Narbonus The laberynth of libertie. Very pleasant for young gentlemen to peruse, and passing profitable for them to prosecute. Wherein is contained the discommodities that insue, by following the lust of a mans will, in youth: and the goodnesse he after gayneth, being beaten with his owne rod, and pricked with the peeushnesse of his owne conscience, in age. VVriten by Austin Saker, of New Inne.
Saker, Austin.
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NARBONVS.

THere dwelt neare the Cittie of Vienna, a Gentleman, named Narbonus: of perso∣nage beautiful, and in behauiour bountiful: in substance, not superiour to any: yet 〈◊〉 wit, inferiour to many: in goodnes, grate∣full: and to his power, beneficiall: He had left him, by th death of his father, some small possessions, & a litle land to maintain his calling: wherwith, had hée bene so wisely disposed, as hée was wantonly delighted, hée might haue bragged with the best, and accompanied the greatest: and had his wit bene so well imployed, as his will was euely occupied, hée had néeded no counsailer for his commodity, nor any schoolemaister for his humanitie: But as he was younge, so was he wilde: and as he was wealthy, so was hée disposed pleasantly: as hée was ritche, so was hée ryo∣tous: and yet as hée was wanton, so was hée curteous. But wit is neuer good before it be bought, & youth neuer brydled before hée haue bidden the brunt: and as the ten∣der twigge will easely be bowed, where the olde trée wil not by any eanes be bente: as the yonge Coult will be reclaymed with a snaffle, when the olde Iade will neuer be manaced with any brydle: as the yonge Fawne will be made take bread at a mans hand, when the old Bucke will not by any meanes looke vpon a man: so as yet this Impe was to bée grafted to beare the first fruit, and now began the spring when it should yéeld the brauest blossom: now was the sap come into the hart, and now such séede as was sowen, such fruit should be found: such as was the plant, such would prooue the peare: how the ground was tilled, such fruit would come from it: and as the fertillest fields not wel husbanded, will yéelde the thickest thistles, Page  2 so contrary, wrought as it should bée, giueth greatest en∣crease of corne: the more perfect memory in any man, the apter to delight in vile vice, which once reclaimed to ho∣nesty, the one blotted out, great goodnes quickly insueth: who then Paule a greater persecutor? who then hée a more godly professour? Samuell first called by God, after cho∣sen his Chaplaine: Caesar first a slauish Souldiour, after, a great and valiaunt Conquerour: as the yeares doo en∣crease, so should a mans goodnes grow, and as strength entereth into a mans armes, so should wisedome enter into the braynes: Why doth a man grow in greatnesse, but that also hée should waxe in goodnes? this youth was acquainted with many vices the which hée accustomed, and nozled in some vertues which he not greatly frequen¦ted, some of his blossoms were blasted, and some séedes prospered perfectly: some of his vertues were bitten with rost, which made no shew til they came to the ripenesse: but then flourished fresh and gréen: other of his plantes prospered wel, and made a goodly shew on so perfect a trée as nature her selfe saw the growth therof: The Riuer Nilus ingendreth the foule Crocadile, and castes vp the precious perles: the filthy Toade hath a faire stone in hir heade: the Serpents skin is very medicinable for sundry things, where contrary, the Bée hath Hony in her mouth and a sting in her tayle: the swetest rose hath some pricke, the clearest Well, some dyrte in the bottom: so the most deformed man may haue some good condicion, the vylest nature some good imaginacion: the greatest pretended mischiefe, some spot of mercy: the stinging Netle is salue for some sore: the poysoned Hemlocke retayneth some vertue, and the Poppy séede is excellente good for many thinges: but the purest perfection may haue some spot of suspicion, the clearest complexion some fault of fauour, the best wit stayned with some diuelish deuice: Narbonus was neither voyd of humility, nor ouerladen with amity: not troubled with more honestly then he néeded to occupy: nor charged with more goodnes then his body could carry, Page  3 nor filled with more feruencie then his stomacke could digest: yet his condicions not to bee blamed, nor his vn∣constancy any wayes reproued: beeing in the Countrey hee wanted no companions to court him, and spending his time so lewdly, lacked no Louers to entice him to fol∣ly: and though the rusticall Countrey be not so stuffed out with swahers, as the Cittie is fortified with swearers, yet their fruite is often eaten with Caterpillers, & more full fraughted then néedeth with flatterers: not so full of good nurture, as infected with vile nature: better fed then taught, and better manned then mannered: This curte∣ous crue that followed his humor, enticed him sumtimes to follow the houndes, then to flye with the Hawke: now to rowse the bristlinge Boare from out his drowsie den, & then to haue the bouncing Bucke in chase: sometimes to vse the Tilte yardes, and then againe to exercise their weapons, here was neyther practised Geomitry, nor stu∣died Philosophy: neither Musicke vsed, nor Diuinity lo∣ued: nothinge seene in Arithmeticke, and as litle know∣ledge in Astrology: neyther the Law lyked, nor so much as a booke looked on: but all began to goe to wracke, and euery good motion no sooner thought on, but as speedily forgotten. Hee had dwellinge in Vienna an Unckle of great estimacion, and his credite no lesse thē hée deserued, for hee was beloued of his Neighbours, and fauoured of his fréendes, commended of his acquaintance, and honou∣red of those that knew him, lyked of the most, and hated but of few: for wisedome, hee was furnished to serue his turne, and his wit any way merited no blame: for his substance sufficient to satisfie his estate, and his goods so many as suffised his callinge: for his courtesie he wanted no instructor, and for good entertainement: to few inferi∣our: and for that hée was without any Sonne, and vnlike∣ly euer to haue a Daughter: neuer a childe by nature, nor any kinsman to his knowledge except his Nephew: Hee therfore behouldinge the life that hee led, and the folly hée folowed, the litle gouernment hee had of his lyuing, and Page  4 as small regarde to employ it the best way: not regarding any study, and caringe not whither euer he tumbled ouer his Bookes, or neuer looked on them againe: but apt to follow any wilfulnesse, and not regardinge to apply any goodnesse: waying more the pleasure of his companions, then the furtheraunce of his owne felicity: and an yuche of pastime, was woorth an ell of profite. His Unckle therfore on a time sente for him to Vienna, the messenger certefiyng him of great businesse, who willingly condis∣cended to awayte on his good Unckle, glad to bee at the commaunde of his fauourable freendshippe: and in deede repaired accordinge to promise, vnwillinge to displease him whom aboue all others hee fauoured: but well con∣tented to heare the cause of his sending for. Where no sooner come, but entertained as courteously as him felfe desired: where after a fewe matters of course, and com∣mon thinges of custome: the good man his Unckle vt∣tered the occasion of his sendinge for, and wherfore hee was cyted to arriue at his house, by these wordes follow∣inge.

Nephew Narbonus, the longest Sommers day hath but his limited time of common course & then the Sunne draweth towardes the westerne Mountaynes, cleane from our sight, and wee enioy the vncomfortable night againe: the weary winters night lasteth but the appoyn∣ted time, and wee beholde the ioyfull dawning as before: the pleasaunt springe sweetly beginneth, and flyeth againe like a shadow: the wallowinge Waues hauinge attained their highest, retire to their former place as be∣fore: the grene Grasse once growen to the ful perfection, withereth to nothing but earth, as at the first: The grea∣test Monarche that euer liued, ranne but his race, and so his name grew againe to nothinge, hauinge the time of his death appointed as well as other men: The happiest felicity hath some fall, & the greatest goodnes some dram not very dainty: the fruitfullest trees are not free from some Caterpillers, & the most fortunate Weale wrought Page  5 with some woe: and how longe doth this tickle state in∣dure, or this fluttinge fortune remaine, when Empires are subuerted, & Kingdomes ouerthrowne: when Duke∣domes goe to wracke, and Princes pine in pouerty: when the ritchest fall to decaye, and the prowdest stoupe to the yoake of fortune: who will reioyce in his welfare, and trust the vncertainty of his time? who therfore can think hée sayleth safely, that is alwayes in danger of the rocks? who can imagine hee trauaileth surely, that is alwayes amongst theeues? who is safe in warfare, whither he flie or follow, the greatest certainty is not sure, and the best vncertainty vnstedfast? Who so prowde as Lucifer, who sooner throwne downe into Hell? who so highe minded as Nabuchodonozer, but who so changed from so mighty a Prince to a brute Beast? who so wicked as Ahab, who more seuerely punished: the strongest cannot boste of his happinesse, nor the mightiest crake of the length of his life: the prowdest cannot brag of his tiranny, nor the ry∣chest reioyce that hée liued euer the longer: the greatest that euer liued hath felt the force of fortune, & the highest hath beene made to stoupe: though Cacus were a Gyant, yet was Hercules stronger: and though Goliah were high, yet was hée made shorter by the head: and if Samson were the stowtest that euer liued, yet met hée with his match: if not by strength, yet by pollicie: if not by might, yet by slight: if not by greatnes of bodye, yet by the sleightes of subtill deuices. Vlisses was valiaunt, yet won to be a seruile subiecte: Achilles was gallaunt, yet met hee with his péeres: though Lemnon were feared, yet was hée van∣quished. Alas, the most fortunate is but fickle, and the gre∣test subiecte to slauery: thraldome hath happened to the noblest, and bondage to the brauest: the yoake hath beene layde on the neckes of Princes, and Emperours, led in cheines of Iron: the greatest goodnes that a man gaineth in this lustly life, is the same that followeth by learning, and the only honour we should hunt after: then the which what is there greater? then the which, what is there Page  6 more pro••table then the which, what is there more esti∣mable? then the which, what is there more commendable in all ages? then the which, what one thinge is there that lasteth after life? And how is vertue attained? or by what meanes is wisedome found out? from whence commeth the knowledge of all prowesse? and how doo Kings learne to beare swaye? is it not the ground of all goodnesse, and the only hope of all happines? Viit post funera virtus: and what can a man name ye lasteth after death, or what memoriall is there made of any thinge whatsoeuer, after our departure? do riches indure after death, because they abound in life? no trust mee: euery good thinge taketh the originall from thence, and as it hath a beginning, so shall it neuer haue ende: who commendeth not the Bookes of Cicero, before the wealth of Cressus? and the wisedome of Solomon, before ye strength of Sampson? the sweet wordes of Tullic, before the threatnings of Minos: and the sober sayinges of Anaxagoras, before the flattering tales of Ari∣stippus: the prudence of Cato, before the foolishnes of Mi∣das: and the Schoole of Thalias, before the Court of Ve∣nus: And for that I know the Countrey to be more giuen to pleasure, then profited by wisedome: better disposed to vse pastime, then to frequent Uertues Scholes: more de∣lighted with the loue of liberty, then practised in the law of ciuility: more pampered in their owne foolishnes, then well nurtured in behauiour, or gratefulnes: you are not ignoraunt of the great good will, that alwayes was bee∣tweene your Father and mee, not onely brotherly loue, but also such mutuall fréendship, as my purse lay alwayes open at his commaund: and he to requite me as fréendly vsed like courtesie in what soeuer. I lamente your Fa∣thers departure, the more your losse, ye greater my gréefe: for kinsmen you haue fewe, but such as for money will claime you of their kindred: for acquaintaunce, you haue more then is needefull, vnlesse greater for your gaine, and more profitable: I onely am lefte the standerde, and you the seconde, both which make but halfe a messe, a Page  7 ••mple seruice for so aunciente a family: as for children, you know none I haue, nor any am likely to get: my pos∣sessions are not small, and my landes not the least, my li∣uinge more then I spende the reuenues, and my credit more then I would it were: but as my charges is great, so my care cannot be litle: and as my substaunce is much, so the meanes to leaue it is yet to make, and for the be∣stowing therof, the choice is yet in mine owne handes: and if duety binde mée to perticipate my lyuinge to you, the onely heire of mee, for want of a childe to enioy my landes, yet nature bindeth mee more straightly to bee∣stowe it on you beeinge the last, or at the least néerest allied to me in line or lignage: and for that it is common for euery man to giue to his cousen, when hée hath ney∣ther children nor brothers, I wil not be found to digresse the boundes of nature, or breake auncient custome: but if you merite well you shall haue ynough, if sufficiēt serue the turne: know you therfore, that the cause of your com∣ming, and the busines I sent for you, is to let you vnder∣stand somewhat for your profite, and a litle for your com∣modity: the loytering life which you leade in the Coun∣try, and the careles consuming of your time, is the way to weary you, and the meanes to make you no miser, yet miserabler: of small credite, and as litle callinge: better acquainted, then beloued: and better knowne thē trusted: In déede, I confesse the Countrey to be passing pleasant, & excellent painefull: more daungerous then dainty: more maydenly then mannerly: and more troublesome then trusty: for delights they are not dainty, and all exercises greatly vsed: all which are baites to allure a stronger thē your selfe, & to win one more wise to delight their wiles Of thrée thinges therfore I giue you your choice, leaue which you list, and choose that which liketh you, whither to bee a Marchaunt, and vse those trades which I can ac∣quaint you withall, or a Studient to follow the Scholes, and vse the Uniuersities, or a Trauailer, to see for raine Countreies, and learne straunge languages: and in that Page  8 your lyuing is but small, it shall be augmented: and the better to maintaine your state, your allowance shall bee amended: if you thinke good to be here with mee, I shal be as well satisfied, as you sufficiently contented: which if you do, my counsell shall not bee hurtfull to perswade you, nor my dooinges a cause of your hinderaunce, but the onely meanes for your preferment: Here you may turne your Gould to the greatest gaine, and your Siluer to the surest safety: vse mine, so it be to your profite: and your owne as benificiall as you may: you may walke the Cittie, and treade the streates: make your Marte with Marchantes, and vse conference with Trauailers, debate with Counsellours, and associate the Cittizens: accompany Artifficers, and vse the fellowshippe of some faithfull fréendes: and so make your choice, as you rue not your losse, nor repent your bargaine: for all sortes of fréendes are here to be sound, both good and bad: both honest and disloyall, both trusty and faithles: as wel the Spider as the Bée, as well the Toade as the Turtle, as well the Woolfe as the Lambe, as well the Foxe as the Dooue: As wel Iason ye falsest, as Iesippus the faythfullest: as well Aneas most vntrue, as Camillus most constaunt: as well Cressid forsworne, as Troylus most iust of his worde. The féelds yt are full of flowers: are ful of wéedes and Nettels: & this Citty so populous, not without flat∣terers or dissemblers: the ground yéeldeth as well corne for commodity, as Thistles that are hurtfull: the fresh Riuers bréed as well the fléetinge fish, as the sprawling Frog: if you here escape the Cirtes, you may fall into Caribdis: if you flye the wrath of Iupiter, you may finde the frowning of Saturne: if you escape the Semplagades, yet you shall come amidst the gaping Cicloppes. You shal heare these Swashbucklers sweare, and these ruffians royst it in their rudenesse, who will not sticke to cracke out othes good cheape, and to coyne lyes for nothinge: great acquaintaunce you shall finde, but few fréendes to credite: paynted sheathes, but rusty swoordes: faire faces Page  9 with crooked condicions: those that will laugh in a mans face and cut his throat: If happely thou finde any whom thou like to make thy freend, and his fancy please thy fauour, trie him before thou trust him, and prooue him before thou praise him, and vse him before thou 〈◊〉 him: if thou finde him faithful, vse him familiarly: if faithles, reward him as slenderly: if doubtfull, be thou daunger∣ous: if subtill, be thou ielous: carry a Ringe in the one hand, and a Fig in the other: write him but in thy tabling booke, so maiest thou easely blot him out againe: vse him as the Irishman doth his wife: who marrieth her for a moneth, then if hée like hir not sendeth her packing: bee wary therfore how thou dealest, and careful with whom thou doost bargaine: whom thou likest, and how thou set him at sale: how his conuersation is, & what his fréends are: whither his calling be so good as thine, or vnfit thy person: the subtilnes of some will cause thée dislike of many, and the collusions of dissemblers, will make thée carefull whom thou choosest thy familiars: the highest flying Hawke, prooueth often haggardly, and the best con∣dicions ly not alwayes vnder braue apparel: the sweetest words may come from faithlesse lippes, and louing lookes often deceyue fond fooles: the highest hilles not surest to build vpon, nor the fayrest riuer surest to swimme in: the greenest grasse hideth the greatest Snake, and in the ri∣chest ground lyeth the filthy Toade: and is not the preti∣ous pearle found in the moulded earth? the Siluer tryed out of the sande? the swéete Rose groweth on a stinkinge dunghill: where lodgeth more honesty, then in a simple couche of strawe? where resteth more fréendship then in poore apparrell, where more vertue then vnder a ragged coate? way not the estate of the man, but the man by his condicions: regarde not his goodly personage, but his good behauiour: estéeme not his great reuenewes, but his goodnes, béeing as gratefull to his power, as thou art be∣nificiall to thy callinge: thou knowest the painted pottes haue deadly poyson within them, & costly clothes, ragged Page  10 walles vnderneath them: and where will the filthy Spi∣der sooner spin her poisoned webbe, then in the brauest houses: and to vse the company of thy superiours, thou shalt bee accounted sawcy, although thou be shamefaste: prowd in minde, be thou neuer so simple in spirite: haugh∣ty in harte, be thou neuer so duetifull in thy dooinges: the surest safegards is the merry meane, and the safest say∣ling in the smoothest Riuers: If they thy betters, what shalt thou doo but please them, though thou displeasure thy selfe? what shalt thou say but sooth them, though a ve∣ry lye? what shalt thou speake but to flatter them, though contrary thy conscience? if thou excell them in apparrell, they will say thou art prowde, in not contenting thy selfe with thine owne estate: if better monyed, they will im∣magine thou commest not by it so well as thou mightest doo: if thy curtesie bee better lyked of others, then their curiositie loued of any, they will seeke thee some displea∣sure, or procure thee some mischiefe: Where contrari∣wise, in vsinge the company of thy inferiours, thy credit will be cracked, and thy good name set soone to sale: they will imagine their curtesie, worthy to be preferred before thy wealth, and their vertues to be imbraced, before thy ritches are to be estéemed: their honesty before thy beha∣uiour, and their goodnes before thy gratefulnesse: and they will not sticke to report, were not my honesty more regarded, then my ritches are to bee wayed, I could not haue gayned him my fréende, who fauoureth mee so wel: and in so dooinge, doth hée more then I deserue? no trust mee, nor so much as I mente, for were I not worthy, I should not be chosen, and were not my condicions godly, my calling could not be so liked: thus the best bréedeth thy sorrow, and the worst increaseth thy greefe: the best for∣sooth is to good, and the worst to be preferred for vertues that know not what honesty meaneth, nor neuer had to doo with it: therfore Narbonus, prefer thy lykinge before my choice, thy loue before my desire, thy owne fancy, be∣fore my frée will: The Meane is the plainest noate, and Page  11 the surest singinge, the Base is to low for thy liking, and the Treble to highe for thy reachinge: vse therfore thy choice, & take thy owne consent, make thy owne match, for thou art like to abide the bargaine: lke what thou bakest, such must thou eate, and such as thou takest, that must thou stand to: that which liketh the, cannot displease mée, so it be honest, and thy lyuing shall procure my loue, if it be vertuous: but sow in any wise the séede of constan∣cy, so shalt thou reape the fruit of thy felicity, and vse thy faithfull fréend with loyalty to the last of thy life: so shalt thou purchase mee thy most assured, so longe as thou list: but thy duty alwaies reserued towardes mée, so shall my goodnes neuer leaue thée, til I forsake my life: & in for∣going my life, thy happines wil not be procured, though my liuings be obtained. Certefie mée therfore, good Nar∣bonus, the ful effect of thy purpose, and let me vnderstand the drift of thy deuice, which is best thy liking, and what fittest thy dooing, I expect thy answere.

Narbonus stoode all this while, somtimes so wrapt with ioy, and then againe so mooued with obedience: now glad of his good hap, and then maruailing at the goodnes of his Unckle: now laughing in minde, and th•• weping in harte, to see the carefulnes hee had of him, and the vn∣kindnes of himselfe: but at length arming him selfe with boldnes, and reiectinge all manner of fearfulnes, hee re∣plied as foloweth.

Deare Uncle, as I am to thanke you for your gratious counsell, so am I dutifully bound, to obey your excellent deuises: and as I am to be blamed for spending my tyme so loyteringly, so shall I for euer be at youre commaunde, for procuring my felicitie: and what youre good pleasure shall thinke beneficiall for my estate, my willing obedi∣ence shall not make any spotte of preiudicialitie, maugre your meaning: your hoarie heares do hasten my parte to conceyue passing well of youre determinations, and my mind being mollifyed with the rules of reason, will easily taste youre wholesome lessons, duety bindeth me to do no Page  12 lesse, and age constreyneth me to my mighte, yet abilitie wanteth to my willing mind: which seeing it hath pleased your goodnesse so gratefully to offer, I will not be repro∣ued of wilfulnesse, vngratiously to persist youre purpose: touching my estate as yet vnstayed, and my loytering life that hath vnprofitably bin led, hath hitherto not bin trou∣blesome to many, nor chargeable to any, disliked of some, and loued of others, blamed as I deserued, but not vtterly conte••ted, or altogither reprooued: the good demeanour you say of my Father, hath possessed mee a place in your heart, and if therefore my soule be founde vnmindfull of your benefites, I wish to be reiected, where now I am be∣loued, your ciuilitie (déere Uncle) bewrayes you not onely a Citizen in outwarde shew, but inwardly an helper to your poore friendes, and a furtherer of your neere neygh∣boures: but Sir, you condemne the Countrey causelesse, and imagine their craftinesse to be cloaked with simplici∣tie: but talke with a Clowne, and he will better resolue you then my selfe can certifye you: but this I know by ex∣perience, and that my eyes haue séene, my lippes maye boldly vtter, your stréetes are stately, oure pathwayes are pleasant: your houses haughty, our habitations hand∣some: your Shoppes abound in brauery, oure Barnes are filled with fruitefull commoditie: your Gardens are fine out of measure, our Fieldes are faire with all pleasure: your Dames decked in brauerie, our wines wedded in honestie: you wante nothinge, and wee lacke not all thinges: you confesse, oure exercises are first preferred, our healthes the likelier to bee preserued: you eate like Epicures, wee absteyne lyke Stoykes: you are cloyed with the excesse of Heliogabalus, wee contented with the roste of Romulus: you the quassinge of Alexander, we ne∣uer surfet with drinking faire water: you the flatterie of Aristippus, we the faith of Laelius: you deuoute Uotaryes, we of God true feruitours, you the musike of Apollo, we the Pipe of Pan we Hauke without hurt, you hunte lyke Homer: we ride for recreation, you rest for rewardes: we Page  13 often méete merily, you oftner manerly: our banquetting brings restoritie, youre feastes are filled with gluttonie: you wanton, we warlie: wee trie our strength, you drye your drugges: you fence it, we fight it: though you wante not any thing, yet haue we that sufficeth oure turnes, you giue me gratious instructions, and godly lessons, in war∣ning me of your wiles, and telling me of your toyes: for (alas) the sillie Birde is quickly caughte with the lime-twigge, the subtile Foxe is taken in his owne hole, the gréedie Wolfe sometimes killed euen in the Shéepefold, and no maruell if my simplicitie gayne me quickly a place of infidelitie: in that there are both the Sirtes, and the Semphlagades, both Lays and Calipso, both Iesabell, and Ia∣son, alas, how shall I looke? how shall I walke? whome shal I way? whome shall I beléeue? whome shal I trie? whome shall I trust? whome shall I credite? who will not deceyue me? how dare I? nay, why dare I not? for that dastards are oftnest in greatest daunger: héere are the swéete Sirenes, héere the meeke Mermaydes, héere the faythlesse flocke of Flora, but where the vestals of Diana? héere is lust with∣out loue, libertie without loyaltie, affection without fayth, constancie without chastitie, behauiour without honoure, fancie without feruencie, small vestalitie, yet lesse mode∣stie: if happily I choose some faithfull friende, I shall bee fearefull he will proue a faithlesse foe: if I proue Damon▪ he Damocles: he Theseus, I Vlysses: I Orestes, he Protheus which turneth into euery shape: I then shall be sorowfull beyonde measure, and my care will be greately increased: thus shal I graft grapes, and reape rushes: firste must I proue, then prayse: first view, then vaunt: firste gette, then gayne: first trie, then trust: first haue, then holde: once gay∣ned, neuer forsaken, and once gottē neuer lost: if his birth better than myne, then wyll he blame me: if his ly∣uing greater, then disdeyne me: if hee many friendes, I beholding to him, if I few, he not regarding me: if hard∣harted, then will he hate me: if furious hastie, faythlesse defye me: but to knowe, and then to kéepe, is a péerelesse Page  14 patrimonie, and a doubt voyde of all daunger: and what? shall I proue, and not be proued? nay: shal I not be repro∣ued? tryall on any man, is sufficiente to acquite any villa∣nie. Constantius, father to Constantine the Great, to the end to make tryall of his faithfull friends, and to represse his faithlesse foes, fauouring greatly the faith of the Gos∣pell, and loathing those that liked it not, on a time deter∣mined to make knowne the good will he bare to his louing subiects, and to represse the rage of rebellious Roysters, putting in proofe a practise, as profitable to his owne e∣state, as commendable in so noble a man as himselfe, cau∣sed to be bruted abroade and proclaimed openly, that those olde ordinances of the Gentiles, and Statutes of the Pa∣ganes, touching Religion, shoulde in as ample manner be vsed, with such superstitious Ceremonies of the Canoni∣call Cleargie, and diuelish deuises of olde dotardes, as had before bin vsed, and euer till his time maynteyned, which to be perfourmed with speedy perfection, the forfeyture of fire and fagot was to be rendred to the resistantes: to the speedie dispatche whereof, the Nobilitie were first willed to vayle their bonets, and leade the dance, then the Laytie to follow within the compasse of the time alotted. Short∣lye after, the Emperoure helde a generall Counsell, and made a solemne méeting, as well the Spiritualtie, as also the Temporaltie, where this matter was called in que∣stion, and sifted to the vttermost, all were asked, all exa∣mined, all prooued, but not all found péerelesse: all tryed, but not all found trusty: a great number of lusty gallants quickly consented, yéelding to all suche articles as were sette downe, and agréeing to whatsoeuer had bin proclay∣med, no torture, no tormente, no fire, no fagot, shoulde cause them recant their sayings, or alter their determi∣nations. Then were examined the Laytie, and those of the meaner sorte, the greatest number of the whiche had cast their ancker long sithence, which should neuer be re∣moued out of the sands of their soules, without the losse of life, and the fruition of the last felicitie. The good Em∣perour Page  15 waying well the pouertie of their penurie, the truth of their tryall, and the clearenesse of their conscien∣ces, that losse of liuing, and forgoing this libertie, and ra∣ther the feare of death could not remoue their mindes, or change their heartes: whereat these gallantes that had lately turned their tippets, and moued their minds from better to worsse, laughed in their sléeues, and had the o∣thers greatly in derision, he caused immediately all those turnecotes to be banished the Court, and their liuings to be giuen vnto the others, and if euer they returned, death was their due, and they should surely haue it, made those Counsellors to his highnesse, and the others reiected for euer out of his presence: for (sayde he) these men are fitte for so noble a personage as my selfe, & worthy my Coun∣sellors: suche friendes I feare me shall I finde, who will groape me for gayne, and turne away for euery trifle: march in the mayne battell, but flie from the fight, looke for the spoyle, but bide no brunt of the broyle: lost with an egge, and wonne with an apple: I as hote as Aetna, they as colde as Caucasus: I as true as Troylus, they as false as Iason: if I frie in faith, they will freese in false∣hoode: if the company of some virgin do entice me to like hir, and perhappes allure me to loue hir, I shall hardlye finde a Castor: easilie a Flora, sooner a haggardish Helen, than a chast Lucretia: sooner a beastly Biblis, than a godly Theocrita: greate courtesie, but little chastitie: solemne protestations, but slender perfourmāces: sweete words, but bitter in the eating: to flatter is a high poynct, and to glose a glorious gayne: the one yeeldeth perdition, the o∣ther bringeth distruction: to paynt thē out in their pride and to carue them in their colours, I should but incurre their displeasures, and do my selfe small profite: the best is but badde, yet my selfe can not make the worst better: yet beautie, the more it is discommended, the greater de∣sire a man hath to behold it: and a good thing mixed with that whiche is more vile, maketh a better shewe. Venus seemed most fayre of fauoure, when the blacke bearde of Page  16 Vulcane was alwayes with hir: is not the Rose neatest that groweth amongst nettles: the coulour of white most perfect, paynted vpon a blacke grounde. But as all is not Golde that glistreth, nor all Siluer that shineth, so cache painted portrature prooueth not the purest, nor euerye sauce that is sauourest the most wholesomest: the sower broath doth as well comforte the stomacke; as the sweete sugre séemeth pleasant in the tast: the choise of friends are so changeable, and the estate so vnstayed of such yong no∣uices as my selfe, that thynking to gayne the greatest treasure, I may finde but rusty iron, and deluing for the good gold, may get but couloured copper: whome should I choose my companions, when the highest are out of my reach, and the lowest stande vpon the tearmes of their vertues: to atteyne the touching of the Skyes with my finger I shoulde be counted very foolishe, and so base as to goe into Hell, the mind of a miserable man: then the earth is the onely place of my estate, and the seate to proue the penaltie of my fortune: the highest things haue the grea∣test fall, but he that goeth on the grounde, can fall but to the earth, and falling no farther, may easily rise agayne. Where you will me to vse your house as my owne home, your habitation, as my proper mansion, and your goodes, as my owne golde: the greatest thing▪ to requite youre courtesie, and the most that I can giue you is thankes for your goodnesse, and obedience for youre desarte: the one I giue you so franckly as I am able to offer, as for the other where my doinges shall bee founde contrary to your de∣sarts, I pray to be rewarded with shame, and to be dealte withall according to my doublenesse: pleaseth it you ther∣fore to be some stay vnto me, and a helper, to maynteyne my poore portion, the best I thinke fitte my calling, and the likeliest I sée to be any preferment to my estate, is to apply the studie of the law, and to practise it so speedely as may be. Wittenberge hath the name for good Sudentes, and the better Schollers, the likelyer I, soonest to atteine the perfection of my studie, and the effect of my purpose: Page  17 pleaseth you therefore to furnish mee with necessaries, and to prouide for my wantes, my long absence shall not procure my penaltie, nor the driuing off the time a hyn∣derance to my studies.

The good old man Henricus his Unckle was as glad to heare his wise answers, as hee was afterwards sory for his lewde behauiour, and as well contented to furnish him with all necessaries, as afterward moued to beholde his carelesse life, he therefore furnished him with all ne∣cessaries whatsoeuer, and prouided so well for his iour∣ney, as himselfe desired. After a few courteous gratulati∣ons, and swéete embracings, with sugred wordes, as the common course of custome is, Narbonus committed hys Unckle to the gouernance of God, and himselfe to the fa∣uour of the faire fields, and pleasant pathes: nowe is our yong youth in the worne way to Wittenberge, and féeling the hard trotting of his Horsse, our Lady be his spéede, and send him as delectable a passage, as he is a morously min∣ded. When sundry cogitations assayled hym, and many vain fansies flew before his face, which were not so quic∣lie come, but as suddainelie faded againe, flattering hym∣selfe with this conceyte, and then drowned in desire with some other, quite contrarie: but amongst other thoughtes that assayled him, and deuises that troubles him, he vtte∣red these words to himselfe: Alas Narbonus, how wyll God now deale with thée? for other friendes héere thou shalt hardly find, first depriued of my good mother, the spe∣ciall friend of my prosperitie, and the only worker of my weale, whose secure care in wishing me well, was as much as nature coulde giue: for the loue of the mother is alwayes greater, than the good will of any other friende, and great reason why it should be so, for that hir trauel is the greatest in bringing it to the world: hir care is also the most, in preseruing and nourishing it to the best mo∣tion of hir minde, and bringing it vp most obedientlye in the feare of God, and dutifully towards all others what∣soeuer: and had I but retayned hir, my griefe should haue Page  18 bin the lesse, and my sorrowes not so many, but the destinies had so appoynted it, why then shoulde my con∣sente be wanting, and my willing mynde absente in a∣nye respecte? then lost I my Father, by whome I en∣ioy these small possessions, and little reuenewes, to maynteyne my poore estate, God sende me no moe suche fyndings, nor gyue me suche windfalles: hys care of my prosperitie was not small, though my disobedience to∣wardes hym were greate, hys great desire that he had of my mayntenance, and the little dutie I shewed there∣fore his secure care in bringing me vp in learning and good ciuilitie, and as little regarde on my parte to fulfill hys commaundementes: and the last wordes that hée spake to me, when afterwarde I neuer sawe hym open hys mouth more, were, that I shoulde be busie with my Bookes, and plye them as my most perfect patrimo∣nie: for thy Bookes (sayde hée) will yeelde thee heauen∣lye knowledge, as for all other thynges, they are but athly, and therefore full of vanitie: whyche wordes come nowe into my remembrance, and happened by chance into my head, appoynted I thinke of God, as a meane to helpe me forwarde, and a motion to make my desire the greater: therefore my good wyll shall not bee founde any way negligene, nor my mynde to bée moued with anye other delight. And nowe haue I lost the residue of my friendes, and departed the ighte of all my olde companyons, whose sights whylest I enioyed, was comfortable, and their felow∣shippe fauourable: perhappes they wyll enquire of me, and hearing of my departure, seeme sorowfull, or ele wisshe me well: but what gayne I by that? or happely desire my safe returne: but in the meane time theyr sighte is absente, and out of sighte, wyll in tyme hée also out of mynde: seldome séene, is soone forgotten, and once gone, and neuer remembred, whyche I knowe not to bee more sooth, than sure, more common, than true: more often spoken, than Page  19 alwayes perfourmed: somewhat I knowe by my owne nature, and my imagination can not bee but true: the deathe of my Father was so greeuous at the firste, and my lamenting so vntollerable, as if my Soule shoulde haue forsaken my Bodye, or my life lefte the habitation where it dwelte: but time maketh me almost not remember hys fauoure, and thys long tyme since hathe caused mée forgette (almost) ane¦thyng that euer hée dyd: shall not my companye hée then forgotten, and my remembrance put cleane out? shall my doyngs bée talked on, or my sayings remem∣bred? shall anye drincke to the health of me, or re∣member mee at theyr feastes: no, as my departure was suddayne, so will my name bée as soone forgot∣ten: and looke as the wallowing waues tumbling ouer any thyng falne into the Sea, or suncke downe to the botthome by chance, for certayne Tydes after it maye bée séene, or looked vppon as it lyeth, but when the Fluddes haue washed the Sandes ouer it, or made it to bee hidden, the verye lykenesse is quicklye forgotten, and afterwardes, the very thyng it selfe. Or as the picture of a man hanging by the walles, decayeth in couloure, and fadeth in fauoure, tyll all bée consumed, and nothyng remayneth but the bare Table, hée is neuer drawen agayne, bycause the forme is forgotten, and the fauoure not remembred. Or as the Toome of a dead man long buryed, at last fallinge to decaye, and béeynge broken downe, is in tyme troden euen with the Earthe, and ne∣uer after buylded, bycause both the superscription is forgotten, and the memoriall of the manne lost▪ euen suche is my case, and so shall bée my estate, thus shall I bée troden on in mynde, and my remem∣brance blotted quite out. Thus he trauailed in the care of his conceytes, and troubled with those things whiche long before were forgotten, at length hée came to Page  20 Wittenberge, a place strongly fortified with stoute Stu∣dents, and careful Scholemaisters, with braue baristers, and aynefull Priests, with paynted Prelates, and boy∣sterous Bishops: with couetous Cardinals, and carelesse Cloysterers: but these are eyther the ghostly Gospellers of God, or the sauerie salt of Sathan: these studie rather the Bookes of Beliall, thā the Axiomeas of Aristotle: these candle bearing taperers, and putrifyed peasants, the vn∣satiable sincke of sinne, and workers of all wickednesse, whose lippes are alwayes lying, mumbling their Masses, as though they had already gayned the good will of God, when their heartes are as farre from him, as Heauen is from ye Earth▪ My yong mayster saw these their sleights, but followed not their fashions: looked still on them, but lsted not greatly for their companyes: was contented to behold their mischiefes, but regarded not to do after their requests: but the silly Flie buzzeth so long aboute the flame, that in the end she is scorehed with the fire: and the craftie Mouse catcheth so long at the chéese, that she is ta∣ken with the trappe: the Frogge leapeth so often vp the bancke, that the Crow catcheth hir: so fared Narbonus at the first, laughed at their wātonnesse, but in the end was enticed to their wiles: he looked so long on their brauery, that he was taken with their pride: he gazed so long on their deynties, that he filled himselfe with their drugges: now the Tennis courtes were claymed his possessions: the Dauncing schooles more deyntie for so louely de∣lightes: the Theaters most gratefull for this gaynefull guest: now began he to plucke his head out of the coller, and pulled his powle into his hoode, renounced all hys forepassed preachings, and denyed all ye bragge boastings againste the bountifull brauerie of Venus courtly crew: and he who was lately so sure a resistant, is now a faith∣full defendant contrary his profession, and cleane against the articles of his late beléefe: hee that so lately would watche with carefull Chrisippus, doth now sléepe with drowsie Endimion: who lately was as Carterly as Dio∣genes, Page  21 is now as Courtly as Paris: he that lately was as loyall as Laelius, is now as carelesse as Cresside: but as the kernell must be throwen into the grounde before it will grow a Trée, or like as the Milke must be brused be∣fore it be Butter, or the toung of the Parret cutte before she will prate, so must maners be refourmed, where re∣medie is resistant, and affections brideled, where folly is the formost, and fancie defaced, where pleasure is the president: so must the Spanyell whelp be taughte to car∣rie, before he assay to take the water: the Oxe to drawe with his fellow, before he take the yoke alone: the Horsse ridden with a cloth on hys backe before he weare the Sadle: in like maner this tender twigge woulde yet bée bent with one finger: the rootes not runne so farre into the ground, but they might easilie be plucked vp agayne: the sprigges not yet sprouted so farre out, but they might be lopped at leysure, or proyned at pleasure: but héere hée was daunted with the blazing beautie of yong Damsels, and regarding the flourishing faces of manerly maidens: now he behelde runnagate Atlanta, and then the alluring face of louely Lays: now the fashions of fine Flora, and thē the diuelish desires of vnfortunate Phaedra: now the filthy lust of beastly Pasiphae, and then the vnsatiable desire of baudy Biblis: these filthy factions made so strong a breach into the tender hearte of this youngling, and so broade a batterie into the bowell of his mind, as he imagined him∣selfe wrapt out of Hell, into Heauen: or raysed out of the Graue into Paradise: or waked out of a carefull slumber, into a quiet cogitation: now away with these babling Bookes, and to what purpose serueth the paltrie pen? now for the studie, the Stewes: for the chast chamber, the choyce of chamberers: for ye Studients gowne, the Casti∣lian cloake: for the ciuill cappe, the flaunting feather: for the comely apparel, the Italian waste: for spirituall, tem∣porall: and for ciuilitie, the domesticall doings: for the séedes of vertue, the blossoms of beastlynesse: this was the estate of his studie, and this the depth of his deuises: this Page  22 the determination of his dooinges, and this the desperate desires of his dotinge desaster: this the vnstayednes of so retchles a companion, and this the sicklenes of so foolish a fondlinge, who would not sticke to gage his gowne for a penny worth of pastime, and to burne all his bookes for a cast at Cards: neither vnknowē of the goldsmithes, nor vnacquainted with Tailours: as for the Mercers, either alwaies in their bookes, or neuer without their billes: for his Host, hée could handle him so cunningly, and flatter him so finely, but rewarded as slenderly, as the husbandman was by the colde Snake that hée layd by the fire: & for that his riches would not reach, nor his sub∣stance extend, to maintaine a Pesaunt, or to kéepe a man to wait on him, ye Sergeants refused not to take so much paines, or bestowe a litle labour to waite on this weery wayfarer, where place did proffer so iust an occasion, or time permit to bestow their diligence: But for that his Unckle was neither vnknowen, nor hée vnseen, his liber∣ty was licensed, and his worde taken of his creditours. But as at one time Phillip lost al Macedon, Antiochus all Asia, the Carthaginians all Libie, so my yonge Maister with one yeares studye, loste all his Bookes and solde all his Landes, which before his Father had so carefullye gotten, and so custodiously kepte for him: and in spen∣dinge thus ydelly his liuinge, he had almost won the yll wil of his Unckle, then the which, there was not any one thing more against his profit, nor whatsoeuer otherwise so preiudiciall his estate: all went to wracke, all wente to hauocke, all goes to decaye, all goes to the spoile: no∣thinge is gained, nor any thinge saued: here was braue∣ry, without honestye, and finenesse without prudencye, coynesse not without great coste, and nicenesse not with∣out great disprofite: hawtinesse with a pennyles Purse, and stoutnesse, with small wisedome: this was the fashi∣on, this was after the cut, this was the newest deuice, and this the dayntiest dealinge: this the greatest for his credite, and this would purchase him some Priuiledge: Page  23 and if a man should haue demaunded the cause, or asked the meaninge of his pretence, his answere should haue béene: his Unckle was commended for so maintaining him, and what was spente, was for the credite of his Unckle, and a great praise in himselfe: his Unckle for maintaininge him so gallantly, and hee for spendinge it so brauely.

O foole, was not this thy discredite? and a grea∣ter gréefe to thy Unckle, to see thée so fondly giuen, and to lay the blame vppon thy deare freende, who was so gladde of thy well dooinge, and reioysed when hée sawe thee honestlye giuen: thou wast indéede, yong of yeares, but yonger in thy dealinges: a Nouice for thy age, and a chylde for thy lyuing: greene in perfection, and verye foolishe in thy outwarde dea∣linges.

Beholde here Gentlemen, the libidinous lust of licen∣cious libertie, and the vnstaied stedfastnes of a foolishe youth: the outragious rigour of a stately studient, and the bold blindnes of Bayards brat: the vnreasonable desires that draue him forward in this wicked working, and the filthy factions voide of all honesty, and without either meane or measure: the sweet instructions were now for∣gotten, and the goulden meane was quite reiected out of his minde: gréedy desire passed the one parte of him, and déepe disdaine was alwaies on the other side: then belike the Diuell daunced iust in the middle: and who so fit a fréend for so careles a companiō? such Maister, such Ser∣uaunt: such Chaplaine, such Parishioners: such Shéepe, such a Shepheard: now the dycing houses retaine him, & then the Tauerns holde him: neuer godly disposed, but alwaies wickedly minded: neuer better then mischie∣uously bente, nor at any time other then enuiously pre∣tended: as prodigal as could be desired, and as malicious as could be imagined: and prodigality is commonly the meanes to pennury, next Neighbour to beggery, ioyned with misery, and freend to infelicity, the helper of licen∣ciousnesse, Page  24 and neighbour to all wickednesse: there he playes, there hee prates, there hee sweates, there hee sweares, there hée stampes, there hee stares: God is ne∣uer out of his mouth, and the Diuell neuer from his thought: hee throweth the Dice, and the Diuell iogges his elbow, then coms sice sincke, and wisshes the Diuel take them, and hée stands behinde, ready to receaue him: Here flyeth the Angels without feathers, and there goes the Golde away in gubbes, the Siluer is so slipper that it cannot abide in his Budgettes, and his coine so colde that it must séeke some warmer corner: The Theaters could not stande, excepte Narbonus were there, nor the plaies goe forwarde vnlesse hee trimmed the Stage: the match was neuer made, till hée was come thither, nor the bargaine any thing worth, till hée him selfe was in place: hée must see and bée séene, gaze on others, and be gaped on him selfe: sometimes to laugh at others, then to lowre at his owne conceites: sometimes to gester, then to vse gra∣uitie: somtimes to reioyce, then to be ielous: somtimes to make signes to some Minion, and then to talke with a trull of trust, who would offer thrée for one, and for eue∣ry stroke strike twice: Here marched Maister Cutpurse aboute so maidenly, and looked so mannerly, as though wealth were his worste, and coyne his smalest care, yet your hande no sooner pluckt from your pocket, but his would be in your purse as ready as might bee, and as di∣ligent as a man would not desire: so lusty a looke as if hee liked no such lures, and so stately a countenance, as if hée néeded no groates: here walked another mannerly mate with a paire of blanckes, and a paire of flattes, a paire of langrets, and a paire of stopt Dice, a paire of barde quater treies, and other Dice of vauntage, they would giue you a crosse cast ouer the thombes, and such a blow on your backe, as they would leaue neuer a penny in a mannes purse, but go home with as many faces as a Shéepe: then these consuming caytiffes, and canckred Caterpillers, who would exchange Golde with Counters, and Siluer Page  25 for counterfeytes: these had also a place amongst the best, and bare a brayne amidst the brauest. Then were there these bitchlike beastly Bées, whose noses would be slit for the Glanders, and their tong cut shorter, that they might prate the better: these woulde bring you a bonylasse to your bedde, or send you to some good house of credite: these toyes vsed my yong mayster, till he was as wise as a Woodcocke, and as ritch as a redde hearing: his landes were morgaged, and his liuings lost: his money al spent, and he almost at the last cast: and for lacke of other exer∣cises, and wāting other recreations, he practised the song Schole, and raught so high a note, but that he mistooke sometime his Cliftes, and gaue his notes wrong names: for sol, he sang soulde: for la, all, and for fa, forfayted: all was sent going, nothing left behind to giue hys friende: as well monyed, as he that had iust neuer a Denire: this was the good dealing of my gratious youth: this the good studie he employed: this the gayne of his going, and this the profite he reaped for his liberall lauishing: nowe he must practise some new deuise to gette more coyne, and séeke some way to put moe pence into his pocket: some subtill shift, or any craftie conueyance, some cast of hys learning, or tricke of his cunning: but the Goldsmithes were his friends, and would lend him to his cost: he payd for his borowing, and those were déere bargaynes: and one amongst the rest set him so farre ouer the shoes, as he could not get out of the mire in a long time after. But his Unckle more gratious, than he deserued, and more beneficiall than he merited: more bountifully dealing with him, than he was curteously able to requite whyle he liued: more happie was his estate, than euer he expec∣ted it should be: the worst was not ill ynough for so care∣lesse a carle, and the most vnfortunate too happie for so doltish a dizzard, that regarded not hys liuing, nor wayed his wealth: regarding neyther the spending of his owne, nor the carelesse consuming of his Uncles. Thus prooued he more lasciuious than well studied, and yet better lear∣ned, Page  26 than well nurtured: and yet his nurture so farre excelled his nature whiche was changed from better to worsse, as a man would rather haue iudged him a Homi∣cide, than a Scholler: a lewde liuer before a sure student: a vile loyterer, before a good Doctor. His Unckle seeing his shiftes, and marking his maners, regarding his dea∣lings, and viewing his naughtinesse: looking on his mise∣rie, and lamenting the leesing of his libertie: sometimes thought to vse him with rigour, and then againe moued with pitie: sometimes thought to forsake him, and then againe remembring the youth of his yeares: sometimes determined to banish him his sight for euer, and then a∣gaine calling to remembrance that his was the motion of his going, therefore he worthy to be blamed for procu∣ring him to it, doubtful whether to write or send, yet send he must perforce, vnlesse hee would beholde his vtter ru∣ine, and not regard the decaying of his estate: he therfore directed by the messenger a Letter, whiche more moued Narbonus, then euer any thing that was said to him be∣fore, which was deliuered with as great spéede, as it was hastily written: the seruant after deliuerie made of his superscribed Letter, wente to dispatch some businesse in the Towne, promising to returne so hastely as he coulde dispatch spéedely: Narbonus repairing to his Chamber, opened the Letter, and found that which he before suspe∣cted, the tenor whereof ensueth.

SYr youth, is your manerly modestie so soone changed to malitious insolencie? your faire words to such foule workes? your dutifull obedience, to such filthy vnthrif∣tinesse? is your swéete tounge become your bitter bane? your sugred talke such deadly poyson? your playne par∣ting, such déepe dissembling? your godly protestations to such diuelish imaginations? Haue you thus requited the guerdon of my good will with such vnsatiable desires, to spend your liuing, and discredite my loyaltie? to con∣sume your owne portion, and make my name be called Page  27 in question, as a maynteyner of your mischiefes, and a partner of your practises? was all reason banished your breste, and such vile vices possesse the place of your priui∣ledge? was neyther the feare of God before your eyes? nor any care of your owne state that could turne your heart? was wisedome quite exiled? and naught but foolish∣nesse assayled your societie? you a Student? you one of the Stewes: you a Scholler? you a Carter: you a Doctor? nay, a Diuell rather: for these are workes of his inuention, and matters of his making: you must flie with Icarus, and fall into the floud: runne with Atlanta for the Golden balles, and leese your Siluer substance: vaunt it with Pa∣ris, and yet as poore as Iob: Would it fared with thée as it happened with Stilpo, the Towne being lost where hée was brought vp, and burnt by ill happe, as often come such chances, seemed neyther very well contented, nor greatly displeased: being demanded how he could take his haplesse fortune so patiently, and his vnluckie libertie that was lost so gently: replied, he lost not any thing: for his riches he caryed alwayes about him, which was his learning, but thou hast lost thy liuinge, and found no lear∣ning: thou hast sucked poyson, where thou shouldst gather hony: reaped thy destruction, where thou shouldest haue gained thy felicitie: Hath my good desire bred thy bitter bane? my honest wish, thy haplesse woe: my good demea∣nor thy manifest miserie: thou wouldest be at Heauen, before thou art from the earth: in Paradise, before thou tast any pleasure: a Prince, before chosen a Magistrate: Thou playest Aesops Dogge, lost the flesh to finde the sha∣dow: what should I maruell be the deapth of thy deuice, or the fulnesse of thy pretence, to spend all in hope of no∣thing, and to neuer spare, till all was cleane gone: is this the life of a Scholler, and the profession of a Protestant? the trade of a traueller, and the gayne of a Marchant? the choyce of thy doings, and the greatest deuice of thy meanings, to sette all at sale, and to play all for paltrie, to sette vp thy rest till nothing hée lefte: to lay on so Page  28 lustely, till all be lashed out: thou to harbour a handsome harlot, hast gayned the ill will of thy glorious God, to prancke vp thy pride in péeuishe apparell, hast lost thy li∣uing, and forfayted thy fréedome: thou to please the foolish fansies of some thy fayned friends, hast vndone thy selfe, and wonne me thy ilwiller: now proue to borow, and sée who will bargayne with thée: those that haue gotten thy gold, proue if they will proffer thée pence: those that thou hast layd thy Lande to, aske if they will credite thée wyth Siluer? no trust me: they will plucke their heads out of the coller, and not knowe thy name, giue thée a gentle gléeke for thy gratious goodnesse, and a faithlesse farewell for thy fond affection: the little Ant prouideth hir store in Sommer, againste the biting of Winter: the hiued Bee searcheth in Sommer all the fine flowers, and prouideth meate ynough to serue till that season returne agayne: the loathsome wormes prouide against Winter a hole or house, where they couch them close? why if these simple things without sense so can serue their owne turnes, how muche more thy selfe, béeing one of the reasonable creatures of God, to whome the imperiall seate is giuen uer other things. Fortunate were the dayes of thy foste∣ring, and greately wast thou delighted in by thy fauou∣rable friendes: shall therefore the dayes of thy youth bée lawlesse? and thy golden time spente in vile vices? God graunt thy Senectus be more satiable, or thy white heares will come but miserably to the graue. Hast thou so soone forgotten thy fathers bounteous blessings, and his care∣full constructions, so quickly to haue his doings in dis∣deyne, and to cast behind thée suche swéet sayings? Hast thou ere this disliked of thy godly purposes, not long si∣thence moued by thy selfe, and so soone forsaken to treade the path of thy profitable patrimonie? the day draweth néere the end, whē the Sunne is setting, and thou begin∣nest to walke in miserie now thy liuing is lacking: can the shaft flie that wanteth feathers? and what wilte thou 〈◊〉 wanting thy wealth? can the Shippe sayle surely that Page  29 hath not a helme? canst thou wander as héeretofore, lac∣king thy substance? canst thou walke Wittenberge, thy li∣bertie not permitted, the catchpoule caytiffes will quick∣lie catch thée, and well worthy of woe, that seeketh not his owne weale: thou hast but thy desarts in purchasing the prisons, and gettest but that thou long gapedst for in loo∣sing thy libertie. Though Aeneas lost Tire, yet gayned he Libye, and in losing Libye he found Latium: though the Ro∣maynes lost the Rhodes, yet retayned they the remaynder of their reuenues: though Venus lost the vale of Smirdo, yet gayned she the mount Pelion: hadst thou kept some par∣cell, thy losse had bin lesse lamentable: and hadst thou re∣tained but a little of thy portion, the residue had bin more easilie redéemed: The Wine in the vessel wil quickly be emptied, being alwayes drawen on: and thy bagges had they bin greater, woulde soone be pennylesse, taking out thy money by handfuls: the great Oake once cut vp by the rootes, neuer springeth more, but presently dyeth: but proyne off the sprigges, and there will grow others gréene in their places: A little breach in the wall may bee manned to defende a certaine space, but the whole wall downe, no remedie will giue rescue: a cutte vpon a mans legge may be healed vp againe, but hit at ye heart, naught ensueth but present death: but too late comes rescue whē the field is rendred: and not in sufficient time is the man at the gate when the Horsse is out of the pasture: too late commeth the pardon, when the théefe is hanged: and too late the clubbes when the fray is parted: too late it is to pleade when iudgemente is giuen: and away with the Phisition when the man is dead: But I weare my words in vaine, and talke to my selfe, the houre is past when the clocke hath stricken, and now too late to call backe yee∣sterday: I make strong reasons, if happely they doe anye thing auayle: but in that there is no remedie against fore∣passed faultes, and recording of offences doe but weare a∣way the time, vse heereafter your selfe more honestlye, and I will not vtterly reiecte you: learne to bridle youre Page  30 affections, and content your selfe with so much as is suffi∣cient your appetite, and forget this boulstering in braue∣ry, for not to any purpose serueth it, but to thy discredite and my shame. Your yeares I confesse are yong, and the gouernment of your self but small: your weakenes ther∣fore shall bee borne withall, in hope of your amendment. My will is therfore, that you make your repaire home with speede, and spend no time in musinge vpon matters of nothing: meane while, my prouision shal be prepared for your comminge, and what you wante, shall bee neces∣sarily prouided: Thus for all my sharpe sawces, I wish you swéete Suger, and after your melancholy meat, plea∣sant Pilles: for in reproouing your vices, I fauour your welfare: and if I cared not for you, I would not haue spo∣ken one worde: for though I caste you a bone to bite on, yet would I not haue you choked: and though I haue vsed seuerity in my sayinges, yet wish I you no cruelty in my dooinges, which you shall try by my goodnes, and acknow∣ledge by the effect of my dooinges: so your manners be re∣formed in an other kinde of order, & your dealings prooue more benificiall to your selfe, & of greater credit towards mee. Hasten your iourney, and poste with spéede.

Farewell, by your louinge Vnckle Henricus, at his house in Vienna.

NArbonus hauinge read the Letter, and wayinge the effect of the contents, his eyes burst sodainely into a fountaine of teares, makinge a litle riuer, vpon his wa∣tery cheekes, looking vpon him selfe, as vncertaine whi∣ther the Letter were presented him from his Unckle, or that it were but the flying fancy of some dreame: but per∣ceiuinge it to be true in déede, and no deceiuinge deuice that beguiled him, hée wept so bitterly, as a man may im∣magine Peeter did for his Maister: so fast the teares ran from him, and the gréefe was greater then the anguish of him that receiueth iudgement, or hath his condemnacion pronounced against him to yéeld to the torments of death, Page  31 or to pay his life a ransom for all wicked dooings: his hart did so languish his yll hap, and lewde life, and his soule lamented his froward fate, & daungerous destiny, as if no pardon should acquited him, or any raunsome set him frée: his soule for a season in an extasie, and his minde so amazed, as if in lamenting, hee should haue died, and in dyinge, made some attonement for his sinnes: such was the extremitie of his passion, and so greate the gréefe of this new receaued Letter: for his conscience was guilty, and therfore yeelded to the force of his fancy, ledde as it were by a legion of resolucions, which way to take, or what was best be done: but in the end, perceiuing his own folly, and musing at his madnes, in that children doo cry, and Women wéepe: not men to complaine in such order, or lament with ye léesing of a few teares, but should bridle vp their affections, and moderate their maladies in such order, as their wéepinge will neither auayle in their de∣meanes, nor teares bée any testimony of their trecherous toyes: his thoughtes altogeather inflamed with fury, and his minde mooued with the measure of his malady, vtte∣red these wordes to himselfe, and spoke as foloweth.

And is it true Narbonus, that thy Unckle hath dealt with thee after thy dooings, and rewarded thee according to thy workes? and if hee doe so, is it more then I merit, or other then my desertes are? no trust mée, nor so much: for were it so, how could I euer looke vpon him agayne? could my heart haue power, or my lippes bee so bolde, to craue a thinge so vnreasonable? or to aske that, which in conscience I cannot desire, his pardon to bee graunted, which will not be denyed, durst I attempt it, or put it in practise, whose care hath beene so comfortable and ayde fo assistaunt, in all these my doubtfull dealinges and des∣perate desasters: how shall I vtter one sweet word? no it will bee so sowre, as he will hardly digest it: can I ima∣gine any collusion to cloake my craft withal, or frame any excuse to hide my folly: Why had I not been called? I had staied in the Countrey, and not come to Vienna: but Page  32 my callinge was for commoditie, and willed for my wel∣fare: but being informed of my wanton life, was wished to spende my time more honestly: but I was sente to Wittenberge, to learne the Law, and to profite my selfe in learninge: but my sendinge was not to learne wit of a Woodcocke, or wisedome of him that knoweth not what it meaneth: but I was sente like a Trauailer, therfore my expences the greater, but my lyuing should haue bin like a Cittizen, and so my credite beene made larger: but had I not beene caused, I had consented: but the choyce was mine owne, and the refusall was in my making: but had I not bin exhorted, I had stayed at home in the Coun∣trey: and had I stayed at home, my lyuing had not béene lost: but mine was the consente, and mine the motion: mine the demaundinge, and mine the requestinge: mine the wishing to obtaine, therfore mine must be the blame, and mine the shame, and mine the repentaunce, for none shall smart but my selfe, nor any feele the foyle, but hee that began the battaile. The spending of my lyuinge, hath prooued mee a lewde loyterer, and the losing of my lands a right Abbey lubber: first I should haue gotten, and then fréely spent: first spare, then vsed: first gayned, and then gratified: first found franckely, and then laid on liberally. But caitiffe that I am, and most wretched, amongst other infortunate: now I speake what I should done, nowe what my pretence might haue béene, nowe I speake my minde, that it is to late, and vtter what before was to bee remedied: And why could not my estate be stayed as be∣fore? and my dooing dealt in so good order as before they were? now shall my owne rod, bee the remedy for such a royster: and my owne staffe my stale for so foolish a har∣binger, the stay of my simple state stolen away, how shal my life be prolonged? what shall I but morne in misery, and pine in perplexitie? But were these Letters sowre? and were they not also sweete? if they were bitter, yet were they tooth some? and though they were sharpe, yet were they comfortable: hée began roughly, but ended Page  33 gently: reproued me sharply at ye beginning, but intreated mee fauourably at the end: though he began with rigour, yet ended he with reason: with rigour, nay with iustice rather: for to punish offenders is a thing commended in the lawes of God, spoken by his owne mouth, and affir∣med in the holy Scriptures: why then should I escape, or be forgiuen? why should I not be payd my desarts, and re∣payed according to iustice? my case deserueth to be for e∣uer reiected, and neuer to atteyne the friendly fauour of my gratious Unckle agayne: but séeing his goodnesse 〈◊〉 offered me such fauour, his friendly countenāce so requi∣ted my vniust desarts: he like a good Shepeeare 〈◊〉 called me home one of the lost flocke: I receyue his grate∣full good will, and reioyce so in his good offer 〈◊〉 earst I despaired euer to atteyne his fauour againe.

Sayling amidst these contrary cogitations, and blow∣inge the coales of hys boyling brest, hys Unckles man, who had dispatched his affaires, and ended his businesse, entred the Chamber, finding him more pleasantly dispo∣sed than he looked for, and yet perceyuing by his counte∣nance that he had read the contents of his pasported let∣ter, and found that whiche both comforted his stomacke, and griped him at the gall: both eased his maladie, and en∣creased his griefe: both moued his patience, and framed his welfare, to whome Eubulanus his Unckles man spake as followeth.

Sir Narbonus, you haue I trust this tractable time of my absence, and the while of this my long delay delibera∣ted vpon the contentes of my masters letters, and found at full the effect of their meaning, pleaseth you therefore to reanswere them, I purposely stay vpon their spéedie dispatch, for to defer time serueth now to small purpose, and to stay longer than the importance of my businesse requireth, were great charge, without likelyhoode of a∣ny profite: he willed me to make hast, and not to stay lon∣ger than of necessitie I must, or forced to expect your an∣swere: for (said he) my Nephew will come I thinke with Page  34 you, and will not cause you stay vpon any matter, or pro∣long any time about any thing, whatsoeuer: which if you purpose to goe, or haue set downe with your selfe to put in execution, I beséech you let it be with speede, and apply∣ed with hast the greatest that may be, for the sooner wée are going, with more spéede will be our ariuall, and the longer we stay, the more will be our charge.

Gramercies, good Eubulanus, answered Narbonus, for thy dutifull diligence in doing me this pleasure: and I thanke thée for the secret care thou hadst in the deliuerie of these my Letters: as for my good Unckle, I finde this his goodnesse so great, and his kindnesse so much, that so farre as my life shall reach, and the vttermost boundes of my health permitte howsoeuer, I shall be found ready to die at his féete, and to offer my soule a sacrifice, to do him such small pleasure, as my little life will permitte: as for thy great paines and carefull diligence, shall be referred till some other time, and driuen off for a more gratefull good turne, till God graunt me somewhat more liberally to bestow on thee, and send me to requite the vttermost of thy good wil: meanewhile, take ye forfaiture of my faith, & the troth plighted of one yt will not deale double, as a most iust gage, and a perfect pledge to pleasure thée howsoeuer.

Sir, reanswered Eubulanus, these small deserts & little gratulations which I dutifully haue done, and obediently fulfilled, were forced by feare, and constreyned by com∣mandement by your Unckle, and my Maister, which of dutie extended so farre, and therefore could do no lesse, ex∣cept I should haue shewed my selfe vndutifull, or restrey∣ned my seruice: this therfore, neither meriteth praise, nor deserueth any fauour: but if fortune be so friendly, or my hap so happie, that in matters of magnanimitie, or works of waight, my simple seruice might be sene, or my willing mind made manifest, the dutie to my maister reserued, and my obedience towards him excepted, you should not find any want of good will, or my duty worthy blame, so farre as my smal power were limited, or within the com∣passe Page  35 of my life whatsoeuer.

Narbonus giuing him the choyce of a thousand thankes, and offering him any courtesie for his great good will, she∣wed the effect of his hastie letters, and the posting spéede that they required: that his Unckles pleasure was, hée should with speede come to Vienna, and not to make longer tariance, than necessitie required, or the cause of the stay∣ing would permitte: they therefore causing their Horsses to be in readinesse, and trussing vp such trinckets as they could, departed the morning ensuing, almost without ta∣king leaue of any, or giuing a friendly farewell to his old friends, and auntient companions.

These wayfaring trauellers, & rancke riders, on their way towards Vienna, & some part of their iourney passed, discoursed of sūdry maters, & the estates of diuers townes, so of their owne Weale publike, and of the Towne of Vi∣enna, then of the Father of Narbonus, & so of his Unckle.

Sir said Eubulanus, this youre iourney was framed in hast, and furnished in post: no sooner determined, than en∣ded, and no sooner thought on, then put in practise: but had you knowen before the law to haue bin so laxatiue to your pursse, and so peruerse to your purpose, I thinke you would eyther haue constreyned the countrey to kept you, or bin content your Unckles house should haue holdē you.

Truth Eubulanus, for the law is laborsom, and very te∣dious, and no loytering lozell may atteine vnto it, or any trifling student euer come néere ye perfection therof: as for the countrey, my care was cōsolation, and my hardest hap blisseful bale, the worst weale was great ioy, and nothing contrried my purpose, or disliked my doings. But Sir, if your study had bin strained, & your wit reiected, you might haue atteined, which now must vnnethes be gainsaide.

I Eubulanus, had Alexander knowen after his valiant victories, & great cōquests of the third part of ye world, he shuld haue left his life so soone, or bin poysoned in Babylon, he would neuer haue entred ye walls, or come within the gates: and had Narbonus knowē yt Wittenberge had bin so Page  36 full of wiles, or this studie any thing so tedious, he would neuer haue tarried the turning ouer of three leaues, or the reading of one Author.

Truth Sir, but you haue bought your witte before it was taughte, and payde for your learning more than is woorth: but the coult must be vsed to the bitte before he come to the saddle, and the wanton whelp must be taught to carrie a gloue, before he diue at a Ducke.

I Eubulanus, had I beene restrained like a Coult, I had not prooued my selfe such an asse: and had my liberty bene lackinge, as wisedome would it should: my dooinges had not prooued so foolishe, nor my pretences so vaine: but as I pay deare for my learning, so is my sorrow the greater: and as my coste was chargeable, so is my minde mooued with the spending of my lyuing: but time already passed cannot bée called backe, and the Tide tarieth not the ley∣sure of any man.

Well quoth Eubulanus, your fall wil prooue your feli∣citie, and better now bee taught your tricke of training, then hereafter haue prooued your painefull repenting.

In déede answered Narbonus, first wit, and then wise∣dome, to haue is good hap, and to hold fast a great vertue: for Narbonus could haue sayd thou hast it: but now he can not say thou holdest it.

Truely Sir replied the other: Your Unckles careful consideracion, will be the cause of your consolation: and to submitte your selfe duetifully, will both purchase you pardon, and make you bee deemed of, as your selfe will desire.

In déede answered Narbonus, hée that yéeldeth, is often saued: but I will not onely submit my selfe, but also due∣tifully doo whatsoeuer my good Unckle shall commaund mee.

With these prety propoundings, and pleasant replies, their iourney seemed shorter, and their trauaile not so te∣dious: but when they ariued at their iourneyes end and came into the house of Henricus, Narbonus was doubtfull Page  37 what to say, how to frame his wordes, or in what order to vtter them, in what manner to submit him selfe, and how his Unckle would take the matter: but spying in the end his Unckle comming towards him, could not hold his eyes from weeping, and his hearte from throbbing, to whome he spake.

Sir, the prodigall childe, after the ritous spending, and wilfull wasting of his carelesse goodes, humbly sub∣mitting himselfe, and crauing pardon for his faults, was receyued into fauour as before, and obteyned pardon, that deserued for euer to be reiected. Alexander the great neuer put any to the sword that yéelded to his person, or asked mercie at his hands. Anthony submitting himselfe, and offering to die before the Emperour that sought hys death, and pronounced his punishment, was receyued in∣to former fauour, and restored to his auntient dignities. My merites déere Uncle deserue no lesse than for euer to be reiected out of your fauour: and my doings if right were rewarded with iustice, haue gayned me your euer∣lasting displeasure: but presuming vpon youre patience, and suing my pardon before so mercifull a Iudge, I néede no solicitor to moue my case, or any Atturney to answere but my selfe, but that your goodnesse hath gayned me vn∣deseruedly, that my vngratiousnes shoulde neuer haue merited: and with those words, the teares trickled so fast downe his chéekes, and his thoughts so troubled his giltie conscience, as he could not speake any more, or vtter the effect of his meaning.

His good Unckle at the sight whereof was so moued with compassiō, and touched at the quicke, as his inward griefe did counteruayle Narbonus outwarde teares, hée therefore embracing him, and holding him betwéene his armes? saide:

Déere Nephew, that which is passed already, can not now be called backe to bee amended: and that whiche is done, can not be vndone againe: to record them therefore in order, or turne them ouer from poynt to parcel, would Page  38 be a great gréefe to you, & not any pleasure to me: My selfe I know was sometimes yong as thy selfe, and no doubt those pleasures then liked me, which now do delight thee: but let herafter my wisdome rule thée being vnresonable, and my instructions perswade thée being holesom for thy health: for that which is past, I drowne it in the floud of forgetfulnesse, and neuer pretend to make rehearsal of it again: cōfort therfore thy wéery spirits & be careful of thy own safegard, so shalt thou find me a faithful freend, and one yt séeketh thy wished desires as wel as thy self: Thus was his good Unckle pacified with his humble submissiō, and him selfe contented to heare his pardon pronounced.

Thus is Narbonus now in Vienna againe, free from the checkes of any, and cleare of the penalties done to his creditours: where hee turneth ouer his time, and accom∣panieth some of equall disposition to his owne, and some contrary his callinge, yet some flatterers, some foysters, some coggers, some cauellers, some brablers, some braw∣lers, some dissemblers, some daungerous, some Cater∣pillers, some courteous, some faithfull, some faithlesse, some honestly disposed, some maliciously minded, some sure fréends, some rancke rebels: There resorted to him as well the Droane, as the Bée: as well the Spider, as the Flie: as well the Kyte, as the Dooue: but Narbonus had learned his stop Galiarde, and could as satiably sooth, as soberly solace, for hée payd for his practise, and lent li∣berally, for small vsury: Among the rest of the fragrant flowers and sweet Uiolets that folowed Narbonus, and ac∣companied him alwaies: there was a Gentleman named Phemocles, of behauiour honest, and of grace grateful, for Parentage one of the best, and for wit sufficiently stored: with lyuinge well furnished and with good qualities very well indued: These two Youths grew into acquaintance and familiarity, and so into lykinge and loue: and from well lykinge to such amity, and confederacy of fidelity, as they missed not one daye where there was not some gra∣tulation or a litle feruency of fidelity demonstrated from Page  39 eache to other. On a time taking the holesom ayre, & wal∣king in ye wilde féelds, where not so much as a bush should be partaker of their praiers, or a bird be acquainted with their doings, Narbonus spake vnto Phemocles as foloweth.

My beloued Phemocles, as there is not any weale which is not mixed with some wo: no felicity, but some way fe∣derated with instabilitie: no auncient amity, but tyed to∣gether with some trechery, by reasō of some freendly foes: or by ye mutability of fickle fortune: so we whose weale is not ye worst, whose happines not ye lest: whose freendship not faithles, must fortify our fantasies against dangerous dealings, as we neither be drawne with their drugs, nor inticed with their trumperies: neither allured to their lustes, nor infranchised to their follyes: neither won to their wiles, nor wedded to their wantōnes: neither trust∣ing to their trifles, nor tied to their toyes: If they assault vs with societie, we wil kepe them company, & dissemble our amitie: if they seke vs, wee will shun them: if they follow vs, wee will fly from them: if by chaunce against our choice, we willingly walke with them: we may pro∣test our olde profession, & fained some fickle excuse to de∣part, and auoyd them: for where there are many, there is maliciousnesse: & where great company, small constan∣cie: When we are in the Towne, we must walke ciuely: when in the Féelds, disport our selues with honesty: whē in the streats, talke soberly: whē close in our Chambers, vse mirth and melodie: when amongst cōpany, fare as if we loued al alike: when by our selues manifest the depth of our desires: the one wil be greatly for our credite & ho∣nestie, the other will double our ioyes, and put all suspi∣tion to exile and infamie: I speake Phemocles by experi∣ence, as I prooued smally for my profite, as you are not ignorante, for that my doings are manifest. When I was in Wittenberge I wanted there no wayters, we heere in Vienna néede woo for no suters: you sée what resorte wée retaine, and what fellowes doe fawne on vs, what a traine doth trupe by vs, and how many hang on our Page  40 sléeues? more for fauour, than for fancie: more for sub∣stance, than for our safetie: more for gaine, than for good∣nesse: more for that they thinke to coyne some commodi∣tie, than truly to testifie their faithfulnesse and honestie: in time they may winne vs to their willes, and allure vs to their alleageances: in time they may cause vs to like that we hated, and loath that which we loued: in time they may frame vs to their follies, and gaine vs to perfourme that which we vtterly reiected: to auoyde therefore an imminent danger, is a warrant of wisedome: and to flie the faculties of flatterers, deserueth no little prayse, but great commendations: we may beare a faire face to all, but not ioyne in amitie with any: welcome all, but bid none stay dinner: embrace all courteouslie, but reward all slenderly, for our owne affaires, and our owne busines whatsoeuer: what my litle helpe may stand you in stead: what my smal substance may pleasure you: what my de∣uices may profite you: I shall be as willinge to imploy, as you are to craue my helpe: as gladly to obey, as you gracious to commaund: as prest at all times to fulfill al things: as you desirous at any time to compell me what∣soeuer: and for my faith towardes your fauour, you shall finde it as bountifully bestowed in euery respect, as your heart can wish, or your selfe desire: And if Damon were faithfull to Pithyas: if Lepidus to Laelius: if Pilades to O∣restes: In like manner shal Narbonus be faithfull to Phe∣mocles, while life doth last, and til death seperate our two bodies: in pawne of which pledge, I can gage you no o∣ther but my hand in the habite of my harte, and were my hart so franckly to be offered, as my hand ready to be ren∣dred, it should be as bountifully pawned, as I haue duti∣fully demonstrated.

Phemocles longe expected this maidenly motion, and harkened a great while for that preached Sermon: and at that very instant had resolued him selfe, to haue made the price, if hée had not bidden so faire for the bargaine: but his determination bare alwayes this imagination, Page  41 that to resolue was better then to propound and paye for the price, easier then to set sale in a Market, to whom hee repaide this resolution, and gratefully requited with this courteous Conge.

Sir Narbonus, you made the demaunde, and I am to reply an answere: which had you not asked since we made our meetinge, I should haue requested before our depar∣ting: your instructions are so comfortable, and your me∣ditacions so medicinable, as I may neither leaue the one nor forsake the other: your perfect approbations by expe∣rience of your bought witte, and my wisedome vnpayed for, doe serue for a profitable prerogatiue, for so simple a Sophist, as hath neither learned his rules of Rethorick, nor discouered his carde of Collusion: our Towne in déed is so fraughted with a frontire of fooles, so larded with lubbers of the laieitie, so tapistred with shiftinge shaue∣linges, and nosegay Nunnes, and so powdred with pick∣thankes in their publique profession, that when a man thinketh hee hath God by the hande, hée hath the Diuell by the héele. Thus wée liue like the birde that is nouri∣shed vnder the Crocadiles mouth, when wée thinke our selues most sure, then in déepest daunger: and when our state most staide, then most tickle: As for you that haue felt the hand of Hercules, may easily indure a tacke with a twigge, but Phemocles whose phisicke hath no néede to be tried by purgations, nor certaintie, proued by any ma∣ner of subtiltie, is so tied to your trustinesse, and bound to your bosome, that distill him what drench you will, and he is content to drinke it, or proue him by what meanes you list, and he is willing to abide it: and this towne re∣tayneth Doctors phisicall, and Phisitions crumenicall, the one for the bodily paine, the other for the pursely pleasure, wherof though you wanted not in Wittenberge, yet we will auoide them in Vienna: my proofe is no priui∣ledge, and my knowlege without practise, the one I lear∣ned but a little, and the other I haue it by heresay. To ac∣knowledge acquaintance, is a motion that procéedeth Page  42 from the heart of some. Againe, others make an outward shew, when they meane nothing lesse: for my part, your goodnesse hath gained so deepe a deuotion in the bowels of my heart, as the dores shall neuer be opened to any other whatsoeuer: and as the wife of Demetrius, who disdeined not to runne Lackeylike by the louing side of hir swéete husband, in that tedious time of his turmoyling trauell: in like maner shall Phemocles not refuse to carrie the crosse of Narbonus in his vnfortunate afflictions, but take his teritorie toyles, tempered with the state of instabili∣tie, as a platforme of prowesse in so simple a Souldioure, that workes without the wiles of craftie coniurations, and deales without the counsaile of any fine Southsayer: And as your friendly faith is federated without any spot of infamie: your dealings, without desarts of my doings: your aleageances, without my alurements: your perfect promises, without my painefull perfourmances: so as far as my rules will reach, and my mind moue me, my fideli∣tie shall shew my fancie: my triall shall pronounce me no Traytour: my faith vnfalsified, shall manifest me no o∣ther, than a trusty Troylus: though I soare high, yet will not I proue haggardlike, but stoupe to the lure of loialtie, to the very féete of your courtesie: but to daunt of a mans doings is varletlike, and to boast brauelie, in faining to be friendly, is foolish faith without any signe of feruen∣cie, and a coyning of curiositie, with shew of little perfor∣mance as may be: but yet thinke not that I can eyther lie for my liberty, nor prate partially: neither argue agility, nor staine sternitie: nor proudely perticipate my periudi∣cialitie, nor ranckly royst it with beastlinesse and braue∣rie: but assure your selfe, that my doings shall be ioyned with the hope of honestie, to do the dutie of a deuoute Uo∣tarie, and in place of Agere, to put Satisfacere: with might and maine, with heart and hande, with tooth and nayle, neuer ceasse to serue you, and neuer leaue off to prosecute your pleasure: and if the imperfection of my abilitie may sufficiently satisfie the desire of your loyaltie, beléeue me Page  43 if you list, no one in ye world whomsoeuer, shall cause mee change my choyce, nor retire in my reentrie, selling my selfe slaue vnto your person, & yeelding you that which no others shall possesse: for ye faithful perfourmance of which promises, and the true meaning of my cleere conscience, take héere my right hand, that member next my heart, a reward altogither insufficient, and too simple a dish for so worthy a Maister: and could I giue you better, you should not haue worse God is my Iudge, whom I call as wit∣nesse, to testifie my troth, and manifest my mind plighted to your person, and rendred to your gratious goodnesse.

Behold here Gentlemen a lincked league of amiable a∣mitie, with a quicke confederacie, & spéedy dispatch of two friends earst vnknowen, now so ioyntly ioyned, & so per∣fectly vnited, as no meanes shal make mutabilitie, or any deuice dissolue their amitie: no bale, that shal be bitter, n fortune froward, no chance that shal be chapman in their choyce: no griefe aggrauate their glorie, nor any diuelishe déedes of dissention sowen amidst the forrowes of their faith, that shal hinder the felowship of their fidelitie, or by any meanes vndoe the linckes of their loyaltie, but that which shall grow for their gréedie gaines, and certainely serue for their security in what affaires soeuer, frowning fortune be interchangeably annexed.

These plights of parliance ended, with the contents of couenants, and the ioyning of hearts and hāds, they both departed the floured fields, and pleasant pastures, as well contented, as they desired, & as fully satisfied, as they both wished. Going into the Towne to dinner, they fed on the confections of their preter promises, & glutted thēselues with their former talke, the rest of the day they spente in their antiēt customes, & swéet talkings. Drawing toward night, & that the day waxed néere spent, each gaue to other ye Baselos manus, & a fréendly farewel for ye night: and hard it was to be adiudged, whether Narbonus for his péereles purchased freend, & louing cōpaniō were best cōtented, or Phemocles for ye inward insolutiō of his preoptated desire, Page  44 or most fauourable felicie best pleased: but this is most certaine, and the truth very manifest, that the interiour instigation of the habitation of the heart, or the resting place of the thoughts was so rauished with the remem∣brance of their most delightfull daliances, or new concey∣ued ioyes, that their hearts coulde wish to haue, or their soules desired to sée, was for the time so senselesse, or void of any feeling, as if the mind moued as it were with hea∣uenly motions, or filled with angelicall contemplations, were drawne from earthly thoughts, and called from ter∣restriall cogitations, into the heauenly harbour of al hap∣pinesse, or the priuate Paradise of most deyntie deuises. But hauing put on their former perplexitie, and digested those pleasant drugges, they were after so armed with a∣morous amplifications, and so drowned in their former preambulations, as melancholies for a season was vtter∣lye abolished, and all bitter heauinesse vanished out of their stomackes, and their thoughts dropped with honny, that earst were gorged with gall: Thus fared it with our two friends, and thus swamme they in their secure safe∣ties: Narbonus woulde not haue changed his choyce, or sought such another friend, to gaine so much goodes as he before forfaited, or to finde moe iewels, than his backe would beare: As for Phemocles, his case better liked him, than if he should haue gayned all the wealth of Cressus, or had all the passing pearles of Arabia.

Narbonus came to his Chamber after his former fa∣shion, and olde accustomed manner, thinking to trie the strings of his louing Lute, or to fill his eares with Mu∣sicke as he had done, but his hearte hopped so without a Harp, and daūced in delights without a Musition, as if he had then bin maried with some dayntie delights, or vsing something for his felicitie, the greatest in the world.

Phemocles departed also to his stately stacion, or earth∣ly mansion: where in stead of rest, he was receaued with reioysing: and for his bed and boulster, the late battaile of their imbracinges bounced so in his braines, and trou∣bled Page  45 so his toyish thoughtes, as hee iested of his ioy to him selfe, and laughed with inward lust of his happy felicity: if the one were daunted with inestimable desires, and drowned in the dewe of terestriall triumphes: the other was fatted with the fruition of his fantacies, & abolished the beauty of all other braueries, bathing himselfe in the beatitude of that protrated picture, and seemely Sainct: which though hee bare it not in his shining shielde, yet he ware it in the wombe of his harte, and kept it in as pri∣uily as a Iewell of great price: Who can best saye for o∣thers safety, and best praise others perfection, spareth not for speaking, neither tarieth for intreating: and the more to augmēt their antiquity of amity, and prolong the lēgth of their loyalty, they were not euery houre in their Oratories, nor euery morninge in their méetinges, not euery day in their daunces, nor alwaies in their daliaun∣ces: for who hath not the faculty of this facility? or who not the knowledge of this plaine misery, that a litle ab∣sence maketh a déepe desire, and the restraining of beeing togeather, maketh the méetinge more ioyfull? for they so tempered their affections, and so dyeted their desires, that euery méetinge was as gainefull as the first, and euery gréeting as benificiall as the frontire of their felicity: If they met, it was by méere chaunce, and they neuer poyn∣ted any time of parlyance: their departure was with aynefull protestations, and their encountering with a∣miable affiances: they tooke their leaues, as if they should haue left their liues, where at their next méeting, their hearts hopped like the carefull Captaine comming home with conquest, or reioysed like him that had escaped the hands of his enimies: for, is the extremitie of the passion of the Citizen comparable the vnspeakeable reioysing of the Souldioure? no trust me, for the ioy of the one is at all times alike, and not greater this day, than the morow fo∣lowing alwayes without danger of death, and euer with∣out losse of liuing: but the other hauing escaped the scou∣ring, or bidden the brunt, returneth with triumph, fur∣thered Page  46 with felicity, reuiued (as it were) from the graue: therfore reioyceth without measure, and his gladnes as much as may be thought. But fortune disdayning their happy felicitie, and enuious at their prosperous procee∣dinges, murmuring at the multitude of their mirth, and hating their heauenly happines: frowning at the goodnes of their gladnesse, and hauinge in contempt the depth of their desasters, caused their seperation by a quicke dis∣patch, and prouided their departures so sodainly, as might be, found a meanes to put the one far enough from the other, and had a deuice to make them part company, ima∣gined a craft to make a daungerous distance of their mer∣ry méetinges, and inuented a drifte to drowne their doo∣ing for a time: And no maruaile if it were so, for what is otherwise? is not the flowre to day finely flourishing: to morrow stamped vnder féete? the trée in sommer fresh and gréene, in winter naked, and bitten with frost? the Hart with his haughty hornes, fat and faire, shortly after colde and ready to sterue: the man that to day bounceth in brauery, to morrow marcheth in the vale of misery: do we not commonly see the stout tyrant to day persecuting, to morrow to stand to the mercy of his inferiours? to day in Fortunes lap, to morrow in the mire of misery? Wée haue but two chaunces, and both wee cannot inioy togea∣ther, good, or euill: happy, or vnfortunate: blessed, or cursed: wisedome should eyther shew vs thus much, or reason rule vs to vnderstand this secrecy: to day we haue, to morow we had: to day men, to morrow lumps of earth: to day in the highest habitacion of felicity, to morow in ye lowest sincke of aduersity: the infant dyeth, the olde foole tarieth stil: the gréene grasse withereth, the toughe olde trée abideth still in his place: as cōmonly goeth the little Lambe to the slaughter, as the olde Oxe to th butchery: let vs not be deceiued with the mutability of the one, nor be∣guiled with ye vncertainty of the other: after the vncom∣fortable night, comes the cleare day: after wallowinge waues, and sturdy stormes, quiet calmes, & swéet gales: Page  47 after tedious trauailes, temperate tastes: after misery, mirth: after Melancholy, melody: after bitter bale, blis∣full beatitude: as wee cannot inioy both, so must we per∣force want one: our lincked louers, whose fancies were their foode: whose delightes their desires: whose wishes their welfare: whose ioy was the greatest: & whose gra∣uity the least: swam al this while in the seas of security, & marched in the frontire of felicitie, were forced to fly the féeld of their confederacy, and resigne the banners of so∣ciety, to time the only meanes to enioy their auncient a∣mity, & to finde out the happines of their former felicitie: they had al this while tasted the apple, but not touched the rinde, crackt the nut for the curnell, but let fall the shell: gathered the grapes, & left the leaues: But now ye Drum soundeth, and the Pipe plaies lofte to depart: for ye father of Phemocles enuying at the lasy life of his loitring sonne, and desirous to haue him better busied in the spendinge of his time, determined to sende him to Naples, to learne the Italian tongue, which would greatly profite him as hee imagined: to whom findinge at conuenient leysure, and time to vnfolde the effecte of his meaninge, hee spake as foloweth, and vttered these wordes.

Sonne Phemocles, hée that alwayes abideth by the fire side, or in the warme house, litle knoweth how hard∣ly hée can abide the freesing frostes, or cold blastes of win∣ters windes, to remaine alwaies within the Citty, or to abide still in the Towne, is no meanes to prooue a good Courtier, or to sée such seruice as the Prince desireth: to marche in a Meddow amongst maydens, or to lye lulling in the lappes of Ladyes, is not the way to prooue a good Souldier, or to be practised in the feates of Armes, thou fightest here but with thy fancy, & striuest with thy owne estate: thou alwaies hopest, but neuer gainest: yu thinkest, to attaine somewhat, but findest iust nothinge: the fruiti∣on of thy fréedome, is no light of thy lyuing, nor the inioy∣inge that thou already haste, a meane to make it more, vnlesse thy vsinge were put to working, and thy sauinge Page  48 to encrasing: the money in thy pursse will not encrease, but the bay salt will grow as it lieth: thy little knowledge seeking for no more experience, will profite very slowly, but thy witte being wrested, may in time winne thée great wealth: the wearing away of thy goodly yeares without commoditie, and the leesing of thy time without any vtilitie, thou wilte héereafter repent, and wish thou hadst bin forced more for thy felicitie. As thou wantest knowledge, so lackest thou also wisedome, and with the atteyning of the one, thou shalte easily finde the way to gaine the other: and as thou wantest vnderstanding, so must thou proue with paines, and not thinke to winne it with wishing: I speake not to the end to haue thée eyther Souldioure or seruitour: neyther rouer nor royster: ney∣ther Courteour nor Caterpiller: but in going, thou mayst gaine, and yet not get without paine, and thy pain doubt∣lesse will preferre thée to profite, and thy profit wil proue so for thy pleasure, as thy gaine shall not seeme painefull, nor thy profite hurtfull. Understand thou therefore, and be it knowē vnto thée, that the better to talke with stran∣gers, and the easier to answer many demandes, the more profitable for thy parentage, and the greater comendable for thy Countrey, the more to pleasure thy selfe, and the better to delight me: then take thy iourney to Naples, and leaue thy naturall seate this Citie, there to learne the I∣talian toung, and to sée the fashions of that Countrey, a place as I imagine as likely for thy learning, as prompt for thy profite, yet perhappes more beutified with braue∣rie, than subiect to the rules of honestie, excéeding full of curtesie, and filled with filed flattery: more coy then come∣lie, and yet more comely than commendable: their faces painted like ye Appothecaries pot, shineth outwardly, but poysoned inwardly: and were their doings correspondent to their sayings, their companyes were to bee craued, where now it is to be hated. When thou shalte be come thither, & stayed in the Towne, looke not on their painted postes, nor haue any regard to their wanton windowes: Page  49 gaze not on their garish girles, nor listen not to their Si∣renes songes, whose Lutes will entice thée to lust, and their musicke moue thee to do that thou after repent: thou shalt find there new fangles, and trifling toyes: tibbes and trulles: knauerie and bawdery: villanie and varietie: But as thou hast eyes to behold these things, so hast thou also a Soule to thinke vpon to saue: for let it be no sooner knowen of thy arriuall, and iudging thée to be a stranger, but the next morning, or happily that same nighte, some Curtizan will salute thée with a swéete song vnder thy window, or else with a Citherne at thy Chamber dore: but giue no eare to such gratulations, nor haue any re∣gard to those salutations, reward hir slenderly with some little péece of Siluer, or pay hir that shal not counteruaile hir trauell, so mayest thou perhappes be dispatched of a Strumpet, and léese the company of a beastly body: but if thou séeme to dallie, or to make any accompt of hir, thou shalt euer bee troubled with hir sight, or mollested with hir sound, woon with hir swéete wordes, or allured with hir louing lookes: deceyued with hir painted pride, or de∣lighted with hir pretie posies: hir eyes as good as fishing baites, and hir handes holde like limetwigges. If societie assaile thée to craue the company of some trusty Titus, or gaine the good will of some faithfull Iesippus: thou must beare two heades in one hoode, or bee repaied treble for single: & once gained loue that he liketh, his louer excep∣ted, or his Lady only restrayned, and then, except thou canst flatter, thou must not liue, and whome thou ac∣quaintest thy selfe withall, or makest thy companyon, wil looke to crow ouer thée, or goe aboute to mainteine some mischiefe against thée: therefore to liue without any of them, and to vse them al alike, were the best in my mind, and the surest for thy safegard. Couldest thou so temper thy traditions, and frame thy fragilitie to worke thy vti∣litie, for let him disdeine thy doings, or loath thy loyaltie, if in working thy owne welfare, thou vnwillingly trou∣ble his testy temperance: if in gaining thy gratious glory Page  50 in any respect, yu gratify not his gredy gulfe, to his cōtent∣ment though smally to thy easement: if in talkinge thou trouble him, or in walking thou wring him, in speakinge to any thou giue not him leaue to bée before thée, or in sa∣luting thou suffer him not be first satisfied, thou shalt pur∣chase thee his displeasure, and win him thy ennimy: in banquetinge thou must spend franckly, and in feastinge féede him finely: one waye thy curtesie will increase thy care, & the other way thy loyalty augment thy sorow: thou must sooth him swéetly & praise him with perpetuity: beare a braine as if thou wouldest banquet him, & make boast of his brauery: flatter him to his face, and dissemble with him to his very lips: For if by thy honest behauiour thou purchase him thy péere, or by thy goodnes thou gaine his gratitude: by thy loyalty, thou purchase his liberty: by thy honest desertes, thou win him as thou wouldst wish: Alas, when thou hast fished so longe, thou shalt finde but a Frogge, and gained what thou canst gette: thou shalt haue but a flittinge fréende, or a faithles foe: thou shalte reape but Cockell for thy corne, and Thistles in the stead of Grapes: Brambles in the place of Apples, and Briers in the roome of Figges: for when to do him any pleasure thou mayest, thou shalt happely displeasure thy selfe, the least looke, or the smallest worde, the least dicurtesie, or the smallest qualitye, the leaste frumpe, or the smallest frowarde face will procure him practise thy perdicion, and sell thy selfe to some Lozell, hired for a litle lucre, and rather then faile, or bee deceiued of his purpose, hée will himselfe vnder the pille of an Apple, conuey a dram of poyson, or foyst some Figge to seale thee a Pasporte of farewell to thy fréends, or giue thee some drench of little delight, good for the Bottes, but yll for the belly: then must his haire bee curled after the cutte, or frizled after the finest fashion, his Mouchachos, Turkylony like, and his Beard his God, his belly boulsfred as their fashion is, and his Rapier after the newest deuice: his face must be washed and froathed, and his ruffes séemely Page  51 set: his Hose brusshed, and his Shooes wiped: then wal∣keth hee so mannerly, and treadeth so stately: marcheth so warily, and saluteth so courteously, that you will saye hee resembleth a Saincte, when in troth hee is as prowd as Lucifer: if hee espye you to talke with his wife, to vse conference with his Louer, or to mooue any question to her whom hée calles his fréend, you may then looke for his rusty Rapier to rumble in your belly, or his stubbed Poy∣nard to giue you the Stabbado, you neuer the wiser, and hee little the better: I speake not to this ende Phemocles, neither imagine my meaning to bée such, that thou shoul∣dest refraine all company, or remaine alwaies in the Me∣lancholy chamber, but admonish thee whom thou inter∣tayne, and of whom thou art intreated: with whom thou accompany, and with whom thou art acquainted: whom thou choose thy freend, and how thou shalt finde few faith∣full: As I would haue thee liberall, so would I not haue thee lauishe: as spend, so not spoile: as willinge, so not wilfull: as for play, I know thee to be no gamester: and for drinking, no Tauerne hunter: thou maist for recrea∣cion vse the Tennis Courtes, and the dauncing Scholes, to refresh thy weary spirites: but the Theaters in any wise refraine, and all such mischeuous motions: and here in the benificiality of my blessings, and as you wil retayn mee your fatherly fréend: refraine the company of Cur∣tizans, and disdaine the fellowship of Harlots, who will quickly péere in your pocket, and empty your purse: laugh in your face, and cut your throte: professe you great good will, and worke you some villany: to abandon your body to their brauery, you shall sell your soule to the Diuell: I will therfore with your consent, & in that it is likely to be profitable your estate, that such necessaries as are want∣inge be with spéede prouided, and those things which you haue not, may hastely be made ready: for in prolonginge your pilgrimage, you doo but delay your desires, and the thinge once gained that you goe for, so spéedy returne may be made as shall seeme good in your likinge.

Page  52Phemocles stoode all the pronouncing of this penaltie, and the reading of this enditement, like the picture of S. Peeter, or the image that Pigmalion wrought: for this he wayed in his wauering minde, and cast these doubtes in the habitation of his head, that to depart from him whose company he craued so much, and to forsake that good fe∣lowship of his late purchased fréend, for whose sake, he would with Orpheus haue gone downe into Hell, or haue ventred to gaine the golden fléece, or to haue tryed his strength with Gorgons head, to haue had his happie desi∣red fréende with him, or to vse his good instructions in that tedious trauell, and long voyage: then contrariwise, the request of his father was so prestricte, and his com∣mands so streight, to denie which motion, or to gainesay his pretence, would cause him be disliked, whiche before was so well loued: he armed therefore his amorous mind with the heritage of hope, and fenced his fancie with the frendship of a fauourable returne. So soone as he had bought his bargaine, or learned his lesson, yet the time he knewe would séeme tedious, though it were but halfe a yeare, and that too long, had it bin lesse, but that he min∣ded should be the most, and the vttermost day should not be more, but he reckned without his host, and tolde his cards false, the more his griefe, as afterwarde it proued, and the greater his sorow, as after it ensued, he shaped therefore this resolute answere, and replyed as foloweth.

Deere Father, I should séeme eyther very prodigious to renounce your reasonable request, or very mallaparte to bragge before I haue bidden the battaile, eyther very foolish to deny your demaundes, or very doultish to driue of doubtes with delayes: eyther very froward to frowne at your francke proffer, or very lowtishe not to listen to your lessons: for dutifully to obey, is but the part of an o∣bedient sonne, and to gainesay the institutions of so trac∣table a Schoolemaister, were the parte of an vntowarde Scholler, and a great signe neuer to prooue a Doctor: the one will yéeld mée contentacion, and giue mee delight, the Page  53 other drowne mée in dispaire, and be a meane to cast mée into the exile of your freendly fauour, then the which, no one thing can bee more hurtfull to my estate, or greater against my profite and preferment: for hauinge lost your fauour, and gained your displeasure, who will procure mée a plaister in my greatest gréefe, or yeelde me remedy for my frailty in the multitude of my miserye: by you I holde, by you I hope: by you I enioye that which other∣wise I had not: by you I liue & lacke not: by you I wish and wante not: by you my care is comfortable, which o∣therwise should bee incommodious: by you my health is happy, which otherwise should bee daungerous. How happy is the vnfortunate childe which hath a carefull Fa∣ther? and how blessed that Sonne that hath a gracious Patron? but how much is Phemocles bound to the celesti∣all God, whose Father is as faithfull as carefull, & more carefull then his courtesie deserueth, or are euer likely to merite. But Sir, if I misse not my marke, and that my Carde deceiue mee not, my vnremoouable minde in this respect is fully resolued to prosecute your pleasure, and to spende that my troublesome time in such honest order, and so for my profite, as may redound greatly to your good likinge, and not a litle to my preferment: pleaseth you therfore to lend mée that liberty, and to graunt mée which erst you promised, that my tongue once attained, and my studie finished, I may returne as hastely, as now I must depart spéedily. I am ready so soone as it pleaseth you to furnish mée, and stand at your gracious commaund ready to depart: As touching the T'rulles of Naples, and their trifling toyes, I shall perhaps be in their Aue maria, but I will neuer procéede so far as their Creede: they shal not looke so louingly, but I will bende my browes as bitterly: they shall not talke so swéetely: but I will answere as shrewdly: they shall not singe so pleasantly, but I will faine as flatteringly: if they haunt mée, I wil hunt them: when they call quickly, I will come as slowly, & rather I will bee tyed to a poste, as was Vlisses, or stop my ares Page  54 as did his men: then be either lured with their lookes, or wonne with their wiles, their flattering shall not make mee faine, nor their wordes cause mee be wanton: their lookes shal not win my likinge, nor their lust get my loy∣alty: their brauery shall not cause mee to blaze in beastli∣nes, nor their paintinge to be prowde in péeuishnesse. As for their gallants the (Neapolitane Gentlemen) my ac∣quaintance shal not be costly, nor my méeting stately: let them prance it in pride vpon their pounced pantaffles, I will bounce it after our fashion with my shoes and bus∣kins: let them bumbast their bellies, I will retayne my slashed hose: let them weare their glistering Rapiers, I will weare my short sword: let their Ladies vse the van∣ting of Venus, or the flattering of Flora: the lewdenesse of Layis, or the vnshamefastnesse of Mirrha: the filthinesse of Pasiphae, or the diuelish desires of Heroydas: al their trum∣peries, all their toyes, all their protestations, al their pre∣rogatiues, all their sorceries, all their sophistries, al their haggish harmonie, all their diuelish melodie, can not stirre the mind of Phemocles to a Strumpet, nor entice him to the trecherie of a Traytour: But happily you wil thus re∣plie, or make me this answers: Phemocles is fleshe as well as others, and made of the substance of other men: flesh indéede, but yet no morsell for such deintie mouthes, nor foode fine ynough for such trimme trulles: they shall trie me eare they tast me, and in eating they will hardly digest me: one cause is, bycause I am not powdered for their purpose, nor crammed for their chappes: the other, that in tasting, they shall find me as bitter as gall, and in drincking a dole drench for such doltish dotards. But alas Phemocles, thou layest on loade now the enimie is away, thou throwest downe Mountaynes before thou camest néere them: thou wilt kill the Diuell, yet neuer dealtst with his damme, God grant thou be not bewitched with their wiles, nor weand before thou hast sucked: the little Lamb skippes and leapes, till the Foxe come in place, then he quiuers and quakes, trembles and shakes, cra∣ueth Page  55 help so well as he can, and maketh moane after his maner: thou pratest before thou prouest, and tatlest be∣fore thou triest: thou dreadest no danger on the dry groūd, but on the Sea, Shipwracke makes thée shiuer: the trée maketh no noyse before it fall, and thou doest not com∣plaine, till thou art caught: the Beare danceth before the Dogges are on hir backe, and thou regardest not thy mo∣ney before thou come into the handes of Theeues: thou héere in Vienna doest vaunt with any, when thou arte in Naples thou wilt crie creake like a Cocke that is crauen: in Naples the fruite is outwardly painted, God grant it be inwardly putrified: the Damsels in Naples are as daintie as swéete meates, but it is well if they proue so holesome as sower sauce: the men ruffle in their robes of purple and veluets, yet I feare me they carrie double. P. about them, and neuer a Pater noster, God grant thée Phemocles to bargaine with neyther of both.

The good man his Father all the time of this treatise, & the saying of this Sermon, stoode listining to the lure of this trained traueller, and hearkening diligentlye to that which he had spoken: and when he had ended this his Oratorie, and declared the effect of his meaning, his Father granted for his returne, the choyce to be in him∣selfe, and that gained which he went for, to come so soone as he would: fortifying therefore himselfe against all the furies of his fancie, he put on the armour of forgetful∣nesse, and so marched vnder Captayne Contentus, not so well pleased as hée would haue wished, nor so surely ea∣sed, as hée woulde haue desired. His father for his spéedie dispatche prepared euerie particular thing for so contra∣rie a iourney, and all necessaries whatsoeuer for his spéedie dispatche: but amongst other extraordinaries, his friende Narbonus, had hée knowen how, or by what meanes, he would gladly haue put him into his portman∣tue, or trussed him vp in his pocket. But, alas, this iour∣ney was so soone chopped vp, & prouided with such hast, as not so much leysure was left, or so much time spared, Page  56 as to giue a friendly farewell, or bid adue from one to the other, whiche no doubt was great gréefe to their galled consciences, and a heauie burthen for them equally to beare: for Narbonus was at that vnfortunate time out of the Towne to dispatch some businesse for his Unckle, the grater his griefe, the more the others sorow: and Phemo∣cles when he was taking his horse, and euen vpon going went to take leaue of his second life, and to giue the fare∣well to his déere fréende, but he was quite beside the cus∣shion, and his expectation was frustrate, which encreased his iolytie like the panges of death, & reuiued his spirits, as if hee should haue receiued his last reward: for he was now on horse backe, & had takē leaue of his Father, ther∣fore to write would but bréede some suspicion in his Fa∣thers ielous head, and to importe his message to any, hee imagined was but a deuice of small certainty: therfore resolued him selfe to defer that determination, and staye his writinge till time would better serue, and place more fit to vse his practise: hee therfore departed smally satis∣fied, and as yll contented.

Now is Phemocles in his wide study, as broad as the high way to Naples, greatly troubled with the leauinge of his new faithfull fréend, and then the departure from his Father troubled him somwhat: thē was he not vnminde∣full of his olde acquaintaunce, and of the residue of his kinsfolkes: now hee thinketh on the brauery of Naples, and then of the comly Curtizanes he should behold there: then of their ritch apparrell, and so of their painted pryde: now of the vsages of their Clergy, and then of the orders of the Laicitie: now of the time hee should gaine his stu∣dy, which as hée thought would be but halfe a yeare, then of his returne how hee should bee receiued home againe? These contagious crosse cares afflicted his fancy, yet cau∣sed the way to seeme somwhat shorter: and after this his painefull Pilgrimage, hee ariued at Naples, the place hee so longe desired, where hee found the instructions of his Father to be nothinge contrary, neither was he deceiued Page  57 in his owne imagination: for the paynted walles brought him into a great admiration at Naples: then the wrought windowes, whereout he might beholde a flirting fisgig singing to hir Citherne: then the brauerie of their appa∣rell, which was so farre vnlike his attire: then he marked the deuoutries of their deuotion, and then their braue ex∣ercises for recreation: almost rauished with these subtill sightes, and welnigh forgetting the effect of his comming, yet framed he in the ende his fangled fancie to beate his braynes about his businesse, for which he had taken so te∣dious trauell, and wandred such a wéerie way.

Narbonus at his returning home, after the dispatch of his businesse, and being enfourmed of the suddaine depar∣ture of Phemocles, and his hasty voyage the which he was gone, was stricken into such a dump, and moued so with melancholie, as he séemed drowned from any delightes, and exiled from all pleasant conceytes: first he recorded to himselfe the ingratitude of his friend, and the small regard he had to participate it vnto him, that he woulde séeme to depart without taking leaue in his owne person, or not so much as manifest it by some ragged letter: then againe calling to remembrance the obedience towardes his father, and that it behoued him to do no lesse: than that he was at his Unckles house to séeke him, but could not heare of him, he let fall that fancie, and entertained ano∣ther in the place thereof: then his owne ill hap troubled him, for his vnfortunate being out of the Towne: then this gréeued him that so foolishly he had put away all his olde friendes, to enterteyne him a stranger, but then throughly acquainted, and so soone to start away: these peruerse cogitations, so troubled him, and his owne con∣trarie imaginations so begiled him, as he fared not so wel as he might haue done, nor liked so wel of the matter, but that his inward gréefes appeared by his outward shewes: which his Unckle perceyuing not only by his doings, but also by other manifest signes, who loued him so déerelie, and had his health in so great honour, yet not knowing to Page  58 remedy his maladie, or what drēch to giue him for his dis∣ease, but vsed many sweete word, & faire motions, to vn∣derstand ye effect of his heauines, or ye maner of his greefe: but he preuailed so much in his purpose, & gained as much by his enquiring, as if he should haue looked for some fa∣mous acte of a dead mā, or heard some swéete sayings pro∣ceede forth of the mouth of a new borne infant, which grée∣ued him at the gall, & displeased his patience not a little.

Not lōg after this new receiued grief, & suddain gained sicknes, Henricus was requested by a special friend, & mo∣ued by one whom he could not deny, to help celebrat a cer∣tain feast, & to make vp the messe at a banquet, which he gladly answered to be there, & that he should cōmand him a greater matter, but that his Nephew, his only comfort and greatest ioy was troubled with a melancholy disease, and a fitte of frowardnesse. Reanswered the inuitor:

Why sir I beséech you let him accōpany you, & be your guest, for that ye smal company which shal be there, & they my speciall friends, will be pleasantly disposed, & passe the time merily: to ye which he willingly agreed, & gaue his ful cōsent, on ye conditiō his Nephew would beare a braine, & be merrie in that pleasant passance, & place of recreation: wherto Narbonus cōsented more to féede the humor of his vnckle, thā for any affection he had to the feast: for his sto∣macke was yet ful of his new conceiued delights, and his mind glutted with their remēbrāce, which feebled his bo∣dy, & altered his fauour, in so much, as he loked very ill, & his stomacke was very bad. But this banquet procured ye which he neuer suspected, & chāged this new corsiue to an old sore: for thinking with melody to put away melancho∣lie, he brued a bitter bane for his owne drincking, & tooke so much, as he could not disgest it in a lōg time after. The appointed day come, & euery thing prouided, these inuited guests all resorted, as wel Henricus, and Narbonus, as also those other which were bidden: where amongst this cum∣lie crue, & courtly companions, there was a yong Gentle∣woman which gaue Narbonus such a glance with hir eye, as she pierced a peece of his hart: and the more to encrease Page  59 this new desire, & to kindle these glowing coales, he was placed so right ouer against hir, as he could not but cast some coūtenāce of fauour, or shew some signe of curtesie. Thus sate he gazing first at the heauenly hue of hir beau∣tie, then on the excellencie of hir bountiful brauerie: then wondred he at the greatnes of hir exceeding curtesie: then maruelled he at hir passing good graces: then mused he at ye specialtie of hir fine behauiour: then was he rapt with ye angelical hue of hir faire face: thē was he astonied to be∣hold the intermixed coulours of hir roseal chéekes, then ye twinckling of hir eyes did so put out his small lightes; as he could neither behold thē loking on hir, yet durst he not reproue thē for shining in such order. Thus fedde he on ye feature of hir face, & could eate nothing, but lokes of loue, nor drincke any thing, but ye drāmes of his desires: some∣times whē by chance she met him with a loke, or gaue him a counterbuffe at ye midle méeting of their eyes, he would blush, as if he shuld not so presume to loke wtout licence, or droupe down his head, as being sorie if he had offēded: then musing by what meanes he might haue occasion of parleāce, or vse the meanes to bewray his woes, suddain∣ly loking that way, was not fully in the face, & stil pierced farther than at the first: for drincking too often he wanted no cuppes, & for alwayes being carued vnto, no meate on his trēcher: and amōgst other that troubled his trēchers, Fidelia, for so was the Gentlewoman nominated, reached him the wing of a Partrich, & laid it before him, which he so gratefully accepted, & thankefully receiued, as if it had bin Manna sent from Heauen, or some of the meate yt the Goddesses fed on: & had it bin poyson cōming frō hir hāds, or some deadly draught, she giuing it, I thinke he would neither refuse to eate ye one, or denied to drink ye other: for he who as yet neuer laid his lips on ye law of loue, nor ne∣uer before felt one fit of Cupids craft, was now limed like ye litle bird, or takē in ye snare of hir beuty: Thus sate Nar. as though he had looked on ye head of Medusa, & bin turned to stone: or as if he had always bin fainting, & neuer fallē: But if Nar. were rauished: Fidelia was also betraid, for his Page  60 lookes as much procured hir delights, as hir eyes fed his greedie desires: for euerie looke she repayed him a liking, and for euery signe she gaue him a crosse greeting: for eue∣rie glance she gaue him a gléeke, and for euery cast, she re∣quited him with a conge: for euery sigh, she yéelded him a blush: and for euerie looke of loue, she reanswered him a dramme of desire.

This feast ended, and the clothes taken away, thankes giuen to God for his goodnesse, and curtesie yéelded for their friendly fauour, the old Gentlemen, and most anti∣ent company fell first to disporting themselues, and to vse their recreations, some to Chests, some to Cardes, some to heare musicke, some to sober talking, some questioned of their estates, some talked of strange Countreys. The yonger sort vsed other exercises, and deused more youth∣like pastimes: some passing the day with pleasant discour∣ses: some with propounding queint questions: some with fine songs: some with tattling tales: some fell to playing: and some settled themselues to dauncing: amongst which company, Narbonus made vp the number, and serued as one not to be spared amongst the rest: by which meanes, he thought to find oportunitie to talke: and time to vtter his mind to hir that he serued, and the séemely Saint that he held his Candle vnto: the instruments sounding, and the Musicke beginning to moue them, the other yong Gentlemen in order tooke euery man his mistresse, and Narbonus amongst the rest woulde not stande to straine curtesie, but led Fidelia by the faire fist, who séemed not greatly vnwilling, nor striued much to refuse his ientle curtesie: the Almaine ended, and the Musicke ceasing to sound, Narbonus could not restraine any lōger, but spake as foloweth.

Mistresse Fidelia, presuming vpon your courtesie, and nothing doubtfull of your friendly fauour, more boldly perhappes than wisedome would I should, yet not more earnestly than reason willed or woulde, mouing you to take a little paines, and to walke after your late receiued Page  61 appetite, which may it proue to your contentment, and be gratefull to your goodnesse, Narbonus sufficiently satisfy∣ed, and in mind passng well pleased: as for the curtesie of your father, the procurer of my comming, I stand bound to do him seruice howsoeuer, or to pleasure him after my small power.

Alas good Sir, replyed Fidelia, this small pittance and little alowance which you haue héere tasted, and fed per∣happes a little, will suffice where there is no better, or hold life and soule togither for the time: but for any dein∣ties, or plentie of fine cates, if you did eyther expect or looke for, you were deceiued of the one, and missed of the other, I the more sorowfull, and my father the worse con∣tented: but my fathers willing minde and great desire to gratifie his friends, is in déede to be excepted before su∣perfluitie of fare, or choyse of dishes, which séeing it hath pleased you so curteously to take, & so gratefully to except, hee I am assured is sufficiently requited and repaid with aduantage: as for my courtesie it is so small, and my gra∣titude so simple, neither framed after the finest, nor vsed any way more than ordinarily, but that you are content to yéeld me more commendations than I deserue, or more praise than I am worthy to haue, whiche séeing it hathe pleased you to bestow so bountifully, I accept them as willingly as they were meant honestly.

Then the Uialles sounded a new Measure, which for∣ced them to stay their talke, and to leaue in the middle of their bargaine, which ended, and that the other company also talked, Narbonus spake as foloweth.

Mistrisse Fidelia, to yéelde you ingratitude for your kindenesse: or frowardnes for your fréendlines: smal cur∣tesy for your great liberality, and litle thankes for your great deserts, were the part of an vnmannerly mate, and a certaine shew of small gentilitie, and as litle honesty: for the greatnes of courtesie is not mixed with any quan∣tity of curiositie, neither is honest behauiour to be requi∣ted with faithles fidelity, neyther assured affiaunce to bee Page  62 measured with so slender sinceritye: if the cause bee commendable, the qualitye cannot bee but reasonable: by boully vntertakinge this venterous voyage, and comminge to your Fathers house, I haue gayned that which I neuer expected, and found that by chaunce, which of frée will I should neuer looked for, seeing that by the force of fortune, which I hope will breede my blisse, and graunt it bringe not my bale, if happely I obtaine it, I gaine my life: if vnfortunately I loose it, I gette my death: the ende whereof will yeelde mee either euerlastinge happines, or seale mee a quicke dis∣patche of my vnfortunate luckines: If Fortune bee so fauourable that by happe I possesse it, I passe into the earthly Paradise, amidst the greatest ioyes that maye bée: if contrary, my willinge desires not inioy it, I shall sinke to the bottom of dispaire, and so ende my vnhappy dayes.

Alas Sir, replyed Fidelia, I am not a litle sorowfull but greatly greeued that your comming hath beene so vn∣comfortable, and my fathers house such a harbour of your vnhappines, your entertainment so vnprofitable, & your small courtesie, to breede your great perplexitie: your paines so preiudiciall to your profite, and your pleasure to be enterlaced with the losse of liberty: for looke by how much the more your care is increased by the meanes of my Fathers homely house, by so much the more will hee bee discontented, to bee the occasion of your manifolde miseries, or the first founder of your happlesse infilicitie: If any thinge whatsoeuer haue beene offensiue or by mis∣ordringe disliked, it shall be amended with reason, or cor∣rected to the fashion of your fancy: if hee haue hurte you vnwittingly, hee will heale you gladly: if harmed you vnwillingly, helpe you speedily: if not thankfully grati∣fied you, yet willingly you ought to prefer his willinge minde before his wishing desires: for could his will béene agreeable to his wish, & his wish consented to that which hee would: you had neither missed of fine fare, nor beene Page  63 deceiued of good entertaynmente: not so gladly haue re∣quested, but hee would more willingly haue performed: not so soone haue sued, as you should spéedily haue ob∣tayned: not so inwardly haue beene mooued with de∣sire, as hee would outwardly haue contented your mea∣ninge: But where there wanteth wealth, there of force lacketh will: and where there is will without wealth, there also is wishinge, but no obtaininge: For my parte if any waye my meanes were vnmeasurable, or my sayinges vnsatiable: if my dooinges were reproouable, or my dealinges doubtfull: if my delightes were not dainty, or my minde any waye mooued then otherwise it ought: if any faulte were framed by my procure∣mente, or any deuice doone not agréeable your mooued minde: I eyther beeinge the Authour, or yeeldinge my consente, I desire but due for my desertes, or punish∣ment for my offence, whosoeuer be Iudge, or what euer bee my crime: and as I am sory that my Fathers insecu∣ritie hath bred your infelicity, so am I not glad that my misdemeanour hath brought you to bed with the Mother of Melancholy.

Then staied they the sounding of an other measure, and daunced about with the other company, which ended, and the Musicke left sounding, Narbonus touched at the quick, and galled neare the hart, spake these words, his pacience béeing a litle mooued.

O good Mistresse Fidelia, caste mee not foorth to marringe, before you haue first put mee to makinge: single not out my siftinge, before you haue heard my pleadinge: arraigne mee not with rigour, beefore you graunt mee to aunswere for my selfe: for trust mee you haue mistaken your marke, and shotte at a wronge Sayncte: it was your Fathers house louinge Ladye, and my owne selfe that I blamed worthely, and in∣treated wilfully, neyther did I quite condemne it, or vtterlye dislike it, but sayde it would procure the one, or graunt mee the other, and why then maye it not Page  64 yéelde mée the best, as likely as graunt mée the worst: bringe as well my beatitude, as driue mée my death, and gaine mee my glory, as get mée my graue: doo you thinke mee so far to stray out of the bounds of honesty? or to giue such iudgement for my entertainment, to render diuilish∣nes, for receiuing such deserts, or to repay a mouth ful of maliciousnes, for gaininge my hart fraught with happi∣nes? truely my good Mistresse, you conster wronge, and giue no right interpretacion: for your Father shall com∣maund Narbonus, who is bound by duety, and that not in matters of meane measure, but so far as the boundes of reason will permit, or hee giue willinge consent for mee to put in practise: but would God graunt mee that good∣nes, and fortune bee so fauourable vnto mée, that my wil∣ling minde might be shewed, or my simple seruice seene, or performing that you would commaund, in pleasuringe your person, or makinge some shew of my simplicity, I would vaunte of my good fortune with the happiest, and boast of my blessednes with the brauest: and in that you imagined mée vncurteous towards your sweet selfe, and to repay your goodnes with vngratefulnes, I call God for my witnes, and choose him my record, that my desires were vanquished by your desertes, and your deserts haue so drowned my desires, yt without your helping hande, I must perforce flie the fielde of your fauour, which to doe you pleasure I would surely prosecute, though no one thinge more contrary my hart: But contrariwise all the Hagges in Hell, nor all the superiall Sprites shall euer hunt mee from your habitacion, nor frame mee to follow any other felicity, but the hope of my happines, which is the grace of your goodnes, graued in my hart, and rooted in my interiour partes: and seeing I haue made so faire an assault, I will prooue to enter the breach, where I wil either leaue my life, or gaine the goale. Bée it knowen therfore vnto you, that not procured with better, nor mo∣ued with worse: but euen the bright beames of your ver∣tue, and the good graces of your personage, which to bee∣holde Page  65 I stood amazed, and altogeather for the time sence∣les: when so soone as I had againe recouered my spirits, and wonne my forelost wittes, I gan first to gaze on your beauty, then to péere on your personage: then to stare on the fine fauour of your face: then to gape on your good graces: then to meruaile at your maydenly modestye: then to mue at your entertainment: then to delight my selfe with those swéet wordes, which procéeded from your dainty mouth: alwaies intermedling my honest meaning with your vertuous imaginacions, all which I thinke would rauish the hardest hart that euer breathed, or melt the congealed minde of the greatest Tyrante that euer liued: therfore your beauty haue bestraught mée, & your vertues vanquished mee: it lyeth in your liberty to make mée the handslaue of your swéet soule, and vnder your cor∣rection to graunt mee my freedome: which if you wit me paciently to possesse, and quietly to enioy, I shal thinke all terestriall toyes, far inferiour to your heauenly delights, and all earthly pleasures but patternes of paine, to the great goodnes it will importe: where contrary, if you thinke mée vnworthy to bestow that swéet ioy on, and not fit to possesse that your faire fauour, I will not perforce liue any longer, nor drawe my breath in this bitter bale, but yeeld my luckles life to the losse of my selfe, and sur∣render my soule to thee.

And with that worde, wringinge harde her hand, and casting his eyes into her body, his wanne chéekes, with his pale lippes, resembled but ye similitude of his picture, or the counterfaite of his fauour, as if before his lyuinge life had beene fled to the celestiall ioyes, or his immortall soule had forsaken this terestriall state: so droupinge downe his heauy head, and lullinge his vnstayed body to one side, his sences were seduced into the entrailes of his sounding soule, and all his members dismembred, not ha∣uinge any force or féeling: thus feebly faintinge, and fal∣ling in deede, but that hee was staied by Fidelia, and held in her tender armes, at the view of which sight, and that Page  66 part of ye tragedy now before their faces, the other cōpany came with helping hands, and his Unckle ran hastily see∣ing him falling, for that he would willingly haue borne a parte, and lent his lyuinge soule to accompanied the late fled life, as hee thought of his beloued Nephew, & Fidelia would rather haue beene first in the graue, or inclosed in the body of him, rather then staied after the departure of Narbonus, and so lefte him without the company of her selfe: but tempering with his pulses, and froathinge his forehead with such distilled waters, and other deuices, as there was plenty of the one, and sufficient of the other, hee recouered his spirits, and stoode againe vpon his stal∣kinge legges, lookinge round about him, and staringe on the company, at last espied Fidelia, on whom hee spente the bestowinge of a paire of eyes, and such a glauncinge countenance, as was able to perce the armour of Achilles, no maruaile then if they ran into the hart of Fidelia.

His Unckle sorowfull to see this euente, and to playe there a parte altogeather vnexpected, especially for his owne safety: and then that he had troubled the company, so well disposed, and so pleasauntly minded: taking ther∣fore his leaue of the Father of Fidelia, and so of the other company, thanked him for his courtesie, and gratified the other for their company.

Narbonus gaue the adue also to them all, but especially to his beloued delight.

The assembly sorowfull to beholde this crosse blow, and mooued to pitty to see his yll hap, giuinge iudgement that this his disease proceeded of Melancholy, or happened by the reason of his colde stomacke not able to digest his fore passed fare, or distempered with their hot drinkes: others answered that heretofore he had bin euil at ease, and kept his Chamber till that daye, which then might procéed by taking the open aire, or some such like thing to bée the oc∣casion of this inwarde influence, but Fidelia amongst the rest shot fairest at the marke, and in deede hitte the very white.

Page  67Henricus walking homewardes, earnestly intreated his Nephew the cause of his new conceiued corasiue, and from whence it yssued: but he must either reache beyond the Moone, or bée neuer the nearer his purpose: for Nar∣bonus soothed him vp with some contrary instructiōs, and forced him beleeue that which hee fained, answeringe as contrary from the matter, as hee was iudged of by the o∣ther company.

Hauinge recouered his Unckles house, and entered his Chamber, hee powred foorth these pittifull plaintes, and vttered these waywarde wordes to him selfe, as followeth.

Alas Narbonus, and is it possible that thou shouldest so soone loose the companye of thy swéete Mistresse, and so quickly forgoe hir sight, whom thou preferrest beefore thy owne life, and in whose handes but lately thou didst marche so mannerly? Oh Fidelia, Fidelia, thou brookest thy name in euerye respecte, and wast not Christned contrarye thy desertes: Alas that thy beau∣tye should worke me this treacherie, and thy swéete countenaunce procure mee this maladie: my lookinge hath made mee madde, and my gazinge starke staring blinde: O how happie are those that doo dayly enioye thy sight, and are alwayes where they may at the full beholde thy face? was this my comminge, and this my callinge of my Unckle? was this the fruitefulnesse of the feaste, and the lookinge glasse of my lasciuious lust? nay, was not this rather the effecte of my felicitie and the manner of my fisshinge, to happe on so louely a Lady, and to finde suche a Frogge as Fidelia? But howe am I deceiued? and in what order beguyled? thinkinge to enioy her, or to catche where I neuer craued, or to angle with my hooke beeinge vnbayted: my Unckle procu∣red mee a little to hastily, and willed mee somewhat to spéedily, to make sale of my safety, beefore my former recouered maladye: but his meaninge was medicinable, though my payne prooue vnprofitable: by proouinge Page  68 to salue my sore: he hath festred my fresh wounde, and in thinking to gaine me my health, hath lost me my liber∣tie. But blamest thou thy Unckle, and reprouest him that honoureth thy health, and whose welfare he wisheth, who delighteth my desires, and craueth my happinesse: who hateth my misfortune, and is sorowfull to see me wéepe? canst thou then blame thy louing Unckle? and why not condemne the eyes of Fidelia? for had not she loked, I had not loued: and had not she wincked, I had not woed: had not she cast glances, I had not made semblances: and had not she infected me, I had bin whole, where now I am sore: pleased, where nowe I must be plastered: sounde, where now I am wounded: and frée frō seruitude, where now I am in bondage. But what sayest thou? doest thou raue, or art thou set to raile? doest thou rage, or beginnest to roare? art thou beside thy self, or doth some other speake for thée? are thy wittes thy owne, or hast thou borowed them of some other? thou speakest not by proofe, but bab∣lest as thou hast heard thy neyghboures? did hir beautie so blaze in thy eyes, that thou couldest not sée? nay rather did not thy owne sight make thée blinde? yes truly, thou canst not denie it, and if thou do, thou flatterest but thy owne affections, and leadest thy begun loue, to a new lust: hath hir faire face made thy fortune frowning? and hir louelie lights made thée grope in darkenesse? hath hir mo∣dest meanes caused thy immodest maners? and hir swéete conceytes bred thy cursed cares? no Narbonus, Fidelia is faire, so is she friendly, amorous, and amiable, pleasant, and pitifull, louing, and loyall, modest, and maydenly, handsome, and honest, comely, and curteous: she wanteth no gifts of nature, and néedeth no nurse for nurture: doest thou thinke that vnder so comely corps can lodge any lust of disloyaltie? or in so beautifull a personage can remayne any sparke of dishonestie? no surely, she was not framed for fashion sake, or made for that there were no moe: O how hir swéete words did reuiue me, almost drenched in the dyke of despaire, and how her chast countenaunce Page  69 pierced me beeing almost dead: Happy art thou Narbonus that layest thy loue, where thou must leaue thy loyalty in possessing thy hope: but thrise happy shalt thou bée, if thou attaine that Iewell, which though thou carry not about thee, yet wearest thou it in the bottome of thy hart: but I should not praise her before I know her, but I dare com∣pare her, before I am acquainted with hir. Doth she not in hue resemble Hester? and in chastitie Susanna? in beau∣tie Bersaba? and in iudgement Iudith? in sobrietie Sara? and in wisedome Minerua? in comelinesse Diana? and in heauenlynesse Castor? But why couldest not thou for a time dissemble thy danger, and kéepe close thy gréefe? but being perceyued of all, they will laugh at thée in their sléeues. Behold héere the extremitie of loue without the consent of lust: I craue but hir séemely sight, and aske but hir bare companie to comfort these my pernicious perils, and reléeue these tossing torments: hir help would make me hole, and hir stay woulde make me strong: why then should I not enioy hir? bycause honestly I loue hir: for in louing hir, I léese my libertie, and in forgoing my liber∣tie, I may happilie gaine my delight, and in obteyning my desire, I care not thē how spéedely I gaine my graue: if in dying I yéeld my last breath in hir bosome, who shall be more fortunate than my selfe? if in lyuing I enioy not hir company, whose death shall be more spéedelie? like to the budding blossome bitten with the frost, so do I fade: or as the Apple eaten inwardly with the worme, and neuer appeareth outwardly, till rotting, it droppe from the trée, or consumed, fall to the earth: or as the old tree consumed, and hollow within, neuer appeareth in the wind till it fal to the earth, or consume as it standeth: so shall I fade, so shall I fall: so shall I droupe, so shall I die: so shall I rotte, so shall I be bereaued of the rarest Iewell that Europe bréedeth. Alas, are these the rewards of loue? and the re∣compences of my good meaning, to hazard my life, and to die vnwounded: but doe thy eyes pierce worse than ar∣rowes? and thy sight infect like the Basalik? If one enimy Page  70 hurt another, he either séeketh a present salue, or giueth him his spéedie death. If a Dogge be bitten by another of his kind, he licketh himself whole againe. If the fléeting fishe be wounded, he healeth himselfe in the running Ri∣uer. But doth not the lamenting Déere, the arrow stic∣king in his side, repaire to some thicke groaue, or busshie lawne, where he moorneth till he die, & walketh himselfe, till senselesse he fall dead to the earth? Alas, is not my case such, and my wound in like order? my carefull Cham∣ber yeelds me small comfort, and what reape I héere, but the fruites of infelicitie? but thou Nouice, did she giue thée this gléeking gall? nay, was it not thy owne eyes? why then blamest thou hir whose faith is thy felicitie? whose countenance thy comfort? whose louing lookes the prolon∣ger of thy life? whose amiable grace the greatnesse of thy goodnesse? and whose swéete words the very restoritie of thy mutabilitie? complaine not then on hir, who was not the causer of thy maladie, for had not thy owne eyes bin the instruments, she had not procured thee: and hadst thou not looked, thy loue had bin little: and had not thy loue bin so great, thou hadst bin loose at libertie, where now thou art tied to hir courtesie, and bounde to hir beautie. And what if thou be so tied, repentest thou thy bargaine? or art thou sorie for thy choyce? no, no, the faire Rose hath a swéete smell: the Uermilion violet a most pleasant sent: the white Lillie, most amiable to behold. Do we not day∣lie sée that misshapen things haue as deformed conditi∣ons? and the brauer the beautie, the finer the qualitie: the fairer the face, the more fruitefull the fancie. Can there lodge in Fidelia any mistrust? or any deceite? any dishone∣stie? or any enuie? any malitiousnesse? or any wicked∣nesse? not in so excellēt a creature, or in so goodly a perso∣nage, in whose feature, and in which formall body, the Creator shewed the thirde parte of his cunning, and Na∣ture I thinke enuied she shoulde haue one degrée more: for had she bin celestiall, as she is but terrestriall, the heauenly Goddesses would haue enuied hir, for excelling Page  71 their fauoures, and passing them in beautie: hir excellen∣cie is the cause of my imperfection, & were she not so hea∣uenlie, my desires would be but earthlye: hir Angelicall face hath infected my ill fauoured feature, and hir swéete graces bewitched my sottish senses, and in my minde, it is one of the wonders of the Worlde, and one of the rarest matters that may bée, how she that hath bin be∣helde of so many, hath not bin loued of all: but no doubt, hir maners draw the heartes of others, and make their maladies not vnlike to mine. How could they in hir Fa∣thers house beholde hir, and not loue hir? with what face could they loke on hir fauour, and not blushe at hir beautie? would not hir words melt in their mouthes? and hir swéete sayings moue their modest minds? Narbonus thou art deceiued, the Diuell loueth a Collier, and the Crow thincketh hir owne Bird fairest. The sotte is soo∣ner wonne to lust, than lured to loue: the more noble mind, the more worthy enterprise: the valiant, feares no frownings, nor the worthie, dreads no danger. Will the Faulcon pray vpon a Crowe, or the Gossehauke cease vp∣pon carion? the Eagle on a dead Horsse? or the Tassell on a starued Dogge? The Lion will deuoure no dead thing, nor the foule Beare touch a man lying on the Earth. I knowe there are moe maydens than Malkin, and moe louers than Phillis, yet but one that liketh mee, or any that shall loue me, but Fidelia. But what shall I doe, or what meanes shall I make? to whome shall I bewaile my wante? or who will helpe mee? who will releeue mee? or who will assist mee? who will further mee? or who wyll take my parte? who will solicite my suite? or who will pleade for mee? my case shall bee manifested to my Unckle, who will as contentedlye assiste mee, as I willinge to craue helpe.

But thou Foole, what knowest thou whether hee will like of thy loue, or condemne thy madnesse? per∣happes hee regardeth some other, and wyll counsell Page  72 thée to match after his mind, and to loue after his liking: and if happily his liking be so, and that contentedly, he will consent, as gladly as my selfe: shall he therefore be my spokesman, and breake the matter first? then will she thinke he loueth not my loyaltie, or regardeth not my chastitie, for then would he not spare to speake, nor de∣spaire to spéede: is not his cause best heard that pleadeth himselfe being plaintife? and doth not he most preuayle that pitifully moueth the Iudge himselfe? yes trust me, that way is therefore the worst, and that inuention with∣out a good deuice: why? the assault is already giuen, and the breach is begonne, yet haue I not looked the enimie in the face, or know how I shall spéede: yes, I haue séene him that hurt me, and scared on the partie that wounded me, yet know I not whether he will bandée or yéeld: if he fight mine is the foile: if I bee ouercome, shall I turne home like a coward, or be driuen backe like a dastard? no trust me, yet will I rather choose a honourable death, than a reprochful life: rather a faire Hearce, thā a defiled body, and sooner a glorious graue, than a miserable estate: thou hast indéede begun blessedly, and thy inception not to be disliked, God graunt thou perseuere as happily, & the end not to be detested: but what did thy dying in hir hand be∣token, and thy fainting in such order presage? was it not a sure signe thou shouldest léese thy life for hir sake? and séeke hir Soule as Aeneas sought Dido in Hell: but she fled from him, and he neuer recouered hir sight againe: but if hir soule flie from me, and departe my sight, I will neuer ceasse but séeke hir, and neuer leaue, till I find hir: thou diuinest like a Doctour, God grant thy imaginatiō proue thée not a Sophister: thou standest héere vpon law points, and driuest doubts vnlooked for, leauing the principall to feede thy fancie: the more speedely thou speakest, the more hastelie thou shalt be answered: and the sooner thou doest solicite thy suite, the sooner shalt thou receiue iudgement. Well then Narbonus, this deuice shall bréede thy delight, and to put this in practise, wil yéeld thée thy contentation: Page  73 let then Paper bée thy messenger and declare thy minde, and Inke thy Secretary to deuise thy meaning: so mayst thou manifest the inward motions of thy minde, & make it knowen how dearely thou louest her, which to looke on thy selfe, thou canst not but blushe, and holde downe thy head at her wise answers: In these carefull cogitaci∣ons, and amidst these sundry inuentions, the day appea∣red in at the litle creuises, and the light brake in betwéen the Curtaines: hee therfore resolued him selfe to forsake his sluggish bed, and buckled on his Buskins, where no sooner ready, and all furnished in his apparrell, but he be∣gan to write, and so to make knowen his secretes: yet this deuice seemed doubtfull, and as hee imagined might bréed daunger, for that the conueiaunce of his letters could not bee without some suspicion, and the messenger as yet vn∣knowen: at the last, this fancy as hee imagined might bréede his felicity, and this deuice answere him as himself would desire, which was to requite their courtesies who before had feasted him, and to inuite them, by whom his Unckle was bidden, which was not so spéedily of his Unckle demaunded, as hee with hasty condiscending had quickly performed.

Now Gentlemen, you must imagine if Narbonus were pricked, Fidelia was also galled: if hee complayned, shée reioyced not: if hee languished, shee laughed not: if hee were sorowfull, shée was not merry: and if hee complay∣ned not without a cause, shee lamented not without occa∣sion: and if he diued in the depth of his desire, shée swam not in the sea of Security: and if his health were denied, her life was not prolonged: You shal therfore vnderstand that at the departure of Narbonus and his Unckle, the one in an extasie, the other amazed at the euent, the rest of the company brake, and ended that daies worke, which better pleased Fidelia, then if they should haue staied lon∣ger: the assembly cleane gone, and all departed, Fidelia entred her Chamber, as if shee should haue gone into her Graue: where béeing alone, and bereft of any company, Page  74 shee vttered these wordes.

O Fidelia, how froward is thy fate, and how vnfor∣tunate thy fall? how lucklesse thy lotte, and how immo∣dest thy maladye? howe miserable thy estate, and howe pittifull thy complayntes? though thou werte at a Feast, yet diddest thou fase: and in that there was plentye of Wyne, yet I feare mee thou haste dranke nought but thy destruction: Alas Narbonus, was thy hap so harde, and thy chaunce so contrarye, to catche heere a corasiue vncureable, and to finde in this place the fine of thy fe∣licitie: I praye it bee not so badde, and wishe earnestly it bee not woorse: but if it bee so, and no whit otherwise, who is to bee blamed, or who to bee reprooued? whose was the cause, or whose the consente? whose were the deedes, or whose the dooinges? whose demeanour, or who the occasion of so beeinge bestraught, but thy owne selfe Fidelia, and thy owne deuices? shall thy loue coste his lyfe, and thy beauty breede his bane? shall thy bra∣uerye cause his bannishmente, or thy eyes breede his death? shall thy graces encrease his grones, or thy coun∣tenaunce procure his pennaunce? no trust mee, if hee loued thee a little, thou shalte loue him as much: and if hee lyked thy face, thou shalte imbrace his fauour: doth not his courtesie, exceede thy curiositie, his behauiour excell thy handsomnesse? his deserts drowne thy desires? O yes, his talke hath taken mee tardye, and his sweete wordes, pierced my sowre lippes: happy art thou to gaine suche a fréende: but thrise happy to finde suche a Iewell, who is contente to leaue his life for thy loue, and to goe into Hell to gette thy fréendly fauour, to render the re∣maynder of his life, to procure thy felicitie: and shall hee not then bee requited for his courtesies, and repayde for his good desertes? Yes, my health shall holde him, and my ioy reléeue him: my felicity shal cause his happinesse, and my goodnesse requite his gratiousnesse: my life will I forgoe to pleasure his person, and my honesty of more value, then all the reste will I importe vnto him, rather Page  75 then bee depriued of his sight, or berefte of his company: doost thou not freese for feare? and arte thou not colde to to thinke on thy conceytes? nay, doost thou not rather burne in desire, and art as hot as a toste: Fie Fidelia, for∣beare these fonde imaginacions, and forget not thy wel∣fare to procure thy woe: but alas, how canst thou forget thy swéete freende, or put out of thy remembraunce, him whom aboue all other thou honourest: if thou wouldest, thou maist not, and were thy consent graunted, thou canst not: for if it were in thy nay, should he haue denyall? no trust mee, my truth shall bée manifested by my tryall, and my tryall shall not procure his trechery: but why did I holde him from falling, and tooke him vp from stumbling, when hee tolde mee my Fathers house, and heare hee had gotten his bane? Alas, because I loue him should I al∣wayes kisse him? or because hée is my freend, shoulde I nought but flatter him? I hated him not, in that I reproo∣ued him, nor disdayned him, because I consented not to to him? could I say lsse for my Fathers honesty, and vsed fewer wordes for my owne credite? either I must haue tyed vp my thoughts, or trussed vp my tongue: yet my wordes I confesse might haue beene more freend∣ly, and my sayinges more satiable: my words more plea∣sauntly pronounced, and my dooings more daintely deui∣sed: But what amendes shall I make? or what reward shall I render? what raunsome shall I paye? or how re∣munerate his demeanour? might my portion pay the per∣fection? or my meanes any waye mittigate his rigour? my desaster should be death, and my life not enioy my liberty, vnlesse to lincke with him in loyalty, and to yeeld him that patrimony, which al true Louers merite: whose lyberty is my lyfe, whose welfare my warrant, whose happinesse my gladnesse, whose ioye my desire.

In the middle of these her meditacions, and nowe in the verye bowelles of loue, shee was cyted to Sup∣per, but not made partaker to suche a Feaste as shée was at lately beefore: which courteous request, more Page  76 to auoyde the spite of suspition, than for any desire of deintie meates, she dayned not to perfourme his last de∣manding, or to giue consent to ye request: but she fed more vpon fancie, than glutted hir selfe with any cates there presente: more vpon daintie deuices, than any parcell of repast: for this meate forsooth was mawmish, & this me∣lancholie: this dish would driue hir to drincke, and this cause hir to drie: this was rhewmatike, & that would in∣crease fleame: this cholerike, and that heauy to disgest: hir mind was on hir maydenhead, and hir thoughts ranne on former preambulations: As for hir heart, that had Narbo∣nus, and as good will hee had to like it, as to leaue it: to weare it, as to want it: to enioy it, as to be without it: hir eyes tumbled and rolled now this way, then on that side: now on this dish, then on that deuice: now she marked the place where Narbonus sate, and then the spoone he eate withall: now the cup he drancke of, and then the trencher he was carued vpon: now she remembred his dancing, and then his dalying: now his parling, and last of all his departing: hir eyes ranne in euery place, and she eate as much as would suffice a Sparow: she thought that supper longest of any that euer she was at, when hir dinner was foure times so long. The Table therefore taken vp, and hir obediēce done to hir father, she departed to hir Cham∣ber, thinking to banish these toyes, lying on hir soft bed, and resting hir head on hir comfortable pillow, but no soo∣ner laid, but assailed in like maner as before: then séeing no sléepe would enter into hir eyes, and that perforce she must yeeld to hir fancie, she vttered these words folowing to hir selfe, in like maner as ensueth.

The toyle is set to take the Déere, the hooke to hang the Fish, the trappe to begile the Mouse, the limetwigge for the Bird, & the net for ye Foxe: and was not Narbonus thē a sufficiēt baite to take so simple a mayd as my selfe? how should I auoid it? or how should I not be taken, that haue already yéelded, and neuer striued to make my flight? & ha∣uing yéelded my selfe prisoner, & abādoned my body to the Page  77 enimies courtesie, no doubt but my life shall be redéemed without ransome, and frée libertie yéelded at my entrea∣ting, as if thy life were at his courtesie, and thou recey∣uest thy death without his loyaltie. But why denyedst thou him at the first motion, and didst not graunt when he offered thée so faire? to yéeld at the first sight, had bin the part of a light huswife, and yet in making deniall, I feare his life be denied him: where the Towne is yeelded at the first assault, there are but fainthearted Souldyours: and had Fidelia consented at the first demanding, he might haue iudged me common: that Colte that will take the bitte at the first manacing, is likely to proue but a iade: and the Tassell reclaimed at the first lure, will proue but a Haggard in the ende: and had Fidelia condiscended at the first request, he would surely imagined hir a Strum∣pet: after drouping cloudes, the Sunne breaketh out into a blaze: after my soure sauce, he should haue had swéete su∣ger: the frost lasteth but in the night, and in the day the thaw commeth: my heart was not so frosen, nor my mind so congealed, but had the Sunne of sufferance stayed a tide, or the heate of his desire bidden the brunt of his bar∣gaine, but it would melt like waxe, and thaw like Snow: the grasse must haue a night to grow, and I one day to loue: But as the ill fauoured Horse séemeth fattest in his maisters eye, so séeme I most faire that do best féede his fancie: and as the grounde sheweth rich in the maisters sight, when but barren in the eye of another man, so doth my face please his fauoure, although he dislike anothers feature: yes doubtlesse, my triall is too true, and my proofe too playne, but loyaltie is my life, and chastitie my choyce: if I leaue the one, I can not liue with the other. Lucretia mighte haue dissembled hir rauishmente, and so saued hir life: had she yéelded, she had not bin for∣ced, and had she not bin forced, she might haue condiscen∣ded, and in yéelding, procured the death of him that cau∣sed the losse of hir owne life: but as she yéelded to lust, so did she also yéelde to death: she dyed, why should I liue? Page  78 and had not she died, should not I therfore dye? yes surely, and dye I would, but for doing him seruice, whose health wil cause me to liue in happines, & whose death wil cause me to die in desperatenesse. Alas how I fade, how I fall, how I looke, how I lacke, how I loue, how I like, how I dying, faint for feare, & how I fainting, am readie to fall: to remēber his wanne face, with his pale lippes: his cold chéeks, with his staring eys: his dying head lolling down, & my hand held hard in his fingers, with my heart in his habitatiō, which I could willingly consented, should haue departed with his: yet durst I not bewray my thoughtes, yet durst I not crie, yet durst I not scritch, yet durst I not complaine outwardly, yet durst I lament inwardly: did I not quake, & did not my heart droupe? yes surely, I would not haue liued to his losse, nor die to his hinderance, I thinke he would neither request the one, nor desire the o∣ther: he fell like the blossome, & faded like the floure: he di∣ed like the Daisie, & fainted like as a babe sléepeth: he dyed like the cōdemned, that layeth his head on the blocke, and dieth before the blow come: but Narbonus dyed before he had his condemnation pronounced: he dyed betwéene thy armes, & in thy lappe: When ye Rose is blowē to the full, it falleth frō the stalke, but Narbonus died before he came to the ful perfection, and yéelded before his life was in dā∣ger: But reape vp thy remēbrance, & pull vp thy sprights, did not these hāds stay him falling? and these eyes behold him recouering? these eyes indéede, and these handes, but from such holdings God graunt I be deliuered, and from such sights defended. Could I blush to sée my owne heart bloud? or could I languish to sée my life linger for ye graue? could I wéepe to wāt the greatest welfare in this world? or could I lament to behold so pitiful a tragedie? In séeing thee despaire I saw my owne death, and in seeing thee breathlesse, I saw my owne bane: in seeing thee pine, I saw my greatest paine, and in seing thee go to the graue, I saw my selfe giuing vp the ghost. Could Phillis hang hir selfe, and couldest not thou kil thy selfe? could Andromeda Page  79 dreame so pitifully, and canst not thou bewaile thy fancie as lamentably? could Prolixena prolong hir life after the losse of hir louer, and canst thou draw forth thy dayes, thy desires being detained? could Bacchir bath hir selfe in the boule of hir bloud, and canst thou blesse thy selfe in the beatitude of thy bargaine? was Dido content to die the death for yeelding to the deapth of hir desires, and canst not thou be content to sacrifice thy soule for the satisfa∣ctiō of that swéete Saint? But how did he withdraw him∣selfe out of my danger, and how faded his face from my fancie? with heauie cheere▪ and with moorning melodie: with mestfull ioy, and with little iolitie: though he came in the common Cockes path, yet went he home by wee∣ping crosse: how did he looke when he badde me farewell? and what a countenance he did cast on me most sorowful? O those eyes, his eyes, Narbonus eyes, nay my eyes, my weeping eyes, the eyes of Fidelia, were they not mine? yet he gaue them me, but where then are they? my hearte harboureth them, & I beare them in my brest. But where art thou now Narbonus? and in what place resteth thy be∣straughted life? if safe, I not sad: if merie, I glad: if helthy, thē am I hole: if sicke, I sorie: but my diuining may bréede my decay, & my bewailing procre my woe: for though he fainted, did he fall for me? and though he lāguished, did he lament for me? though he soothed me sweetely, he may vse me as sourely: and though he praysed me passingly, yet may he hate me hartely: though he looked earnestly, yet may he loue me slenderly, for some sullen sicknes was the cause of his sounding, & some old foistring disease did be∣gin againe to renew his wonted course: he faynted for feare, rather thā feared my fauour: he yt was before sicke, how could he be then sound? and he that was before infec∣ted, how could he heere be healed? why do I not then re∣iect him, and remoue him out of my mind? his fancie shall not breede my feare, nor his fauour begile my feature: I wil roote out his remēbrance, & burne ye bil wherewith I bid ye bargaine: his heart shal be out of my habitatiō, & my Page  80 liberty not detained with his loue, let him looke some o∣ther louer, and finde some fitter fréend: prooue some other Préest, and parley with some other Prelate: trye some other more trusty, and loue some other more loyall: know some other more kinde, and serue some other more faith∣full: the surest will proue but sowre, and the swéetest but sawce: thou hast deuined right Fidelia, and spoken but the very truth: bid therfore thy carefull bed adue, and write to him of his wanton wiles, in séekinge to mollifie so mo∣dest a mayden as my selfe, and to mingle such mischéefe to so vnfained a fréend as Fidelia: then shée lefte her care∣full couch, and gan to write as foloweth.

ANd couldest thou for my so great courtesie, requite mée with a congratulatiō of periury: although I loked on thée, yet lusted I not after thee: and though I daunced with thee, yet was I not bereft of my honesty: thou hast wooed in Wittenberge some wantons, wedded to thy wiles, and thou lookest here in Vienna to lure mee to thy luste: but alas, thou castest thy baites in a dry Ditch, and if any bite, they will prooue but Frogges: Is this one of thy Schoole trickes? and this thy lesson, learned so earnestly to carrye two heades in one hoode, and two faces in one bodye? two tongues in one mouth, and two hartes in so little a lumpe of fleshe? No no, goe fishe amongst foolish Fryers, and singe thy Sirens songes amidst the fellowship of Flora: I would thou knewest, Diana is my Mistresse, and for such cutters as thy self, they come not in our crue: I am one of those which haue vowed vestality, as for thy lyking, thou maist séeke the layety of Layis: goe finde out some flirt to bestow thy frumpes on, & make loue to some Lozell like to thy self. O how thou wouldest die (forsooth) and leade Apes in Hell: thou diddest fainte, because I lowred: and thou wouldst sell thy soule, because I would not make sale of my honesty: did I hold thee by the hand when thou dyinge saydst: and if no? and so diddest fall fainting. But out (alas) Fidelia.

And with those wordes, the teares flowed downe her Page  81 face, and her head ran round shée knew not how, her sen∣ces were drowned with dispaire, and her soule sanke soft∣ly to the ground: for shee slept seeely for a saso, and dreamed not of any her desires: who then had beheld her, would haue thought her life had been led to Limbo Lake, & her soule gone to wander amongst the infernal ghostes: But when she returned to her former imaginacions, and had fully possessed the freedome of her selfe, maruallige what shee had doone, and into what place shée had eene transported, began to gaze on the walles, and to stare on euery place: then shee beheld her bed, and mused whither it were her owne or not: then erecting her body vpon hir fallen féete, and turninge to her window, looked on other thinges: then seeing her glasse, looked into it, wher per∣ceiuinge her watry eyes, and her bubbles héekes, her haire about hr face, and her head so out of order, was ra∣uished to know the cause, and amazed at thi sight: the leaning on the side of her window, and turning her selfe to the other part, shee sawe Paper scribled on, and Inke standing by it, wherat catching hastily, shee red the effect of the prescript: where seeing her owne folly, and sorow∣full for that was done: shée began againe so lamentably to lamente, and so bitterly to wéepe, as though her soule should no longer haue liued in this painefull pilgrimage, and as if she would at that instant forced her selfe to die: then taking the paper written on, shee rent euery peece, and euery parcell: euery worde, and euery letter, which her imaginacion did giue her to bewray any thing, or her fancy thought would bee any way perceiued: and in this outragious rigour, shee spake these wordes.

Had this writing euer béene seene of any other but my selfe, or beene red of any but mée, vnfortunate wretch, the hand that wrote it should haue been carued with as many cuttes, as there were letters writtē: the mouth that spake them, should so haue beene rente, as neuer to haue spoken any more: as for the head that inuented it, should neuer made mee such inuentions.

Page  82O Fidelia, whither were thy wits wandred? and into what place thy right sences seduced? to deuise so madde a mistery, and to inuente so diuelishe a deuice? to preache so shamelesse a Sermon, and to sound such Hellish harmony to that sweet Saint, whose life is my lyuinge, and with∣out whom my carefull carkas shall prooue my pe••ry, in yeelding my soule into the body of him, whom no one thing in this worlde is to mee so deare? Therfore, come happe, come eauinesse: come sorowing: come olacinge: come sorow: come felicity, come aduersity: come Hagge, come Hell: come death, come Diuell: I will write to him my wéeping will, and send the effect of my meaning: let him take mée, or let him turne mee away: let him loue mee, or let him hate mée: let him accept mée, or let him forsake mee: the worst that can come is but death, and I looke for no lesse, neither doo I deserue more. What care I if death ende my dayes, and that my life bee now at the last cast, so I may dye to serue him, whom to enioye, I would not feare to fetch the Gouldē Apples from the Dragon, or to passe amidst the gulfe of Caribdes: then shée tooke other Paper, and began to write as followeth.

WHen as Narbonus thy fréendly face, and louinge countenance presented the patterne of the perfectest picture y Nature nourisheth, or at the least ye only forme that Fidelia honoureth: I incensed with the light: then pawsing a while, and reading it ouer againe, shée blotted it out and began a new.

Of all the humayne creatures that God wrought, and of all the workes that hee made, man hee framed after the forme of his owne Image, and the feature of his owne face: gaue to him a soule, to liue againe after this tere∣striall trauaile: and besides, lente him a thing in nature, which excéedeth all others in this world: which is the in∣ward influence that procedes from the very harte: then stayed shee there, and readinge what shee had written, dashed it out againe, and wrote afterwards as followeth.

Page  83THe pleasaunt Springe procureth the delight of euery Beast of the Féeld, and of euery foule of the ayre and man is renewed, as it were, and againe formed: after the colde winters blaste, and frozen fieldes: when the fine sweete flowers doo beautifie the Forrests, and decke the lawndes, euery beast reioyseth: the flickeringe birdes make their musicall melody: and man is recreated, as it were, and beginneth againe as at the first: each Bea•• chooseth his best beloued, eache Birde his match: but the nature of man that way is framed contrary for that all: Then perusing what she had written, she blotted it cleane out.

And standinge amazed, to thinke that shee had thrise written, and neither had pleased her, she began to renew her sorrowes a fresh, beeinge vncertaine what to d•• for one way shee doubted how they would bee taken: and a other thinge troubled her, which was the secure deliuery of them: in the end, resolued her selfe to let them alone for that time, & to bee better aduised before shée wrote: which imagination tooke so good effecte, as therupon shée went to dinner better contented, then when shee arose in th morning.

As for Narbonus, hée deuised first one thinge, and then another: first some yll deuice, and then a worse: which framed so yll, and prooued so contrary, as hée looked as yll as at the first, and rather worse then likely to amende: which his Unckle perceiued at all times so yll disposed, and to haue so litle appetite to his meate, spake thus vnto him.

Nephew, the Pot goeth so long to the water, til it comes broken home, the Cat playeth so long with the Mowse, that at length shee eateth her: the Frogge leapeth so often vp the banke, that the Kite catcheth her: the Fly buzzeth so long about the Candle, that shee is brent to asshes: doth not the Sun as well thaw the snow, as dry the dyrt? doth not ye fire as wel melt the wax, as harden the sappy wood? I feare mee thou wilt dally so long with the fire, as yu wilt Page  84 be burnt with the flame: the dawning of the day breaketh out softly, encreasing till the cleere light be discerned, but when the Sunne shineth out, what can be hidden from the sight thereof? thy disease groweth by degrées, and en∣creaseth like the waxing of the Moone, for first it troubled thée alittle, but nw it restreyneth thee of thy meate, whereby thou shouldest liue, and prolong thy life. Can the Horsse liue without prouender? or the Lamb without the wate of hir damme? the child without the brest of the Nursse? or a man without his naturall foode? canst thou liue, and lacke the maintenance of thy life? thy dayes must perforce be shortned, and thy winde wast away like the water bubbles: and thy life lost, how shall mine bée manleihed? if thu enioy not thy desire, why should I en∣ioy my health? therfore Narbonus, as dutie bindeth thée, and as I thinke entirelie thou doest loue me, put away this pensuenesse, and driue away these dumpes: flie from these fancies which will shorten thy life like a shadow, and consume thée, like as the Caterpiller deuoureth the blooming blossom: if there be any thing, whatsoeuer, spare for no speaking, and thou shalt not misse for obteyning: make manifest thy miserie, and then if I procure thée not a plaister, let me not beare the name of thy faithfull Unckle, that will not séeke to salue thy disease.

These swéete wordes made so satiable a sound in the eares of Narbonus, as he had almost bewrayed the wéerie wandring of his wauering witte, but yet stayd his toung to some more temperate time, and to a season more fitte the grafting of his words, he thus replyed.

Deere Unckle, can the Infante goe so soone as hée is borne? or will the Trée sproute againe so soone as the olde leaues are fallen? when the Tyde hath flowed to the full, must it not haue a time to ebbe againe? and when the Moone is waxen to the full, must she not haue hir season to waine agayne? can my disease be dried vp in one day? or can I be cured with one pleasante conceyte? as i en∣creased, so must it decrease: as it grew, so must it fade: as Page  85 it came, so must it goe away againe: my gréefe beganne with groanes, but I hope it will ende with gladnesse: doth not the colde encrease, as Sommer weareth away? and as Winter decreaseth, do not so the sprigges sproute? doth not the sillie Shéepe quiuer and quake, depriued of his fléece? but once growen, he dreadeth not the weather as before? the bouncing Bucke depriued of his goodlie hornes, kéepeth the lawnes and groaues, which once growen againe, he sheweth himselfe as before. So must Narbonus comforte himselfe with his close Chamber, and vse his consolation in his quiet Cabin, till his ma∣ladie bée amended, and his conceytes cured. But Unckle, to driue away all doubts from your desires, and all suspi∣tion from your presumption, I neyther am infected with frensie, nor madde aboue measure: but my feuer is faint∣nesse, and my pensiuenesse melancholinesse: no other disease, nor any other deuice, no other sicknesse, nor a∣nie other sainctlinesse: no other infection, nor any o∣ther consumption: And séeing you haue so courteouslie offered, I will as shameleslie demaunde: which is, that I may enioy the companie of some pleasant disposed companyons, and the sight of some honest merrie mée∣tings: and in that you were so friendly inuited, I be∣séech you as curteouslie to entertayne, if it shall please you that comfortable companye where you were so friendlye feasted, and so bountifully entertained, for that they are good and honest, courteous without curio∣sitie, and pleasant without partialitie.

To the whiche request, for that it séemed neyther vnreasonable, nor very vnprofitable, he willingly con∣discended, and with spéede made repaire to enuite his former banquetters, who as curteouslie consented, as he friendly entreated.

Nowe let those that haue bin bitte with the Bolt of Cupid, and tasted the conceytes of loue, iustifie their iudgementes, whether these copartners fellow louers were incensed with their enflamed fancies, or bereaued Page  86 of their right wittes, or drawne with the desire of mutu∣all confederacie, or to make manifest the meaning of the mind, and the other to take delight in the lippes of hir lo∣uer. Fidelia for hir parte spared not to bounce it in the brauest manner she could, nor looked that any one thing should be contrarie hir calling: no wrinckle awrie on hir kirtle, no spotte stayned on hir coate: euerie finger shée thought was fiftéene, and euerie toe twentie: hir glasse was oftner gazed in that morning, then looked on halfe a yeare before: hir comely head decked with fine flowers, and hir gloues perfumed with swéet waters: As for those things which were néerer hir body, I trust lacked neither Muske, nor wanted Ciuet, nor any swéete smelles to de∣light hir dearling, and to féede his fancie: As for other deinties fitte for such a banquet, and other delightes per∣teyning to a louely feast, shee conueyed in hir bosome a Casket full of kindnesse, the Till filled with temperance, and the sides paynted with securitie: the bottome full of embracings, and both endes full of honest enticings: the hinges hanged with harmonie, and about that place de∣lighted with melodie: within the locke stoode loyaltie, and hard by chastitie hande in hande: on the hookes happi∣nesse, and the inner sides lined with libertie: on the toppe was trust, who helde truth by the toe: on the féete was fancie, looking in the face of fidelitie: vnderneath was Venus sitting in the lappe of poultfooted Vulcane, and not farre from thence was Diana dancing with hir naked Nimphes: and a little from them were placed Faith, Hope, and Charitie: Faith was paynted with a smiling countenance, and friendly fauour, looking so feruentlye vpon Hope, and so sweetelie, as though ye blowing breath had proceeded foorth of hir mouth, giuing the one hand to Hope, and with the other hand she beckned that Charitie should come to hir: Hope held a Hauke vpon hir fist, which séemed as if it had bin flying away, and with the other hand she caught it againe: from one eye ranne downe the trickling teares, and the other looked liuely, and hir coun∣tenance Page  87 as though she had laughed: Charitie looked full in both their faces, and in one hande she helde a Doue and a Dogge, the whiche she presented to Faith as hir fée, and in the other hande shee helde a Sword and a gol∣den Apple, the which she gaue to Hope: Hard by these was Enuie, with a knife in the one hand, and a rodde in the other: then next to him was placed Disdeyne, who stoode vomiting and slaering out of his mouth: then was there Dispaire, who fared as if he had bin running a∣mongst the Nimphes naked: and Death folowing him with a great many dartes, and one of them he threwe, which did sticke in the buttock of Dispaire: This was hir Casket of conceytes, and this she caried to proue which of them woulde represente hir purpose, as for Rings and Bracelets, Iewels, and Cheynes, Tablets & such like, I trust she rifled hir cofers, & left none of ye best behind hir.

And if Fidelia were so ••ne in hir fancies, Narbonus was as trimme in his trumperies, and by that time hée was throughly furnished of his attire, and fitted of his ne∣cessaries, the long desired guestes approched: who were not so soone come as welcome, and farre better welcome was Fidelia, than eyther hir Father, or any other friend. Narbonus curteously saluted them all, enterteyning them with so good grace, as shewed him to be no Nouice that way, or needing any tutor to teach him trickes: he gaue to the Father of his Sainct great thankes for their late receyued gratulations: then saluted he the Gentlewomen orderly, so came he to Fidelia, and kissing his hand, layd it on the faire fist of Fidelia, and then kissed hir hand: as for his eyes, he layde them vnder the eye liddes of hirs, and gaue hir this salutation.

Mistresse Fidelia, mighty Princes and great Monar∣ches are of duetie bound, and in conscience ought doe no lesse then yéelde thankes to God for their dignities, and praise him for their receiued ritches: but much more I, for inioying this benifite, and be holdinge this body, your only swéete selfe: to the which all earthly things are in Page  88 respect but lothsome, but I prefer it before my owne life, but for suspicion, hee neither durst stay to speake any fur∣ther, nor abide to heare the reply of her answere.

Henricus shortly after, placed this courteous crue in such order as hee iudged best, and allotted euery one their places, according to their callinge.

Narbonus was content for that time to beare the office of Gentleman Sewer, and I thinke could haue béen con∣tented to haue held a Candle at the trencher of the Sainct hee serued: but so soone as the first course was in, hee tooke his place appointed by the Maister of the Feaste, where hee fed on a daintie dish, that he would rather haue bestowed in an other place then there: if shée looked meri∣ly, then did hée laugh: if shée lowred, hee frowned: if shée scowled, hee was coy: if shée were pleasant, then was hee merry: hee fed neither on spoone meate, nor boyled dish: neither on baked, nor rosted, neither the Partridge, nor the Plouer: neither Crane, nor Quaile: neither Heath∣cocke, nor Mallarde: shée looked on her lust, and hée beheld his life, for her lust was his loue, and his loue her life: the other spent the dinner time with eating and drinking but they with lookinge and lyking: But when the feaste was finished, and the clothes taken from the Table, after duety done, and courtesie yéelded, they arose to passe the rest of the day in pleasant pastimes, in dauncings and dal∣lyinges, euery one was busied with talkinge, or commu∣nicating of some matter, and Narbonus was talking with one of the Gentlewomen about common matters, and of small importaunce, where after a small season and a ltile time spent, hee espyed Fidelia without any to kéepe her company, and leaninge out at a window: wherupon hée left off with aduantage, and departed where he beganne, then taking Fidelia by the hande as she stoode leaning, he spake as foloweth.

Mistresse Fidelia, to stand vpon tackes of tattling, and tearmes of long discourses, were but the prolonging of a painefull pilgrimage, and the spending of time without Page  89 profite, now so good an occasion is offered, and that this place will permitte vs a little to speake, and yet the Har∣binger cries hast, hast, and the messenger biddes post post: I could aleadge many circumstances, and make manye protestations, vse many faire flatterings, and giue many gléeking gloses, much curtesie, and more curiositie in the working of my words, and the placing of my parleance: know you therefore that the heauenly vertues, with the which God hath adorned you, & nature hath decked you, haue at the first view of your beautifull personage, and the first sight of your faire fauoure, so rauished my minde, & stolne my heart, as I who before was neuer subiect to any such suggestion, nor neuer assayled with any suche maladie, was so entangled with the heauenly hue of your bright burning beautie, and so rapt with the superexcel∣lencie of your swéete selfe, as come all the torture, and all the tormentes that euer were deuised by any humayne motion, or inuented by any notorious Tirant, I will die the secret seruant of faithfull Fidelia, and awaite on your person so long as I liue: will you? will you? I will eyther loue you liuing, or follow you dead: pleaseth you therefore to retaine so simple a seruant as my selfe, and to com∣maund me your slaue, I shal be bound to you in body, and honour you with my heart: And for my loialtie, if it be not comparable to any that euer liued, and my loue as much as any that euer breathed, I pray héere from the bowels of my soule, and from the inner part of my heart, God the Iudge of all secretes, & the acknowledger of all thoughts, to poure his plagues as thicke as Hayle, and his punish∣ments as plentifully as rayne, and after the leauing of this life, all the Hagges in Hell, and al the Féends where∣soeuer, with Fire to torment me, and with their Forkes always to pursue my sinfull soule. You iudged, I am sure, my inward griefe by my outward sorow, when I was at your Fathers house, and in the deapth of my dauncing, and had I then ended my dayes, and lost my life, I should haue thought my happe comparable to any, and inferiour Page  90 to none, wher now if I possesse not my desires, nor obteine my felicitie, my life wil be more lothsome, & my death not so acceptable: stand not therfore vpō delayes, neyther vse any lingering excuses: pronounce eyther my happie feli∣citie, or death my earthly destinie, which if you giue me, I shall as willingly. I cā not speake more before you reply.

Sir Narbonus answered Fidelia: your wordes are pre∣cise, and very prestrict to answere your demaunds at the full, and to reply in such order as you will me, I stand a∣mazed what to do, and yet fully you must be reanswered: you prefer my personage (you say) before al other earthly creatures, and in doing so much, if you perfourme what you say, you do but your dutie, and requite but my curte∣sie. You loue me so well as euer wight was beloued, and honour me as the habitation of your owne soule: I will not say I loue you better, nor that I honour you more, which if you do not in euery respect perfourme, and to the vttermost of your power seeke to mainteyne, you wish to be punished with plagues, and the Hagges of Hel to haunt you, God guide you from them heereafter, but whilest you are héere, I hope to defend you. You are content to sacri∣fice your soule for my sake, and to haue your body suffer the torments of death in my behalfe: the common saying is: after you is maners: but I will be first in this respect, then vse your owne as you list. My Fathers house you say was a signe sure ynough, and that I saw your loue sufficiently well: O Narbonus, hadst thou then dyed, or there lefte thy life, thy Soule should not haue wandred without the felowship of faithfull Fidelia, nor gone into the graue, without the company of me thy most assured till death. Thou willest me not to driue off with delay, for that tomorrow bréedeth sorow: know thou therefore Narbonus, that Fidelia is vowed thy faithfull féere, and thou the only Saint that I will serue, and the barking of fearefull Cerberus in Hell, or the gaping of that Dragon of Hesperia, shall neuer cause me forsake thée, or euer force me flie from thée: the which to confirme somewhat more Page  91 surely, and to bind as we are willed with the bonds of a∣mitie, take héere my hand, otherwise my heart shall seale me a spéedie pasport: therefore giue me quickly my death, or yeeld me the thing, without the which, I will neuer af∣ter this day behold the sunne, or looke vp to Heauē, which is thy swéete selfe, and no other thing.

Narbonus you imagin, or else do I quickly gaue hir his hand, and would I thinke haue died in hir embracings, had not the company bin there.

O faithfull Fidelia, the fréendlyest that euer breathed, and the swéetest that euer liued, how am I rapt that earst was bestraughted? and how reuiued, that but now was at deathes dore? am I in Heauen, or do I holde my auntient habitation? thy life my ioy, and I will not liue, but to die with thée, nor die, but to do thée seruice.

But Narbonus, as I haue yéelded thée my life, & as thou louest me, vse secrecie, and hold thy hande on thy mouth, til such time as our ioyes may be obteined at ye full, & our mariage rites celebrated to the depth of our desires.

The rest of the cōpany had spent this time in pleasant talke, & now were set roūd togither, where they al cōdis∣cended that euery mā shuld tell a pleasant tale: to ye which Narbonus was enuited, and Fidelia willed to make vp the messe, who came as ioyfully as they were requested ear∣nestly, & it was alotted a Gentleman of ye company should begin, & the other cōsequently to follow, who began thus.

THere dwelt in Venice a Merchant,* whose credite caried some port, and his word was worth much. This yong youth longed belike to be in loue: for in euery corner hée was wooinge, séeking alwayes some one honest woman, and sometimes amōgst the maidens of Flora: he was mo∣ued too much with diuers honest mens daughters of great calling, & good behauior, but none liked him, or pleased his fancie, but one of his owne choosing, and not of any o∣thers. Thus fed he his fancie, now with this Dame, then with that Damsell: nowe louinge, then lustinge: Page  92 now suing, then seruing. After this lawlesse life ledde by the space of certaine moneths, and that he waxed wéerie of this diet, he fell in loue with a manerly mayden, as he thoughte, but in déede such a one as was hired for euery mans siluer, and set to sale at a certaine price, and long it was ere he could get graunt of hir consent, or winne hir to his Wife, yet another man might haue borowed hir good cheape, or at the least of an easie price: she so flattered him to the will of his fancie, and so bragged alwayes of hir honestie, which he thought to be most true, and that he had found some singuler péece: and to make him beléeue the better of hir honestie, and to thinke that she could not be but good, she would hit him in the teeth with some one man of his profession, or some woman so honest as hir selfe, that had bin plagued for their wickednes, and puni∣shed for their sinnes. My maister Merchant thought hir pennie good Siluer, and that there was no better hay in Denshire, determined therefore to abide the brunt of this bargaine, and to dispatch his mariage: which ended, and that he had certaine dayes vsed hir companie, he suspe∣cted that which was so indéede, and beléeued that whiche was so true as his Créede, for he perceiued hir trickes and hir toyes: hir becks and hir glauncings: hir paynting, and hir paltring: and though it be a matter méerely mistru∣sted in Italy, to conference and familiaritie of a mans Wife, yet vsed she hir former fashions that way, and de∣nied not to talke with any: but she had a wrong Sow by the tayle, for that he was acquainted with these caruers before: he therefore bewayled his vnfortunate wedding, and wished it had neuer bin done: but séeing no remedie, & that necessitie is lawlesse, he determined to put away his Wife, or else to put away himselfe: then to put hir away, or to cast hir off, the discredite would be as much to him, as now the ill name was to hir: and to retaine hir, and not to forsake hir, euery man would laugh him to scorne, and point at him in the stréetes: he deuised therefore this pra∣ctise, and put it straight in proofe, his Lands he was con∣tent Page  93 to leaue with his Wife, bycause they were not easie to be caried, and to sel them, would bréede great suspition, and to morgage them, or borrow money on them, his re∣trne was vncertaine: therfore so hee would not deale, but tooke vp of his creditours to the value of thrée hun∣dreth Duckets, or neare that quantity, thinkinge to sée some chaunge before the consuming of so much coyne: as for his wife hee made her priuie to none of his dealinges but pretēded a voiage into the Countrey, where he would shortly returne, and foure dayes should bee the longest he would stay: But the olde Bée his wiues Mother, doubted of his driftes and perceiued his shiftes: the night before hee should goe, hée pounced his Portmantue with Porti∣gues, and stuffed it with Duckets, laying it in his Cham∣ber, as if there had béen no such matter: his lawles Mo∣ther, or Mother in law, when hee was soundly sléepinge, (not without the cōsent of his Wife) conueyed closely out of his Chamber his packet, and brought it into her owne, where shée oppened it, and found that shee suspected: shee therfore tooke out all the Portigues, and plucked out all the Duckets, except a iust hundred, which shée lefte to sus∣taine his wante, and conuayed therin by weight so many Counters, and in the same place where out shee had the money, and afterward laide it where hee found it, as if no man had seene it: in the morninge hee rose early, and tooke leaue of his now wife, promising to returne shortly, and in déede hée returned sooner then hee was minded at his goinge. Then did hee secretly conuey himselfe into a Shippe, ready to sayle into Spayne, who staied but his com∣ming, and then hoysed sayles: no sooner on ship bourd, but they wayed their Anckors, and sayled so prosperously, that within a shorte time they ariued in Spayne, at the appoyn∣ted place of landing: my young Maister had some money lose in his pocket to pay his Boate hire, and to serue cer∣taine dayes after: comming to his Inne, hée deliuered his cariage to his Hoste, desiring him to bée carefull of it, for oppening it (a litle) shewed, saying there are thus many Page  94 Duckets, and so many Portigues: and Fortune was so fréendly, and his happe so good, as the money lay right a∣gainst the place hee opened, and his Hoste saw nothinge but Golde: then his Host tooke it in his handes, & iudged there was so much by the waight therof: promised ther∣fore warrantise for the safety therof, and that hée would answers what ere was therin: My young Maister went into the Towne as well to sée, as to be seene, making him selfe so merry as he might, and delighted him selfe so well as hee could: the charges for his dyet was meruailous great, and his expences more then he thought they would bee. One day askinge for his Casket, to reache out some money, which deliuered him, hée tooke out aboue twenty Duckets, openinge but a little hole to put in his hande, and that right against the place where they lay: for had he put his hand on the right side, he had pulled out Counters: and had hee put his hand on the lefte, hee had raught out counterfeytes: but he closed it vp in the sight of his Host, and his Hostes was there present, rendring it to bée kept againe, which was layde where as before: the good man of the house retayned a seruant, to do such his businesses as hee appointed him, who espying his pray, and thinking the money had beene much, pretended a voyage into Por∣tugall, to see his olde fréendes, and to speake with his fa∣ther before hee dyed, who as hee sayd was very olde, and that longe sithens hee had not seene him: his Maister gaue consent, and speedily procured him a Pasporte, who no sooner had it, but the day following departed, and toke the Budget with him: This trauayling Traitour, and maister filcher, thrée daies on his iourney, and far ynough from their getting, this Casket was missinge, and euery corner sought, & euery rush remooued that was suspected, or where they thought it might bee hidden: but all to late, the money was gone, and the man was away: the good man was sorowfull beyond measure, and knew not what to doo: the day followinge, and dinner ended, his Hoste questioned with him of this thing: then demaunded he of Page  95 some other quite contrary, and amongst other matters, of his Casket, and the somme of money therin, who answe∣red there were thrée hundred Duckets, where out he had taken twenty: well Sir, sayd his Hoste, more or lesse, whatsoeuer there was it is iust all gone, not so much as one péece lefte: wherat my younge Maister halfe dead to heare these newes, and sorowful beyond measure, tolde his Hoste that hée should answere him so much, or else the Law should yeeld him nothing: his Host feareful to haue this trechery knowen, for that the discredite would be his, would gladly agréed to any reasonable matter, and to some agréement though with great losse: intreated therfore his guest to take parte of the money, for the principall pari∣mony: the other liuyinge the waight of the matter, and foreseeinge how troublesome it would fall out, consented his Hoste to giue him one hundred Duckets, and he to dis∣charge all his debts, and to make cleare with the house: my younge Maister by that time his dyet was payed for, and the house quite discharged, had left but fifty Duckets, much lesse as hee imagined then hee brought foorth, but the more wronge had my Hoste, and yet the greater his gréefe: This slaue, seruaunt to his Host, & well moneyed as he imagined, arriued in Italy & landed at Venice, where when hée opened, and found but Counters, he was almost mad, and more then halfe foolish, for that hee had forsaken his owne Countrey, and lefte his good Maister vnac∣quainted there, and not knowing how to get into seruice: but forcinge him selfe to doo that hee neuer thought, and puttinge that in practise hee neuer looked for, offe∣red his seruice to manye, and diuerse motions were made, but none accepted, nor no entertaynment could bee had: passinge alonge the Streates, and runninge thus vp and downe, hee happened on the house of Ma∣dona Maria, the good wife of my younge Maister: shee because hee was a straunger thinkinge hee should some way delight her, entertayned him, and receiued him into seruice, where hee bestowed his stollen Budget Page  96 in his Chamber, the whiche he thought would neuer bée séene of the right owner, nor marked of any. The credi∣tours of whome this money was borowed, and where hée receyued his Crownes, came at the appoynted daye, or shortly after: Mistresse Maria with that summe hir mother had taken from hir husband, and with some part of the re∣uenues of his Lands, paid the debt, and receiued a bill of discharge. Sir Marcellus del Hespado, my yong maister, his Crownes welnye consumed, and his pursse very thin, saw no other shift, nor could deuise any other meanes, but to repaire home, and that with spéede: taking therefore Shippe with a Merchant of Venice that was trauelling homeward, making a vertue of necessitie, questioned by the way of diuers matters, and en•••red of the estate of Venice, then he asked him of such a stréete, and for a Gētle∣woman dwelling there, named Maria: the other answered, he knew the Stréete very well, as for the Gentlewoman, he hard that good report, and that it was most true that she was counted a light woman, and one of a very yll name: but now so loathing that whiche was reported she loued, and hating that which it was sayd she embraced, there is no one in the Towne better disposed, nor any that doth liue in better or more honest order: and you shall vnder∣stand, that being beautifull, and also very faire, yet hir cō∣ditions at that time not honest by reporte, nor so good as they might haue bin. One Marcellus a yong Merchant of good calling, and his credit inferiour to few of his yeares, first liked hir, and after maried hir: when afterward sus∣pecting that which was sometimes true, and imagining that it could be no other, departed from hir almost a yeare since, his departure vnknowen to any, from which time, hir life hath bin so honest, and hir doings so well liked of, as she is beloued of many, and lamented of all that knowe hir: and were hir life knowen to hir Husband, and hir do∣ings manifested to him by anye meanes, he woulde post home with spéede, and hast to haue hir honest companie.

Marcellus at these words his eares so glowed, and he Page  97 was so rauished with ioy, as hée thought long till hée came on shoare, and desired to know the certainty of this mat∣ter: once safely landed, and gotten into the Towne, to bée more certaine of that hée had heard, and in no wise to bee beguiled, went to an vnknowen place in the Towne, and where hee was vnacquainted: The next day disguised him selfe, and wore a heard borowed in such order, as hee was not suspected of any, nor beknowen to his wife: go∣inge to the house of Maria, alwayes in the eueninges, and when it was darke, who first enquired for her, and soone obtayned to speake with her: then makinge loue to her, brake the effect of his whole minde, and plyed the matter very harde, but no graunt of good will could bee gotten, nor any fauour showen: but answered hee would not bée, nor bee shifted of by any meanes, except hee obtained his desires, and gained that, for the which he made such suite: Shee séeinge hee would in no reasonable matter bee per∣swaded, nor answered with reason, disdained to speake with him, and forbad him her house, except his pretence were lesse preiudiciall to her purpose, and more benificial for her honesty: but shee not knowing how to shifte him off, nor what way to leese his company, practised that her Mayde should lye with him and vse him knauishly: at his next comming, hee found her more tractable then before, and seemed to condiscend vpon certayne condicions, and so consented hee should come that night, appointinge him ye time hée should repaire: who presently departed, thin∣kinge all had beene but lyes reported to him: hee therfore procured two knaues hired of purpose, and such as were contented to doo any thing for money, thinkinge now to take a sufficient reuenge, and by this deuice, to put her away. At the hour appointed, and within the time she had limitted, my yonge Maister came marching to the house, and these Ruffians with him, who entred the house so cunningly, and conueyed them selues so closely, as they were not perceiued of any, nor knowen that they were within the doores: Maria welcomed this forlorne guest, Page  98 and brought him to his Chamber, where shée willed him to vnray his Robes, and goe into his bed, which done shee promised to come quickly to him, but the Candle must be out whilest shee made her vnready: meane while the Mayde shifte into the Chamber, and went into the bed to him: her Mistresse conueyed her selfe into her owne Chamber, and lefte her mayde in bed with her Maister: he dallyed and imbraced her a certaine space, but yet could not obtaine the thinge hee proffered so faire for, but was as much satisfied when hée layde him downe, as when hée arose: they had not beene laide the space of an houre, or little more, but these hirelings had lighted their Torches and found the way vp, came into the Chamber, and so to the side of the bed: then Marcellus leaped out of the bed, and pulled on his beard: now Minion saide hee, I per∣ceiue that to bée, and with that looking full in her face, and seeing her not to bee his wife, helde downe his head, and had not a worde to say.

Then the Mayden looked so pittifully, and began to wéepe, affirminge that what shee had doone, was to saue her Mistresse honesty: I am neuer the more dishonested for lying with you, neither would haue beene had you con∣tinued till morninge: you may vse mee at your pleasure, and deale with mee as you liste: but before you get my mayden head, or spoile mee of my virginity, you shall depriue mee of my life, or thrust your Sworde thorow mee.

Marcellus gaue these Torche bearers their hire, and rewarded them with a little péece of money, & made them swere, neuer to vtter this to any, nor euer to speake more or lesse of it.

They departed, hée shut the doores after them, and cer∣tified the Mayde that hee was her Maister: and for that her honesty, and because shee loued her Mistresse so well, hee rewarded her so bountifully, and gaue her so liberal∣ly, as she repented not the bargaine, nor was sory for that was past.

Page  99Then hée willed her to take the Candle, and to goe to∣wardes her Mistresse Chamber doore, where shee knocked softly, and made but smal noyse, yet awaked her Mistresse who lay for that purpose: shee arisinge, and openinge the doore, espyinge him comminge in, whom as shee thought would haue lyen with her: began to cry out, and to rayle on her Maide: but hee desired her to be content, & shewed her that hee was Marcellus, then hee craued forgiuenesse of her, & desiring her to forget what was past, protestinge euer after so to content her, and to blot out this his foolish deuices, as shee should not dislike of his loyalte, nor blame his ingratitude.

Shee then imbraced him, & willingly consented to agrée to what he would haue her: all that night he neuer made any motion to her of his borowed money, neither tolde shée him how it was discharged: her man shée had sent in∣to the Countrey not far off, the day before, who made hast, and posted so quickly, that hee came not home that night, nor the next day till towardes the eueninge: in the mor∣ning Marcellus rose and looked about his businesse, sear∣ched vp and downe the house to sée how orderly all things were vsed, and how his wife had handled the matter, but hee found euery thinge so well, and no one thinge other∣wise then it ought, as hee reioyced that hee was come home, and was sorowfull that hee stayed so longe away: goinge from one place to another, and from chamber to e∣uery corner, hée espied the Budget in the chamber where his man lay, and found that which hee neuer had thought to knowen: he let it lye still where it was, and sayd neuer a worde of it, beefore night her man came home, hauing dispatched his businesse: then Marcellus asked him if hee had neuer seene him before, or if he were not a Spaniard borne: wherto hee aunswered that hee was borne in Spayne, but hee neuer sawe him beefore: then hee had the Maide fetche a Budget, lyinge in suche a Chamber, whiche brought, hee asked him if it were his, and where hee had it? hee answered that it was his, and that Page  100 hee brought such thinges as hee had in it: then hee asked him if hee dwelt not in such a Towne in Spayne, and were not seruaunt to suche a man? wherto hee answered, that he was such a seruaunt, and in such a Towne: now sure∣ly sayd Marcellus thou shalt bee hanged, for thou meritest no lesse: this Budget was mine, and thou haddest three hundred Duckets therin, then she winge it to his Wife, shée affirmed it was so: The fellow fell on his knées, bee∣séeching him of fauour, and desiring mercy of him, and he would shew the effecte of the matter: then his wife whis∣peringe in his eare, and callinge him aside, tolde him the whole matter, and confessed the conueying in of the coun∣ters: the fellow thinkinge hee should surely bee hanged, and that there was no remedy or the losse of his life: they busie in talking, and hee watching his tide, slipped out of the doore, and was neuer seene after. This is most true sayd the Gentleman, and not inuented by my selfe, for the Gentleman is yet lyuing that knew both the Marchaunt, and had seene his Wife.

This tale contented the company a little, but would better haue liked them, had it not beene so longe: then Narbonus was requested to bee the seconde man, and that his turne came then about: wherto hée made no great de∣nyall, nor seemed very well contente, but would gladly y some other should haue spoken for him: yet willing to do as the company would haue him, he began as followeth.

THere dwelt in the Ile of Rhodes, a certaine Pirate, or Rouer on ye Sea, who many yéeres had vsed this kinde of life, and fortune seemed alwayes mutable in his doo∣inges: for sometimes hee was ritche, and sometimes pinched with pouerty: sometimes his bagges filled, some∣times his Purse pennyles: sometimes hee bounced in brauery, and sometimes hee marched in misery. On a time his happe was to loose all his gooddes, and to sinke his Shippe, drowned many of his men, and escaped hardly with his owne life: and likely then to come to Page  101 greater penurie, and to wade farther in the Sea of 〈◊〉, except he prouided better for himselfe, and looked more earnestly to his businesse: bethinking (〈◊〉) what was best to be done, and how to deliuer himselfe from danger, remembred he had there a brother of great calling, and his credite very much, determined to repaire 〈◊〉 him, to proue how he would pleasure him. Trauelling certayne dayes on his voyage, and almost wierie of his life, ith the forow he conceyued, found (by good hap) in the way a bagge of Siluer: who ioyfull for this good turne, and mer∣rie in mind that he spedde so well, determined not with∣standing to repaire to his brother, and to spend the rest of his life with him, neuer to professe the life of a •••er a∣gaine, nor any more to delight in such 〈◊〉. Mar∣ching on his way, and mana••ng thus his 〈◊〉 stoppes, not farre now to go, and within one 〈◊〉 iourney of his brothers h••se, he found a bagge of Golde, heauie than the first of Siluer, layde downe the 〈◊〉 and tooke vp the Gold, for (said he.)

With that looking on Fidelia, he 〈◊〉 staide, and could not tter one word more. The companie earnestly entreated him, and courteusly requeste him to 〈◊〉 that was begun, and not to flée touch in the middle of the mat∣ter: but he craued parden, and desired so earnestly til some other time, as they were contented, and woulde not aske him any more: wherevpon the company all rose vp, and forsaked that kind of sport, and deuised some other to passe the time as pleasantly, and to content all as quietly, for too much of one thing is vnsauerie for anything, and too much pleasure is ill for profite.

Then the musicke sounded, and they all fell to dancing, first the old Gentlemen, and then the ancient Gentlewo∣men, so the yong youths, and then the manerly maydens: euery man ledde a Gentlewoman by the hand, and Nar∣bonus marched in the fist of his Mistresse: alwayes as the musicke ceased, the company talked, euery one tolde his Gentlewoman some tale: & Narbonus shriued his Sainct Page  102 as foloweth.

Mistresse Fidelia, whether this motion be Heauenly, or Angelical, 〈◊〉 he by the Goddes or terrestrial? whe∣ther by the spirits internall, or by the diuine powers, I know not wht this loue i, neyther whereof it is deri∣ued: but surely, in my iudgement, and according to my small skil it is so secret a thing in nature, and procéedeth in such order, as all the writers can not sufficiently point the perfect proportion, or all the Diuines atteyne to ma∣nifest the ground thereof. I know not how the desires of other men are moued, and so am I ignorant, whether their appetites fall out in such order as domine, but for my part, the more I looke, why the more I loue: the grea∣ter fight I gaine, the greater is my desire: the more the company that is with me, the more inwardly procéedeth the motion, so as t all other desires, and for euery other sight, this farre differeth, and is quite contrarie: the mu∣tuall friendship made her 〈◊〉, and the o•• of pa∣rents towards their children séemeth quite 〈◊〉 to this, and altogither differing: Then speaking softly in hir eare, because none shoulde heare. In my tale (sayde he) comming once to Golde, estéeming that to e of most va∣lue in this World, and the only thing that all men de∣sire, looking then vpon you, and beholding your fate, more precious than all the Gold in the World in my eye, or of more estimation, than the greatest iewell whatsoeuer: not able to speake one word more, or to make some ende of that which was begonne, pardon me therefore I pray you, and let it not offende you, for when you shall please héereafter to commaund, I will fully resolue you, and perhappes féede youre fancie with some other delighte more pleasant, and make you merily disposed with some toy more pretie: And for that the time requireth not now to stande vpon trifling toyes, and too shorten this time with troublesome tales, for that our matters are of more importance, and our affaires of greater weight, youre councell in this case must be comfortable, and your de∣uice Page  103 paide of danger, for that lingering may import disli∣king, and delayes bréede doubte: oo dot 〈◊〉 or experien•• teache vs, and do we not see it our selues, that boyling leade will e as colde as stone: first let vs vanquish those thoughts, which other wise wil breede our decayes, which once repressed, and troden vnder 〈◊〉, we may bast with victorie, and triumph with ioy, 〈…〉 slayne hi Enimies, he had escaped himelfe, but thinking 〈◊〉 to blotte out their rage, and to put their déedes in to li 〈◊〉, he vndid himselfe, and moue the 〈…〉 destruction. Had Romeo 〈…〉 first, and manifesed the intent of his 〈…〉 done very wisely, and 〈◊〉 licence for the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 faithfull friends, and if Narbonus take 〈…〉 it is time he must stay the fall, and abide the 〈◊〉 Therfore Fidelia▪ for the inward 〈…〉 loue, and the ••tward 〈…〉 let vs nt flatter our elue in the 〈…〉 nor 〈◊〉 off 〈…〉 with delyes 〈…〉 is condemned and he hopeth 〈…〉 our hope will little auayle if fortune 〈…〉 shall we hope for when we are 〈◊〉 of our pur••s The olde saying is, Hope well, and haue well: hope for 〈◊〉 rope, and haue a haulter: not so, when the thing is at 〈◊〉 be, put it not to shall be▪ as we 〈◊〉 had prosperous e∣uentes, so my we haue contagious rauillings: the thing that is to day, to morrow was: to day wee enioy life, to morrow dead and gone: to day wée liue in libertie, to morrow we pine in prison: to day we ••imme: in pro∣speritie, to morrow wée are drowned in aduersitie: a we are not sure so are we 〈◊〉: we 〈…〉 of wealth, and to morrow vncertayne of we: but we may be vncertayne of the 〈◊〉, and not sure of the other, put downe therefore your mind with my determination, and what you shall thinke good, I shall not thinke yll: what you desire, not disliked of me. Fidelia therfore, framed hir selfe to make him an answere, and spke as followeth.

Page  104Beloued Narbonus, fully to satisfye you what the sub∣stance of loue is, or to wade that way farther than I may safelie come backe againe, my senses are altogither vn∣able, and my wit too wanton to make you a warrantise: but as my skill was neuer schooled, and my mind vnmor∣tified, my rimes must be without reason, and reason not so reasonable, a sufficient to satisfie: yet thus much my brayne can hol forth, and this I dare presume to say, the richest and the greatest, the highest and the lowest, the proudest and the poorest, the strongest and the stoutest, not only men mortall, but also Gods deuine, haue bin en∣tangle with loe, and priced with his piercing Dart. 〈…〉 vnder the likenesse of a Boy & suche like tke 〈…〉 vpon him, to inuest the virginitie from vs sim∣pl 〈…〉 ascendeth from the heart, and doth en∣flme the minde, a mixture in the heauenly 〈◊〉, and a 〈…〉 and 〈…〉, where the fauour of the 〈◊〉 and complexion of the other, is added to coequall sub∣stance 〈…〉 an every respect 〈◊〉 examples of the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉, and the 〈◊〉 of •••oures, we haue a number to great to recite in a day▪ and more than now reason would I should name: as Dido, Deianira, Procris, Phillis, Bacchi, Prolixena, with others too many for their prfites, and little to the pleasure of others: whatsoeuer it is, or how the meaning is, let it be what it can be: you haue tasted a little, and I haue tried, somewhat, as for drifts (indéed) bréede but doubtes, and delayes cōmonly bring dangers: when the Sunne is set, it is too late to call backe that day againe: and when the clocke strikes, the houre is passed: when death is in the dish, i bootes not to bid him tarrie: and when the man is dead, what should the surgion doe? all Trees haue their times, and all séedes their seasons: all plants their planets, and all beastes their bearing: all Foules their feathering, and all fishes their engendring: Whē the Eagle hath cast hir old bill, she can not put it on againe: when the Snake hath left hir skinne behind hir, she can not créepe into it againe: when the Henne hath Page  105 hatched hir Chicke, she can not put it into the shel againe: and when the Bucke hath cast his hornes, he can not put them on againe: euery propert•• hath his portion, and e∣uery sute his season: euery fashion his action, and euery qualitie his cause: euery profite some discommoditie, and euery good motion entangled with some yll meaning: the Sunne riseth, but falleth not there at night: the Moone encreaseth and decreaseth not in one fort nighte: the Cloudes that rocke to the East, returne not presently thi∣ther againe: the tide must be taken at the full, for time ta∣rieth not for any. Bycause therefore, time shall not trie vs Traytours, nor prolonging shall not cause repenting: you shall vnderstand that I will pretende a voyage, and frame some excuse therefore, a little into the Countrey, about foure miles from the town: where for change of di∣et, and altering my fare, where in stéede of Partrich and Quayles, I shal find Cruddes and Creame: for Pheasant and Kayles, Puddings and Pancakes: for Capon and Swanne, Butter & Bacon: there I will stay a fortnight at the least, but as I thinke more, in the which time you may cloake your craft, and coyne some excuse to make vp our nuptiall rites, and quickly to dispatch what eare you shall thinke good: which ended, you may returne when you please, and departe as you shall sée occasion: then after∣ward we may stay a tide, and watch the time when we may vnfold our doings, & manifest that whiche hath pas∣sed, and therevpon take my hand in stead of my heart, the one I can giue you outwardly, the other I can affoord you but inwardly. Looke to your loyaltie, & remember ye time.

And therewithall turning hir from him to sincke all suspition, and that the dauncing was ended, she went to the other company, and left him eleuated to the Skyes with Moyses into Heauen, or raysed as Lazarus was re∣uiued from the graue: he swamme so in the Seas of secu∣ritie, and bathed so in the beatitude of his owne blisse, in such order, as he knew not whether he were bestraught, or amased: heauenly were his cogitations, and angelicall Page  106 his glories: his meanes wer without measure, & his hap∣pinesse without hardnes: for now he had atteyned ye pla∣sures which in this world his soule desired, & all that he required could not be more thā he had now granted him.

This courteous company hauing spent the best parte of the day, and delighted themselues as they desired, gaue the grauitie of gratulation, thankes for their boldnesse, and courtesie for their kindnesse.

Narbonus tooke leaue of Fidelia, and gaue hir the gentle Conge, he well pleased, and she a little eased, and both better contented than earst before they consented.

Fidelia going along with hir father, & talking of cōmon matters, remembred him of his promise, & entreated him to perfourme it▪ of hir going into the Countrey: and now the day was expired, wherat he made no great denial, but gaue hir his consent. Now hir iewell boxe al this time I trust was making readie, and hir apparell péered on: now she would go with this gowne, and then with that other: now these lawnes, and then that linnē: now these ruffes, & then those rings: now these slippers, & then those shoes: now these gloues, and then those bongraces: euery thing was too much, & yet all too little: the least were too great, & the great not good ynough. The appoynted day appro∣ched, & the desired day come, hir Horsses head woulde not be giue for washing, nor his bridle bought for biting: his mane would not be bought for shauing, nor his taile giuē for clipping: hir sadle set on surely, hir stirrop steadie, hir cloathes costly and curious, hir bitte after the finest fashi∣on, euery thing so well, and yet all not good ynough.

Now is Fidelia on Horssebacke, and aboute to ride, as the long desired, more curious than coy: more curteous than cumbersome, more trifling than troublesome: euery thing was amisse that liked hir not, and all awrie that pleased not hir fancie: she spéedely arriued at the place she rode to, & quickly came thither, for that it was not farre: hir Horse trode vpon thornes, and she fate vpon nettles.

Such is the furious force of hote loue, such the motions Page  107 of that molested mind, whose lust is vpon liking, & whose liking hath gained the thing desired: suche is the inwarde instigation of that senselesse misterie: such the déepe desire of mutual confederacie: But had Fidelia knowen hir ma∣riage day had bin so farre off, she woulde not haue made such hast: and had she séene before what followed after, she woulde haue stayed in Vienna, and not haue gone into the Countrey: but as there is no one thing in this worlde certaine, so is there not any thing but tasteth of vncer∣taintie: one man accounteth such a day to be maried to a wife, and the same day is wedded to his graue: one thin∣keth to winne the goldē spurres, and gaineth the hempen haulter: some one man thinketh to winne all the worlde, & léeseth his owne life. After Alexanders great Cōquests he thought to haue greater, but he entred Babylon with great triumph, and there left his life. Was not noble An∣thony of Rome one day a mighty prince, the next day forced to wander ye wods? Holofernes more desired the cōpany of Iudith, than the conquest of his desires, & in gaining hir he thought to get what was desired, but his getting cost him his life, & if his gaine were good, he lost his head. Euery one hath his weale of wealth, & his time of happinesse, his field of felicitie, & his golden age: but how long resteth the shadow in one place? where staies the running water? or in what place doth the sune stand still? alwayes ebbing, or flowing, encreasing, or decreasing, waning or waxing. When the Apple is ripe, it falles from the trée, and whē the Rose is full blowen, it falles from the stalke: when a man is at the strongest, he waxeth weaker: when the grasse is at the gréenest, it chāgeth coulours: the child can not be borne, before it be bredde: nor the seede growen, be∣fore it be sowen? these are the nouelties of Nature, & this the ficklenesse of Fortune: this the frailtie of the flesh, and this the vncertaintie of our happinesse. As one wax∣eth rich, so another groweth in penurie: Some begger commes to the pomp of a Prince, some Prince to the paine of penurie. Bellezarius béeing a mightie Prince, Page  108 yet tasted of the ticklenesse of Fortune, had both his eyes put out, and was forced to begge in the Marketplace. Caesar but of meane parentage, and at the first a common Souldiour, afterward a mighty Prince and Emperour of the thirde parte of the World: this is the mutabilitie of man, and this the happinesse of our felicitie, Quid certum in terris, or what vnder Heauen?

Narbonus now bragging in his brauerie, and boasting of his bare fortune, tiring of himself in the statelyest sort, and thinking his fortune inferiour to none, marching in the maintenance of merrie melodie, and reioycing in the greatnesse of his pranked pleasure, in suche sorte, as if he fedde his owne fancie, yet he displeased his Unckle: for thinking to please his mistresse, and to delight hir with daliances, he spared for no spending, nor cared for his rec∣koning: he did what him liked, and liued as he lusted, he had all at commaundement, and nothing was restreyned from his custodie: he kept the keyes of the cofers, and so long he lacked no louers. He that earst was pensiue and poore, ciuill and honest, courteous and well disposed, is now retchlesse, and outragious, bouncing in brauerie, and frouncing in knauerie: swearing in silke, and swea∣ting in sattin: ruffling in roabes, and pounced with pride: ••aunting with a face of flatterie, and vaunting in the vale of dishonestie: for which, his Unckle was sorowfull beyond measure, and solitarie without any pleasure, vn∣certaine what to do, or how to deale: which way to take, or by what meanes to procure remedie: alwayes doub∣ting the worst, and euermore dissembling the best: such is the outragiousnesse of that sicknesse, and such the vn∣medicinablenesse of that disease, that in procuring the fauoure of their Mistresse, purchast the displeasure of their God, careful to sped, & carelesse to gette: so it be had, what matter how? no bracelets, nor no toyes: no glous, nor no girdles: no garters, nor no carfes, are eyther too faire, or too fine, nothing too déere, nor any thing of too great a price: for the brauer in sighte, the better Page  109 excepted: the poorer in spirite, the lesse regarded: and the truer in dealinge, the likelier to bée a begger: Narbonus cared for no cost, nor spared for any spendinge, gaped for no gaine, nor regarded any profite: all was for pleasure, yet all beyond measure.

Fidelia was gone before into the Countrey, and looked longe for his comminge, where shee had gotten liberty for a moneth, and more if néede required, shée still counted the dayes, and reconed the times, longing for her lust, and hoping for her hap: but shee was no sooner in the Coun∣trey, and had remained there a few dayes, but the case al∣tered, and the winde turned South, very yll for his shoo∣ting, and worse for his mouth: for the King of Spayne had sent Embassadours to the Emperour, which were then returned, hauing obtained their purpose, and gotten that they came for: which was for forty thousand men, which was spéedily graunted, and hastily prouided for: within twelue dayes this army was leuied, and all ready furni∣shed: eyght thousand went out of Vienna, in which compa∣ny Narbonus was one, the more his gréefe, the greater his Unckles sorow.

Narbonus imagined, bicause his Unckle bare such a port in the Towne, and that his credite was so great, that hee should bee excused, and pardoned for a litle money: but the better day, the better déede: the lustier man, the likelyer to doo his Prince seruice: but will hée, nill hée, hee had re∣ceiued his presse money, and therfore must goe, no intrea∣ting, nor no suinge: no complayning, nor any lamenting: Golde would not excuse him, nor fée buy his fréedome: here hee began to sweate, and then to sweare: nowe to stampe, and then to stare: now to rage, and then to raue: now to speake faire, and then to flatter: now to dissemble his gréefe, and then to burst out into wéeping: now to per∣swade him selfe, and then to put some deuice in practise, to cause him stay at home, or to excuse his going: then would hée call him selfe foole, and asse, faint harted Lozell, and milkesop, dastard, and momarde, to bee afrayd of a fancy, Page  110 and run away from a shadow: But all these fancies fled a∣way like shadowes, and new supplyed their places: then meruailed hee whither Fidelia would continue faithfull, or flit away false and vniust: now shée would, and then shée would not: hee thought hee heard her say, because hee was fickle, shée would bée as false: then hee imagined shee wept, and now shee complayned: now shee wronge her handes, and now shee throbbed: now she sobbed, and then shee sighed: now shée lamented her losse, and then shee so∣rowed her shame: now thought hée to write, and then to send: now to excuse him selfe, and then to condemne his folly: but takinge Inke and Paper, he began to write as followeth.

AFter those ten yeares of toyling trauaile, and trouble∣some time, that noble Vlisses returned with victory, & gayned suche conquest as hee fought for: and saylinge on the Seas homeward, amidst the waltringe Waues, to auoyd that inconuenience, when he should passe amongst the Mermaydes, hee not onely caused all his men to stop their eares, but also him selfe hee bound fast to the Maste of the shippe, to auoide their sweete songes, and not to bée taken with their inticinge harmony: his painefull Pene∣lope, and louing Wife, carefull of her honour, and fauou∣ring him before any other, deuised the meanes to weary all wooers, and inuented a way to send them all going, so fast as they came: but no doubt: had hee not returned the sooner, shee would haue beene wearied, but findinge ney∣ther.

Then pausinge there, hee blotted it out, for it liked him not, for hee thought with him selfe, & imagined thus. Should I accompt to stay so longe? or am I maried, that shée should not be wedded to any? no, no: out of sight, and out of minde: are there no moe men will shee say, but the Miller? nor no moe louers then Paris? let him goe if hee lust, and depart when hee please: Vienna wants no wooers then shall not Fidelia fale of some suters: shée is faire, the likelier to be looked on: shée is welth, the likelier to bee Page  111 wedded: shee his honest, the likelier to haue a husband: shee is beautiful, the likelier to be imbraced: she is cour∣teous, the likelier to bee compelled: shee lackes no guifts of nature, the vnlikelier shée shoulde wante a wedded féere.

But what sayest thou? or what do thy lippes babble forth? canst thou so rayle on thy beloued? or cāst thou rage at her that hates thee not? canst thou so raue on her that loues thy liberty, as she liketh her owne life? that honou∣reth thy fréedome, as shee fauoureth her felicity: that ho∣peth thy happines, as she hateth not her owne blessednes: no, no, Narbonus shée loueth thée, and shee will lyue with thée: But alas, how shalt thou liue with her? or how shalt thou enioy her, whose sight thou must forgoe, and whose presence thou must parte from? whose fauour thou must flye, and whose company thou must bee constrained to léese indeede: and to forgoe it, the greatest losse that euer lost Narbonus, and the greatest gaine that euer my selfe did forgoe: but write I will, and declare my minde, happe what happe may, then thus hee beganne as follo∣weth.

THe shining Sunne whose bright beames, and rhadiant rayes, doo bringe comfortable consolation, and great happinesse to the whole earth, and to the whole masse of mankinde, who neuer resteth to recreate vs, nor neuer stayeth to comforte vs, whose night workes are nothinge, whose labour then auayleth not: our tra∣uayle then is tedious, and our labour lothsome: our payne vnprofitable, and our pleasure vnsatiable: After all the worlde hath wonne the comfortable enioyinge of her, and that all the day shee hath satisfied vs as wee woulde, the westerne Mountaynes keepe her from our sighte, and depriue vs of our light, till the bright morninge when wee enioye that erste wee did, and haue the full fruition as the day beefore, and beginneth her light.

Page  112Then stayinge, and looking what hee had doone, dashed it out againe, and tooke other paper, callinge himselfe dotard, and foole: as who should say, that for so smal a time and for so litle a season, I should forgo the sight of my swéete Mistresse, and then inioy it againe: and how shall I enioy that which neuer was mine? or how shal I wear that I neuer had? the winde turneth often in a day, and a womans minde is reméeed oftner in one houre: what shall I doo? or what meanes shall I worke? my Pen dis∣daines to write, and my hand shakes that should holde it: my hart is colde, and my wittes are on wooll geathering: my inuentions is wrong, and my wrightinge contrary: These are signes of suspicion, and doubtes of dispaire: imaginacions that deuine some mischéefe, and dreames that prognosticate my death: but yet spur vp thy spirites, and wrest thy will▪ meruaile not on thy Memento, but thinke on the place whither thou must goe. Alas how I deuine, and how I foresée what will follow: can I escape death when I come there? how shall I deale to saue my selfe? how shal I that neuer was wearied with ye warres and that neuer tasted of those toyles: that neuer bid their broyles, and that neuer saw their shotte: that neuer hard the thundring of their Gunnes, and neuer was troubled with their angry alaroms: that neuer sawe their bloudy battayles: that neuer heard the skriches of those that are slayne: and shall not I walke in the fore Warde, and marche in the maine battaile? shall not I bée in the first fight, and bée thrust out, for that I am but a raw Souldi∣our? how can I then escape? or howe shall I flye away? there may I sacrifice my soule for my sweete Mistresse, & offer there my last sacrifice: why? then Narbonus write thy last farewell, and neuer looke to speake more to her.

To his faythfull Fidelia.

THe gréene grafte sprouting for a season fresh, & spring∣inge for a time faire, is by chaunce cut a sunder, or by some yll hap plucked vp by the rootes, then burnt in the Page  113 fire: or so trodden on as it neuer sprouteth more: if the Grape bée plucked gréene, or gathered before it bee ripe, hath neither pleasaunt taste, nor maketh good Wine: the Cherry hangeth till it bee rype, for who regardeth it be∣fore? the sweete Rose plucked before it bee blowne, yéel∣deth no smell, neither will the water bee distilled from it: if the Fawne bee let liue, hee will beare a great head: and if the Calfe were not killed young, he might in time serue for the yoake: had Sampson died in his youthe, hee had ne∣uer slayne so many Philistines: and had Hercules beene spoyled before hee came to perfection, hée had neuer enter∣prised those great laboures. Alas, what shall Narbonus now in his blooming be blasted? now in his chéefe grow∣inge to bee chopped downe: now hee is but sprouting, to wither away, and now he begins to flourish, to be plucked vp: The Drummes with their dreadfull noyse call mee, away, away: the shrill Trumpets, with their rentinge blastes doo sound, ready, ready: my Captaine hath giuen mee my presse pay, and my furniture, and he crieth haste, haste: the Saylers haue hoysed their Sayles, and wayed their Anckors: and they call come, come: God graunt my haste bee not heauy, and my farewell fearfull. O Fidelia, the best beloued this day liuinge, and the onely maintayner of my strength: I must wander, and I must trauaile: I must bee gone, I must perforce depart, with∣out thy sight, and without takinge my adue: without any imbracinge, and without one kisse: without one sweete worde, and without one fréendly looke: had not I consen∣ted, thou haddest not gone into the Countrey: and haddest thou staied at home, I might haue found one fauourable farewell, and one sight from those heauenly eyes, which I feare mee will neuer beholde mee againe, and which I doubt I haue for euer lost: blame not then thy seruaunt sweete Mistresse, but blame his hard hap: blame my fro∣ward fortune, and reprooue my vnchaste chaunce: for had I suspected, I would haue preuented this: and in missing this chaunce, I might enioyed the heauenly hap of this Page  114 life terestriall, where now I goe to my death, & feare ne∣uer to returne hither again: yet were it for thy sake, or to doo thee any seruice, it should neuer repent mée, nor any thinge trouble mee: but after quiet calmes, come sturdy stormes: and after passinge pleasure, painefull Pilgri∣mages: after swéete imbracings, sowre seperations: and after daintie daliaunces, diuelishe pastaunces: But Fidelia, I striue against the winde, and weare my words without perfourming of workes: I swimme against the Tide, and striue against the Hill: seeinge therfore my departure is pronounced, and my lotte layde before mee: my chaunce is cast, and I already condemned: the Iudge will not bee féeed, the Tiraunt will by no meanes be in∣treated, the Captaine will not be perswaded nor I relea∣sed: no Golde nor gaine, no faire wordes, nor wanton wiles: no flattering filinges, nor any deceytfull dealings will warrant mee my welfare, nor purhace mee my par∣don, get mée grace, nor gaine mée goodnes: but bide vp∣on this bargaine, and bee most assured of this doubt, that what I haue promise I will performe, and what I haue sayd, that will I stand too: and if euer Lelius were louing, and Lepidus were loyall: if Camillus were kinde: if Cae∣phalus were stedfast: if Titus were true: if Hanniball chose rather to dye, then to fall into the hands of his eni∣mies: shall not Narbonus choose ten deathes rather then fall from Fidelia? yes, on the Sea I shall swim in thy de∣sires, on the land I shal walke wary, in hope to inioy thée: had it bin the losse of my liuinge, or the forfaiture of my fréedome: the going to decay of my goods, or the losse of my landes: the farewell of my freendes, or the forgoinge of any other thinge, whatsoeuer, my sorowes might haue beene salued, and my cares cured: or had it béene, that thou haddest béene forced any villaynous voyage, or com∣pelled to any tedious trauaile, thē my seruice might haue beene seene, and my good wil manifested, to haue ridden or runne: to haue posted, to haue Lackied, to lamed my immes, nay to haue lent my lyfe: I should haue boasted, Page  115 it well bestowed: and bragged, it benifitially bereft. But I will perforce march in thy mellody, and fight with thy fancy: sléepe with thy shadow, and dreame of thy dooings: pray for thy prosperitie, and wishe thy welfare: trust to thy truth, and hange on thy good hap: ath in thy blisse, and thinke yet to enioy that Iewell, the brightest in my fancy. But thou wilt happely reply, if thou wert so lauish of thy loue, and so deepe in thy desire: why framedst thou not some excuse, and so mightest stayd at home? thou mightest fayned thy selfe to beene sicke, or lame: diseased or brused: vnable for the Warres, and vnfitte to fight, and rather then fayled haue hidden thy selfe awaye, or stayed some where in the Countrey, till the Armye had beene dispatched, and the Campe departed: then mightst thou shewed thy selfe safely, and walked the stréetes wantonly. But then, thus would I answere thée. The Shéepehearde keepeth his Cottage, and the Fisher∣man his litle Boate: the Abbey lubber keepeth his Cloy∣ster, and the Pesaunt feareth to péepe out: the dastarde dareth not looke on a man, and the milkesop may tarry within doores: If I were not forced, I would not flye: and were I not compelled, I néeded not complayne: needes must whom the Diuell driues: and of force must hee runne, that is forced to flye: But thou wilt say, thy departure was too spéedye, and thy haste to hainous: thy farewell to fast, and thy goinge posted more then needed: thou mightst come halfe a daies iourney to see mee, and bestowed thrée houres ridinge to taken thy farewell: and so might I in déede, and done it easily: yet, in séeing thée I should but renew my sorowes: and in takinge my leaue, haue taken that greefe, which might cost mée my life: lyke Tantalus, or like Sisiphus: like the Dragon yt watcheth the goulden Apples, but dareth not touch one: or like him yt saw all the dainties in the world, & could not eate any: in seeing thée, I should seduce my selfe into slauery, not sléepe in security: purchace my bondage, not possesse my heri∣tage: gaine mee Hell, not get mee happinesse: nor that Page  116 thy sight is hurtfull, but my sight in seeinge thee, would procure mee this trechery: for how happy were I, might I enioy thee? and how vnfortunate is my state, in that I forgoe thee? yet time may turne all truth to tryall, & alter my affection, to gaine the ful perfection: the poore is often preserued by fortune, and the ritche throwne downe into the mye of misery: when all the blastes of bitternes are ouerblowen, and all the surges of Simony, swallowed in∣to obliuion, my Sunne will shine in the worlde of my weale, and my cleare day of delight bee faire in my fancy: though the Hearbes bee trodden, and washed with wea∣ther, frozen with froste, and bitten with blastes, yet grow they gréene as before, and looke as fresh as at the first: let vs then tarry a tyde, and hope for a day: The Husband∣man soweth his Séede, tilleth his ground, tarieth the sea∣son and taketh great toyle, yet knoweth not who shall reape his profite, or geather his grayne: the Gardener grafteth his plantes, and settteth his Hearbes, proyneth them, and wéedeth them cleane: soweth them best for the Sunne, and bestoweth them out of the shadow, yet eateth not one Apple him selfe, nor smelleth to one flower. The Marchant maketh a masse of money, and prepareth for his Marte, furnisheth a ship, and sendes her on the Seas, yet knoweth hee not whyther hee shall enioye any of his Marchandize, or euer see his fraught come home: are not our dooinges manifest, and our miseryes common, our daungers not dayntye, and our infelicitie plenty? but happe what may come, and let fortune do hir worst, the worst is but death, and the greatest but the losse of my life, and in dying my soule may wayte on thée, and my ghost follow thy fancie: therefore Fidelia, as you haue re∣gard of your health and as you beare loyall loue vnto me, comfort your aduersitie with consolation, and assist your desperate desaster with the hope of spéedie returne: for you may assure your selfe that my gaynecome shall be as speedie as is possible, and my hast with so great desire as may be: meane while, I wish you all the ioyes that this Page  117 lingering life can giue you, and desire all the happinesse that this earthly pilgremage can affoord you.

Farewell: the secret seruant of faithfull Fidelia.

THis Letter sealed with sorow, and deliuered with danger, he gaue to a man of his Uncles, whose faith he credited, and whose trust in other matters before he try∣ed. The next day his Unckle had ocasion to send him in∣to the Countrey, and to spéede him about some businesse, not farre from the place where she lay, nor greatly out of the way as she should go, who glad to pleasure Narbonus, and contente to perfourme his request, strayned a little courtesie with his Maister, and deliuered the letter.

Fidelia receyued the Letter, and rewarded the seruant, asking if it required answere, or if naught but the deliue∣rie? who answered, not that he knewe of, and saide none that he heard of. The Seruant departed better pleased, than she was afterward contented: she therefore hasted to hir Chamber expecting some newes, and posted to open it, hoping for better then she found therein: for there was that comforted hir like the pangs of death, and that writ∣ten, which delighted hir like the Diuels daunce: but rea∣ding it, and pervsing it well, she looked on hir aperne strings, and hir minde was on hir maydenhead: she con∣strued euery worde, and reconstrued euery letter: some∣times she laughed though not hartelie, sometimes shée wept, but that bitterly: now she imputed hirselfe the first of this follie, and then she condemned him for a Traytour doing hir that iniurie: now she lamented the departure of suche a friende, and then she blamed his staying in the Towne: now shee confessed that hée entirely loued her, and dearely lyked her, with the greatest affection, and the most good will, of any that loued or any that enioyed this worlde: then she doubted his loyalty was not correspon∣dēt to his property, nor his loue so great, but his lust was greater: for thē would he haue deuised a thousand shifts to Page  118 procured his staying, and inuented a number of meanes to haue bidden at home. Now she persuaded hir fancie to find no more fault, and entreated hir desires to be content for purchasing hir libertie, he woulde gaine his owne in∣felicitie, and get his owne death, rather than she shoulde be frustrated of hir wish: then she wished hir wauering will to let fall those fancies, and moued hir minde to ba∣nish those doubts, to comfort hir selfe so well as she could, and to take the matter as merrie as she might: for that to say is not to do, and to promise faire, is not to perfourme plentie: for he spared not for speaking, but cared not for doing: dayned not to promise, but denyed to perfourme: therfore his meaning was but to wrest his wanton will, and so bid hir good night. And this last presumption, and fine imagination tooke such firme roote in the ground of hir heart, that there it grewe so long as she liued, and there it remained, vntill she was buried: for she stayed still vpon these poynts, and had alwayes these sayings by the end: to tarrie at home is cowardlike, and to lurke in a corner the part of a dastard: for (said she) had his loue bin so affectionate as his lust was outragious, he would haue cropen in a bench hole, before gon in such order, and line in some darke corner, before haue gone in such manner: is it dastardlike, and the parte of a momard in gaining a little credite, and perhappes with losse of his life to leese the purest propertie in this life, and to obteyne the onely felicitie in this worlde. He was no dastarde, for he durst deceyue so simple a mayden as my selfe, neyther was hée a dotard, for he could beguile me to whome he had pligh∣ted his faith: but let him spurne at the Spanish péeces, and trie them with their trumpeies, as for my wooll it is but weatherbeaten, yet too fyne for his wearing, or too good for his handling: are these thy swéete Cirenes songs? are these thy paynted protestations? to sell thy safetie to trust a Stranger? and to bestow thy loue vpon some out∣landish broode? they that tryed thée, must not first trust thee, and shée that enioyeth thée, must weare thée first a Page  119 yeare about hir necke: but who will weare thée that art not woorthie to be wedded? and who will wedde thée that art more wanton than wise: the Drumme sounds, and thou must bée gone, the Captayne calles, and thou must away: if Vienna haue neuer more wante then to lacke so lustie a Lubber as thy selfe, nor neuer more di∣stressed then being bereaft of so rancke a Rebell, the Towne will neuer repente thy departure, nor wish thy welcome home. How happie is thy good Unckle depriued of such an vnthrift? and how fortunate I Fidelia in forgo∣ing so faithlesse a freend? thy Unckle may ioy thy speedie posting, and I be glad of thy happie hasting: thy Unckle is well lightened of a licentious loyterer, and I well de∣liuered from so false a flatterer: But happie it was that my oare was stricken no farther in the bancke, and blessed was I that my Torch was burnte no further: fortunate was I that my Trée was not grafted: fauou∣rable was my felicitie, that hée was in my hande, but out of my hearte: God graunt that I may as easilie re∣moue him, as I was willing to entertayne hym: but my warrante shall bée written with water, and sealed with sauce: put into the Paper of obliuion, and deliue∣red with the hande of forgetfulnesse. And arte thou in∣déede gone Narbonus? then farewell faithlesse friend, and adue false Iason: thou sayest by séeing me, thou shalte see thy death, and beholding my face, thou shalte forgoe thy owne fauour: then shalte thou neuer die by my consente, and my countenance shall neuer seduce thee into thy owne destruction: am I a Basalike that my face will infecte thée? or Medusaes head, that thou wilt die with looking on me? hadst thou yet come thy sele, thou mightest haue spedde the better, or spo∣ken in thy owne person, thy tale the likelier to bin heard: but Paper will not blush, and Incke doth be∣wray, yet is not ashamed: if thou be ashamed to take leaue, I will be ashamed to entertaine thée at thy re∣turne.

Page  120Héere was hote loue soone colde: what faire wordes? and what froward workes? what swéete lippes? and what soure sauce? woon with an Egge, and lost with an Apple: no sooner ripe, but readie to rotte: no sooner blowen, but blasted: no sooner sprouted, but bitten with the frost: hir Prayers were pitifull, hir sighes and sobbes, as though they would haue pierced the hard flint: hir words woun∣ded the heart that heard them, and hir lamēting, mollified the minds of those that were within hir hearing: héere were Crocodili lothrinae, and déepe dissembling? she wh earst would downe into Hell to pleasure his person, will not now kneele downe vnto Heauen to craue one little petition▪ but resolued hir selfe neuer to talke with him, or to come in that place where he was present: yet to worke his mischife, or to séeke some reuenge, she imagi∣ned would but crake hir credit, and be a blotte to hir good name, therefore she was content to let him alone, but for euer to giue him the Basalos Manos.

If Fidelia were thus bereft of reason, and almost mad with melancholy, Henricus was as sorowfull for his Ne∣phew, but that he hoped his safe returne, and fedde his mind that he would come hastily home again: his Unckle therefore furnishing him with money, and furniture, e∣uerie thing necessarie, and a man to waite on him, betoke him to the preseruation of the Gods, and to the mercie of the waters.

Now is Narbonus on Shipboorde, and at the mercie of the waues, where his antient cogitations assayled him with a fresh supply, and troubled him so bitterly, as hée thought hee should neuer see Spayne, nor any part therof: hee imagined howe lamentably Fidelia would take his departure, and how sorowfull shée would be for that iour∣ney: now how shee wept, and then how shee wailed: now how shee sighed, and then how shee sobbed: now how pit∣tifully shee would bewayle his goinge, and how happely hee should be welcomed home: then thought he, perhaps, shée may bee lightly disposed, and wantonly giuen, for she Page  121 was soone woon, and easilie entreated: and as quickly hee may bee lost, and as soone forgone: shée was easily caught, and as quickly may shee bee carued from mee: now I am gone out of her company, and departed from her sight: is it not likely that shée will retaine some other and like of one that shall tarry at home, more worthy per∣haps then my selfe, & whose calling is greater thn mine: more worthy, nay, perhaps more wealthy: for mine shée is by right, though some other haue her by rigour: and I wan her with loue, though some other wed her by lawe: I had her by inheritance, but some other may take posses∣sion in my absence: But Fidelia is faire, so is shee faithful: shée is fréendly, so is shée fauourable: shée is amiable, so is shée loyall: shée is honest, so is shée iuste: As shée hath pro∣mised, so will shee perfourme: shée gaue mee her hande, why then should not I retaine her hart? But thou foole that braggest before the victory, and reioysest before the goale bée thine: thou thinkest thou hast the Apple, and hast but the leafe: shée soone liked of mée, is shée not the likelier to loue some other? did I quickly win her? and may not some other spéedily wed her? did she not quickly loue mée? will not some other as speedily lust after her? and then because hee loueth, will she lust? and because hee wooeth, will shee wed any but my selfe? because hee burneth in desire, will not shee driue him in disdayne? and because hee fixeth his fancy in her feature, will shee therfore giue graunt that hee shall enioy his pleasure? no, no: vnder so faire a face cannot lodge so filthy a fact: and vnder so true a tongue cannot be hid pernicious poyson: in so beautiful a body, cannot bee any filthy infection: and so straight a hand, must haue as right a hart: For is it not common by probability, and see we not daily the tryall? that the fairer personage, the finer conditions, and the more deformed in body, the more defiled in deedes: Fidelia is mine, and shal not bee any others, and if my body cannot waite on her, my soule shall fulfill the vttermost of my imaginations. Drowned amidst these contrary imaginations, & sayling Page  122 in the hart of these cogitations, now praising then disprai∣sing: now louinge, then loathinge: now laughinge, then lamenting: now wishinge, then waylinge: now longing for life, then desiringe death: the boysterous windes began to blow, and the bitter blastes troubled their totter∣inge Shippe: the wallowinge waues tumbled about the sides of the Boate, and the Billowes beate harde on her sides, which tottered on this side, and then tumbled that way to sea warde: wherwith Narbonus who was neuer at the Sea before, nor had at any time felt the force of the waters, grew so sicke, and so troubled with the water, as hee was without hope euer to come on shoare & more, & neuer thought to behold the faire face of Fidelia againe: where let him wallow amongst the waues, and trye his fortune with the waters.

PHemocles who had spente almost a yeare in Naples, & thought the time longe, profited so well as hee would desire, & gained his tongue perfectly: wherfore he wrote to his Father that his charges was great, and that time was yll spent: now hee had gained that hée went for, and obtained his purpose to the full: to which his reasonable request, and willinge demaund, his Father condiscended, & graunted his returne: procuring him therfore Horses, and other thinges necessary: hee spéedily willed him to hasten his tedious trauaile, and to come so quickly as hée could, but willed him to take easie iourneyes by the way, and not to toyle him selfe with rydinge, but might if hee would see the Countrey by the way, and come through all the Townes that hee thought any thinge worthy the re∣membraunce there to bee séene.

Phemocles after the receiuinge of his letters, and the certifiyng from his Father, tooke leaue of his good com∣panions, and betooke him to his Horse: where by the way his minde was mooued with many matters, and troubled with former motions: he remembred the courteous crue that accompanied him in Naples, and the great courtesie hee receiued at their handes: their passing pleasures, and Page  123 their boasting in brauery: their sumptuousnes of appar∣rell, and the lauishnes of their Purses: their pleasaunt sportes, and their excellent exercises: then their gallant Instrumentes, and their good musicke: the congregation of their Curtizans, & the fellowship of their faire Dames: their Iewels, and their Ringes: their Ruffes, and their Robes: their Lawnes, and their loose attires: their nice∣nes in goinge, and their coynes in speaking: their cour∣teous behauiour, and their comely graces: their painted faces, and their inticinge toyes: then their protestations in their prayers, and their deuout humility: their wor∣shippinges of their Sainctes, and their guilded Crosses: their pratlinge Préestes, and their costly Copes: their Crucifixes, and their Wafer breade: their holly water stockes, and their Dirges for their deade. The remem∣braunce of these thinges were so fresh in his minde, and the companye that hee alwayes vsed, as hee could not but deuine vpon them, and imploye his cogitations that way.

Then remembred hee the estate of their Weale publique, and thought vpon the estate of the layitie, as their Magistrates, and their Officers: their free men, and their Spiritualty: the seuere executinge of their Lawes, and the excellent Iustice vsed amongst them: the companyes of their fellowshippes, and the assembly of their meetinges: their benificialitie to the Poore, and the good orders for their mayntenaunce: nothinge dislyked him, excepte the not punishinge of Whoredome, and nothinge hee hated but the mayn∣tenaunce of Userers: These dislyked him in lyuinge, and in conscience hee thought them woorthy of punish∣mente: It was lawfull for to come to the house of any Curtizan, or else to their Chambers: Their Lute they vsed to gette the lykinge of any man, and their Cithernes to prouoke any man to their desires: If happely hee come, whom their lykinge dooth loue, or thinkinge to gayne ought by him, they woulde not Page  124 spare for signes, and vse their eyes with winckes, and beckes, with countenaunces, and such like wanton toies: then to frame some fine songe, and to vse that instrument whose liking should be best beloued: Then came to his re∣membraunce his faithfull freend, and best beloued Nar∣bonus, who was the cause of his importunate hast, and the occasion he stayed no longer, minding the first occasion of their acquaintaunce, and the knitting vp of their fami∣liarity, which hee hoped would in as large manner bee amplified, as euer it was before: Then hee deuised how to speake with him at his comming home, and how he should entertaine him, what wordes hee should vse to him, and how hee should blush at his first sight, how hee should dis∣course of his time spent in Naples, and how he should shew to him the order of the Countrey: as well the ciuilitye of their Townes, as the ordinaunces of their spiritualty, and temporalty: doubtinge what should bee demaunded, and to what hee should make answere: then the pleasant talke that should passe betweene them, and their walking in the feeldes: the assembling to their Chambers, and the exercises they should vse: sometimes hee doubted of his health, and dreaded his welfare: sorowful to heare of any losses, and lamentinge to heare him any way perplexed, dreadinge euer the worste, yet hopinge alwayes the best: fearinge that any way hee should incurre the yll will of his Unckle, for that olde men doo hate the pleasauntnes of youth, and younglinges when their auncestors shewe them any thinge for their aduauntage, they thinke them to bee dotardes, or olde fooles: Then feared hee the gay∣ning the yll wil of the Citizens, or some other his freends and so his loue should be turned to hate, and his good will to his owne disaduauntage: Then doubtinge he shoulde some way hurte him selfe, by dooinge some exercise, or any such like, which would bee more greefe to him, then payne to the other: Last of all, hee was sorowfull that hee must bestows his imbracinges, and vse his courtesie to some other before hee mette with Narbonus, Page  125 that he should not be the first. This was the maner of his riding, and this the vsage of his trauelling: these the in∣uentions of his thoughtes, these the sayings of his imagi∣nations: this the effect of the bestowing of his loue: this the thought of a faithfull fréend: this the certaintie of his vncertaintie, and this the liking of his seconde mée∣tinge.

As he was thus led in the lust of his desires, and drow∣ned in the deapth of their remembrance, his fathers man desirous to heare him discourse of the order of his liuing, and the estate of the Countrey, beganne to boult forth these words, and spake as followeth.

Sir, the tediousnesse of your toyling iourney is so vn∣comfortable, and your company so small, as with the one your witte is wéeried, and with the other your minde is moued, so as you can not frame your selfe to be merrie, nor dispose your passance to be pleasant.

Truly, replyed he, the toyle is tedious, and the iourney nothing ioyfull, with the memorie of the one I can not be refreshed, nor to forget the other any thing comforted: yet my heart is heauenly, and my mind inwardly moued with melodie, though my forces foulter outwardly, and my senses make no shew of iolitie.

Indéede, where the inwarde affections are framed so farre vnlike the outwarde cogitations: where the heart harboureth happinesse, yet the outward senses seduced to shamefastnesse, the soule sobbed with sorowes, and assay∣led with sullennesse: it séemes very vnlikely the open ap∣péerances, or outward motions, to import any signe of fe∣licitie, or to make shew of any pleasant melodie: so secret∣lie hath nature hidden these things, and so closely conuey∣ed them in our thoughts: yet the outwarde sights souced in sadnesse, or the face making a shew of heauinesse, the interiour instigations may swimme in securitie, or the heart moued with delight, may flow in felicitie.

Trust me, said the other, for the secretnesse of nature, my iudgement is small, and my knowledge lesse: but this Page  126 I know, yt the heart moued wt some sorow, ye mind can not be merie: but y face may séeme frowardly to frowne, whē ye heart is eleuated to ye highest tipe of fortunate felicitie.

Sir (said he) let him that is happie, not hide it, and he that is merily disposed not prolong his pleasure: for in hi∣ding the one, he may happe neuer to find the like againe, and in not declaring the other, neuer come to such a bar∣gaine whilest he liueth.

Why then saide Phemocles, for that it séemes good to tarrie no mo tides for triall, nor to make any moe dayes of parleance, let thy talke tende to trifling toyes, and my witte shall be as wanton to reply to foolish follies.

Then I beséech you to manifest vnto me, and lay flatly before me the maners of that Countrey, and the ordinan∣ces of the Neapolitane Nation, where you haue lente some little parcell of liberalitie, and spent some trifling time, to find out their feate phrases, and to be acquaynted with their rules of Rhetorike: And to begin of their fine fae, and delicious daynties, their brauerie of banquet∣ting, and feasting fittest for their fancie.

To shew you prestrictly the dayntines of their diet, and the finenesse of their féedinge: their appetites are wel applyed to their tender stomackes, and wel bestowed to the health of their bodyes. Their meate is not much, nor their fare great, but that little that the yeate, holpen with the company of fine hearbes▪ and pleasaunt Oyles: with Lemmons and Pomgranats: Oringes and Oliues: as for their Wynes they wante none that wee haue, neyther haue wee any, but they haue so good. They eate but twice in a day, and banquet often after supper. Their drincking not so immoderate as oures, and their quaffing not so common. And in my minde, the order of their diet is excellent, & such as I could very well like of.

Then replyed he, trust me sir, they are greatly to be commended, and deserue muche praise: for druncken∣nesse with vs is iested at, and gluttonie is no matter of conscience, the one infecteth ye body with diseases, ye other Page  127 drowneth the sences frō all knowledge: & both (no doubt) are no salue for the soule, but a baite for the Diuell: Hell must be their inheritance, and not thinke scorne to daunce with his dam: But sir, for their Magistrates I beséech you speake a little, & for the Laitie, I pray you say somewhat?

The offices of their Magistrates, and duties of their Iustices, is executed in so good order, & so seuerely punished as I sée no one thing woorthy faulte, or any other that can be amended. A man may put his money to the greatest gaine, so it be priuelie, and take what interest he can get so it be not knowen. Murther there is death, and Fellonies very seldome escape. Treason executed with terrible tor∣tures, and offending the Magistrates prestrictly punished. The Laitie deale nothing with the Spiritualtie, nor at any time meddle with their matters: for the Spiritualtie are greatly honoured, and dutifully reuerenced.

Replied the other, these vices of whoredome are great, and this sinne of Usurie is not tollerable: but let vs search our owne consciences, and examine our thoughts, and we shal be found farre more culpable, and much more enclined to wicked desires. As for the Priests, they are the elect people of God, or the graund Captaines of their Maister the Diuell: they may lie by authoritie, and steale without checke, robbe without rigour of the law, & commit Uenerie by the Statute. These Caterpillers may rauish as well Maidens, as defile Widowes: they can quickly sue their dispensatiō, & spéedely purchase the Popes Bul. The Wo∣men are very great Uotaries, and deuout Templers, worshippers of superiall Saints, and honourers of the ce∣lestiall powers. If maried, she neuer walketh to Church, or goeth in the stréets, without the cōpany of her husband, or some one of her kinsmē: for y prince Iealousy is a great man amongst thē, and I thinke naturally they are all iea∣lous. It is a hard matter for a man to talke with a mayde, except in the Church, or at some feast, they are so dayntie to be talkt withall, and so straight laced that way, as (for∣sooth) they wyll not be found vnchast, or counted light: Page  128 yet méeting them by chaunce, and not séene of any o∣thers, they may haply geue you the hearing of some toy, or lend the harkning to your talke: But my curious Cur∣tizans knowing you to be a stranger, and of any callyng, to play vnder your wyndow when you are newly layde, or the mornyng followyng to féede your fancy with some ne song, and rather than fayle passing along the stréetes, or as by chance you walk by their dores, yf she sée you en∣clyned that way, or giuen after her wyll, by signes they séeke to win you their subiectes, or by lookes allure you to bee their louers: but if with none of these beckes shee can bow you to her bent, then beware of her words, for other∣wise she will win you to her wyles.

Then Sir, they broke theyr name for theyr curtesie, and are not curious in that lyberalitie, and I haue heard the men to be verye iealous ouer theyr wiues, and very doubtfull of their honesties.

If hée sée a man looke vpon his wyfe suspected by him, or talke with her, if he know not the man very well, he wyll vse him very curteously, and make an outwarde shewe of great frindship, when hee wyll present hym some daynty deuice and closely conuey in it the Letter P. which eating it, hee shall neuer be troubled with the wyndcollicke, nor infected with any other disease.

Truly Sir sayd the other, you wanted I think no com∣panyons, nor néeded any partners, howsoeuer you woulde dispose your selfe, or what exercise amongst others you would choose to vse.

No truelye replyed hée, let a man haue money, and hee shall not want friendes: or a good purse, and he shall lacke no good companyons, protesting great friendship, and offe∣rynge great curtesie: but a man must bee lauishe of hys purse, and spende francklye: speake faire, and vse great curtesye: offer very much, though a man perfourme but lyttle: and they looke that a Stranger shoulde geue them place, and be careull how he handle his tong: otherwise, a man may boult out some foolyshe worde, or speake some Page  129 ond phrase, that he may euer after repent, and perhaps losse of his life. To dissemble is a vertue, and he that can not lie, must not there liue: he that vseth one of them of∣fendeth God, but who so loueth them both, the Diuell will catch him.

Why then, a man must be courteous and curious, lo∣uing, though but little: proffer faire words, what eare he professe in déedes: proude protestations, and double do∣ings: two faces in one hoode, and two toungs in one mouth: lie for libertie, and dissemble to auoyde danger▪ then his pennie must be best siluer, and his groate best golde: his wordes most woorth, though his déedes least woorthy: he crowes well on his owne dunghill, but in a∣nother place he will crie creake. But Sir, I thinke your departure was not procured with so great hast, but your desire homeward desireth as much spéede: and if you like there well of your companyons, yet those at home will be farre better loued: for if in a strange place a man haue health, and libertie, wealth and riches, pleasure, and pa∣staunce, whateuer his heart desireth, and any thing that his soule wisheth, yet his owne Countrey is more déere, and his naturall fréendes better fauoured: so as a man will choose to liue poorelie at home, rather than Lordlike in a strange place.

Trust me replyed the other, you haue diuined like a Doctour, and hitte the nayle full on the head, shotte as streight as a thréede, and leuelled as with a line: for when I was in surest safetie, and no danger to be dreaded: when feare might haue fledde, and no malice was meant me, yet my heart séemed heauie, and my senses were not frée from suspition: so that for a season, after my arriuall, my boulster, the procurer of my sléepe, and my bedde, my only resting place, so filled my eares with franticke fits, and beguiled so my thoughts with vaine imaginations, that my couche of sléepe, was my Cabin of care, and my meanes of rest, my author of disquietnesse.

Truly said the other, my mind doth meditate no lesse, Page  130 and my senses would be seduced into those opinions: the absence is not so gréeuous, nor the tract of time so intol∣lerable, as the fraile feare conceyued from the sincke of suspition, and the troubled thoughts, which come of con∣trarie cogitations: which if a man once haue gained some good companyons, or honest disposed persons to accompa∣nie him, yet a man loueth, but freesed in feare, and liketh but to please their fancies: these are the doubts a man conceyueth: these are the maner of his diuinations: thus is he fearefull to offend: thus is he carefull to contente: thus is he alwayes redoubling his danger, and so is he neuer frée from suspition.

Replied Phemocles, many fréends I gained, and many fréendes I founde, some I tryed, and some I trusted, all were retained, but not all beloued: the best were liked, the worst were loathed: all had faire faces, but not all hartie graces: those which I loued, I lacked not, and those which I hated, enuied me not: for louing was my loyaltie to some, and swéete were my words to all: yet found I some as faithfull as friendly, and as trustie as a man woulde desire, and yet thinking on Narbonus, Vienna harboureth so faithfull friendship, and that our towne retaineth such linckes of loyaltie, as Naples, though fuller of nouelties, and more fine tearmes vseth, yet not suche lasting loyal∣tie, nor suche plentie of honestie: for Vienna in my minde hath more delicious delightes, and more satiable securi∣ties: more swéete smelles of auntient amitie, and greater plentie of sure friends.

But he missed his marke, and was deceyued of his say∣ings, for the man was away, and that place not as he y∣magined.

For that only place you haue great reason, and of du∣tie you cā say no lesse: for there are your auntient amitie, and your old Segniurs in familiaritie: your courteous kinsmen, and your fauourable father, whome to honour, and to feare: to aide and assist: to help and to praise: to fur∣ther by all the meanes you may, and to set out to the vt∣termost Page  131 of your power: you do but your dutie, and fulfill but your calling: and in doing that your dutie, you depart not vnrewarded with courtesie: whose fatherly affection is so great, and whose comfortable care so manifest, as to sée you do otherwise than well, or miscarrie by what meanes soeuer, would neither comfort his conscience, nor like his fancie, but be as preiudiciall to his person, as so∣rowfull to your safetie.

Thus passed they their passance, and wore out the wée∣rie way with these pleasant discourses, & prettie posies, where after their tedious toyle, they came to their Inne, where Phemocles coulde neither eate meate for ioy, nor sléepe in his bedde for the pleasure he cōceiued of his tra∣uell. Thus he swamme in securitie, and sayled (as he thought) in safetie, but how much was he wide? and how farre from his purpose? the maine Sea was betwixt his fréend and him, and Narbonus as much distant from him, as when he was in Naples, that painefull passage, and that long cutte, which was tedious in length, and dange∣rous in trauell.

Phemocles now at the ende of his iourney, and hauing the full view of the Countrey, ariued very wel at Vienna▪ & in good time, as he thought, hasted to his Fathers house, and stayed not in any place till he came there, whome hée found busied about matters of his owne estate, and tri∣fling with those small things he had to do, where after obedience yéelded to his Father, and his duty fully per∣fourmed, he as ioyfully welcomed him home, & as grate∣fully receyued him, as he willingly wished, or hartelie required: who questioned with him of diuers matters, touching the estate of the Countrey, and enquired by what orders their Townes were gouerned, then how he hadde spente his time, and so, for the atteyning of his language, wherein he founde him so well profited, and that his time so well spent, as his Father was very ioy∣full of his time of absence, and not a little gladde of his safe returne.

Page  132Afterward, they sate downe to dinner, and fed on such fare as there was prouided: which ended, and the Table taken away, Phemocles thought to find out his friend, and could not tarrie longer before he spake with him, wente to the house of his Unckle to enquire for him, and founde there the house, but the man was gone: there he enquired for Narbonus, and whether he were within? his Unckle answered, he was neyther in his house, nor yet in Germa∣nie, then he shewed him the manner of his departure, and vpon what occasion.

Phemocles séemed with this tale not greatly discōtēted, nor déepely displeased, but dissembled his griefe, & concea∣led his sorow: then repairing to his fathers house, & com∣ming into it, whome he found readie for supper, and pre∣pared to sitte downe: But how coulde he feede? or what meate could he eate? for he had alreadie taken that which he knewe not how to put ouer, and heard that with his eares, which he knew not how to disgest with his heart. Supper ended, he bade farewell to all, & gaue good night to his Father, he went to his Chamber, but not to sléepe, and into his bedde, but not to rest: laide in his carefull couche, and drowned in his soft bedde, he poured foorth these complaintes, and vttered these words.

And art thou gone indéede Narbonus? and was thy de∣parture so spéedy? must thou vnneathes frame this vnfor∣tunate voyage in the time of my absence? and perforce be forced whē I was not present? had I bin at home, or héere in thy hastie iourney, thy soule should not haue wandred without my company, nor thy presence departed without my comforte. Should not I haue bin a faithfull Titus in the time of thy tedious trauell? and a second Camillus to accompany thy wādring wittes in what place soener thy faithful felowship should pretēd passage, or to what Coun∣trey soeuer thy toyling trauell should march forward? A∣las, couldest thou not haue written some ragged letter, or some scribled lines? if not writtē, some small sayings sent by some messenger, who might himselfe manifested the Page  133 memorie of thy trauell, & vttered y pretēce of thy passage? Alas, who was this the harbinger of thy heauinesse, and the Pilot of thy Sea trauaile? which had I knowen by a∣ny meanes, or heard by any motion, I would not haue staied though I had lost my time, nor lingred behinde to obtaine this my language: I would not taried to haue lost the good will of my fréendes, nor stayed, if I had gained the yll will of my Father: whose company to me is more curious then Coffers of coyne, and more gratefull then Golde: more acceptable then Iemmes and Iewels, and more profitable then precious thinges or Pearles: more pleasant then all other pleasures: and his departure then death more bitter: But how could Narbonus write? or how could hee send? what excuse could he frame? or what deuice was hee able to put in practise? but suspected, or doubted: but dreaded, or mistrusted: but knowen by some meanes, or made apparant by others: And had hee sent? should I haue come? or should I haue lost my learninge? should I haue burnt my Bookes, or forsaken my know∣ledge? should I forgone my freendes, and left my Father? And why would not hee haue consented, or happely haue graunted my request: I might haue gained his grace, or wonne his willing will, I might haue found such fauou∣rable fréendship, and haue gained my desired wish, to haue had his company, & inioyed his presence, to laude his com∣fortable wordes, and giuen eare to his sweete sayinges, more swéet then Suger, and more holesome then Honny: more satiable then the tollerable tongue of Tullie, & more acceptable then the vauntinge verses of Virgill: And did not hee doubt of the consent of my Father, and was feare∣full of his agreement: for that olde men are froward, and wayward: testy, and doting: who thinke the absence of their children, for a time will bréede their euerlastinge farewell: and which most delighteth vs, seemes most vn∣sauery to them: But how couldst thou brooke the Seas, that neuer tasted the sowces of the waltringe waues? or how couldst thou indure the waters, that neuer was ac∣quainted Page  134 with the tossinges of those sorowfull Surges: thy body may bee so contrary to away with the nature of the Seas, and thy sences so impatient with the qualities of the Waues, as thy life may bee in daunger, and thy death pronounced: If so thy life be lost, or thy soule sinke into the Sandes, who will there bewaile thee? or what freendes will make moane? what company will follow thy Hearce, or who will sing thy Dirges? who wil beare thy Coffin, or who will dig thy Graue? who wil intombe thee, or who will wrap thee in Leade? who will write Uerses in the praise of thy person, or will erect a Monu∣ment in honour of thy fidelitie? Alas, the colde waters must be thy Graue, and the Mermaydes must wayle and lament: in stead of thy stately Tomb, where thou shouldst lye whole and sound, the fléeting Fishes, will now teare and mangle thee: where thou shouldst haue béene imbaul∣med with swéet perfumes, the flowinge floods must wash and make thee cleane: I pray Narbonus that thy boone be not so bad, and wish thy hap bee not so yll: and if thou haue escaped the rigour of the Rockes, and auoyd the bea∣tinge of the Billowes: is not thy daunger afterwardes great, and thy penaunce then as much pronounce? Yes, for the Spaniard is proude, so is he stately: he is haugh∣ty, so is hee arragant, hating thy health, and loathing thy liberty: not crauing thy company, and flying thy fréend∣ship: flatteringe thy welfare, and laughinge at thy losse: contemninge thy courtesie, and péeuishly requitinge thy painfull pilgrimage: At euery wry looke, mooued against thée, & for euery crosse conceit, séeking to displeasure thee: maintaining malice, or procuring some mischiefe: cockred in carnall conceyts, & dandled in daungerous delightes: al∣waies repining at thy pleasure, and euer more vitupera∣ting thy welfare: If thou talke with him, hée is as testy & froward as may bee: if thou vse any conference, so contra∣ry and crosse as thou wouldst not imagine: if thou walke with him in the stréetes, or also in the Church, thou must turne as hée turneth, otherwise, hee will imagine thou Page  135 disdaynest him, and so shalt purchace his displeasure: thou must talke to answere him directly, though he speak neuer so contrary: thou to please his patience, he to mooue thy humour: thou to make him merry, hee to make thee weepe: thou to fauour his fancy, hee to offende thee fro∣wardly: if thou séeme contented, vnles to gayne his gratu∣lation, hee is then offended, thinkinge thou vsest some pretence to displease his person: If in familiar talke thou vnwittingly wrest out some waywarde worde, or vnwil∣lingly speake which thou wouldst not, hee will straight chalenge the combat, and soone offer thee to fight: which excepte thou seeme as willinge to perfourme, as hee is ready to offer, thou art no Cocke of the Game, therefore thy combe shall be cutte: But if happely thou thus escape and agrée well with them, what afterward will become of thee, or how canst thou digest this coare, when thou shalt bee forced to march all the day in thy heauy armour, and at night to looke thy lodginge amongst the Dogges There the longe grasse, if fortune fauour thee so wel, may bee thy softe feather bed, or some straw, if thou canst get any, thy quiet Couche: thy Boulster, some turfe of the ground, and thy sheetes not very faire, for that they are alwayes at thy backe: thy coueringe colde, excepte thy bargayne bee the better, thy Chamber not stately, but a house for a Swine: marchinge thou shalt bee hindred with Hayle, and sowced with Snowe: bitten with the Froste, and nipped with blastes: frozen in the flawes, and troubled with winde and weather: When thou shalt turne thy face vp to Heauen, or looke a little vpwarde, all these droppinge on thee, and all these runninge downe thy skirtes: how happye then was thy home? and how blessed thy Unckles House? Alas, will the remembraunce of these thoughts reuiue thee? nay, will they not terrifie thee? then shalte thou bee thrust out into euery skirmish, & euermore be the first that shal goe forth: at euery false Alarum disquieted of thy rest, and at euery Page  136 péece discharged in the night, thou must run to ye Trench, there must thou watch at thy Warde, and stand thy sen∣tinell: bee one in the still watch, or walke thy Round: Then shalt thou be the first that shall fight, because thou art a raw Souldiour, and the foremost that shall enter at the Breach, because thou shalt be made expert: And if by good happe thou escape all these daungers, and bee hurte with none of these harmes: that litle money spente that thou cariedst with thee, and thy purse pennylesse, then shalt thou be ready to sterue with hunger, and like to faint with thirst: and steale there thou maist not, for Martiall Law is straightly executed: and begge thou canst not, for none will reléeue thee: for euery trifle thou shalte gayne the yll will of thy Captayne, and for euery small offence thy life shall bee in daunger, when perhaps thou shalte bee better borne then him selfe, and thy courage not infe∣riour to his: Going into the Féeld, some dastardly dotard or cowherdly sotte, shall get that by chaunce, and gaine by good hap, which thou with great daunger of thy life, and duetifull seruice shall neuer obtaine, nor at any time bee in likelyhood: For, is not this saying sooth, & the Prouerb too true: The more foole, the better fortune? For did not that carpet Knight, kill by chaunce that noble Achilles? whose force to haue frowned on him, the other beeinge presente, or whose lookes to haue lowred, he being néere him, would feare the other to frame one frowarde face, or caused him to vsed one contrarie countenance: the one las∣shed with his launce, the other laid on load with his Lute: the one a notable Captaine, the other a Courtly Carpeter: ye one a litle practised by pollicy, the other tried by strēgth: yet his hap was to giue the gleeke, & the others chaunce to bide the bitter bargaine: So may fortune frowne on thee, nay, so will it not defie thee: Did not the carterly Ptholomy, slay cowardly y noble Pompey? who a nobler Captaine thē the one, who a viler Prince then the other? Was not Caesar the onely man of his time, and stabbed in by his trayterous Senatous? who then hee a more noble Page  137 Prince? who then they more Traytourlike Rebels? Yet in scaping all these scourings, and biding all these bitter broyles, in flinginge out too farre thou hap to be taken, and in ventring some thing too muche, thou come shorte home, who will raunsome thée? or who will acquite thee? who wil set thée frée? or who wil fetch thée backe? Answer will be made, he was foolishhardie, and vnaduised, vnru∣led, and disdeyning to be refourmed, let him therefore ei∣ther raunsome himselfe, or trie out his fortune. What shall I say? or what shall I do? how shall I find thée out? or how shall I fetch thée home? where shall I séeke thée? or in what part of the Countrey shall I looke for thée? I dread the woorst, and I feare thy fal, I doubt thy danger, and I dread thy death: how can I hope thy health, when there is no likelyhode of thy returne? the time is not now to trie I feare me, nor the place to be appointed: thy life is alreadie alotted, and thy death determined: but honou∣rably I wish thée come to thy graue, and that thy death may be lamented of others: But some will replie, the death of the fielde is honourable, and farre better then to be buried at home in a mans graue. The death I confesse is honourable, and the déedes commēdable: but God giue thée that honour to die at home, and to be buried in Vienna amongst thy friends: at thy tumbling into the hole, or the raking vp of thy bones, thou mayest happe to get a volue of shot, or a peale of Gunnes, which any Souldiour hath so much, and the greatest Captaine hath no more.

Tumbling himselfe amidst these doubtfull desires, and tossing amongst these dreadful dangers, he let his slouth∣full bedde, and rose out of his sincke of securitie, thinking to abandon these curious cogitations, by walking in the Féeldes, & to driue these fonde fancies into the open aire: which purpose tooke so good effecte, as he put it straight in practise: where no sooner entred, but his auntient remē∣brance, and forepassed fancies of his faithfull friend and banished exile assailed him as before, and troubled him as at the first: for the floured feeldes were rather a helpe to Page  138 renew his Rebellious, than to put into obliuion his con∣trarie conceytes: for let any man afflicted come into any Pallace of pleasure, or fine fieldes, furnished with fra∣grant floures, if pleasantly disposed, they augment his felicitie, if pensiuely perplexed, they encrease his so∣rowes: he therefore that earst was pensiue, can not there boast of his brauerie, and he that before was afflicted, can not there be reléeued: But now he deuiseth what meanes he may worke to go to him, and how to temper with his Father to get his consente: now he hopeth, then he doubteth: now he flattereth himselfe that his Father can not denie him so reasonable a request, then he feareth that he will deuine vpon some dreadfull daun∣gers, the troublesome trauell, in that the Countrey ly∣eth full of Souldioures in euery corner, and their rob∣bing and spoyling of him: who to packe their pouch full of redde Ruddockes, or for the gayne of little gold, regard not the murthering of a man, and the selling of their Soule to the Diuell, who is their good Mayster, and so let him be, let them serue him so long as they list, and the best they can, in the ende they come home by weeping Crosse, and crie Peccaui: now he doubted this, and then dreaded some other thing: now deuised, and then vndid it again: now counsailed, and then sette it at sale: now bidde the bargaine, and then drew his head out of the coller: firste fayned, then framed: first agréed, then de∣créede: first propounded, then renounced: then he thought to bidde the bargaine, was but the parte of a choyce Champion, and to giue the assaulte, but the duetie of a good Souldyours, and he rather to aske, than the other to demaunde: his nay at the firste was no deniall, nor his gaynesaying to stand as a bonde of aduantage: the worst that could happe was but nay, and the greatest deniall might in time be graunted: Then he thought to frame some excuse, and vnder some pretence to vnder∣take that voyage: then hee remembred agayne that playne dealing was a iewell, and the trueth woulde bée Page  139 tried out in the ende: Then agayne this troubled him, the vncertaintie of his finding, and the not knowing in what place he was: if he should be gone from the Camp, or be thrust into garrison into some Towne, his Cap∣tayne he was not acquaynted withall, neyther dyd hée know any that wente in his companie: then thought he, that to make suche spéedie poasting woulde grow to some suspition, maruelling what his pretenced hast shoulde meane, comming so lately home, and but then refreshed of his forepassed trauell: then hée thought to stay some time, and to watche a season, for the reque∣sting of his suite, this was the greatest certaintie, and tooke surest effect.

Who then had séene him in this perplexitie, and so rauished in his desires, flattering still his fancie that he shoulde obtaine his desires, and perswading himselfe he could not be denied, his wittes ranne he knew not whi∣ther, and his senses were seduced into sundry places: his thoughtes were now in Naples, and then in Witten∣berge: now in Vienna, and then in Roome: now in Ger∣manie, and then in Spayne.

Thus was Phemocles neuer contented, but alwayes troubled, till he had pouredfoorth the effect of his froward fancie, & vnfolded the inwarde cogitations of his doubled thoughts, thinking then hée should be sufficiently satis∣fied, that once obtayned which hee desired. Octauian af∣ter the departure of Anthonie, and his secrete flying, was so incensed with outrage, and enflamed with furie, as he coulde not abide to heare him named, or any man to speake of hym, but submission made, and pardon craued of his owne person, when the boy∣sterous blastes were ouerblowen, and rigorous out∣rage put into obliuion, hee gayned agayne that quiet caulme whiche contented him, obtayned his par∣don, and gayned his fauoure, whiche grewe greate∣lye to the aduantage of the common wealth. Was not Peeter more faithfull after he receyued pardon for Page  140 his offence, and Paule must finde fault, after he lefte per∣secuting.

Phemocles now imagined to get that by entreating, whiche he coulde not gayne without asking, and to ob∣tayne that by fauoure, whiche he shoulde neuer winne without friendship, watching therfore a time so conueni∣ent, as he thought none could be more beneficiall, and e∣spying such place, as he imagined he should not be gaine∣sayed, he plucked vp his spirits, and spake thus to his Father.

Sir, the idle spending of time, and the wearing of a mans yong yeares without any profite, is no meanes ey∣ther to get credite, or gaine riches: to obtaine wisedome, or to learne knowledge: to find out experience, or to pro∣cure liuing: there is nothing found but yéeldeth some pro∣fite, nor anye thing gotten without some paynes. How grow the graftes? or how spring the plantes? how sproute the buddes? or how encrease the flouds? how commes the corne, not without tilling? how commes the fruite, not without planting? nor profite without payne? and that paine peeuishly employed, if it yéelde not some commodi∣tie. Doth not the hired seruant worke before he be re∣warded? and the Souldioure some seruice before he re∣ceyue pay? Can the traueller atteyne his desires before he passe the Seas? or the Merchant haue his Shippe come home before he make his mart? no trust me: for then hée returneth voyde of his pretence, and commeth home as muche the better, as when he wente forthe. Must not the Scholler procéede by degrées? and the craftes man be a Prentise before he be a Maister? can the Pilot passe the Seas before he haue learned his compasse? and the Astro∣nomer giue iudgemente of the Starres before he knowe the Earth? must not the Shomaker make a latchet before he fashion a boote? and the Paynter vse his pen before he practise with his pensell? could I atteyned my toung if I had stayed at home? and how should he be learned that ne∣er loketh on Bookes? the minoritie of small things must Page  141 first be learned, then the substance of greater matters the easier to be atteyned. The Gretians sacked Troy, but not without greate toyle: and the Romanes woon Hierusalem, but not withoute greate trauell. Caesar gayned the Em∣pire, but not without long labour: and the Turkes woon the Rhodes, but not without great slaughter. Tully gay∣ned eloquence, but not without great study: and Orpheus gote his wife out of Hell, but not withoute passing toyle. Of somewhat commeth something, but of ydlenesse no∣thing ensueth. Doth not the Astronomer stare long on the Starres, before hee make his Prognostication: and the Lawyer pleades not at the Barre, before hee know his cases: can the Musition attaine the ground of musicke by one Instrument? and could Pithagoras attaine his wis∣dome in one day? but once gained, what profit doth import? and once attained, what credite insueth? Thus paine will yéelde profite, and tedious trauaile bringe greedy gayne: to linger at home, and to loyter in the Towne: To kéepe as well yll disposed company, as those which are honest and good, I know is an offence to God, and some grudge to my conscience: the way to growe into discredite, and the meanes to moone me to naughtinesse: Wherfore were wee made, or wherfore begotten? wherfore created after the Images of God? or wherefore did hée breath life into vs? to stand like Ciphers, or to bee deuouring Catterpillers? no, euery one after his degree, and each ac∣cordinge to his callinge: If it shall please you therfore to thinke good of it, and that it bee not disagréeable to your minde, to graunt this my small request, and not to gain∣say that which I shall craue: for as you haue found mee alwayes obedient to perfourme what euer you should commaund: so wish I not longer to liue, then duetifully to obey your pleasure: which is, that I may finde so much fauour in your sight, and obtaine so much goodnes at your handes, to maintayne a voyage into Spayne, to see that noble Countrey: troublesome I know it will seeme vnto you, and a thing altogeather vnexpected: but for my time Page  142 of absence, and the while I shall bee away, graunt how longe it please▪ or how litle shall like you best, if it bee but one quarter of a yeare, or lesse, if sooner I may make my returne: for my charges, my bare dyet shall excuse mee: and for expences, Horse hire will bee the greatest: and my iourney I hope will not bée so chargeable, but my returne will be as profitable: lyuinge thus, I consume my yeares, and profite not my witte: which well imployed, would profite my selfe, and further some other: Is not the Bée yued for her Honny, & the Shéepe sheared for her fléece? is not the Foule plucked for her feathers, & the Oxe his necke wrought for his Maisters profite? Is not the Trée grafted to yeelde fruite, and the ground laboured to bring foorth Corne? Wherfore was I begotten? or to what ende had you such care ouer mée in my infancy? wherfore was I fostered, and wherfore nourished to this age? to be a Droane amongst the Bees, and a Catterpiller amongst the Fruite, deuouring the profite of others, and seruinge to no vse my selfe: But happely, you will demaund the cause of my hastie voyage, and the occasion of my sodaine departure, which though it séeme hastie to you, yet it hath beene long sithens put in practise by mee: you know bet∣ter then I can manifest vnto you, and saw more by expe∣rience, then I haue by hearesay: The late Armie leuied by our Noble Emperour, and the Royall company that yssued foorth of our Towne: the number of Horsemen, glisteringe in their bright Armour, and the braue compa∣ny of Footemen, with their Pikes and Shotte: the cou∣ragious Captaynes in their callinges, and the lustye Sergeauntes in their Offices: All which, as it wil yéelde no great discommodity to you, so must it of necessitie bee very profitable for mee: then may I boast, I haue seene an Army Royall: then may I vaunt of that noble Coun∣trey of Spayne: I would not you should thinke my mea∣ninge is to serue, or to take pay as a Souldiour: for that my cunning is small, and my experience lesse: onely my desire is to gayne the full sight of that huge Army, and to Page  143 see their noble orders, and Ordinaunces: As for my time of absence, and the space to bee away: I referre it to your discretion, and shal contentedly bee ruled by your will.

His Father who suspected that pretence lea•• of any in the worlde, and neuer imagined any suche demaund would bée required: knew not how to answere at te 〈◊〉, nor how to deny so reasonable a request: yet both fearful of his daunger, and carefull of his health: doubtinge •• well the daunger of the fominge flouds, as mistrustinge the health of his Sonne, who was neuer on the Sea bee∣fore, nor at any time in little daunger of drowning: then feared hee the nature of the Countrey would not agree with him: and then doubted hee the disposition of the people, which was altogeather vnlike theirs: yet in the ende imagininge that hee would haue sufficient regard of his owne safety, and looke diligently to the health of him selfe, hee therfore put away all doubtes, and shaped him this answere.

MY beloued Phemocles, what the harte thinketh, the mouth vttereth: and what the minde inwardly con∣ceyueth, is knowen partly by the outwarde cogitations: there is no commodity, but hath his discommodity: an no profite, but hath some disprofite: thou art not borne to eate alwayes thy bread in one place, nor bred to drinke al∣wayes of one Well: The cloth hath his list, and the Trée not without some blast: the Nutte his shell, and the swéet Bée, her stinginge tayle: as the one cannot bee made without the other, so must the best bee a helper to the worser. I thy Father, neuer trauayled out of my Countrey: thou my Sonne hast trauayled, and de∣sirest more: I a great Marchaunte, thou ignoraunte of the Marte: thou desirest that I neuer wished, and crauest that, which were it in my case, should neuer bee desired: Aristippus saith wee are borne for plea∣sure, but Cato saith wee are begotten for the vtilitie of our Countrey: wee are borne in deede for the pleasure Page  144 of GOD, and created to doe the will of oure heauenlye Father.

Anaxagoras sayeth, wee are borne to looke vp to Hea∣uen, and Naso willeth vs to pleasure all men: And as the aforesayde Anaxagoras sayeth in that respecte wee are Angell like, and do resemble the doings of our ma∣••r, in that all other Creatures do looke downewarde, and haue no regarde to beholde the Heauens: and man is the onely thinge in this worlde, that other beastes doo feare, and they tremble to beholde his countenaunce: but let that passe, and come to the purpose: Thou desirest the life of a Trauailer, and imployest thy minde that waye, which to thy profite to make denyall, and to thy vtilitie not to perfourme, were but the parte of an vncourte∣ous Father, and the déedes of an yll disposed parente. There is no reason I shoulde disdayne thy doings being good, and no cause why I shoulde blame thy bargaines béeing honest. One desireth the life of a Souldyoure, another requireth the lyfe of a Merchante: One sée∣keth the life and libertie of a frée man, another regar∣deth to liue in forraigne Countreys: one delighteth to trauell by Sea, another more reioyceth to iourney by Land.

Fabritius greatest ioy was by pouertie, and that onely life he desired: for, he that had nothing, was certayne not to léese any thing.

Rutilius reioyced of his exile, and Cato was not sorow∣full of his death.

Socrates thought his greatest felicitie to be by poyson, and that noble Captayne, who to saue Rome, disdeyned not to ride into the gaping gulfe.

Thy desire is to mainteyne a Uoyage into Spayne, and to haue the full sighte of that noble Armye, and thy purpose shall take effecte, and thou not deceyued of that thou desirest: but I feare me thou wilte hardly away with the nature of the Soyle, and I am doubte∣full that the Countrey lyeth full of Souldyoures: yet Page  145 vpon this condition that thy returne be so spéedie as thou sayest, and so thou promise me to come agayne in that time thou hast sette downe. I am contnt to graunte thy request, and willinglye consente to what thou desi∣rest. But whilest thou arte there, be carefull of thy dyet, and haue a regard whome thou choosest thy companyon, for in that thou knowest not whome to trust héere, thou mayest perforce be deceyued in a strange place: For the fatherlie affection I haue ouer thée, dothe wishe thée so well as my selfe: and without thy health, what happi∣nesse can I haue? Therefore I charge thée héere, vpon payne of my displeasure, and commaunde thée as thou wilte purchasse my blessing, that thou be carefull of thy owne safetie, and make so spéedie returne, as thy selfe hast promised.

His father immediately furnishing him with euerie thing apperteyning to suche a voyage, and willing him to be mindfull of his promises, committed him to the go∣uernemente of the highest, and betooke him to the fauour of the Flouds, there to trie his Fortune amidst the fo∣ming froath, and to march in the middle of the saltishe Seas, where we must leaue him to them vpō his chance, and betake him to his close cabbin in the steade of his choyse Chamber.

I Haue thus finished the first parte of NARBONVS, and gyuen PHE∣MOCLES, for a tyme, his farewell: you shall shortlye heare what newes in Page  146 Spayne, and of the successe of the Emperoures Ar∣mie: where he that before neuer walked in the warres, is now wedded to some woe: and he that earst was neuer ouer the shoes in fortunes despight, is now o∣uer the bootes in enuies disdeyne. I commende him to the Spanyardes courtesie, whome I doubt will entreate him not cu∣riouslie, yet careles∣lye.

FINIS.
The ende of the first part.