|
There is not any burden that some would
gladlier post off to another than the charge and care of their religion. There
be--who knows not that there be?--of Protestants and professors who live and
die in as arrant an implicit faith as any lay Papist of Loretto. A wealthy man,
addicted to his pleasure and to his profits, finds religion to be a traffic so
entangled, and of so many piddling accounts, that of all mysteries he cannot
skill to keep a stock going upon that trade. What should he do? fain he would
have the name to be religious, fain he would bear up with his neighbours in
that. What does he therefore, but resolves to give over toiling, and to find
himself out some factor, to whose care and credit he may commit the whole
managing of his religious affairs; some divine of note and estimation that must
be. To him he adheres, resigns the whole warehouse of his religion, with all
the locks and keys, into his custody; and indeed makes the very person of that
man his religion; esteems his associating with him a sufficient evidence and
commendatory of his own piety. So that a man may say his religion is now no
more within himself, but is become a dividual movable, and goes and comes near
him, according as that good man frequents the house. He entertains him, gives
him gifts, feasts him, lodges him; his religion comes home at night, prays, is
liberally supped, and sumptuously laid to sleep; rises, is saluted, and after
the malmsey, or some well-spiced brewage, and better breakfasted than he whose
morning appetite would have gladly fed on green figs between Bethany and
Jerusalem, his religion walks abroad at eight, and leaves his kind entertainer
in the shop trading all day without his religion.
Another sort there be who, when they hear that all things
shall be ordered, all things regulated and settled, nothing written but what
passes through the custom-house of certain publicans that have the tonnaging
and poundaging of all free-spoken truth, will straight give themselves up into
your hands, make 'em and cut 'em out what religion ye please: there be
delights, there be recreations and jolly pastimes that will fetch the day about
from sun to sun, and rock the tedious year as in a delightful dream. What need
they torture their heads with that which others have taken so strictly and so
unalterably into their own purveying? These are the fruits which a dull ease
and cessation of our knowledge will bring forth among the people. How goodly
and how to be wished were such an obedient unanimity as this, what a fine
conformity would it starch us all into! Doubtless a staunch and solid piece of
framework, as any January could freeze together.
Nor much better will be the consequence even among the
clergy themselves. It is no new thing never heard of before, for a parochial
minister, who has his reward and is at his Hercules' pillars in a warm
benefice, to be easily inclinable, if he have nothing else that may rouse up
his studies, to finish his circuit in an English Concordance and a topic folio,
the gatherings and savings of a sober graduateship, a Harmony and a Catena;
treading the constant round of certain common doctrinal heads, attended with
their uses, motives, marks, and means, out of which, as out of an alphabet, or
sol-fa, by forming and transforming, joining and disjoining variously, a little
bookcraft, and two hours' meditation, might furnish him unspeakably to the
performance of more than a weekly charge of sermoning: not to reckon up the
infinite helps of interlinearies, breviaries, synopses, and other loitering
gear. But as for the multitude of sermons ready printed and piled up, on every
text that is not difficult, our London trading St. Thomas in his vestry, and
add to boot St. Martin and St. Hugh, have not within their hallowed limits more
vendible ware of all sorts ready made: so that penury he never need fear of
pulpit provision, having where so plenteously to refresh his magazine. But if
his rear and flanks be not impaled, if his back door be not secured by the
rigid licenser, but that a bold book may now and then issue forth and give the
assault to some of his old collections in their trenches, it will concern him
then to keep waking, to stand in watch, to set good guards and sentinels about
his received opinions, to walk the round and counter-round with his fellow
inspectors, fearing lest any of his flock be seduced, who also then would be
better instructed, better exercised and disciplined. And God send that the fear
of this diligence, which must then be used, do not make us affect the laziness
of a licensing Church.
For if we be sure we are in the right, and do not hold the
truth guiltily, which becomes not, if we ourselves condemn not our own weak and
frivolous teaching, and the people for an untaught and irreligious gadding
rout, what can be more fair than when a man judicious, learned, and of a
conscience, for aught we know, as good as theirs that taught us what we know,
shall not privily from house to house, which is more dangerous, but openly by
writing publish to the world what his opinion is, what his reasons, and
wherefore that which is now thought cannot be sound? Christ urged it as
wherewith to justify himself, that he preached in public; yet writing is more
public than preaching; and more easy to refutation, if need be, there being so
many whose business and profession merely it is to be the champions of truth;
which if they neglect, what can be imputed but their sloth, or unability?
Thus much we are hindered and disinured by this course of
licensing, toward the true knowledge of what we seem to know. For how much it
hurts and hinders the licensers themselves in the calling of their ministry,
more than any secular employment, if they will discharge that office as they
ought, so that of necessity they must neglect either the one duty or the other,
I insist not, because it is a particular, but leave it to their own conscience,
how they will decide it there.
There is yet behind of what I purposed to lay open, the
incredible loss and detriment that this plot of licensing puts us to; more than
if some enemy at sea should stop up all our havens and ports and creeks, it
hinders and retards the importation of our richest merchandise, truth; nay, it
was first established and put in practice by Antichristian malice and mystery
on set purpose to extinguish, if it were possible, the light of Reformation,
and to settle falsehood; little differing from that policy wherewith the Turk
upholds his Alcoran, by the prohibition of printing. 'Tis not denied, but
gladly confessed, we are to send our thanks and vows to Heaven louder than most
of nations, for that great measure of truth which we enjoy, especially in those
main points between us and the Pope, with his appurtenances the prelates: but
he who thinks we are to pitch our tent here, and have attained the utmost
prospect of reformation that the mortal glass wherein we contemplate can show
us, till we come to beatific vision, that man by this very opinion declares
that he is yet far short of truth.
Truth indeed came once into the world with her divine
Master, and was a perfect shape most glorious to look on: but when he ascended,
and his Apostles after him were laid asleep, then straight arose a wicked race
of deceivers, who, as that story goes of the Egyptian Typhon with his
conspirators, how they dealt with the good Osiris, took the virgin Truth, hewed
her lovely form into a thousand pieces, and scattered them to the four winds.
From that time ever since, the sad friends of Truth, such as durst appear,
imitating the careful search that Isis made for the mangled body of Osiris,
went up and down gathering up limb by limb, still as they could find them. We
have not yet found them all, Lords and Commons, nor ever shall do, till her
Master's second coming; he shall bring together every joint and member, and
shall mould them into an immortal feature of loveliness and perfection. Suffer
not these licensing prohibitions to stand at every place of opportunity,
forbidding and disturbing them that continue seeking, that continue to do our
obsequies to the torn body of our martyred saint.
We boast our light; but if we look not wisely on the sun
itself, it smites us into darkness. Who can discern those planets that are oft
combust, and those stars of brightest magnitude that rise and set with the sun,
until the opposite motion of their orbs bring them to such a place in the
firmament, where they may be seen evening or morning? The light which we have
gained was given us, not to be ever staring on, but by it to discover onward
things more remote from our knowledge. It is not the unfrocking of a priest,
the unmitring of a bishop, and the removing him from off the presbyterian
shoulders, that will make us a happy nation. No, if other things as great in
the Church, and in the rule of life both economical and political, be not
looked into and reformed, we have looked so long upon the blaze that Zuinglius
and Calvin hath beaconed up to us, that we are stark blind. There be who
perpetually complain of schisms and sects, and make it such a calamity that any
man dissents from their maxims. 'Tis their own pride and ignorance which causes
the disturbing, who neither will hear with meekness, nor can convince; yet all
must be suppressed which is not found in their Syntagma. They are the
troublers, they are the dividers of unity, who neglect and permit not others to
unite those dissevered pieces which are yet wanting to the body of Truth. To be
still searching what we know not by what we know, still closing up truth to
truth as we find it (for all her body is homogeneal and proportional), this is
the golden rule in theology as well as in arithmetic, and makes up the best
harmony in a Church; not the forced and outward union of cold, and neutral, and
inwardly divided minds.
Lords and Commons of England! consider what nation it is
whereof ye are, and whereof ye are the governors: a nation not slow and dull,
but of a quick, ingenious and piercing spirit, acute to invent, subtle and
sinewy to discourse, not beneath the reach of any point the highest that human
capacity can soar to. Therefore the studies of learning in her deepest sciences
have been so ancient and so eminent among us, that writers of good antiquity
and ablest judgment have been persuaded that even the school of Pythagoras and
the Persian wisdom took beginning from the old philosophy of this island. And
that wise and civil Roman, Julius Agricola, who governed once here for Caesar,
preferred the natural wits of Britain before the laboured studies of the
French. Nor is it for nothing that the grave and frugal Transylvanian sends out
yearly from as far as the mountainous borders of Russia, and beyond the
Hercynian wilderness, not their youth, but their staid men, to learn our
language and our theologic arts.
Yet that which is above all this, the favour and the love of
Heaven, we have great argument to think in a peculiar manner propitious and
propending towards us. Why else was this nation chosen before any other, that
out of her, as out of Sion, should be proclaimed and sounded forth the first
tidings and trumpet of Reformation to all Europe? And had it not been the
obstinate perverseness of our prelates against the divine and admirable spirit
of Wickliff, to suppress him as a schismatic and innovator, perhaps neither the
Bohemian Huns and Jerome, no nor the name of Luther or of Calvin, had been ever
known: the glory of reforming all our neighbours had been completely ours. But
now, as our obdurate clergy have with violence demeaned the matter, we are
become hitherto the latest and the backwardest scholars, of whom God offered to
have made us the teachers. Now once again by all concurrence of signs, and by
the general instinct of holy and devout men, as they daily and solemnly express
their thoughts, God is decreeing to begin some new and great period in his
Church, even to the reforming of Reformation itself: what does he then but
reveal himself to his servants, and as his manner is, first to his Englishmen?
I say, as his manner is, first to us, though we mark not the method of his
counsels, and are unworthy.
Behold now this vast city: a city of refuge, the mansion
house of liberty, encompassed and surrounded with his protection; the shop of
war hath not there more anvils and hammers waking, to fashion out the plates
and instruments of armed justice in defence of beleaguered truth, than there be
pens and heads there, sitting by their studious lamps, musing, searching,
revolving new notions and ideas wherewith to present, as with their homage and
their fealty, the approaching Reformation: others as fast reading, trying all
things, assenting to the force of reason and convincement. What could a man
require more from a nation so pliant and so prone to seek after knowledge? What
wants there to such a towardly and pregnant soil, but wise and faithful
labourers, to make a knowing people, a nation of prophets, of sages, and of
worthies? We reckon more than five months yet to harvest; there need not be
five weeks; had we but eyes to lift up, the fields are white already.
Where there is much desire to learn, there of necessity will
be much arguing, much writing, many opinions; for opinion in good men is but
knowledge in the making. Under these fantastic terrors of sect and schism, we
wrong the earnest and zealous thirst after knowledge and understanding which
God hath stirred up in this city. What some lament of, we rather should rejoice
at, should rather praise this pious forwardness among men, to reassume the ill-
deputed care of their religion into their own hands again. A little generous
prudence, a little forbearance of one another, and some grain of charity might
win all these diligences to join, and unite in one general and brotherly search
after truth; could we but forgo this prelatical tradition of crowding free
consciences and Christian liberties into canons and precepts of men. I doubt
not, if some great and worthy stranger should come among us, wise to discern
the mould and temper of a people, and how to govern it, observing the high
hopes and aims, the diligent alacrity of our extended thoughts and reasonings
in the pursuance of truth and freedom, but that he would cry out as Pyrrhus
did, admiring the Roman docility and courage: If such were my Epirots, I would
not despair the greatest design that could be attempted, to make a Church or
kingdom happy.
Yet these are the men cried out against for schismatics and
sectaries; as if, while the temple of the Lord was building, some cutting, some
squaring the marble, others hewing the cedars, there should be a sort of
irrational men who could not consider there must be many schisms and many
dissections made in the quarry and in the timber, ere the house of God can be
built. And when every stone is laid artfully together, it cannot be united into
a continuity, it can but be contiguous in this world; neither can every piece
of the building be of one form; nay rather the perfection consists in this,
that, out of many moderate varieties and brotherly dissimilitudes that are not
vastly disproportional, arises the goodly and the graceful symmetry that
commends the whole pile and structure.
Let us therefore be more considerate builders, more wise in
spiritual architecture, when great reformation is expected. For now the time
seems come, wherein Moses the great prophet may sit in heaven rejoicing to see
that memorable and glorious wish of his fulfilled, when not only our seventy
elders, but all the Lord's people, are become prophets. No marvel then though
some men, and some good men too perhaps, but young in goodness, as Joshua then
was, envy them. They fret, and out of their own weakness are in agony, lest
these divisions and subdivisions will undo us. The adversary again applauds,
and waits the hour: when they have branched themselves out, saith he, small
enough into parties and partitions, then will be our time. Fool! he sees not
the firm root, out of which we all grow, though into branches: nor will beware
until he see our small divided maniples cutting through at every angle of his
ill-united and unwieldy brigade. And that we are to hope better of all these
supposed sects and schisms, and that we shall not need that solicitude, honest
perhaps, though over-timorous, of them that vex in this behalf, but shall laugh
in the end at those malicious applauders of our differences, I have these
reasons to persuade me.
First, when a city shall be as it were besieged and blocked
about, her navigable river infested, inroads and incursions round, defiance and
battle oft rumoured to be marching up even to her walls and suburb trenches,
that then the people, or the greater part, more than at other times, wholly
taken up with the study of highest and most important matters to be reformed,
should be disputing, reasoning, reading, inventing, discoursing, even to a
rarity and admiration, things not before discoursed or written of, argues first
a singular goodwill, contentedness and confidence in your prudent foresight and
safe government, Lords and Commons; and from thence derives itself to a gallant
bravery and well-grounded contempt of their enemies, as if there were no small
number of as great spirits among us, as his was, who when Rome was nigh
besieged by Hannibal, being in the city, bought that piece of ground at no
cheap rate, whereon Hannibal himself encamped his own regiment.
Next, it is a lively and cheerful presage of our happy
success and victory. For as in a body, when the blood is fresh, the spirits
pure and vigorous, not only to vital but to rational faculties, and those in
the acutest and the pertest operations of wit and subtlety, it argues in what
good plight and constitution the body is; so when the cheerfulness of the
people is so sprightly up, as that it has not only wherewith to guard well its
own freedom and safety, but to spare, and to bestow upon the solidest and
sublimest points of controversy and new invention, it betokens us not
degenerated, nor drooping to a fatal decay, but casting off the old and
wrinkled skin of corruption to outlive these pangs and wax young again,
entering the glorious ways of truth and prosperous virtue, destined to become
great and honourable in these latter ages. Methinks I see in my mind a noble
and puissant nation rousing herself like a strong man after sleep, and shaking
her invincible locks: methinks I see her as an eagle mewing her mighty youth,
and kindling her undazzled eyes at the full midday beam; purging and unscaling
her long-abused sight at the fountain itself of heavenly radiance; while the
whole noise of timorous and flocking birds, with those also that love the
twilight, flutter about, amazed at what she means, and in their envious gabble
would prognosticate a year of sects and schisms.
What would ye do then? should ye suppress all this flowery
crop of knowledge and new light sprung up and yet springing daily in this city?
Should ye set an oligarchy of twenty engrossers over it, to bring a famine upon
our minds again, when we shall know nothing but what is measured to us by their
bushel? Believe it, Lords and Commons, they who counsel ye to such a
suppressing do as good as bid ye suppress yourselves; and I will soon show how.
If it be desired to know the immediate cause of all this free writing and free
speaking, there cannot be assigned a truer than your own mild and free and
humane government. It is the liberty, Lords and Commons, which your own
valorous and happy counsels have purchased us, liberty which is the nurse of
all great wits; this is that which hath rarefied and enlightened our spirits
like the influence of heaven; this is that which hath enfranchised, enlarged
and lifted up our apprehensions, degrees above themselves.
Ye cannot make us now less capable, less knowing, less
eagerly pursuing of the truth, unless ye first make yourselves, that made us
so, less the lovers, less the founders of our true liberty. We can grow
ignorant again, brutish, formal and slavish, as ye found us; but you then must
first become that which ye cannot be, oppressive, arbitrary and tyrannous, as
they were from whom ye have freed us. That our hearts are now more capacious,
our thoughts more erected to the search and expectation of greatest and
exactest things, is the issue of your own virtue propagated in us; ye cannot
suppress that, unless ye reinforce an abrogated and merciless law, that fathers
may dispatch at will their own children. And who shall then stick closest to
ye, and excite others? not he who takes up arms for coat and conduct, and his
four nobles of Danegelt. Although I dispraise not the defence of just
immunities, yet love my peace better, if that were all. Give me the liberty to
know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all
liberties.
What would be best advised, then, if it be found so hurtful
and so unequal to suppress opinions for the newness or the unsuitableness to a
customary acceptance, will not be my task to say. I only shall repeat what I
have learned from one of your own honourable number, a right noble and pious
lord, who, had he not sacrificed his life and fortunes to the Church and
Commonwealth, we had not now missed and bewailed a worthy and undoubted patron
of this argument. Ye know him, I am sure; yet I for honour's sake, and may it
be eternal to him, shall name him, the Lord Brook. He writing of episcopacy,
and by the way treating of sects and schisms, left ye his vote, or rather now
the last words of his dying charge, which I know will ever be of dear and
honoured regard with ye, so full of meekness and breathing charity, that next
to his last testament, who bequeathed love and peace to his disciples, I cannot
call to mind where I have read or heard words more mild and peaceful. He there
exhorts us to hear with patience and humility those, however they be miscalled,
that desire to live purely, in such a use of God's ordinances, as the best
guidance of their conscience gives them, and to tolerate them, though in some
disconformity to ourselves. The book itself will tell us more at large, being
published to the world, and dedicated to the Parliament by him who, both for
his life and for his death, deserves that what advice he left be not laid by
without perusal.
And now the time in special is, by privilege to write and
speak what may help to the further discussing of matters in agitation. The
temple of Janus with his two controversial faces might now not unsignificantly
be set open. And though all the winds of doctrine were let loose to play upon
the earth, so Truth be in the field, we do injuriously, by licensing and
prohibiting, to misdoubt her strength. Let her and Falsehood grapple; who ever
knew Truth put to the worse, in a free and open encounter? Her confuting is the
best and surest suppressing. He who hears what praying there is for light and
clearer knowledge to be sent down among us, would think of other matters to be
constituted beyond the discipline of Geneva, framed and fabricked already to
our hands. Yet when the new light which we beg for shines in upon us, there be
who envy and oppose, if it come not first in at their casements. What a
collusion is this, whenas we are exhorted by the wise man to use diligence, to
seek for wisdom as for hidden treasures early and late, that another order
shall enjoin us to know nothing but by statute? When a man hath been labouring
the hardest labour in the deep mines of knowledge, hath furnished out his
findings in all their equipage: drawn forth his reasons as it were a battle
ranged: scattered and defeated all objections in his way; calls out his
adversary into the plain, offers him the advantage of wind and sun, if he
please, only that he may try the matter by dint of argument: for his opponents
then to skulk, to lay ambushments, to keep a narrow bridge of licensing where
the challenger should pass, though it be valour enough in soldiership, is but
weakness and cowardice in the wars of Truth.
For who knows not that Truth is strong, next to the
Almighty? She needs no policies, nor stratagems, nor licensings to make her
victorious; those are the shifts and the defences that error uses against her
power. Give her but room, and do not bind her when she sleeps, for then she
speaks not true, as the old Proteus did, who spake oracles only when he was
caught and bound, but then rather she turns herself into all shapes, except her
own, and perhaps tunes her voice according to the time, as Micaiah did before
Ahab, until she be adjured into her own likeness. Yet is it not impossible that
she may have more shapes than one. What else is all that rank of things
indifferent, wherein Truth may be on this side or on the other, without being
unlike herself? What but a vain shadow else is the abolition of those
ordinances, that hand-writing nailed to the cross? What great purchase is this
Christian liberty which Paul so often boasts of? His doctrine is, that he who
eats or eats not, regards a day or regards it not, may do either to the Lord.
How many other things might be tolerated in peace, and left to conscience, had
we but charity, and were it not the chief stronghold of our hypocrisy to be
ever judging one another?
I fear yet this iron yoke of outward conformity hath left a
slavish print upon our necks; the ghost of a linen decency yet haunts us. We
stumble and are impatient at the least dividing of one visible congregation
from another, though it be not in fundamentals; and through our forwardness to
suppress, and our backwardness to recover any enthralled piece of truth out of
the gripe of custom, we care not to keep truth separated from truth, which is
the fiercest rent and disunion of all. We do not see that, while we still
affect by all means a rigid external formality, we may as soon fall again into
a gross conforming stupidity, a stark and dead congealment of wood and hay and
stubble, forced and frozen together, which is more to the sudden degenerating
of a Church than many subdichotomies of petty schisms.
Not that I can think well of every light separation, or that
all in a Church is to be expected gold and silver and precious stones: it is
not possible for man to sever the wheat from the tares, the good fish from the
other fry; that must be the Angels' ministry at the end of mortal things. Yet
if all cannot be of one mind--as who looks they should be?--this doubtless is
more wholesome, more prudent, and more Christian, that many be tolerated,
rather than all compelled. I mean not tolerated popery, and open superstition,
which, as it extirpates all religions and civil supremacies, so itself should
be extirpate, provided first that all charitable and compassionate means be
used to win and regain the weak and the misled: that also which is impious or
evil absolutely either against faith or manners no law can possibly permit,
that intends not to unlaw itself: but those neighbouring differences, or rather
indifferences, are what I speak of, whether in some point of doctrine or of
discipline, which, though they may be many, yet need not interrupt THE UNITY OF
SPIRIT, if we could but find among us THE BOND OF PEACE.
In the meanwhile if any one would write, and bring his
helpful hand to the slow-moving Reformation which we labour under, if Truth
have spoken to him before others, or but seemed at least to speak, who hath so
bejesuited us that we should trouble that man with asking license to do so
worthy a deed? and not consider this, that if it come to prohibiting, there is
not aught more likely to be prohibited than truth itself; whose first
appearance to our eyes, bleared and dimmed with prejudice and custom, is more
unsightly and unplausible than many errors, even as the person is of many a
great man slight and contemptuous to see to. And what do they tell us vainly of
new opinions, when this very opinion of theirs, that none must be heard but
whom they like, is the worst and newest opinion of all others; and is the chief
cause why sects and schisms do so much abound, and true knowledge is kept at
distance from us; besides yet a greater danger which is in it.
For when God shakes a kingdom with strong and healthful
commotions to a general reforming, 'tis not untrue that many sectaries and
false teachers are then busiest in seducing; but yet more true it is, that God
then raises to his own work men of rare abilities, and more than common
industry, not only to look back and revise what hath been taught heretofore,
but to gain further and go on some new enlightened steps in the discovery of
truth. For such is the order of God's enlightening his Church, to dispense and
deal out by degrees his beam, so as our earthly eyes may best sustain it.
Neither is God appointed and confined, where and out of what
place these his chosen shall be first heard to speak; for he sees not as man
sees, chooses not as man chooses, lest we should devote ourselves again to set
places, and assemblies, and outward callings of men; planting our faith one
while in the old Convocation house, and another while in the Chapel at
Westminster; when all the faith and religion that shall be there canonized is
not sufficient without plain convincement, and the charity of patient
instruction to supple the least bruise of conscience, to edify the meanest
Christian, who desires to walk in the Spirit, and not in the letter of human
trust, for all the number of voices that can be there made; no, though Harry
VII himself there, with all his liege tombs about him, should lend them voices
from the dead, to swell their number.
And if the men be erroneous who appear to be the leading
schismatics, what withholds us but our sloth, our self-will, and distrust in
the right cause, that we do not give them gentle meetings and gentle
dismissions, that we debate not and examine the matter thoroughly with liberal
and frequent audience; if not for their sakes, yet for our own? seeing no man
who hath tasted learning, but will confess the many ways of profiting by those
who, not contented with stale receipts, are able to manage and set forth new
positions to the world. And were they but as the dust and cinders of our feet,
so long as in that notion they may yet serve to polish and brighten the armoury
of Truth, even for that respect they were not utterly to be cast away. But if
they be of those whom God hath fitted for the special use of these times with
eminent and ample gifts, and those perhaps neither among the priests nor among
the Pharisees, and we in the haste of a precipitant zeal shall make no
distinction, but resolve to stop their mouths, because we fear they come with
new and dangerous opinions, as we commonly forejudge them ere we understand
them; no less than woe to us, while, thinking thus to defend the Gospel, we are
found the persecutors.
There have been not a few since the beginning of this
Parliament, both of the presbytery and others, who by their unlicensed books,
to the contempt of an Imprimatur, first broke that triple ice clung about our
hearts, and taught the people to see day: I hope that none of those were the
persuaders to renew upon us this bondage which they themselves have wrought so
much good by contemning. But if neither the check that Moses gave to young
Joshua, nor the countermand which our Saviour gave to young John, who was so
ready to prohibit those whom he thought unlicensed, be not enough to admonish
our elders how unacceptable to God their testy mood of prohibiting is; if
neither their own remembrance what evil hath abounded in the Church by this set
of licensing, and what good they themselves have begun by transgressing it, be
not enough, but that they will persuade and execute the most Dominican part of
the Inquisition over us, and are already with one foot in the stirrup so active
at suppressing, it would be no unequal distribution in the first place to
suppress the suppressors themselves: whom the change of their condition hath
puffed up, more than their late experience of harder times hath made wise.
And as for regulating the press, let no man think to have
the honour of advising ye better than yourselves have done in that Order
published next before this, "that no book be printed, unless the printer's and
the author's name, or at least the printer's, be registered." Those which
otherwise come forth, if they be found mischievous and libellous, the fire and
the executioner will be the timeliest and the most effectual remedy that man's
prevention can use. For this authentic Spanish policy of licensing books, if I
have said aught, will prove the most unlicensed book itself within a short
while; and was the immediate image of a Star Chamber decree to that purpose
made in those very times when that Court did the rest of those her pious works,
for which she is now fallen from the stars with Lucifer. Whereby ye may guess
what kind of state prudence, what love of the people, what care of religion or
good manners there was at the contriving, although with singular hypocrisy it
pretended to bind books to their good behaviour. And how it got the upper hand
of your precedent Order so well constituted before, if we may believe those men
whose profession gives them cause to inquire most, it may be doubted there was
in it the fraud of some old patentees and monopolizers in the trade of
bookselling; who under pretence of the poor in their Company not to be
defrauded, and the just retaining of each man his several copy, which God
forbid should be gainsaid, brought divers glossing colours to the House, which
were indeed but colours, and serving to no end except it be to exercise a
superiority over their neighbours; men who do not therefore labour in an honest
profession to which learning is indebted, that they should be made other men's
vassals. Another end is thought was aimed at by some of them in procuring by
petition this Order, that, having power in their hands, malignant books might
the easier scape abroad, as the event shows.
But of these sophisms and elenchs of merchandise I skill
not. This I know, that errors in a good government and in a bad are equally
almost incident; for what magistrate may not be misinformed, and much the
sooner, if liberty of printing be reduced into the power of a few? But to
redress willingly and speedily what hath been erred, and in highest authority
to esteem a plain advertisement more than others have done a sumptuous bride,
is a virtue (honoured Lords and Commons) answerable to your highest actions,
and whereof none can participate but greatest and wisest men.
-End- |