly is that that laid the foundation of cities; and by it,
empire, authority, religion, policy, and public actions are
preserved; neither is there anything in human life that is not a
kind of pastime of folly.
- But to speak of arts, what set men's wits on work to
invent and transmit to posterity so many famous, as they
conceive, pieces of learning but the thirst of glory? With so
much loss of sleep, such pains and travail, have the most foolish
of men thought to purchase themselves a kind of I know not what
fame, than which nothing can be more vain. And yet
notwithstanding, you owe this advantage to folly, and which is
the most delectable of all other, that you reap the benefit of
other men's madness.
- And now, having vindicated to myself the praise of
fortitude and industry, what think you if I do the same by that
of prudence? But some will say, you may as well join fire and
water. It may be so. But yet I doubt not but to succeed even in
this also, if, as you have done hitherto, you will but favor me
with your attention. And first, if prudence depends upon
experience, to whom is the honor of that name more proper? To the
wise man, who partly out of modesty and partly distrust of
himself, attempts nothing; or the fool, whom neither modesty
which he never had, nor danger which he never considers, can
discourage from anything? The wise man has recourse to the books
of the ancients, and from thence picks nothing but subtleties of
words. The fool, in undertaking and venturing on the business of
the world, gathers, if I mistake not, the true prudence, such as
Homer though blind may be said to have seen when he said,
"The burnt child dreads the fire." For there are two
main obstacles to the knowledge of things, modesty that casts a
mist before the understanding, and fear that, having fancied a
danger, dissuades us from the attempt. But from these folly
sufficiently frees us, and few there are that rightly understand
of what great advantage it is to blush at nothing and attempt
everything.
- But if you had rather take prudence for that that
consists in the judgment of things, hear me, I beseech you, how
far they are from it that yet crack of the name. For first 'tis
evident that all human things, like Alcibiades' Sileni or rural
gods, carry a double face, but not the least alike; so that what
at first sight seems to be death, if you view it narrowly may
prove to be life; and so the contrary. What appears beautiful may
chance to be deformed; what wealthy, a very beggar; what
infamous, praiseworthy; what learned, a dunce; what lusty,
feeble; what jocund, sad; what noble, base; what lucky,
unfortunate; what friendly, an enemy; and what healthful,
noisome. In short, view the inside of these Sileni, and you'll
find them quite other than what they appear; which, if perhaps it
shall not seem so philosophically spoken, I'll make it plain to
you "after my blunt way." Who would not conceive a
prince a great lord and abundant in everything? But yet being so
ill-furnished with the gifts of the mind, and ever thinking he
shall never have enough, he's the poorest of all men. And then
for his mind so given up to vice, 'tis a shame how it enslaves
him. I might in like manner philosophize of the rest; but let
this one, for example's sake, be enough.
- Yet why this? will someone say. Have patience, and I'll
show you what I drive at. If anyone seeing a player acting his
part on a stage should go about to strip him of his disguise and
show him to the people in his true native form, would he not,
think you, not only spoil the whole design of the play, but
deserve himself to be pelted off with stones as a phantastical
fool and one out of his wits? But nothing is more common with
them than such changes; the same person one while impersonating a
woman, and another while a man; now a youngster, and by and by a
grim seignior; now a king, and presently a peasant; now a god,
and in a trice again an ordinary fellow. But to discover this
were to spoil all, it being the only thing that entertains the
eyes of the spectators. And what is all this life but a kind of
comedy, wherein men walk up and down in one another's disguises
and act their respective parts, till the property-man brings them
back to the attiring house. And yet he often orders a different
dress, and makes him that came but just now off in the robes of a
king put on the rags of a beggar. Thus are all things represented
by counterfeit, and yet without this there was no living.
- And here if any wise man, as it were dropped from
heaven, should start up and cry, this great thing whom the world
looks upon for as a god and I know not what is not so much as a
man, for that like a beast he is led by his passions, but the
worst of slaves, inasmuch as he gives himself up willingly to so
many and such detestable masters. Again if he should bid a man
that were bewailing the death of his father to laugh, for that he
now began to live by having got an estate, without which life is
but a kind of death; or call another that were boasting of his
family ill begotten or base, because he is so far removed from
virtue that is the only fountain of nobility; and so of the rest:
what else would he get by it but be thought himself mad and
frantic? For as nothing is more foolish than preposterous wisdom,
so nothing is more unadvised than a forward unseasonable
prudence. And such is his that does not comply with the present
time "and order himself as the market goes," but
forgetting that law of feasts, "either drink or
begone," undertakes to disprove a common received opinion.
Whereas on the contrary ,tis the part of a truly prudent man not
to be wise beyond his condition, but either to take no notice of
what the world does, or run with it for company. But this is
foolish, you'll say; nor shall I deny it, provided always you be
so civil on the other side as to confess that this is to act a
part in that world.
- But, O you gods, "shall I speak or hold my
tongue?" But why should I be silent in a thing that is more
true than truth itself ? However it might not be amiss perhaps in
so great an affair to call forth the Muses from Helicon, since
the poets so often invoke them upon every foolish occasion. Be
present then awhile, and assist me, you daughters of Jupiter,
while I make it out that there is no way to that so much famed
wisdom, nor access to that fortress as they call it of happiness,
but under the banner of Folly. And first ,tis agreed of all hands
that our passions belong to Folly; inasmuch as we judge a wise
man from a fool by this, that the one is ordered by them, the
other by reason; and therefore the Stoics remove from a wise man
all disturbances of mind as so many diseases. But these passions
do not only the office of a tutor to such as are making towards
the port of wisdom, but are in every exercise of virtue as it
were spurs and incentives, nay and encouragers to well doing:
which though that great Stoic Seneca most strongly denies, and
takes from a wise man all affections whatever, yet in doing that
he leaves him not so much as a man but rather a new kind of god
that was never yet nor ever like to be. Nay, to speak plainer, he
sets up a stony semblance of a man, void of all sense and common
feeling of humanity. And much good to them with this wise man of
theirs; let them enjoy him to themselves, love him without
competitors, and live with him in Plato's commonwealth, the
country of ideas, of Tantalus' orchards. For who would not shun
and startle at such a man, as at some unnatural accident or
spirit? A man dead to all sense of nature and common affections,
and no more moved with love or pity than if he were a flint or
rock; whose censure nothing escapes; that commits no errors
himself, but has a lynx's eyes upon others; measures everything
by an exact line, and forgives nothing; pleases himself with
himself only; the only rich, the only wise, the only free man,
and only king; in brief, the only man that is everything, but in
his own single judgment only; that cares not for the friendship
of any man, being himself a friend to no man; makes no doubt to
make the gods stoop to him, and condemns and laughs at the whole
actions of our life? And yet such a beast is this their perfect
wise man. But tell me pray, if the thing were to be carried by
most voices, what city would choose him for its governor, or what
army desire him for their general? What woman would have such a
husband, what goodfellow such a guest, or what servant would
either wish or endure such a master? Nay, who had not rather have
one of the middle sort of fools, who, being a fool himself, may
the better know how to command or obey fools; and who though he
please his like, 'tis yet the greater number; one that is kind to
his wife, merry among his friends, a boon companion, and easy to
be lived with; and lastly one that thinks nothing of humanity
should be a stranger to him? But I am weary of this wise man, and
therefore I'll proceed to some other advantages.
- Go to then. Suppose a man in some lofty high tower, and
that he could look round him, as the poets say Jupiter was now
and then wont. To how many misfortunes would he find the life of
man subject? How miserable, to say no worse, our birth, how
difficult our education; to how many wrongs our childhood
exposed, to what pains our youth; how unsupportable our old age,
and grievous our unavoidable death? As also what troops of
diseases beset us, how many casualties hang over our heads, how
many troubles invade us, and how little there is that is not
steeped in gall? To say nothing of those evils one man brings
upon another, as poverty, imprisonment, infamy, dishonesty,
racks, snares, treachery, reproaches, actions, deceits--but I'm
got into as endless a work as numbering the sands--for what
offenses mankind have deserved these things, or what angry god
compelled them to be born into such miseries is not my present
business. Yet he that shall diligently examine it with himself,
would he not, think you, approve the example of the Milesian
virgins and kill himself? But who are they that for no other
reason but that they were weary of life have hastened their own
fate? Were they not the next neighbors to wisdom? among whom, to
say nothing of Diogenes, Xenocrates, Cato, Cassius, Brutus, that
wise man Chiron, being offered immortality, chose rather to die
than be troubled with the same thing always.
- And now I think you see what would become of the world
if all men should be wise; to wit it were necessary we got
another kind of clay and some better potter. But I, partly
through ignorance, partly unadvisedness, and sometimes through
forgetfulness of evil, do now and then so sprinkle pleasure with
the hopes of good and sweeten men up in their greatest
misfortunes that they are not willing to leave this life,. even
then when according to the account of the destinies this life has
left them; and by how much the less reason they have to live, by
so much the more they desire it; so far are they from being
sensible of the least wearisomeness of life. Of my gift it is,
that you have so many old Nestors everywhere that have scarce
left them so much as the shape of a man; stutterers, dotards,
toothless, grayhaired, bald; or rather, to use the words of
Aristophanes, "Nasty, crumpled, miserable, shriveled, bald,
toothless, and wanting their baubles," yet so delighted with
life and to be thought young that one dyes his gray hairs;
another covers his baldness with a periwig; another gets a set of
new teeth; another falls desperately in love with a young wench
and keeps more flickering about her than a young man would have
been ashamed of. For to see such an old crooked piece with one
foot in the grave to marry a plump young wench, and that too
without a portion, is so common that men almost expect to be
commended for it. But the best sport of all is to see our old
women, even dead with age, and such skeletons one would think
they had stolen out of their graves, and ever mumbling in their
mouths, "Life is sweet;" and as old as they are, still
caterwauling, daily plastering their face, scarce ever from the
glass, gossiping, dancing, and writing love letters. These things
are laughed at as foolish, as indeed they are; yet they please
themselves, live merrily, swim in pleasure, and in a word are
happy, by my courtesy. But I would have them to whom these things
seem ridiculous to consider with themselves whether it be not
better to live so pleasant a life in such kind of follies, than,
as the proverb goes, "to take a halter and hang
themselves." Besides though these things may be subject to
censure, it concerns not my fools in the least, inasmuch as they
take no notice of it; or if they do, they easily neglect it. If a
stone fall upon a man's head, that's evil indeed; but dishonesty,
infamy, villainy, ill reports carry no more hurt in them than a
man is sensible of; and if a man have no sense of them, they are
no longer evils. What are you the worse if the people hiss at
you, so you applaud yourself? And that a man be able to do so, he
must owe it to folly.
- But methinks I heat the philosophers opposing it and
saying 'tis a miserable thing for a man to be foolish, to err,
mistake, and know nothing truly. Nay rather, this is to be a man.
And why they should call it miserable, I see no reason; forasmuch
as we are so born, so bred, so instructed, nay such is the common
condition of us all. And nothing can be called miserable that
suits with its kind, unless perhaps you'll think a man such
because he can neither fly with birds, nor walk on all four with
beasts, and is not armed with horns as a bull. For by the same
reason he would call the warlike horse unfortunate, because he
understood not grammar, nor ate cheese-cakes; and the bull
miserable, because he'd make so ill a wrestler. And therefore, as
a horse that has no skill in grammar is not miserable, no more is
man in this respect, for that they agree with his nature. But
again, the virtuosi may say that there was particularly added to
man the knowledge of sciences, by whose help he might recompense
himself in understanding for what nature cut him short in other
things. As if this had the least face of truth, that Nature that
was so solicitously watchful in the production of gnats, herbs,
and flowers should have so slept when she made man, that he
should have need to be helped by sciences, which that old devil
Theuth, the evil genius of mankind, first invented for his
destruction, and are so little conducive to happiness that they
rather obstruct it; to which purpose they are properly said to be
first found out, as that wise king in Plato argues touching the
invention of letters.
- Sciences therefore crept into the world with other the
pests of mankind, from the same head from whence all other
mischiefs spring; we'll suppose it devils, for so the name
imports when you call them demons, that is to say, knowing. For
that simple people of the golden age, being wholly ignorant of
everything called learning, lived only by the guidance and
dictates of nature; for what use of grammar, where every man
spoke the same language and had no further design than to
understand one another? What use of logic, where there was no
bickering about the double-meaning words? What need of rhetoric,
where there were no lawsuits? Or to what purpose laws, where
there were no ill manners? from which without doubt good laws
first came. Besides, they were more religious than with an
impious curiosity to dive into the secrets of nature, the
dimension of stars, the motions, effects, and hidden causes of
things; as believing it a crime for any man to attempt to be wise
beyond his condition. And as to the inquiry of what was beyond
heaven, that madness never came into their heads. But the purity
of the golden age declining by degrees, first, as I said before,
arts were invented by the evil genii; and yet but few, and those
too received by fewer. After that the Chaldean superstition and
Greek newfangledness, that had little to do, added I know not how
many more; mere torments of wit, and that so great that even
grammar alone is work enough for any man for his whole life.
- Though yet among these sciences those only are in esteem
that come nearest to common sense, that is to say, folly. Divines
are half starved, naturalists out of heart, astrologers laughed
at, and logicians slighted; only the physician is worth all the
rest. And among them too, the more unlearned, impudent, or
unadvised he is, the more he is esteemed, even among princes. For
physic, especially as it is now professed by most men, is nothing
but a branch of flattery, no less than rhetoric. Next them, the
second place is given to our law-drivers, if not the first, whose
profession, though I say it myself, most men laugh at as the ass
of philosophy; yet there's scarce any business, either so great
or so small, but is managed by these asses. These purchase their
great lordships, while in the meantime the divine, having run
through the whole body of divinity, sits gnawing a radish and is
in continual warfare with lice and fleas. As therefore those arts
are best that have the nearest affinity with folly, so are they
most happy of all others that have least commerce with sciences
and follow the guidance of Nature, who is in no wise imperfect,
unless perhaps we endeavor to leap over those bounds she has
appointed to us. Nature hates all false coloring and is ever best
where she is least adulterated with art.
- Go to then, don't you find among the several kinds of
living creatures that they thrive best that understand no more
than what Nature taught them? What is more prosperous or
wonderful than the bee? And though they have not the same
judgment of sense as other bodies have, yet wherein has
architecture gone beyond their building of houses? What
philosopher ever founded the like republic? Whereas the horse,
that comes so near man in understanding and is therefore so
familiar with him, is also partaker of his misery. For while he
thinks it a shame to lose the race, it often happens that he
cracks his wind; and in the battle, while he contends for
victory, he's cut down himself, and, together with his rider
"lies biting the earth ;" not to mention those strong
bits, sharp spurs, close stables, arms, blows, rider, and
briefly, all that slavery he willingly submits to, while,
imitating those men of valor, he so eagerly strives to be
revenged of the enemy. Than which how much more were the life of
flies or birds to be wished for, who living by the instinct of
nature, look no further than the present, if yet man would but
let them alone in it. And if at anytime they chance to be taken,
and being shut up in cages endeavor to imitate our speaking, 'tis
strange how they degenerate from their native gaiety. So much
better in every respect are the works of nature than the
adulteries of art.
- In like manner I can never sufficiently praise that
Pythagoras in a dunghill cock, who being but one had been yet
everything, a philosopher, a man, a woman, a king, a private man,
a fish, a horse, a frog, and, I believe too, a sponge; and at
last concluded that no creature was more miserable than man, for
that all other creatures are content with those bounds that
nature set them, only man endeavors to exceed them. And again,
among men he gives the precedency not to the learned or the
great, but the fool. Nor had that Gryllus less wit than Ulysses
with his many counsels, who chose rather to lie grunting in a hog
sty than be exposed with the other to so many hazards. Nor does
Homer, that father of trifles, dissent from me; who not only
called all men "wretched and full of calamity," but
often his great pattern of wisdom, Ulysses,
"miserable;" Paris, Ajax, and Achilles nowhere. And
why, I pray but that, like a cunning fellow and one that was his
craft's master, he did nothing without the advice of Pallas? In a
word he was too wise, and by that means ran wide of nature. As
therefore among men they are least happy that study wisdom, as
being in this twice fools, that when they are born men, they
should yet so far forget their condition as to affect the life of
gods; and after the example of the giants, with their
philosophical gimcracks make a war upon nature: so they on the
other side seem as little miserable as is possible who come
nearest to beasts and never attempt anything beyond man. Go to
then, let's try how demonstrable this is; not by enthymemes or
the imperfect syllogisms of the Stoics, but by plain, downright,
and ordinary examples.
- And now, by the immortal gods! I think nothing more
happy than that generation of men we commonly call fools, idiots,
lack-wits, and dolts; splendid titles too, as I conceive them.
I'll tell you a thing, which at first perhaps may seem foolish
and absurd, yet nothing more true. And first they are not afraid
of death--no small evil, by Jupiter! They are not tormented with
the conscience of evil acts, not terrified with the fables of
ghosts, nor frightened with spirits and goblins. They are not
distracted with the fear of evils to come nor the hopes of future
good. In short, they are not disturbed with those thousand of
cares to which this life is subject. They are neither modest, nor
fearful, nor ambitious, nor envious, nor love they any man. And
lastly, if they should come nearer even to the very ignorance of
brutes, they could not sin, for so hold the divines. And now tell
me, you wise fool, with how many troublesome cares your mind is
continually perplexed; heap together all the discommodities of
your life, and then you'll be sensible from how many evils I have
delivered my fools. Add to this that they are not only merry,
play, sing, and laugh themselves, but make mirth wherever they
come, a special privilege it seems the gods have given them to
refresh the pensiveness of life. Whence it is that whereas the
world is so differently affected one towards another, that all
men indifferently admit them as their companions, desire, feed,
cherish, embrace them, take their parts upon all occasions, and
permit them without offense to do or say what they like. And so
little does everything desire to hurt them, that even the very
beasts, by a kind of natural instinct of their innocence no
doubt, pass by their injuries. For of them it may be truly said
that they are consecrate to the gods, and therefore and not
without cause do men have them in such esteem. Whence is it else
that they are in so great request with princes that they can
neither eat nor drink, go anywhere, or be an hour without them?
Nay, and in some degree they prefer these fools before their
crabbish wise men, whom yet they keep about them for state's
sake. Nor do I conceive the reason so difficult, or that it
should seem strange why they are preferred before the others, for
that these wise men speak to princes about nothing but grave,
serious matters, and trusting to their own parts and learning do
not fear sometimes "to grate their tender ears with smart
truths;" but fools fit them with that they most delight in,
as jests, laughter, abuses of other men, wanton pastimes, and the
like.
- Again, take notice of this no contemptible blessing
which Nature has given fools, that they are the only plain,
honest men and such as speak truth. And what is more commendable
than truth? For though that proverb of Alcibiades in Plato
attributes truth to drunkards and children, yet the praise of it
is particularly mine, even from the testimony of Euripides, among
whose other things there is extant that his honorable saying
concerning us, "A fool speaks foolish things." For
whatever a fool has in his heart, he both shows it in his looks
and expresses it in his discourse; while the wise men's are those
two tongues which the same Euripides mentions, whereof the one
speaks truth, the other what they judge most seasonable for the
occasion. These are they "that turn black into white,"
blow hot and cold with the same breath, and carry a far different
meaning in their breast from what they feign with their tongue.
Yet in the midst of all their prosperity, princes in this respect
seem to me most unfortunate, because, having no one to tell them
truth, they are forced to receive flatterers for friends.
- But, someone may say, the ears of princes are strangers
to truth, and for this reason they avoid those wise men, because
they fear lest someone more frank than the rest should dare to
speak to them things rather true than pleasant; for so the matter
is, that they don't much care for truth. And yet this is found by
experience among my fools, that not only truths but even open
reproaches are heard with pleasure; so that the same thing which,
if it came from a wise man's mouth might prove a capital crime,
spoken by a fool is received with delight. For truth carries with
it a certain peculiar power of pleasing, if no accident fall in
to give occasion of offense; which faculty the gods have given
only to fools. And for the same reasons is it that women are so
earnestly delighted with this kind of men, as being more propense
by nature to pleasure and toys. And whatsoever they may happen to
do with them, although sometimes it be of the most serious, yet
they turn it to jest and laughter, as that sex was ever
quickwitted, especially to color their own faults.
- But to return to the happiness of fools, who when they have
passed over this life with a great deal of pleasantness and
without so much as the least fear or sense of death, they go
straight forth into the Elysian field, to recreate their pious
and careless souls with such sports as they used here. Let's
proceed then, and compare the condition of any of your wise men
with that of this fool. Fancy to me now some example of wisdom
you'd set up against him; one that had spent his childhood and
youth in learning the sciences and lost the sweetest part of his
life in watchings, cares, studies, and for the remaining part of
it never so much as tasted the least of pleasure; ever sparing,
poor, sad, sour, unjust, and rigorous to himself, and troublesome
and hateful to others; broken with paleness, leanness, crassness,
sore eyes, and an old age and death contracted before their time
(though yet, what matter is it, when he die that never lived?);
and such is the picture of this great wise man.
- And here again do those frogs of the Stoics croak at me
and say that nothing is more miserable than madness. But folly is
the next degree, if not the very thing. For what else is madness
than for a man to be out of his wits? But to let them see how
they are clean out of the way, with the Muses' good favor we'll
take this syllogism in pieces. Subtly argued, I must confess, but
as Socrates in Plato teaches us how by splitting one Venus and
one Cupid to make two of either, in like manner should those
logicians have done and distinguished madness from madness, if at
least they would be thought to be well in their wits themselves.
For all madness is not miserable, or Horace had never called his
poetical fury a beloved madness; nor Plato placed the raptures of
poets, prophets, and lovers among the chiefest blessings of this
life; nor that sibyl in Virgil called Aeneas' travels mad labors.
But there are two sorts of madness, the one that which the
revengeful Furies send privily from hell, as often as they let
loose their snakes and put into men's breasts either the desire
of war, or an insatiate thirst after gold, or some dishonest
love, or parricide, or incest, or sacrilege, or the like plagues,
or when they terrify some guilty soul with the conscience of his
crimes; the other, but nothing like this, that which comes from
me and is of all other things the most desirable; which happens
as often as some pleasing dotage not only clears the mind of its
troublesome cares but renders it more jocund. And this was that
which, as a special blessing of the gods, Cicero, writing to his
friend Atticus, wished to himself, that he might be the less
sensible of those miseries that then hung over the commonwealth.
- Nor was that Grecian in Horace much wide of it, who was
so far mad that he would sit by himself whole days in the theatre
laughing and clapping his hands, as if he had seen some tragedy
acting, whereas in truth there was nothing presented; yet in
other things a man well enough, pleasant among his friends, kind
to his wife, and so good a master to his servants that if they
had broken the seal of his bottle, he would not have run mad for
it. But at last, when by the care of his friends and physic he
was freed from his distemper and become his own man again, he
thus expostulates with them, "Now, by Pollux, my friends,
you have rather killed than preserved me in thus forcing me from
my pleasure." By which you see he liked it so well that he
lost it against his will. And trust me, I think they were the
madder of the two, and had the greater need of hellebore, that
should offer to look upon so pleasant a madness as an evil to be
removed by physic; though yet I have not determined whether every
distemper of the sense or understanding be to be called madness.
- For neither he that having weak eyes should take a mule
for an ass, nor he that should admire an insipid poem as
excellent would be presently thought mad; but he that not only
errs in his senses but is deceived also in his judgment, and that
too more than ordinary and upon all occasions--he, I must
confess, would be thought to come very near to it. As if anyone
hearing an ass bray should take it for excellent music, or a
beggar conceive himself a king. And yet this kind of madness, if,
as it commonly happens, it turn to pleasure, it brings a great
delight not only to them that are possessed with it but to those
also that behold it, though perhaps they may not be altogether so
mad as the other, for the species of this madness is much larger
than the people take it to be. For one mad man laughs at another,
and beget themselves a mutual pleasure. Nor does it seldom happen
that he that is the more mad, laughs at him that is less mad. And
in this every man is the more happy in how many respects the more
he is mad; and if I were judge in the case, he should be ranged
in that class of folly that is peculiarly mine, which in truth is
so large and universal that I scarce know anyone in all mankind
that is wise at all hours, or has not some tang or other of
madness.
- And to this class do they appertain that slight
everything in comparison of hunting and protest they take an
unimaginable pleasure to hear the yell of the horns and the yelps
of the hounds, and I believe could pick somewhat extraordinary
out of their very excrement. And then what pleasure they take to
see a buck or the like unlaced? Let ordinary fellows cut up an ox
or a wether, 'twere a crime to have this done by anything less
than a gentleman! who with his hat off, on his bare knees, and a
couteau for that purpose (for every sword or knife is not
allowable), with a curious superstition and certain postures,
lays open the several parts in their respective order; while they
that hem him in admire it with silence, as some new religious
ceremony, though perhaps they have seen it a hundred times
before. And if any of them chance to get the least piece of it,
he presently thinks himself no small gentleman. In all which they
drive at nothing more than to become beasts themselves, while yet
they imagine they live the life of princes.
- And next these may be reckoned those that have such an
itch of building; one while changing rounds into squares, and
presently again squares into rounds, never knowing either measure
or end, till at last, reduced to the utmost poverty, there
remains not to them so much as a place where they may lay their
head, or wherewith to fill their bellies. And why all this? but
that they may pass over a few years in feeding their foolish
fancies.
- And, in my opinion, next these may be reckoned such as
with their new inventions and occult arts undertake to change the
forms of things and hunt all about after a certain fifth essence;
men so bewitched with this present hope that it never repents
them of their pains or expense, but are ever contriving how they
may cheat themselves, till, having spent all, there is not enough
left them to provide another furnace. And yet they have not done
dreaming these their pleasant dreams but encourage others, as
much as in them lies, to the same happiness. And at last, when
they are quite lost in all their expectations, they cheer up
themselves with this sentence, "In great things the very
attempt is enough," and then complain of the shortness of
man's life that is not sufficient for so great an understanding.
- And then for gamesters, I am a little doubtful whether
they are to be admitted into our college; and yet 'tis a foolish
and ridiculous sight to see some addicted so to it that they can
no sooner hear the rattling of the dice but their heart leaps and
dances again. And then when time after time they are so far drawn
on with the hopes of winning that they have made shipwreck of
all, and having split their ship on that rock of dice, no less
terrible than the bishop and his clerks, scarce got alive to
shore, they choose rather to cheat any man of their just debts
than not pay the money they lost, lest otherwise, forsooth, they
be thought no men of their words. Again what is it, I pray, to
see old fellows and half blind to play with spectacles? Nay, and
when a justly deserved gout has knotted their knuckles, to hire a
caster, or one that may put the dice in the box for them? A
pleasant thing, I must confess, did it not for the most part end
in quarrels, and therefore belongs rather to the Furies than me.
- But there is no doubt but that that kind of men are
wholly ours who love to hear or tell feigned miracles and strange
lies and are never weary of any tale, though never so long, so it
be of ghosts, spirits, goblins, devils, or the like; which the
further they are from truth, the more readily they are believed
and the more do they tickle their itching ears. And these serve
not only to pass away time but bring profit, especially to mass
priests and pardoners. And next to these are they that have
gotten a foolish but pleasant persuasion that if they can but see
a wooden or painted Polypheme Christopher, they shall not die
that day; or do but salute a carved Barbara, in the usual set
form, that he shall return safe from battle; or make his
application to Erasmus on certain days with some small wax
candles and proper prayers, that he shall quickly be rich. Nay,
they have gotten a Hercules, another Hippolytus, and a St.
George, whose horse most religiously set out with trappings and
bosses there wants little but they worship; however, they
endeavor to make him their friend by some present or other, and
to swear by his master's brazen helmet is an oath for a prince.
Or what should I say of them that hug themselves with their
counterfeit pardons; that have measured purgatory by an
hourglass, and can without the least mistake demonstrate its
ages, years, months, days, hours, minutes, and seconds, as it
were in a mathematical table? Or what of those who, having
confidence in certain magical charms and short prayers invented
by some pious impostor, either for his soul's health or profit's
sake, promise to themselves everything: wealth, honor, pleasure,
plenty, good health, long life, lively old age, and the next
place to Christ in the other world, which yet they desire may not
happen too soon, that is to say before the pleasures of this life
have left them?
- And now suppose some merchant, soldier, or judge, out of
so many rapines, parts with some small piece of money. He
straight conceives all that sink of his whole life quite
cleansed; so many perjuries, so many lusts, so many debaucheries,
so many contentions, so many murders, so many deceits, so many
breaches of trusts, so many treacheries bought off, as it were by
compact; and so bought off that they may begin upon a new score.
But what is more foolish than those, or rather more happy, who
daily reciting those seven verses of the Psalms promise to
themselves more than the top of felicity? Which magical verses
some devil or other, a merry one without doubt but more a blab of
his tongue than crafty, is believed to have discovered to St.
Bernard, but not without a trick. And these are so foolish that I
am half ashamed of them myself, and yet they are approved, and
that not only by the common people but even the professors of
religion. And what, are not they also almost the same where
several countries avouch to themselves their peculiar saint, and
as everyone of them has his particular gift, so also his
particular form of worship? As, one is good for the toothache;
another for groaning women; a third, for stolen goods; a fourth,
for making a voyage prosperous; and a fifth, to cure sheep of the
rot; and so of the rest, for it would be too tedious to run over
all. And some there are that are good for more things than one;
but chiefly, the Virgin Mother, to whom the common people do in a
manner attribute more than to the Son.
- Yet what do they beg of these saints but what belongs to
folly? To examine it a little. Among all those offerings which
are so frequently hung up in churches, nay up to the very roof of
some of them, did you ever see the least acknowledgment from
anyone that had left his folly, or grown a hair's breadth the
wiser? One escapes a shipwreck, and he gets safe to shore.
Another, run through in a duel, recovers. Another, while the rest
were fighting, ran out of the field, no less luckily than
valiantly. Another, condemned to be hanged, by the favor of some
saint or other, a friend to thieves, got off himself by
impeaching his fellows. Another escaped by breaking prison.
Another recovered from his fever in spite of his physician.
Another's poison turning to a looseness proved his remedy rather
than death; and that to his wife's no small sorrow, in that she
lost both her labor and her charge. Another's cart broke, and he
saved his horses. Another preserved from the fall of a house. All
these hang up their tablets, but no one gives thanks for his
recovery from folly; so sweet a thing it is not to be wise, that
on the contrary men rather pray against anything than folly.
- But why do I launch out into this ocean of
superstitions? Had I a hundred tongues, as many mouths, and a
voice never so strong, yet were I not able to run over the
several sorts of fools or all the names of folly, so thick do
they swarm everywhere. And yet your priests make no scruple to
receive and cherish them as proper instruments of profit; whereas
if some scurvy wise fellow should step up and speak things as
they are, as, to live well is the way to die well; the best way
to get quit of sin is to add to the money you give the hatred of
sin, tears, watchings, prayers, fastings, and amendment of life;
such or such a saint will favor you, if you imitate his life--
these, I say, and the like--should this wise man chat to the
people, from what happiness into how great troubles would he draw
them?
- Of this college also are they who in their lifetime
appoint with what solemnity they'll be buried, and particularly
set down how many torches, how many mourners, how many singers,
how many almsmen they will have at it; as if any sense of it
could come to them, or that it were a shame to them that their
corpse were not honorably interred; so curious are they herein,
as if, like the aediles of old, these were to present some shows
or banquet to the people.
- And though I am in haste, yet I cannot yet pass by them
who, though they differ nothing from the meanest cobbler, yet
'tis scarcely credible how they flatter themselves with the empty
title of nobility. One derives his pedigree from Aeneas, another
from Brutus, a third from the star by the tail of Ursa Major.
They show you on every side the statues and pictures of their
ancestors; run over their greatgrandfathers and the
great-great-grandfathers of both lines, and the ancient matches
of their families, when themselves yet are but once removed from
a statue, if not worse than those trifles they boast of. And yet
by means of this pleasant self-love they live a happy life. Nor
are they less fools who admire these beasts as if they were gods.
- But what do I speak of any one or the other particular
kind of men, as if this self-love had not the same effect
everywhere and rendered most men superabundantly happy? As when a
fellow, more deformed than a baboon, shall believe himself
handsomer than Homer's Nereus. Another, as soon as he can draw
two or three lines with a compass, presently thinks himself a
Euclid. A third, that understands music no more than my horse,
and for his voice as hoarse as a dunghill cock, shall yet
conceive himself another Hermogenes. But of all madness that's
the most pleasant when a man, seeing another any way excellent in
what he pretends to himself, makes his boasts of it as
confidently as if it were his own. And such was that rich fellow
in Seneca, who whenever he told a story had his servants at his
elbow to prompt him the names; and to that height had they
flattered him that he did not question but he might venture a
rubber at cuffs, a man otherwise so weak he could scarce stand,
only presuming on this, that he had a company of sturdy servants
about him.
- Or to what purpose is it I should mind you of our
professors of arts? Forasmuch as this self-love is so natural to
them all that they had rather part with their father's land than
their foolish opinions; but chiefly players, fiddlers, orators,
and poets, of which the more ignorant each of them is, the more
insolently he pleases himself, that is to say vaunts and spreads
out his plumes. And like lips find like lettuce; nay, the more
foolish anything is, the more ,tis admired, the greater number
being ever tickled at the worst things, because, as I said
before, most men are so subject to folly. And therefore if the
more foolish a man is, the more he pleases himself and is admired
by others, to what purpose should he beat his brains about true
knowledge, which first will cost him dear, and next render him
the more troublesome and less confident, and lastly, please only
a few?
- And now I consider it, Nature has planted, not only in
particular men but even in every nation, and scarce any city is
there without it, a kind of common self-love. And hence is it
that the English, besides other things, particularly challenge to
themselves beauty, music, and feasting. The Scots are proud of
their nobility, alliance to the crown, and logical subtleties.
The French think themselves the only wellbred men. The Parisians,
excluding all others, arrogate to themselves the only knowledge
of divinity. The Italians affirm they are the only masters of
good letters and eloquence, and flatter themselves on this
account, that of all others they only are not barbarous. In which
kind of happiness those of Rome claim the first place, still
dreaming to themselves of somewhat, I know not what, of old Rome.
The Venetians fancy themselves happy in the opinion of their
nobility. The Greeks, as if they were the only authors of
sciences, swell themselves with the titles of the ancient heroes.
The Turk, and all that sink of the truly barbarous, challenge to
themselves the only glory of religion and laugh at Christians as
superstitious. And much more pleasantly the Jews expect to this
day the coming of the Messiah, and so obstinately contend for
their Law of Moses. The Spaniards give place to none in the
reputation of soldiery. The Germans pride themselves in their
tallness of stature and skill in magic.
- And, not to instance in every particular, you see, I
conceive, how much satisfaction this Self-love, who has a sister
also not unlike herself called Flattery, begets everywhere; for
self-love is no more than the soothing of a man's self, which,
done to another, is Hattery. And though perhaps at this day it
may be thought infamous, yet it is so only with them that are
more taken with words than things. They think truth is
inconsistent with flattery, but that it is much otherwise we may
learn from the examples of true beasts. What more fawning than a
dog? And yet what more trusty? What has more of those little
tricks than a squirrel? And yet what more loving to man? Unless,
perhaps you'll say, men had better converse with fierce lions,
merciless tigers, and furious leopards. For that flattery is the
most pernicious of all things, by means of which some treacherous
persons and mockers have run the credulous into such mischief.
But this of mine proceeds from a certain gentleness and
uprightness of mind and comes nearer to virtue than its opposite,
austerity, or a morose and troublesome peevishness, as Horace
calls it. This supports the dejected, relieves the distressed,
encourages the fainting, awakens the stupid, refreshes the sick,
supplies the untractable, joins loves together, and keeps them so
joined. It entices children to take their learning, makes old men
frolic, and, under the color of praise, does without offense both
tell princes their faults and show them the way to amend them. In
short, it makes every man the more jocund and acceptable to
himself, which is the chiefest point of felicity. Again, what is
more friendly than when two horses scrub one another? And to say
nothing of it, that it's a main part of physic, and the only
thing in poetry; 'tis the delight and relish of all human
society.
- But 'tis a sad thing, they say, to be mistaken. Nay
rather, he is most miserable that is not so. For they are quite
beside the mark that place the happiness of men in things
themselves, since it only depends upon opinion. For so great is
the obscurity and variety of human affairs that nothing can be
clearly known, as it is truly said by our academics, the least
insolent of all the philosophers; or if it could, it would but
obstruct the pleasure of life. Lastly, the mind of man is so
framed that it is rather taken with the false colors than truth;
of which if anyone has a mind to make the experiment, let him go
to church and hear sermons, in which if there be anything serious
delivered, the audience is either asleep, yawning, or weary of
it; but if the preacher--pardon my mistake, I would have said
declaimer--as too often it happens, fall but into an old wives'
story, they're presently awake, prick up their ears and gape
after it. In like manner, if there be any poetical saint, or one
of whom there goes more stories than ordinary, as for example, a
George, a Christopher, or a Barbara, you shall see him more
religiously worshipped than Peter, Paul, or even Christ himself.
But these things are not for this place.
- And now at how cheap a rate is this happiness purchased!
Forasmuch as to the thing itself a man's whole endeavor is
required, be it never so inconsiderable; but the opinion of it is
easily taken up, which yet conduces as much or more to happiness.
For suppose a man were eating rotten stockfish, the very smell of
which would choke another, and yet believed it a dish for the
gods, what difference is there as to his happiness? Whereas on
the contrary, if another's stomach should turn at a sturgeon,
wherein, I pray, is he happier than the other? If a man have a
crooked, ill-favored wife, who yet in his eye may stand in
competition with Venus, is it not the same as if she were truly
beautiful? Or if seeing an ugly, ill-pointed piece, he should
admire the work as believing it some great master's hand, were he
not much happier, think you, than they that buy such things at
vast rates, and yet perhaps reap less pleasure from them than the
other? I know one of my name that gave his new married wife some
counterfeit jewels, and as he was a pleasant droll, persuaded her
that they were not only right but of an inestimable price; and
what difference, I pray, to her, that was as well pleased and
contented with glass and kept it as warily as if it had been a
treasure In the meantime the husband saved his money and had this
advantage of her folly, that he obliged her as much as if he had
bought them at a great rate. Or what difference, think you,
between those in Plato's imaginary cave that stand gaping at the
shadows and figures of things, so they please themselves and have
no need to wish, and that wise man, who, being got loose from
them, sees things truly as they are? Whereas that cobbler in
Lucian if he might always have continued his golden dreams, he
would never have desired any other happiness. So then there is no
difference; or, if there be, the fools have the advantage: first,
in that their happiness costs them least, that is to say, only
some small persuasion; next, that they enjoy it in common. And
the possession of no good can be delightful without a companion.
For who does not know what a dearth there is of wise men, if yet
any one be to be found? And though the Greeks for these so many
ages have accounted upon seven only, yet so help me Hercules, do
but examine them narrowly, and I'll be hanged if you find one
half-witted fellow, nay or so much as one-quarter of a wise man,
among them all.
- For whereas among the many praises of Bacchus they
reckon this the chief, that he washes away cares, and that too in
an instant, do but sleep off his weak spirits, and they come on
again, as we say, on horseback. But how much larger and more
present is the benefit you receive by me, since, as it were with
a perpetual drunkenness I fill your minds with mirth, fancies,
and jollities, and that too without any trouble? Nor is there any
man living whom I let be without it; whereas the gifts of the
gods are scrambled, some to one and some to another. The
sprightly delicious wine that drives away cares and leaves such a
flavor behind it grows not everywhere. Beauty, the gift of Venus,
happens to few; and to fewer gives Mercury eloquence. Hercules
makes not everyone rich. Homer's Jupiter bestows not empire on
all men. Mars oftentimes favors neither side. Many return sad
from Apollo's oracle. Phoebus sometimes shoots a plague among us.
Neptune drowns more than he saves: to say nothing of those
mischievous gods, Plutoes, Ates, punishments, fevers, and the
like, not gods but executioners. I am that only Folly that so
readily and indifferently bestows my benefits on all. Nor do I
look to be entreated, or am I subject to take pet, and require an
expiatory sacrifice if some ceremony be omitted. Nor do I beat
heaven and earth together if, when the rest of the gods are
invited, I am passed by or not admitted to the stream of their
sacrifices. For the rest of the gods are so curious in this point
that such an omission may chance to spoil a man's business; and
therefore one has as good even let them alone as worship them:
just like some men, who are so hard to please, and withall so
ready to do mischief, that 'tis better be a stranger than have
any familiarity with them.
- But no man, you'll say, ever sacrificed to Folly or
built me a temple. And troth, as I said before, I cannot but
wonder at the ingratitude; yet because I am easily to be
entreated, I take this also in good part, though truly I can
scarce request it. For why should I require incense, wafers, a
goat, or sow when all men pay me that worship everywhere which is
so much approved even by our very divines? Unless perhaps I
should envy Diana that her sacrifices are mingled with human
blood. Then do I conceive myself most religiously worshipped when
everywhere, as 'tis generally done, men embrace me in their
minds, express me in their manners, and represent me in their
lives, which worship of the saints is not so ordinary among
Christians. How many are there that burn candles to the Virgin
Mother, and that too at noonday when there's no need of them! But
how few are there that study to imitate her in pureness of life,
humility and love of heavenly things, which is the true worship
and most acceptable to heaven! Besides why should I desire a
temple when the whole world is my temple, and I'm deceived or
'tis a goodly one? Nor can I want priests but in a land where
there are no men. Nor am I yet so foolish as to require statues
or painted images, which do often obstruct my worship, since
among the stupid and gross multitude those figures are worshipped
for the saints themselves. And so it would fare with me, as it
does with them that are turned out of doors by their substitutes.
No, I have statues enough, and as many as there are men, everyone
bearing my lively resemblance in his face, how unwilling so ever
he be to the contrary. And therefore there is no reason why I
should envy the rest of the gods if in particular places they
have their particular worship, and that too on set days--as
Phoebus at Rhodes; at Cyprus, Venus; at Argos, Juno; at Athens,
Minerva; in Olympus, Jupiter; at Tarentum, Neptune; and near the
Hellespont, Priapus--as long as the world in general performs me
every day much better sacrifices.
- Wherein notwithstanding if I shall seem to anyone to
have spoken more boldly than truly, let us, if you please, look a
little into the lives of men, and it will easily appear not only
how much they owe to me, but how much they esteem me even from
the highest to the lowest. And yet we will not run over the lives
of everyone, for that would be too long, but only some few of the
great ones, from whence we shall easily conjecture the rest. For
to what purpose is it to say anything of the common people, who
without dispute are wholly mine? For they abound everywhere with
so many several sorts of folly, and are every day so busy in
inventing new, that a thousand Democriti are too few for so
general a laughter, though there were another Democritus to laugh
at them too. 'Tis almost incredible what sport and pastime they
daily make the gods; for though they set aside their sober
forenoon hours to dispatch business and receive prayers, yet when
they begin to be well whittled with nectar and cannot think of
anything that's serious, they get them up into some part of
heaven that has better prospect than other and thence look down
upon the actions of men. Nor is there anything that pleases them
better. Good, good! what an excellent sight it is! How many
several hurly-burlies of fools! for I myself sometimes sit among
those poetical gods.
- Here's one desperately in love with a young wench, and
the more she slights him the more outrageously he loves her.
Another marries a woman's money, not herself. Another's jealousy
keeps more eyes on her than Argos. Another becomes a mourner, and
how foolishly he carries it! nay, hires others to bear him
company to make it more ridiculous. Another weeps over his
mother-in-law's grave. Another spends all he can rap and run on
his belly, to be the more hungry after it. Another thinks there
is no happiness but in sleep and idleness. Another turmoils
himself about other men's business and neglects his own. Another
thinks himself rich in taking up moneys and changing securities,
as we say borrowing of Peter to pay Paul, and in a short time
becomes bankrupt. Another starves himself to enrich his heir.
Another for a small and uncertain gain exposes his life to the
casualties of seas and winds, which yet no money can restore.
Another had rather get riches by war than live peaceably at home.
And some there are that think them easiest attained by courting
old childless men with presents; and others again by making rich
old women believe they love them; both which afford the gods most
excellent pastime, to see them cheated by those persons they
thought to have over-caught. But the most foolish and basest of
all others are our merchants, to wit such as venture on
everything be it never so dishonest, and manage it no better; who
though they lie by no allowance, swear and forswear, steal,
cozen, and cheat, yet shuffle themselves into the first rank, and
all because they have gold rings on their fingers. Nor are they
without their flattering friars that admire them and give them
openly the title of honorable, in hopes, no doubt, to get some
small snip of it themselves.
- There are also a kind of Pythagoreans with whom all
things are so common that if they get anything under their
cloaks, they make no more scruple of carrying it away than if it
were their own by inheritance. There are others too that are only
rich in conceit, and while they fancy to themselves pleasant
dreams, conceive that enough to make them happy. Some desire to
be accounted wealthy abroad and are yet ready to starve at home.
One makes what haste he can to set all going, and another rakes
it together by right or wrong. This man is ever laboring for
public honors, and another lies sleeping in a chimney corner. A
great many undertake endless suits and outvie one another who
shall most enrich the dilatory judge or corrupt advocate. One is
all for innovations and another for some great he-knows-not-what.
Another leaves his wife and children at home and goes to
Jerusalem, Rome, or in pilgrimage to St. James's where he has no
business. In short, if a man like Menippus of old could look down
from the moon and behold those innumerable rufflings of mankind,
he would think he saw a swarm of flies and gnats quarreling among
themselves, fighting, laying traps for one another, snatching,
playing, wantoning, growing up, falling, and dying. Nor is it to
be believed what stir, what broils, this little creature raises,
and yet in how short a time it comes to nothing itself; while
sometimes war, other times pestilence, sweeps off many thousands
of them together.
- But let me be most foolish myself, and one whom
Democritus may not only laugh at but flout, if I go one foot
further in the discovery of the follies and madnesses of the
common people. I'll betake me to them that carry the reputation
of wise men and hunt after that golden bough, as says the
proverb. Among whom the grammarians hold the first place, a
generation of men than whom nothing would be more miserable,
nothing more perplexed, nothing more hated of the gods, did not I
allay the troubles of that pitiful profession with a certain kind
of pleasant madness. For they are not only subject to those five
curses with which Homer begins his Iliads, as says the Greek
epigram, but six hundred; as being ever hungerstarved and slovens
in their schools--schools, did I say? Nay, rather cloisters,
bridewells, or slaughterhouses--grown old among a company of
boys, deaf with their noise, and pined away with stench and
nastiness. And yet by my courtesy it is that they think
themselves the most excellent of all men, so greatly do they
please themselves in frighting a company of fearful boys with a
thundering voice and big looks, tormenting them with ferules,
rods, and whips; and, laying about them without fear or wit,
imitate the ass in the lion's skin. In the meantime all that
nastiness seems absolute spruceness, that stench a perfume, and
that miserable slavery a kingdom, and such too as they would not
change their tyranny for Phalaris' or Dionysius' empire. Nor are
they less happy in that new opinion they have taken up of being
learned; for whereas most of them beat into boys, heads nothing
but foolish toys, yet, you good gods! what Palemon, what Donatus,
do they not scorn in comparison of themselves? And so, I know not
by what tricks, they bring it about that to their boys' foolish
mothers and dolt-headed fathers they pass for such as they fancy
themselves. Add to this that other pleasure of theirs, that if
any of them happen to find out who was Anchises' mother, or pick
out of some worm-eaten manuscript a word not commonly known--as
suppose it bubsequa for a cowherd, bovinator for a wrangler,
manticulator for a cutputse--or dig up the ruins of some ancient
monument with the letters half eaten out; O Jupiter! what
towerings! what triumphs! what commendations! as if they had
conquered Africa or taken in Babylon.
- But what of this when they give up and down their
foolish insipid verses, and there wants not others that admire
them as much? They believe presently that Virgil's soul is
transmigrated into them! But nothing like this, when with mutual
compliments they praise, admire, and claw one another. Whereas if
another do but slip a word and one more quick-sighted than the
rest discover it by accident, O Hercules ! what uproars, what
bickerings, what taunts, what invectives! If I lie, let me have
the ill will of all the grammarians. I knew in my time one of
many arts, a Grecian, a Latinist, a mathematician, a philosopher,
a physician, a man master of them all, and sixty years of age,
who, laying by all the rest, perplexed and tormented himself for
above twenty years in the study of grammar, fully reckoning
himself a prince if he might but live so long till he could
certainly determine how the eight parts of speech were to be
distinguished, which none of the Greeks or Latins had yet fully
cleared: as if it were a matter to be decided by the sword if a
man made an adverb of a conjunction. And for this cause is it
that we have as many grammars as grammarians; nay more, forasmuch
as my friend Aldus has given us above five, not passing by any
kind of grammar, how barbarously or tediously soever compiled,
which he has not turned over and examined; envying every man's
attempts in this kind, rather to be pitied than happy, as persons
that are ever tormenting themselves; adding, changing, putting
in, blotting out, revising, reprinting, showing it to friends,
and nine years in correcting, yet never fully satisfied; at so
great a rate do they purchase this vain reward, to wit, praise,
and that too of a very few, with so many watchings, so much
sweat, so much vexation and loss of sleep, the most precious of
all things. Add to this the waste of health, spoil of complexion,
weakness of eyes or rather blindness, poverty, envy, abstinence
from pleasure, over-hasty old age, untimely death, and the like;
so highly does this wise man value the approbation of one or two
blear-eyed fellows. But how much happier is this my writer's
dotage who never studies for anything but puts in writing
whatever he pleases or what comes first in his head, though it be
but his dreams; and all this with small waste of paper, as well
knowing that the vainer those trifles are, the higher esteem they
will have with the greater number, that is to say all the fools
and unlearned. And what matter is it to slight those few learned
if yet they ever read them? Or of what authority will the censure
of so few wise men be against so great a cloud of gainsayers?
- But they are the wiser that put out other men's works
for their own, and transfer that glory which others with great
pains have obtained to themselves; relying on this, that they
conceive, though it should so happen that their theft be never so
plainly detected, that yet they should enjoy the pleasure of it
for the present. And 'tis worth one's while to consider how they
please themselves when they are applauded by the common people,
pointed at in a crowd, "This is that excellent person;"
lie on booksellers' stalls; and in the top of every page have
three hard words read, but chiefly exotic and next degree to
conjuring; which, by the immortal gods! what are they but mere
words? And again, if you consider the world, by how few
understood, and praised by fewer! for even among the unlearned
there are different palates. Or what is it that their own very
names are often counterfeit or borrowed from some books of the
ancients? When one styles himself Telemachus, another Sthenelus,
a third Laertes, a fourth Polycrates, a fifth Thrasymachus. So
that there is no difference whether they title their books with
the "Tale of a Tub," or, according to the philosophers,
by alpha, beta.
- But the most pleasant of all is to see them praise one
another with reciprocal epistles, verses, and encomiums; fools
their fellow fools, and dunces their brother dunces. This, in the
other's opinion, is an absolute Alcaeus; and the other, in his, a
very Callimachus. He looks upon Tully as nothing to the other,
and the other again pronounces him more learned than Plato. And
sometimes too they pick out their antagonist and think to raise
themselves a fame by writing one against the other; while the
giddy multitude are so long divided to whether of the two they
shall determine the victory, till each goes off conqueror, and,
as if he had done some great action, fancies himself a triumph.
And now wise men laugh at these things as foolish, as indeed they
are. Who denies it? Yet in the meantime, such is my kindness to
them, they live a merry life and would not change their imaginary
triumphs, no, not with the Scipioes. While yet those learned men,
though they laugh their fill and reap the benefit of the other's
folly, cannot without ingratitude deny but that even they too are
not a little beholding to me themselves.
- And among them our advocates challenge the first place,
nor is there any sort of people that please themselves like them:
for while they daily roll Sisyphus his stone, and quote you a
thousand cases, as it were, in a breath no matter how little to
the purpose, and heap glosses upon glosses, and opinions on the
neck of opinions, they bring it at last to this pass, that that
study of all other seems the most difficult. Add to these our
logicians and sophists, a generation of men more prattling than
an echo and the worst of them able to outchat a hundred of the
best picked gossips. And yet their condition would be much better
were they only full of words and not so given to scolding that
they most obstinately hack and hew one another about a matter of
nothing and make such a sputter about terms and words till they
have quite lost the sense. And yet they are so happy in the good
opinion of themselves that as soon as they are furnished with two
or three syllogisms, they dare boldly enter the lists against any
man upon any point, as not doubting but to run him down with
noise, though the opponent were another Stentor.
- And next these come our philosophers, so much reverenced
for their furred gowns and starched beards that they look upon
themselves as the only wise men and all others as shadows. And
yet how pleasantly do they dote while they frame in their heads
innumerable worlds; measure out the sun, the moon, the stars, nay
and heaven itself, as it were, with a pair of compasses; lay down
the causes of lightning, winds, eclipses, and other the like
inexplicable matters; and all this too without the least
doubting, as if they were Nature's secretaries, or dropped down
among us from the council of the gods; while in the meantime
Nature laughs at them and all their blind conjectures. For that
they know nothing, even this is a sufficient argument, that they
don't agree among themselves and so are incomprehensible touching
every particular. These, though they have not the least degree of
knowledge, profess yet that they have mastered all; nay, though
they neither know themselves, nor perceive a ditch or block that
lies in their way, for that perhaps most of them are half blind,
or their wits a wool-gathering, yet give out that they have
discovered ideas, universalities, separated forms, first matters,
quiddities, haecceities, formalities, and the like stuff; things
so thin and bodiless that I believe even Lynceus himself was not
able to perceive them. But then chiefly do they disdain the
unhallowed crowd as often as with their triangles, quadrangles,
circles, and the like mathematical devices, more confounded than
a labyrinth, and letters disposed one against the other, as it
were in battle array, they cast a mist before the eyes of the
ignorant. Nor is there wanting of this kind some that pretend to
foretell things by the stars and make promises of miracles beyond
all things of soothsaying, and are so fortunate as to meet with
people that believe them.
- But perhaps I had better pass over our divines in
silence and not stir this pool or touch this fair but unsavory
plant, as a kind of men that are supercilious beyond comparison,
and to that too, implacable; lest setting them about my ears,
they attack me by troops and force me to a recantation sermon,
which if I refuse, they straight pronounce me a heretic. For this
is the thunderbolt with which they fright those whom they are
resolved not to favor. And truly, though there are few others
that less willingly acknowledge the kindnesses I have done them,
yet even these too stand fast bound to me upon no ordinary
accounts; while being happy in their own opinion, and as if they
dwelt in the third heaven, they look with haughtiness on all
others as poor creeping things and could almost find in their
hearts to pity them; while hedged in with so many magisterial
definitions, conclusions, corollaries, propositions explicit and
implicit, they abound with so many starting-holes that Vulcan's
net cannot hold them so fast, but they'll slip through with their
distinctions, with which they so easily cut all knots asunder
that a hatchet could not have done it better, so plentiful are
they in their new-found words and prodigious terms. Besides,
while they explicate the most hidden mysteries according to their
own fancy--as how the world was first made; how original sin is
derived to posterity; in what manner, how much room, and how long
time Christ lay in the Virgin's womb; how accidents subsist in
the Eucharist without their subject.
- But these are common and threadbare; these are worthy of
our great and illuminated divines, as the world calls them! At
these, if ever they fall athwart them, they prick up--as whether
there was any instant of time in the generation of the Second
Person; whether there be more than one filiation in Christ;
whether it be a possible proposition that God the Father hates
the Son; or whether it was possible that Christ could have taken
upon Him the likeness of a woman, or of the devil, or of an ass,
or of a stone, or of a gourd; and then how that gourd should have
preached, wrought miracles, or been hung on the cross; and what
Peter had consecrated if he had administered the Sacrament at
what time the body of Christ hung upon the cross; or whether at
the same time he might be said to be man; whether after the
Resurrection there will be any eating and drinking, since we are
so much afraid of hunger and thirst in this world. There are
infinite of these subtle trifles, and others more subtle than
these, of notions, relations, instants, formalities, quiddities,
haecceities, which no one can perceive without a Lynceus whose
eyes could look through a stone wall and discover those things
through the thickest darkness that never were.
- Add to this those their other determinations, and those
too so contrary to common opinion that those oracles of the
Stoics, which they call paradoxes, seem in comparison of these
but blockish and idle--as 'tis a lesser crime to kill a thousand
men than to set a stitch on a poor man's shoe on the Sabbath day;
and that a man should rather choose that the whole world with all
food and raiment, as they say, should perish, than tell a lie,
though never so inconsiderable. And these most subtle subtleties
are rendered yet more subtle by the several methods of so many
Schoolmen, that one might sooner wind himself out of a labyrinth
than the entanglements of the realists, nominalists, Thomists,
Albertists, Occamists, Scotists. Nor have I named all the several
sects, but only some of the chief; in all which there is so much
doctrine and so much difficulty that I may well conceive the
apostles, had they been to deal with these new kind of divines,
had needed to have prayed in aid of some other spirit.
- Paul knew what faith was, and yet when he said,
"Faith is the substance of things hoped for, and the
evidence of things not seen," he did not define it
doctor-like. And as he understood charity well himself, so he did
as illogically divide and define it to others in his first
Epistle to the Corinthians, Chapter the thirteenth. And devoutly,
no doubt, did the apostles consecrate the Eucharist; yet, had
they been asked the question touching the "terminus a
quo," and the "terminus ad quem" of
transubstantiation; of the manner how the same body can be in
several places at one and the same time; of the difference the
body of Christ has in heaven from that of the cross, or this in
the Sacrament; in what point of time transubstantiation is,
whereas prayer, by means of which it is, as being a discrete
quantity, is transient; they would not, I conceive, have answered
with the same subtlety as the Scotists dispute and define it.
They knew the mother of Jesus, but which of them has so
philosophically demonstrated how she was preserved from original
sin as have done our divines? Peter received the keys, and from
Him too that would not have trusted them with a person unworthy;
yet whether he had understanding or no, I know not, for certainly
he never attained to that subtlety to determine how he could have
the key of knowledge that had no knowledge himself. They baptized
far and near, and yet taught nowhere what was the formal,
material, efficient, and final cause of baptism, nor made the
least mention of delible and indelible characters. They
worshipped, 'tis true, but in spirit, following herein no other
than that of the Gospel, "God is a Spirit, and they that
worship, must worship him in spirit and truth;" yet it does
not appear it was at that time revealed to them that an image
sketched on the wall with a coal was to be worshipped with the
same worship as Christ Himself, if at least the two forefingers
be stretched out, the hair long and uncut, and have three rays
about the crown of the head. For who can conceive these things,
unless he has spent at least six and thirty years in the
philosophical and supercelestial whims of Aristotle and the
Schoolmen?
- In like manner, the apostles press to us grace; but
which of them distinguishes between free grace and grace that
makes a man acceptable? They exhort us to good works, and yet
determine not what is the work working, and what a resting in the
work done. They incite us to charity, and yet make no difference
between charity infused and charity wrought in us by our own
endeavors. Nor do they declare whether it be an accident or a
substance, a thing created or uncreated. They detest and
abominate sin, but let me not live if they could define according
to art what that is which we call sin, unless perhaps they were
inspired by the spirit of the Scotists. Nor can I be brought to
believe that Paul, by whose learning you may judge the rest,
would have so often condemned questions, disputes, genealogies,
and, as himself calls them, "strifes of words," if he
had thoroughly understood those subtleties, especially when all
the debates and controversies of those times were rude and
blockish in comparison of the more than Chrysippean subtleties of
our masters. Although yet the gentlemen are so modest that if
they meet with anything written by the apostles not so smooth and
even as might be expected from a master, they do not presently
condemn it but handsomely bend it to their own purpose, so great
respect and honor do they give, partly to antiquity and partly to
the name of apostle. And truly 'twas a kind of injustice to
require so great things of them that never heard the least word
from their masters concerning it. And so if the like happen in
Chrysostom, Basil, Jerome, they think it enough to say they are
not obliged by it.
- The apostles also confuted the heathen philosophers and
Jews, a people than whom none more obstinate, but rather by their
good lives and miracles than syllogisms: and yet there was scarce
one among them that was capable of understanding the least
"quodlibet" of the Scotists. But now, where is that
heathen or heretic that must not presently stoop to such
wire-drawn subtleties, unless he be so thickskulled that he can't
apprehend them, or so impudent as to hiss them down, or, being
furnished with the same tricks, be able to make his party good
with them? As if a man should set a conjurer on work against a
conjurer, or fight with one hallowed sword against another, which
would prove no other than a work to no purpose. For my own part I
conceive the Christians would do much better if instead of those
dull troops and companies of soldiers with which they have
managed their war with such doubtful success, they would send the
bawling Scotists, the most obstinate Occamists, and invincible
Albertists to war against the Turks and Saracens; and they would
see, I guess, a most pleasant combat and such a victory as was
never before. For who is so faint whom their devices will not
enliven? who so stupid whom such spurs can't quicken? or who so
quicksighted before whose eyes they can't cast a mist?
- But you'll say, I jest. Nor are you without cause, since
even among divines themselves there are some that have learned
better and are ready to turn their stomachs at those foolish
subtleties of the others. There are some that detest them as a
kind of sacrilege and count it the height of impiety to speak so
irreverently of such hidden things, rather to be adored than
explicated; to dispute of them with such profane and heathenish
niceties; to define them so arrogantly and pollute the majesty of
divinity with such pithless and sordid terms and opinions.
Meantime the others please, nay hug themselves in their
happiness, and are so taken up with these pleasant trifles that
they have not so much leisure as to cast the least eye on the
Gospel or St. Paul's epistles. And while they play the fool at
this rate in their schools, they make account the universal
church would otherwise perish, unless, as the poets fancied of
Atlas that he supported heaven with his shoulders, they
underpropped the other with their syllogistical buttresses. And
how great a happiness is this, think you? while, as if Holy Writ
were a nose of wax, they fashion and refashion it according to
their pleasure; while they require that their own conclusions,
subscribed by two or three Schoolmen, be accounted greater than
Solon's laws and preferred before the papal decretals; while, as
censors of the world, they force everyone to a recantation that
differs but a hair's breadth from the least of their explicit or
implicit determinations. And those too they pronounce like
oracles. This proposition is scandalous; this irreverent; this
has a smack of heresy; this no very good sound: so that neither
baptism, nor the Gospel, nor Paul, nor Peter, nor St. Jerome, nor
St. Augustine, no nor most Aristotelian Thomas himself can make a
man a Christian, without these bachelors too be pleased to give
him his grace. And the like in their subtlety in judging; for who
would think he were no Christian that should say these two
speeches "matula putes" and "matula putet,"
or "ollae fervere" and "ollam fervere" were
not both good Latin, unless their wisdoms had taught us the
contrary? who had delivered the church from such mists of error,
which yet no one ever met with, had they not come out with some
university seal for it? And are they not most happy while they do
these things?
- Then for what concerns hell, how exactly they describe
everything, as if they had been conversant in that commonwealth
most part of their time! Again, how do they frame in their fancy
new orbs, adding to those we have already an eighth! a goodly
one, no doubt, and spacious enough, lest perhaps their happy
souls might lack room to walk in, entertain their friends, and
now and then play at football. And with these and a thousand the
like fopperies their heads are so full stuffed and stretched that
I believe Jupiter's brain was not near so big when, being in
labor with Pallas, he was beholding to the midwifery of Vulcan's
ax. And therefore you must not wonder if in their public disputes
they are so bound about the head, lest otherwise perhaps their
brains might leap out. Nay, I have sometimes laughed myself to
see them so tower in their own opinion when they speak most
barbarously; and when they humh and hawh so pitifully that none
but one of their own tribe can understand them, they call it
heights which the vulgar can't reach; for they say 'tis beneath
the dignity of divine mysteries to be cramped and tied up to the
narrow rules of grammarians: from whence we may conjecture the
great prerogative of divines, if they only have the privilege of
speaking corruptly, in which yet every cobbler thinks himself
concerned for his share. Lastly, they look upon themselves as
somewhat more than men as often as they are devoutly saluted by
the name of "Our Masters," in which they fancy there
lies as much as in the Jews' "Jehovah;" and therefore
they reckon it a crime if "Magister Noster" be written
other than in capital letters; and if anyone should
preposterously say "Noster Magister," he has at once
overturned the whole body of divinity.
- And next these come those that commonly call themselves
the religious and monks, most false in both titles, when both a
great part of them are farthest from religion, and no men swarm
thicker in all places than themselves. Nor can I think of
anything that could be more miserable did not I support them so
many several ways. For whereas all men detest them to that
height, that they take it for ill luck to meet one of them by
chance, yet such is their happiness that they flatter themselves.
For first, they reckon it one of the main points of piety if they
are so illiterate that they can't so much as read. And then when
they run over their offices, which they carry about them, rather
by tale than understanding, they believe the gods more than
ordinarily pleased with their braying. And some there are among
them that put off their trumperies at vast rates, yet rove up and
down for the bread they eat; nay, there is scarce an inn, wagon,
or ship into which they intrude not, to the no small damage of
the commonwealth of beggars. And yet, like pleasant fellows, with
all this vileness, ignorance, rudeness, and impudence, they
represent to us, for so they call it, the lives of the apostles.
Yet what is more pleasant than that they do all things by rule
and, as it were, a kind of mathematics, the least swerving from
which were a crime beyond forgiveness--as how many knots their
shoes must be tied with, of what color everything is, what
distinction of habits, of what stuff made, how many straws broad
their girdles and of what fashion, how many bushels wide their
cowl, how many fingers long their hair, and how many hours sleep;
which exact equality, how disproportionate it is, among such
variety of bodies and tempers, who is there that does not
perceive it? And yet by reason of these fooleries they not only
set slight by others, but each different order, men otherwise
professing apostolical charity, despise one another, and for the
different wearing of a habit, or that 'tis of darker color, they
put all things in combustion. And among these there are some so
rigidly religious that their upper garment is haircloth, their
inner of the finest linen; and, on the contrary, others wear
linen without and hair next their skins. Others, again, are as
afraid to touch money as poison, and yet neither forbear wine nor
dallying with women. In a word, 'tis their only care that none of
them come near one another in their manner of living, nor do they
endeavor how they may be like Christ, but how they may differ
among themselves.
- And another great happiness they conceive in their
names, while they call themselves Cordiliers, and among these
too, some are Colletes, some Minors, some Minims, some Crossed;
and again, these are Benedictines, those Bernardines; these
Carmelites. those Augustines: these Williamites. and those
Jacobines; as if it were not worth the while to be called
Christians. And of these, a great part build so much on their
ceremonies and petty traditions of men that they think one heaven
is too poor a reward for so great merit, little dreaming that the
time will come when Christ, not regarding any of these trifles,
will call them to account for His precept of charity. One shall
show you a large trough full of all kinds of fish; another tumble
you out so many bushels of prayers; another reckon you so many
myriads of fasts, and fetch them up again in one dinner by eating
till he cracks again; another produces more bundles of ceremonies
than seven of the stoutest ships would be able to carry; another
brags he has not touched a penny these three score years without
two pair of gloves at least upon his hands; another wears a cowl
so lined with grease that the poorest tarpaulin would not stoop
to take it up; another will tell you he has lived these
fifty-five years like a sponge, continually fastened to the same
place; another is grown hoarse with his daily chanting; another
has contracted a lethargy by his solitary living; and another the
palsy in his tongue for want of speaking. But Christ,
interrupting them in their vanities, which otherwise were
endless, will ask them, "Whence this new kind of Jews? I
acknowledge one commandment, which is truly mine, of which alone
I hear nothing. I promised, 'tis true, my Father's heritage, and
that without parables, not to cowls, odd prayers, and fastings,
but to the duties of faith and charity. Nor can I acknowledge
them that least acknowledge their faults. They that would seem
holier than myself, let them if they like possess to themselves
those three hundred sixty-five heavens of Basilides the heretic's
invention, or command them whose foolish traditions they have
preferred before my precepts to erect them a new one." When
they shall hear these things and see common ordinary persons
preferred before them, with what countenance, think you, will
they behold one another? In the meantime they are happy in their
hopes, and for this also they are beholding to me.
- And yet these kind of people, though they are as it were
of another commonwealth, no man dares despise, especially those
begging friars, because they are privy to all men's secrets by
means of confessions, as they call them. Which yet were no less
than treason to discover, unless, being got drunk, they have a
mind to be pleasant, and then all comes out, that is to say by
hints and conjectures but suppressing the names. But if anyone
should anger these wasps, they'll sufficiently revenge themselves
in their public sermons and so point out their enemy by
circumlocutions that there's no one but understands whom 'tis
they mean, unless he understand nothing at all; nor will they
give over their barking till you throw the dogs a bone. And now
tell me, what juggler or mountebank you had rather behold than
hear them rhetorically play the fool in their preachments, and
yet most sweetly imitating what rhetoricians have written
touching the art of good speaking? Good God! what several
postures they have! How they shift their voice, sing out their
words, skip up and down, and are ever and anon making such new
faces that they confound all things with noise! And yet this
knack of theirs is no less a mystery that runs in succession from
one brother to another; which though it be not lawful for me to
know, however I'll venture at it by conjectures. And first they
invoke whatever they have scraped from the poets; and in the next
place, if they are to discourse of charity, they take their rise
from the river Nilus; or to set out the mystery of the cross,
from bell and the dragon; or to dispute of fasting, from the
twelve signs of the zodiac; or, being to preach of faith, ground
their matter on the square of a circle.
- I have heard myself one, and he no small fool--I was
mistaken, I would have said scholar--that being in a famous
assembly explaining the mystery of the Trinity, that he might
both let them see his learning was not ordinary and withal
satisfy some theological ears, he took a new way, to wit from the
letters, syllables, and the word itself; then from the coherence
of the nominative case and the verb, and the adjective and
substantive: and while most of the audience wondered, and some of
them muttered that of Horace, "What does all this trumpery
drive at?" at last he brought the matter to this head, that
he would demonstrate that the mystery of the Trinity was so
clearly expressed in the very rudiments of grammar that the best
mathematician could not chalk it out more plainly. And in this
discourse did this most superlative theologian beat his brains
for eight whole months that at this hour he's as blind as a
beetle, to wit, all the sight of his eyes being run into the
sharpness of his wit. But for all that he thinks nothing of his
blindness, rather taking the same for too cheap a price of such a
glory as he won thereby.
- And besides him I met with another, some eighty years of
age, and such a divine that you'd have sworn Scotus himself was
revived in him. He, being upon the point of unfolding the mystery
of the name Jesus, did with wonderful subtlety demonstrate that
there lay hidden in those letters whatever could be said of him;
for that it was only declined with three cases, he said, it was a
manifest token of the Divine Trinity; and then, that the first
ended in S, the second in M, the third in U, there was in it an
ineffable mystery, to wit, those three letters declaring to us
that he was the beginning, middle, and end (summum, medium, et
ultimum) of all. Nay, the mystery was yet more abstruse; for he
so mathematically split the word Jesus into two equal parts that
he left the middle letter by itself, and then told us that that
letter in Hebrew was schin or sin, and that sin in the Scotch
tongue, as he remembered, signified as much as sin; from whence
he gathered that it was Jesus that took away the sins of the
world. At which new exposition the audience were so wonderfully
intent and struck with admiration, especially the theologians,
that there wanted little but that Niobe-like they had been turned
to stones; whereas the like had almost happened to me, as befell
the Priapus in Horace. And not without cause, for when were the
Grecian Demosthenes or Roman Cicero ever guilty of the like? They
thought that introduction faulty that was wide of the matter, as
if it were not the way of carters and swineherds that have no
more wit than God sent them. But these learned men think their
preamble, for so they call it, then chiefly rhetorical when it
has least coherence with the rest of the argument, that the
admiring audience may in the meanwhile whisper to themselves,
"What will he be at now?" In the third place, they
bring in instead of narration some texts of Scripture, but handle
them cursorily, and as it were by the bye, when yet it is the
only thing they should have insisted on. And fourthly, as it were
changing a part in the play, they bolt out with some question in
divinity, and many times relating neither to earth nor heaven,
and this they look upon as a piece of art. Here they erect their
theological crests and beat into the people's ears those
magnificent titles of illustrious doctors, subtle doctors, most
subtle doctors, seraphic doctors, cherubic doctors, holy doctors,
unquestionable doctors, and the like; and then throw abroad among
the ignorant people syllogisms, majors, minors, conclusions,
corollaries, suppositions, and those so weak and foolish that
they are below pedantry. There remains yet the fifth act in which
one would think they should show their mastery. And here they
bring in some foolish insipid fable out of Speculum Historiae or
Gesta Romanorum and expound it allegorically, tropologically, and
anagogically. And after this manner do they and their chimera,
and such as Horace despaired of compassing when he wrote
"Humano capiti," etc.
- But they have heard from somebody, I know not whom, that
the beginning of a speech should be sober and grave and least
given to noise. And therefore they begin theirs at that rate they
can scarce hear themselves, as if it were not matter whether
anyone understood them. They have learned somewhere that to move
the affections a louder voice is requisite. Whereupon they that
otherwise would speak like a mouse in a cheese start out of a
sudden into a downright fury, even there too, where there's the
least need of it. A man would swear they were past the power of
hellebore, so little do they consider where 'tis they run out.
Again, because they have heard that as a speech comes up to
something, a man should press it more earnestly, they, however
they begin, use a strange contention of voice in every part,
though the matter itself be never so flat, and end in that manner
as if they'd run themselves out of breath. Lastly, they have
learned that among rhetoricians there is some mention of
laughter, and therefore they study to prick in a jest here and
there; but, O Venus! so void of wit and so little to the purpose
that it may be truly called an ass's playing on the harp. And
sometimes also they use somewhat of a sting, but so nevertheless
that they rather tickle than wound; nor do they ever more truly
flatter than when they would seem to use the greatest freedom of
speech. Lastly, such is their whole action that a man would swear
they had learned it from our common tumblers, though yet they
come short of them in every respect. However, they are both so
like that no man will dispute but that either these learned their
rhetoric from them, or they theirs from these. And yet they light
on some that, when they hear them, conceive they hear very
Demosthenes and Ciceroes: of which sort chiefly are our merchants
and women, whose ears only they endeavor to please, because as to
the first, if they stroke them handsomely, some part or other of
their ill-gotten goods is wont to fall to their share. And the
women, though for many other things they favor this order, this
is not the least, that they commit to their breasts whatever
discontents they have against their husbands. And now, I conceive
me, you see how much this kind of people are beholding to me,
that with their petty ceremonies, ridiculous trifles, and noise
exercise a kind of tyranny among mankind, believing themselves
very Pauls and Anthonies.
- But I willingly give over these stage-players that are
such ingrateful dissemblers of the courtesies I have done them
and such impudent pretenders to religion which they haven't. And
now I have a mind to give some small touches of princes and
courts, of whom I am had in reverence, aboveboard and, as it
becomes gentlemen, frankly. And truly, if they had the least
proportion of sound judgment, what life were more unpleasant than
theirs, or so much to be avoided? For whoever did but truly weigh
with himself how great a burden lies upon his shoulders that
would truly discharge the duty of a prince, he would not think it
worth his while to make his way to a crown by perjury and
parricide. He would consider that he that takes a scepter in his
hand should manage the public, not his private, interest; study
nothing but the common good; and not in the least go contrary to
those laws whereof himself is both the author and exactor: that
he is to take an account of the good or evil administration of
all his magistrates and subordinate officers; that, though he is
but one, all men's eyes are upon him, and in his power it is,
either like a good planet to give life and safety to mankind by
his harmless influence, or like a fatal comet to send mischief
and destruction; that the vices of other men are not alike felt,
nor so generally communicated; and that a prince stands in that
place that his least deviation from the rule of honesty and honor
reaches farther than himself and opens a gap to many men's ruin.
Besides, that the fortune of princes has many things attending it
that are but too apt to train them out of the way, as pleasure,
liberty, flattery, excess; for which cause he should the more
diligently endeavor and set a watch over himself, lest perhaps he
be led aside and fail in his duty. Lastly, to say nothing of
treasons, ill will, and such other mischiefs he's in jeopardy of,
that that True King is over his head, who in a short time will
call him to account for every the least trespass, and that so
much the more severely by how much more mighty was the empire
committed to his charge. These and the like if a prince should
duly weigh, and weigh it he would if he were wise, he would
neither be able to sleep nor take any hearty repast.
- But now by my courtesy they leave all this care to the
gods and are only taken up with themselves, not admitting anyone
to their ear but such as know how to speak pleasant things and
not trouble them with business. They believe they have discharged
all the duty of a prince if they hunt every day, keep a stable of
fine horses, sell dignities and commanderies, and invent new ways
of draining the citizens' purses and bringing it into their own
exchequer; but under such dainty new-found names that though the
thing be most unjust in itself, it carries yet some face of
equity; adding to this some little sweetening that whatever
happens, they may be secure of the common people. And now suppose
someone, such as they sometimes are, a man ignorant of laws,
little less than an enemy to the public good, and minding nothing
but his own, given up to pleasure, a hater of learning, liberty,
and justice, studying nothing less than the public safety, but
measuring everything by his own will and profit; and then put on
him a golden chain that declares the accord of all virtues linked
one to another; a crown set with diamonds, that should put him in
mind how he ought to excel all others in heroic virtues; besides
a scepter, the emblem of justice and an untainted heart; and
lastly, a purple robe, a badge of that charity he owes the
commonwealth. All which if a prince should compare them with his
own life, he would, I believe, be clearly ashamed of his bravery,
and be afraid lest some or other gibing expounder turn all this
tragical furniture into a ridiculous laughingstock.
- And as to the court lords, what should I mention them?
than most of whom though there be nothing more indebted, more
servile, more witless, more contemptible, yet they would seem as
they were the most excellent of all others. And yet in this only
thing no men more modest, in that they are contented to wear
about them gold, jewels, purple, and those other marks of virtue
and wisdom; but for the study of the things themselves, they
remit it to others, thinking it happiness enough for them that
they can call the king master, have learned the cringe a la mode,
know when and where to use those titles of Your Grace, My Lord,
Your Magnificence; in a word that they are past all shame and can
flatter pleasantly. For these are the arts that speak a man truly
noble and an exact courtier. But if you look into their manner of
life you'll find them mere sots, as debauched as Penelope's
wooers; you know the other part of the verse, which the echo will
better tell you than I can. They sleep till noon and have their
mercenary Levite come to their bedside, where he chops over his
matins before they are half up. Then to breakfast, which is
scarce done but dinner stays for them. From thence they go to
dice, tables, cards, or entertain themselves with jesters, fools,
gambols, and horse tricks. In the meantime they have one or two
beverages, and then supper, and after that a banquet, and 'twere
well, by Jupiter, there were no more than one. And in this manner
do their hours, days, months, years, age slide away without the
least irksomeness. Nay, I have sometimes gone away many inches
fatter, to see them speak big words; while each of the ladies
believes herself so much nearer to the gods by how much the
longer train she trails after her; while one nobleman edges out
another, that he may get the nearer to Jupiter himself; and
everyone of them pleases himself the more by how much more
massive is the chain he swags on his shoulders, as if he meant to
show his strength as well as his wealth.
- Nor are princes by themselves in their manner of life,
since popes, cardinals, and bishops have so diligently followed
their steps that they've almost got the start of them. For if any
of them would consider what their alb should put them in mind of,
to wit a blameless life; what is meant by their forked miters,
whose each point is held in by the same knot, we'll suppose it a
perfect knowledge of the Old and New Testaments; what those
gloves on their hands, but a sincere administration of the
Sacraments, and free from all touch of worldly business; what
their crosier, but a careful looking after the flock committed to
their charge; what the cross born before them, but victory over
all earthly affections--these, I say, and many of the like kind
should anyone truly consider, would he not live a sad and
troublesome life? Whereas now they do well enough while they feed
themselves only, and for the care of their flock either put it
over to Christ or lay it all on their suffragans, as they call
them, or some poor vicars. Nor do they so much as remember their
name, or what the word bishop signifies, to wit, labor, care, and
trouble. But in racking to gather money they truly act the part
of bishops, and herein acquit themselves to be no blind seers.
- In like manner cardinals, if they thought themselves the
successors of the apostles, they would likewise imagine that the
same things the other did are required of them, and that they are
not lords but dispensers of spiritual things of which they must
shortly give an exact account. But if they also would a little
philosophize on their habit and think with themselves what's the
meaning of their linen rochet, is it not a remarkable and
singular integrity of life? What that inner purple; is it not an
earnest and fervent love of God? Or what that outward, whose
loose plaits and long train fall round his Reverence's mule and
are large enough to cover a camel; is it not charity that spreads
itself so wide to the succor of all men? that is, to instruct,
exhort, comfort, reprehend, admonish, compose wars, resist wicked
princes, and willingly expend not only their wealth but their
very lives for the flock of Christ: though yet what need at all
of wealth to them that supply the room of the poor apostles?
these things, I say, did they but duly consider, they would not
be so ambitious of that dignity; or, if they were, they would
willingly leave it and live a laborious, careful life, such as
was that of the ancient apostles.
- And for popes, that supply the place of Christ, if they
should endeavor to imitate His life, to wit His poverty, labor,
doctrine, cross, and contempt of life, or should they consider
what the name pope, that is father, or holiness, imports, who
would live more disconsolate than themselves? or who would
purchase that chair with all his substance? or defend it, so
purchased, with swords, poisons, and all force imaginable? so
great a profit would the access of wisdom deprive him of--wisdom
did I say? nay, the least corn of that salt which Christ speaks
of: so much wealth, so much honor, so much riches, so many
victories, so many offices, so many dispensations, so much
tribute, so many pardons; such horses, such mules, such guards,
and so much pleasure would it lose them. You see how much I have
comprehended in a little: instead of which it would bring in
watchings, fastings, tears, prayers, sermons, good endeavors,
sighs, and a thousand the like troublesome exercises. Nor is this
least considerable: so many scribes, so many copying clerks, so
many notaries, so many advocates, so many promoters, so many
secretaries, so many muleteers, so many grooms, so many bankers:
in short, that vast multitude of men that overcharge the Roman
See--I mistook, I meant honor--might beg their bread.
- A most inhuman and economical thing, and more to be
execrated, that those great princes of the Church and true lights
of the world should be reduced to a staff and a wallet. Whereas
now, if there be anything that requires their pains, they leave
that to Peter and Paul that have leisure enough; but if there be
anything of honor or pleasure, they take that to themselves. By
which means it is, yet by my courtesy, that scarce any kind of
men live more voluptuously or with less trouble; as believing
that Christ will be well enough pleased if in their mystical and
almost mimical pontificality, ceremonies, titles of holiness and
the like, and blessing and cursing, they play the parts of
bishops. To work miracles is old and antiquated, and not in
fashion now; to instruct the people, troublesome; to interpret
the Scripture, pedantic; to pray, a sign one has little else to
do; to shed tears, silly and womanish; to be poor, base; to be
vanquished, dishonorable and little becoming him that scarce
admits even kings to kiss his slipper; and lastly, to die,
uncouth; and to be stretched on a cross, infamous.
- Theirs are only those weapons and sweet blessings which
Paul mentions, and of these truly they are bountiful enough: as
interdictions, hangings, heavy burdens, reproofs, anathemas,
executions in effigy, and that terrible thunderbolt of
excommunication, with the very sight of which they sink men's
souls beneath the bottom of hell: which yet these most holy
fathers in Christ and His vicars hurl with more fierceness
against none than against such as, by the instigation of the
devil, attempt to lessen or rob them of Peter's patrimony. When,
though those words in the Gospel, "We have left all, and
followed Thee," were his, yet they call his patrimony lands,
cities, tribute, imposts, riches; for which, being enflamed with
the love of Christ, they contend with fire and sword, and not
without loss of much Christian blood, and believe they have then
most apostolically defended the Church, the spouse of Christ,
when the enemy, as they call them, are valiantly routed. As if
the Church had any deadlier enemies than wicked prelates, who not
only suffer Christ to run out of request for want of preaching
him, but hinder his spreading by their multitudes of laws merely
contrived for their own profit, corrupt him by their forced
expositions, and murder him by the evil example of their
pestilent life.
- Nay, further, whereas the Church of Christ was founded
in blood, confirmed by blood, and augmented by blood, now, as if
Christ, who after his wonted manner defends his people, were
lost, they govern all by the sword. And whereas war is so savage
a thing that it rather befits beasts than men, so outrageous that
the very poets feigned it came from the Furies, so pestilent that
it corrupts all men's manners, so unjust that it is best executed
by the worst of men, so wicked that it has no agreement with
Christ; and yet, omitting all the other, they make this their
only business. Here you'll see decrepit old fellows acting the
parts of young men, neither troubled at their costs, nor wearied
with their labors, nor discouraged at anything, so they may have
the liberty of turning laws, religion, peace, and all things else
quite topsy-turvy. Nor are they destitute of their learned
flatterers that call that palpable madness zeal, piety, and
valor, having found out a new way by which a man may kill his
brother without the least breach of that charity which, by the
command of Christ, one Christian owes another. And here, in
troth, I'm a little at a stand whether the ecclesiastical German
electors gave them this example, or rather took it from them;
who, laying aside their habit, benedictions, and all the like
ceremonies, so act the part of commanders that they think it a
mean thing, and least beseeming a bishop, to show the least
courage to Godward unless it be in a battle.
- And as to the common herd of priests, they account it a
crime to degenerate from the sanctity of their prelates. Heidah!
How soldier-like they bustle about the jus divinum of titles, and
how quicksighted they are to pick the least thing out of the
writings of the ancients wherewith they may fright the common
people and convince them, if possible, that more than a tenth is
due! Yet in the meantime it least comes in their heads how many
things are everywhere extant concerning that duty which they owe
the people. Nor does their shorn crown in the least admonish them
that a priest should be free from all worldly desires and think
of nothing but heavenly things. Whereas on the contrary, these
jolly fellows say they have sufficiently discharged their offices
if they but anyhow mumble over a few odd prayers, which, so help
me, Hercules! I wonder if any god either hear or understand,
since they do neither themselves, especially when they thunder
them out in that manner they are wont. But this they have in
common with those of the heathens, that they are vigilant enough
to the harvest of their profit, nor is there any of them that is
not better read in those laws than the Scripture. Whereas if
there be anything burdensome, they prudently lay that on other
men's shoulders and shift it from one to the other, as men toss a
ball from hand to hand, following herein the example of lay
princes who commit the government of their kingdoms to their
grand ministers, and they again to others, and leave all study of
piety to the common people. In like manner the common people put
it over to those they call ecclesiastics, as if themselves were
no part of the Church, or that their vow in baptism had lost its
obligation. Again, the priests that call themselves secular, as
if they were initiated to the world, not to Christ, lay the
burden on the regulars; the regulars on the monks; the monks that
have more liberty on those that have less; and all of them on the
mendicants; the mendicants on the Carthusians, among whom, if
anywhere, this piety lies buried, but yet so close that scarce
anyone can perceive it. In like manner the popes, the most
diligent of all others in gathering in the harvest of money,
refer all their apostolical work to the bishops, the bishops to
the parsons, the parsons to the vicars, the vicars to their
brother mendicants, and they again throw back the care of the
flock on those that take the wool.
- But it is not my business to sift too narrowly the lives
of prelates and priests for fear I seem to have intended rather a
satire than an oration, and be thought to tax good princes while
I praise the bad. And therefore, what I slightly taught before
has been to no other end but that it might appear that there's no
man can live pleasantly unless he be initiated to my rites and
have me propitious to him. For how can it be otherwise when
Fortune, the great directress of all human affairs, and myself
are so all one that she was always an enemy to those wise men,
and on the contrary so favorable to fools and careless fellows
that all things hit luckily to them?
- You have heard of that Timotheus, the most fortunate
general of the Athenians, of whom came that proverb, "His
net caught fish, though he were asleep;" and that "The
owl flies;" whereas these others hit properly, wise men
"born in the fourth month;" and again, "He rides
Sejanus's his horse;" and "gold of Toulouse,"
signifying thereby the extremity of ill fortune. But I forbear
the further threading of proverbs, lest I seem to have pilfered
my friend Erasmus' adages. Fortune loves those that have least
wit and most confidence and such as like that saying of Caesar,
"The die is thrown." But wisdom makes men bashful,
which is the reason that those wise men have so little to do,
unless it be with poverty, hunger, and chimney corners; that they
live such neglected, unknown, and hated lives: whereas fools
abound in money, have the chief commands in the commonwealth, and
in a word, flourish every way. For if it be happiness to please
princes and to be conversant among those golden and diamond gods,
what is more unprofitable than wisdom, or what is it these kind
of men have, may more justly be censured? If wealth is to be got,
how little good at it is that merchant like to do, if following
the precepts of wisdom, he should boggle at perjury; or being
taken in a lie, blush; or in the least regard the sad scruples of
those wise men touching rapine and usury. Again, if a man sue for
honors or church preferments, an ass or wild ox shall sooner get
them than a wise man. If a man's in love with a young wench, none
of the least humors in this comedy, they are wholly addicted to
fools and are afraid of a wise man and flee him as they would a
scorpion. Lastly, whoever intend to live merry and frolic, shut
their doors against wise men and admit anything sooner. In brief,
go whither you will, among prelates, princes, judges,
magistrates, friends, enemies, from highest to lowest, and you'll
find all things done by money; which, as a wise man condemns it,
so it takes a special care not to come near him. What shall I
say? There is no measure or end of my praises, and yet 'tis fit
my oration have an end. And therefore I'll even break off; and
yet, before I do it, 'twill not be amiss if I briefly show you
that there has not been wanting even great authors that have made
me famous, both by their writings and actions, lest perhaps
otherwise I may seem to have foolishly pleased myself only, or
that the lawyers charge me that I have proved nothing. After
their example, therefore, will I allege my proofs, that is to
say, nothing to the point.
- And first, every man allows this proverb, "That
where a man wants matter, he may best frame some." And to
this purpose is that verse which we teach children, " 'Tis
the greatest wisdom to know when and where to counterfeit the
fool." And now judge yourselves what an excellent thing this
folly is, whose very counterfeit and semblance only has got such
praise from the learned. But more candidly does that fat plump
"Epicurean bacon-hog," Horace, for so he calls himself,
bid us "mingle our purposes with folly;" and whereas he
adds the word bravem, short, perhaps to help out the verse, he
might as well have let it alone; and again, " 'Tis a
pleasant thing to play the fool in the right season;" and in
another place, he had rather "be accounted a dotterel and
sot than to be wise and made mouths at." And Telemachus in
Homer, whom the poet praises so much, is now and then called
nepios, fool: and by the same name, as if there were some good
fortune in it, are the tragedians wont to call boys and
striplings. And what does that sacred book of Iliads contain but
a kind of counter-scuffle between foolish kings and foolish
people? Besides, how absolute is that praise that Cicero gives of
it! "All things are full of fools." For who does not
know that every good, the more diffusive it is, by so much the
better it is?
- But perhaps their authority may be of small credit among
Christians. We'll therefore, if you please, support our praises
with some testimonies of Holy Writ also, in the first place,
nevertheless, having forespoke our theologians that they'll give
us leave to do it without offense. And in the next, forasmuch as
we attempt a matter of some difficulty and it may be perhaps a
little too saucy to call back again the Muses from Helicon to so
great a journey, especially in a matter they are wholly strangers
to, it will be more suitable, perhaps, while I play the divine
and make my way through such prickly quiddities, that I entreat
the soul of Scotus, a thing more bristly than either porcupine or
hedgehog, to leave his scorebone awhile and come into my breast,
and then let him go whither he pleases, or to the dogs. I could
wish also that I might change my countenance, or that I had on
the square cap and the cassock, for fear some or other should
impeach me of theft as if I had privily rifled our masters' desks
in that I have got so much divinity. But it ought not to seem so
strange if after so long and intimate an acquaintance and
converse with them I have picked up somewhat; when as that
fig-tree-god Priapus hearing his owner read certain Greek words
took so much notice of them that he got them by heart, and that
cock in Lucian by having lived long among men became at last a
master of their language.
- But to the point under a fortunate direction.
Ecclesiastes says in his first chapter, "The number of fools
is infinite;" and when he calls it infinite, does he not
seem to comprehend all men, unless it be some few whom yet 'tis a
question whether any man ever saw? But more ingeniously does
Jeremiah in his tenth chapter confess it, saying, "Every man
is made a fool through his own wisdom;" attributing wisdom
to God alone and leaving folly to all men else, and again,
"Let not man glory in his wisdom." And why, good
Jeremiah, would you not have a man glory in his wisdom? Because,
he'll say, he has none at all. But to return to Ecclesiastes,
who, when he cries out, "Vanity of vanities, all is
vanity!" what other thoughts had he, do you believe, than
that, as I said before, the life of man is nothing else but an
interlude of folly? In which he has added one voice more to that
justly received praise of Cicero's which I quoted before, viz.,
"All things are full of fools." Again, that wise
preacher that said, "A fool changes as the moon, but a wise
man is permanent as the sun," what else did he hint at in it
but that all mankind are fools and the name of wise only proper
to God? For by the moon interpreters understand human nature, and
by the sun, God, the only fountain of light; with which agrees
that which Christ himself in the Gospel denies, that anyone is to
be called good but one, and that is God. And then if he is a fool
that is not wise, and every good man according to the Stoics is a
wise man, it is no wonder if all mankind be concluded under
folly. Again Solomon, Chapter 15, "Foolishness," says
he, "is joy to the fool," thereby plainly confessing
that without folly there is no pleasure in life. To which is
pertinent that other, "He that increases knowledge,
increases grief; and in much understanding there is much
indignation." And does he not plainly confess as much,
Chapter 7, "The heart of the wise is where sadness is, but
the heart of fools follows mirth"? by which you see, he
thought it not enough to have learned wisdom without he had added
the knowledge of me also. And if you will not believe me, take
his own words, Chapter 1, ''I gave my heart to know wisdom and
knowledge, madness and folly." Where, by the way, 'tis worth
your remark that he intended me somewhat extraordinary that he
named me last. A preacher wrote it, and this you know is the
order among churchmen, that he that is first in dignity comes
last in place, as mindful, no doubt, whatever they do in other
things, herein at least to observe the evangelical precept.
- Besides, that folly is more excellent than wisdom the
son of Sirach, whoever he was, clearly witnesses, Chapter 44,
whose words, so help me, Hercules! I shall not once utter before
you meet my induction with a suitable answer, according to the
manner of those in Plato that dispute with Socrates. What things
are more proper to be laid up with care, such as are rare and
precious, or such as are common and of no account? Why do you
give me no answer? Well, though you should dissemble, the Greek
proverb will answer for you, "Foul water is thrown out of
doors;" which, if any man shall be so ungracious as to
condemn, let him know 'tis Aristotle's, the god of our masters.
Is there any of you so very a fool as to leave jewels and gold in
the street? In truth, I think not; in the most secret part of
your house; nor is that enough; if there be any drawer in your
iron chests more private than other, there you lay them; but dirt
you throw out of doors. And therefore, if you so carefully lay up
such things as you value and throw away what's vile and of no
worth, is it not plain that wisdom, which he forbids a man to
hide, is of less account than folly, which he commands him to
cover? Take his own words, "Better is the man that hideth
his folly than he that hideth his wisdom." Or what is that,
when he attributes an upright mind without craft or malice to a
fool, when a wise man the while thinks no man like himself? For
so I understand that in his tenth chapter, "A fool walking
by the way, being a fool himself, supposes all men to be fools
like him." And is it not a sign of great integrity to esteem
every man as good as himself, and when there is no one that leans
not too much to other way, to be so frank yet as to divide his
praises with another? Nor was this great king ashamed of the name
when he says of himself that he is more foolish than any man. Nor
did Paul, that great doctor of the Gentiles, writing to the
Corinthians, unwillingly acknowledge it; "I speak,"
says he, "like a fool. I am more." As if it could be
any dishonor to excel in folly.
- But here I meet with a great noise of some that endeavor
to peck out the crows' eyes; that is, to blind the doctors of our
times and smoke out their eyes with new annotations; among whom
my friend Erasmus, whom for honor's sake I often mention,
deserves if not the first place yet certainly the second. O most
foolish instance, they cry, and well becoming Folly herself! The
apostle's meaning was wide enough from what you dream; for he
spoke it not in this sense, that he would have them believe him a
greater fool than the rest, but when he had said, "They are
ministers of Christ, the same am I," and by way of boasting
herein had equaled himself with to others, he added this by way
of correction or checking himself, "I am more," as
meaning that he was not only equal to the rest of the apostles in
the work of the Gospel, but somewhat superior. And therefore,
while he would have this received as a truth, lest nevertheless
it might not relish their ears as being spoken with too much
arrogance, he foreshortened his argument with the vizard of
folly, "I speak like a fool," because he knew it was
the prerogative of fools to speak what they like, and that too
without offense. Whatever he thought when he wrote this, I leave
it to them to discuss; for my own part, I follow those fat,
fleshy, and vulgarly approved doctors, with whom, by Jupiter! a
great part of the learned had rather err than follow them that
understand the tongues, though they are never so much in the
right. Not any of them make greater account of those smatterers
at Greek than if they were daws. Especially when a no small
professor, whose name I wittingly conceal lest those choughs
should chatter at me that Greek proverb I have so often
mentioned, "an ass at a harp," discoursing
magisterially and theologically on this text, "I speak as a
fool, I am more," drew a new thesis; and, which without the
height of logic he could never have done, made this new
subdivision--for I'll give you his own words, not only in form
but matter also--"I speak like a fool," that is, if you
look upon me as a fool for comparing myself with those false
apostles, I shall seem yet a greater fool by esteeming myself
before them; though the same person a little after, as forgetting
himself, runs off to another matter.
- But why do I thus staggeringly defend myself with one
single instance? As if it were not the common privilege of
divines to stretch heaven, that is Holy Writ, like a cheverel;
and when there are many things in St. Paul that thwart
themselves, which yet in their proper place do well enough if
there be any credit to be given to St. Jerome that was master of
five tongues. Such was that of his at Athens when having casually
espied the inscription of that altar, he wrested it into an
argument to prove the Christian faith, and leaving out all the
other words because they made against him, took notice only of
the two last, viz., "To the unknown God;" and those too
not without some alteration, for the whole inscription was thus:
"To the Gods of Asia, Europe, and Africa; To the unknown and
strange Gods." And according to his example do the sons of
the prophets, who, forcing out here and there four or five
expressions and if need be corrupting the sense, wrest it to
their own purpose; though what goes before and follows after make
nothing to the matter in hand, nay, be quite against it. Which
yet they do with so happy an impudence that oftentimes the
civilians envy them that faculty.
- For what is it in a manner they may not hope for success
in, when this great doctor (I had almost bolted out his name, but
that I once again stand in fear of the Greek proverb) has made a
construction on an expression of Luke, so agreeable to the mind
of Christ as are fire and water to one another. For when the last
point of danger was at hand, at which time retainers and
dependents are wont in a more special manner to attend their
protectors, to examine what strength they have, and prepare for
the encounter, Christ, intending to take out of his disciples'
minds all trust and confidence in such like defense, demands of
them whether they wanted anything when he sent them forth so
unprovided for a journey that they had neither shoes to defend
their feet from the injuries of stones and briars nor the
provision of a scrip to preserve them from hunger. And when they
had denied that they wanted anything, he adds, "But now, he
that hath a bag, let him take it, and likewise a scrip; and he
that hath none, let him sell his coat and buy a sword." And
now when the sum of all that Christ taught pressed only meekness,
suffering, and contempt of life, who does not clearly perceive
what he means in this place? to wit, that he might the more
disarm his ministers, that neglecting not only shoes and scrip
but throwing away their very coat, they might, being in a manner
naked, the more readily and with less hindrance take in hand the
work of the Gospel, and provide themselves of nothing but a
sword, not such as thieves and murderers go up and down with, but
the sword of the spirit that pierces the most inward parts, and
so cuts off as it were at one blow all earthly affections, that
they mind nothing but their duty to God. But see, I pray, whither
this famous theologian wrests it. By the sword he interprets
defense against persecution, and by the bag sufficient provision
to carry it on. As if Christ having altered his mind, in that he
sent out his disciples not so royally attended as he should have
done, repented himself of his former instructions: or as
forgetting that he had said, "Blessed are ye when ye are
evil spoken of, despised, and persecuted, etc.," and forbade
them to resist evil; for that the meek in spirit, not the proud,
are blessed: or, lest remembering, I say, that he had compared
them to sparrows and lilies, thereby minding them what small care
they should take for the things of this life, was so far now from
having them go forth without a sword that he commanded them to
get one, though with the sale of their coat, and had rather they
should go naked than want a brawling-iron by their sides. And to
this, as under the word "sword" he conceives to be
comprehended whatever appertains to the repelling of injuries, so
under that of "scrip" he takes in whatever is necessary
to the support of life. And so does this deep interpreter of the
divine meaning bring forth the apostles to preach the doctrine of
a crucified Christ, but furnished at all points with lances,
slings, quarterstaffs, and bombards; lading them also with bag
and baggage, lest perhaps it might not be lawful for them to
leave their inn unless they were empty and fasting. Nor does he
take the least notice of this, that he so willed the sword to be
bought, reprehends it a little after and commands it to be
sheathed; and that it was never heard that the apostles ever used
or swords or bucklers against the Gentiles, though 'tis likely
they had done it, if Christ had ever intended, as this doctor
interprets.
- There is another, too, whose name out of respect I pass
by, a man of no small repute, who from those tents which Habakkuk
mentions, "The tents of the land of Midian shall
tremble," drew this exposition, that it was prophesied of
the skin of Saint Bartholomew who was flayed alive. And why,
forsooth, but because those tents were covered with skins? I was
lately myself at a theological dispute, for I am often there,
where when one was demanding what authority there was in Holy
Writ that commands heretics to be convinced by fire rather than
reclaimed by argument; a crabbed old fellow, and one whose
supercilious gravity spoke him at least a doctor, answered in a
great fume that Saint Paul had decreed it, who said, "Reject
him that is a heretic, after once or twice admonition." And
when he had sundry times, one after another, thundered out the
same thing, and most men wondered what ailed the man, at last he
explained it thus, making two words of one. "A heretic must
be put to death." Some laughed, and yet there wanted not
others to whom this exposition seemed plainly theological; which,
when some, though those very few, opposed, they cut off the
dispute, as we say, with a hatchet, and the credit of so
uncontrollable an author. "Pray conceive me," said he,
"it is written, 'Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.' But
every heretic bewitches the people; therefore, etc." And
now, as many as were present admired the man's wit, and
consequently submitted to his decision of the question. Nor came
it into any of their heads that that law concerned only
fortunetellers, enchanters, and magicians, whom the Hebrews call
in their tongue "Mecaschephim," witches or sorcerers:
for otherwise, perhaps, by the same reason it might as well have
extended to fornication and drunkenness.
- But I foolishly run on in these matters, though yet
there are so many of them that neither Chrysippus, nor Didymus,
volumes are large enough to contain them. I would only desire you
to consider this, that if so great doctors may be allowed this
liberty, you may the more reasonably pardon even me also, a raw,
effeminate divine, if I quote not everything so exactly as I
should. And so at last I return to Paul. "Ye
willingly," says he, "suffer my foolishness," and
again, "Take me as a fool," and further, "I speak
it not after the Lord, but as it were foolishly," and in
another place, "We are fools for Christ's sake." You
have heard from how great an author how great praises of folly;
and to what other end, but that without doubt he looked upon it
as that one thing both necessary and profitable. "If anyone
among ye," says he, "seem to be wise, let him be a fool
that he may be wise." And in Luke, Jesus called those two
disciples with whom he joined himself upon the way,
"fools." Nor can I give you any reason why it should
seem so strange when Saint Paul imputes a kind of folly even to
God himself. "The foolishness of God," says he,
"is wiser than men." Though yet I must confess that
Origen upon the place denies that this foolishness may be
resembled to the uncertain judgment of men; of which kind is,
that "the preaching of the cross is to them that perish
foolishness."
- But why am I so careful to no purpose that I thus run on
to prove my matter by so many testimonies? when in those mystical
Psalms Christ speaking to the Father says openly, "Thou
knowest my foolishness." Nor is it without ground that fools
are so acceptable to God. The reason perhaps may be this, that as
princes carry a suspicious eye upon those that are over-wise, and
consequently hate them--as Caesar did Brutus and Cassius, when he
feared not in the least drunken Antony; so Nero, Seneca; and
Dionysius, Plato--and on the contrary are delighted in those
blunter and unlabored wits, in like manner Christ ever abhors and
condemns those wise men and such as put confidence in their own
wisdom. And this Paul makes clearly out when he said, "God
hath chosen the foolish things of this world," as well
knowing it had been impossible to have reformed it by wisdom.
Which also he sufficiently declares himself, crying out by the
mouth of his prophet, "I will destroy the wisdom of the
wise, and cast away the understanding of the prudent."
- And again, when Christ gives Him thanks that He had
concealed the mystery of salvation from the wise, but revealed it
to babes and sucklings, that is to say, fools. For the Greek word
for babes is fools, which he opposes to the word wise men. To
this appertains that throughout the Gospel you find him ever
accusing the Scribes and Pharisees and doctors of the law, but
diligently defending the ignorant multitude (for what other is
that "Woe to ye Scribes and Pharisees" than woe to you,
you wise men?), but seems chiefly delighted in little children,
women, and fishers. Besides, among brute beasts he is best
pleased with those that have least in them of the foxes'
subtlety. And therefore he chose rather to ride upon an ass when,
if he had pleased, he might have bestrode the lion without
danger. And the Holy Ghost came down in the shape of a dove, not
of an eagle or kite. Add to this that in Scripture there is
frequent mention of harts, hinds, and lambs; and such as are
destined to eternal life are called sheep, than which creature
there is not anything more foolish, if we may believe that
proverb of Aristotle "sheepish manners," which he tells
us is taken from the foolishness of that creature and is used to
be applied to dull-headed people and lack-wits. And yet Christ
professes to be the shepherd of this flock and is himself
delighted with the name of a lamb; according to Saint John,
"Behold the Lamb of God!" Of which also there is much
mention in the Revelation. And what does all this drive at, but
that all mankind are fools--nay, even the very best?
- And Christ himself, that he might the better relieve
this folly, being the wisdom of the Father, yet in some manner
became a fool when taking upon him the nature of man, he was
found in shape as a man; as in like manner he was made sin that
he might heal sinners. Nor did he work this cure any other way
than by the foolishness of the cross and a company of fat
apostles, not much better, to whom also he carefully recommended
folly but gave them a caution against wisdom and drew them
together by the example of little children, lilies, mustard-seed,
and sparrows, things senseless and inconsiderable, living only by
the dictates of nature and without either craft or care. Besides,
when he forbade them to be troubled about what they should say
before governors and straightly charged them not to inquire after
times and seasons, to wit, that they might not trust to their own
wisdom but wholly depend on him. And to the same purpose is it
that that great Architect of the World, God, gave man an
injunction against his eating of the Tree of Knowledge, as if
knowledge were the bane of happiness; according to which also,
St. Paul disallows it as puffing up and destructive; whence also
St. Bernard seems in my opinion to follow when he interprets that
mountain whereon Lucifer had fixed his habitation to be the
mountain of knowledge.
- Nor perhaps ought I to omit this other argument, that
Folly is so gracious above that her errors are only pardoned,
those of wise men never. Whence it is that they that ask
forgiveness, though they offend never so wittingly, cloak it yet
with the excuse of folly. So Aaron, in Numbers, if I mistake not
the book, when he sues unto Moses concerning his sister's
leprosy, "I beseech thee, my Lord, not to lay this sin upon
us, which we have foolishly committed." So Saul makes his
excuse of David, "For behold," says he, "I did it
foolishly." And again, David himself thus sweetens God,
"And therefore I beseech thee, O Lord, to take away the
trespass of thy servant, for I have done foolishly," as if
he knew there was no pardon to be obtained unless he had colored
his offense with folly and ignorance. And stronger is that of
Christ upon the cross when he prayed for his enemies,
"Father, forgive them," nor does he cover their crime
with any other excuse than that of unwittingness--because, says
he, "they know not what they do." In like manner Paul,
writing to Timothy, "But therefore I obtained mercy, for
that I did it ignorantly through unbelief." And what is the
meaning of "I did it ignorantly" but that I did it out
of folly, not malice? And what of "Therefore I received
mercy" but that I had not obtained it had I not been made
more allowable through the covert of folly? For us also makes
that mystical Psalmist, though I remembered it not in its right
place, "Remember not the sins of my youth nor my
ignorances." You see what two things he pretends, to wit,
youth, whose companion I ever am, and ignorances, and that in the
plural number, a number of multitude, whereby we are to
understand that there was no small company of them.
- But not to run too far in that which is infinite. To
speak briefly, all Christian religion seems to have a kind of
alliance with folly and in no respect to have any accord with
wisdom. Of which if you expect proofs, consider first that boys,
old men, women, and fools are more delighted with religious and
sacred things than others, and to that purpose are ever next the
altars; and this they do by mere impulse of nature. And in the
next place, you see that those first founders of it were plain,
simple persons and most bitter enemies of learning. Lastly there
are no sort of fools seem more out of the way than are these whom
the zeal of Christian religion has once swallowed up; so that
they waste their estates, neglect injuries, suffer themselves to
be cheated, put no difference between friends and enemies, abhor
pleasure, are crammed with poverty, watchings, tears, labors,
reproaches, loathe life, and wish death above all things; in
short, they seem senseless to common understanding, as if their
minds lived elsewhere and not in their own bodies; which, what
else is it than to be mad? For which reason you must not think it
so strange if the apostles seemed to be drunk with new wine, and
if Paul appeared to Festus to be mad.
- But now, having once gotten on the lion's skin, go to,
and I'll show you that this happiness of Christians, which they
pursue with so much toil, is nothing else but a kind of madness
and folly; far be it that my words should give any offense,
rather consider my matter. And first, the Christians and
Platonists do as good as agree in this, that the soul is plunged
and fettered in the prison of the body, by the grossness of which
it is so tied up and hindered that it cannot take a view of or
enjoy things as they truly are; and for that cause their master
defines philosophy to be a contemplation of death, because it
takes off the mind from visible and corporeal objects, than which
death does no more. And therefore, as long as the soul uses the
organs of the body in that right manner it ought, so long it is
said to be in good state and condition; but when, having broken
its fetters, it endeavors to get loose and assays, as it were, a
flight out of that prison that holds it in, they call it madness;
and if this happen through any distemper or indisposition of the
organs, then, by the common consent of every man, 'tis downright
madness. And yet we see such kind of men foretell things to come,
understand tongues and letters they never learned before, and
seem, as it were, big with a kind of divinity. Nor is it to be
doubted but that it proceeds from hence, that the mind, being
somewhat at liberty from the infection of the body, begins to put
forth itself in its native vigor. And I conceive 'tis from the
same cause that the like often happens to sick men a little
before their death, that they discourse in strain above mortality
as if they were inspired. Again, if this happens upon the score
of religion, though perhaps it may not be the same kind of
madness, yet 'tis so near it that a great many men would judge it
no better, especially when a few inconsiderable people shall
differ from the rest of the world in the whole course of their
life. And therefore it fares with them as, according to the
fiction of Plato, happens to those that being cooped up in a cave
stand gaping with admiration at the shadows of things; and that
fugitive who, having broke from them and returning to them again,
told them he had seen things truly as they were, and that they
were the most mistaken in believing there was nothing but pitiful
shadows. For as this wise man pitied and bewailed their palpable
madness that were possessed with so gross an error, so they in
return laughed at him as a doting fool and cast him out of their
company. In like manner the common sort of men chiefly admire
those things that are most corporeal and almost believe there is
nothing beyond them. Whereas on the contrary, these devout
persons, by how much the nearer anything concerns the body, by so
much more they neglect it and are wholly hurried away with the
contemplation of things invisible. For the one give the first
place to riches, the next to their corporeal pleasures, leaving
the last place to their soul, which yet most of them do scarce
believe, because they can't see it with their eyes. On the
contrary, the others first rely wholly on God, the most
unchangeable of all things; and next him, yet on this that comes
nearest him, they bestow the second on their soul; and lastly,
for their body, they neglect that care and condemn and flee money
as superfluity that may be well spared; or if they are forced to
meddle with any of these things, they do it carelessly and much
against their wills, having as if they had it not, and possessing
as if they possessed it not.
- There are also in each several things several degrees
wherein they disagree among themselves. And first as to the
senses, though all of them have more or less affinity with the
body, yet of these some are more gross and blockish, as tasting,
hearing, seeing, smelling, touching; some more removed from the
body, as memory, intellect, and the will. And therefore to which
of these the mind applies itself, in that lies its force. But
holy men, because the whole bent of their minds is taken up with
those things that are most repugnant to these grosser senses,
they seem brutish and stupid in the common use of them. Whereas
on the contrary, the ordinary sort of people are best at these,
and can do least at the other; from whence it is, as we have
heard, that some of these holy men have by mistake drunk oil for
wine. Again, in the affections of the mind, some have a greater
commerce with the body than others, as lust, desire of meat and
sleep, anger, pride, envy; with which holy men are at
irreconcilable enmity, and contrary, the common people think
there's no living without them. And lastly there are certain
middle kind of affections, and as it were natural to every man,
as the love of one's country, children, parents, friends, and to
which the common people attribute no small matter; whereas the
other strive to pluck them out of their mind: unless insomuch as
they arrive to that highest part of the soul, that they love
their parents not as parents--for what did they get but the body?
though yet we owe it to God, not them--but as good men or women
and in whom shines the image of that highest wisdom which alone
they call the chiefest good, and out of which, they say, there is
nothing to be beloved or desired.
- And by the same rule do they measure all things else, so
that they make less account of whatever is visible, unless it be
altogether contemptible, than of those things which they cannot
see. But they say that in Sacraments and other religious duties
there is both body and spirit. As in fasting they count it not
enough for a man to abstain from eating, which the common people
take for an absolute fast, unless there be also a lessening of
his depraved affections: as that he be less angry, less proud,
than he was wont, that the spirit, being less clogged with its
bodily weight, may be the more intent upon heavenly things. In
like manner, in the Eucharist, though, say they, it is not to be
esteemed the less that 'tis administered with ceremonies, yet of
itself 'tis of little effect, if not hurtful, unless that which
is spiritual be added to it, to wit, that which is represented
under those visible signs. Now the death of Christ is represented
by it, which all men, vanquishing, abolishing, and, as it were,
burying their carnal affections, ought to express in their lives
and conversations that they may grow up to a newness of life and
be one with him and the same one among another. This a holy man
does, and in this is his only meditation. Whereas on the
contrary, the common people think there's no more in that
sacrifice than to be present at the altar and crowd next it, to
have a noise of words and look upon the ceremonies. Nor in this
alone, which we only proposed by way of example, but in all his
life, and without hypocrisy, does a holy man fly those things
that have any alliance with the body and is wholly ravished with
things eternal, invisible, and spiritual. For which cause there's
so great contrarity of opinion between them, and that too in
everything, that each party thinks the other out of their wits;
though that character, in my judgment, better agrees with those
holy men than the common people: which yet will be more clear if,
as I promised, I briefly show you that that great reward they so
much fancy is nothing else but a kind of madness.
- And therefore suppose that Plato dreamed of somewhat
like it when he called the madness of lovers the most happy
condition of all others. For he that's violently in love lives
not in his own body but in the thing he loves; and by how much
the farther he runs from himself into another, by so much the
greater is his pleasure. And then, when the mind strives to rove
from its body and does not rightly use its own organs, without
doubt you may say 'tis downright madness and not be mistaken, or
otherwise what's the meaning of those common sayings, "He
does not dwell at home," "Come to yourself,"
"He's his own man again"? Besides, the more perfect and
true his love is, the more pleasant is his madness. And
therefore, what is that life hereafter, after which these holy
minds so pantingly breathe, like to be? To wit, the spirit shall
swallow up the body, as conqueror and more durable; and this it
shall do with the greater ease because heretofore, in its
lifetime, it had chanced and thinned it into such another nothing
as itself. And then the spirit again shall be wonderfully
swallowed up by the highest mind, as being more powerful than
infinite parts; so that the whole man is to be out of himself nor
to be otherwise happy in any respect, but that being stripped of
himself, he shall participate of somewhat ineffable from that
chiefest good that draws all things into itself. And this
happiness though 'tis only then perfected when souls being joined
to their former bodies shall be made immortal, yet forasmuch as
the life of holy men is nothing but a continued meditation and,
as it were, shadow of that life, it so happens that at length
they have some taste or relish of it; which, though it be but as
the smallest drop in comparison of that fountain of eternal
happiness, yet it far surpasses all worldly delight, though all
the pleasures of all mankind were all joined together. So much
better are things spiritual than things corporeal, and things
invisible than things visible; which doubtless is that which the
prophet promises: "The eye hath not seen, nor the ear heard,
nor has it entered into the heart of man to consider what God has
provided for them that love Him." And this is that Mary's
better part which is not taken away by change of life, but
perfected.
- And therefore they that are sensible of it, and few
there are to whom this happens, suffer a kind of somewhat little
differing from madness; for they utter many things that do not
hang together, and that too not after the manner of men but make
a kind of sound which they neither heed themselves, nor is it
understood by others, and change the whole figure of their
countenance, one while jocund, another while dejected, now
weeping, then laughing, and again sighing. And when they come to
themselves, tell you they know not where they have been, whether
in the body or out of the body, or sleeping; nor do they remember
what they have heard, seen, spoken, or done, and only know this,
as it were in a mist or dream, that they were the most happy
while they were so out of their wits. And therefore they are
sorry they are come to themselves again and desire nothing more
than this kind of madness, to be perpetually mad. And this is a
small taste of that future happiness.
- But I forget myself and run beyond my bounds. Though
yet, if I shall seem to have spoken anything more boldly or
impertinently than I ought, be pleased to consider that not only
Folly but a woman said it; remembering in the meantime that Greek
proverb, "Sometimes a fool may speak a word in season,"
unless perhaps you expect an epilogue, but give me leave to tell
you you are mistaken if you think I remember anything of what I
have said, having foolishly bolted out such a hodgepodge of
words. 'Tis an old proverb, "I hate one that remembers
what's done over the cup." This is a new one of my own
making: I hate a man that remembers what he hears. Wherefore
farewell, clap your hands, live and drink lustily, my most
excellent disciples of Folly.
Finis